Part 36 (2/2)
He won the game and the rubber, but he had reduced his partner to a state of frigidity excelling even Miss Wood's. ”We won't play any more,”
she said to that lady, ”I know you are tired at our noise.” And with a general good-night she went out of the room, leaving the box of candy behind her.
Miss Wood added the score conscientiously, p.r.o.nounced her partner and herself the winners, professed indignation at d.i.c.k's offer to pay anything he might owe, and, accompanied by Mrs. Pickens, left the young man to himself.
Richard Shelby Brown looked across the table at the empty chair and deliberately kicked himself. ”What a mutt I am,” he thought. ”But if she were a princess, born with a lot of knights bowing before her all day long, she couldn't hold her head any higher.” Then he pulled the cigar that Mr. Talbert had given him out of his pocket, struck a light and began to smoke. And as he sniffed the delicious fragrance and blew rings into the air, as he looked about the room at the bright pictures all descriptive of gaiety and happiness, he grew less disturbed and gradually regained his self-possession. One could never tell what a girl liked, but surely she must find it pleasant to know that a man wanted to kiss her. Had she slapped him on the face, as Annie-Lou would have done, he would not have minded. But she had blushed, and, oh how beautiful she became when the color rushed into her face! Tilted back in one chair, his feet on another, he puffed at his cigar and puffed again, and smiled gently, thinking of the princess in her room and of the palace that he must hasten to build.
CHAPTER XXVI
There was no question that Hertha Ogilvie was not making a success at stenography and typewriting at the excellent school which d.i.c.k had found for her. Among the thirty-odd pupils who had entered in February, only two were as far behind as she. And though her teachers, who liked her for her good manners and quiet speech, were ready with encouragement, a.s.suring her that the moment would come when, with unexpected rapidity, the light of understanding would s.h.i.+ne amid the darkness of insignificant lines and dots and she would forge ahead, she herself did not believe in the miracle. This was perhaps her greatest handicap--distrust in her ability blocked her road. An ever recurring sense of stupidity kept her repeating the same tasks without progress, until, filled with disgust, she threw her books aside, declaring that she would give it up and take to sewing again.
This was her mood on the Sat.u.r.day afternoon following the game of bridge, when, dropping her work, she went into the park with Bob Henderson, her next door neighbor and devoted companion. Bob was the oldest of four children, though but six himself, and when his mother could spare him from the home tasks that were already piling upon his small shoulders, he liked best to go with Hertha among the trees to the lake where every day there was some new interest. This afternoon it was a brood of ducks that were taking their first bath. And while Hertha sat on the gra.s.s he wandered along the sh.o.r.e, throwing in bits of bread and sometimes laughing softly to himself.
The afternoon was full of golden lights, the warm sun bringing a feeling of happy drowsiness. School was forgotten and the southern girl basked in the languorous fragrance of spring. Life had begun again for the world. Across from where she sat on a granite stone a little white b.u.t.terfly lighted and slowly folded and unfolded its wings. It quivered on its resting place as though not yet accustomed to flight. The buds on the azalea were slowly opening. Everywhere life was close to fulfilment and yet as though waiting for some final word from sun or earth.
”Please come here, Miss Ogilvie,” Bob called, running up to her. ”Look at this bird. I bet it's broken its wing.”
A white birch hung over the path by the water's edge and beneath it, on the smooth asphalt, fluttered a little bird, brilliant with black and orange markings. It hopped away as they approached, but made no flight, and as they followed they could mark each splotch of black and white and orange.
”What is it?” Bob asked eagerly.
”I never saw it before,” Hertha said. ”I think it belongs up in the treetops.”
Bob eyed the broken wing. ”It was some boy,” he said admiringly, ”that could hit such a little thing with nothing but a stone.”
”Was that how it happened?”
”Sure. I've seen the boys throwing stones up the trees, but it ain't often they bring down a bird.”
Making a tremendous effort, the bird flew on to a low branch of the birch. Amid the young green leaves its dress of orange and black showed gayer than ever. It reminded Hertha of one of Ellen's children, a little girl with s.h.i.+ning black face and bright black eyes, who used to wear as a kerchief her mother's bandana. She was like a bird herself, swift of movement, trilling with song.
”It was a mean thing to do,” Hertha cried indignantly as she watched the warbler flutter and fall to the ground again. ”Why couldn't they let it stay in the tree top? I suppose the boys think it's fun to bring it down with a stone.”
”Sure,” said Bob cheerfully.
”Don't you do it,” his companion commanded. ”Can't you see how it hurts?
It's crippled through no fault of its own.”
”What do you think'll happen?” Bob asked, a little anxiously. Hertha's tone was making an impression on him.
”I'm afraid it will die. Any animal can seize it now.”
”I tell you what.” Bob's face brightened. ”I'll catch it and put it in our old canary cage. Our bird's dead now, and we can feed this and hear it sing.”
He crouched to make a sudden spring, but Hertha held him back. ”Don't!”
she said.
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