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<h2> CHAPTER XXIII. THE CAUSE AND BERTRAM </h2>
<p>February came The operetta, for which Billy was working so hard, was to be
given the twentieth. The Art Exhibition, for which Bertram was preparing
his four pictures, was to open the sixteenth, with a private view for
specially invited friends the evening before.</p>
<p>On the eleventh day of February Mrs. Greggory and her daughter arrived at
Hillside for a ten-days' visit. Not until after a great deal of pleading
and argument, however, had Billy been able to bring this about.</p>
<p>"But, my dears, both of you," Billy had at last said to them; "just
listen. We shall have numberless rehearsals during those last ten days
before the thing comes off. They will be at all hours, and of all lengths.
You, Miss Greggory, will have to be on hand for them all, of course, and
will have to stay all night several times, probably. You, Mrs. Greggory,
ought not to be alone down here. There is no sensible, valid reason why
you should not both come out to the house for those ten days; and I shall
feel seriously hurt and offended if you do not consent to do it."</p>
<p>"But—my pupils," Alice Greggory had demurred.</p>
<p>"You can go in town from my home at any time to give your lessons, and a
little shifting about and arranging for those ten days will enable you to
set the hours conveniently one after another, I am sure, so you can attend
to several on one trip. Meanwhile your mother will be having a lovely time
teaching Aunt Hannah how to knit a new shawl; so you won't have to be
worrying about her."</p>
<p>After all, it had been the great good and pleasure which the visit would
bring to Mrs. Greggory that had been the final straw to tip the scales. On
the eleventh of February, therefore, in the company of the once scorned
"Peggy and Mary Jane," Alice Greggory and her mother had arrived at
Hillside.</p>
<p>Ever since the first meeting of Alice Greggory and Arkwright, Billy had
been sorely troubled by the conduct of the two young people. She had, as
she mournfully told herself, been able to make nothing of it. The two were
civility itself to each other, but very plainly they were not at ease in
each other's company; and Billy, much to her surprise, had to admit that
Arkwright did not appear to appreciate the "circumstances" now that he had
them. The pair called each other, ceremoniously, "Mr. Arkwright," and
"Miss Greggory"—but then, that, of course, did not "signify," Billy
declared to herself.</p>
<p>"I suppose you don't ever call him 'Mary Jane,'" she said to the girl, a
little mischievously, one day.</p>
<p>"'Mary Jane'? Mr. Arkwright? No, I don't," rejoined Miss Greggory, with an
odd smile. Then, after a moment, she added: "I believe his brothers and
sisters used to, however."</p>
<p>"Yes, I know," laughed Billy. "We thought he was a real Mary Jane, once."
And she told the story of his arrival. "So you see," she finished, when
Alice Greggory had done laughing over the tale, "he always will be 'Mary
Jane' to us. By the way, what is his name?"</p>
<p>Miss Greggory looked up in surprise.</p>
<p>"Why, it's—" She stopped short, her eyes questioning. "Why, hasn't
he ever told you?" she queried.</p>
<p>Billy lifted her chin.</p>
<p>"No. He told us to guess it, and we have guessed everything we can think
of, even up to 'Methuselah John'; but he says we haven't hit it yet."</p>
<p>"'Methuselah John,' indeed!" laughed the other, merrily.</p>
<p>"Well, I'm sure that's a nice, solid name," defended Billy, her chin still
at a challenging tilt. "If it isn't 'Methuselah John,' what is it, then?"</p>
<p>But Alice Greggory shook her head. She, too, it seemed, could be firm, on
occasion. And though she smiled brightly, all she would say, was:</p>
<p>"If he hasn't told you, I sha'n't. You'll have to go to him."</p>
<p>"Oh, well, I can still call him 'Mary Jane,'" retorted Billy, with airy
disdain.</p>
<p>All this, however, so far as Billy could see, was not in the least helping
along the cause that had become so dear to her—the reuniting of a
pair of lovers. It occurred to her then, one day, that perhaps, after all,
they were not lovers, and did not wish to be reunited. At this disquieting
thought Billy decided, suddenly, to go almost to headquarters. She would
speak to Mrs. Greggory if ever the opportunity offered. Great was her joy,
therefore, when, a day or two after the Greggorys arrived at the house,
Mrs. Greggory's chance reference to Arkwright and her daughter gave Billy
the opportunity she sought.</p>
<p>"They used to know each other long ago, Mr. Arkwright tells me," Billy
began warily.</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>The quietly polite monosyllable was not very encouraging, to be sure; but
Billy, secure in her conviction that her cause was a righteous one,
refused to be daunted.</p>
<p>"I think it was so romantic—their running across each other like
this, Mrs. Greggory," she murmured. "And there <i>was</i> a romance,
wasn't there? I have just felt in my bones that there was—a
romance!"</p>
<p>Billy held her breath. It was what she had meant to say, but now that she
had said it, the words seemed very fearsome indeed—to say to Mrs.
