As she expected, the two came towards her, and Mr. Harrison was presented; Helen, who was on the watch with all her faculties, decided that he bore that trial tolerably, for while his admiration of course showed itself, he did not stare, and he was not embarrassed.
“I am a little late, I fear,” he said; “have I missed much of the music?”
“No,” said Helen, “that was the first selection.”
“I am glad of that,” said the other.
According to the laws which regulate the drifting of conversation, it was next due that Helen should ask if he were fond of singing; and then that he should answer that he was very fond of it, which he did.
“Mrs. Roberts tells me you are a skillful musician,” he added; “I trust that I shall hear you?”
Helen of course meant to play, and had devoted some thought to the selection of her program; therefore she answered: “Possibly; we shall see by and by.”
“I am told that you have been studying in Germany,” was the next observation. “Do you like Germany?”
“Very much,” said Helen. “Only they made me work very hard at music, and at everything else.”
“That is perhaps why you are a good player,” said Mr. Harrison.
“You ought to wait until you hear me,” the girl replied, following his example of choosing the most obvious thing to say.
“I fear I am not much of a critic,” said the other.
And so the conversation drifted on for several minutes, Mr. Harrison’s remarks being so very uninspiring that his companion could find no way to change the subject to anything worth talking about.
“Evidently,” the girl thought, during a momentary lull, “he has learned all the rules of talking, and that’s why he’s at ease. But dear me, what an awful prospect! It would kill me to have to do this often. But then, to be sure I shan’t see him in the day time, and in the evenings we should not be at home. One doesn’t have to be too intimate with one’s husband, I suppose. And then—”
“I think,” said Mr. Harrison, “that your aunt is coming to ask you to play.”
That was Aunt Polly’s mission, for a fact, and Helen was much relieved, for she had found herself quite helpless to lift the conversation out of the slough of despond into which it had fallen; she wanted a little time to collect her faculties and think of something clever to start with again. When in answer to the request of Aunt Polly she arose and went to the piano, the crushed feeling of course left her, and her serenity returned; for Helen was at home at the piano, knowing that she could do whatever she chose, and do it without effort. It was a stimulus to her faculties to perceive that a general hush had fallen upon the room, and that every eye was upon her; as she sat down, therefore, all her old exultation was back.