"Well, I am discovered--and lost." Julie, lazily making the
announcement after a long silence, shut her magazine with a sigh of
sleepy content; and braced herself more comfortably against the old
rowboat that was half buried in sand at her back. She turned as she
spoke to smile at the woman near her, a frail, keen-faced little
woman luxuriously settled in an invalid's wheeled chair.
"Ann--you know you're not interested in that book. Did you hear what
I said? I'm discovered."
"Well, it was sure to happen, sooner or later, I suppose." Mrs.
Arbuthnot, suddenly summoned from the pages of a novel brought her
gaze promptly to the younger woman's face, with the pitifully alert
interest of the invalid. "You were bound to be recognized by some
one, Ju!"
"Don't worry, a cannon wouldn't wake him!" said Julia, in reference
to Mrs. Arbuthnot's lowered voice, and the solicitous look the wife
had given a great opened beach umbrella three feet away, under which
Dr. Arbuthnot slumbered on the warm sands. "He's forty fathoms deep.
No," continued the actress, returning aggrievedly to her own
affairs, "I suppose there's no such thing as escaping recognition--
even as late in the season as this, and at such an out-of-the-way
place. Of course, I knew," she continued crossly, "that various
people here had placed me, but I did rather hope to escape actual
introductions!"
"Who is it--some one you know?" Mrs. Arbuthnot adjusted the pillow
at her back, and settled herself enjoyably for a talk.
"Indirectly; it's that little butterfly of a summer girl--the one
Jim calls 'The Dancing Girl'--of all people in the world!" said
Julie, locking her arms comfortably behind her head. "You know how
she's been haunting me, Ann? She's been simply determined upon an
introduction ever since she placed me as her adored Miss Ives of
matinee fame. I imagine she's rather a nice child--every evidence of
money--the ambitious type that longs to do something big--and is
given to desperate hero worship. She's been under my feet for a
week, with a Faithful Tray expression that drives me crazy. I've
taken great pains not to see her."
"And now--?" prompted the other, as the actress fell silent, and sat
staring dreamily at the brilliant sweep of beach and sea before
them.
"Oh--now," Miss Ives took up her narrative briskly. "Well, a new
young man arrived on the afternoon boat and, of course, the Dancing
Girl instantly captivated him. She has one simple yet direct method
with them all," she interrupted herself to digress a little. "She
gets one of her earlier victims to introduce him; they all go down
for a swim, she fascinates him with her daring and her bobbing red
cap, she returns to white linen and leads him down to play tennis--
they have tea at the 'Casino,' and she promises him the second two-
step and the first extra that evening. He is then hers to command,"
concluded Julie, bringing her amused eyes back to Mrs. Arbuthnot's
face, "for the remainder of his stay!"
"That's exactly what she does do," said Mrs. Arbuthnot, laughing,
"but I don't see yet--"
"Oh, I forgot to say," Miss Ives amended hastily, "that to-day's
young man happens to be an acquaintance of mine; at least his uncle
introduced him to me at a tea last winter. She led him by to the
tennis courts an hour ago, and, to my disgust, I recognized him.
That's all Miss Dancing Girl wants. Now--you'll see! They'll come up
to our table in the dining-room to-night, and to-morrow she'll bring
up a group of dear friends and he'll bring up another--to be
introduced; and--there we'll be!"
"Oh, yes, indeed, Ann!" pursued Miss Ives with morose enjoyment.
"You don't know how helpless one is. I'll be annoyed to death for
the rest of the month, just so that the Dancing Girl can go back to
the city this winter and say, 'Oh, girls, Julia Ives was staying
where mamma and I were this summer, and she's just a dear! She
doesn't make up one bit off the stage, and she dresses just as
plain! I saw her every day and got some dandy snapshots. She's just
a darling when you know her.'"
"Well! What an unspoiled modest little soul you are, Julie!"
interrupted the doctor's admiring voice. He wheeled away the
umbrella and, lying luxuriously on his elbows in the sun, beamed at
them both through his glasses.
"Jim," said the actress, severely, "it's positively indecent--the
habit you're getting of evesdropping on Ann and me!"
"It gives me sidelights on your characters," said the doctor, quite
brazenly.
"I certainly do, Ju," his wife agreed warmly. "But Jim has no sense
of honor." Ann Arbuthnot, in the fifteen years of her married life,
had never been able to keep a thrill of adoration out of her voice
when she spoke, however jestingly, of her husband. It trembled there
now.
