The Other Girls eBook

Adeline Dutton Train Whitney
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 498 pages of information about The Other Girls.

The Other Girls eBook

Adeline Dutton Train Whitney
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 498 pages of information about The Other Girls.

“I give all I leave in the world to my niece Belinda Bree.”

“Kellup” came down and buried his sister, and “looked into things;” concluded that “Bel was pretty comfortable, and with good folks,—­Mrs. Pimminy and Miss Smalley; ’sposed she calc’lated to keep on, now; she could come back if she wanted to, though.”

Bel did not want to.  She would stay here a little while, at any rate, and think.  So Kellup went back into New Hampshire.

There was a little money laid up since Miss Bree and Bel had been together; Bel could get along, she thought, till work began again.  But it was no longer living; it would not be living then; it would be only work and solitude.  She was like a great many others of them now; girls without tie or belonging,—­holding on where they could.  Elise Mokey had said to her,—­“See if you could help yourself if you hadn’t Aunt Blin!” and now she began to look forward against that great, dark “If.”

Everything had come together.  If work had kept on, there would have been these little savings to fall back upon when earnings did not quite meet outlay.  But now she should use them up before work came.  And what did it signify, anyhow?  All the comfort—­all the meaning of it—­was gone.

They were all kind to her; Miss Smalley sat with her evenings, till Bel wished she would have the wiser kindness to go away and let her be miserable, just a little while.

Morris Hewland knocked at the door one afternoon when the music-mistress was out, giving her lessons.

Bel did not ask him in to sit down; she stood just within the doorway, and talked with him.

He made some friendly inquiries that led to conversation; he drew her to say something of her plans.  He had not come on purpose; he hardly knew what he had come for.  He had only knocked to say a word of kindness; to look in the poor, pretty little face that he felt such a tenderness for.

“I can’t bear to give things up,—­because they were pleasant,” Bel said.  “But I suppose I shall have to go away.  It isn’t home; there isn’t anybody to make home with any more.  I know what I had thought of, a while ago; I believe I know what there is that I might do; I am just waiting until the thoughts come back, and begin to look as they did.  Nothing looks as it did yet.”

“Nothing?” asked Morris Hewland, his eyes questioning of hers.

“Yes,—­friends.  But the friends are all outside, after all.”

Hewland stood silent.

How beautiful it might be to make home for such a little heart as this!  To surround her with comfort and prettiness, such as she loved and knew how to contrive out of so little!  To say,—­“Let us belong together.  Make home with me!”

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Project Gutenberg
The Other Girls from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.