The Heart's Kingdom - Page 25/148

"You said I might go 'next time' when my Auntie Harriet didn't want me

to go with you last Tuesday on account of my stomach from the raw potato

Jimmy dared me to eat. This is that time," she calmly answered, as she

gave an interested look at the silent Bill and again settled the short,

pink skirts.

"Yes, I did say that," admitted Mr. Goodloe, as he turned in his seat as

far as he could and began to argue the question. "But we shall be gone

almost all day and I am afraid your mother wouldn't want you to be gone

that long."

"Is it true for you to say that when you know that she will be mighty

glad for you to keep me safe with you all day?" Charlotte demanded of

him, looking directly into his smiling, friendly face.

"No, that wasn't quite honest, I'll admit," he answered her gravely with

the guilt of conviction showing in his face just as plainly as it would

have shown if one of his deacons had caught him evading a question of

grave moment. "And as it is the fulfillment of a promise which you

claim, I am going to ask Miss Powers and the judge if they will permit

me to add you to the party, and then go and get permission from your

mother to take you with us."

"My mother told me to go and bother Auntie Charlotte an hour or two and

that was when I met you. I ran into the car just minding my mother,"

Charlotte answered him with calm pride at her near achievement of death

through literal obedience.

"Just drive by and we'll call to Nell. I am afraid the case must have

been desperate, for I am seldom the victim," I said in an undertone to

our host, who acquiesced with a laugh. "Harriet Henderson must be dead,

for Nell usually sends the worse one to her," I added under my breath.

"My Auntie Harriet is having a man cut the ache out of one of her

teeth," Charlotte remarked, apropos of nothing, as the huge car swung

around into the street in which the Morgans reside. "And, besides, I

don't like her any more, because, when she said Sue had to have part of

the doll house she bought for us to play in down at her home, and I said

then Sue would have to take the outside because I wanted the inside, she

locked it up for all this week."

"The modern business acumen of the feministic persuasion," father

remarked, as we all laughed at this candid revelation of an egocentric

attitude of mind in small Charlotte.

After a few whirls of the gray wheels we paused a moment at the Morgan

gate.