Well, anyway, Louise of leather, just as Roxanne and I had got the skirt ripped up and the pattern straightened out, we saw all the girls coming, and from the way they were talking we saw something interesting was surely happening, had happened, or was going to happen.
“Hide the gingham, Roxanne, while I slip over the wall and change my dress,” I said quickly. “Our business arrangements are nobody else’s business.”
“Will you come right back?” asked Roxanne in a way that made me know she would worry if I didn’t.
I would rather have stayed at home until the girls had had their visit and gone home, but I have thought out just how I ought to act about Roxanne and her friends and me. It is only fair to pay no attention to how they feel, but to do what makes Roxanne happy in case of the mix-up of us all. My pride and Roxanne’s are different. Hers has been handed down for generations and she can act on it without argument with herself, but mine is my own kind and only I understand it. It is new and I have to plan it out by thinking. The girls all think that because I have finer clothes and travel and am rich, that I think I am better than they are and am proud of it. Richness is not my fault, any more than a hunched back would be, and it is my duty to forget it whether they do or not. I act accordingly.
Another thing: I believe something is making my father see the error of his ways and I hope that some day I will see him settled into being a good and great man just like Judge Luttrell and the Colonel are and Roxanne’s father was. He has acted in a peculiar way just lately. Last night he drew me up close to him and stood by the window a long time without speaking.
“Phil,” he finally said, not in the voice he generally uses as if he were speaking to his only son—but with a daughter tone in it—“you have made good in Byrdsville, and I want to tell you that I’m proud of you. I doubted whether you could do it. A bunch of such youngsters as you have made friends with would be a test for any man, much less a young woman. I’m their friend because they are yours, and pretty soon I am going to prove it—like the sentimental fools that all fathers of almost-grown daughters get to be. Go to bed, kiddie, and say an extra one for Father.”
Now all this is directly connected with the state I found the girls in over at the Byrd cottage, when I finally dressed and got back again, after stopping to bargain with Lovelace Peyton to go without the four-o’clock cookies for half a tube of perfectly harmless tooth-paste that he wanted for some kind of plaster to put on Uncle Pompey’s heel, which is always painful enough to occupy most of the snake-doctor’s time.
“No, I don’t see why we should always tell Phyllis every interesting thing that happens to us or is going to happen,” Belle was saying in such a decided tone of voice that it carried through the front door, across the porch, and halfway down the front walk.