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PAGE 2

The Little Lonely Girl
by [?]

“I guess she is,” said Willy. He was sure of it when at the home hole, guarded by a high hedge, Dickson’s ball was sliced into the stubborn net of osage-orange roots. When his own ball sailed cleanly over the wall he made an excuse of tying his shoe in order to get another view of “that kid’s” brilliant smile. The girl herself went on to the bench in sight of the blackboard. Here she found herself beside an elderly man with a great head of thick gray hair. He was clapping so vigorously that she took him to be Willy’s father, and sent him a glance of sympathy. “You been all ’round with him?” said he. “What sort of a game is he playing?”

“Pretty bad until the fifteenth, and then a wonder,” she returned calmly.

“Rattled!” he snorted in disgust, as he chewed his cigar out of shape. “First match game. How are the others? What’s his chance?”

“He can beat them all if he will only think so,” she returned in the same even tone. Her voice was fuller, with a different and more melodious intonation than those about him; he looked up at her quickly, as if from a passing sense of the difference.

“Yes, he’s rattled!” grunted the elderly gentleman. “Gone stale, practicing every minute. Too anxious. Wants to please his father by getting a little silverware.”

“Aren’t you his father?”

Me? No. His father could buy me up out of his pocket-money. His father is Hiram G. Butler. I’m only his boss. He’s learning the steel business with me. I wish I was his father; he’s a genius in his way.”

“I suppose his father is awfully proud of him.”

“Proud nothing!” exploded the stout gentleman. “His father has bought and sold and fought inventors so long that when he discovered that his son was hatching formulas for open-hearth steel he was disgusted. Then at college Will took honors in chemistry and was a grind; and when his father wanted to load him with money, and told him to go ahead and make all the societies, he sent the money back and said he didn’t know any boys in societies; the boys who ran after him were only after his money and the other boys didn’t want him. The trouble simply is he is too all-fired shy and modest. Takes his father’s word he is a failure because he couldn’t make their fool societies. How should a fellow who has spent his life in English schools and traveling about with a tutor, and then is dumped into Harvard, be expected to make a splash among those snippy young swells? Harvard’s no violet cold-frame! The other boys did, but they were chips of the old block, hard as nails and hustlers from ‘way back. And since his mother died this poor chap has had nobody to chirk him up. Father didn’t mind until the other boys died. All three in one year; pretty tough on their father. Pretty tough. Ever lose–ur-r!–any one in your family? Then you know. Now Willy’s the only child, and his father wants to make him over in his brothers’ image. Wants to give him a wife to help! And Willy so scared of a petticoat he walked two hours up and down before the Somerset Hotel at his first college dance trying to screw up courage to go in–and couldn’t. Hiram never will get over that. But Willy, though he won’t marry to please his father, is fond of the old dictator just the same. And mighty proud. That’s why he has worked so at golf. Trying to show he can do some things like other boys, you see. Well, I see that Harvard dude has got his ball on the green at last. Now it’s up to Willy–Didn’t I tell you? In all right! Shall–Oh!” It was a singularly small, soft “Oh!” which the elderly man uttered, and it slipped out of his rugged lips when he caught the shy flash from Willy’s eyes at the girl. He studied her an infinitesimal space before he spoke, and he turned a chuckle into a cough as he said, “Aren’t you Lady Jean Bruce-Hadden and aren’t you visiting the Brookes?”