Part 7 (2/2)

”Why, Mrs. Hudgers, ain't you et yer breakfast yet?”

”Of course I hev. I'm puttin' the kittle over fer my dinner.”

”Dinner! why, it's only a half arter nine.”

Mrs. Hudgers looked incredulous.

”I seen the chillern agoin' hum from school,” she maintained.

”Them was the Jenkinses, Iry hez come down with the scarlit fever, and they're all in quarrytine.”

”How you talk! Wait till I put the kittle offen the bile.”

The two neighbors sat down to discuss this affliction with the ready sympathy of the poor for the poor. Their pa.s.sing envy of the Jenkins's good fortune was instantly skimmed from the surface of their friendliness, which had only lain dormant and wanted but the touch of trouble to make them once more akin.

When the city physician had p.r.o.nounced Iry's ”spell” to be scarlet fever, the other members of the household were immediately summoned by emergency calls. The children came from school, Amarilly from the theatre, and the Boarder from his switch to hold an excited family conference.

”It's a good thing we got the was.h.i.+n's all hum afore Iry was took,”

declared the optimistic Amarilly.

”Thar's two things here yet,” reported Mrs. Jenkins. ”Gus come hum too late last night to take the preacher's surplus and Miss King's lace waist. You was so tired I didn't tell you, 'cause I know'd you'd be sot on goin' with them yourself. They're all did up.”

”Well, they'll hev to stay right here with us and the fever,” said Amarilly philosophically.

At heart she secretly rejoiced in the retaining of these two garments, for they seemed to keep her in touch with their owners whom she would be unable to see until Iry had recovered.

”I don't see what we are going to do, Amarilly,” said her mother despairingly. ”Thar'll be nuthin' comin' in and so many extrys.”

”No extrys,” cheerfully a.s.sured the little comforter. ”The city doctor'll take keer of Iry and bring the medicines. We hev laid by some sence we got the church wash. It'll tide us over till Iry gits well. We all need a vacation from work, anyhow.”

At the beginning of the next week a ten-dollar bill came from Colette, ”to buy jellies and things for Iry,” she wrote. A similar contribution came from John Meredith.

”We air on Easy Street onct more!” cried Amarilly joyfully.

”I hate to take the money from them,” sighed Mrs. Jenkins.

”We'll make it up to them when we kin work agin,” consoled Amarilly.

”Better to take from friends than from the city. It won't be fer long.

Iry seems to hev took it light, the doctor said.”

This diagnosis proved correct, but it had not occurred to Amarilly in her prognostications that the question of the duration of the quarantine was not entirely dependent upon Iry's convalescence. Like a row of blocks the children, with the exception of Flamingus and Amarilly, in rapid succession came down with a mild form of the fever. Mrs. Jenkins and Amarilly divided the labors of cook and nurse, but the mainstay of the family was the Boarder. He aided in the housework, and as an entertainer of the sick he proved invaluable. He told stories, drew pictures, propounded riddles, whittled boats and animals, played ”Beggar my Neighbor,” and sang songs for the convalescent ward.

When the last cent of the Jenkins's reserve fund and the contributions from the rector and Colette had been exhausted, the Boarder put a willing hand in his pocket and drew forth his all to share with the afflicted family. There was one appalling night when the treasury was entirely depleted, and the larder was a veritable Mother Hubbard's cupboard.

”Something will come,” prophesied Amarilly trustfully.

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