“Come, Sylvia, it is nine o’clock!
Little slug-a-bed, don’t you mean to get up
to-day?” said Miss Yule, bustling into her sister’s
room with the wide-awake appearance of one to whom
sleep was a necessary evil, to be endured and gotten
over as soon as possible.
“No, why should I?” And
Sylvia turned her face away from the flood of light
that poured into the room as Prue put aside the curtains
and flung up the window.
“Why should you? What a
question, unless you are ill; I was afraid you would
suffer for that long row yesterday, and my predictions
seldom fail.”
“I am not suffering from any
cause whatever, and your prediction does fail this
time; I am only tired of everybody and everything,
and see nothing worth getting up for; so I shall just
stay here till I do. Please put the curtain down
and leave me in peace.”
Prue had dropped her voice to the
foreboding tone so irritating to nervous persons whether
sick or well, and Sylvia laid her arm across her eyes
with an impatient gesture as she spoke sharply.
“Nothing worth getting up for,”
cried Prue, like an aggravating echo. “Why,
child, there are a hundred pleasant things to do if
you would only think so. Now don’t be dismal
and mope away this lovely day. Get up and try
my plan; have a good breakfast, read the papers, and
then work in your garden before it grows too warm;
that is wholesome exercise and you’ve neglected
it sadly of late.”
“I don’t wish any breakfast;
I hate newspapers, they are so full of lies; I’m
tired of the garden, for nothing goes right this year;
and I detest taking exercise merely because it’s
wholesome. No, I’ll not get up for that.”
“Then stay in the house and
draw, read, or practise. Sit with Mark in the
studio; give Miss Hemming directions about your summer
things, or go into town about your bonnet. There
is a matinee, try that; or make calls, for you owe
fifty at least. Now I’m sure there’s
employment enough and amusement enough for any reasonable
person.”
Prue looked triumphant, but Sylvia
was not a “reasonable person,” and went
on in her former despondingly petulant strain.
“I’m tired of drawing;
my head is a jumble of other people’s ideas
already, and Herr Pedalsturm has put the piano out
of tune. Mark always makes a model of me if I
go to him, and I don’t like to see my eyes,
arms, or hair in all his pictures. Miss Hemming’s
gossip is worse than fussing over new things that
I don’t need. Bonnets are my torment, and
matinées are wearisome, for people whisper and
flirt till the music is spoiled. Making calls
is the worst of all; for what pleasure or profit is
there in running from place to place to tell the same
polite fibs over and over again, and listen to scandal
that makes you pity or despise your neighbors.
I shall not get up for any of these things.”
Prue leaned on the bedpost meditating
with an anxious face till a forlorn hope appeared
which caused her to exclaim
“Mark and I are going to see
Geoffrey Moor, this morning, just home from Switzerland,
where his poor sister died, you know. You really
ought to come with us and welcome him, for though
you can hardly remember him, he’s been so long
away, still, as one of the family, it is a proper
compliment on your part. The drive will do you
good, Geoffrey will be glad to see you, it is a lovely
old place, and as you never saw the inside of the
house you cannot complain that you are tired of that
yet.”
“Yes I can, for it will never
seem as it has done, and I can no longer go where
I please now that a master’s presence spoils
its freedom and solitude for me. I don’t
know him, and don’t care to, though his name
is so familiar. New people always disappoint
me, especially if I’ve heard them praised ever
since I was born. I shall not get up for any Geoffrey
Moor, so that bait fails.”
Sylvia smiled involuntarily at her
sister’s defeat, but Prue fell back upon her
last resource in times like this. With a determined
gesture she plunged her hand into an abysmal pocket,
and from a miscellaneous collection of treasures selected
a tiny vial, presenting it to Sylvia with a half pleading,
half authoritative look and tone.
“I’ll leave you in peace
if you’ll only take a dose of chamomilla.
It is so soothing, that instead of tiring yourself
with all manner of fancies, you’ll drop into
a quiet sleep, and by noon be ready to get up like
a civilized being. Do take it, dear; just four
sugar-plums, and I’m satisfied.”
Sylvia received the bottle with a
docile expression; but the next minute it flew out
of the window, to be shivered on the walk below, while
she said, laughing like a wilful creature as she was
“I have taken it in the only
way I ever shall, and the sparrows can try its soothing
effects with me; so be satisfied.”
