Part 9 (1/2)
”Oh! Betty's nonsense.”
”Johnnie DID--”
”Johnnie only--”
”Now, Hal!”
”Tell-tale!” ”Cry-baby!”
”She only cried that Miss Fosbrook might hear.”
So shouted the little Babel, Bessie sobbing resentfully between her words, till Miss Fosbrook, insisting that everybody should be quiet, desired her to tell what had happened.
”Johnnie--Johnnie called me a toad.”
The others all burst out laughing, and Miss Fosbrook, trying to silence them with a frown, said it was very rude of John, but she saw no reason why a girl of Bessie's age should act so childish a part.
”He's been teasing me, and so has Anne, all this time!” cried Bessie.
”They've been at me ever since I came out, pulling me and plaguing me, and--”
”Well,” said Susan, ”I told you to walk in front of Miss Fosbrook, where they could not.”
”I didn't do anything to her,” said John.
”Now, Johnnie!”
”He only pulled her frock and poked her ankles,” said Anne pleadingly
”Only--and why did you do what she did not like?”
Johnnie looked st.u.r.dy and cross. Anne hung her head; and Elizabeth burst out again,
”They always do--they always are cross to me! I said I'd tell you, and now they said Ida was a conceited little toad, and stingy Bet was another;” and out burst her howls again.
”A very sad and improper way of spending a Sunday evening,” said Miss Fosbrook, who had really grown quite angry. ”Anne and John, I WILL put an end to this teasing. Go to bed this instant.”
They did not dare to disobey, but went off slowly with sulky footsteps, muttering to one another that Miss Fosbrook always took pipy Betty's part; Nurse said so, and they wished Mamma was at home.
And when they came up to the nursery, Nurse pitied them. She had never heard of a young lady doing such a thing as ordering off two poor dear children to bed for only just saying a word; but it seemed there were to be favourites now. No, she could not put them to bed; they must wait till Mary came in from her walk; she wasn't going to put herself out of the way for any fine London governess.
So Johnnie had another conquest over Miss Fosbrook; but Anne was uncomfortable, and went and sat in a corner, wis.h.i.+ng she had had her punishment properly over, and kicking her brother away when he wanted to play with her.
As for Bessie, she only cried the more for Miss Fosbrook's trying to talk to her. It was a way of hers, perhaps from being less strong than the others, if once she started in a cry she could not leave off.
Susan told Miss Fosbrook so; and the boys tried to drag her on with a promise of a blackbird's nest; but she thought them unfeeling to such woeful distress, and first tried to reason with Bessie, then to soothe her, till at last, finding all in vain, she thought bed the only place for the child, and led her into the house, helped her, still shaking with sobs, to undress, and was going to see her lie down in the bed which she shared with Susan. Elizabeth was still young enough to say her prayers aloud. The words came out in the middle of choking sobs, not as if she were much attending to them.
Miss Fosbrook knelt down by her as she was going to rise, and said in her own words,
”Most merciful G.o.d, give unto this Thy child the spirit of content, and the spirit of love, that she may bear patiently all the little trials that hurt and vex her, and win her way as Thy good soldier and servant. Amen.”