Their father glared at them. "You can read, can't you?" he asked.
"Yes, of course we can read," the twins replied.
"Even I can read," Jane said, "and I'm a complete dodo."
"Well, then, you should feel very fortunate. There are many less fortunate people in the world. I have heard of people in underdeveloped countries who do not know how to read.
"Here," he said, and he took the brochure from his wife and handed it to Barnaby B. "This is a test. Read this or you'll have no dessert."
Barnaby B looked with interest at the first glossy page of the brochure. "'Visit exotic locations,'" he read aloud.
"Now your brother," said Mr. Willoughby, and grabbed the brochure. He handed it to Barnaby A, who read aloud: "'Erupting volcanoes. Ferocious wild animals. Floods, famine, and—'"
"And finally the girl." Mr. Willoughby grabbed the brochure again and handed it to Jane. She sounded out the words very carefully. "'Earthquakes. Civil strife. War zones.'"
"Good. You can all read. Dessert for everyone, and no college. You don't need college." Mr. Willoughby put his fork down. "Dearest?" He looked inquiringly at his wife. "Shall we tell them about our plans?"
"Please do," she said.
"We've decided, as a result of this glossy brochure from the Reprehensible Travel Agency, to take a vacation," Mr. Willoughby announced.
"Yes, you said that already," Jane pointed out.
"Don't interrupt."
"Sorry," said Jane, looking at her lap.
"Therefore," he continued, "since it is against the law for us to leave you alone—"
"It is?" asked Barnaby A with interest.
"We don't mind staying alone," Tim said. "We prefer it, actually."
Mr. Willoughby glared at the children. "May I continue?" he asked pointedly.
The children nodded politely. "Sorry," they all murmured, and Tim, feeling thwarted, kicked the cat under the table.
"Therefore," his father continued, "we have decided to hire a nanny."
5. The Arrival of the Odious Nanny
"Here comes another one," Barnaby A announced, looking down from the window after the doorbell had sounded below.
The Willoughby children were on the fourth floor of the tall, thin house, the floor where a musty, cobwebbed attic had been converted into a musty, cobwebbed playroom.
"What does this one look like?" Barnaby B asked, glancing over from the table, where he was drawing a picture of a skyscraper on a long piece of paper that he had laid out. "Eighty-nine, ninety," he murmured as he drew two more windows. Barnaby B was meticulous, and he had decided that his skyscraper would have three hundred and thirty-six windows, twelve per floor, and that each one must be identical to the others. He measured them with a ruler, drew them with faint pencil lines, then went over each line with ink.
"Heavyset," his twin described, "and wearing a hat."
"I'm deducting four points from your daily total, A," Tim said, "because you did not include any helpful details." He put down his book, went to the window with a pair of binoculars, and looked down through them to the front steps. "Large feet wearing suede lace-up shoes," he announced, "a faux alligator purse, no gloves, a man's watch on the left wrist, the hat has a faded pink flower on its left side, and she is holding a torn piece of newspaper, probably the ad for a nanny."
Jane, who had been laboriously writing a note that she planned to pin to the sweater worn by an old doll, went to the window. "May I look?" she asked Tim.
"No," he said. "And a two-point deduction for asking. Now she is about to ring the bell a second time. She has aimed her right index finger."
The bell sounded again.
"I get forty points for a correct prediction," Tim said.
"Do you think she looks villainous, like the one who came yesterday?" Barnaby B asked. "Ninety-two," he murmured, inking in another window.
"No. The one yesterday had some weaponry in her satchel," Tim said. "I was quite certain about that. No wonder Father ordered her to leave before he even interviewed her. Father dislikes weaponry of any sort."
"Yes, he's even suspicious of Mother's knitting scissors," Barnaby B pointed out. "He feels all warfare should be conducted with taunts and gibes and vicious rumors."
"What about the one the day before?" asked Jane, still thinking about the nanny. "The one who was wearing glasses and sniffed into a hanky?"
"Lugubrious," Tim said. "She sniffed all through the interview and wept at the end, when she told about her previous post."
"Whatever made her cry?" Jane asked.
"The child died of malnutrition," Tim explained. "She was describing its thinness and began to weep."
"Why didn't she feed it?"
"She forgot."
"How sad," Jane said.
"Father almost hired her. But then she told about the child's funeral. She spoke very reverently. Father is repulsed by reverence. Also, she dabbed her eyes. He dislikes dabbing."
"Look again if you would, Tim, and see if they've let this one in after that second ring," Barnaby A suggested.
Tim glanced down through the window. "Yes," he said. "She has entered. I'll go down into my spying place." He looked around the playroom. "Jane," he said, "you may continue your imaginative play with the doll."
Jane dutifully picked up her pencil and continued the note she was writing. I CANNOT CARE FOR MY POOR UGLY BABY, it said.
"A, read my book while I'm gone and be prepared to report on it to me. Chapter eleven," Tim said.
Barnaby A sighed. "But it's about thermodynamics," he said. "It's too hard."