The very next day Mrs. Hargrave was
called into the country to see a sick cousin.
She telephoned Minnie before she left and told her
that she felt that things were going along as well
as anyone could possibly expect, and that she was
delighted with Rosanna and her little friend.
This message distressed Minnie for she was just about
to go to see Mrs. Hargrave.
Minnie was not happy. Silly and
foolish as it was, she well knew that the proud old
Mrs. Horton would not be willing to accept as poor
and simple a child as Helen for Rosanna’s closest
friend, no matter how sweet and well mannered she
might be. Minnie, who knew real worth when she
saw it, despised Mrs. Horton for her overbearing ideas,
but what to do she didn’t know. She feared
a storm if she let things go until Mrs. Horton’s
return, yet she dreaded a separation for the children,
when they might enjoy each other for two or three
weeks longer.
Rosanna was improving daily.
Minnie was pleased and proud to see how she continued
to do for herself and learn in every way to be independent.
Her sewing was wonderful. She was working eagerly
on a little dark blue dress like Helen’s for
herself, and with Minnie’s help was even putting
a little simple cross-stitching on the cuffs and yoke.
Rosanna was prouder of that dress than of anything
she had ever had in her beautiful, crowded wardrobe.
Minnie felt that she wanted to consult
with someone, and the most sensible person she knew
was Mrs. Hargrave. But with Mrs. Hargrave away,
all Minnie could see to do was to let things go along,
and “trust to luck” as she put it.
Minnie didn’t like “trusting to luck”
at all; and every time she saw the two children playing
together so happily and busily she shook her head
and sighed.
Rosanna, too, in a dim way was feeling
troubled, because she too knew her grandmother, and
remembered other times when she had been severely
scolded for trying to make friends with children whose
parents did not measure up to the standard set by
Mrs. Horton.
In fact, for all the seeming happiness,
no one was wholly happy but Helen!
Helen had been taught by her wise
young mother that the most important things in life
are not to be measured as anything that money can buy.
According to Mrs. Culver, a little girl must be obedient
and truthful and well behaved and kind. She must
have a low and pleasant voice and be able to sit in
the presence of her elders without trying to enter
the conversation unless asked to do so. These
things she had taught Helen, and her little girl had
been a ready pupil. Mrs. Culver was justly proud
of her.
Rosanna was just a bit afraid.
And the fear caused her to go in a line that was not
perfectly straightforward. She was sorry
enough for it afterward sorrier than she
thought she could ever be. But that did not mend
things in the least.
Because she did not know just how
to turn around and explain everything to her grandmother
and still be sure of her happy time, to say nothing
of protecting her dear Helen from distress, when she
answered her grandmother’s letter she wrote
as follows:
Dear Grandmother:
“I was glad to get your letter,
and I am glad Uncle Robert is home again. Give
my love to him, please. I am glad you are having
a good time, and I hope you will stay away as long
as you like. I am having a very good time.
Oh, grandmother, I am having a lovely time. What
do you think? Mrs. Hargrave had Helen and me
to luncheon with her, and she likes Helen as much
as I do, only she doesn’t belong to the Lee family,
and after luncheon Mrs. Hargrave took us down town
with her, and before we came home she bought each
of us a gold notebook with a gold pencil on a gold
chain fastened to it. She bought herself one too
so we each have one just like a secret society.
“I am learning to cook and to
sew. I am making myself a dress. It is very
pretty. I shall make a good many of my dresses
after this. It saves a good deal of money, Minnie
says, and I can help the poor with it.
“We went out to Jacobs Park
for a picnic, and five poor little children had lost
their basket of supper. So I thought what you
would do if you saw five little children who had lost
their supper, and I asked them to have supper with
us. There was enough, on account of our taking
Uncle Robert’s hamper, and Uncle Robert always
liking to be generous.
“We have planned a great many
things. If they don’t all get done before
you come home, grandmother, perhaps you will enjoy
doing them too.
“I am learning a great deal
about the Girl Scouts. I want to be one.
“Did you know our cook has a
little lame boy at home? I was glad to find it
out. It is one more person to be kind to.
I have sent him all my set of puzzle pictures.
“Minnie is planning to get married.
She has a trunk of things. When you come home
won’t it be nice because we can go down town
and buy something for her. She will like something
you have given her.
“She likes you very much, I
am sure, because she always says, ’Well, all
I can say is there’s not many like your grandmother
in this world.’
“I think it is so nice to be
liked. I want to grow up to be liked. I
think being a Girl Scout will help. Helen says
all sorts of girls belong, rich as well as poor, and
that it broadens you.
“This is a long letter, grandmother,
but I had a good deal to tell you. So please
have a good time, grandmother, and I am your loving
little girl
“ROSANNA.”
Minnie sent a letter too. It read:
“Mrs. Horton:
“I wish to report that everything
seems to be going smoothly. Mrs. Hargrave has
taken a great liking to Miss Rosanna, and her new friend
Miss Helen, and likes to have them with her. Miss
Rosanna practices and studies faithfully, and her
music teacher says she never had such a bright pupil.
I have her take a rest in the middle of each day.
The day you left she broke her bottle of tonic, and
I could not get more, as you have the prescription.
But I do not think she needs it. She has gained
two pounds since you left us. I give her hair
a hundred strokes each night. I think she wants
to bob her hair, it is so very long and heavy, but
I tell her not for worlds, as you are so proud of it.
“We are keeping to the routine
you ordered except when Mrs. Hargrave has made some
slight change, but of course I know that is all right,
as you told me she might wish to do so.
“Respectfully,
“MINNIE.”
And Mrs. Hargrave wrote from the country
a letter full of praise for both little girls and
for Minnie.
Mrs. Horton received all three letters
the same day. She slipped them away in her portfolio,
thinking as she did so, with a smile, of Cousin Hendy’s
trunks full of letters.
One thing troubled her a little.
It seemed as though she could see in all the letters
evidences that little Rosanna was undergoing some slight
changes in her way of thinking and acting. And
Mrs. Horton did not care to have Rosanna change in
the least. She was perfectly satisfied the way
she was. It had not occurred to Mrs. Horton to
wonder if poor little motherless Rosanna was satisfied
with her pampered, lonely life.
Mrs. Horton had Rosanna’s life
all mapped out. However, she remembered the high
stone wall and reflected that the child could see very
little of the outside world if she was kept behind
that.