Part 2 (1/2)

This pose was the signal that freed the feminine Madigan tongue. Usually they all broke into conversation at once; but on this evening there seemed to be some agreement which held them mute till Irene spoke.

”I am glad to see you be so patient with papa, Sissy,” she said gently.

His third daughter glanced apprehensively at Madigan. But her father had retired within his sh.e.l.l, and nothing but a cataclysm could reach him there.

”Why--” she said, puzzled, ”why--I--”

”Promise me that you'll try to stand him,” urged Split, joyously.

”And that you'll help me control my temper, and not mock and aggravate me when I sulk,” chanted Kate.

Sissy dropped her knife and fork, and her hands flew to her bosom, not in wrath, but in terror. The crackling testament was gone!

”Split! You--”

”Try to bear with me, won't you, Sis, even if I am a devil?” grinned Split.

”And set us a good example, Sissy,” piped the twins.

Sissy gasped.

”Be a yittle muvver to Fw.a.n.k,” lisped the baby, prompted by a big sister.

”And don't steal candy out of my pocket, will you, Cecilia Morgan?”

begged her oldest sister.

”And--”

Sissy sprang into the air, as though lifted bodily by the taunts of these ungrateful beneficiaries of her good intentions.

”Sit down, you ox!” came in thundering tones from the head of the table.

When one was called an ox among the Madigans the culprit invariably subsided, however the epithet might tend to make her sisters rejoice.

But Sissy had borne too much in that one day--always keeping in mind the perfect sanct.i.ty with which she had begun it.

With an inarticulate explanation that was at once a sob, a complaint, and a trembling defiance, she pushed back her chair and fled to her room. Here she sobbed in peace and plenty; sobbed till tears became a luxury to be produced by a conscious effort of the will. It had always been a grief to Sissy that she could never cry enough. Split, now, could weep vocally and by the hour, but all too soon for Sissy the wells of her own sorrow ran dry.

Yet tears had ever a chastening effect upon the third of the Madigans.

In due time she rose, washed her face, and combed back her hair and braided it in a tight plait that stuck out at an aggressive angle on the side; unaided she could never get it to depend properly from the middle.

This heightened the feeling of utter peacefulness, of remorse washed clean, besides putting her upon such a spiritual elevation as enabled her to meet her world with composure, though bitter experience told her how long a joke lasted among the Madigans.

She fell upon her knees at last beside her bed. No Madigan of this generation had been taught to pray, an aggressive skepticism--the tangent of excessive youthful religiosity--having made the girls' father an outspoken foe to religious exercise. But to Sissy's emotional, self-conscious soul the necessity for worded prayer came quick now and imperative.

”O Lord,” she pleaded aloud, ”help me to keep 'em all--even Number 10--in spite of Split and the devil. Help--”

She heard the door open behind her.

[Ill.u.s.tration: ”The Rest of the Madigans”]