Miss Billy by Eleanor Hodgman Porter (best ebook reader for surface pro TXT) đ
- Author: Eleanor Hodgman Porter
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Not long after Marie arrived, Billy told her of the engagement. William was at the house very frequently, and owing to the intimacy of Marieâs relationship with the family Billy decided to tell her how matters stood. Marieâs reception of the news was somewhat surprising. First she looked frightened.
âTo William?âyou are engaged to William?â
âWhyâyes.â
âBut I thoughtâsurely it wasâdonât you meanâMr. Cyril?â
âNo, I donât,â laughed Billy. âAnd certainly I ought to know.â
âAnd you donâtâcare for him?â
âI hope notâif Iâm going to marry William.â
So light was Billyâs voice and manner that Marie dared one more question.
âAnd heâdoesnât careâfor you?â
âI hope notâif William is going to marry me,â laughed Billy again.
âOh-h!â breathed Marie, with an odd intonation of relief. âThen Iâm gladâso glad! And I hope youâll be very, very happy, dear.â
Billy looked into Marieâs glowing face and was pleased: there seemed to be so few, so very few faces into which she had looked and found entire approbation of her engagement to William.
Billy saw a great deal of William now. He was always kind and considerate, and he tried to help her entertain her guests; but Billy, grateful as she was to him for his efforts, was relieved when he resigned his place to Bertram. Bertram did, indeed, know so much better how to do it. William tried to help her, too, about training her vines and rosebushes; but of course, even in this, he could not be expected to show quite the interest that Bertram manifested in every green shoot and opening bud, for he had not helped her plant them, as Bertram had.
Billy was a little troubled sometimes, that she did not feel more at ease with William. She thought it natural that she should feel a little diffident with him, in the face of his sudden change from an âuncleâ to an accepted lover; but she did not see why she should be afraid of himâyet she was. She owned that to herself unhappily. And he was so good!âshe owned that, too. He seemed not to have a thought in the world but for her comfort and happiness; and there was no end to the tactful little things he was always doing for her pleasure. He seemed, also, to have divined that she did not like to be kissed and caressed; and only occasionally did he kiss her, and then it was merely a sort of fatherly salute on her foreheadâfor which consideration Billy was grateful: Billy decided that she would not like to be kissed on the lips.
After some days of puzzling over the matter Billy concluded that it was self-consciousness that caused all the trouble. With William she was self-conscious. If she could only forget that she was some day to be Williamâs wife, the old delightful comradeship would return, and she would be at ease again with him. In time, after she had become accustomed to the idea of marriage, it would not so confuse her, of course. She loved him dearly, and she wanted to make him happy; but for the presentâjust while she was âgetting used to thingsââshe would try to forget, sometimes, that she was going to be Williamâs wife.
Billy was happier now. She was always happier after she had thought things out to her own satisfaction. She turned with new zest to the entertainment of her guests; and with Bertram she planned many delightful trips for their pleasure. Bertram was a great comfort to her these days. Never, in word or look, could she see that he overstepped the role which he had promised to playâ Williamâs brother.
Billy went back to her music, too. A new melody was running through her head, and she longed to put it on paper. Already her first little âGroup of Songsâ had found friends, and Billy, to a very modest extent, was beginning to taste the sweets of fame.
Thus, by all these interests, did Billy try âto get used to things.â
Of all Billyâs guests, Marie was very plainly the happiest. She was a permanent guest, it is true, while the others came for only a week or two at a time; but it was not this, Billy decided, that had brought so brilliant a sparkle to Marieâs eyes, so joyous a laugh to her lips. The joyousness was all the more noticeable, because heretofore Marie, while very sweet, had been also sad. Her big blue eyes had always carried a haunting shadow, and her step had lacked the spring belonging to youth and happiness. Certainly, Billy had never seen her like this before.
âVerily, Marie,â she teased one day, âhave you found an exhaustless supply of stockings to mend, or a never-done pudding to makeâ which?â
âWhy? What do you mean?â
âOh, nothing. I was only wondering just what had brought that new light to your eyes.â
âIs there a new light?â
âThere certainly is.â
âIt must be because Iâm so happy, then,â sighed Marie; âbecause youâre so good to me.â
âIs that all?â
âIsnât that enough?â Marieâs tone was evasive.
âNo.â Billy shook her head mischievously. âMarie, what is it?â
âItâs nothingâreally, itâs nothing,â protested Marie, hurrying out of the room with a nervous laugh.
Billy frowned. She was suspicious before; she was sure now. In less than twelve hoursâ time came her opportunity. She was alone again with Marie.
âMarie, who is he?â she asked abruptly.
âHe? Who?â
âThe man who is to wear the stockings and eat the pudding.â
The little music teacher flushed very red, but she managed to display something that might pass for surprise.