"Well, what's wrong, Julie? Some old admirer turn up?" asked the
doctor, sleepily content to follow any conversational lead, in the
idle pleasantness of the hour.
"No--no!" she corrected him, "just some silly social complications
ahead--which I hate!"
"Now, you know, I'd love that!" said Mrs. Arbuthnot, youthfully.
"I'd simply love to be followed and envied and adored!"
"No, you wouldn't, Ann!" Miss Ives assured her promptly. "You'd like
it, as I did, for a little while. And then the utter uselessness of
it would strike you. Especially from such little complacent, fluffy
whirlings as that Dancing Girl!"
"Yes, and that's the kind of a girl I like," persisted the other,
smiling.
"That's the kind of a girl you were, Ann, I've no doubt," said the
actress, vivaciously, "only sweeter. I know she wore white ruffles
and a velvet band on her hair, didn't she, Jim? And roses in her
belt?"
"She did," said the doctor, reminiscently. "I believe she flirted in
her kindergarten days. She was always engaged to ride or dance or
row on the river with the other men--and always splitting her
dances, and forgetting her promises, and wearing the rings and pins
of her adorers."
"And the fun was, Ju," said Mrs. Arbuthnot, girlishly, with bright
color in her cheeks, "that when Jim came there to give two lectures,
you know, all the older girls were crazy about him--and he was ten
years older than I, you know, and I never dreamed--"
"Oh, you go to, Ann! You never dreamed!" said Miss Ives, lazily.
"Honestly, I didn't!" Mrs. Arbuthnot protested. "I remember my
brother Billy saying, 'Babs, you don't think Dr. Arbuthnot is coming
here to see me, do you?' and then it all came over me! Why, I was
only eighteen."
"Well," said the wife, naively, "he knew all along it wasn't
serious."
"You must have been a rose," said Miss Ives, "and I would have hated
you! Now, when I went to dances," she pursued half seriously, "I sat
in one place and smiled fixedly, and watched the other girls dance.
Or I talked with great animation to the chaperons. Ann, I've felt
sometimes that I would gladly die, to have the boys crowd around me
just once, and grab my card and scribble their names all over it. I
didn't dress very well, or dance very well--and I never could talk
to boys." She began to trace a little watercourse in the sand with
an exquisite finger tip. "I was the most unhappy girl on earth, I
think! I felt every birthday was a separate insult--twenty, and
twenty-two, and twenty-four! We were poor, and life was--oh, not
dramatic or big!--but just petty and sordid. I used to rage because
the dining-room was the only place for the sewing-machine, and rage
because my bedroom was really a back parlor. Well!--I joined a
theatrical company--came away. And many a night, tired out and
discouraged, I've cried myself to sleep because I'd never have any
girlhood again!"
She stopped with a half-apologetic laugh. The doctor was watching
her with absorbed, bright eyes. Mrs. Arbuthnot, unable to imagine
youth without joy and beauty, protested:
"Julie--I don't believe you--you're exaggerating! Do you mean you
didn't go on the stage until you were twenty-four!"
"I was twenty-six. I was leading lady my second season, and starred
my third," said the actress, without enthusiasm. "I was starred in
'The Jack of Clubs.' It ran a season in New York and gave me my
start. Lud, how tired we all got of it!"
"And then I hope you went back home, Ju, and were lionized," said
the other woman, vigorously.
"Oh, not then! No, I'd been meaning to go--and meaning to go--all
those three years. The little sisters used to write me--such forlorn
little letters!--and mother, too--but I couldn't manage it. And
then--the very night 'Jack' played the three hundredth time, as it
happened--I had this long wire from Sally and Beth. Mother was very
ill, wanted me--they'd meet a certain train, they were counting the
hours--"
Miss Ives demolished her watercourse with a single sweep of her
palm. There was a short silence.
"Well!" she said, breaking it. "Mother got well, as it happened, and
I went home two months later. I had the guest room, I remember.
Sally was everything to mother then, and I tried to feel glad. Beth
was engaged. Every one was very flattering and very kind in the
intervals left by engagements and weddings and new babies and family
gatherings. Then I came back to 'Jack,' and we went on the road. And
then I broke down and a strange doctor in a strange hospital put me
together again," she went on with a flashing smile and a sudden
change of tone, "and his wholly adorable wife sent me double white
violets! And they--the Arbuthnots, not the violets--were the nicest
thing that ever happened to me!"
