Part 12 (1/2)
”Tom,” she said, ”there is somebody in the kitchen!”
Mr. Fenelby laid his fork softly on his plate and listened. There was no doubt of it. Someone was in the kitchen, gathering up the silverware. Mr. Fenelby arose and went into the kitchen. Almost immediately he returned. He returned because he either had to follow Bridget into the dining room or stay in the kitchen alone.
”It's me, ma'am,” said Bridget. She planted herself before Mrs.
Fenelby and placed her hands on her hips. Mrs. Fenelby arose. ”I've come back,” said Bridget.
”And you can go again,” said Mrs. Fenelby regally. ”I do not want you, you can go!”
”Yes, ma'am,” said Bridget. ”'Tis all th' same t' me--stay or go, ma'am,--but I'll be askin' ye t' pay me a month's wages, Mrs.
Fenelby, if ye want me t' go. A month's wages or a month's notice--that is th' law, ma'am.”
”The idea!” exclaimed Mrs. Fenelby. ”I have not even hired you, yet!”
”No, ma'am,” said Bridget, ”but th' young lady has. She hired me with her own mouth, at me own sister Maggie's, who will be witness t' it, an' I have been workin' in th' kitchen already. I've washed th' spoons.”
”The young lady,” said Mrs. Fenelby coldly, ”has no right to hire servants for me.”
”And hasn't she, ma'am?” said Bridget angrily. ”Let th' judge in th'
court-house say if she has or hasn't! Don't try t' fool me, Missus Fenelby, ma'am. I've worked here before, ma'am, an' I know all about th' Commonwealth way ye have of doin' things. Wan of ye has as good a right t' vote me into a job as another has, Mrs. Fenelby, an' th'
young lady an' th' young gintleman both asked me t' come. Even a poor ign'rant Irish girl has rights, Mrs. Fenelby, an' hired I was, t' worrk for th' Commonwealth. An' here I stay, without ye choose t' hand me me month's wages!”
Mrs. Fenelby looked appealingly at Tom, and Tom looked at Billy.
”I think she'd win, if she took it to law,” said Billy. ”You know how the judges are. And if she brought up the matter of the Commonwealth, you know you _did_ make Kitty and me full partakers in it.”
”Tom,” said Mrs. Fenelby, ”pay her a month's wages and let her go!”
Mr. Fenelby moved uneasily. He had put all his money into Bobberts'
bank. In all the house there was not a month's wages except in Bobberts' bank. Mr. Fenelby looked toward the bank.
”Never!” said Billy. ”_I_ put money into that, and so did Kitty. It is for Bobberts, not for month's wages. I object.”
Mr. Fenelby looked away from the bank. He looked, helplessly, all around the room, and ended by looking at Laura.
”My dear,” he said, ”I think we had better keep Bridget.”
”I think ye had!” said Bridget. ”For there ain't no way t' git rid of me. I'm here, ma'am, an' I don't bear no ill will. I forgive ye all, an' I'm willin' t' let by-gones be by-gones, excipt one or two things, which ye will have t' change.”
”The idea!” exclaimed Mrs. Fenelby. Bridget shrugged her shoulders.
”Have it yer own way, ma'am,” she said. ”I am not one that would dictate t' th' lady of th' house. I am no dictator, ma'am, an' I don't wish t' be, but here I am an' here I stay, an' 'tis no fault of mine if some things riles me temper and makes me act as I shouldn't. I'm one that likes things t' be peaceful, ma'am, for no one knows how much row a girrl can make in th' house better 'n than I does, especially when she's hired by th' month an' can't be fired.
I can't forget one Mrs. Gra.s.set I worked for, ma'am, an' her that miserable an' cryin' all th' time, just because I had one of me bad timper spells. I should hate t' have one of thim here, Mrs.
Fenelby.”