To Susan the thought of hypodermics, anesthetics, antisepsis and clinic thermometers, charts and diets, was utterly mysterious and abhorrent, and her healthy distaste for them amused Emily, and gave Emily a good reason for discussing and defending them.
Susan’s part was to listen and agree, listen and agree, listen and agree, on this as on all topics. She had not been long at “High Gardens” before Emily, in a series of impulsive gushes of confidence, had volunteered the information that Ella was so jealous and selfish and heartless that she was just about breaking Mama’s heart, never happy unless she was poisoning somebody’s mind against Emily, and never willing to let Emily keep a single friend, or do anything she wanted to do.
“So now you see why I am always so dignified and quiet with Ella,” said Emily, in the still midnight when all this was revealed. “That’s the one thing that makes her mad!”
“I can’t believe it!” said Susan, aching for sleep, and yawning under cover of the dark.
“I keep up for Mama’s sake,” Emily said. “But haven’t you noticed how Ella tries to get you away from me? You must have! Why, the very first night you were here, she called out, ’Come in and see me on your way down!’ Don’t you remember? And yesterday, when I wasn’t dressed and she wanted you to go driving, after dinner! Don’t you remember?”
“Yes, but—–” Susan began. She could dismiss this morbid fancy with a few vigorous protests, with a hearty laugh. But she would probably dismiss herself from the Saunders’ employ, as well, if she pursued any such bracing policy.
“You poor kid, it’s pretty hard on you!” she said, admiringly. And for half an hour she was not allowed to go to sleep.
Susan began to dread these midnight talks. The moon rose, flooded the sleeping porch, mounted higher. The watch under Susan’s pillow ticked past one o’clock, past half-past one—
“Emily, you know really Ella is awfully proud of you,” she was finally saying, “and, as for trying to influence your mother, you can’t blame her. You’re your mother’s favorite—anyone can see that--and I do think she feels—”
“Well, that’s true!” Emily said, mollified. A silence followed. Susan began to settle her head by imperceptible degrees into the pillow; perhaps Emily was dropping off! Silence—silence—heavenly delicious silence. What a wonderful thing this sleeping porch was, Susan thought drowsily, and how delicious the country night—
“Susan, why do you suppose I am Mama’s favorite?” Emily’s clear, wide-awake voice would pursue, with pensive interest.
Or, “Susan, when did you begin to like me?” she would question, on their drives. “Susan, when I was looking straight up into Mrs. Carter’s face,—you know the way I always do!—she laughed at me, and said I was a madcap monkey? Why did she say that?” Emily would pout, and wrinkle her brows in pretty, childish doubt. “I’m not a monkey, and I don’t think I’m a madcap? Do you?”