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"Well, I can't help it if I have," said Peggy.
She felt cross and a little hurt because Clara had not seemed any more glad to see her when she had been just crazy to see Clara. Miss Rand had been delighted to see her, and even Mrs. Horton had seemed more glad than Clara. Only the peac.o.c.k and Clara had seemed proud. Perhaps Clara had been afraid Peggy would rumple her dress. It was a very lovely shimmery dress with smocking. Peggy liked dresses that were smocked. She seated herself on a branch of the apple tree and began to swing back and forth. She was never shy herself, so it did not occur to her that Clara was shy. There did not seem to be anything to say, and it seemed a long, long time, since Thanksgiving Day, when she had last seen Clara, and as if they would have to get acquainted all over again.
"Did you have a nice journey?" said Peggy.
"No, horrid! I'm always car-sick. Father's coming for us and we are going back in the automobile."
"That will be great fun," said Peggy.
"It will be better than the train," said Clara, "but it's a long ride, and I always get awfully tired."
"Do you?" said Peggy, swinging back and forth again.
"How long your legs are," said Clara.
Peggy stopped short in her swinging. "If you say anything about my legs I shall go crazy," she announced. Then she climbed as high in the apple tree as she could get and dared them to come and join her. "Come up into my house, you short-legged people," she called down. "I have a room in a tower and there are windows in it, and I can see all over the place.
Come up here--why don't you come?"
"Don't be cross, Peggy," said Alice. "You know I am scared to, and Clara would spoil her dress if she climbed up there."
"What are dresses for if you can't climb trees in them?" Peggy called down.
"I wish I had a frock like yours, it is such a pretty color," said Clara, who always liked other people's things better than her own.
The compliment to her dress restored Peggy's good humor. She was very seldom cross, and she felt thoroughly ashamed of herself. So she condescended to play dolls with Clara and Alice, and there was no fun so great as to have Peggy play dolls. She put them through such adventures and made them have such narrow escapes that the little mothers were positively thrilled. So it was a very happy afternoon for every one, even for Miss Rand, who came out just before it was time for the children to go home, with a tray on which there was a pitcher of something nice and cold that tasted of orange, and some small doughnuts.
Miss Rand sat down on an apple branch, which seat she preferred to a chair, and she sang for them, at Peggy's request, some Scotch songs, in a sweet contralto voice.
"It has been a nice afternoon," said Peggy, as she kissed Clara good-bye, and this time Clara gave her a most responsive kiss.
CHAPTER VI
DIANA
Peggy did not think of Lady Jane again until supper-time, when Mrs. Owen said to Alice, "I've warmed some milk for the cat. It is in the blue pitcher; you can turn it into her saucer."
Peggy kept very still. She hoped against hope that her furry little gray friend would come at the sound of her name. "I can't find her anywhere, mother," said Alice.
"I haven't seen her all the afternoon, now I think of it," said Mrs.
Owen. "Did you see her, Peggy? Do you suppose she could have slipped out when Michael Farrell came in?"
"I am afraid she did, mother," said Peggy.
"Well, Peggy Owen," said Alice, "I never knew any one as careless as you are. You ought to be punished."
"You are not my mother," said Peggy.
"It is a very serious matter," and Alice gave a wise shake to her small head. "It is the second time you've let her get out."
"Well," said Mrs. Owen, "if she is so anxious to live at the other house and they want to keep her, suppose we let them have her? The other day when I called, Mrs. Carter told me how fond her little girl was of her, and the child hasn't been well."
"Give up Lady Jane!" cried Peggy in dismay.
"Mother, what are you thinking of!" said Alice. "She's one of the family. Would you give me up if I kept going back to the Carters'?"
"Certainly not; but that is entirely different."
"I love Lady Jane just as much as you love me, mother," said Alice.
"That is impossible. Don't talk such nonsense," said her mother.
It seemed an extreme statement, even to Peggy. "Do you love her as much as you love mother?" she asked.
Alice paused to consider.
"Don't ask her such a trying question, Peggy. She would probably find it a little less convenient to live without me than without the cat; but if you children care so much about her you can go and get her. It is too much to expect them to send her back again."
Mrs. Owen telephoned to Mrs. Carter and found that the cat had been spending the afternoon with them.
"I won't trouble you to send her back," said Mrs. Owen. "The children will go for her to-morrow afternoon."
The next day Peggy and Alice could hardly wait to finish their dinner, they were so eager to go for Lady Jane and get back in time to spend a long afternoon with Clara. As they came near the Carters' house, they saw Christopher just coming out of the gate.
"So you are going to take the cat back again?" he said disapprovingly, as he looked at the basket.
"She's our cat," Alice said sweetly, but very firmly.
Christopher looked down at Alice, who smiled up at him and showed her dimples.
"Yes, of course, she is your cat," he said; for n.o.body could resist Alice. "But it seems too bad to yank her out every time she comes back to her old place."
"We've had her a very long time," said Alice. "I can hardly remember anything before we had her."
"She must be a very old cat," said Christopher, laughing.
It seemed strange to ring the doorbell of their own old house. The front door was painted green now and it had a shiny bra.s.s knocker. The office door was green, too. It was sad not to see their dear father's name there any more. "Dr. T. H. Carter" seemed very unnatural. The gra.s.s was beginning to grow green, and the snowdrops and crocuses were in blossom by the front door. Mrs. Carter opened the door for them herself. She looked so pleasant that Peggy wanted to kiss her.
"I know you've come for Lady Jane," she said, glancing at the basket.
"She's out calling this afternoon, but I'm sure she'll be in before long. While you are waiting for her you can go up and see Diana. She is expecting you. You can go upstairs; she is out on the piazza."
Everything seemed strange and yet familiar about the house. There was a new paper in the hall, and the floor and the stairs had been done over.
They went out on the upper side piazza, which was gla.s.sed in, and here Diana was lying in a hammock that looked almost like a bed. Peggy loved Diana the moment she saw her. She had the same friendly face that Mrs.
Carter had. Her hair was a sunshiny brown and so were her eyes, and her face, too, was a warm color, as if she had been out of doors a great deal. She had on a pale green wrapper with pink roses and green leaves embroidered on it. Peggy thought she had never seen anything so sweet in her life as Diana was, lying there in her green wrapper. She seemed a part of the pleasant springtime. Peggy noticed a copy of "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland" lying on the hammock. This was one of her favorite books, and she began to talk about it at once.
Alice's attention was caught by the sight of a flaxen-haired doll lying beside Diana in the hammock. "So you like dolls?" Alice said.