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<h2> XI </h2>
<h3> BEGINNING A TRUE FRIENDSHIP </h3>
<p>This was Miss Jane Baxter. She opened her eyes upon the new-born day, and
her first thoughts were of Mr. Parcher. That is, he was already in her
mind when she awoke, a circumstance to be accounted for on the ground that
his conversation, during her quiet convalescence in his library, had so
fascinated her that in all likelihood she had been dreaming of him. Then,
too, Jane and Mr. Parcher had a bond in common, though Mr. Parcher did not
know it. Not without result had William repeated Miss Pratt's inquiry in
Jane's hearing: "Who IS that curious child?" Jane had preserved her
sang-froid, but the words remained with her, for she was one of those who
ponder and retain in silence.</p>
<p>She thought almost exclusively of Mr. Parcher until breakfast-time, and
resumed her thinking of him at intervals during the morning. Then, in the
afternoon, a series of quiet events not unconnected with William's passion
caused her to think of Mr. Parcher more poignantly than ever; nor was her
mind diverted to a different channel by another confidential conversation
with her mother. Who can say, then, that it was not by design that she
came face to face with Mr. Parcher on the public highway at about five
o'clock that afternoon? Everything urges the belief that she deliberately
set herself in his path.</p>
<p>Mr. Parcher was walking home from his office, and he walked slowly,
gulping from time to time, as he thought of the inevitable evening before
him. His was not a rugged constitution, and for the last fortnight or so
he had feared that it was giving way altogether. Each evening he felt that
he was growing weaker, and sometimes he thought piteously that he might go
away for a while. He did not much care where, though what appealed to him
most, curiously enough, was not the thought of the country, with the
flowers and little birds; no, what allured him was the idea that perhaps
he could find lodgment for a time in an Old People's Home, where the
minimum age for inmates was about eighty.</p>
<p>Walking more and more slowly, as he approached the dwelling he had once
thought of as home, he became aware of a little girl in a checkered dress
approaching him at a gait varied by the indifferent behavior of a
barrel-hoop which she was disciplining with a stick held in her right
hand. When the hoop behaved well, she came ahead rapidly; when it affected
to be intoxicated, which was most often its whim, she zigzagged with it,
and gained little ground. But all the while, and without reference to what
went on concerning the hoop, she slowly and continuously fed herself (with
her left hand) small, solemnly relished bites of a slice of
bread-and-butter covered with apple sauce and powdered sugar.</p>
<p>Mr. Parcher looked upon her, and he shivered slightly; for he knew her to
be Willie Baxter's sister.</p>
<p>Unaware of the emotion she produced in him, Jane checked her hoop and
halted.</p>
<p>"G'd afternoon, Mister Parcher," she said, gravely.</p>
<p>"Good afternoon," he returned, without much spirit.</p>
<p>Jane looked up at him trustfully and with a strange, unconscious fondness.
"You goin' home now, Mr. Parcher?" she asked, turning to walk at his side.
