Really, I have left Aunt Selina rather out of it, but she was important
as a cause, not as a result; at least at first. She came out strong
later. I believe she was a very nice old woman, with strong likes and
prejudices, which she was perfectly willing to pay for. At least, I only
presume she had likes; I know she had prejudices.
Nobody ever understood why Bella consented to take Betty's place with
Aunt Selina. As for me, I was too much engrossed with my own affairs
to pay the invalid much attention. Once or twice during the day I had
stopped in to see her, and had been received frigidly and with marked
disapproval. I was in disgrace, of course, after the scene in the dining
room the night before. I had stood like a naughty child, just inside the
door, and replied meekly when she said the pillows were overstuffed, and
why didn't I have the linen slips rinsed in starch water? She laid the
blame of her illness on me, as I have said before, and she made Jim read
to her in the afternoon from a book she carried with her, Coals of Fire
on the DOMESTIC Hearth, marking places for me to read.
She sent for me that night, just as I had taken off my gown; so I threw
on a dressing gown and went in. To my horror, Jim was already there. At
a gesture from Aunt Selina, he closed the door into the hall and tiptoed
back beside the bed, where he sat staring at the figures on the silk
comfort.
Aunt Selina's first words were: "Where's that flibberty-gibbet?"
Jim looked at me.
"She must mean Betty," I explained. "She has gone to bed, I think."
"Don't--let--her--in--this--room--again," she said, with awful emphasis.
"She is an infamous creature."
"Oh, come now, Aunt Selina," Jim broke in; "she's foolish, perhaps, but
she's a nice little thing."
Aunt Selina's face was a curious study. Then she raised herself on her
elbow, and, taking a flat chamois-skin bag from under her pillow, held
it out.
"My cameo breastpin," she said solemnly; "my cuff-buttons with gold rims
and storks painted on china in the middle; my watch, that has put me to
bed and got me up for forty years, and my money--five hundred and ten
dollars and forty cents!--taken with the doors locked under my nose."
Which was ambiguous, but forcible.
"But, good gracious, Miss Car--Aunt Selina!" I exclaimed, "you don't
think Betty Mercer took those things?"
"No," she said grimly; "I think I probably got up in my sleep and
lighted the fire with them, or sent em out for a walk." Then she stuffed
the bag away and sat up resolutely in bed.
"Have you made up?" she demanded, looking from one to the other of us.
"Bella, don't tell me you still persist in that nonsense."