Part 2 (1/2)
”No, Bobby, he has never heard a sound.”
Too awe-stricken even to repeat his favorite exclamation, the boy munched his cooky in silence, while Maggie, enjoying her share of the old basket maker's hospitality, snuggled a little closer to the wheel of the big chair.
”Billy Rand, you see,” explained the Interpreter, ”is my legs.”
Bobby laughed. ”Funny legs, I'd say.”
”Yes,” agreed the Interpreter, ”but very good legs just the same. Billy runs all sorts of errands for me--goes to town to sell our baskets and to bring home our groceries, helps about the house and does many things that I can't do. He is hoeing the garden this afternoon. He comes in every once in a while to ask if I want anything. He sleeps in a little room next to mine and sometimes in the night, when I am not resting well, I hear him come to my bedside to see if I am all right.”
”An' yer keep him an' take care of him?” asked Bobby.
”Yes,” returned the Interpreter, ”I take care of Billy and Billy takes care of me. He has fine legs but not much of a--but cannot speak or hear. I can talk and hear and think but have no legs. So with my reasonably good head and his very good legs we make a fairly good man, you see.”
Bobby laughed aloud and even wee Maggie chuckled at the Interpreter's quaint explanation of himself and Billy Rand.
”Funny kind of a man,” said Bobby.
”Yes,” agreed the Interpreter, ”but most of us men are funny in one way or another--aren't we, Maggie?” He looked down into the upturned face of that tiny wisp of humanity at his side.
Maggie smiled gravely in answer.
Very confident now in his superiority over the Interpreter, whose deaf and dumb legs were safely out of sight in the garden back of the house, Bobby finished the last of his cookies, and began to explore.
Accompanying his investigations with a running fire of questions, he fingered the unfinished basket and the tools and material on the table, examined the wheel chair, and went from end to end of the balcony porch. Hanging over the railing, he looked down from every possible angle upon the rocks, the stairway and the dusty road below.
Exhausting, at last, the possibilities of the immediate vicinity, he turned his inquiring gaze upon the more distant landscape.
”Gee! Yer can see a lot from here, can't yer?”
”Yes,” returned the Interpreter, gravely, ”you can certainly see a lot.
And do you know, Bobby, it is strange, but what you see depends almost wholly on what you are?”
The boy turned his freckled face toward the Interpreter. ”Huh?”
”I mean,” explained the Interpreter, ”that different people see different things. Some who come to visit me can see nothing but the Mill over there; some see only the Flats down below; others see the stores and offices; others look at nothing but the different houses on the hillsides; still others can see nothing but the farms. It is funny, but that's the way it is with people, Bobby.”
”Aw--what are yer givin' us?” returned Bobby, and, with an unmistakably superior air, he faced again toward the scene before them. ”I can see the whole darned thing--I can.”
The Interpreter laughed. ”And that,” he said, ”is exactly what every one says, Bobby. But, after all, they don't see the whole darned thing--they only think they do.”
”Huh,” retorted the boy, scornfully, ”I guess I can see the Mill, can't I?--over there by the river--with the smoke a-rollin' out of her chimneys? Listen, I can hear her, too.”
Faintly, on a pa.s.sing breath of air, came the heavy droning, moaning voice of the Mill.
”Yes,” agreed the Interpreter, with an odd note in his deep, kindly voice, ”I can nearly always hear it. I was sure you would see the Mill.”
”An' look-ee, look-ee,” shouted the boy, forgetting, in his quick excitement, to maintain this superior air, ”look-ee, Mag! Come here, quick.” With energetic gestures he beckoned his sister to his side.
”Look-ee, right over there by that bunch of dust, see? It's our house--where we live. That there's Tony's old place on the corner. An'
there's the lot where us kids plays ball. Gee, yer could almost see mom if she'd only come outside to talk to Missus Grafton er somethin'!”
From his wheel chair the Interpreter watched the children at the porch railing. ”Of course you would see your home,” he said, gravely. ”The Mill first, and then the place where you live. Nearly every one sees those things first. Now tell what else you see.”
”I see, I see--” The boy hesitated. There was so much to be seen from the Interpreter's balcony porch.