Kaethe gave a gasp. But she, too, was no saver.
"Magnificent," she cried. She was faint with hunger herself. Yes, for once ... then she turned to Carli.
"Carli must drink his mimi," she said, as she held the cup tenderly to his lips.
The other children looked on absorbed in the spectacle. Resl cried, drawing her breath in:
"Carli's having such a wonderful drink!" and Hansi with his eyes very big, asked,
"Carli, does it taste good?" and they all hung close about him as he drank in tiny not very hungry sips.
"I'd show Carli how to drink if I had the chance!" continued Hansi, moving his feet up and down in famished impatience.
"I do wish Leo were here to see the children," said Kaethe to her aunt, "but he won't be back till past one o'clock, though he goes as early as he can to the Stephansplatz. It's just wonderful to think they're going to have enough. It's seeing them after they've had their dinner that is sometimes the worst."
A long, impatient ring was heard at the door. Resl ran to open it and Lilli came in with a dash in spite of the broken handle of her basket of briquets. She threw off the disfiguring coat she wore and revealed herself in a very worn, sea-blue dress of some smooth, silky material. It lay beautifully about the white column of her young neck, it repeated the blue of her wide eyes, it heightened the fine pallor of her cheeks, it burnished the pale gold of her hair. There were gleaming bits of embroidery in places meant to accent the curves of a more mature figure. Quite evidently made-over, too, was the elaborate, dark blue cloth dress that Resl wore. Indeed, they all wore garments or parts of garments quite patently not fulfilling their original raison d'être, that struck a note of gay luxury in the large, shabby room.
Lilli's objective was the kitchen. She was greeted with shouts. The rice was boiling briskly, the odor of the cheese was in the air. The package of "feinste Keks," made of a combination of ersatz substances meant to deceive the palate and annoy the stomach, looked gayly, impudently at them beside the little pile of apples. As Lilli took it all in, a tiny line that sometimes showed itself between those lovely eyes was quite smoothed out.