"And so you, too, have cared for the orphan," said Mrs. Campbell. "Well, you will find it a task to rear her as she should be reared, but a consciousness of doing right makes every thing seem easy. My dear, (speaking to Ella,) run out and play awhile with your sister, I wish to see Mrs. Mason alone."
"You may go into the garden," said Mrs. Mason to Mary, who arose to obey; but Ella hung back, saying she 'didn't want to go,—the garden was all nasty, and she should dirty her clothes."
"But, my child," said Mrs. Campbell, "I wish to have you go, and you love to obey me, do you not?"
Still Ella hesitated, and when Mary took hold of her hand, she jerked it away, saying, "Let me be."
At last she was persuaded to leave the room, but on reaching the hall she stopped, and to Mary's amazement applied her ear to the keyhole.
"I guess I know how to cheat her," said she in a whisper. "I've been sent off before, but I listened and heard her talk about me."
"Talk about you!" repeated Mary. "What did she say?"
"Oh, 'set me up,' as Sarah says," returned Ella; and Mary, who had never had the advantage of a waiting maid, and who consequently was not so well posted on "slang terms," asked what "setting up" meant.
"Why," returned Ella, "she tells them how handsome and smart I am, and repeats some cunning thing I've said or done; and sometimes she tells it right before me, and that's why I didn't want to come out."
This time, however, Mrs. Campbell's conversation related more particularly to Mary.