“Very well. I shall send
for Dr. Baum, for I’m convinced that you are
going to be ill. I shall say no more, but act
as I think proper, because it’s like talking
to the wind to reason with you in one of these perverse
fits.”
As Prue turned away, Sylvia frowned
and called after her
“Spare yourself the trouble,
for Dr. Baum will follow the chamomilla, if you bring
him here. What does he know about health, a fat
German, looking lager beer and talking sauer-kraut?
Bring me bona fide sugar-plums and I’ll
take them; but arsenic, mercury, and nightshade are
not to my taste.”
“Would you feel insulted if
I ask whether your breakfast is to be sent up, or
kept waiting till you choose to come down?”
Prue looked rigidly calm, but Sylvia
knew that she felt hurt, and with one of the sudden
impulses which ruled her the frown melted to a smile,
as drawing her sister down she kissed her in her most
loving manner.
“Dear old soul, I’ll be
good by-and-by, but now I’m tired and cross,
so let me keep out of every one’s way and drowse
myself into a cheerier frame of mind. I want
nothing but solitude, a draught of water, and a kiss.”
Prue was mollified at once, and after
stirring fussily about for several minutes gave her
sister all she asked, and departed to the myriad small
cares that made her happiness. As the door closed,
Sylvia sighed a long sigh of relief, and folding her
arms under her head drifted away into the land of
dreams, where ennui is unknown.
All the long summer morning she lay
wrapt in sleeping and waking dreams, forgetful of
the world about her, till her brother played the Wedding
March upon her door on his way to lunch. The desire
to avenge the sudden downfall of a lovely castle in
the air roused Sylvia, and sent her down to skirmish
with Mark. Before she could say a word, however,
Prue began to talk in a steady stream, for the good
soul had a habit of jumbling news, gossip, private
opinions and public affairs into a colloquial hodge-podge,
that was often as trying to the intellects as the risibles
of her hearers.
“Sylvia, we had a charming call,
and Geoffrey sent his love to you. I asked him
over to dinner, and we shall dine at six, because then
my father can be with us. I shall have to go
to town first, for there are a dozen things suffering
for attention. You can’t wear a round hat
and lawn jackets without a particle of set all summer.
I want some things for dinner, and the
carpet must be got. What a lovely one Geoffrey
had in the library! Then I must see if poor Mrs.
Beck has had her leg comfortably off, find out if
Freddy Lennox is dead, and order home the mosquito
nettings. Now don’t read all the afternoon,
and be ready to receive any one who may come if I
should get belated.”
The necessity of disposing of a suspended
mouthful produced a lull, and Sylvia seized the moment
to ask in a careless way, intended to bring her brother
out upon his favorite topic,
“How did you find your saint, Mark?”
“The same sunshiny soul as ever,
though he has had enough to make him old and grave
before his time. He is just what we need in our
neighborhood, and particularly in our house, for we
are a dismal set at times, and he will do us all a
world of good.”
“What will become of me, with
a pious, prosy, perfect creature eternally haunting
the house and exhorting me on the error of my ways!”
cried Sylvia.
“Don’t disturb yourself;
he is not likely to take much notice of you; and it
is not for an indolent, freakish midge to scoff at
a man whom she does not know, and couldn’t appreciate
if she did,” was Mark’s lofty reply.
“I rather liked the appearance
of the saint, however,” said Sylvia, with an
expression of naughty malice, as she began her lunch.
“Why, where did you see him!” exclaimed
her brother.
“I went over there yesterday
to take a farewell run in the neglected garden before
he came. I knew he was expected, but not that
he was here; and when I saw the house open, I slipped
in and peeped wherever I liked. You are right,
Prue; it is a lovely old place.”
“Now I know you did something
dreadfully unladylike and improper. Put me out
of suspense, I beg of you.”
Prue’s distressful face and
Mark’s surprise produced an inspiring effect
upon Sylvia, who continued, with an air of demure satisfaction
“I strolled about, enjoying
myself, till I got into the library, and there I rummaged,
for it was a charming place, and I was happy as only
those are who love books, and feel their influence
in the silence of a room whose finest ornaments they
are.”
“I hope Moor came in and found you trespassing.”
“No, I went out and caught him
playing. When I’d stayed as long as I dared,
and borrowed a very interesting old book
“Sylvia! did you really take
one without asking?” cried Prue, looking almost
as much alarmed as if she had stolen the spoons.
