Miss Billy by Eleanor Hodgman Porter (best ebook reader for surface pro TXT) đ
- Author: Eleanor Hodgman Porter
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âAnd I did hear itâI did! Oh, wonât you play it, please, with the door open?â
âI canât, Billy. Iâm sorry, indeed I am. But Iâve an appointment, and Iâm late now. You shall hear it, though, I promise you, and with the door wide open,â continued the man, as, with a murmured apology, he passed the girl and hurried down the stairs.
Billy waited until she heard the outer hall door shut; then very softly she crept through Cyrilâs open doorway, and crossed the room to the piano.
May came, and with it warm sunny days. There was a little balcony at the rear of the second floor, and on this Mrs. Stetson and Billy sat many a morning and sewed. There were occupations that Billy liked better than sewing; but she was dutiful, and she was really fond of Aunt Hannah; so she accepted as gracefully as possible that good ladyâs dictum that a woman who could not sew, and sew well, was no lady at all.
One of the things that Billy liked to do so much better than to sew was to play on Cyrilâs piano. She was very careful, however, that Mr. Cyril himself did not find this out. Cyril was frequently gone from the house, and almost as frequently Aunt Hannah took naps. At such times it was very easy to slip upstairs to Cyrilâs rooms, and once at the piano, Billy forgot everything else.
One day, however, the inevitable happened: Cyril came home unexpectedly. The man heard the piano from Williamâs floor, and with a surprised ejaculation he hurried upstairs two steps at a time. At the door he stopped in amazement.
Billy was at the piano, but she was not playing âragtime,â âThe Storm,â nor yet âThe Maidenâs Prayer.â There was no music before her, but under her fingers âbig bass notesâ very much like Cyrilâs own, were marching on and on to victory. Billyâs face was rapturously intent and happy.
âBy JoveâBilly!â gasped the man.
Billy leaped to her feet and whirled around guiltily.
âOh, Mr. CyrilâIâm so sorry!â
âSorry!âand you play like that!â
âNo, no; Iâm not sorry I played. Itâs because youâfound me.â
Billyâs cheeks were a shamed red, but her eyes were defiantly brilliant, and her chin was at a rebellious tilt. âI wasnât doing anyâharm; not if you werenât hereâwith your NERVES!â
The man laughed and came slowly into the room.
âBilly, who taught you to play?â
âNo one. I canât play. I can only pick out little bits of things in C.â
âBut you do play. I just heard you.â
Billy shrugged her shoulders.
âThat was nothing. It was only what I had heard. I was trying to make it sound likeâyours.â
âAnd, by George! you succeeded,â muttered Cyril under his breath; then aloud he asked: âDidnât you ever study music?â
Billyâs eyes dimmed.
âNo. That was the only thing Aunt Ella and I didnât think alike about. She had an old square piano, all tin-panny and thin, you know. I played some on it, and wanted to take lessons; but I didnât want to practise on that. I wanted a new one. Thatâs what she wouldnât doâget me a new piano, or let me do it. She said SHE practised on that piano, and that it was quite good enough for me, especially to learn on. IâIâm afraid I got stuffy. I hated that piano so! But I was almost ready to give in whenâwhen Aunt Ella died.â
âAnd all you play then is just by ear?â
âByâear? I suppose soâif you mean what I hear. Easy things I can play quick, butâbut those chords ARE hard; they skip around so!â
Cyril smiled oddly.
âI should say so,â he agreed. âBut perhaps there is something else that I playâthat you like. Is there?â
âOh, yes. Now thereâs that little thing that swings and sways like this,â cried Billy, dropping herself on to the piano stool and whisking about. Billy was not afraid now, nor defiant. She was only eager and happy again. In a moment a dreamy waltz fell upon Cyrilâs earsâa waltz that he often played himself. It was not played correctly, it is true. There were notes, and sometimes whole measures, that were very different from the printed music. But the tune, the rhythm, and the spirit were there.
âAnd thereâs this,â said Billy; âand this,â she went on, sliding into one little strain after anotherâall of which were recognized by the amazed man at her side.
âBilly,â he cried, when she had finished and whirled upon him again, âBilly, would you like to learn to playâreally play from notes?â
âOh, wouldnât I!â
âThen you shall! Weâll have a piano tomorrow in your rooms for you to practise on. AndâIâll teach you myself.â
âOh, thank you, Mr. Cyrilâyou donât know how I thank you!â exulted Billy, as she danced from the room to tell Aunt Hannah of this great and good thing that had come into her life.
To Billy, this promise of Cyrilâs to be her teacher was very kind, very delightful; but it was not in the least a thing at which to marvel. To Bertram, however, it most certainly was.
âWell, guess whatâs happened,â he said to William that night, after he had heard the news. âIâll believe anything nowâanything: that youâll raffle off your collection of teapots at the next church fair, or that I shall go to Egypt as a âCookyâ guide. Listen; Cyril is going to give piano lessons to Billy!âCYRIL!â
Bertram said that the Strata was not a strata any longer. He declared that between them, Billy and Spunk had caused such an upheaval that there was no telling where one stratum left off and another began. What Billy had not attended to, Spunk had, he said.
