Billy did not leave the Strata this
time. Before twenty-four hours had passed, the
last cherished fragment of Mr. William Henshaw’s
possessions had been carefully carried down the imposing
steps of the Beacon Hill boarding-house under the
disapproving eyes of its bugle-adorned mistress, who
found herself now with a month’s advance rent
and two vacant “parlors” on her hands.
Before another twenty-four hours had passed her quondam
boarder, with a tired sigh, sank into his favorite
morris chair in his old familiar rooms, and looked
about him with contented eyes. Every treasure
was in place, from the traditional four small stones
of his babyhood days to the Batterseas Billy had just
brought him. Pete, as of yore, was hovering near
with a dust-cloth. Bertram’s gay whistle
sounded from the floor below. William Henshaw
was at home again.
This much accomplished, Billy went to see Aunt Hannah.
Aunt Hannah greeted her affectionately,
though with tearfully troubled eyes. She was
wearing a gray shawl to-day topped with a black one sure
sign of unrest, either physical or mental, as all her
friends knew.
“I’d begun to think you’d
forgotten me,” she faltered, with
a poor attempt at gayety.
“You’ve been home three whole days.”
“I know, dearie,” smiled
Billy; “and ’twas a shame. But I have
been so busy! My trunks came at last, and I’ve
been helping Uncle William get settled, too.”
Aunt Hannah looked puzzled.
“Uncle William get settled? You mean he’s
changed his room?”
Billy laughed oddly, and threw a swift glance into
Aunt Hannah’s face.
“Well, yes, he did change,”
she murmured; “but he’s moved back now
into the old quarters. Er you haven’t
heard from Uncle William then, lately, I take it.”
“No.” Aunt Hannah
shook her head abstractedly. “I did see
him once, several weeks ago; but I haven’t,
since. We had quite a talk, then; and, Billy,
I’ve been wanting to speak to you,” she
hurried on, a little feverishly. “I didn’t
like to leave, of course, till you did come home,
as long as you’d said nothing about your plans;
but ”
“Leave!” interposed Billy,
dazedly. “Leave where? What do you
mean?”
“Why, leave here, of course,
dear. I mean. I didn’t like to get
my room while you were away; but I shall now, of course,
at once.”
“Nonsense, Aunt Hannah!
As if I’d let you do that,” laughed Billy.
Aunt Hannah stiffened perceptibly.
Her lips looked suddenly thin and determined.
Even the soft little curls above her ears seemed actually
to bristle with resolution.
“Billy,” she began firmly,
“we might as well understand each other at once.
I know your good heart, and I appreciate your kindness.
But I can not come to live with you. I shall
not. It wouldn’t be best. I should
be like an interfering elder brother in your home.
I should spoil your young married life; and if I went
away for two months you’d never forget the utter
joy and freedom of those two months with the whole
house ali to yourselves.”
At the beginning of this speech Billy’s
eyes had still carried their dancing smile, but as
the peroration progressed on to the end, a dawning
surprise, which soon became a puzzled questioning,
drove the smile away. Then Billy sat suddenly
erect.
“Why, Aunt Hannah, that’s
exactly what Uncle William ” Billy
stopped, and regarded Aunt Hannah with quick suspicion.
The next moment she burst into gleeful laughter.
Aunt Hannah looked grieved, and not
a little surprised; but Billy did not seem to notice
this.
“Oh, oh, Aunt Hannah you,
too! How perfectly funny!” she gurgled.
“To think you two old blesseds should get your
heads together like this!”
Aunt Hannah stirred restively, and
pulled the black shawl more closely about her.
“Indeed, Billy, I don’t
know what you mean by that,” she sighed, with
a visible effort at self-control; “but I do
know that I can not go to live with you.”
“Bless your heart, dear, I don’t
want you to,” soothed Billy, with gay promptness.
“Oh! O-h-h,” stammered
Aunt Hannah, surprise, mortification, dismay, and
a grieved hurt bringing a flood of color to her face.
