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Almost before the snow had gone, talk of the March fair began to engage the attention of the Eastsh.o.r.e school pupils. This was an annual event and there was much rivalry between the three schools as to which should turn in the most money. The proceeds of the fair went to the Memorial Hospital in Bennington, rather had gone into the building fund until this year for the hospital had recently been completed. The high and grammar and primary schools, each had tables and exhibits and there was always a large attendance during the Friday afternoon and Sat.u.r.day the fair was under way.
"The high school is going to have a cafeteria," reported Rosemary at dinner one night. "I wish we'd thought of that. The boys are going to wear white ap.r.o.ns and caps and stand behind the tables and serve the food, while the girls act as waitresses and carry out the dishes and look after the silver. They want every one to eat their supper there Friday and Sat.u.r.day night."
"All right, we'll come," promised Aunt Trudy. "Hugh can meet us there, can't you, Hugh?"
"Of course," he agreed. "But I'm saving my money for the grammar and primary school tables--I want that understood. I'll treat you all to supper, and please Jack Welles at the same time, but the real expenditures of this family must be where they'll count for the lower grades."
The three girls beamed upon him approvingly.
"I'm going to have charge of the cake table," said Rosemary. "Tell Winnie to buy our Sunday cake from me, won't you, Aunt Trudy? I have ten different kinds of icings to make--every one of the girls has asked me to ice her cake, because they say I always have good luck."
"I hope you'll use sugar and not salt," murmured the doctor wickedly.
"Oh, Hugh, wasn't that soup too dreadful!" said Rosemary, shuddering at the recollection. "I know perfectly well I didn't put in too much salt and yet no one else seasoned it--I wish I knew how it happened."
"Let it go as a mystery," advised her brother. "What are you going to do in the fair line, Sarah?" he added, turning to her.
"Sell gold fish," she answered placidly. "What are you laughing at?"
she asked them in surprise. "I have a great big bowl with gold fish in it and a lot of little bowls; and people buy the little bowls for fifteen cents and I dip out two gold fish with a soup ladle for twenty-five cents, and they take them home."
"I'm going to sell little baby bouquets," announced Shirley, who looked like a "baby bouquet" herself in a pink challis frock. "I have 'em on a tray and I walk around and people buy them for their b.u.t.tonholes."
"I'll be your first customer, sweetheart," Doctor Hugh a.s.sured her.
Preparations for the fair absorbed most of the after-school time of the next two weeks. There were committee meetings and inter-cla.s.s conferences, and difficulties that required to be straightened out and sensitive feelings that needed careful handling.
"We could get along so much faster, if every one was pleasant,"
sighed Rosemary to her brother. "Fannie Mears has a dozen pin-cushions to make and she made twelve of us promise to take one and finish it for the fancy-work table; and then she wouldn't help iron the napkins for the cake plates. She said it wasn't her table and she didn't intend to waste her time. Harriet Reed heard her and she was so mad she ripped up the pincushion she had just sewed and the sewing teacher found it in the waste-basket and she says Harriet has to buy material to replace the stuff she tore and she can't go home after school to-morrow until she has made another pincushion."
"Well, I don't think Harriet helped her cause much," said the doctor pacifically.
"Well Fannie Mears is too mean," said Rosemary. "It isn't a very nice thing to say, Hugh--"
"Then don't say it, dear," he countered promptly. "Don't gossip, Rosemary. I know of nothing harder on the nerves and temper than a fair, and if you can keep cheerful and serene and not quarrel with your friends and above all, don't talk about them in their absence, you will have done better than most fair workers twice your age."
Rosemary remembered this bit of advice often in the turbulent days that followed. Fannie Mears was one of those girls who manage to sow discord and dissension wherever they go. She had a tireless industry that commended her to her teachers and she was always ready to accept additional tasks and duties. What they did not see was that she distributed these tasks among her friends and the girls in the lower grades and then was unwilling to help them in turn.
"I suppose you've heard what Fannie Mears and Nina Edmonds have done now?" remarked Sarah one noon period when the fair was a scant week off.
"No, what?" asked Rosemary who avoided Nina's name whenever possible.