"And as the Duchess would say, the moral of that is--?"
"The moral is for me. Or else it's for little dancing girls, I don't
know which." Miss Ives wiped her eyes openly and, restoring her
handkerchief to its place, announced that she perceived she had been
talking too much.
Presently the Dancing Girl came down from the tennis-court, with her
devoted new captive in tow. The captive, a fat, amiable-looking
youth, was warm and wilted, but the girl was fresh and buoyant as
ever. They heard her allude to the "second two-step" and something
was said of the "supper dance," but her laughing voice stopped as
she and her escort came nearer the actress, and she gave Julie her
usual look of mute adoration. The boy, flushing youthfully, lifted
his hat, and Julie bowed briefly.
They were lingering over their coffee two hours later, when the
newly arrived young man made the expected move. He threaded the
tables between his own and the doctor's carefully, the eager Dancing
Girl in his wake.
"I don't know whether you remember me, Miss Ives--?" he began, when
he could extend a hand.
Julie turned her splendid, unsmiling eyes toward him.
"Mr. Polk. How do you do? Yes, indeed, I remember you," she said,
unenthusiastically. "How is Mr. Gilbert?"
"Uncle John? Oh, he's fine!" said young Polk, rapturously. "I wonder
why he didn't tell me you were spending the summer here I"
"I don't tell any one," said Julie, simply. "My winters are so
crowded that I try to get away from people in the summer."
"Oh!" said the boy, a little blankly. There was an instant's pause
before he added rather uncomfortably:
"Miss Ives--Miss Carter has been so anxious to meet you--"
"How do you do, Miss Carter?" said Julie, promptly, politely. She
gave her young adorer a ready hand. The usually poised Dancing Girl
could not recall at the moment one of the things she had planned to
say when this great moment came. But she thought of them all as she
lay in bed that night, and the conviction that she had bungled the
long-wished-for interview made her burn from her heels to the lobes
of her ears. What had she said? Something about having longed for
this opportunity, which the actress hadn't answered, and something
about her desperate admiration for Miss Ives, at which Miss Ives had
merely smiled. Other things were said, or half said--the girl
reviewed them mercilessly in the dark--and then the interview had
terminated, rather flatly. Marian Carter writhed at the
recollection.
But the morning brought courage. She passed Julie, who was fresh
from a plunge in the ocean, and briskly attacking a late breakfast,
on her way from the dining-room.
"Good morning, Miss Ives! Isn't it a lovely morning?"
Julie gave her book a glance and raised her eyes expectantly to Miss
Carter's face, but did not speak.
"Miss Ives," said Miss Carter, a little confusedly, "mamma was
wondering if you've taken the trip to Fletcher's Forest? We've our
motor-car here, you know, and they serve a very good lunch at the
Inn."
"Oh, thank you, no!" said Julie, positively. "Very good of you--but
I'm with the Arbuthnots, you know. Thank you, no."
"I hoped you would," said Miss Carter, disappointed. "I know you use
a motor in town," she answered daringly. "You see I know all about
you!"
Miss Ives paid to this confession only the small tribute of raised
eyebrows and an absent smile. She was quite at her ease, but in the
little silence that followed Miss Carter had time to feel baffled--
in the way. "Here is Mrs. Arbuthnot," she said in relief, as Ann
came slowly in on the doctor's arm. Before they reached the table
the girl had slipped away.
That afternoon she asked Miss Ives, pausing beside the basking group
on the sands to do so, if she would have tea informally with mamma
and a few friends. Oh--thank you, Miss Ives couldn't, to-day. Thank
you. The next day Miss Carter wondered if Miss Ives would like to
spin out to the Point to see the sunset? No, thank you so much. Miss
Ives was just going in. Another day brought a request for Miss
Ives's company at dinner, with just mamma and Mr. Polk and the
Dancing Girl herself. Declined. A fourth day found Miss Carter,
camera in hand, smilingly confronting the actress as she came out on
the porch.
"Will you be very cross if I ask you to stand still just a moment,
Miss Ives?" asked the Dancing Girl.
"Oh, I'm afraid I will," said Julie, annoyed. "I don't like to be
photographed!" But she was rather disarmed at the speed with which
Miss Carter shut up her little camera.
