When it was over, and
Miss Ferrol rose, she became conscious that her companion was troubled
by some new difficulty, and a second thought suggested to her what its
nature was.
"Are you going to your room?" she asked.
"I don't know," said the girl, with the look of helpless appeal again.
"I don't know where else to go. I don't like to go out there"
(signifying the gallery) "alone."
"Why not come with me?" said Miss Ferrol. "Then we can promenade
together."
"Ah!" she said, with a little gasp of relief and gratitude. "Don't you
mind?"
"On the contrary, I shall be very glad of your society," Miss Ferrol
answered. "I am alone, too."
So they went out together and wandered slowly from one end of the
starlit gallery to the other, winding their way through the crowd that
promenaded, and, upon the whole, finding it rather pleasant.
"I shall have to take care of her," Miss Ferrol was deciding; "but I do
not think I shall mind the trouble."
The thing that touched her most was the girl's innocent trust in her
sincerity—her taking for granted that this stranger, who had been
polite to her, had been so not for worldly good breeding's sake, but
from true friendliness and extreme generosity of nature. Her first
shyness conquered, she related her whole history with the unreserve of
a child. Her father was a farmer, and she had always lived with him on
his farm. He had been too fond of her to allow her to leave home, and
she had never been "away to school."
"He has made a pet of me at home," she said. "I was the only one that
lived to be over eight years old. I am the eleventh. Ten died before
I was born, and it made father and mother worry a good deal over
me—and father was worse than mother. He said the time never seemed to
come when he could spare me. He is very good and kind—is father," she
added, in a hurried, soft-voiced way. "He's rough, but he's very good
and kind."
Before they parted for the night Miss Ferrol had the whole genealogical
tree by heart. They were an amazingly prolific family, it seemed.
There was Uncle Josiah, who had ten children, Uncle Leander, who had
fifteen, Aunt Amanda, who had twelve, and Aunt Nervy, whose belongings
comprised three sets of twins and an unlimited supply of odd numbers.
They went upstairs together and parted at Miss Ferrol's door, their
rooms being near each other.
The girl held out her hand.
"Good-night!" she said. "I'm so thankful I've got to know you."
Her eyes looked bigger and wider-open than ever; she smiled, showing
her even, sound, little white teeth. Under the bright light of the
lamp the freckles the day betrayed on her smooth skin were not to be
seen.
"Dear me!" thought Miss Ferrol. "How startlingly pretty, in spite of
the cotton lace and the dreadful polonaise!"
She touched her lightly on the shoulder.
"Why, you are as tall as I am!" she said.
"Yes," the girl replied, depressedly; "but I'm twice as broad."
"Oh no—no such thing." And then, with a delicate glance down over
her, she said—"It is your dress that makes you fancy so. Perhaps your
dressmaker does not understand your figure,"—as if such a failing was
the most natural and simple thing in the world, and needed only the
slightest rectifying.
"I have no dressmaker," the girl answered. "I make my things myself.
Perhaps that is it."
"It is a little dangerous, it is true," replied Miss Ferrol. "I have
been bold enough to try it myself, and I never succeeded. I could give
you the address of a very thorough woman if you lived in New York."
"But I don't live there, you see. I wish I did. I never shall,
though. Father could never spare me."
Another slight pause ensued, during which she looked admiringly at Miss
Ferrol. Then she said "good-night" again, and turned away.
But before she had crossed the corridor she stopped.
"I never told you my name," she said.
Miss Ferrol naturally expected she would announce it at once, but she
did not. An air of embarrassment fell upon her. She seemed almost
averse to speaking.
"Well," said Miss Ferrol, smiling, "what is it?"
She did not raise her eyes from the carpet as she replied, unsteadily:
"It's Louisiana."
Miss Ferrol answered her very composedly:
"The name of the state?"
"Yes. Father came from there."
"But you did not tell me your surname."
"Oh! that is Rogers. You—you didn't laugh.
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