ler--"
"Mrs. Thaddler?"
"O I know it was old Aberthwaite, but he represented Mrs. Thaddler and
her clique, and had come there to preach to Diantha about propriety--I
heard him,--and she brought him in and very politely introduced him to
her mother!--it was rich, Isabel."
"How did Diantha manage it?" asked her friend.
"She's been trying to arrange it for ever so long. Of course her father
objected--you'd know that. But there's a sister--not a bad sort, only
very limited; she's taken the old man to board, as it were, and I guess
the mother really set her foot down for once--said she had a right to
visit her own daughter!"
"It would seem so," Mrs. Porne agreed. "I _am_ so glad! It will be so
much easier for that brave little woman now."
It was.
Diantha held her mother in her arms the night she came, and cried tike a
baby.
"O mother _dear!_" she sobbed, "I'd no idea I should miss you so much. O
you blessed comfort!"
Her mother cried a bit too; she enjoyed this daughter more than either
of her older children, and missed her more. A mother loves all her
children, naturally; but a mother is also a person--and may, without
sin, have personal preferences.
She took hold of Diantha's tangled mass of papers with the eagerness of
a questing hound.
"You've got all the bills, of course," she demanded, with her anxious
rising inflection.
"Every one," said the girl. "You taught me that much. What puzzles me
is to make things balance. I'm making more than I thought in some lines,
and less in others, and I can't make it come out straight."
"It won't, altogether, till the end of the year I dare say," said Mrs.
Bell, "but let's get clear as far as we can. In the first place we must
separate your business,--see how much each one pays."
"The first one I want to establish," said her daughter, "is the girl's
club. Not just this one, with me to run it. But to show that any group
of twenty or thirty girls could do this thing in any city. Of course
where rents and provisions were high they'd have to charge more. I want
to make an average showing somehow. Now can you disentangle the girl
part front the lunch part and the food part, mother dear, and make it
all straight?"
Mrs. Bell could and did; it gave her absolute delight to do it. She set
down the total of Diantha's expenses so far in the Service Department,
as follows:
Rent of Union House $1,500
Rent of furniture...................
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