PAGE 6
The Spirit Of Cecelia Anne
by
“I’m not so sure of that,” said Mrs. Hawtry.
* * * * *
Cecelia Anne was allowed to run. First, in a girl’s race among the giggling, amateurish, self-conscious girls whom she outdistanced by a lap or two and, later, in the race for all winners, where she had to compete with Charlie Anderson, the beau of the hotel, Len Fogarty, the milkman’s son, and her own incomparable Jimmie.
The master of ceremonies gave the signal and the event of the day was on. First to collapse was Charlie Anderson. Jimmie was then in the lead with Len Fogarty a close second, and Cecelia Anne beside him. So they went for a lap. Then Jimmie, missing perhaps the blue little figure of his pacemaker, wavered a little, only a little, but enough to allow Len Fogarty to forge past him. Len Fogarty! The blatant, hated Len Fogarty, always shouting defiance from his father’s milk-wagon! Then forward sprang Cecelia Anne. Not for all the riches of the earth would she have beaten Jimmie, but not for all the glory of heaven would she allow any one else to beat him. And so by an easy spectacular ten seconds, she outran Len Fogarty.
Then wild was the enthusiasm of the audience and black was the brow of Len Fogarty. A chorus of: “Let a girl lick you,” “Call yourself a runner,” “Come up to the house an’ race me baby brother,” has not a soothing effect when added to the disappointment of being forever shut off from the business end of rockets and Roman candles. These things Cecelia Anne knew and so accepted, sadly and resignedly, the glare with which Len turned away from her little attempts at explanations.
But she was not prepared, nothing in her short life could ever have prepared her, to find the same expression on Jimmie’s face when she broke through a shower of congratulations and followed him up the road; to expect praise and to meet such a rebuff would have been sufficient to make even stiffer laurels than Cecelia Anne’s trail in the dust.
“Why Jimmie,” she whimpered contrary to his most stringent rule. “Why Jimmie what’s the matter?”
“You’re a sneak,” said Jimmie darkly and vouchsafed no more. There was indeed no more to say. It was the last word of opprobrium.
They pattered on in silence for a short but dusty distance, Cecelia Anne struggling with the temptation to lie down and die; Jimmie upborne by furious temper.
“Who taught you how to run?” he at last broke out. “Wasn’t it me? Didn’t I give you lessons every morning in the old lot? And then didn’t you go and beat me when Len Fogarty, Charlie Anderson, Billy Van Derwater, and all the other fellows were there?”
Cecelia Anne returned his angry gaze with her blue and loyal eyes.
“I didn’t beat you ‘t all,” she answered. “I didn’t beat anybody but Len Fogarty.”
Her mentor studied her for a while and then a grin overspread his once more placid features.
“I guess it’ll be all right,” he condescended. “Maybe you didn’t mean it the way it looked. But say, Cecelia Anne, if you’re afraid of fire-crackers what are you going to do about the rockets and the Roman candles? You know sparks fly out of them like rain. And if the smell of old cartridge shells makes you sick, I don’t know just how you’ll get along to-night.”
The victor stopped short under the weight of this overwhelming spoil.
“I forgot all about it,” she whispered. “Oh, Jimmie, I guess I ought to have let Len Fogarty win that race. He could set off rockets and Roman candles and Catherine wheels. I guess it’ll kill me when the sparks and the smoke come out. Maybe I’d better go and see Mr. Anstell and ask to be excused.”
“Aw, I wouldn’t do that,” Jimmie advised her, “you don’t want everyone to know about your nerve. You just tell him your dress is too light and that you want me to attend to the fireworks for you.”
In the transports of gratitude to which this knightly offer reduced her, Cecelia Anne fared on by Jimmie’s side until they reached the house and their enquiring parents. Mrs. Hawtry was on the steps as they came up and she gathered Cecelia Anne into her arms. For a moment no one spoke. Then Jimmie made his declaration.
“Cecelia Anne beat Len Fogarty all to nothing. You ought to have been there to see her.”
“Was there any one else in the race?” queried Mr. Hawtry in what his son considered most questionable taste.
“Oh, yes,” he was constrained to answer. “Charlie Anderson was in it. She beat him, too. And I started with them but I thought it would do those boys more good to be licked by a little girl than to have me ‘tend to them myself.” And Jimmie proceeded leisurely into the house.
“But I don’t have to set off the fireworks,” Cecelia Anne explained happily. “Jimmie says I don’t have to if I don’t want to. He’s going to do it for me.”
“Kind brother,” ejaculated Mr. Hawtry. And across the bright gold braids of her little Atalanta, Mrs. Hawtry looked at her husband.
” Did he know?” she questioned, “or did he not? You thought we could be sure if he let her start.”
“Well,” was Mr. Hawtry’s cryptic utterance, “he knows now.”