There was a labored playfulness in his manner which troubled me. He has bought a phaeton and pony for her. I hope that he is not going beyond his means. As for a larger parlor, I am afraid that Mrs. Weston will have to fill it with rather odd people.
July 27. Kathie has shown a new side to her character which troubles me. It is all, I suppose, part of her morbid, unhinged condition, but it is unpleasant. She has conceived a violent jealousy of baby. She refuses to stay in the house if I have Thomasine with me. This afternoon I had sent for her to come over and stay to tea. She came in about five, with a wild look in her eyes which she has almost all the time now. She sat down without saying anything, and began to pull the roses in a bowl on the table to pieces, scattering the petals on the floor.
I laughingly told her that she evidently thought she was in the woods where roses grew wild and there were no rugs. Instead of answering me, or apologizing, she looked at me strangely, and for a moment said nothing.
"Are you going to have baby brought down here this afternoon?" she demanded at last.
I said Tomine was out with Rosa, but that I expected them in soon, as it was almost time for baby's supper.
"Will she come in here?" Kathie asked.
"Oh, yes," was my reply. "You will see her. Never fear."
"Then I may as well go home now," observed this astounding child, rising, and going deliberately toward the door.
"What in the world do you mean?" I cried out, completely taken by astonishment.