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<h2> CHAPTER XXX </h2>
<h3> MARIE FINDS A FRIEND </h3>
<p>It was on a very cold January afternoon, and Cyril was hurrying up the
hill toward Billy's house, when he was startled to see a slender young
woman sitting on a curbstone with her head against an electric-light post.
He stopped abruptly.</p>
<p>"I beg your pardon, but—why, Miss Hawthorn! It is Miss Hawthorn;
isn't it?"</p>
<p>Under his questioning eyes the girl's pale face became so painfully
scarlet that in sheer pity the man turned his eyes away. He thought he had
seen women blush before, but he decided now that he had not.</p>
<p>"I'm sure—haven't I met you at Miss Neilson's? Are you ill? Can't I
do something for you?" he begged.</p>
<p>"Yes—no—that is, I AM Miss Hawthorn, and I've met you at Miss
Neilson's," stammered the girl, faintly. "But there isn't anything, thank
you, that you can do—Mr. Henshaw. I stopped to—rest."</p>
<p>The man frowned.</p>
<p>"But, surely—pardon me, Miss Hawthorn, but I can't think it your
usual custom to choose an icy curbstone for a resting place, with the
thermometer down to zero. You must be ill. Let me take you to Miss
Neilson's."</p>
<p>"No, no, thank you," cried the girl, struggling to her feet, the vivid red
again flooding her face. "I have a lesson—to give."</p>
<p>"Nonsense! You're not fit to give a lesson. Besides, they are all
folderol, anyway, half of them. A dozen lessons, more or less, won't make
any difference; they'll play just as well—and just as atrociously.
Come, I insist upon taking you to Miss Neilson's."</p>
<p>"No, no, thank you! I really mustn't. I—" She could say no more. A
strong, yet very gentle hand had taken firm hold of her arm in such a way
as half to support her. A force quite outside of herself was carrying her
forward step by step—and Miss Hawthorn was not used to strong,
gentle hands, nor yet to a force quite outside of herself. Neither was she
accustomed to walk arm in arm with Mr. Cyril Henshaw to Miss Billy's door.
When she reached there her cheeks were like red roses for color, and her
eyes were like the stars for brightness. Yet a minute later, confronted by
Miss Billy's astonished eyes, the stars and the roses fled, and a very
white-faced girl fell over in a deathlike faint in Cyril Henshaw's arms.</p>
<p>Marie was put to bed in the little room next to Billy's, and was
peremptorily hushed when faint remonstrance was made. The next morning,
white-faced and wide-eyed, she resolutely pulled herself half upright, and
announced that she was all well and must go home—home to Marie was a
six-by-nine hall bed-room in a South End lodging house.</p>
<p>Very gently Billy pushed her back on the pillow and laid a detaining hand
on her arm.</p>
<p>"No, dear. Now, please be sensible and listen to reason. You are my guest.
You did not know it, perhaps, for I'm afraid the invitation got a little
delayed. But you're to stay—oh, lots of weeks."</p>
<p>"I—stay here? Why, I can't—indeed, I can't," protested Marie.</p>
<p>"But that isn't a bit of a nice way to accept an invitation," disapproved
Billy. "You should say, 'Thank you, I'd be delighted, I'm sure, and I'll
stay.'"</p>
<p>In spite of herself the little music teacher laughed, and in the laugh her
tense muscles relaxed.</p>
<p>"Miss Billy, Miss Billy, what is one to do with you? Surely you know—you
must know that I can't do what you ask!"</p>
<p>"I'm sure I don't see why not," argued Billy. "I'm merely giving you an
invitation and all you have to do is to accept it."</p>
<p>"But the invitation is only the kind way your heart has of covering
another of your many charities," objected Marie; "besides, I have to
teach. I have my living to earn."</p>
<p>"But you can't," demurred the other. "That's just the trouble. Don't you
see? The doctor said last night that you must not teach again this
winter."</p>
<p>"Not teach—again—this winter! No, no, he could not be so cruel
as that!"</p>
<p>"It wasn't cruel, dear; it was kind. You would be ill if you attempted it.
Now you'll get better. He says all you need is rest and care—and
that's exactly what I mean my guest shall have."</p>
<p>Quick tears came to the sick girl's eyes.</p>
<p>"There couldn't be a kinder heart than yours, Miss Billy," she murmured,
"but I couldn't—I really couldn't be a burden to you like this. I
shall go to some hospital."</p>
<p>"But you aren't going to be a burden. You are going to be my friend and
companion."</p>
<p>"A companion—and in bed like this?"</p>
<p>"Well, THAT wouldn't be impossible," smiled Billy; "but, as it happens you
won't have to put that to the test, for you'll soon be up and dressed. The
doctor says so. Now surely you will stay."</p>
<p>There was a long pause. The little music teacher's eyes had left Billy's
face and were circling the room, wistfully lingering on the hangings of
filmy lace, the dainty wall covering, and the exquisite water colors in
their white-and-gold frames. At last she drew a deep sigh.</p>
<p>"Yes, I'll stay," she breathed rapturously; "but—you must let me
help."</p>
<p>"Help? Help what?"</p>
<p>"Help you; your letters, your music-copying, your accounts—anything,
everything. And if you don't let me help,"—the music teacher's voice
was very stern now—"if you don't let me help, I shall go home just—as—soon—as—I—can—walk!"</p>
<p>"Dear me!" dimpled Billy. "And is that all? Well, you shall help, and to
your heart's content, too. In fact, I'm not at all sure that I sha'n't
keep you darning stockings and making puddings all the time," she added
mischievously, as she left the room.</p>
<p>Miss Hawthorn sat up the next day. The day following, in one of Billy's
"fluttery wrappers," as she called them, she walked all about the room.
Very soon she was able to go down-stairs, and in an astonishingly short
time she fitted into the daily life as if she had always been there. She
was, moreover, of such assistance to Billy that even she herself could see
the value of her work; and so she stayed, content.</p>
<p>The little music teacher saw a good deal of Billy's friends then,
particularly of the Henshaw brothers; and very glad was Billy to see the
comradeship growing between them. She had known that William would be kind
to the orphan girl, but she had feared that Marie would not understand
Bertram's nonsense or Cyril's reserve. But very soon Bertram had begged,
and obtained, permission to try to reproduce on canvas the sheen of the
fine, fair hair, and the veiled bloom of the rose-leaf skin that were
Marie's greatest charms; and already Cyril had unbent from his usual
stiffness enough to play to her twice. So Billy's fears on that score were
at an end.</p>
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