It is one thing to refuse a home, and quite another
to have a home refused you.
“Oh! O-h-h, Aunt Hannah,”
cried Billy, turning very red in her turn. “Please,
please don’t look like that. I didn’t
mean it that way. I do want you, dear, only I
want you somewhere else more. I want you here.”
“Here!” Aunt Hannah looked relieved, but
unconvinced.
“Yes. Don’t you like it here?”
“Like it! Why, I love it,
dear. You know I do. But you don’t
need this house now, Billy.”
“Oh, yes, I do,” retorted
Billy, airily. “I’m going to keep
it up, and I want you here.
“Fiddlededee, Billy! As
if I’d let you keep up this house just for me,”
scorned Aunt Hannah.
“’Tisn’t just for you. It’s
for for lots of folks.”
“My grief and conscience, Billy! What are
you talking about?”
Billy laughed, and settled herself
more comfortably on the hassock at Aunt Hannah’s
feet.
“Well, I’ll tell you.
Just now I want it for Tommy Dunn, and the Greggorys
if I can get them, and maybe one or two others.
There’ll always be somebody. You see, I
had thought I’d have them at the Strata.”
“Tommy Dunn at the Strata!”
Billy laughed again ruefully.
“O dear! You sound just
like Bertram,” she pouted. “He didn’t
want Tommy, either, nor any of the rest of them.”
“The rest of them!”
“Well, I could have had a lot
more, you know, the Strata is so big, especially now
that Cyril has gone, and left all those empty rooms.
I got real enthusiastic, but Bertram didn’t.
He just laughed and said ‘nonsense!’ until
he found I was really in earnest; then he well,
he said ‘nonsense,’ then, too only
he didn’t laugh,” finished Billy, with
a sigh.
Aunt Hannah regarded her with fond, though slightly
exasperated eyes.
“Billy, you are, indeed, a most
extraordinary young woman at times.
Surely, with you, a body never knows what to expect except
the unexpected.”
“Why, Aunt Hannah! and
from you, too!” reproached Billy, mischievously;
but Aunt Hannah had yet more to say.
“Of course Bertram thought it
was nonsense. The idea of you, a bride, filling
up your house with with people like that!
Tommy Dunn, indeed!”
“Oh, Bertram said he liked Tommy
all right,” sighed Billy; “but he said
that that didn’t mean he wanted him for three
meals a day. One would think poor Tommy was a
breakfast food! So that is when I thought of
keeping up this house, you see, and that’s why
I want you here to take charge of it.
And you’ll do that for me, won’t
you?”
Aunt Hannah fell back in her chair.
“Why, y-yes, Billy, of course,
if if you want it. But what an extraordinary
idea, child!”
Billy shook her head. A deeper
color came to her cheeks, and a softer glow to her
eyes.
“I don’t think so, Aunt
Hannah. It’s only that I’m so happy
that some of it has just got to overflow somewhere,
and this is going to be the overflow house a
sort of safety valve for me, you see. I’m
going to call it the Annex it will be an
annex to our home. And I want to keep it full,
always, of people who who can make the best
use of all that extra happiness that I can’t
possibly use myself,” she finished a little
tremulously. “Don’t you see?”
“Oh, yes, I see,”
replied Aunt Hannah, with a fond shake of the head.
“But, really, listen it’s
sensible,” urged Billy. “First, there’s
Tommy. His mother died last month. He’s
at a neighbor’s now, but they’re going
to send him to a Home for Crippled Children; and he’s
grieving his heart out over it. I’m going
to bring him here to a real home the kind
that doesn’t begin with a capital letter.
He adores music, and he’s got real talent, I
think. Then there’s the Greggorys.”
Aunt Hannah looked dubious.
“You can’t get the Greggorys
to to use any of that happiness, Billy.
They’re too proud.”
Billy smiled radiantly.
