she returned to her husband's study. 
Her husband, it seemed, had not noticed her absence. Still poring over 
the tomes and commentaries incidental to the preparation of his next 
Sunday's sermon his fine face glowed half frown, half ecstasy, in the 
December twilight, while close at his elbow all unnoticed a smoking 
kerosine lamp went smudging its acrid path to the ceiling. Dusky lock 
for dusky lock, dreamy eye for dreamy eye, smoking lamp for smoking 
lamp, it might have been a short-haired replica of Flame herself. 
"Oh if Flame had only been 'set' like the maternal side of the house!" 
reasoned Flame's Mother. "Or merely dreamy like her Father! Her 
Father being only dreamy could sometimes be diverted from his dreams! 
But to be 'set' and 'dreamy' both? Absolutely 'set' on being absolutely 
'dreamy'? That was Flame!" With renewed tenacity Flame's Mother 
reverted to Truth as Truth. "Dogs do not take houses!" she affirmed 
with unmistakable emphasis. 
"Eh? What?" jumped her husband. "Dogs? Dogs? Who said anything 
about dogs?" With a fretted pucker between his brows he bent to his 
work again. "You interrupted me," he reproached her. "My sermon is 
about Hell-Fire.--I had all but smelled it.--It was very disagreeable." 
With a gesture of impatience he snatched up his notes and tore them in 
two. "I think I will write about the Garden of Eden instead!" he rallied. 
"The Garden of Eden in Iris time! Florentina Alba everywhere! 
Whiteness! Sweetness!--Now let me see,--orris root I believe is 
deducted from the Florentina Alba--." 
"U--m--m--m," sniffed Flame's Mother. With an impulse purely 
practical she started for the kitchen. "The season happens to be 
Christmas time," she suggested bluntly. "Now if you could see your
way to make a sermon that smelt like doughnuts and plum-pudding--" 
"Doughnuts?" queried her Husband and hurried after her. 
Supplementing the far, remote Glory-of-God expression in his face, the 
glory-of-doughnuts shone suddenly very warmly. 
Flame at least did not have to be reminded about the Seasons. 
"Oh mother!" telephoned Flame almost at once, "It's--so much nearer 
Christmas than it was half an hour ago! Are you sure everything will 
keep? All those big packages that came yesterday? That humpy one 
especially? Don't you think you ought to peep? Or poke? Just the 
teeniest, tiniest little peep or poke? It would be a shame if anything 
spoiled! A--turkey--or a--or a fur coat--or anything." 
"I am--making doughnuts," confided her Mother with the faintest 
possible taint of asperity. 
"O--h," conceded Flame. "And Father's watching them? Then I'll hurry! 
M--Mother?" deprecated the excited young voice. "You are always so 
horridly right! Lopsy and Beautiful-Lovely and Blunder-Blot are not 
Christmasing all alone in the Rattle-Pane House! There is a man with 
them! Don't tell Father,--he's so nervous about men!" 
"A--man?" stammered her Mother. "Oh I hope not a young man! 
Where did he come from?" 
"Oh I don't think he came at all," confided Flame. It was Flame who 
was perplexed this time. "He looks to me more like a person who had 
always been there! Like something I mean that the dogs found in the 
attic! Quite crumpled he is! And with a red waistcoat!--A--A butler 
perhaps?--A--A sort of a second hand butler? Oh Mother!--I wish we 
had a butler!" 
"Flame--?" interrupted her Mother quite abruptly. "Where are you 
doing all this telephoning from? I only gave you eighteen cents and it 
was to buy cereal with."
"Cereal?" considered Flame. "Oh that's all right," she glowed suddenly. 
"I've paid cash for the telephoning and charged the cereal." 
With a swallow faintly guttural Flame's Mother hung up the receiver. 
"Dogs--do--not--have--butlers," she persisted unshakenly. 
She was perfectly right. They did not, it seemed. 
No one was quicker than Flame to acknowledge a mistake. Before five 
o'clock Flame had added a telephone item to the cereal bill. 
"Oh--Mother," questioned Flame. "The little red sweater and Tam that I 
have on?--Would they be all right, do you think, for me to make a call 
in? Not a formal call, of course,--just a--a neighborly greeting at the 
door? It being Christmas Eve and everything!--And as long as I have to 
pass right by the house anyway?--There is a lady at the Rattle-Pane 
House! A--A--what Father would call a Lady Maiden!--Miss--" 
"Oh not a real lady, I think," protested her Mother. "Not with all those 
dogs. No real lady I think would have so many dogs.--It--It isn't 
sanitary." 
"Isn't--sanitary?" cried Flame. "Why Mother, they are the most 
absolutely--perfectly sanitary dogs you ever saw in your life!" Into her 
eager young voice an expression of ineffable dignity shot suddenly. 
"Well--really, Mother," she said, "In whatever concerns men or 
crocheting--I'm perfectly willing to take Father's advice or yours. But 
after all, I'm eighteen," stiffened the young voice. "And when it comes 
to dogs--I must use my own judgment!" 
"And just    
    
		
	
	
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