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<h2> CHAPTER XX. ARKWRIGHT TELLS A STORY </h2>
<p>Arkwright called Monday afternoon by appointment; and together he and
Billy put the finishing touches to the new song.</p>
<p>It was when, with Aunt Hannah, they were having tea before the fire a
little later, that Billy told of her adventure the preceding Friday
afternoon in front of Symphony Hall.</p>
<p>"You knew the girl, of course—I think you said you knew the girl,"
ventured Arkwright.</p>
<p>"Oh, yes. She was Alice Greggory. I met her with Uncle William first, over
a Lowestoft teapot. Maybe you'd like to know <i>how</i> I met her," smiled
Billy.</p>
<p>"Alice Greggory?" Arkwright's eyes showed a sudden interest. "I used to
know an Alice Greggory, but it isn't the same one, probably. Her mother
was a cripple."</p>
<p>Billy gave a little cry.</p>
<p>"Why, it is—it must be! <i>My</i> Alice Greggory's mother is a
cripple. Oh, do you know them, really?"</p>
<p>"Well, it does look like it," rejoined Arkwright, showing even deeper
interest. "I haven't seen them for four or five years. They used to live
in our town. The mother was a little sweet-faced woman with young eyes and
prematurely white hair."</p>
<p>"That describes my Mrs. Greggory exactly," cried Billy's eager voice. "And
the daughter?"</p>
<p>"Alice? Why—as I said, it's been four years since I've seen her." A
touch of constraint had come into Arkwright's voice which Billy's keen ear
was quick to detect. "She was nineteen then and very pretty."</p>
<p>"About my height, and with light-brown hair and big blue-gray eyes that
look steely cold when she's angry?" questioned Billy.</p>
<p>"I reckon that's about it," acknowledged the man, with a faint smile.</p>
<p>"Then they <i>are</i> the ones," declared the girl, plainly excited.
"Isn't that splendid? Now we can know them, and perhaps do something for
them. I love that dear little mother already, and I think I should the
daughter—if she didn't put out so many prickers that I couldn't get
near her! But tell us about them. How did they come here? Why didn't you
know they were here?"</p>
<p>"Are you good at answering a dozen questions at once?" asked Aunt Hannah,
turning smiling eyes from Billy to the man at her side.</p>
<p>"Well, I can try," he offered. "To begin with, they are Judge Greggory's
widow and daughter. They belong to fine families on both sides, and they
used to be well off—really wealthy, for a small town. But the judge
was better at money-making than he was at money-keeping, and when he came
to die his income stopped, of course, and his estate was found to be in
bad shape through reckless loans and worthless investments. That was eight
years ago. Things went from bad to worse then, until there was almost
nothing left."</p>
<p>"I knew there was some such story as that back of them," declared Billy.
"But how do you suppose they came here?"</p>
<p>"To get away from—everybody, I suspect," replied Arkwright. "That
would be like them. They were very proud; and it isn't easy, you know, to
be nobody where you've been somebody. It doesn't hurt quite so hard—to
be nobody where you've never been anything but nobody."</p>
<p>"I suppose so," sighed Billy. "Still—they must have had friends."</p>
<p>"They did, of course; but when the love of one's friends becomes <i>too</i>
highly seasoned with pity, it doesn't make a pleasant morsel to swallow,
specially if you don't like the taste of the pity—and there are
people who don't, you know. The Greggorys were that kind. They were
morbidly so. From their cheap little cottage, where they did their own
work, they stepped out in their shabby garments and old-fashioned hats
with heads even more proudly erect than in the old days when their home
and their gowns and their doings were the admiration and envy of the town.
