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Dorinda’s Desperate Deed
by
“Leicester,” said Mrs. Page.
Dorinda winked her eyes as she always did when she was doubtful.
“Well, I knew he was one of them, but I wasn’t going to put him the very first. However, we will. Leicester’s case stands thus. He is a pretty smart boy–if he wasn’t my brother, I’d say he was a very smart boy. He has gone as far in his studies as Willowdale School can take him, has qualified for entrance into the Blue Hill Academy, wants to go there this fall and begin the beginnings of a college course. Well, of course, Mother Page, we can’t send Leicester to Blue Hill any more than we can send him to the moon.”
“No,” mourned Mrs. Page, “and the poor boy feels so badly over it. His heart is set on going to college and being a doctor like his father. He believes he could work his way through, if he could only get a start. But there isn’t any chance. And I can’t afford to keep him at school any longer. He is going into Mr. Churchill’s store at Willow Centre in the fall. Mr. Churchill has very kindly offered him a place. Leicester hates the thought of it–I know he does, although he never says so.”
“Next to Leicester’s college course we want–“
“Music lessons for Jean.”
Dorinda winked again.
“Are music lessons for Jean really a difficulty?” she said. “That is, one spelled with a capital?”
“Oh, yes, Dorinda dear. At least, I’m worried over it. Jean loves music so, and she has never had anything, poor child, not even as much school as she ought to have had. I’ve had to keep her home so much to help me with the work. She has been such a good, patient little girl too, and her heart is set on music lessons.”
“Well, she must have them then–after we get Leicester’s year at the academy for him. That’s two. The third is a new–“
“The roof must be shingled this fall,” said Mrs. Page anxiously. “It really must, Dorinda. It is no better than a sieve. We are nearly drowned every time it rains. But I don’t know where the money to do it is going to come from.”
“Shingles for the roof, three,” said Dorinda, as if she were carefully jotting down something in a mental memorandum. “And fourth–now, Mother Page, I will have my say this time–fourthly, biggest capital of all, a Nice, New Dress and a Warm Fur Coat for Mother Page this winter. Yes, yes, you must have them, dearest. It’s absolutely necessary. We can wait a year or so for college courses and music lessons to grow; we can set basins under the leaks and borrow some more if we haven’t enough. But a new dress and coat for you we must, shall, and will have, however it is to be brought about.”
“I wouldn’t mind if I never got another new stitch, if I could only manage the other things,” said Mrs. Page stoutly. “If your Uncle Eugene would only help us a little, until Leicester got through! He really ought to. But of course he never will.”
“Have you ever asked him?” said Dorinda.
“Oh, my dear, no; of course not,” said Mrs. Page in a horrified tone, as if Dorinda had asked if she had ever stolen a neighbour’s spoons.
“I don’t see why you shouldn’t,” said Dorinda seriously.
“Oh, Dorinda, Uncle Eugene hates us all. He is terribly bitter against us. He would never, never listen to any request for help, even if I could bring myself to make it.”
“Mother, what was the trouble between us and Uncle Eugene? I have never known the rights of it. I was too small to understand when I was home before. All I remember is that Uncle Eugene never came to see us or spoke to us when he met us anywhere, and we were all afraid of him somehow. I used to think of him as an ogre who would come creeping up the back stairs after dark and carry me off bodily if I wasn’t good. What made him our enemy? And how did he come to get all of Grandfather Page’s property when Father got nothing?”