"Possibly. My milkman isn"t real dependable. Sometimes there will be three or four days in a month when I can"t get all I need, and if I ever want any extra, I always have to tell him two or three days before. The McGees seem to be able to supply a body at any time with any amount. But no one enjoys having such inexcusably dirty children bring their milk even if they _know_ the milk itself is absolutely clean. Somehow it takes away one"s appet.i.te."
"Why don"t that big girl keep the others clean? She"s old enough, ain"t she?"
"She"s too lazy. They all are. They fight all day sometimes over whose turn it is to carry the milk or bring in the wood. Mrs. McGee never has trained them to help her a bit, and though Ophelia is past twelve years old, she is as useless as the baby when it comes to doing the housework."
"Ophelia--ain"t that a funny name!"
"Ridiculous!" laughed Mrs. Wood. "But so are all the rest. Having no fortune to endow his children with, old Pat McGee gave his offspring as "high-toned and iligent names as iver belonged to rich folks." They are Ophelia and Tobias, Antonio and Augustus, Lavinia and Humphrey, and the poor little babe Nadene. Commonly they are known as Feely, Toby, Tony, Gus, Vinie, Humpy and Deanie. Their real names are just for dress-up occasions."
"It takes me back to Parker days," said Gail reminiscently. "Only the McGees are worse off than the Greenfields were, for there are seven of them and all so small. What would happen if the mother should slip away as our mother did?"
"O, the orphan asylum would open its doors, of course. But even at that they might stand a better chance than they do now. They never will amount to anything, growing up as they are, like weeds. She can"t give them the attention they ought to have, and she is not teaching them to be independent or helpful in any way. Toby and the twins are almost beyond her control now. Some of us neighbors have tried to get her to send part of the tribe at least to a Children"s Home. Such an inst.i.tution would certainly give them the training that she can"t--"
"O, but think of having to eat oatmeal every morning without milk or sugar," interrupted Peace in horrified accents, "and your bread and potatoes without any b.u.t.ter, and never having any pie or cake, and meat only once a week, and hardly any fruit, and--ugh! I"d starve!"
"Peace, oh, Peace," called Allee"s voice from outside the window, "come see what I"ve found." And the crippled sister, hastily adjusting her crutches, went to discover what was wanted.
The next day while she was sitting alone under the great tree in the back yard, she heard a stealthy rustling in the gra.s.s beyond the fence, and glancing up from the book she had been trying to interest herself in, she again saw the dirty face of Tobias McGee peering at her through the lattice work. Then Antonio appeared, followed one by one by the rest of the tousled McGees. She surveyed them critically from head to heels and then scathingly remarked, "I sh"d think you would be ashamed to go so dirty."
"We--we ain"t none of us got such pretty clo"es as you," stammered Tobias, much confused by this unlooked-for reception, and he thrust both grimy hands behind his back as if that would hide all his filth.
"You don"t have to have pretty clothes to have "em clean," Peace retorted.
"Ma ain"t got time to keep us washed up," explained Tobias, apologetically.
"Why don"t you do it yourselves then?"
"But--we--can"t," they gasped in chorus.
"I don"t see why."
"We ain"t big enough."
"You are, too. Feely"s as old as Hope was when we were in Parker, and Hope kept after us till we were glad to wash our faces and hands and brush our hair. Of course she helped, but there were Cherry and Allee and me all younger"n her. And we helped Gail, too. I churned the b.u.t.ter once, and we helped houseclean and--and pick chickens, and run errands and bring in the wood--"
"Huh, us boys do that," broke in Gus scornfully. "Girls ain"t s"posed to fetch wood and water."
"All our boys were girls," replied Peace loftily, "and some of us _had_ to bring in the wood or else how would it have got there?"
"Did you wash dishes?" asked Ophelia, with a slight display of curiosity.
"Cherry washed and I wiped."
"How old was Cherry?" demanded Antonio.
"O, about ten, when we lived in Parker, I guess."
"Feely"s twelve and she don"t wash the dishes yet," tattled Vinie, and was promptly rewarded with a smart slap from the older sister.
"Shame on you!" cried Peace indignantly. "You are the meanest family I ever knew. Mrs. Wood said you are always fighting, and that"s all you"ve done every time you"ve been over here."