“Yes; why not? I can apologize
prettily, and it will open the way for more.
I intend to browse over that library for the next six
months.”
“But it was such a liberty, so
rude, so – dear, dear; and he as fond
and careful of his books as if they were his children!
Well, I wash my hands of it, and am prepared for anything
now!”
Mark enjoyed Sylvia’s pranks
too much to reprove, so he only laughed while one
sister lamented and the other placidly went on
“When I had put the book nicely
in my pocket, Prue, I walked into the garden.
But before I’d picked a single flower, I heard
little Tilly laugh behind the hedge and some strange
voice talking to her. So I hopped upon a roller
to see, and nearly tumbled off again; for there was
a man lying on the grass, with the gardener’s
children rioting over him. Will was picking his
pockets, and Tilly eating strawberries out of his
hat, often thrusting one into the mouth of her long
neighbor, who always smiled when the little hand came
fumbling at his lips. You ought to have seen
the pretty picture, Mark.”
“Did he see the interesting
picture on your side of the wall?”
“No, I was just thinking what
friendly eyes he had, listening to his pleasant talk
with the little folks, and watching how they nestled
to him as if he were a girl, when Tilly looked up
and cried, ’I see Silver!’ So I ran away,
expecting to have them all come racing after.
But no one appeared, and I only heard a laugh instead
of the ’stop thief’ that I deserved.”
“If I had time I should convince
you of the impropriety of such wild actions; as I
haven’t, I can only implore you never to do so
again on Geoffrey’s premises,” said Prue,
rising as the carriage drove round.
“I can safely promise that,”
answered Sylvia, with a dismal shake of the head,
as she leaned listlessly from the window till her brother
and sister were gone.
At the appointed time Moor entered
Mr. Yule’s hospitably open door; but no one
came to meet him, and the house was as silent as if
nothing human inhabited it. He divined the cause
of this, having met Prue and Mark going downward some
hours before, and saying to himself, “The boat
is late,” he disturbed no one, but strolled
into the drawing-rooms and looked about him.
Being one of those who seldom find time heavy on their
hands, he amused himself with observing what changes
had been made during his absence. His journey
round the apartments was not a long one, for, coming
to an open window, he paused with an expression of
mingled wonder and amusement.
A pile of cushions, pulled from chair
and sofa, lay before the long window, looking very
like a newly deserted nest. A warm-hued picture
lifted from the wall stood in a streak of sunshine;
a half-cleared leaf of fruit lay on a taboret, and
beside it, with a red stain on its title-page, appeared
the stolen book. At sight of this Moor frowned,
caught up his desecrated darling and put it in his
pocket. But as he took another glance at the
various indications of what had evidently been a solitary
revel very much after his own heart, he relented, laid
back the book, and, putting aside the curtain floating
in the wind, looked out into the garden, attracted
thither by the sound of a spade.
A lad was at work near by, and wondering
what new inmate the house had gained, the neglected
guest waited to catch a glimpse of the unknown face.
A slender boy, in a foreign-looking blouse of grey
linen; a white collar lay over a ribbon at the throat,
stout half boots covered a trim pair of feet, and
a broad-brimmed hat flapped low on the forehead.
Whistling softly he dug with active gestures; and,
having made the necessary cavity, set a shrub, filled
up the hole, trod it down scientifically, and then
fell back to survey the success of his labors.
But something was amiss, something had been forgotten,
for suddenly up came the shrub, and seizing a wheelbarrow
that stood near by, away rattled the boy round the
corner out of sight. Moor smiled at his impetuosity,
and awaited his return with interest, suspecting from
appearances that this was some protege of Mark’s
employed as a model as well as gardener’s boy.
Presently up the path came the lad,
with head down and steady pace, trundling a barrow
full of richer earth, surmounted by a watering-pot.
Never stopping for breath he fell to work again, enlarged
the hole, flung in the loam, poured in the water,
reset the shrub, and when the last stamp and pat were
given performed a little dance of triumph about it,
at the close of which he pulled off his hat and began
to fan his heated face. The action caused the
observer to start and look again, thinking, as he
recognized the energetic worker with a smile, “What
a changeful thing it is! haunting one’s premises
unseen, and stealing one’s books unsuspected;
dreaming one half the day and masquerading the other
half. What will happen next? Let us see but
not be seen, lest the boy turn shy and run away before
the pretty play is done!”
