Mrs. Red Pepper eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 300 pages of information about Mrs. Red Pepper.

Mrs. Red Pepper eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 300 pages of information about Mrs. Red Pepper.

“Yes, Granny, much quieter.  Go to sleep now, and make up for lost time.”

Her charge forgot to ask her what she meant to do herself, and presently dropped comfortably off into a deep slumber.  Charlotte piled on wood, making a rousing fire, and sat beside it for the rest of the night, wrapped in a blanket in the winged chair.  She shivered away the hours, unable to become warm no matter how close to the fire she crouched, and in the morning was conscious that she had taken a severe cold, quite as might have been expected.  But, as her chief anxiety was relieved by finding that Madam Chase awoke apparently in as good condition as ever and not in the least the worse for her exposure, Charlotte made light to herself of her own ill feelings.

She struggled across the street in the morning to telephone a carpenter, and as it was the dull season for workmen of his craft obtained one immediately.  He proved a conscientious person, who shook his head over the ancient window frame and advised putting in a new one with a tightly fitting sash.  By night the room was secure from the weather, and Madam Chase insisted on returning to it, in spite of Charlotte’s entreaties that she remain downstairs until the storm should be over.

“Nonsense, child,” she said firmly, “this is no place for me and my bed.  Any of our friends are likely to come in at any time, and it is impossible to keep the room looking properly under such conditions.  Besides, I much prefer my own room.”

So at her bedtime Charlotte moved her back to her quarters, having heated them to a summer temperature with the small oil-stove.

“Poof!” said the little old lady, as she was brought into the room.  “How unnecessarily warm it is here!  Just because a storm rages outside, dear, why should it be necessary to heat this room so stuffily?  The stove consumes the air.  When I’m in bed you must open the window and give me something to breathe.”

“I was so frightened last night,” Charlotte explained hoarsely in Madam Chase’s ear, “I feel like doing you up in cotton wool, lest such another icy wind blow on you.”

“Why, what a cold you have, child!” cried her grandmother, recognizing this undoubted fact more fully than she had yet done.  “You must make yourself some hot ginger tea, or some hot lemonade, and get to bed at once.  Promise me you will do it, my dear.”

Charlotte nodded, smiling in the candle-light.  Then she tucked her charge in with more than ordinary care, and spent some time in arranging the ventilation of the room to her satisfaction.  The storm outside was still heavy, but the wind was less violent, and it had changed its quarter.

She went downstairs again, finding it too early for her own bedtime, weary though she was.  Martha Macauley presently sent over a maid who was commissioned to send Charlotte across for an evening with the family, the maid herself to remain with Madam Chase.  “If you have the courage to come out in the storm,” the note read.

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Project Gutenberg
Mrs. Red Pepper from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.