"There, Miss Ruth!" cried Hannah.
"There, Miss Privet!" cried Rosa.
"Well," I said defensively; "I expected her to cry some."
"She wants to be walked with, poor little thing," Rosa said incautiously.
I was rejoiced to have a chance to turn the tables, and I sprang upon her tacit admission at once.
"Rosa," I said severely, "have you been walking Thomasine to sleep? I told you never to do it."
Rosa, self-convicted, could only murmur that she had just taken her up and down two or three times to make her sleepy; she hadn't really walked her to sleep.
"What if she had?" Hannah demanded boldly, her place entirely forgotten in the excitement of the moment. "If babies like to be walked to sleep, it stands to reason that's nature."
I began to feel as if all authority were fast slipping away from me, and that I should at this rate soon become a very secondary person in my own house. I tried to recover myself by assuming the most severe air of which I was capable.