Holding the curtain between the window
and himself, Moor peeped through the semi-transparent
screen, enjoying the little episode immensely.
Sylvia fanned and rested a few minutes, then went up
and down among the flowers, often pausing to break
a dead leaf, to brush away some harmful insect, or
lift some struggling plant into the light; moving among
them as if akin to them, and cognizant of their sweet
wants. If she had seemed strong-armed and sturdy
as a boy before, now she was tender fingered as a
woman, and went humming here and there like any happy-hearted
bee.
“Curious child!” thought
Moor, watching the sunshine glitter on her uncovered
head, and listening to the air she left half sung.
“I’ve a great desire to step out and see
how she will receive me. Not like any other girl,
I fancy.”
But, before he could execute his design,
the roll of a carriage was heard in the avenue, and
pausing an instant, with head erect like a startled
doe, Sylvia turned and vanished, dropping flowers as
she ran. Mr. Yule, accompanied by his son and
daughter, came hurrying in with greetings, explanations,
and apologies, and in a moment the house was full
of a pleasant stir. Steps went up and down, voices
echoed through the rooms, savory odors burst forth
from below, and doors swung in the wind, as if the
spell was broken and the sleeping palace had wakened
with a word.
Prue made a hasty toilet and harassed
the cook to the verge of spontaneous combustion, while
Mark and his father devoted themselves to their guest.
Just as dinner was announced Sylvia came in, as calm
and cool as if wheelbarrows were myths and linen suits
unknown. Moor was welcomed with a quiet hand-shake,
a grave salutation, and a look that seemed to say,
“Wait a little, I take no friends on trust.”
All through dinner, though she sat
as silent as a well-bred child, she looked and listened
with an expression of keen intelligence that children
do not wear, and sometimes smiled to herself, as if
she saw or heard something that pleased and interested
her. When they rose from table she followed Prue
up stairs, quite forgetting the disarray in which
the drawing-room was left. The gentlemen took
possession before either sister returned, and Mark’s
annoyance found vent in a philippic against oddities
in general and Sylvia in particular; but his father
and friend sat in the cushionless chairs, and pronounced
the scene amusingly novel. Prue appeared in the
midst of the laugh, and having discovered other delinquencies
above, her patience was exhausted, and her regrets
found no check in the presence of so old a friend as
Moor.
“Something must be done about
that child, father, for she is getting entirely beyond
my control. If I attempt to make her study she
writes poetry instead of her exercises, draws caricatures
instead of sketching properly, and bewilders her music
teacher by asking questions about Beethoven and Mendelssohn,
as if they were personal friends of his. If I
beg her to take exercise, she rides like an Amazon
all over the Island, grubs in the garden as if for
her living, or goes paddling about the bay till I’m
distracted lest the tide should carry her out to sea.
She is so wanting in moderation she gets ill, and
when I give her proper medicines she flings them out
of the window, and threatens to send that worthy,
Dr. Baum, after them. Yet she must need something
to set her right, for she is either overflowing with
unnatural spirits or melancholy enough to break one’s
heart.”
“What have you done with the
little black sheep of my flock, not banished
her, I hope?” said Mr. Yule, placidly, ignoring
all complaints.
“She is in the garden, attending
to some of her disagreeable pets, I fancy. If
you are going out there to smoke, please send her in,
Mark; I want her.”
As Mr. Yule was evidently yearning
for his after-dinner nap, and Mark for his cigar,
Moor followed his friend, and they stepped through
the window into the garden, now lovely with the fading
glow of summer sunset.
“You must know that this peculiar
little sister of mine clings to some of her childish
beliefs and pleasures in spite of Prue’s preaching
and my raillery,” began Mark, after a refreshing
whiff or two. “She is overflowing with
love and good will, but being too shy or too proud
to offer it to her fellow-creatures, she expends it
upon the necessitous inhabitants of earth, air, and
water with the most charming philanthropy. Her
dependants are neither beautiful nor very interesting,
nor is she sentimentally enamored of them; but the
more ugly and desolate the creature, the more devoted
is she. Look at her now; most young ladies would
have hysterics over any one of those pets of hers.”