âBILLY!â
âCome, dear,â coaxed Billy, winningly. âTell me about it. Iâm so interested!â
âBut there isnât anything to tellâreally there isnât.â
âWho is he?â
âHe isnât anybodyâthat is, he doesnât know heâs anybody,â amended Marie.
Billy laughed softly.
âOh, doesnât he! Hasnât he ever shownâthat he cared?â
âNo; that isâperhaps he has, only I thought thenâthat it wasâ another girl.â
âAnother girl! So thereâs another girl in the case?â
âYes. I mean, no,â corrected Marie, suddenly beginning to realize what she was saying. âReally, it wasnât anythingâit isnât anything!â she protested.
âHm-m,â murmured Billy, archly. âOh, Iâm getting on some! He did show, once, that he cared; but you thought it was another girl, and you coldly looked the other way. Now, there ISNâT any other girl, you find, andâMarie, tell me the rest!â
Marie shook her head emphatically, and pulled herself gently away from Billyâs grasp.
âNo, no, please!â she begged. âIt really isnât anything. Iâm sure Iâm imagining it all!â she cried, as she ran away.
During the days that followed, Billy speculated not a little on Marieâs half-told story, and wondered interestedly who the man might be. She questioned Marie once again, but the girl would tell nothing more; and, indeed, Billy was so occupied with her own perplexities that she had little time for those of other people.
To herself Billy was forced to own that she was not âgetting used to things.â She was still self-conscious with William; she could not forget that she was one day to be his wife. She could not bring back the dear old freedom of comradeship with him.
Billy was alarmed now. She had begun to ask herself searching questions. What should she do if never, never should she get used to the idea of marrying William? How could she marry him if he was still âUncle William,â and never her dear lover in her eyes? Why had she not been wise enough and brave enough to tell him in the first place that she was not at all sure that she loved him, but that she would try to do so? Then when she had triedâas she had nowâand failed, she could have told him honestly the truth, and it would not have been so great a shock to him as it must be now, if she should tell him.
Billy had remorsefully come to the conclusion that she could never love any man well enough to marry him, when one day so small a thing as a piece of paper fluttered into her vision, and showed her the fallacy of that idea.
It was a half-sheet of note paper, and it blew from Marieâs balcony to the lawn below. Billy found it there later, and as she picked it up her eyes fell on a single name in Marieâs handwriting inscribed half a dozen times as if the writer had musingly accompanied her thoughts with her pen; and the name was, âMarie Henshaw.â
For a moment Billy stared at the name perplexedlyâthen in a flash came the remembrance of Marieâs words; and Billy breathed: âHenshaw!âthe manâBERTRAM!â
Billy dropped the paper then and fled. In her own room, behind locked doors, she sat down to think.
Bertram! It was he for whom Marie caredâHER Bertram! And then it came to Billy with staggering force that he was not HER Bertram at all. He never could be her Bertram now. He wasâMarieâs.
Billy was frightened then, so fierce was this strange new something that rose within herâthis overpowering something that seemed to blot out all the world, and leave onlyâBertram. She knew then, that it had always been Bertram to whom she had turned, though she had been blind to the cause of that turning. Always her plans had included him. Always she had been the happiest in his presence; never had she pictured him anywhere else but at her side. Certainly never had she pictured him as the devoted lover of another woman! ⊠And she had not known what it all meantâ poor blind child that she was!
Very resolutely now Billy set herself to looking matters squarely in the face. She understood it quite well. All summer Marie and Bertram had been thrown together. No wonder Marie had fallen in love with Bertram, and that heâBilly thought she comprehended now why Bertram had found it so easy for the last few weeks to be Williamâs brother. She, of course, had been the âother girlâ whom Marie had once feared that the man loved. It was all so clearâso woefully clear!
With an aching heart Billy asked herself what now was to be done. For herself, turn whichever way she could, she could see nothing but unhappiness. She determined, therefore, with Spartan fortitude, that to no one else would she bring equal unhappiness. She would be silent. Bertram and Marie loved each other. That matter was settled. As to WilliamâBilly thought of the story William had told her of his lonely life,âof the plea he had made to her; and her heart ached. Whatever happened, William must be made happy. William must not be told. Her promise to William must be kept.
Before September passed all Billyâs friends said that her summerâs self-appointed task had been too hard for her. In no other way could they account for the sad change that had come to her.
Undeniably Billy looked really ill. Always slender, she was shadow-like now. Her eyes had found again the wistful appeal of her girlhood, only now they carried something that was almost fear, as well. The rose-flush had gone from her cheeks, and pathetic little hollows had appeared, making the round young chin below look almost pointed. Certainly Billy did seem to be ill.
Late in September William went West on business. Incidentally he called to see his sister, Kate.
âWell, and how is everybody?â asked Kate, cheerily, after the greetings were over.
William sighed.
âWell, âeverybody,â to me, Kate, is pretty badly off. Weâre worried about Billy.â
âBilly! You donât mean sheâs sick? Why, sheâs always been the picture of health!â
âI know
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