Part 96 (1/2)

”Mother can't see the good of it yet, but she will later--Mother's all right.

”I'm awfully sorry the Wardens feel so--and make Ross unhappy--but of course I knew they would. It can't be helped. It's just a question of time and work.”

And she went to work.

Mrs. p.o.r.ne called on her friend most promptly, with a natural eagerness and curiosity.

”How does it work? Do you like her as much as you thought? Do tell me about it, Viva. You look like another woman already!”

”I certainly feel like one,” Viva answered. ”I've seen slaves in housework, and I've seen what we fondly call 'Queens' in housework; but I never saw brains in it before.”

Mrs. p.o.r.ne sighed. ”Isn't it just wonderful--the way she does things!

Dear me! We do miss her! She trained that Swede for us--and she does pretty well--but not like 'Miss Bell'! I wish there were a hundred of her!”

”If there were a hundred thousand she wouldn't go round!” answered Mrs.

Weatherstone. ”How selfish we are! _That_ is the kind of woman we all want in our homes--and fuss because we can't have them.”

”Edgar says he quite agrees with her views,” Mrs. p.o.r.ne went on.

”Skilled labor by the day--food sent in--. He says if she cooked it he wouldn't care if it came all the way from Alaska! She certainly can cook! I wish she'd set up her business--the sooner the better.”

Mrs. Weatherstone nodded her head firmly. ”She will. She's planning.

This was really an interruption--her coming here, but I think it will be a help--she's not had experience in large management before, but she takes hold splendidly. She's found a dozen 'leaks' in our household already.”

”Mrs. Thaddler's simply furious, I hear,” said the visitor. ”Mrs. Ree was in this morning and told me all about it. Poor Mrs. Ree! The home is church and state to her; that paper of Miss Bell's she regards as simple blasphemy.”

They both laughed as that stormy meeting rose before them.

”I was so proud of you, Viva, standing up for her as you did. How did you ever dare?”

”Why I got my courage from the girl herself. She was--superb! Talk of blasphemy! Why I've committed _lese majeste_ and regicide and the Unpardonable Sin since that meeting!” And she told her friend of her brief pa.s.sage at arms with Mrs. Halsey. ”I never liked the woman,” she continued; ”and some of the things Miss Bell said set me thinking. I don't believe we half know what's going on in our houses.”

”Well, Mrs. Thaddler's so outraged by 'this scandalous attack upon the sanct.i.ties of the home' that she's going about saying all sorts of things about Miss Bell. O look--I do believe that's her car!”

Even as they spoke a toneless voice announced, ”Mr. and Mrs. Thaddler,”

and Madam Weatherstone presently appeared to greet these visitors.

”I think you are trying a dangerous experiment!” said Mrs. Thaddler to her young hostess. ”A very dangerous experiment! Bringing that young iconoclast into your home!”

Mr. Thaddler, stout and sulky, sat as far away as he could and talked to Mrs. p.o.r.ne. ”I'd like to try that same experiment myself,” said he to her. ”You tried it some time, I understand?”

”Indeed we did--and would still if we had the chance,” she replied. ”We think her a very exceptional young woman.”

Mr. Thaddler chuckled. ”She is that!” he agreed. ”Gad! How she did set things humming! They're humming yet--at our house!”

He glanced rather rancorously at his wife, and Mrs. p.o.r.ne wished, as she often had before, that Mr. Thaddler wore more clothing over his domestic afflictions.

”Scandalous!” Mrs. Thaddler was saying to Madam Weatherstone. ”Simply scandalous! Never in my life did I hear such absurd--such outrageous--charges against the sanct.i.ties of the home!”