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<h2> VIII </h2>
<h3> JANE </h3>
<p>William's period of peculiar sensitiveness dated from that evening, and
Jane, in particular, caused him a great deal of anxiety. In fact, he began
to feel that Jane was a mortification which his parents might have spared
him, with no loss to themselves or to the world. Not having shown that
consideration for anybody, they might at least have been less spinelessly
indulgent of her. William's bitter conviction was that he had never seen a
child so starved of discipline or so lost to etiquette as Jane.</p>
<p>For one thing, her passion for bread-and-butter, covered with apple sauce
and powdered sugar, was getting to be a serious matter. Secretly, William
was not yet so changed by love as to be wholly indifferent to this
refection himself, but his consumption of it was private, whereas Jane had
formed the habit of eating it in exposed places—such as the front
yard or the sidewalk. At no hour of the day was it advisable for a
relative to approach the neighborhood in fastidious company, unless
prepared to acknowledge kinship with a spindly young person either eating
bread-and-butter and apple sauce and powdered sugar, or all too visibly
just having eaten bread-and-butter and apple sauce and powdered sugar.
Moreover, there were times when Jane had worse things than apple sauce to
answer for, as William made clear to his mother in an oration as hot as
the July noon sun which looked down upon it.</p>
<p>Mrs. Baxter was pleasantly engaged with a sprinkling-can and some small
flower-beds in the shady back yard, and Jane, having returned from various
sidewalk excursions, stood close by as a spectator, her hands replenished
with the favorite food and her chin rising and falling in gentle motions,
little prophecies of the slight distensions which passed down her slender
throat with slow, rhythmic regularity. Upon this calm scene came William,
plunging round a corner of the house, furious yet plaintive.</p>
<p>"You've got to do something about that child!" he began. "I CAN not stand
it!"</p>
<p>Jane looked at him dumbly, not ceasing, how ever, to eat; while Mrs.
Baxter thoughtfully continued her sprinkling.</p>
<p>"You've been gone all morning, Willie," she said. "I thought your father
mentioned at breakfast that he expected you to put in at least four hours
a day on your mathematics and—"</p>
<p>"That's neither here nor there," William returned, vehemently. "I just
want to say this: if you don't do something about Jane, I will! Just look
at her! LOOK at her, I ask you! That's just the way she looked half an
hour ago, out on the public sidewalk in front of the house, when I came by
here with Miss PRATT! That was pleasant, wasn't it? To be walking with a
lady on the public street and meet a member of my family looking like
that! Oh, LOVELY!"</p>
<p>In the anguish of this recollection his voice cracked, and though his eyes
were dry his gestures wept for him. Plainly, he was about to reach the
most lamentable portion of his narrative. "And then she HOLLERED at me!
She hollered, 'Oh, WILL—EE!'" Here he gave an imitation of Jane's
voice, so damnatory that Jane ceased to eat for several moments and drew
herself up with a kind of dignity. "She hollered, 'Oh, WILL—EE' at
me!" he stormed. "Anybody would think I was about six years old! She
hollered, 'Oh, Will—ee,' and she rubbed her stomach and slushed
apple sauce all over her face, and she kept hollering, 'Will—ee!'
with her mouth full. 'Will—ee, look! Good! Bread-and-butter and
apple sauce and sugar! I bet you wish YOU had some, Will—ee!'"</p>
<p>"You did eat some, the other day," said Jane. "You ate a whole lot. You
eat it every chance you get!"</p>
<p>"You hush up!" he shouted, and returned to his description of the outrage.