"I know I bother you," said the girl, with a wistful sincerity that
was most becoming and with a heightened color, "but--but I just
can't seem to help it!" She walked down the steps beside Julie,
laughing almost with vexation at her own weakness. "I've always
admired so--the people who do things! I've always wanted to do
something myself," said Miss Carter, awkwardly. "You don't know how
unhappy it makes me. You don't know how I'd love to do something for
you!"
"You can, you can let me off being photographed, like a sweet
child!" said Julie, lightly. But twenty minutes later when, very
trim and dainty in her blue bathing suit and scarlet cap, she came
out of the bath-house to join Ann and the doctor on the beach, she
reproached herself. She might have met the stammered little
confidence with something warmer than a jesting word, she thought
with a little shame.
"You're not going in again!" protested Ann. "Oh, chil-dren!"
"I am," said Miss Ives, buoyantly. "I don't know about Jim. At
Jim's age every step counts, I suppose. These fashionable doctors
habitually overeat and oversleep, I understand, and it makes them
lazy."
"Iam going in, Ann," said the doctor, with dignity, rising from the
sand and pointedly addressing his wife. A few moments later he and
Julie joyously breasted the sleepy roll of the low breakers, and
pushed their way steadily through the smoother water beyond.
"Oh, that was glorious, Jim!" gasped the actress, as they gained the
raft that was always their goal and pulling herself up to sit siren-
wise upon it. She was breathless, radiant, bubbling with the joy of
sun and air and green water. She took off her cap and let the
sunlight beat on her loosened braids.
"I don't know that I would," he said seriously, impersonally.
There was a little silence. Then the girl began to pin up her braids
with fingers that trembled a little.
"Ann's waving!" she said presently, and the doctor caught up her
scarlet cap to signal back to the far blur on the beach that was
Ann. He watched the tiny distant groups a moment.
"Where?" Julie was ready at once to slip into the water.
"Oh--finish your hair--take your time! She's just in the breakers.
We'll be off long before she gets here."
"That reminds me, Jim," Miss Ives was quite herself again, "that
when I was in the bath-house a few moments ago your Dancing Girl and
that pretty little girl who is visiting her came into the next room.
You know how flimsy the walls are? I could hear every word they
said."
"If you'd been a character in a story, Ju, you'd have felt it your
duty to cough!"
"Well, I didn't," grinned Miss Ives; "not that I wanted to hear what
they were saying. I didn't even know who they were until I heard
little Miss Carter say solemnly, 'Ethel, I used to want mamma to get
that Forty-eighth Street house, and I used to want to do Europe, but
I think if I had one wish now, it would be to do something that
would make everybody know me--and everybody talk about me. I'd love
to be pointed out wherever I went. I'd love to have people stare at
me. I'd like to be just as popular and just as famous as Julia
Ives!'"
"She has. And it will be fuel on the flames to have me start to swim
back to shore while she is swimming as hard as she can to the raft!"
said the lady, tucking the last escaping lock under her cap and
springing up for the plunge that started the home trip.
It was only a little after midnight that night when Julie, lying
wakeful in the sultry summer darkness, was startled by a person in
her room.
"It's Emma, Miss Ives," said Mrs. Arbuthnot's maid, stumbling about,
"Mrs. Arbuthnot wants you."
"She's ill!" Julie felt rather than said the words, instantly alert
and alarmed, and reaching for her wrapper and slippers.
"No, ma'am. But the doctor feels like he ought to go down to the
fire, and she's nervous--"
"Yes'm," said Emma, simply, "the windmill is afire!"
"And I sleeping through it all!" Miss Ives was still bewildered,
fastening the sash of her cobwebby black Mandarin robe as she
followed Emma through the passage that joined her suite to the
Arbuthnots'.
"Ann, dear--Emma tells me the laundry's on fire?" said she, entering
the big room. "I had no idea of it!"
"Nor had we," the doctor's wife rejoined eagerly. "The first we knew
was from Emma. Jim says there's no danger. Do you think there is?"
"Certainly not, Ann!" Julie laughed. "I'll tell you what we can do,"
she added briskly. "We'll wheel you down the hall here to the
window; you can get a splendid view of the whole thing."
The doctor approving, the ladies took up their station at a wide
hall window that commanded the whole scene.
Outside the velvet blackness and silence of the night were
shattered. The great mill, ugly tongues of flame bursting from the
door and windows at its base, was the centre of a talking, shouting,
shrill-voiced crowd that was momentarily, in the mysterious fashion
of crowds, gathering size.
