Miss Theodora: a West End Story
Copyright© 2026 by Helen Leah Reed
Chapter 2
Although Miss Theodora disliked visiting, every summer she and Ernest spent a month at Nahant with her cousin, Sarah Somerset. She herself would have preferred the quiet independence of a New Hampshire country farm, but she thought it her duty to give Ernest this yearly opportunity of seeing his relatives in the intimacy possible only at their summer homes. This was before the days of Beverly’s popularity, when almost every one at Nahant was cousin to every one else. Even the people at the boarding houses belonged to the little group held to have an almost inherent right to the rocky peninsula.
Both the little boy, therefore, and Miss Theodora were made much of by their kinsfolk; and the child thought these summer days the happiest of the year.
In other ways Miss Theodora was occasionally remembered by her relatives. Once she was asked to spend a whole year in Europe as chaperone to two or three girls, her distant cousins. Even if she could have made up her mind to leave Ernest, I doubt whether she would have accepted the invitation. She had almost determined never to go abroad again, preferring to hold sacred the journey that she and her parents and John had made two or three years before their troubles began.
For the most part, then, Miss Theodora repelled all attempts at intimacy made by her relatives. Unreasonable though she knew herself to be, she believed that she could never care so much for her cousins since they had all in such curious fashion—like swallows in winter—begun to migrate southward to the Back Bay. At first she felt as bitter as was possible for a person of her amiable disposition, when she saw people whom no necessity impelled leaving their spacious dwellings on the Hill for the more contracted houses on the flat land beyond the Public Garden.
Yet if Miss Theodora pitied her degenerate kin, how much more did they pity her! “Poor Theodora,” some of them would say. “I don’t see how she manages to get along at all. If she sold that house, with the interest of the money she and Ernest could board comfortably somewhere. Even as it is, she might let a room or two; but no—I suppose that would hardly do. Well, she must be dreadfully pinched.”
Notwithstanding these well meant fears, Miss Theodora got along very well. The greatest sacrifice of pride that she had to make came when she found that she must send Ernest to a public school. Yet even this hardship might have been worse. “It isn’t as if he were a girl, you know,” she said half apologetically to Sarah Somerset. “Although he may make a few undesirable acquaintances, he will have nothing to do with them when he goes to Harvard.” For Miss Theodora’s plans for Ernest reached far into the future, even beyond his college days, and she must save all that was possible out of her meagre income.
Public or private school was all the same to Ernest; or perhaps his preference, if he had been asked to express it, would have been decidedly for the big brick schoolhouse, with its hosts of boys. What matter if many of these boys were rough and unkempt. Among them all he could always find some suitable companions. His refined nature chose the best; and if the best in this case did not mean rich boys or those of well-known names, it meant boys of a refinement not so very unlike that possessed by Ernest himself.
One day he came home from school later than usual, with his eye black and blue, and one of the pockets of his little jacket hanging ripped and torn.
“Why, what is the matter, Ernest?” cried his aunt; “have you been fighting?”
“Well, not exactly fighting, but kind of fighting,” he replied, and “kind of fighting” became one of the joking phrases between aunt and nephew whenever the latter professed uncertainty as to his attitude on any particular question.
“You see, it was this way,” and he began to explain the black eye and the torn pocket.
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