Porridge, eggs and bacon, marmalade--
"And--her golden hair was hanging--" croaked Edward.
"Your aunt won't come down this morning, Maggie.She's much better.
The sun's shining.A little walk will be a good thing.I'll buy the calico that Anne talked about.Your aunt's better."Maggie felt ashamed of herself.What desperate silly feelings had she allowed last night? How much she had made of that service, and how weak she was to give way so easily!
"I'll clean the silver," she thought."I'll do it better than ever"--but unfortunately she had a hole in her stocking, and Aunt Elizabeth, like a sparrow who has found a worm, told her about it.
"Mr.Crashaw's coming to tea this afternoon," she concluded.
"That's why Anne's staying in bed--to be well enough." The stocking and Mr.Crashaw dimmed a little of the morning's radiance, but behind them was the thought, "Martin must come to-day.It was like a message his look last night." She even sang to herself as she scrubbed at the silver.
They spent a domestic morning.Aunt Elizabeth did not go for her walk, but instead stayed in the dining-room and, seated at the end of the long dining-table, her head just appearing above the worn and soiled green table-cloth, tried to discipline the week's household accounts.She worked sucking one finger after another and poking her pencil into her ears.
"One pound, three shillings--ham, ham, ham--?"At one moment she invited the cook to assist her, and that lady, crimson from the kitchen fire, bared arms akimbo, stated that she was not only the most economical woman in London, but was also, thanks to her upbringing, one of the most sober and virtuous, and if Miss Cardinal had anything to say against--Oh no! Aunt Elizabeth had nothing to say against, only this one pound, three shillings--Well, the cook couldn't help that; she wasn't one to let a penny out of her fingers where it shouldn't go.