"She kept FOLLOWING us! She followed us, hollering, 'WILL—EE!' till
it's a wonder we didn't go deaf! And just look at her! I don't see how you
can stand it to have her going around like that and people knowing it's
your child! Why, she hasn't got enough ON!"</p>
<p>Mrs. Baxter laughed. "Oh, for this very hot weather, I really don't think
people notice or care much about—"</p>
<p>"'Notice'!" he wailed. "I guess Miss PRATT noticed! Hot weather's no
excuse for—for outright obesity!" (As Jane was thin, it is probable
that William had mistaken the meaning of this word.) "Why, half o' what
she HAS got on has come unfastened—especially that frightful thing
hanging around her leg—and look at her back, I just beg you! I ask
you to look at her back. You can see her spinal cord!"</p>
<p>"Column," Mrs. Baxter corrected. "Spinal column, Willie."</p>
<p>"What do <i>I</i> care which it is?" he fumed. "People aren't supposed to
go around with it EXPOSED, whichever it is! And with apple sauce on their
ears!"</p>
<p>"There is not!" Jane protested, and at the moment when she spoke she was
right. Naturally, however, she lifted her hands to the accused ears, and
the unfortunate result was to justify William's statement.</p>
<p>"LOOK!" he cried. "I just ask you to look! Think of it: that's the sight I
have to meet when I'm out walking with Miss PRATT! She asked me who it
was, and I wish you'd seen her face. She wanted to know who 'that curious
child' was, and I'm glad you didn't hear the way she said it. 'Who IS that
curious child?' she said, and I had to tell her it was my sister. I had to
tell Miss PRATT it was my only SISTER!"</p>
<p>"Willie, who is Miss Pratt?" asked Mrs. Baxter, mildly. "I don't think
I've ever heard of—"</p>
<p>Jane had returned to an admirable imperturbability, but she chose this
moment to interrupt her mother, and her own eating, with remarks delivered
in a tone void of emphasis or expression.</p>
<p>"Willie's mashed on her," she said, casually. "And she wears false
side-curls. One almost came off."</p>
<p>At this unspeakable desecration William's face was that of a high priest
stricken at the altar.</p>
<p>"She's visitin' Miss May Parcher," added the deadly Jane. "But the
Parchers are awful tired of her. They wish she'd go home, but they don't
like to tell her so."</p>
<p>One after another these insults from the canaille fell upon the ears of
William. That slanders so atrocious could soil the universal air seemed
unthinkable.</p>
<p>He became icily calm.</p>
<p>"NOW if you don't punish her," he said, deliberately, "it's because you
have lost your sense of duty!"</p>
<p>Having uttered these terrible words, he turned upon his heel and marched
toward the house. His mother called after him:</p>
<p>"Wait, Willie. Jane doesn't mean to hurt your feelings—"</p>
<p>"My feelings!" he cried, the iciness of his demeanor giving way under the
strain of emotion. "You stand there and allow her to speak as she did of
one of the—one of the—" For a moment William appeared to be at
a loss, and the fact is that it always has been a difficult matter to
describe THE bright, ineffable divinity of the world to one's mother,
especially in the presence of an inimical third party of tender years.
"One of the—" he said; "one of the—the noblest—one of
the noblest—"</p>
<p>Again he paused.</p>
<p>"Oh, Jane didn't mean anything," said Mrs. Baxter. "And if you think Miss
Pratt is so nice, I'll ask May Parcher to bring her to tea with us some
day. If it's too hot, we'll have iced tea, and you can ask Johnnie Watson,
if you like. Don't get so upset about things, Willie!"</p>
<p>"'Upset'!" he echoed, appealing to heaven against this word. "'Upset'!"
And he entered the house in a manner most dramatic.</p>
<p>"What made you say that?" Mrs. Baxter asked, turning curiously to Jane
when William had disappeared. "Where did you hear any such things?"</p>
<p>"I was there," Jane replied, gently eating on and on. William could come
and William could go, but Jane's alimentary canal went on forever.</p>
<p>"You were where, Jane?"</p>
<p>"At the Parchers'."</p>
<p>"Oh, I see."</p>
<p>"Yesterday afternoon," said Jane, "when Miss Parcher had the Sunday-school
class for lemonade and cookies."</p>
<p>"Did you hear Miss Parcher say—"</p>
<p>"No'm," said Jane. "I ate too many cookies, I guess, maybe. Anyways, Miss
Parcher said I better lay down—"</p>
<p>"LIE down, Jane."</p>
<p>"Yes'm. On the sofa in the liberry, an' Mrs. Parcher an' Mr. Parcher came
in there an' sat down, after while, an' it was kind of dark, an' they
didn't hardly notice me, or I guess they thought I was asleep, maybe.
