II

In a few days’ time the list was ready. It ran like this:

£ s. d.
Mrs. Meadows’ false teeth want mending.
It can be done for
0 12 6
Tommy Pringle ought to go to a Nursing
Home by the sea for three weeks. This
costs 7s. a week and 5s. 4d. return fare
1 6 4
Old Mrs. Wigram really must have a new
bonnet
0 4 6
Mrs. Ryan has been saving up for months
to buy a sewing machine. She had it all
ready, but Sarah’s illness has taken away
10s. I should like to make that up
0 10 0
The little Barretts ought to have a real ball.
It isn’t any fun playing with a bit of
wood
0 1 0
Mr. Eyles has broken his spectacles again 0 2 6
Old Mr. and Mrs. Snelling have never been
in London, and they’re both nearly eighty.
I’m sure they ought to go. There is an
excursion on the first of the month at 3s.
return each, and their grandson’s wife
would look after them there. Fraser’s
cart to the station and back would be 4s.
0 10 0
Mrs. Callow will lose all her peas and currants
again if she doesn’t have a net
0 3 0
The schoolmaster says that the one thing
that would get the boys to the village
room is a gramaphone like the one at the
public-house. This is 15s., and twelve
tunes for 9s.
1 4 0
Mrs. Carter’s mangle will cost 8s. to be
mended, but it must be done
0 8 0
Thomas Barnes’ truck is no good any more,
and his illness took away all the money
he had; but he will never take it if he
knows it comes from us
1 10 0

Mary read through her list and once more added up the figures. They came to £6 11s. 10d.

“Dear me!” she said, “I hadn’t any idea it was so difficult to be an almoner.”

She went through the list again, and brought it down to £5 0s. 10d. by knocking off one week of Tommy Pringle’s sea-side holiday and depriving the village room of its gramaphone.

“I suppose I must make up the tenpence myself,” she said.