You see, they didn't want—that pity."</p>
<p>"I <i>do</i> see," cried Billy, her face aglow with sudden understanding;
"and I don't believe pity would be—nice!" Her own chin was held high
as she spoke.</p>
<p>"It must have been hard, indeed," murmured Aunt Hannah with a sigh, as she
set down her teacup.</p>
<p>"It was," nodded Arkwright. "Of course Mrs. Greggory, with her crippled
foot, could do nothing to bring in any money except to sew a little. It
all depended on Alice; and when matters got to their worst she began to
teach. She was fond of music, and could play the piano well; and of course
she had had the best instruction she could get from city teachers only
twenty miles away from our home town. Young as she was—about
seventeen when she began to teach, I think—she got a few beginners
right away, and in two years she had worked up quite a class, meanwhile
keeping on with her own studies, herself.</p>
<p>"They might have carried the thing through, maybe," continued Arkwright,
"and never <i>apparently</i> known that the 'pity' existed, if it hadn't
been for some ugly rumors that suddenly arose attacking the Judge's
honesty in an old matter that somebody raked up. That was too much. Under
this last straw their courage broke utterly. Alice dismissed every pupil,
sold almost all their remaining goods—they had lots of quite
valuable heirlooms; I suspect that's where your Lowestoft teapot came in—and
with the money thus gained they left town. Until they could go, they
scarcely showed themselves once on the street, they were never at home to
callers, and they left without telling one soul where they were going, so
far as we could ever learn."</p>
<p>"Why, the poor dears!" cried Billy. "How they must have suffered! But
things will be different now. You'll go to see them, of course, and—"
At the look that came into Arkwright's face, she stopped in surprise.</p>
<p>"You forget; they wouldn't wish to see me," demurred the man. And again
Billy noticed the odd constraint in his voice.</p>
<p>"But they wouldn't mind <i>you—here</i>," argued Billy.</p>
<p>"I'm afraid they would. In fact, I'm sure they'd refuse entirely to see
me."</p>
<p>Billy's eyes grew determined.</p>
<p>"But they can't refuse—if I bring about a meeting just casually, you
know," she challenged.</p>
<p>Arkwright laughed.</p>
<p>"Well, I won't pretend to say as to the consequences of that," he
rejoined, rising to his feet; "but they might be disastrous. Wasn't it you
yourself who were telling me a few minutes ago how steely cold Miss
Alice's eyes got when she was angry?"</p>
<p>Billy knew by the way the man spoke that, for some reason, he did not wish
to prolong the subject of his meeting the Greggorys. She made a quick
shift, therefore, to another phase of the matter.</p>
<p>"But tell me, please, before you go, how did those rumors come out—about
Judge Greggory's honesty, I mean?"</p>
<p>"Why, I never knew, exactly," frowned Arkwright, musingly. "Yet it seems,
too, that mother did say in one letter, while I was in Paris, that some of
the accusations had been found to be false, and that there was a prospect
that the Judge's good name might be saved, after all."</p>
<p>"Oh, I wish it might," sighed Billy. "Think what it would mean to those
women!"</p>
<p>"'Twould mean everything," cried Arkwright, warmly; "and I'll write to
mother to-night, I will, and find out just what there is to it-if
anything. Then you can tell them," he finished a little stiffly.</p>
<p>"Yes—or you," nodded Billy, lightly. And because she began at once
to speak of something else, the first part of her sentence passed without
comment.</p>
<p>The door had scarcely closed behind Arkwright when Billy turned to Aunt
Hannah a beaming face.</p>
<p>"Aunt Hannah, did you notice?" she cried, "how Mary Jane looked and acted
whenever Alice Greggory was spoken of? There was something between them—I'm
sure there was; and they quarrelled, probably."</p>
<p>"Why, no, dear; I didn't see anything unusual," murmured the elder lady.</p>
<p>"Well, I did. And I'm going to be the fairy godmother that straightens
everything all out, too. See if I'm not! They'd make a splendid couple,
Aunt Hannah. I'm going right down there to-morrow."</p>
<p>"Billy, my dear!" exclaimed the more conservative old lady, "aren't you
taking things a little too much for granted? Maybe they don't wish for—for
a fairy godmother!"</p>
<p>"Oh, <i>they</i> won't know I'm a fairy godmother—not one of them;
and of course I wouldn't mention even a hint to anybody," laughed Billy.
"I'm just going down to get acquainted with the Greggorys; that's all.
Only think, Aunt Hannah, what they must have suffered! And look at the
place they're living in now—gentlewomen like them!"</p>
<p>"Yes, yes, poor things, poor things!" sighed Aunt Hannah.</p>
<p>"I hope I'll find out that she's really good—at teaching, I mean—the
daughter," resumed Billy, after a moment's pause. "If she is, there's one
thing I can do to help, anyhow. I can get some of Marie's old pupils for
her. I <i>know</i> some of them haven't begun with a new teacher, yet; and
Mrs. Carleton told me last Friday that neither she nor her sister was at
all satisfied with the one their girls <i>have</i> taken. They'd change, I
know, in a minute, at my recommendation—that is, of course, if I can
<i>give</i> the recommendation," continued Billy, with a troubled frown.
"Anyhow, I'm going down to begin operations to-morrow."</p>
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