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"I am going to talk with Mr. Ashe about the matter now. We must do what is best for the boy." As General Trent walked to meet Uncle Cliff, Blue Bonnet stood staring after him, her thoughts in a whirl.
"What's the matter? You look as if you had just been through an earthquake," laughed Ruth, coming up and slipping her thin hand into Blue Bonnet's.
"I think I have,--and everything is upside down." Blue Bonnet still looked dazed as she turned to go into the house.
"Come in and see Kitty. The poor child is pretty blue."
"She was pretty red when I last saw her!" laughed Blue Bonnet. "I've something here to cheer her--a message from Sandy. She snubs him dreadfully, but he seems to enjoy it."
They found all the girls gathered about Kitty's bed, evidently in the midst of a serious discussion. Silence fell as Blue Bonnet entered.
"I can see out of one eye!" Kitty announced with forced gaiety.
"Praise be!" said Blue Bonnet. "Now you can see what Sandy sent for a farewell message." She held out the envelope.
"Open it please," said Kitty. "That boy is always up to mischief and I can't take any more risks. I cut one of his dances the other evening and he vowed vengeance."
Blue Bonnet obeyed while the other girls looked on with unconcealed interest. The envelope appeared to be empty, but when it was vigorously shaken upside down, something fell on to the counterpane.
They all dove for it, but it was Debby who finally caught and held it up. It was a tiny square of note-paper, in the centre of which a knot of ribbon secured something bright and s.h.i.+ning. It was a lock of Sandy's silky red hair. Under it was written: "A coal of fire. I forgive you."
Kitty laughed for the first time since her affliction had come upon her; and the girls blessed Sandy for his nonsense.
"May I borrow my granddaughter for a few minutes?" asked the Senora, looking in at the door. "Blue Bonnet, I've a letter here from your Aunt Lucinda."
An odd look came into Blue Bonnet's face,--Grandmother's voice held a hint of something important. She handed Sandy's memento to Kitty and forced a smile. "Put this in your memory-book, Kitty. When Sandy is president, you can point with pride to that coal of fire--they're likely, by then, to call it 'the fire of genius!'"
When she had left the room, Kitty looked out of her one good eye with a glance intended to be solemn. "Girls, I've a presentiment."
"What about,--Sandy?" asked Sarah.
"No, you silly,--except that he'll never be president! I'm thinking about Blue Bonnet,--I was just going to tell you when she came in. I don't believe she intends to go back with us."
Kitty's words produced even more of an effect than she had expected.
For several minutes no one spoke, then Ruth said half irritably:
"If you can't have pleasanter presentiments than that, Kitty, I wish you wouldn't have them."
"I can't help it," Kitty declared. "She won't say a word about it. And every time we get on to the subject, she either begins to talk about something else, or leaves the room."
"I've noticed it, too," said Sarah, quietly.
The gloom on every countenance bore silent witness to the hold Blue Bonnet had on the affections of the We are Sevens.
"Woodford will be a stupid old hole without her," Kitty declared.
"Pa.s.sing over your implied compliment to us," said Debby, "I agree with you."
Grandmother handed Blue Bonnet Aunt Lucinda's letter without comment; but watched the girl's face closely as she read. A characteristic letter it was, showing the fine mind and cultivation of the writer, yet like her, too, precise and rather formal in its wording. She was in Munich, enjoying the summer music festival. Nothing very important so far, Blue Bonnet concluded, and began to breathe more easily. But over the closing pages she sobered again.
"There is a rather remarkable pianist staying at this same pension,"
she wrote; "and she plays for us very often. Something in the charm and delicacy of her touch makes me think of Blue Bonnet's, when she plays her little 'Ave Maria.' I have talked with her about Blue Bonnet and she thinks with me that the child must have real talent for the piano. Fraulein Schirmer is to teach music in a school for girls in Boston, this coming winter, and I think it would be an excellent plan to place Blue Bonnet right in the school. She is old enough now to appreciate the atmosphere of culture and refinement in such a place,--I am told that the first families of Boston send their daughters there--and she could have the advantage of attending the Symphony concerts.
"Woodford has nothing much to offer in the way of musical advantages, and I think Blue Bonnet should develop her talent in this line. She could come to us for the week-end always, and in that way we should not have to part with her altogether. But we can settle the matter when we are all in Woodford once more."
Blue Bonnet sighed as she finished and let the letter drop into her lap. "When they were all in Woodford once more." So Aunt Lucinda, too, took it for granted! She stirred a trifle resentfully.
"One would think I had signed a life-contract!" she thought.
Mrs. Clyde sought her granddaughter's eye anxiously. "Well, Blue Bonnet, what are you thinking?"
"I'm thinking--not for the first time either,--of something I once said to Alec. I wished, and keep on wis.h.i.+ng--that there were two of me,--so that one might stay here on the ranch with Uncle Cliff, while the other was with you and Aunt Lucinda in Woodford, being educated."
Grandmother smiled and sighed in the same breath. "Suppose you leave me and Uncle Clifford and Aunt Lucinda out of the matter entirely.
Just think how it would have appealed to--your mother."
The blue eyes turned swiftly from her grandmother's face to gaze out across the wide sweep of prairie. There was a long silence. When Blue Bonnet faced her grandmother again, her eyes were misty.
"I wish she were here to tell me. Somehow I can't make it seem right, either way. Will you wait and let me sleep on it, Grandmother? I'll tell you, as the Mexicans say--_manana_."
"To-morrow?"
"Well, _manana_ with the Mexicans means almost any time in the future, but I'll make it--to-morrow."
Mrs. Clyde was silent, but the glance that followed Blue Bonnet as she left the room, was very wistful.
CHAPTER XXI
BLUE BONNET DECIDES
[Ill.u.s.tration: "ALEC SURVEYED HER PROUD LITTLE PROFILE."]
"I SAY, Blue Bonnet, wait for a fellow, won't you?"
Blue Bonnet waited, none too eagerly, while Alec caught up with her, and then, whistling to Don and Solomon, turned to resume her walk along the gra.s.sy bank of San Franciscito.
Alec surveyed her proud little profile for a few minutes in a sort of puzzled wonder, and finally as she kept on in the same unsociable manner, he began with determined friendliness:
"We've never yet taken the walk we planned, along the _rio_. Feel equal to it this morning?"
"There isn't time to go far. I told Grandmother I'd not be gone long,"
she returned carelessly.
"Another tea-party on?" This time he succeeded in bringing the old sparkle of laughter to her eyes.
"Not this time," she answered.