"The laundry, Miss Ives. And there's a sort of flat on the second
floor where the laundry woman and her husband--he's the man that
drives the 'bus--live."
"Oh, sure," said the maid, comfortably. "It was all of an hour ago
the fire started. They had lots of time."
The three watched for a while in silence. Ann's eyes began to droop
from the bright monotony of the flames.
"I believe I'll wait until the tank falls, Ju? and then go back to
my comfortable bed--Julie, what is it--!"
Her voice rose, keen with terror. The actress, her hand on her
heart, shook her head without turning her eyes from the mill.
For suddenly above the other clamor there had risen one horrible
scream, and now, following it, there was almost a silence.
"Why--what on earth--" panted Miss Ives, looking to Mrs. Arbuthnot
for explanation after an endless interval in which neither stirred.
But again they were interrupted, this time by such an outbreak of
shouting and cries from the watching crowd about the mill as made
the night fairly ring.
A moment later the entire top of the mill collapsed, sending a gush
of sparks far up into the night. Then at last the faithfully played
hoses began to gain control.
"Do run down and find out what the shouting was, Emma," said Julie.
Emma gladly obeyed.
"She'd come back, if anything had happened," said Julie, some ten
minutes later.
"Who--Emma?" Mrs. Arbuthnot was not alarmed. "Oh, surely!" she
yawned, and drew her wraps about her.
"It's all over now. But I suppose it will burn for hours. I think
I'll turn in again," she said.
"I've had enough, too!" Julie said, not quite easy herself, but glad
to find the other so. "Let's decamp."
She wheeled the invalid carefully back to her room, where both women
were still talking when a bell-boy knocked, bringing a message from
the doctor. A woman had been hurt; he would be busy with her for an
hour.
"Who was it?" Julie asked him, but the boy, obviously frantic to
return to the fascinations of the fire, didn't know.
It was more than an hour later that the doctor came in. Julie had
been reading to Ann. She shut the book.
"Oh, no, dear! No, I'll tell you." He came over and sat beside her
on the bed, patting her hand. The two women watched him with tense,
absorbed faces.
"When I got there," said the doctor, slowly, "there was quite a
crowd--the lower story of the mill was all aflame--and the firemen
were keeping the people back. They'd a ladder up at the second story
and firemen were pitching things out of the windows as fast as they
could--chairs, rugs, pillows, and so on. Finally the last man came
out, smoke coming after him--it was quick work! Now, remember, dear,
no one was killed--"he stopped to pat his wife's hand reassuringly.
"Well, just then, at the third-story windows--it seems the laundress
has children--"
"Well, they put the ladder back again, but the sill was aflame then.
No use! Just then the mother and father--poor souls--arrived. They'd
been at a dance in the village. The woman screamed--"
"Ah? The man had to be held, poor fellow! It was--it was--" Again
the doctor stopped, unable to go on. But after a few seconds he
began more briskly: "Well! The mill was connected with this house,
you know, by a little bridge, from the tank floor of the mill to the
roof. No one had thought of it, because every one supposed that
there was no one in the mill. Before the crowd had fairly seen that
there were children caged up there, they left the window, and not a
minute later we saw them come up the trap-door by the tank. Lord,
how every one yelled."
"They'd thought of it, the darlings!" half sobbed Mrs. Arbuthnot.
"No, they'd never have thought of it--too terrified, poor little
things. No. We all saw that there was some one--a woman--with them
hurrying them along. I was helping hold the mother or I might have
thought it was the mother. They scampered across that bridge like
little squirrels, the woman with the baby last. By that time the
mill was roaring like a furnace behind them, and the bridge itself
burst into flames at the mill end. She--the woman--must have felt it
tottering, for she flung herself the last few feet--but she couldn't
make it. She threw the baby, by some lucky accident, for she
couldn't have known what she was doing, safe to the others, and
caught at the rail, but the whole thing gave way and came down.... I
got there about the first--she'd only fallen some dozen feet, you
know, on the flat roof of the kitchen, but she was all smashed up,
poor little girl. We carried her into the housekeeper's room--and
then I saw that it was little Miss Carter--your Dancing Girl, Ju!"
"Oh, no! I don't think she'll die. She's badly burned, of course--
face and hands especially--but it's the spine I'm afraid for. We can
tell better to-morrow. We made her as comfortable as we could. I
gave her something that'll make her sleep. Her mother's with her.