"Why they've taken three dozen needle-books that have to have the flannel leaves tied in them with ribbon," explained Sarah. "See, Shirley has four to do. Fannie and Nina promised Miss Carlson they'd do them, and now they've handed them all out in the primary grades. They wanted me to do six, but I wouldn't."
Sarah was engrossed with the gold fish which had already arrived and were housed in the natural history room in the high school building.
She visited them several times daily and in his heart Mr. Martin, the biology teacher feared she would kill them with kindness before the fair opened.
"Shirley doesn't mind tying the leaves in, do you dear?" asked Rosemary cheerfully.
"Not much," replied Shirley, "only I wanted to cut the ribbons for my flower bouquets yesterday afternoon, and Fannie wouldn't lend me the scissors."
"I'll help you do it this afternoon," promised Rosemary, who had planned to a.s.semble the recipes for her cake icings and see what supplies were lacking that she would need.
"If that fancy-work table ever gets enough things, the rest of us may be able to pay a little attention to our own tables," she said to herself.
But that afternoon Shirley came crying to Rosemary to say that she had lost the four little needle-books.
"I've looked everywhere," the child insisted. "All over everywhere, Rosemary. And they're all gone."
"That means I'll have to make four," said poor Rosemary. "Don't cry, Shirley, Sister will see that you have four needle-books to turn in.
Though I don't see how you could lose them," she added wearily.
"I'll bet Fannie Mears took those books," declared Sarah when she heard of the loss. "It would be just like her. She thinks it's smart to get four extra books."
Rosemary protested weakly at this idea. In her heart of hearts, she thought Fannie quite capable of such an act, but she had loyally resolved to try and follow Hugh's advice.
"But I can't help wishing he knew Fannie," said Rosemary to herself.
She made the needle-books and helped Shirley measure and cut the ribbon for her bouquets. Sarah's "soup ladle" proved to be a net and that small girl "experimented" with the netting so earnestly that she required a new net to be inserted practically every day. Of course Rosemary was called on for this and as a result her own work was left quite to the last.
"But I couldn't ice the cakes till the day before the fair, anyway,"
she said philosophically to Miss Parsons, "though I did want to have time to see that the plates and napkins were matched; last year we ran short of napkins."
The morning of the fair, Rosemary hurried upstairs to ice her cakes.
They were all arranged on the kitchen table, thirty of them, each one a triumph of culinary art. Rosemary was excused from school for the day, but the cakes had been baked late the previous afternoon for it was a school rule that the fair was not to interfere with cla.s.s attendance.
"And I don't see why Rosemary Willis should be excused," muttered Fannie Mears indignantly.
"I suppose you think she can ice thirty cakes in half an hour,"
Sarah flung back. "And set the table and go home and get dressed, too."
Humming happily, Rosemary tied on her white ap.r.o.n and went about her mixing. As she had said, there were ten different icings to be made, the same flavor being allowed only three cakes. Some were loaves and some were layers and one or two had been scorched. These Rosemary carefully grated and planned to ice thickly.
In the midst of her work she made a distressing discovery. The linen cloth for the table was soiled!
"I'm just as sure as I can be that it was clean in the drawer last night," Rosemary confided to Miss Parsons. "I looked the last thing."
She had found it rolled up in a wad and stuffed at the furtherest end of the table drawer. Not only was it rumpled, but it showed several stains.
"I'll go home this noon and get one of ours," said Rosemary. "I think I'll be glad when this fair is over."
"I think we'll all be glad," replied Miss Parsons, frowning a little, for the cloth incident annoyed her. She, too, had been certain it was clean the afternoon before.
Rosemary went home at noon, leaving half the cakes to do on her return. A large bowl of chocolate icing stood on the table, covered with a muslin cloth.
There was no one to see the kitchen door open slyly fifteen minutes later, no one to see a figure dart in and make for the table. One hand lifted the muslin cloth, the other reached for the large tin salt shaker.
"Drop that!" said a voice peremptorily.
The shaker dropped to the floor with a clatter, and Fannie Mears turned to face Mr. Oliver.