John Culver brought them home and
as they left the car Mrs. Horton enquired, “Is
your apartment comfortable, John?”
“Perfectly comfortable, thank you,” said
Culver.
“You are married?” Mrs. Horton continued.
“Yes,” replied Culver.
“Any children?”
“One little girl,” said Culver, glancing
at Rosanna with a smile.
Mrs. Horton saw the look. She
said nothing, but when Rosanna sat before her at the
great round table, eating her luncheon, Mrs. Horton
remarked, “Of course, Rosanna, you will make
no effort whatever to meet the child living over the
garage. Unless you make the opportunity, she will
never see you, thanks to the arrangement of the windows.
She is a child that it would be impossible for you
to know.”
Rosanna did not reply.
“Rosanna?” said her grandmother sharply.
“Yes, grandmother,” sighed poor Rosanna.
After luncheon Mrs. Horton dressed
and was driven away to a bridge party. Rosanna
practiced scales for half an hour, talked French with
her governess for another long half, and then wandered
out into the garden and commenced to wonder about
the child over the garage. How old was she?
What was she like? Rosanna wished she could see
her. There was a rustic seat near the garage
and Rosanna went over and curled up on its rough lap.
She stared and stared at the garage, but the blank
brick walls with their curtains of vines gave her
no hint.
It seemed as though she had been sitting
there for hours when she fancied a small voice called,
“Hello, Rosanna!”
Rosanna sat perfectly still, staring at the brick
wall.
“Hello, Rosanna!” said
the voice again softly. It was a strangely sweet,
gentle voice and seemed to come from the air.
Rosanna cast a startled glance above her.
There was a little laugh. “Look in the
tree,” said the pleasant voice.
Rosanna, mouth open, eyes popping, looked up.
A big tree growing in the alley, close
outside the brick wall, leaned its biggest bough in
a friendly fashion over Rosanna’s garden.
High up something blue fluttered among the thick leaves.
Then the branches parted, and a face appeared.
Rosanna continued to stare.
The little girl in the tree waved her hand.
“You don’t know me, do
you, Rosanna?” she teased. “But I
know you. You are Rosanna Horton, and you live
in that lovely, lovely house and this is your garden.
Is that your playhouse over there? And oh, is
there an honest-for-truly pony in that little barn?
Dad says there really is. Is there?” She
stopped for breath, and beamed down on Rosanna.
“How did you get up there?”
said Rosanna. She was not allowed to climb
trees.
“Father made a little ladder
and fastened it to the trunk with wires so it won’t
hurt the wood. If Mrs. Horton doesn’t mind,
he is going to fix a little platform up here.
There is a splendid place for it. Then I can
study up here where it is all cool and breezy and whispery.
Don’t you like to hear the leaves whisper?
He is going to put a rail around it so we won’t
fall off.”
“Who is we?” asked
Rosanna. “Have you brothers and sisters?”
“No, I haven’t,”
said the little girl. “Mother says it is
my greatest misfortune. She says that I shall
have to make a great many friends to make up for it,
and that if I don’t I will grow selfish.
Wouldn’t you hate to be selfish? I ’spect
you have dozens and dozens of little girls
to play with. How happy you must make everybody
with your lovely garden and things! My mother
says that is what things are for: to share with
people. She says it is just like having two big
red apples. If you eat them both, why, you don’t
feel good in your tummy; but if you give one to some
one, you feel good everywhere, and you have a good
time while you are eating them and get better acquainted,
and it just does you good. Do little girls come
to see you every day?”
“No,” said Rosanna, “I
don’t know any little girls. My grandmother
won’t let me.”
“Won’t let you?”
said the girl in the tree in a shocked tone. “Why
won’t she let you?”
“She says I would learn to speak
bad grammar and use slang, and grow up to be vulgar.”
“Goodness me!” said the
stranger. She sat rocking on her bough for a few
minutes. Then: “Why would you have
to learn bad things of other girls?” she demanded.
“I wouldn’t let anybody teach me
anything I didn’t want to know. I should
think it would be nice to have you teach them
good grammar if you know it, and not to use slang,
and all that. She must think you are soft!
My mother says if you are made of putty, you will
get dented all over and never be more than an unshapely
lump, but if you are made of good stone, you can be
carved into something lovely and lasting. But
that is just your grandmother,” said the girl.
“Where is your mother? Is she off visiting?”
“She is dead,” said Rosanna.
A wave of unspeakable longing for the lost young mother
swept over her and her lip trembled as she spoke.
“Oh, poor, poor Rosanna!”
said the little tree girl softly. “Oh,
Rosanna, I feel so sorry! If you ever want to
borrow mine, I wish you would. I wish you would!
My mother says that when a woman has even just one
child in her heart, it grows so big that it can hold
and love all the children in the world. You borrow
her any time you need her, Rosanna!” Then feeling
that perhaps the conversation ought to take a livelier
strain, she did not wait for Rosanna to answer, but
continued, “I wish somebody hadn’t built
this apartment over your garage so that none of the
windows look out on your garden. We are going
to hate that, aren’t we?”
“Grandmother had it built that
way so we would not see the people living there,”
Rosanna explained.
“Oh!” said the tree girl.
“Well, of course you know that I live
there now. We came two days ago, and my name
is Helen Culver. We would love to play together,
wouldn’t we?”
“Oh, indeed we would!” said Rosanna.
“Well, then we will,”
said Helen joyfully. “I must go now.
I think it is practice time. I will see you after
luncheon. Good-bye!” and she slid down
the tree and disappeared.
Rosanna went skipping to the house.
She was so happy. It was not her practice time,
but she was going to practice because Helen was so
engaged. Her mind was full of Helen as she sat
doing finger exercises and scales. How lovely
and clean and bright she looked with her big, blue
eyes and blond docked hair! Her teeth were so
white and pretty and her voice was so soft and low.
And she had a dimple! It was Rosanna’s
dream to have a dimple in her thin little cheek.
Rosanna commenced to play scales.
She took the C scale it was so easy that
she could think. She was so happy that she played
it in a very prancy way, up and down, up and down.
Then it commenced to stumble and go ve-ry, v-e-r-y
slowly. Rosanna had had an awful thought.
The same thought had really been there all the time,
but her heart was making such a happy noise that she
wouldn’t let herself hear it. Now, however,
it made such a racket she just had to listen.
Over and over with the scales it said loudly and harshly,
“Will your grandmother let you play with that
little girl who lives over the garage? Will your
grandmother even let you know that little girl
who lives over the garage? Will she? Will
she?”
Rosanna Horton knew the answer perfectly well.