Part 1 (1/2)
Opportunities.
by Susan Warner.
CHAPTER I.
It was the morning after that Sunday when Matilda had been baptized.
The girls came down to prepare breakfast as usual; Maria in a very unsettled humour. She was cloudy and captious to a degree that Matilda could not understand. The kitchen was hot; the b.u.t.ter was soft; the milk was turned; the bread was dry. All things went wrong.
”It is no wonder the bread is dry,” said Matilda; ”it has been baked ever since last Friday.”
”Thursday. I didn't say it was a wonder. Aunt Candy _will_ have the bread dry. I hate it!”
”And it is no wonder the b.u.t.ter is soft, if you keep it up here in the kitchen. The kitchen must be hot, with this hot stove. But the milkman will be along directly.”
”No, he won't. We always have to wait for him; or take the old milk.
And I can't be bothered to keep the b.u.t.ter down cellar and be running for it fifty times in an hour. I have enough to do as it is. Whatever possessed Aunt Erminia to want corn bread this morning!”
”Does she want corn bread?”
”Yes.”
”Well, corn bread is nice. I am glad of it.”
”You wouldn't be glad if you had to make it. There! I knew it would be so. There isn't a speck of soda. Put on your bonnet, Matilda, and run round to Mr. Sample's and get some soda, will you?--and be quick. We shall be late, and then there will be a row.”
”There won't be a _row_, Maria. Aunt Candy is always quiet.”
”I wish she wouldn't, then. I hate people who are always quiet. I would rather they would flare out now and then. It's safer.”
”For what? _Safer_, Maria?”
”Do go along and get your soda!” exclaimed Maria. ”Do you think it will be safe to be late with breakfast?”
Maria was so evidently out of order this morning, that her sister thought the best way was to let her alone; only she asked, ”Aren't you well, Maria?” and got a sharp answer; then she went out.
It was a delicious spring morning. The air stirred in her face its soft and glad breaths of sweetness; the sunlight was the very essence of promise; the village and the green trees, now out in leaf, shone and basked in the fair day. It was better than breakfast, to be out in the air. Matilda went round the corner, into b.u.t.ternut Street, and made for Mr. Sample's grocery store, every step being a delight. Why could not the inside world be as pleasant as the outside? Matilda was musing and wis.h.i.+ng, when just before she reached Mr. Sample's door, she saw what made her forget everything else; even the mischievous little boy who belonged to Mrs. Dow. What was he doing here in b.u.t.ternut Street?
Matilda's steps slackened. The boy knew her, for he looked and then grinned, and then bringing a finger alongside of his nose in a peculiar and mysterious expressiveness, he repeated his old words--
”Ain't you green?”
”I suppose so,” said Matilda. ”I dare say I am. What then? Green is not the worst colour.”
The boy looked at her, a little confounded.
”If you would come to Sunday-school,” Matilda went on, ”_you_ would be a better colour than you are--by and by.”
”What colour be I?” said the boy.