Moor looked, and thought the group
a very pretty one, though a plump toad sat at Sylvia’s
feet, a roly-poly caterpillar was walking up her sleeve,
a blind bird chirped on her shoulder, bees buzzed harmlessly
about her head, as if they mistook her for a flower,
and in her hand a little field mouse was breathing
its short life away. Any tender-hearted girl
might have stood thus surrounded by helpless things
that pity had endeared, but few would have regarded
them with an expression like that which Sylvia wore.
Figure, posture, and employment were so childlike in
their innocent unconsciousness, that the contrast was
all the more strongly marked between them and the
sweet thoughtfulness that made her face singularly
attractive with the charm of dawning womanhood.
Moor spoke before Mark could dispose of his smoke.
“This is a great improvement
upon the boudoir full of lap-dogs, worsted-work and
novels, Miss Sylvia. May I ask if you feel no
repugnance to some of your patients; or is your charity
strong enough to beautify them all?”
“I dislike many people, but
few animals, because however ugly I pity them, and
whatever I pity I am sure to love. It may be silly,
but I think it does me good; and till I am wise enough
to help my fellow-beings, I try to do my duty to these
humbler sufferers, and find them both grateful and
affectionate.”
There was something very winning in
the girl’s manner as she spoke, touching the
little creature in her hand almost as tenderly as if
it had been a child. It showed the newcomer another
phase of this many-sided character; and while Sylvia
related the histories of her pets at his request,
he was enjoying that finer history which every ingenuous
soul writes on its owner’s countenance for gifted
eyes to read and love. As she paused, the little
mouse lay stark and still in her gentle hand; and
though they smiled at themselves, both young men felt
like boys again as they helped her scoop a grave among
the pansies, owning the beauty of compassion, though
she showed it to them in such a simple shape.
Then Mark delivered his message, and
Sylvia went away to receive Prue’s lecture,
with outward meekness, but such an absent mind that
the words of wisdom went by her like the wind.
“Now come and take our twilight
stroll, while Mark keeps Mr. Moor in the studio and
Prue prepares another exhortation,” said Sylvia,
as her father woke, and taking his arm, they paced
along the wide piazza that encircled the whole house.
“Will father do me a little favor?”
“That is all he lives for, dear.”
“Then his life is a very successful
one;” and the girl folded her other hand over
that already on his arm. Mr. Yule shook his head
with a regretful sigh, but asked benignly
“What shall I do for my little daughter?”
“Forbid Mark to execute a plot
with which he threatens me. He says he will bring
every gentleman he knows (and that is a great many)
to the house, and make it so agreeable that they will
keep coming; for he insists that I need amusement,
and nothing will be so entertaining as a lover or
two. Please tell him not to, for I don’t
want any lovers yet.”
“Why not?” asked her father, much amused
at her twilight confidences.
“I’m afraid. Love
is so cruel to some people, I feel as if it would be
to me, for I am always in extremes, and continually
going wrong while trying to go right. Love bewilders
the wisest, and it would make me quite blind or mad,
I know; therefore I’d rather have nothing to
do with it, for a long, long while.”
“Then Mark shall be forbidden
to bring a single specimen. I very much prefer
to keep you as you are. And yet you may be happier
to do as others do; try it, if you like, my dear.”
“But I can’t do as others
do; I’ve tried, and failed. Last winter,
when Prue made me go about, though people probably
thought me a stupid little thing, moping in corners,
I was enjoying myself in my own way, and making discoveries
that have been very useful ever since. I know
I’m whimsical, and hard to please, and have
no doubt the fault was in myself, but I was disappointed
in nearly every one I met, though I went into what
Prue calls ‘our best society.’ The
girls seemed all made on the same pattern; they all
said, did, thought, and wore about the same things,
and knowing one was as good as knowing a dozen.
Jessie Hope was the only one I cared much for, and
she is so pretty, she seems made to be looked at and
loved.”
“How did you find the young gentlemen, Sylvia?”
“Still worse; for, though lively
enough among themselves they never found it worth
their while to offer us any conversation but such as
was very like the champagne and ice-cream they brought
us, sparkling, sweet, and unsubstantial.
Almost all of them wore the superior air they put
on before women, an air that says as plainly as words,
’I may ask you and I may not.’ Now
that is very exasperating to those who care no more
for them than so many grasshoppers, and I often longed
to take the conceit out of them by telling some of
the criticisms passed upon them by the amiable young
ladies who looked as if waiting to say meekly, ‘Yes,
thank you.’”
