The Governess. Julie M. Lippmann

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Название The Governess
Автор произведения Julie M. Lippmann
Жанр Языкознание
Серия
Издательство Языкознание
Год выпуска 0
isbn 4064066177348



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       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      "Hello, Nan!"

      "Heyo, Ruthie!"

      "Where are you going?"

      "Over to Reid's lot."

      "Take me?"

      "No, Ruthie, can't."

      The little child's lip began to tremble. "I think you're real mean, Nan Cutler," she complained.

      Nan shook her head. "Can't help it if you do," she returned, stoutly, and took a step on.

      "Nannie," cried the child eagerly, starting after her and clutching her by the skirt, "I didn't mean that! Truly, I didn't. I think you're just as nice as you can be. Do please let me go with you. Won't you?"

      Nan compressed her lips. "Now, Ruth, look here," she said after a moment, in which she stood considering, "I'd take you in a minute if I could but the truth is—oh, you're too little."

      "I ain't too little!"

      "Well, then, your mother doesn't like you to be with me, so there!" cried Nan, in a burst of reckless frankness.

      Ruth hung her head. She could not deny it but at sight of her companion turning to leave her she again started forward, piping shrilly, "Nannie! Nannie! She won't care this time. Honest, she won't."

      Nan stalked on without turning her head.

      The hurrying little feet followed on close behind.

      "Nannie! Nannie!"

      "See here, Ruth," exclaimed the girl, veering suddenly about and speaking with decision. "You can't come, and that's all there is about it. Your mother doesn't like me, and you ought not to disobey her. Now run back home like a good little girl."

      The delicate, small face upturned to hers grew hardened and set, but the child did not move.

      Nan gave her a friendly shove on the shoulder and turned on her way again. Immediately she heard the tap of hurrying little feet behind, like the echoing sound of her own hasty footsteps. She stopped and swung about abruptly.

      "Are you going to be a good little girl and go back this minute?" she demanded sternly, calling to her assistance all the dignity of her fourteen years, and turning on the poor infant a severe, unrelenting eye.

      The child gazed up at her reproachfully, but did not reply.

      Nan felt herself fast losing patience. "Of all the provoking little witches!" she exclaimed, in an underbreath of irritation.

      Ruth's rebuking eyes surveyed her calmly, but she made no response.

      "Now be good and trot along back," cajoled Nan, changing her tactics and stroking the child's soft hair caressingly.

      There was a visible pursing of the obstinate little lips, but no further sign of acknowledgment.

      Nan dropped her voice to a tone of honey-sweetness. "See here, Ruthie, if you'll go home this minute I'll give you five cents. You can buy anything you like with it at Sam's, on the way back." She plunged her hand into her pocket and drew forth a bright new nickel, and held it alluringly aloft.

      The azure eyes gazed at it appreciatively, but the hand was not outstretched to receive it. For a second Nan reviewed the situation in silence. Then she flung about with a movement of exasperation, and marched on stolidly, and the smaller feet hastened after her, keeping pace with difficulty, and often breaking into a little run that they might not be outstripped.

      A chill autumn wind was sweeping up heavily from the northeast, and the air was cold and raw. Nan shuddered as she walked, and wished Ruth were safe and sound in her own warm home, which she never should have been permitted to leave this blustering day. A score of plans for ridding herself of her troublesome little follower crowded Nan's brain. She might run and leave the youngster behind. But then Ruth would cry, and Nan could not bear to inflict pain on a little child. She might take her up in her arms and carry her bodily back to her own door. Well, and what then? Why, simply, she would get the credit of abusing the little girl. There seemed no way out of it. She stalked on grimly, and when she came to Reid's lot she promptly and dexterously climbed its fence and continued her way in silence. But the fence proved an insurmountable obstacle to Ruth. She stood outside and wailed dismally. The sound smote Nan, and made her turn around.

      "Ruth Newton, you deserve to be spanked!" she announced, severely.

      The child uttered another wail of entreaty. Nan sprang up to the cross-bar of the palings, gathered her skirts about her knees, and leaped down.

      "Here, let me boost you, since you will get over," she said sharply.

      After they were both safely on the other side Ruth's spirit rose, and she capered about in the freedom of the open space as wildly as a young colt. Nan had come for chestnuts. She announced the same presently to Ruth. Ruth shouted gleefully.

      "I'm going to climb the tree. You can stand underneath and pick up what I shake, only mind you don't get the burr-prickles in your fingers, for they hurt like sixty," warned Nan.

      The child nodded her head and pranced over the brown, stubbly ground with dancing feet, her cheeks aglow and her eyes flashing with satisfaction.

      She watched Nan with the liveliest interest, and when the older girl was once comfortably ensconced in the lofty branches, she executed a sort of war-dance underneath, and spread her tiny skirt to catch the rain of nuts that Nan shook down upon her from above. But presently this began to pall.

      "I want to come up where you are, Nannie," she called, coaxingly.

      "You'll have to want then," retorted Nan, carelessly munching nuts like a squirrel.

      "I could climb's good as anything if only I had a boost," drawled the child ruefully.

      Nan sprinkled a handful of shucks on her head.

      "I'm going to try," ventured Ruth.

      Nan laughed.

      Ruth looked around, trying to discover some means by which she might accomplish her purpose. Nan felt so sure that the child could not do what she threatened that she made no effort to dissuade her. She, herself, passed from bough to bough as nimbly as a boy, in spite of her skirts, and in a very short time was almost out of sight among the upper spreading branches. She sat astride one of these, swinging to and fro and luxuriating in her sense of freedom and adventure. Peering down occasionally she saw Ruth standing beneath her and sent repeated showers of nuts spinning through the boughs to keep the child busy. But presently Ruth disappeared. She had spied an old piece of board and she immediately flew to get it, her silly little head filled with the idea of making it serve her as a ladder. She tugged it laboriously across the stubbly field, and her short, panting breaths did not reach Nan's ear, full of the near rustle of leaves and the hum of the scudding wind.

      "Ahoy! below there!" she shouted nautically from above.

      Ruth was too busy to respond. The board was heavy, and it took all the strength of her slight arms to get it in position.

      "Shipmate ahoy!" repeated Nan.

      By this time the board had been tilted against the tree and Ruth was scrambling up the unsteady inclined plane, too absorbed and scared in her adventure to reply. She actually managed to reach the top and to stand