"But, Patty, DARLING, I want to tell you,--you know I"m going away, and I won"t see you again,--and I MUST tell you,--I must ASK you--"
"Patty--Pat-ty! Bill! Where ARE you both?"
Mona"s voice rose high as she called, and it was joined by others calling the same two names.
"They"re calling, we must go!" exclaimed Patty.
"Go! Nothing!" cried Big Bill, savagely. He glanced round,--he saw the dumb-waiter, built large and roomy in accordance with all the plans of "Red Chimneys."
In about three seconds he had picked Patty up, and before she knew it, she found herself sitting on the top shelf of that big dumb-waiter, and, moreover, she found herself being lowered, at first slowly, and then rapidly.
She was about to scream when she heard Big Bill whisper softly, but commandingly, "Not a word! Not a sound! I"ll pull you up in a few minutes."
She heard the doors above her close. She was in total darkness. She had no desire to scream, but she was consumed with laughter.
Farnsworth had hidden her! Hidden her from Mona and the others, in the dumb-waiter! What a man he was! She had no idea what he intended to do next, but she was not afraid. It was an escapade, and of all things Patty loved an escapade!
After closing the doors, Bill put out the light in the butler"s pantry, opened the door, slipped through the dimly lighted dining-room, and came around by a side hall to the group in the main hall.
"Calling me?" he said. "I was just coming to say good-bye to you all.
Where"s Patty?"
"That"s what we want to know," said Mona. "We thought she was with you."
"She isn"t," said Bill, truthfully enough.
"Well, where CAN she be? I"ve looked everywhere! Even in the pantries."
"Hasn"t one load already started?"
"Yes, Aunt Adelaide and the Kenerleys have gone."
"Didn"t she go with them?"
"Why, she MUST have done so. Well, good-bye, dear old Bill, come and see us again next summer, won"t you?"
"I will so!" and Bill shook Mona"s hand mightily, as an earnest of his words.
"And I"m sorry to go off and leave you, but you go to the station in a few minutes, don"t you?"
"Yes, and Barker will look after me. Run along, Mona, I"ll write you in a day or two, and tell you how much I"ve enjoyed my visit here."
Some further cordial good-byes were said, and then the car started off with Daisy, Mona, and Cromer to the Country Club. Farnsworth flew back to the pantry.
"h.e.l.lo," he said, as he drew up the dumb-waiter, "you WILL evade me, will you, you little bunch of perversity?"
Patty, who was still laughing at his daring deed, said, "Have they all gone?" "They sure have! You and I are here all alone."
"Oh, Bill!" and Patty"s lip quivered a little. "How COULD you do that?
What SHALL I do?"
"Now don"t get ruffled, little one; my train goes in twenty minutes.
You"re going to the station to see me off, and then Barker will take you on to the Country Club to join the rest of them. You won"t be half an hour late!"
This wasn"t a VERY dreadful outlook, so Patty smiled again.
"Why stay in this queer place?" she said. "Why not go out on the veranda?"
"No; there are eleven hundred servants bobbing up everywhere! Here I can have you all to myself long enough to make you answer one question.
Apple Blossom, will you marry me?"
"No, sir; thank you," and Patty blushed, but looked straight into Farnsworth"s eyes.
"You mean it, don"t you?" he said, returning her gaze. "And why not, little girl?"
"Because, Billee, I don"t want to marry anybody,--at least, not for years and years. I like you AWFULLY,--and I appreciate all your kindness, and your,--your liking for me----"
"Don"t say liking, sweetheart; it"s love,--deep, true, BIG love for you,--you little sunbeam. Oh, Patty, CAN"T you?"
"No, Little Billee, I can"t,--but,--but I DO like to have you love me like that!"
"Then I shall WAIT, dear!" and Bill"s voice was full of triumphant gladness. "If you like to have me love you, I can hope and believe that some day you"ll love me. You ARE too young, dear, you"re just a little girl, I know."
"Why, I"m not even "out,"" said Patty. "I"m to come out next winter, you know."
"Yes, and then you"ll have lots of admirers, and they"ll flatter you, but they won"t spoil you. I know your sweet, simple, generous nature; it can"t be spoiled, even by the foolishnesses of society." "Will YOU come to my coming-out party, Bill?"
"I don"t know, perhaps so. I may see you before then. And I"ll write to you, mayn"t I, Apple Blossom?"
"Oh, yes, do! I love to get letters, and I know I"ll love yours."
"DO love them, dear, and perhaps, through them, learn to love,--Jiminetty Christmas, Apple Blossom, I"ve just ten minutes to catch that train! Come on, dear, fly with me, at least to the railroad station!"
They flew, and by speeding the car, Barker just managed to reach the station in time. The ride was a silent one, but Farnsworth held Patty"s hand in a close, warm pressure all the way. As they reached the platform, he bent over her and whispered:
"Good-bye, sweetheart, DEAR little Apple Blossom. Some day I shall come back and win you for my own. Until then, I shall just wait,--and love you."
A light kiss fell on the little hand he had been holding, and then Farnsworth flung himself out of the motor-car, and on to the platform of the already moving train.
"To the Country Club, Barker," said Patty.