“Don’t excite yourself,
my dear; it is all very lamentable and laughable,
but we must submit till the world learns better.
There are often excellent young persons among the
‘grasshoppers,’ and if you cared to look
you might find a pleasant friend here and there,”
said Mr. Yule, leaning a little toward his son’s
view of the matter.
“No, I cannot even do that without
being laughed at; for no sooner do I mention the word
friendship than people nod wisely and look as if they
said, ‘Oh, yes, every one knows what that sort
of thing amounts to.’ I should like a friend,
father; some one beyond home, because he would be
newer; a man (old or young, I don’t care which),
because men go where they like, see things with their
own eyes, and have more to tell if they choose.
I want a person simple, wise, and entertaining; and
I think I should make a very grateful friend if such
an one was kind enough to like me.”
“I think you would, and perhaps
if you try to be more like others you will find friends
as they do, and so be happy, Sylvia.”
“I cannot be like others, and
their friendships would not satisfy me. I don’t
try to be odd; I long to be quiet and satisfied, but
I cannot; and when I do what Prue calls wild things,
it is not because I am thoughtless or idle, but because
I am trying to be good and happy. The old ways
fail, so I attempt new ones, hoping they will succeed;
but they don’t, and I still go looking and longing
for happiness, yet always failing to find it, till
sometimes I think I am a born disappointment.”
“Perhaps love would bring the happiness, my
dear?”
“I’m afraid not; but,
however that may be, I shall never go running about
for a lover as half my mates do. When the true
one comes I shall know him, love him at once, and
cling to him forever, no matter what may happen.
Till then I want a friend, and I will find one if I
can. Don’t you believe there may be real
and simple friendships between men and women without
falling into this everlasting sea of love?”
Mr. Yule was laughing quietly under
cover of the darkness, but composed himself to answer
gravely
“Yes, for some of the most beautiful
and famous friendships have been such, and I see no
reason why there may not be again. Look about,
Sylvia, make yourself happy; and, whether you find
friend or lover, remember there is always the old
Papa glad to do his best for you in both capacities.”
Sylvia’s hand crept to her father’s
shoulder, and her voice was full of daughterly affection,
as she said
“I’ll have no lover but
‘the old Papa’ for a long while yet.
But I will look about, and if I am fortunate enough
to find and good enough to keep the person I want,
I shall be very happy; for, father, I really think
I need a friend.”
Here Mark called his sister in to
sing to them, a demand that would have been refused
but for a promise to Prue to behave her best as an
atonement for past pranks. Stepping in she sat
down and gave Moor another surprise, as from her slender
throat there came a voice whose power and pathos made
a tragedy of the simple ballad she was singing.
“Why did you choose that plaintive
thing, all about love, despair, and death? It
quite breaks one’s heart to hear it,” said
Prue, pausing in a mental estimate of her morning’s
shopping.
“It came into my head, and so
I sung it. Now I’ll try another, for I am
bound to please you if I can.”
And she broke out again with an airy melody as jubilant
as if a lark had mistaken moonlight for the dawn and
soared skyward, singing as it went. So blithe
and beautiful were both voice and song they caused
a sigh of pleasure, a sensation of keen delight in
the listener, and seemed to gift the singer with an
unsuspected charm. As she ended Sylvia turned
about, and seeing the satisfaction of their guest
in his face, prevented him from expressing it in words
by saying, in her frank way
“Never mind the compliments.
I know my voice is good, for that you may thank nature;
that it is well trained, for that praise Herr Pedalsturm;
and that you have heard it at all, you owe to my desire
to atone for certain trespasses of yesterday and to-day,
because I seldom sing before strangers.”
“Allow me to offer my hearty
thanks to Nature, Pedalsturm, and Penitence, and also
to hope that in time I may be regarded, not as a stranger,
but a neighbor and a friend.”
Something in the gentle emphasis of
the last word struck pleasantly on the girl’s
ear, and seemed to answer an unspoken longing.
She looked up at him with a searching glance, appeared
to find some ’assurance given by looks,’
and as a smile broke over her face she offered her
hand as if obeying a sudden impulse, and said, half
to him, half to herself
“I think I have found the friend already.”