Anyways, they didn't talk loud, but Mr. Parcher would sort of grunt an'
ack cross. He said he just wished he knew when he was goin' to have a home
again. Then Mrs. Parcher said May HAD to ask her Sunday-school class, but
he said he never meant the Sunday-school class. He said since Miss Pratt
came to visit, there wasn't anywhere he could go, because Willie Baxter
an' Johnnie Watson an' Joe Bullitt an' all the other ones like that were
there all the time, an' it made him just sick at the stummick, an' he did
wish there was some way to find out when she was goin' home, because he
couldn't stand much more talk about love. He said Willie an' Johnnie
Watson an' Joe Bullitt an' Miss Pratt were always arguin' somep'm about
love, an' he said Willie was the worst. Mamma, he said he didn't like the
rest of it, but he said he guessed he could stand it if it wasn't for
Willie. An' he said the reason they were all so in love of Miss Pratt was
because she talks baby-talk, an' he said he couldn't stand much more
baby-talk. Mamma, she has the loveliest little white dog, an' Mr. Parcher
doesn't like it. He said he couldn't go anywhere around the place without
steppin' on the dog or Willie Baxter. An' he said he couldn't sit on his
own porch any more; he said he couldn't sit even in the liberry but he had
to hear baby-talk goin' on SOMEwheres an' then either Willie Baxter or Joe
Bullitt or somebody or another arguin' about love. Mamma, he said"—Jane
became impressive—"he said, mamma, he said he didn't mind the
Sunday-school class, but he couldn't stand those dam boys!"</p>
<p>"Jane!" Mrs. Baxter cried, "you MUSTN'T say such things!"</p>
<p>"I didn't, mamma. Mr. Parcher said it. He said he couldn't stand those da—"</p>
<p>"JANE! No matter what he said, you mustn't repeat—"</p>
<p>"But I'm not. I only said Mr. PARCHER said he couldn't stand those d—"</p>
<p>Mrs. Baxter cut the argument short by imprisoning Jane's mouth with a firm
hand. Jane continued to swallow quietly until released. Then she said:</p>
<p>"But, mamma, how can I tell you what he said unless I say—"</p>
<p>"Hush!" Mrs. Baxter commanded. "You must never, never again use such a
terrible and wicked word."</p>
<p>"I won't, mamma," Jane said, meekly. Then she brightened. "Oh, <i>I</i>
know! I'll say 'word' instead. Won't that be all right?"</p>
<p>"I—I suppose so."</p>
<p>"Well, Mr. Parcher said he couldn't stand those word boys. That sounds all
right, doesn't it, mamma?"</p>
<p>Mrs. Baxter hesitated, but she was inclined to hear as complete as
possible a report of Mr. and Mrs. Parcher's conversation, since it seemed
to concern William so nearly; and she well knew that Jane had her own way
of telling things—or else they remained untold.</p>
<p>"I—I suppose so," Mrs. Baxter said, again.</p>
<p>"Well, they kind of talked along," Jane continued, much pleased;—"an'
Mr. Parcher said when he was young he wasn't any such a—such a word
fool as these young word fools were. He said in all his born days Willie
Baxter was the wordest fool he ever saw!"</p>
<p>Willie Baxter's mother flushed a little. "That was very unjust and very
wrong of Mr. Parcher," she said, primly.</p>
<p>"Oh no, mamma!" Jane protested. "Mrs. Parcher thought so, too."</p>
<p>"Did she, indeed!"</p>
<p>"Only she didn't say word or wordest or anything like that," Jane
explained. "She said it was because Miss Pratt had coaxed him to be so in
love of her, an' Mr. Parcher said he didn't care whose fault it was,
Willie was a—a word calf an' so were all the rest of 'em, Mr.
Parcher said. An' he said he couldn't stand it any more. Mr. Parcher said
that a whole lot of times, mamma. He said he guess' pretty soon he'd haf
to be in the lunatic asylum if Miss Pratt stayed a few more days with her
word little dog an' her word Willie Baxter an' all the other word calfs.
Mrs. Parcher said he oughtn't to say 'word,' mamma. She said, 'Hush,
hush!' to him, mamma. He talked like this, mamma: he said, 'I'll be word
if I stand it!' An' he kept gettin' crosser, an' he said, 'Word! Word!
WORD! WOR—'"</p>
<p>"There!" Mrs. Baxter interrupted, sharply. "That will do, Jane! We'll talk
about something else now, I think."</p>
<p>Jane looked hurt; she was taking great pleasure in this confidential
interview, and gladly would have continued to quote the harried Mr.
Parcher at great length. Still, she was not entirely uncontent: she must
have had some perception that her performance merely as a notable bit of
reportorial art—did not wholly lack style, even if her attire did.
Yet, brilliant as Jane's work was, Mrs. Baxter felt no astonishment;
several times ere this Jane had demonstrated a remarkable faculty for the
retention of details concerning William. And running hand in hand with a
really superb curiosity, this powerful memory was making Jane an even
greater factor in William's life than he suspected.</p>
<p>During the glamors of early love, if there be a creature more deadly than
the little brother of a budding woman, that creature is the little sister
of a budding man. The little brother at least tells in the open all he
knows, often at full power of his lungs, and even that may be avoided,
since he is wax in the hands of bribery; but the little sister is more apt
to save her knowledge for use upon a terrible occasion; and, no matter
what bribes she may accept, she is certain to tell her mother everything.
All in all, a young lover should arrange, if possible, to be the only
child of elderly parents; otherwise his mother and sister are sure to know
a great deal more about him than he knows that they know.</p>
<p>This was what made Jane's eyes so disturbing to William during lunch that
day. She ate quietly and competently, but all the while he was conscious
of her solemn and inscrutable gaze fixed upon him; and she spoke not once.
She could not have rendered herself more annoying, especially as William
was trying to treat her with silent scorn, for nothing is more irksome to
the muscles of the face than silent scorn, when there is no means of
showing it except by the expression. On the other hand, Jane's
inscrutability gave her no discomfort whatever. In fact, inscrutability is
about the most comfortable expression that a person can wear, though the
truth is that just now Jane was not really inscrutable at all.</p>
<p>She was merely looking at William and thinking of Mr. Parcher.</p>
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