While Caroline Was Growing. Josephine Daskam Bacon. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Josephine Daskam Bacon
Издательство: Bookwire
Серия:
Жанр произведения: Языкознание
Год издания: 0
isbn: 4064066211899
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said, and bending over him, kissed him delicately.

      "How good it smells—how—how different!" she murmured. "I thought they—I thought they didn't."

      Miss Honey had taken the lady's other hand, and was examining the square ruby with a diamond on either side.

      "My mother says that's the principal reason to have a baby," she remarked, absorbed in the glittering thing. "You sprinkle 'em all over with violet powder—just like doughnuts with sugar—and kiss 'em. Some people think they get germs that way, but my mother says if she couldn't kiss 'em she wouldn't have 'em!"

      The Princess bent over the baby again.

      "It's going to sleep here!" she said, half fearfully, with an inquiring glance at the two. "Oughtn't one to rock it?"

      Miss Honey shook her head severely. "Not General," she answered, "he won't stand it. My mother tried again and again—could I take that blue ring a minute? I'd be awful careful—but he wouldn't. He sits up and he lies down, but he won't rock."

      "I might sing to him," suggested the Princess, brushing a damp lock from the General's warm forehead and slipping her ringless finger into his curved fist carefully. "Would he like it?"

      "No, he wouldn't," said Miss Honey bluntly, twisting the ring around her finger. "He only likes two people to sing—Delia and my mother. Was that ruby ring a 'ngagement ring?"

      Caroline interfered diplomatically. "General would be very much obliged," she explained politely, "except that my Aunt Deedee is a very good singer indeed, and Uncle Joe says General's taste is ruined for just common singing."

      The Princess stared at her blankly.

      "Oh, indeed!" she remarked. Then she smiled again in that whimsical expressive way. "You don't think I could sing well enough for him—as well as your mother?"

      With a great sweep of her arm, she brushed aside a portière and disappeared.

      Miss Honey laughed carelessly. "My mother is a singer," she said, "a real one. She used to sing in concerts—real ones. In theatres. Real theatres, I mean," as the lady appeared to be still amused.

      "If you know where the Waldorf Hotel is," Caroline interrupted, "she has sung in that, and it was five dollars to get in. It was to send the poor children to a Fresh Air Fund. It—it's not the same as you would sing—or me," she added politely.

      The lady arose suddenly and deposited the General, like a doll, with one swift motion in the basket chair. Striding across the room she turned, flushed and tall, and confronted the wondering children.

      "I will sing for you," she said haughtily, "and you can judge better!"

      With a great sweep of her half bare arm, she brushed aside a portière and disappeared. A crashing chord rolled out from a piano behind the curtains and ceased abruptly.

      "What does your mother sing?" she demanded, not raising her voice, it seemed, and yet they heard her as plainly as when they had leaned against her knee.

       "She sings, 'My Heart's Own Heart,'" Miss Honey called back defiantly.

      "And it's printed on the song, 'To Madame Edith Holt!'" shrilled Caroline.

      The familiar prelude was played with a firm, elastic touch, the opening chords struck, and a great shining voice, masterful, like a golden trumpet, filled the room. Caroline sat dumb; Miss Honey, instinctively humming the prelude, got up from her foot-stool and followed the music, unconscious that she walked. She had been privileged to hear more good singing in her eight years than most people have in twenty-four, had Miss Honey, and she knew that this was no ordinary occasion. She did not know she was listening to one of the greatest voices her country had ever produced—perhaps in time to be known for the head of them all—but the sensitive little soul swelled in her and her childish jealousy was drowned deep in that river of wonderful sound.

      Higher and sweeter and higher yet climbed the melody; one last triumphant leap, and it was over.

      "My heart—my heart—my heart's own heart!"

       The Princess stood before them in the echoes of her glory, her breath quick, her eyes brilliant.

      "Well?" she said, looking straight at Miss Honey, "do I sing as well as your mother?"

      Miss Honey clenched her fists and caught her breath. Her heart was breaking, but she could not lie.

      "You—you—" she motioned blindly to Caroline, and turned away.

      "You sing better," Caroline began sullenly; but the lady pointed to Miss Honey.

      "No, you tell me," she insisted remorselessly.

      Miss Honey faced her.

      "You—you sing better than my m-mother," she gulped, "but I love her better, and she's nicer than you, and I don't love you at all!"

      She buried her face in the red velvet throne, and sobbed aloud with excitement and fatigue. Caroline ran to her: how could she have loved that cruel woman? She cast an ugly look at the Princess as she went to comfort Miss Honey, but the Princess was at the throne before her.

      "Oh, I am abominable," she cried. "I am too horrid to live! It wasn't kind of me, chérie, and I love you for standing up for your mother. There's no one to do as much for me, when I'm down and out—no one!" Sorrow swept over her flexible face like a veil, and seizing Miss Honey in her strong nervous arms she wept on her shoulder.

      Caroline, worn with the strain of the day, wept, too, and even the General, abandoned in the great chair, burst into a tiny warning wail.

      Quick as thought the Princess was upon him, and had raised him against her cheek.

      "Hush, hush, don't cry—don't cry, little thing," she whispered, and sank into one of the high carved chairs with him.

      "No, no, I'll hold him," she protested, as Delia entered, her arms out. "I'm going to sing to him. May I? He's sleepy."

      Delia nodded indulgently. "For half an hour," she said, as one allowing a great privilege, "and then we must go. The children are tired."

      "What do you sing to him?" the Princess questioned humbly.

      "I generally sing 'Flow Gently, Sweet Afton,'" the nurse answered. "Do you know it?"

       "I think so," and the Princess began a sort of glorified humming, like a great drowsy bee, all resonant and tremulous.

      "Tell me the words," she said, and Delia recited them, as a mother would, to humor a petted child.

      The Princess lifted her voice and pressing the General to her, began the song,

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