“I know I can’t get them
to use it, Aunt Hannah, but I believe I can
get them to give it,” she declared triumphantly.
“I shall ask Alice Greggory to teach Tommy music,
and I shall ask Mrs. Greggory to teach him books;
and I shall tell them both that I positively need them
to keep you company.”
“Oh, but Billy,” bridled
Aunt Hannah, with prompt objection.
“Tut, tut! I know
you’ll be willing to be thrown as a little bit
of a sop to the Greggorys’ pride,” coaxed
Billy. “You just wait till I get the Overflow
Annex in running order. Why, Aunt Hannah, you
don’t know how busy you’re going to be
handing out all that extra happiness that I can’t
use!”
“You dear child!” Aunt
Hannah smiled mistily. The black shawl had fallen
unheeded to the floor now. “As if anybody
ever had any more happiness than one’s self
could use!”
“I have,” avowed Billy,
promptly, “and it’s going to keep growing
and growing, I know.”
“Oh, my grief and conscience,
Billy, don’t!” exclaimed Aunt Hannah,
lifting shocked hands of remonstrance. “Rap
on wood do! How can you boast like
that?”
Billy dimpled roguishly and sprang to her feet.
“Why, Aunt Hannah, I’m
ashamed of you! To be superstitious like that you,
a good Presbyterian!”
Aunt Hannah subsided shamefacedly.
“Yes, I know, Billy, it is silly; but I just
can’t help it.”
“Oh, but it’s worse than
silly, Aunt Hannah,” teased Billy, with a remorseless
chuckle. “It’s really heathen!
Bertram told me once that it dates ’way back
to the time of the Druids appealing to the
god of trees, or something like that when
you rap on wood, you know.”
“Ugh!” shuddered Aunt
Hannah. “As if I would, Billy! How
is Bertram, by the by?”
A swift shadow crossed Billy’s bright face.
“He’s lovely only his arm.”
“His arm! But I thought that was better.”
“Oh, it is,” drooped Billy,
“but it gets along so slowly, and it frets him
dreadfully. You know he never can do anything
with his left hand, he says, and he just hates to
have things done for him though Pete and
Dong Ling are quarreling with each other all the time
to do things for him, and I’m quarreling with
both of them to do them for him myself! By the
way, Dong Ling is going to leave us next week.
Did you know it?”
“Dong Ling leave!”
“Yes. Oh, he told Bertram
long ago he should go when we were married; that he
had plenty much money, and was going back to China,
and not be Melican man any longer. But I don’t
think Bertram thought he’d do it. William
says Dong Ling went to Pete, however, after we left,
and told him he wanted to go; that he liked the little
Missee plenty well, but that there’d be too
much hen-talk when she got back, and ”
“Why, the impudent creature!”
Billy laughed merrily.
“Yes; Pete was furious, William
says, but Dong Ling didn’t mean any disrespect,
I’m sure. He just wasn’t used to having
petticoats around, and didn’t want to take orders
from them; that’s all.”
“But, Billy, what will you do?”
“Oh, Pete’s fixed all
that lovely,” returned Billy, nonchalantly.
“You know his niece lives over in South Boston,
and it seems she’s got a daughter who’s
a fine cook and will be glad to come. Mercy!
Look at the time,” she broke off, glancing at
the clock. “I shall be late to dinner,
and Dong Ling loathes anybody who’s late to his
meals as I found out to my sorrow the night
we got home. Good-by, dear. I’ll be
out soon again and fix it all up about
the Annex, you know.” And with a bright
smile she was gone.
“Dear me,” sighed Aunt
Hannah, stooping to pick up the black shawl; “dear
me! Of course everything will be all right there’s
a girl coming, even if Dong Ling is going. But but Oh,
my grief and conscience, what an extraordinary child
Billy is, to be sure but what a dear one!”
she added, wiping a quick tear from her eye.
“An Overflow Annex, indeed, for her ‘extra
happiness’! Now isn’t that just like
Billy?”