She had suspended the hoop over her left arm and transferred the
bread-and-butter and apple sauce and sugar to her right, so that she could
eat even more conveniently than before.</p>
<p>"I suppose so," he murmured.</p>
<p>"My brother Willie's been at your house all afternoon," she remarked.</p>
<p>He repeated, "I suppose so," but in a tone which combined the vocal tokens
of misery and of hopeless animosity.</p>
<p>"He just went home," said Jane. "I was 'cross the street from your house,
but I guess he didn't see me. He kept lookin' back at your house. Miss
Pratt was on the porch."</p>
<p>"I suppose so." This time it was a moan.</p>
<p>Jane proceeded to give him some information. "My brother Willie isn't
comin' back to your house to-night, but he doesn't know it yet."</p>
<p>"What!" exclaimed Mr. Parcher.</p>
<p>"Willie isn't goin' to spend any more evenings at your house at all," said
Jane, thoughtfully. "He isn't, but he doesn't know it yet."</p>
<p>Mr. Parcher gazed fixedly at the wonderful child, and something like a ray
of sunshine flickered over his seamed and harried face. "Are you SURE he
isn't?" he said. "What makes you think so?"</p>
<p>"I know he isn't," said demure Jane. "It's on account of somep'm I told
mamma."</p>
<p>And upon this a gentle glow began to radiate throughout Mr. Parcher. A new
feeling budded within his bosom; he was warmly attracted to Jane. She was
evidently a child to be cherished, and particularly to be encouraged in
the line of conduct she seemed to have adopted. He wished the Bullitt and
Watson families each had a little girl like this. Still, if what she said
of William proved true, much had been gained and life might be tolerable,
after all.</p>
<p>"He'll come in the afternoons, I guess," said Jane. "But you aren't home
then, Mr. Parcher, except late like you were that day of the Sunday-school
class. It was on account of what you said that day. I told mamma."</p>
<p>"Told your mamma what?"</p>
<p>"What you said."</p>
<p>Mr. Parcher's perplexity continued. "What about?"</p>
<p>"About Willie. YOU know!" Jane smiled fraternally.</p>
<p>"No, I don't."</p>
<p>"It was when I was layin' in the liberry, that day of the Sunday-school
class," Jane told him. "You an' Mrs. Parcher was talkin' in there about
Miss Pratt an' Willie an' everything."</p>
<p>"Good heavens!" Mr. Parcher, summoning his memory, had placed the occasion
and Jane together. "Did you HEAR all that?"</p>
<p>"Yes." Jane nodded. "I told mamma all what you said."</p>
<p>"Murder!"</p>
<p>"Well," said Jane, "I guess it's good I did, because look—that's the
very reason mamma did somep'm so's he can't come any more except in
daytime. I guess she thought Willie oughtn't to behave so's't you said so
many things about him like that; so to-day she did somep'm, an' now he
can't come any more to behave that loving way of Miss Pratt that you said
you would be in the lunatic asylum if he didn't quit. But he hasn't found
it out yet."</p>
<p>"Found what out, please?" asked Mr. Parcher, feeling more affection for
Jane every moment.</p>
<p>"He hasn't found out he can't come back to your house to-night; an' he
can't come back to-morrow night, nor day-after-to-morrow night, nor—"</p>
<p>"Is it because your mamma is going to tell him he can't?"</p>
<p>"No, Mr. Parcher. Mamma says he's too old—an' she said she didn't
like to, anyway. She just DID somep'm."</p>
<p>"What? What did she do?"</p>
<p>"It's a secret," said Jane. "I could tell you the first part of it—up
to where the secret begins, I expect."</p>
<p>"Do!" Mr. Parcher urged.</p>
<p>"Well, it's about somep'm Willie's been WEARIN'," Jane began, moving
closer to him as they slowly walked onward. "I can't tell you what they
were, because that's the secret—but he had 'em on him every evening
when he came to see Miss Pratt, but they belong to papa, an' papa doesn't
know a word about it. Well, one evening papa wanted to put 'em on, because
he had a right to, Mr. Parcher, an' Willie didn't have any right to at
all, but mamma couldn't find 'em; an' she rummidged an' rummidged 'most
all next day an' pretty near every day since then an' never did find 'em,
until don't you believe I saw Willie inside of 'em only last night! He was
startin' over to your house to see Miss Pratt in 'em! So I told mamma, an'
she said it 'd haf to be a secret, so that's why I can't tell you what
they were. Well, an' then this afternoon, early, I was with her, an' she
said, long as I had told her the secret in the first place, I could come
in Willie's room with her, an' we both were already in there anyway,
'cause I was kind of thinkin' maybe she'd go in there to look for 'em, Mr.
Parcher—"</p>
<p>"I see," he said, admiringly. "I see."</p>
<p>"Well, they were under Willie's window-seat, all folded up; an' mamma said
she wondered what she better do, an' she was worried because she didn't
like to have Willie behave so's you an' Mrs. Parcher thought that way
about him. So she said the—the secret—what Willie wears, you
know, but they're really papa's an' aren't Willie's any more'n they're
MINE—well, she said the secret was gettin' a little teeny bit too
tight for papa, but she guessed they—I mean the secret—she
said she guessed it was already pretty loose for Willie; so she wrapped it
up, an' I went with her, an' we took 'em to a tailor, an' she told him to
make 'em bigger, for a surprise for papa, 'cause then they'll fit him
again, Mr. Parcher. She said he must make 'em a whole lot bigger. She said
he must let 'em way, WAY out! So I guess Willie would look too funny in
'em after they're fixed; an' anyway, Mr. Parcher, the secret won't be home
from the tailor's for two weeks, an' maybe by that time Miss Pratt'll be
gone."</p>
<p>They had reached Mr. Parcher's gate; he halted and looked down fondly upon
this child who seemed to have read his soul. "Do you honestly think so?"