But I'm afraid her dancing days are over."
"Think of it--little Miss Carter!" Julie's voice sounded dazed.
"But, Jim," Ann said, "what was she doing in the mill?"
"Why, that's the point," he said. "She wasn't there when the fire
started. She was simply one of the crowd. But when she heard that
the children were there, she ran to the back of the mill, where
there was a straight up-and-down ladder built against the wall
outside, so that the tank could be reached that way. She went up it
like a flash--says she never thought of asking any one else to go.
She broke a window and climbed in--she says the floor was hot to her
feet then--and she and the kids ran up the inside flight to the
trap-door. They obeyed her like little soldiers! But the bridge side
of the mill was the side the fire was on, and the wood was rotten,
you know--almost explosive. Half a minute later and they couldn't
have made it at all."
"How do you account for such courage in a girl like that?" marvelled
Julie.
"I don't know," he said. "Take it all in all, it was the most
extraordinary thing I ever saw. Apparently she never for one second
thought of herself. She simply ran straight into that hideous
danger--while the rest of us could do nothing but put our hands over
our eyes and pray."
"But she'll live, Jim?" the actress asked, and as he nodded a
thoughtful affirmative, she added: "That's something to be thankful
for, at least!"
Ten days later Miss Ives came cheerfully into the sunny, big room
where Marian Carter lay. Bandaged, and strapped, and bound, it was a
sorry little Dancing Girl who turned her serious eyes to the
actress's face. But Julie could be irresistible when she chose, and
she chose to be her most fascinating self to-day. Almost reluctantly
at first, later with something of her old gayety, the Dancing Girl's
laugh rang out. It stirred Julie's heart curiously to hear it, and
made the little patient's mother, listening in the next room, break
silently into tears.
"But this is what I really came to bring you," said the actress,
presently, laying a score or more of newspaper clippings on the bed.
"You see you are famous! I had my press-agent watch for these, and
they're coming in at a great rate every mail. You see, here's a
nattering likeness of you in a New York daily, and here you are
again, in a Chicago paper!"
"Itsays they are," Julie said. "One says you are petite and dark,
and the other that you are a blond Gibson type. You wouldn't have
believed that your wish could come true so quickly, would you, just
the other day?"
"Yes. Don't you remember saying that you wished you could do
something big?" pursued Julie. "You've done a thing that makes the
rest of us feel pretty small, you know. Why, while there was any
question of your getting better, there wasn't a dance given at any
of the hotels between here and Surf Point, and all sorts of people
came here with inquiries every day. This place was absolutely
hushed. The maids used to fight for the privilege of carrying your
trays up. None of us thought of anything but 'How is Miss Carter?'
And you'll be 'The young lady who saved those children from the
fire' for the rest of your life wherever you go!"
"You say I got my wish," she said now, her blue eyes brimming with
slow tears, and her lips trembling. "But--but--you see how I am,
Miss Ives! Dr. Arbuthnot says I may be able to walk in a month or
two, but no swimming or riding or dancing for years--perhaps never.
And my face--it'll always be scarred."
Julie laid a gentle hand on the little helpless fingers.
"But that's part of the process, you know, little girl," said the
actress after a little silence. "I pay one way, perhaps, and you pay
another, but we both pay. Don't you suppose," a smile broke through
the seriousness of her face, "don't you suppose I have my scars,
too?"
"When you are pointed out--as you will be, wherever you go--" said
Julie, "you'll think to yourself, 'Ah, yes, this is very lovely and
very flattering, but I'll never dance again--I'll never rush into
the waves again, I'll never spend a whole morning on the tennis
court,' won't you?"
The Dancing Girl nodded, her eyes filling again, her lips trembling.
"And when people stare after me and follow me," said Julie, "I think
to myself--'Oh, this is very flattering, very delightful--but the
young years are gone--the mother who missed me and longed for me is
gone--the little sisters are married, and deep in happy family
cares--they don't need me any more.' I have what I wanted, but I've
paid the price! In a life like mine there's no room for the normal,
wonderful ties of a home and children. Never--" she put her head
back against her chair and shut her eyes--"never that happiness for
me!" She finished, her voice lowered and carefully controlled.
They were both silent awhile. Then Marian stirred her helpless
fingers just enough to deepen their light pressure on Julie's own.
"Thank you," she said shyly. "I see now. I think I begin to
understand."