"I don"t care, Vinie had no business to say that," muttered Ophelia, scowling sullenly. "She can"t never keep her mouth shut. I just _hate_ to wash dishes."
"So do I," Peace cheerfully agreed. "But I don"t go around slapping folks" faces "cause of it. Besides, Gail had all she could "tend to without bothering about the dishes. We _had_ to do them or go hungry.
Who does them at your house?"
"Ma," volunteered Vinie once more, edging warily out of range of the big sister"s hand.
"After she"s washed all day?" asked Peace in horrified accents.
Ophelia was scowling threateningly; Vinie drew a little further away and nodded silently.
"Don"t _any_ of you do _anything_ to help her?"
"I mind the kids," said Ophelia defiantly.
"I should think you would keep "em scrubbed up a little cleaner, then,"
observed Peace critically. "They--you are all so dirty you--you--smell.
I don"t wonder folks won"t buy milk from you."
"Ma takes care of the milk herself and washes the buckets and covers "em all up careful before she gives "em to us to tote," cried Tobias, much insulted by Peace"s frank words.
"I don"t care," retorted that young lady with dignity. "Mrs. Wood herself says she can"t swallow you children, you are so dirty; and she would take milk from you if you were clean, "cause I asked her."
Silence reigned while each young McGee dug his bare toes into the soft earth and chewed his finger or thumb. Then Tobias growled, "Mrs. Wood is too p"tic"lar. Ma says so."
"I"ll bet Mrs. Moody and Mrs. Carter are just as p"tic"lar," Peace declared hotly. "If you"d ask them why they quit taking milk of you, and just _made_ "em tell you the truth, I"ll bet they would say that you kids were always so dirty it made "em sick to look at you."
Vinie withdrew her thumb from her mouth, stopped shuffling her dirty little feet in the gra.s.s, stared thoughtfully at the candid young hostess on the other side of the fence, and quietly disappeared, followed by solemn-eyed Humphrey. No one noticed her going, no one missed her from her place in the rank, but while belligerent Tobias was still arguing the question with stubborn Peace, Vinie returned with Humpy still at her heels. She had hurried, and her breath came quick and fast, but before she had reached her place in the line-up again, she called excitedly, "That pretty girl is right. We"re all too dirty to suit Mrs. Moody and Mrs. Carter."
"Wh--at?" shrieked the brothers and sisters, wheeling about in consternation to face their new accuser,--one of their own kin.
"Well, I asked "em honest true, just like she said to do, and after a bit they owned up that it wasn"t the milk they didn"t like, but the looks of us was too much."
Ophelia stared dully at the small sister for a long moment, then suddenly slumped down in the tall gra.s.s and wept. Tobias, Antonio and Augustus all followed suit, and even baby Nadene lifted her voice in lament, though she did not know what she was crying about.
Surprised, awed and troubled, Peace drew near to the fence and pressed her face against the lattice work to watch this unusual performance; but Vinie, after one contemptuous glance at the snivelling group, turned energetically away toward the little green shack across the field, still holding fast to Humpy"s grimy fist.
"Where you going?" demanded Antonio, peeping at her from under his arm as he lay sprawled in the clover.
"I ain"t got time to bawl," she flung back over her shoulder. "I promised to go home and clean up Humpy and me. Then Mrs. Carter"s going to give me two cents to go to the store for her."
Peace watched the two little figures trudging off across the meadow, and then she said thoughtfully, "She"s right, and I b"lieve you could get back all your milk customers if you"d everyone clean up once and _stay_ clean. Why don"t you try?"
Antonio lifted his head, looked at his twin and began slowly to struggle to his feet. Augustus joined him, then Tobias, and finally Ophelia. She looked timidly toward Peace, and asked meekly, "Don"t you s"pose Ma would scold?"
"What for? Washing your faces? No, I don"t. She"s a funny mother if she does. It"s easier work to sell milk than to do washings, and I should think you"d try to help her all you can so she won"t get sick and die and all of you have to go to an _orphant_ asylum."
The round-eyed children gazed at her in affright, then swiftly made off through the tall gra.s.s in Vinie"s wake.