Greggory. Then Billy remembered her Cause, and took heart—Billy was
spelling it now with a capital C.</p>
<p>For a long minute Mrs. Greggory did not answer—for so long a minute
that Billy's breath dropped into a fluttering sigh, and her Cause became
suddenly "IMPERTINENCE" spelled in black capitals. Then Mrs. Greggory
spoke slowly, a little sadly.</p>
<p>"I don't mind saying to you that I did hope, once, that there would be a
romance there. They were the best of friends, and they were well-suited to
each other in tastes and temperament. I think, indeed, that the romance
was well under way (though there was never an engagement) when—"
Mrs. Greggory paused and wet her lips. Her voice, when she resumed,
carried the stern note so familiar to Billy in her first acquaintance with
this woman and her daughter. "As I presume Mr. Arkwright has told you, we
have met with many changes in our life—changes which necessitated a
new home and a new mode of living. Naturally, under those circumstances,
old friends—and old romances—must change, too."</p>
<p>"But, Mrs. Greggory," stammered Billy, "I'm sure Mr. Arkwright would want—"
An up-lifted hand silenced her peremptorily.</p>
<p>"Mr. Arkwright was very kind, and a gentleman, always," interposed the
lady, coldly; "but Judge Greggory's daughter would not allow herself to be
placed where apologies for her father would be necessary—<i>ever!</i>
There, please, dear Miss Neilson, let us not talk of it any more," begged
Mrs. Greggory, brokenly.</p>
<p>"No, indeed, of course not!" cried Billy; but her heart rejoiced.</p>
<p>She understood it all now. Arkwright and Alice Greggory had been almost
lovers when the charges against the Judge's honor had plunged the family
into despairing humiliation. Then had come the time when, according to
Arkwright's own story, the two women had shut themselves indoors, refused
to see their friends, and left town as soon as possible. Thus had come the
breaking of whatever tie there was between Alice Greggory and Arkwright.
Not to have broken it would have meant, for Alice, the placing of herself
in a position where, sometime, apologies must be made for her father. This
was what Mrs. Greggory had meant—and again, as Billy thought of it,
Billy's heart rejoiced.</p>
<p>Was not her way clear now before her? Did she not have it in her power,
possibly—even probably—to bring happiness where only sadness
was before? As if it would not be a simple thing to rekindle the old flame—to
make these two estranged hearts beat as one again!</p>
<p>Not now was the Cause an IMPERTINENCE in tall black letters. It was,
instead, a shining beacon in letters of flame guiding straight to victory.</p>
<p>Billy went to sleep that night making plans for Alice Greggory and
Arkwright to be thrown together naturally—"just as a matter of
course, you know," she said drowsily to herself, all in the dark.</p>
<p>Some three or four miles away down Beacon Street at that moment Bertram
Henshaw, in the Strata, was, as it happened, not falling asleep. He was
lying broadly and unhappily awake Bertram very frequently lay broadly and
unhappily awake these days—or rather nights. He told himself, on
these occasions, that it was perfectly natural—indeed it was!—that
Billy should be with Arkwright and his friends, the Greggorys, so much.
There were the new songs, and the operetta with its rehearsals as a cause
for it all. At the same time, deep within his fearful soul was the
consciousness that Arkwright, the Greggorys, and the operetta were but
Music—Music, the spectre that from the first had dogged his
footsteps.</p>
<p>With Billy's behavior toward himself, Bertram could find no fault. She was
always her sweet, loyal, lovable self, eager to hear of his work,
earnestly solicitous that it should be a success. She even—as he
sometimes half-irritably remembered—had once told him that she
realized he belonged to Art before he did to himself; and when he had
indignantly denied this, she had only laughed and thrown a kiss at him,
with the remark that he ought to hear his sister Kate's opinion of that
matter. As if he wanted Kate's opinion on that or anything else that
concerned him and Billy!</p>
<p>Once, torn by jealousy, and exasperated at the frequent interruptions of
their quiet hours together, he had complained openly.</p>
<p>"Actually, Billy, it's worse than Marie's wedding," he declared, "<i>Then</i>
it was tablecloths and napkins that could be dumped in a chair. <i>Now</i>
it's a girl who wants to rehearse, or a woman that wants a different wig,
or a telephone message that the sopranos have quarrelled again. I loathe
that operetta!"</p>
<p>Billy laughed, but she frowned, too.</p>
<p>"I know, dear; I don't like that part. I wish they <i>would</i> let me
alone when I'm with you! But as for the operetta, it is really a good
thing, dear, and you'll say so when you see it. It's going to be a great
success—I can say that because my part is only a small one, you
know. We shall make lots of money for the Home, too, I'm sure."</p>
<p>"But you're wearing yourself all out with it, dear," scowled Bertram.</p>
<p>"Nonsense! I like it; besides, when I'm doing this I'm not telephoning you
to come and amuse me. Just think what a lot of extra time you have for
your work!"</p>
<p>"Don't want it," avowed Bertram.</p>
<p>"But the <i>work</i> may," retorted Billy, showing all her dimples. "Never
mind, though; it'll all be over after the twentieth. <i>This</i> isn't an
understudy like Marie's wedding, you know," she finished demurely.</p>
<p>"Thank heaven for that!" Bertram had breathed fervently. But even as he
said the words he grew sick with fear. What if, after all, this <i>were</i>
an understudy to what was to come later when Music, his rival, had really
conquered?</p>
<p>Bertram knew that however secure might seem Billy's affection for himself,
there was still in his own mind a horrid fear lest underneath that
security were an unconscious, growing fondness for something he could not
give, for some one that he was not—a fondness that would one day
cause Billy to awake. As Bertram, in his morbid fancy pictured it, he
realized only too well what that awakening would mean to himself.</p>
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