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For the first time Patty realised that her hair was hanging about her shoulders and her costume was, to say the least, informal, and with another little squeal, she sprang back into her room and closed the window doors.
Then she went and looked at herself in the mirror.
"Well, you don't look an absolute fright," she said, to the smiling reflection she saw there. "But to think of Bill being here! Little Billee! Bless his old heart!"
And then Patty flew at her toilet. Everything had been laid in readiness, and she began to draw on her white silk stockings and dainty slippers.
She was sitting before her mirror, doing her hair, when the key turned and Adele came in.
"For goodness' sake, Patty Fairfield! WHERE did all these flowers come from?"
"They came in at the window, ma'am, before I closed it," said Patty, demurely.
"Came in at the window! Nonsense, how could they do that?"
"Oh, the breeze was awful strong, and it just blew them in."
"Silly child! But I say, Patty, hurry up and get dressed!"
"I AM hurrying!" and Patty provokingly twisted up her curls with slow, deliberate motions.
"You're NOT! you're dawdling horribly! But you wouldn't, if you knew who was downstairs!"
"Who?"
"Oh, you're very indifferent, aren't you? Well, you wouldn't be so indifferent if you knew who's downstairs."
"Not, by any chance, Bill Farnsworth?"
"Yes! that's just exactly who it is! How did you ever guess? Are you glad?"
"Yes, of course I am," and Patty's pink cheeks dimpled as she smiled frankly at Adele. "I'm just crazy to see Bill again!"
"Look here, Patty," and Adele spoke somewhat seriously, "I want to say something to you,--and yet I hate to. But I feel as if I ought to."
"My stars! Adele, what IS the dreadful thing?"
Patty paused in her hairdressing and, with brush in one hand and mirror in the other, she stared at Adele.
"Why, you see, Patty, I know you do like Bill, and--I don't want you to like him too much."
"What DO you mean?"
"Oh, nothing. It even sounds silly to say it to you, as a warning. But, dear, I feel I MUST tell you. He's engaged."
"Oh, is he?" Patty tossed her head, and then went on arranging her hair, but the pink flush on her cheek deepened. "Are you sure?" she said, carelessly.
"Well, I'm not sure that he's engaged, really," and Adele wrinkled her pretty brow, as she looked at Patty; "but he told me last winter that all his life was bound up in Kitty, and he loved her with all his heart, or something like that."
"Kitty who?"
"I can't remember her other name, although he told me."
"How did Bill happen to tell you this, Adele?"
"He was here, and I was chaffing him about one of the Crosby girls, and then he told me that about Kitty. And somehow I thought you ought to know it."
"Oh, fiddlesticks, Adele, as if I cared! I can't understand why you should think _I_ would care if Mr. Farnsworth were engaged to forty-'leven girls. It's nothing to me."
"Of course I know it isn't, Patty; but I just wanted to tell you."
"All right, honey; I'm glad you did. Now go on downstairs, and I'll be down in a few minutes."
Adele ran away and Patty proceeded to don her royal robes.
The coronation gown was of white chiffon, having no decoration save tiny bunches and garlands of flowers. It was not made in the prevailing fas.h.i.+on, but copied from a quaint old picture and was very becoming to its wearer.
Her golden curls were loosely ma.s.sed and a few flowers adorned them.
Patty sat a moment in front of her mirror, talking to herself, as she often did.
"Of course Little Billee is engaged," she said to herself; "he's too nice a man not to be. And I hope his Kitty is a lovely, sweet, charming girl. I don't think, as an engaged man, he had any business to throw flowers in at my window, but I suppose that was because we've always been good friends. I don't see how he could tear himself away from the charming Kitty long enough to come East, but he's always flying across the continent on his business trips."
Daisy came into Patty's room then, and the two girls went downstairs together.
The guests had gathered for the garden party, and were dotted over the lawns or grouped on the veranda.
"Thank goodness it's a warm day," said Patty, as they went down the stairs. "Sometimes on May-day we have to go around in fur coats."
At the foot of the staircase Bill Farnsworth waited to greet Patty.
He came forward with an eager smile and took her two hands in his.
"Little Apple Blossom!" he exclaimed; "Patty Pink-and-White!"
For the life of her, Patty could not be as cordial as she would have been if Adele had not told her what she did. But though she tried to speak a genuine welcome, she only succeeded in saying, "How do you do, Mr. Farnsworth?" in a cool little voice.
Big Bill looked at her in amazement.
"You gave me a better greeting than that from your window," he said, in laughing reproach. "I still have an apple blossom left. May I give it to you?" and Bill produced a small but perfect spray which he proceeded to pin on the shoulder of Patty's gown.
"My costume is complete," said Patty, with a smiling dissent; "it doesn't need any additional flower."
"It needs this one to make it perfect," said Farnsworth, calmly, and indeed the pretty blossom was no detriment to the effect.
"Oh, Phil, how gorgeous you look!" and Patty abruptly turned from Farnsworth to admire Van Reypen's get-up.
"Me, too!" exclaimed Hal Ferris, stepping up to be admired. The men's decorations consisted of garlands draped across their shoulders and tied with huge bows of ribbon. On their heads they wore cla.s.sic wreaths which Daisy and Hal had made, and which were really not unbecoming. The procession formed in the hall, and went out across the lawn to the May Queen's throne.