he asked.</p>
<p>"Well, anyway, Mr. Parcher," said Jane, "mamma said—well, she said
she's sure Willie wouldn't come here in the evening any more when YOU're
at home, Mr. Parcher—'cause after he'd been wearin' the secret every
night this way he wouldn't like to come and not have the secret on. Mamma
said the reason he would feel like that was because he was seventeen years
old. An' she isn't goin' to tell him anything about it, Mr. Parcher. She
said that's the best way."</p>
<p>Her new friend nodded and seemed to agree. "I suppose that's what you
meant when you said he wasn't coming back but didn't know it yet?"</p>
<p>"Yes, Mr. Parcher."</p>
<p>He rested an elbow upon the gate-post, gazing down with ever-increasing
esteem. "Of course I know your last name," he said, "but I'm afraid I've
forgotten your other one."</p>
<p>"It's Jane."</p>
<p>"Jane," said Mr. Parcher, "I should like to do something for you."</p>
<p>Jane looked down, and with eyes modestly lowered she swallowed the last
fragment of the bread-and-butter and apple sauce and sugar which had been
the constantly evanescent companion of their little walk together. She was
not mercenary; she had sought no reward.</p>
<p>"Well, I guess I must run home," she said. And with one lift of her eyes
to his and a shy laugh—laughter being a rare thing for Jane—she
scampered quickly to the corner and was gone.</p>
<p>But though she cared for no reward, the extraordinary restlessness of
William, that evening, after dinner, must at least have been of great
interest to her. He ascended to his own room directly from the table, but
about twenty minutes later came down to the library, where Jane was
sitting (her privilege until half after seven) with her father and mother.
William looked from one to the other of his parents and seemed about to
speak, but did not do so. Instead, he departed for the upper floor again
and presently could be heard moving about energetically in various parts
of the house, a remote thump finally indicating that he was doing
something with a trunk in the attic.</p>
<p>After that he came down to the library again and once more seemed about to
speak, but did not. Then he went up-stairs again, and came down again, and
he was still repeating this process when Jane's time-limit was reached and
she repaired conscientiously to her little bed. Her mother came to hear
her prayers and to turn out the light; and—when Mrs. Baxter had
passed out into the hall, after that, Jane heard her speaking to William,
who was now conducting what seemed to be excavations on a serious scale in
his own room.</p>
<p>"Oh, Willie, perhaps I didn't tell you, but—you remember I'd been
missing papa's evening clothes and looking everywhere for days and days?"</p>
<p>"Ye—es," huskily from William.</p>
<p>"Well, I found them! And where do you suppose I'd put them? I found them
under your window-seat. Can you think of anything more absurd than putting
them there and then forgetting it? I took them to the tailor's to have
them let out. They were getting too tight for papa, but they'll be all
right for him when the tailor sends them back."</p>
<p>What the stricken William gathered from this it is impossible to state
with accuracy; probably he mixed some perplexity with his emotions.
Certainly he was perplexed the following evening at dinner.</p>
<p>Jane did not appear at the table. "Poor child! she's sick in bed," Mrs.
Baxter explained to her husband. "I was out, this afternoon, and she ate
nearly ALL of a five-pound box of candy."</p>
<p>Both the sad-eyed William and his father were dumfounded. "Where on earth
did she get a five-pound box of candy?" Mr. Baxter demanded.</p>
<p>"I'm afraid Jane has begun her first affair," said Mrs. Baxter. "A
gentleman sent it to her."</p>
<p>"What gentleman?" gasped William.</p>
<p>And in his mother's eyes, as they slowly came to rest on his in reply, he
was aware of an inscrutability strongly remindful of that inscrutable look
of Jane's.</p>
<p>"Mr. Parcher," she said, gently.</p>
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