Miss Billy by Eleanor Hodgman Porter (the false prince series .TXT) đ
The lawyer stirred restlessly and pondered.
"But, surely, my dear, isn't there some relative, somewhere?" hedemanded. "How about your mother's people?"
Billy shook her head. Her eyes filled again with tears.
There was only Aunt Ella, ever, that I knew anything about. Sheand mother were the only children there were, and mother died whenI was a year old, you know."
"But your father's people?"
"It's even worse there. He was an only child and an orphan whenmother married him. He died when I was but six months old. Afterthat there was only mother and Aunt Ella, then Aunt Ella alone; andnow--no one."
"And you know nothing of your father's people?"
"Nothing; that is--almost nothing."
"Then there is some one?"
Billy smiled. A deeper pink showed in her cheeks.
"Why, there's one--a man but he isn't really father's people,anyway. But I--I have been tempted to write to him."
"Who is he?"
"The one I'm named
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Marie was put to bed in the little room next to Billyâs, and was peremptorily hushed when faint remonstrance was made. The next morning, white-faced and wide-eyed, she resolutely pulled herself half upright, and announced that she was all well and must go homeâ home to Marie was a six-by-nine hall bedroom in a South End lodging house.
Very gently Billy pushed her back on the pillow and laid a detaining hand on her arm.
âNo, dear. Now, please be sensible and listen to reason. You are my guest. You did not know it, perhaps, for Iâm afraid the invitation got a little delayed. But youâre to stayâoh, lots of weeks.â
âIâstay here? Why, I canâtâindeed, I canât,â protested Marie.
âBut that isnât a bit of a nice way to accept an invitation,â disapproved Billy. âYou should say, âThank you, Iâd be delighted, Iâm sure, and Iâll stay.ââ
In spite of herself the little music teacher laughed, and in the laugh her tense muscles relaxed.
âMiss Billy, Miss Billy, what is one to do with you? Surely you knowâyou must know that I canât do what you ask!â
âIâm sure I donât see why not,â argued Billy. âIâm merely giving you an invitation and all you have to do is to accept it.â
âBut the invitation is only the kind way your heart has of covering another of your many charities,â objected Marie; âbesides, I have to teach. I have my living to earn.â
âBut you canât,â demurred the other. âThatâs just the trouble. Donât you see? The doctor said last night that you must not teach again this winter.â
âNot teachâagainâthis winter! No, no, he could not be so cruel as that!â
âIt wasnât cruel, dear; it was kind. You would be ill if you attempted it. Now youâll get better. He says all you need is rest and careâand thatâs exactly what I mean my guest shall have.â
Quick tears came to the sick girlâs eyes.
âThere couldnât be a kinder heart than yours, Miss Billy,â she murmured, âbut I couldnâtâI really couldnât be a burden to you like this. I shall go to some hospital.â
âBut you arenât going to be a burden. You are going to be my friend and companion.â
âA companionâand in bed like this?â
âWell, THAT wouldnât be impossible,â smiled Billy; âbut, as it happens you wonât have to put that to the test, for youâll soon be up and dressed. The doctor says so. Now surely you will stay.â
There was a long pause. The little music teacherâs eyes had left Billyâs face and were circling the room, wistfully lingering on the hangings of filmy lace, the dainty wall covering, and the exquisite water colors in their white-and-gold frames. At last she drew a deep sigh.
âYes, Iâll stay,â she breathed rapturously; âbutâyou must let me help.â
âHelp? Help what?â
âHelp you; your letters, your music-copying, your accountsâ anything, everything. And if you donât let me help,ââthe music teacherâs voice was very stern nowââif you donât let me help, I shall go home justâasâsoonâasâIâcanâwalk!â
âDear me!â dimpled Billy. âAnd is that all? Well, you shall help, and to your heartâs content, too. In fact, Iâm not at all sure that I shaânât keep you darning stockings and making puddings all the time,â she added mischievously, as she left the room.
Miss Hawthorn sat up the next day. The day following, in one of Billyâs âfluttery wrappers,â as she called them, she walked all about the room. Very soon she was able to go downstairs, and in an astonishingly short time she fitted into the daily life as if she had always been there. She was, moreover, of such assistance to Billy that even she herself could see the value of her work; and so she stayed, content.
The little music teacher saw a good deal of Billyâs friends then, particularly of the Henshaw brothers; and very glad was Billy to see the comradeship growing between them. She had known that William would be kind to the orphan girl, but she had feared that Marie would not understand Bertramâs nonsense or Cyrilâs reserve. But very soon Bertram had begged, and obtained, permission to try to reproduce on canvas the sheen of the fine, fair hair, and the veiled bloom of the rose-leaf skin that were Marieâs greatest charms; and already Cyril had unbent from his usual stiffness enough to play to her twice. So Billyâs fears on that score were at an end.
Many times during those winter days Billy thought of Marieâs words: âBut what if the man and the music both happen to be on the same side?â They worried her, to some extent, and, curiously, they pleased and displeased her at the same time.
