"What did that Miss Bigelow take her for that she must ask her to be

kind to Ethelyn? Of course she should do her duty, and she guessed her

ways were not so very different from other people's, either," and the

good woman gave an extra twist to the tablecloth she was wringing, and

shaking it out rather fiercely, tossed it into the huge clothes-basket

standing near.

The wash was unusually large that day and as the unpacking of the box

had taken up some time, the clock was striking two just as the last

clothespin was fastened in its place, and the last brown towel hung upon

the currant bushes. It was Mrs. Markham's weakness that her wash should

be fluttering in the wind before that of Mrs. Jones, which could be

plainly seen from her kitchen window. But to-day Mrs. Jones was ahead,

and Melinda's pink sun-bonnet was visible in the little back-yard as

early as eleven, at which time the Markham garments had just commenced

to boil. The bride had brought with her a great deal of extra work, and

what with waiting breakfast for her until the coffee was cold and the

baked potatoes "all soggy," and then cleaning up the litter of "that

box," Mrs. Markham was dreadfully behind with her Monday's work. And it

did not tend to improve her temper to know that the cause of all her

discomposure was "playing lady" in a handsome cashmere morning gown,

with heavy tassels knotted at her side, while she was bending over the

washtub in a faded calico pinned about her waist, and disclosing the

quilt patched with many colors, and the black yarn stockings footed with

coarse white. Not that Mrs. Markham cared especially for the difference

between her dress and Ethelyn's--neither did she expect Ethelyn to

"help" that day--but she might at least have offered to wipe the dinner

dishes, she thought. It would have shown her good will at all events.

But instead of that she had returned to her room the moment dinner was

over, and Eunice, who went to hunt for a missing sock of Richard's,

reported that she was lying on the lounge with a story book in her hand.

"Shiffless," was the word Mrs. Markham wanted to use, but she repressed

it, for she would not talk openly against Richard's wife so soon after

her arrival, though she did make some invidious remarks concerning the

handsome underclothes, wondering "what folks were thinking of to put so

much work where it was never seen. Puffs, and embroidery, and lace, and,

I vum, if the ruffles ain't tucked too," she continued, in a despairing

voice, hoping Ethelyn knew "how to iron such filagree herself, for the

mercy knew she didn't."

Now these same puffs, and embroidery, and ruffles, and tucks had excited

Eunice's liveliest admiration, and her fingers fairly itched to see how

they would look hanging on the clothes bars after passing through her

hands. That Ethelyn could touch them she never once dreamed. Her

instincts were truer than Mrs. Markham's and it struck her as perfectly

proper that one like Ethelyn should sit still while others served, and

to her mistress' remarks as to the ironing, she hastened to reply: "I'd

a heap sight rather do them up than to iron the boys' coarse shirts and

pantaloons. Don't you mind the summer I was at Camden working for Miss

Avery, who lived next door to Miss Judge Miller, from New York? She had

just such things as these, and I used to go in sometimes and watch Katy

iron 'em, so I b'lieve I can do it myself. Anyways, I want to try."




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