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<h2> CHAPTER XXV. THE OPERETTA </h2>
<p>The sixteenth, seventeenth, and eighteenth of February were, for Billy,
and for all concerned in the success of the operetta, days of hurry,
worry, and feverish excitement, as was to be expected, of course. Each
afternoon and every evening saw rehearsals in whole, or in parts. A friend
of the Club-president's sister-in-law-a woman whose husband was stage
manager of a Boston theatre—had consented to come and "coach" the
performers. At her appearance the performers—promptly thrown into
nervous spasms by this fearsome nearness to the "real thing"—forgot
half their cues, and conducted themselves generally like frightened school
children on "piece day," much to their own and every one else's despair.
Then, on the evening of the nineteenth, came the final dress rehearsal on
the stage of the pretty little hall that had been engaged for the
performance of the operetta.</p>
<p>The dress rehearsal, like most of its kind, was, for every one, nothing
but a nightmare of discord, discouragement, and disaster. Everybody's
nerves were on edge, everybody was sure the thing would be a "flat
failure." The soprano sang off the key, the alto forgot to shriek "Beware,
beware!" until it was so late there was nothing to beware of; the basso
stepped on Billy's trailing frock and tore it; even the tenor, Arkwright
himself, seemed to have lost every bit of vim from his acting. The chorus
sang "Oh, be joyful!" with dirge-like solemnity, and danced as if legs and
feet were made of wood. The lovers, after the fashion of amateur actors
from time immemorial, "made love like sticks."</p>
<p>Billy, when the dismal thing had dragged its way through the final note,
sat "down front," crying softly in the semi-darkness while she was waiting
for Alice Greggory to "run it through just once more" with a pair of
tired-faced, fluffy-skirted fairies who could <i>not</i> learn that a duet
meant a <i>duet</i>—not two solos, independently hurried or retarded
as one's fancy for the moment dictated.</p>
<p>To Billy, just then, life did not look to be even half worth the living.
Her head ached, her throat was going-to-be-sore, her shoe hurt, and her
dress—the trailing frock that had been under the basso's foot—could
not possibly be decently repaired before to-morrow night, she was sure.</p>
<p>Bad as these things were, however, they were only the intimate, immediate
woes. Beyond and around them lay others many others. To be sure, Bertram
and happiness were supposed to be somewhere in the dim and uncertain
future; but between her and them lay all these other woes, chief of which
was the unutterable tragedy of to-morrow night.</p>
<p>It was to be a failure, of course. Billy had calmly made up her mind to
that, now. But then, she was used to failures, she told herself. Was she
not plainly failing every day of her life to bring about even friendship
between Alice Greggory and Arkwright? Did they not emphatically and
systematically refuse to be "thrown together," either naturally, or
unnaturally? And yet—whenever again could she expect such
opportunities to further her Cause as had been hers the past few weeks,
through the operetta and its rehearsals? Certainly, never again! It had
been a failure like all the rest; like the operetta, in particular.</p>
<p>Billy did not mean that any one should know she was crying. She supposed
that all the performers except herself and the two earth-bound fairies by
the piano with Alice Greggory were gone. She knew that John with Peggy was
probably waiting at the door outside, and she hoped that soon the fairies
would decide to go home and go to bed, and let other people do the same.
For her part, she did not see why they were struggling so hard, anyway.
Why needn't they go ahead and sing their duet like two solos if they
wanted to? As if a little thing like that could make a feather's weight of
difference in the grand total of to-morrow night's wretchedness when the
final curtain should have been rung down on their shame!</p>
<p>"Miss Neilson, you aren't—crying!" exclaimed a low voice; and Billy
turned to find Arkwright standing by her side in the dim light.</p>
<p>"Oh, no—yes—well, maybe I was, a little," stammered Billy,
trying to speak very unconcernedly. "How warm it is in here! Do you think
it's going to rain?—that is, outdoors, of course, I mean."</p>
<p>Arkwright dropped into the seat behind Billy and leaned forward, his eyes
striving to read the girl's half-averted face. If Billy had turned, she
would have seen that Arkwright's own face showed white and a little
drawn-looking in the feeble rays from the light by the piano. But Billy
did not turn. She kept her eyes steadily averted; and she went on speaking—airy,
inconsequential words.</p>
<p>"Dear me, if those girls <i>would</i> only pull together! But then, what's
the difference? I supposed you had gone home long ago, Mr. Arkwright."</p>
<p>"Miss Neilson, you <i>are</i> crying!" Arkwright's voice was low and
vibrant. "As if anything or anybody in the world <i>could</i> make <i>you</i>
cry! Please—you have only to command me, and I will sally forth at
once to slay the offender." His words were light, but his voice still
shook with emotion.</p>
<p>Billy gave an hysterical little giggle. Angrily she brushed the persistent
tears from her eyes.</p>
<p>"All right, then; I'll dub you my Sir Knight," she faltered. "But I'll
warn you—you'll have your hands full. You'll have to slay my
headache, and my throat-ache, and my shoe that hurts, and the man who
stepped on my dress, and—and everybody in the operetta, including
myself."</p>
<p>"Everybody—in the operetta!" Arkwright did look a little startled,
at this wholesale slaughter.</p>
<p>"Yes. Did you ever see such an awful, awful thing as that was to-night?"
moaned the girl.</p>
<p>Arkwright's face relaxed.</p>
<p>"Oh, so <i>that's</i> what it is!" he laughed lightly. "Then it's only a
bogy of fear that I've got to slay, after all; and I'll despatch that
right now with a single blow. Dress rehearsals always go like that
to-night. I've been in a dozen, and I never yet saw one go half decent.