She told herself that she knew very well, of course, what Marie meant: it was Cyril; he was the man, and the music. But was Cyril beginning to care for her; and did she want him to? Very seriously one day Billy asked herself these questions; very calmly she argued the matter in her mindâas was Billyâs way.
She was proud, certainly, of what her influence had apparently done for Cyril. She was gratified that to her he was showing the real depth and beauty of his nature. It WAS flattering to feel that she, and only she, had thus won the regard of a professional woman-hater. Then, besides all this, there was his musicâhis glorious music. Think of the bliss of living ever with that! Imagine life with a man whose soul would be so perfectly attuned to hers that existence would be one grand harmony! Ah, that, truly, would be the ideal marriage! But she had planned not to marry. Billy frowned now, and tapped her foot nervously. It was, indeed, most puzzlingâthis question, and she did not want to make a mistake. Then, too, she did not wish to wound Cyril. If the dear man HAD come out of his icy prison, and were reaching out timid hands to her for her help, her interest, her loveâthe tragedy of it, if he met with no response! ⊠. This vision of Cyril with outstretched hands, and of herself with cold, averted eyes was the last straw in the balance with Billy. She decided suddenly that she did care for Cyrilâa little; and that she probably could care for him a great deal. With this thought, Billy blushedâalready in her own mind she was as good as pledged to Cyril.
It was a great change for Billyâthis sudden leap from girlhood and irresponsibility to womanhood and care; but she took it fearlessly, resolutely. If she was to be Cyrilâs wife she must make herself fit for itâand in pursuance of this high ideal she followed Marie into the kitchen the very next time the little music teacher went out to make one of her dainty desserts that the family liked so well.
âIâll just watch, if you donât mind,â announced Billy.
âWhy, of course not,â smiled Marie, âbut I thought you didnât like to make puddings.â
âI donât,â owned Billy, cheerfully.
âThen why thisâwatchfulness?â
âNothing, only I thought it might be just as well if I knew how to make them. You know how Cyrilâthat is, ALL the Henshaw boys like every kind you make.â
The egg in Marieâs hand slipped from her fingers and crashed untidily on the shelf. With a gleeful laugh Billy welcomed the diversion. She had not meant to speak so plainly. It was one thing to try to fit herself to be Cyrilâs wife, and quite another to display those efforts so openly before the world.
The pudding was made at last, but Marie proved to be a nervous teacher. Her hand shook, and her memory almost failed her at one or two critical points. Billy laughingly said that it must be stage fright, owing to the presence of herself as spectator; and with this Marie promptly, and somewhat effusively, agreed.
So very busy was Billy during the next few days, acquiring her new domesticity, that she did not notice how little she was seeing of Cyril. Then she suddenly realized it, and asked herself the reason for it. Cyril was at the house certainly, just as frequently as he had been; but she saw that a new shyness in herself had developed which was causing her to be restless in his presence, and was leading her to like better to have Marie or Aunt Hannah in the room when he called. She discovered, too, that she welcomed William, and even Bertram, with peculiar enthusiasmâif they happened to interrupt a tete-a-tete with Cyril.
Billy was disturbed at this. She told herself that this shyness was not strange, perhaps, inasmuch as her ideas in regard to love and marriage had undergone so abrupt a change; but it must be overcome. If she was to be Cyrilâs wife, she must like to be with himâand of course she really did like to be with him, for she had enjoyed his companionship very much during all these past weeks. She set herself therefore, now, determinedly to cultivating Cyril.
It was then that Billy made a strange and fearsome discovery: there were some things about Cyril that she didânotâlike!
Billy was inexpressibly shocked. Heretofore he had been so high, so irreproachable, so god-like!âbut heretofore he had been a friend. Now he was appearing in a new roleâthough unconsciously, she knew. Heretofore she had looked at him with eyes that saw only the delightful and marvelous unfolding of a coldly reserved nature under the warmth of her own encouraging smile. Now she looked at him with eyes that saw only the possibilities of that same nature when it should have been unfolded in a lifelong companionship. And what she saw frightened her. There was still the musicâshe acknowledged that; but it had come to Billy with overwhelming force that music, after all, was not everything. The man counted, as well. Very frankly then Billy stated the case to herself.
âWhat passes for âfascinating mysteryâ in him now will be plain morosenessâsometime. He is âtaciturnâ now; heâll beâcross, then. It is âerraticâ when he wonât play the piano to-day; but a few years from now, when he refuses some simple request of mine, it will beâstubbornness. All this it will beâif I donât love him; and I donât. I know I donât. Besides, we arenât really congenial. I like people around; he doesnât. I like to go to plays; he doesnât. He likes rainy days; I abhor them. There is no doubt of itâlife with him would not be one grand harmony; it would be one jangling discord. I simply cannot marry him. I shall have to break the engagement!
Billy spoke with regretful sorrow. It was evident that she grieved to bring pain to Cyril. Then suddenly the gloom left her face: she had remembered that the âengagementâ was just three weeks oldâand was a profound secret, not only to the bridegroom elect, but to all the world as wellâsave herself!
Billy was very happy after that. She sang about the house all day, and she danced sometimes from room to room, so light were her feet and her heart. She made no more puddings with Marieâs supervision, but she
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