The room’s vigor and cleanliness inspired Miss Fogg to attempt mending her clothes and putting them in order.
“It would be a right funny thing,” she said, “if I couldn’t put my own old duds to rights, me that always did the fine sewin’ for all the swellest brides in town.”
Her fits of depression and indifference persisted but, sustained by Julie, she was more alive between the attacks, more able to look after herself.
One morning when Julie went up to her, she found the old woman, a fantastic gingham cap upon her head, busy turning out all her drawers, with a spasmodic energy.
“I got to get everything straight—all nice and clean,” she announced. “Wait,” she added. She tiptoed across to the door and closed it. “Sh-sh!” she whispered. “There ain’t a soul in this house a person can trust. They spy on me all the time. They peep at me over the transom an’ spy in at the keyhole. Ain’t it just awful what some folks will do?”
She stood close to Julie and spoke into her ear mysteriously. “Sh-sh! there’s one of ’em at the keyhole now.”
Julie went quickly over and threw wide the door. The hall was completely empty.
“There’s nobody there,” she said. “You just thought you heard somebody.”
“Hm!” the old woman retorted scornfully but still whispering. “So you think; but they don’t fool me. They’re quick enough to jump away when you open the door. I’ve quit doin’ that. I’m up to their tricks, an’ I got a way to fool ’em all right.”
Catching up an old spotted handkerchief, she hung it stealthily on the handle of the door. “There, that’ll fix ’em!” she triumphed. “If they want to peep, let ’em peep into that handkerchief. They’ll see all them red spots, an’ then they’ll run out in the street an’ say, ‘Old Miss Fogg’s done killed herself, an’ her blood’s all over the floor.’ That’d be funny, wouldn’t it?” She gave a sudden crazy laugh. “I kin kill myself all right, but it won’t be none er their business if I do. It won’t be their brains on the floor.”