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<h2> CHAPTER XXIX </h2>
<h3> "I'M NOT GOING TO MARRY" </h3>
<p>Billy did not know whether to be more amazed or amused at Bertram's
proposal of marriage. She was vexed; she was very sure of that. To marry
Bertram? Absurd!... Then she reflected that, after all, it was only
Bertram, so she calmed herself.</p>
<p>Still, it was annoying. She liked Bertram, she had always liked him. He
was a nice boy, and a most congenial companion. He never bored her, as did
some others; and he was always thoughtful of cushions and footstools and
cups of tea when one was tired. He was, in fact, an ideal friend, just the
sort she wanted; and it was such a pity that he must spoil it all now with
this silly sentimentality! And of course he had spoiled it all. There was
no going back now to their old friendliness. He would be morose or silly
by turns, according to whether she frowned or smiled; or else he would
take himself off in a tragic sort of way that was very disturbing. He had
said, to be sure, that he would "win." Win, indeed! As if she could marry
Bertram! When she married, her choice would fall upon a man, not a boy; a
big, grave, earnest man to whom the world meant something; a man who loved
music, of course; a man who would single her out from all the world, and
show to her, and to her only, the depth and tenderness of his love; a man
who—but she was not going to marry, anyway, remembered Billy,
suddenly. And with that she began to cry. The whole thing was so
"tiresome," she declared, and so "absurd."</p>
<p>Billy rather dreaded her next meeting with Bertram. She feared—she
knew not what. But, as it turned out, she need not have feared anything,
for he met her tranquilly, cheerfully, as usual; and he did nothing and
said nothing that he might not have done and said before that twilight
chat took place.</p>
<p>Billy was relieved. She concluded that, after all, Bertram was going to be
sensible. She decided that she, too, would be sensible. She would accept
him on this, his chosen plane, and she would think no more of his
"nonsense."</p>
<p>Billy threw herself then even more enthusiastically into her beloved work.
She told Marie that after all was said and done, there could not be any
man that would tip the scales one inch with music on the other side. She
was a little hurt, it is true, when Marie only laughed and answered:</p>
<p>"But what if the man and the music both happen to be on the same side, my
dear; what then?"</p>
<p>Marie's voice was wistful, in spite of the laugh—so wistful that it
reminded Billy of their conversation a few weeks before.</p>
<p>"But it is you, Marie, who want the stockings to darn and the puddings to
make," she retorted playfully. "Not I! And, do you know? I believe I shall
turn matchmaker yet, and find you a man; and the chiefest of his
qualifications shall be that he's wretchedly hard on his hose, and that he
adores puddings."</p>
<p>"No, no, Miss Billy, don't, please!" begged the other, in quick terror.
"Forget all I said the other day; please do! Don't tell—anybody!"</p>
<p>She was so obviously distressed and frightened that Billy was puzzled.</p>
<p>"There, there, 'twas only a jest, of course," she soothed her. "But,
really Marie, it is the dear, domestic little mouse like yourself that
ought to be somebody's wife—and that's the kind men are looking for,
too."</p>
<p>Marie gave a slow shake of her head.</p>
<p>"Not the kind of man that is somebody, that does something," she objected;
"and that's the only kind I could—love. HE wants a wife that is
beautiful and clever, that can do things like himself—LIKE HIMSELF!"
she iterated feverishly.</p>
<p>Billy opened wide her eyes.</p>
<p>"Why, Marie, one would think—you already knew—such a man," she
cried.</p>
<p>The little music teacher changed her position, and turned her eyes away.</p>
<p>"I do, of course," she retorted in a merry voice, "lots of them. Don't
you? Come, we've discussed my matrimonial prospects quite long enough,"
she went on lightly. "You know we started with yours. Suppose we go back
to those."</p>
<p>"But I haven't any," demurred Billy, as she turned with a smile to greet
Aunt Hannah, who had just entered the room. "I'm not going to marry; am I,
Aunt Hannah?"</p>
<p>"Er—what? Marry? My grief and conscience, what a question, Billy! Of
course you're going to marry—when the time comes!" exclaimed Aunt
Hannah.</p>
<p>Billy laughed and shook her head vigorously. But even as she opened her
lips to reply, Rosa appeared and announced that Mr. Calderwell was waiting
down-stairs. Billy was angry then, for after the maid was gone, the
merriment in Aunt Hannah's laugh only matched that in Marie's—and
the intonation was unmistakable.</p>
<p>"Well, I'm not!" declared Billy with pink cheeks and much indignation, as
she left the room. And as if to convince herself, Marie, Aunt Hannah, and
all the world that such was the case, she refused Calderwell so decidedly
that night when he, for the half-dozenth time, laid his hand and heart at
her feet, that even Calderwell himself was convinced—so far as his
own case was concerned—and left town the next day.</p>
<p>Bertram told Aunt Hannah afterward that he understood Mr. Calderwell had
gone to parts unknown. To himself Bertram shamelessly owned that the more
"unknown" they were, the better he himself would be pleased.</p>
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