Part 18 (1/2)
”Now I've done it!” she exclaimed crossly. ”Splattered my stockings too.”
”Oh, that's too bad,” said Penny, pausing.
”This is the only place I ever worked where the cook was expected to carry out the garbage!” the woman complained. ”It makes me good and mad every time I do it.”
”I should think a house of this size would have an incinerator so that the garbage could be burned,” Penny remarked.
”Say, this place doesn't have any conveniences for the servants,” the cook went on. ”You're expected to work, work, work from morning to night.”
She broke off quickly, regarding Penny with a suspicious gaze. ”You're not one of Miss Sylvia's guests?” she demanded.
”Oh, no, I only came here on an errand. I wouldn't repeat anything to the family.”
”That's all right then,” the woman said in relief. ”I liked my job here well enough until lately. All month it's been one dinner party after another. Then we spent days getting ready for the wedding feast and not one sc.r.a.p of food was touched!”
”But I suppose Mrs. Kippenberg pays you well.”
”Listen, she didn't give me one extra cent for all the work I did. Mrs.
Kippenberg always has been real close, and she's a heap worse since her husband went away. Another week like this last one and I quit!”
”Well, I can't say I blame you,” Penny said, leading the woman on. ”I suppose Miss Sylvia is as overbearing as her mother?”
”Oh, Miss Sylvia is all right, as sweet a girl as you'll find anywhere. I felt mighty sorry for her when that no-account man threw her over.”
Penny knew by this time that she must be talking with Mrs. Latch, for the footman had mentioned the cook's name. As the woman walked on with her bundles of garbage she fell into step with her.
”It was strange about Mr. Atherwald's disappearance,” she remarked. ”I hear he came to the house and then went away just before the wedding.”
”I can tell you about that,” replied Mrs. Latch with an important air.
”Yesterday morning a boy came to the back door with a letter for Mr.
Atherwald. It's my opinion he sent it to himself.”
”Didn't the boy tell you where he had obtained the letter?”
”He said it was given to him by one of Mr. Atherwald's friends. A man in a boat.”
”Oh, I see,” said Penny, making a mental note of the information.
Realizing that the cook had told everything she knew about the matter, she quickly switched the subject. ”By the way, who is the head gardener here?”
”Do you mean Peter Henderson?”
”A fairly old man,” described Penny. ”Gray hair, stooped shoulders, and I might add, an unpleasant manner.”
”I guess that's Peter. He's not much of a gardener in my opinion. And he feels too high and mighty to a.s.sociate with the other servants. He doesn't even stay here nights.”
”Is he a new man?”