âYou see, itâs like this,â he explained to an amused friend one day. âBilly is taking piano lessons of Cyril, and she is posing for one of my heads. Naturally, then, such feminine belongings as fancy-work, thread, thimbles, and hairpins are due to show up at any time either in Cyrilâs apartments or mineâto say nothing of Williamâs; and sheâs in Williamâs lotsâto look for Spunk, if for no other purpose.
âYou must know that Spunk likes Williamâs floor the best of the bunch, there are so many delightful things to play with. Not that Spunk stays thereâdear me, no. Heâs a sociable little chap, and his usual course is to pounce on a shelf, knock off some object that tickles his fancy, then lug it in his mouth toâwell, anywhere that he happens to feel like going. Cyril has found him upstairs with a small miniature, battered and chewed almost beyond recognition. And Aunt Hannah nearly had a fit one day when he appeared in her room with an enormous hard-shelled black bugâdead, of courseâthat he had fished from a case that Pete had left open. As for me, I can swear that the little round white stone he was playing with in my part of the house was one of Williamâs Collection Number One.
âAnd that isnât all,â Bertram continued. âBilly brings her music down to show to me, and lugs my heads all over the rest of the house to show to other folks. And there is always everywhere a knit shawl, for Aunt Hannah is sure to feel a draught, and Billy keeps shawls handy. So there you are! We certainly arenât a strata any longer,â he finished.
Billy was, indeed, very much at home in the Beacon Street houseâ too much so, Aunt Hannah thought. Aunt Hannah was, in fact, seriously disturbed. To William one evening, late in May, she spoke her mind.
âWilliam, what are you going to do with Billy?â she asked abruptly.
âDo with her? What do you mean?â returned William with the contented smile that was so often on his lips these days. âThis is Billyâs home.â
âThatâs the worst of it,â sighed the woman, with a shake of her head.
âThe worst of it! Aunt Hannah, what do you mean? Donât you like Billy?â
âYes, yes, William, of course I like Billy. I love her! Who could help it? Thatâs not what I mean. Itâs of Billy Iâm thinking, and of the rest of you. She canât stay here like this. She must go away, to school, orâor somewhere.â
âAnd sheâs going in September,â replied the man. âSheâll go to preparatory school first, and to college, probably.â
âYes, but nowâright away. She ought to goâsomewhere.â
âWhy, yes, for the summer, of course. But those plans arenât completed yet. Billy and I were talking of it last evening. You know the boys are always away more or less, but I seldom go until August, and we let Pete and Dong Ling off then for a month and close the house. I told Billy Iâd send you and her anywhere she liked for the whole summer, but she says no. She prefers to stay here with me. But I donât quite fancy that ideaâthrough all the hot June and Julyâso I donât know but Iâll get a cottage somewhere near at one of the beaches, where I can run back and forth night and morning. Of course, in that case, we take Pete and Dong Ling with us and close the house right away. I fear Cyril would not fancy it much; but, after all, he and Bertram would be off more or less. They always are in the summer.â
âBut, William, you havenât yet got my idea at all,â demurred Aunt Hannah, with a discouraged shake of her head. âItâs away!âaway from all thisâfrom youâthat I want to get Billy.â
âAway! Away from me,â cried the man, with an odd intonation of terror, as he started forward in his chair. âWhy, Aunt Hannah, what are you talking about?â
âAbout Billy. This is no place in which to bring up a young girlâ a young girl who has not one shred of relationship to excuse it.â
âBut she is my namesake, and quite alone in the world, Aunt Hannah; quite aloneâpoor child!â
âMy dear William, that is exactly itâshe is a child, and yet she is not. Thatâs where the trouble lies.â
âWhat do you mean?â
âWilliam, Billy has been brought up in a little country town with a spinster aunt and a whole good-natured, tolerant village for company. Well, she has accepted you and your entire household, even down to Dong Ling, on the same basis.â
âWell, Iâm sure Iâm glad,â asserted the man with genial warmth. âItâs good for us to have her here. Itâs good for the boys. Sheâs already livened Cyril up and toned Bertram down. I may as well confess, Aunt Hannah, that Iâve been more than a little disturbed about Bertram of late. I donât like that Bob Seaver that he is so fond of; and some other fellows, too, that have been coming here altogether too much during the last year. Bertram says theyâre only a little âBohemianâ in their tastes. And to me thatâs the worst of it, for Bertram himself is quite too much inclined that way.â
âExactly, William. And that only goes to prove what I said before. Bertram is not a spinster aunt, and neither are any of the rest of you. But Billy takes you that way.â
âTakes us that wayâas spinster aunts!â
âYes. She makes herself as free in this house as she was in her Aunt Ellaâs at Hampden Falls. She flies up to Cyrilâs rooms half a dozen times a day with some question about her lessons; and I donât know how long sheâd sit at his feet and adoringly listen to his playing
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