“God above bless and reward you, Margaret!” was all Mrs. Gardiner could say, but Magsie never tired of hearing it.
When the two women went down the hospital steps they found Billy Pickering, in her large red car, eying them reproachfully from the curb.
“This is a nice way to act!” Billy began. “Your janitor’s wife said you had come here. I’ve got two men—” Magsie’s expression stopped her.
“This is Mr. Gardiner’s mother, Billy,” Magsie said solemnly. “The doctors agree that he must not stand this climate another day. He had another sinking spell yesterday, and he—he mustn’t have another! I am going with them to California—”
“You are?” Billy ejaculated in amazement. Magsie bridled in becoming importance.
“It is all very sudden,” she said with the weary, patient smile of the invalid’s wife, “but he won’t go without me.” And then, as Mrs. Gardiner began to give directions to the driver of her own car, which was waiting, she went on inconsequentially, and in a low and troubled undertone, “I didn’t know what to do. Do—do you think I’m a fool, Billy?”
“But what’ll the other man say?” demanded Billy.
Magsie, leaning against the door of the car, rubbed the polished wood with a filmy handkerchief.
“He won’t know,” she said.
“Won’t know? But what will you tell him?”
“Oh, he’s not here. He won’t be back for ever so long. And—and Richie can’t live—they all say that. So if I come back before he does, what earthly difference can it make to him that I was married to Richie?”
“Married!” For once in her life Billy was completely at a loss. “But are you going to marry him?”
Magsie gave her a solemn look, and nodded gravely. “He loves me,” she said in a soft injured tone, “and I mean to take as good care of him as the best wife in the world could! I’m sick of the stage, and if anything happens with—the other, I shan’t have to worry— about money, I mean. I’m not a fool, Billy. I can’t let a chance like this slip. Of course I wouldn’t do it if I didn’t like him and like his mother, too. And I’ll bet he will get well, and I’ll never come back to New York! Of course this is all a secret. We’re going right down to the City Hall for the license now, and the ring—–There are a lot of clothes I’ve got to buy immediately—”
“Why don’t you let me run you about?” suggested Billy. “I don’t have to meet the men until six—I’ll have to round up another girl, too; but I’d love to. Let Mama go back to Mr. Gardiner!”