Название: Cinders to Satin
Автор: Fern Michaels
Издательство: Ingram
Жанр: Сказки
isbn: 9781601830760
isbn:
“Eat slow and chew it well and your stomach won’t object.” Jesus, now where had she heard that? Madge wondered with a start. She sounded like her own mother. The feeling was nice. “After we eat, you’re gonna have a bubble bath. Did you ever have a bubble bath?”
“Ma’am, my mum kept us real clean. I got a bath once or twice a week, whenever we could afford the peat for the fire to heat water. Lately its been cold water for all of us. We were poor,” she said quietly.
“Kid, I’ve been poor myself. I know what it’s all about. You sit there and eat while I heat some water. I’m gonna scrub you down myself and wash your hair. What happened to it, anyways?”
“They cut it off because they said I had lice.”
Madge held her fork poised in mid-air. “Do you?” She hated vermin of any kind.
“No. They just said that so they could cut my hair and sell it to wigmakers. It was a. . .” She searched for the right word. “Scam.”
“Now where would a kid like you hear a word like that?”
“A kid like me had it done to her. I have eyes and ears, and that’s what I heard them say it was. But I don’t have lice and never did. You can look in my hair if you don’t believe me.”
“I believe you, I believe you,” Madge declined the offer. “I hate cooties, hate ’em more than anything. Only thing to do for them is to wash your hair with kerosene and that burns like hell.” Madge studied her young guest and felt her heart swell as Callie popped a potato into her mouth. How young she was, and how alone, with no one but that pimp Owen to thank for her living. Madge sighed heavily.
“Mrs. Collins . . . Madge. What will you do with me after the bath? What kind of work will I do here?”
“I have to give it some thought. But you can believe one thing and it ain’t two. I’ll do what’s best for you. I promise you that. Here, have another slice of bread and more jam. Put some meat on those bones.” Madge herself reached for the jam jar and spread it thickly on the bread.
“Do you work for my cousin Owen?”
“In a manner of speaking. I think it’d be more truthful to say we’re sort of partners.”
“What do you do?”
“I guess you could say I deal in services. Yeah, I sell my services.”
“Does that mean you’re a lady of the evening?” Callie asked quietly.
Madge suppressed a chuckle. Owen was right. This kid was no dummy. “Of the evening and the morning and afternoon. Whatever, whenever.”
“And my cousin thinks I’m going to learn the trade from you. Is that why he brought me here?”
“No, kid, no. He brought you here because he had nowhere else to take you. You’re so young. The other girls . . . well, the other girls are older. Twenty, and even as old as twenty-five. Good girls, all of them, they do what they’re told and don’t make trouble. That’s how we all make out.”
Callie worked on her plate of eggs and drained her glass of buttermilk dry. “You just sit there, give your stomach a rest. The water isn’t hot enough yet for your bath. You’ll have to do some fancy soaking, and we’ve got to air out those clothes of yours. And wash your drawers and things. Maybe we’ve got some things around here that’ll fit you.”
“What will you do with me?”
“The Lord only knows. Just trust me, kid. Can you do that?”
“How many girls work here?”
“You’re the nosey one, ain’t you. There’s nine girls, including me and a woman who works in the kitchen. None of us are much at cooking and cleaning.”
“You are, Madge. That was the best plate of eggs I ever ate!”
The compliment endeared Callie to Madge forever. “Come along now,” she instructed, “you can help me carry the tub in here, and we’ll put it in front of the stove where it’s warm. You fill it, and I’ll get some towels and clean clothes for you. Where’s your baggage?”
“In the parlor. I don’t have anything much, and everything smells just the same as I do.” Callie’s back stiffened against the shame of it. She knew she sounded defensive, but she couldn’t help it. “I am what I am,” she told Madge. “Take me or leave me, it’s your choice.”
“Couldn’t have said it better myself. We’ll get along just fine. You do what I say and we won’t have any problems.”
“Is that the same thing as saying, ‘If I want your opinion, I’ll tell you what it is’?”
Madge roared with laughter. Callie noticed she didn’t answer, though.
By the time the final rinse water was carted off and Callie was wrapped in a large towel, the house began to take on life. The cook arrived and was busy getting dinner ready for “her girls.” The gentlemen would start arriving when darkness fell. Madge wrapped a smaller towel around Callie’s head and headed her in the direction of the stairs, but first she stopped in the front parlor to introduce Callie to what she called her constituents. It was hard to guess their ages with all the makeup the women had on their faces. None of them seemed as old as Madge, but neither were any of them as young as Callie. Seasoned was what Madge called them. Callie made a note to figure all of that out later.
“Listen, ladies, I have an announcement to make. I won’t be working this evening.” If Madge had dropped a bomb, she couldn’t have gotten a better reaction. It was obvious that Madge never took time off. The second bomb dropped when she announced that she had to make a dress for Callie.
“But you don’t know how to sew,” Shirley said in a squeaky voice. Shirley pretended to be seventeen, but everyone knew she’d never see twenty-seven again.
“I know, but I’m going to do the best I can. The kid has nothing to wear,” Madge said.
“Where are you going to get the material? You had Bessie make you a dress out of that yellow silk a month ago,” said a young woman named Dorothy. “I suppose you’ll be wanting that length of blue wool that Mr. Warner gave me.”
“It never crossed my mind,” Madge said.
“And what about button holes? I’m the only one who knows how to make button holes,” Sara said haughtily. “If you go trying to make button holes, you’ll botch up the whole dress.”
“I know, but I’m going to try. We can’t have this kid going around looking like a ricky-ticky immigrant.”
“I could give you that yard of lace Mr. Johns gave me last year,” a plump woman named Elsie offered.
“Never! For shame. I know how you treasure that lace,” Madge responded.
“Tell me you aren’t going to ask for my muslin!” said a tall, overly СКАЧАТЬ