Don't you worry. The worse the rehearsal, the better the performance,
every time!"</p>
<p>Billy blinked off the tears and essayed a smile as she retorted:</p>
<p>"Well, if that's so, then ours to-morrow night ought to be a—a—"</p>
<p>"A corker," helped out Arkwright, promptly; "and it will be, too. You poor
child, you're worn out; and no wonder! But don't worry another bit about
the operetta. Now is there anything else I can do for you? Anything else I
can slay?"</p>
<p>Billy laughed tremulously.</p>
<p>"N-no, thank you; not that you can—slay, I fancy," she sighed. "That
is—not that you <i>will</i>," she amended wistfully, with a sudden
remembrance of the Cause, for which he might do so much—if he only
would.</p>
<p>Arkwright bent a little nearer. His breath stirred the loose, curling hair
behind Billy's ear. His eyes had flashed into sudden fire.</p>
<p>"But you don't know what I'd do if I could," he murmured unsteadily. "If
you'd let me tell you—if you only knew the wish that has lain
closest to my heart for—"</p>
<p>"Miss Neilson, please," called the despairing voice of one of the
earth-bound fairies; "Miss Neilson, you <i>are</i> there, aren't you?"</p>
<p>"Yes, I'm right here," answered Billy, wearily. Arkwright answered, too,
but not aloud—which was wise.</p>
<p>"Oh dear! you're tired, I know," wailed the fairy, "but if you would
please come and help us just a minute! Could you?"</p>
<p>"Why, yes, of course." Billy rose to her feet, still wearily.</p>
<p>Arkwright touched her arm. She turned and saw his face. It was very white—so
white that her eyes widened in surprised questioning.</p>
<p>As if answering the unspoken words, the man shook his head.</p>
<p>"I can't, now, of course," he said. "But there <i>is</i> something I want
to say—a story I want to tell you—after to-morrow, perhaps.
May I?"</p>
<p>To Billy, the tremor of his voice, the suffering in his eyes, and the
"story" he was begging to tell could have but one interpretation: Alice
Greggory. Her face, therefore, was a glory of tender sympathy as she
reached out her hand in farewell.</p>
<p>"Of course you may," she cried. "Come any time after to-morrow night,
please," she smiled encouragingly, as she turned toward the stage.</p>
<p>Behind her, Arkwright stumbled twice as he walked up the incline toward
the outer door—stumbled, not because of the semi-darkness of the
little theatre, but because of the blinding radiance of a girl's illumined
face which he had, a moment before, read all unknowingly exactly wrong.</p>
<p>A little more than twenty-four hours later, Billy Neilson, in her own
room, drew a long breath of relief. It was twelve o'clock on the night of
the twentieth, and the operetta was over.</p>
<p>To Billy, life was eminently worth living to-night. Her head did not ache,
her throat was not sore, her shoe did not hurt, her dress had been mended
so successfully by Aunt Hannah, and with such comforting celerity, that
long before night one would never have suspected the filmy thing had known
the devastating tread of any man's foot. Better yet, the soprano had sung
exactly to key, the alto had shrieked "Beware!" to thrilling purpose,
Arkwright had shown all his old charm and vim, and the chorus had been
prodigies of joyousness and marvels of lightness. Even the lovers had lost
their stiffness, while the two earth-bound fairies of the night before had
found so amiable a meeting point that their solos sounded, to the
uninitiated, very like, indeed, a duet. The operetta was, in short, a
glorious and gratifying success, both artistically and financially. Nor
was this all that, to Billy, made life worth the living: Arkwright had
begged permission that evening to come up the following afternoon to tell
her his "story"; and Billy, who was so joyously confident that this story
meant the final crowning of her Cause with victory, had given happy
consent.</p>
<p>Bertram was to come up in the evening, and Billy was anticipating that,
too, particularly: it had been so long since they had known a really free,
comfortable evening together, with nothing to interrupt. Doubtless, too,
after Arkwright's visit of the afternoon, she would be in a position to
tell Bertram the story of the suspended romance between Arkwright and Miss
Greggory, and perhaps something, also, of her own efforts to bring the
couple together again. On the whole, life did, indeed, look decidedly
worth the living as Billy, with a contented sigh, turned over to go to
sleep.</p>
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