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<h1> A LITTLE QUEEN OF HEARTS </h1>
<h2> By Ruth Ogden </h2>
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<h2> CHAPTER I.—HAROLD AND TED HAVE IT OUT. </h2>
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<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">H</span>e was a thoroughly
manly little fellow—nobody questioned that for a moment, not even
Ted; and yet there he sat, his head bowed upon his folded arms, while now
and then something very like a sob seemed to shake the well-knit figure
and give the boyish head an undignified little bob.</p>
<p>When at last he looked up, behold proof positive. There were tears not
only in his eyes, but on the sleeve of his Eton jacket; and there was no
longer any question but that Harold Harris, sturdy little Englishman
though he was, had been having what is known on both sides of the water as
a good, hard cry.</p>
<p>“How old was he?” asks Young America, a little mistrustful as
to the right sort of stuff; but what does it matter how old he was, since
this is certain, that he was not the boy to cry under any circumstances
without abundant reason. It was evident now, however, that he was fast
getting the better of himself. He sat up, and resting his head on one
hand, reached with the other for the paper-knife, and began cutting queer
little geometrical figures on the big silver-cornered blotter that half
covered the table. It was evident too that his thoughts were not at all on
what he was doing, and that the hard cry was being followed by a good,
hard think. But this did not last long; Harold was simply trying to make
up his mind, as the phrase goes, and that soon accomplished, he drew pen,
paper and ink toward him and commenced writing a letter, with his head on
one side and his lips tightly pursed together. Indeed, he never unpursed
them until that same letter was sealed and directed and the stamp affixed
with a very determined little air, as though firmly resolved that the
thing he had done should brook no undoing. Then he slipped into his coat
and hurried out to post it, and a few yards from the door he met Ted, who
was just coming home.</p>
<p>“Hello, there!” cried Ted, coming to a halt with his hands in
his pockets; “where are you going this time of night?”</p>
<p>“Out,” replied Harold, starting off at a run, for it was wet
and damp, and, to use England's English, “quite nasty.”
Ted gave a low whistle of surprise, Harold as a rule was such a civil
fellow. But no matter. What did he care where he was going, and entering
the house with a latch-key, he tossed his hat on to a hook and started
upstairs, his thoughts already far afield from all that concerned his
younger brother. Back they came again, however, as he reached the landing,
and the old clock struck twelve. “So late as that?” he said to
himself, and deciding to wait for Harold, he turned and went down again to
the library. He hoped he should not have to wait long, for, since he was
rather counting on a good night's rest, nothing more exciting seemed
to offer. In the mean time, he would make himself as comfortable as
possible on the library lounge. Indeed, to make himself as comfortable as
possible had gradually grown to be the one thing worth striving for in the
estimation of this young gentleman. A beautiful portrait of his mother
hung over the library mantel, but it belonged to a closed chapter of his
life, and he had almost forgotten its existence. He had never dreamed this
would be so; he had never meant it should be; but that did not alter the
fact that, flattered and made much of ever since he went up to Oxford, he
had somehow had little time to think of his mother, and, sorrier than
that, little inclination. Death was such a desperately gloomy thing to
contemplate! Besides, to keep thinking about it did not bring any one
back. And yet, as much as in him lay, Ted had loved his mother, and been
very proud of her too. It seemed hard that she should not have lived a
great while longer. But then she had been so very sad sometimes, and life
of course wasn't worth very much under those conditions. When it
ceased to be awfully jolly, perhaps it was just as well to have done with
it. For him, thank his stars! that unhappy period had not yet arrived. To
be a Christ Church Senior, with plenty of money and plenty of friends and
a head that easily mastered enough learning to make a good showing, left
little to be desired, especially when already endowed with a handsome face
and a physique that every man envied—at least, so thought Theodore
Harris, and so thought and affirmed the half score of intimate friends who
enjoyed many of the good things of this life through his bounty. It was a
pity that there was not one among them with insight enough to gauge the
complacent fellow aright, and at the same time with honesty enough to take
him to task for the profitless life he was leading. But nobody did, and so
on he fared, thoughtless and selfish, and so wholly absorbed in the
present that even alone and at midnight, with his eyes resting full upon
his mother's portrait, he had no thought to give it nor the worthier
past that it stood for. Indeed, to judge from the discontented look on his
face, his mind did not rise for a moment above the level of his annoyance
at being kept waiting.</p>
<p>“Why don't the fellow come back?” he muttered angrily,
realizing, as he heard the clock strike half-past twelve, that he had been
actually inconvenienced for a whole half hour; and shortly after “the
fellow did come back,” the dearest little fellow in the world too,
by the way, and shut to the big front door and locked it as he had done
night after night during the last two years, while Ted was up at Oxford,
and he had been living alone with the servants in the pretty little home
there at Windsor.</p>
<p>“Harold!” rang out an impatient voice.</p>
<p>“What, you there, Ted?” with unconcealed gladness; it seemed
so cheery to have some one awake in the house.</p>
<p>“Yes; of course I'm here. You didn't suppose I'd
go to bed, did you, with you prowling the streets this time of night?”</p>
<p>That is exactly what Harold had supposed, but he had the grace not to say
so as he threw himself into a great easy-chair opposite Ted and clasped
his hands behind his head in comfortable stay-awhile fashion, and as
though quite ready to be agreeable if Ted would only let him.</p>
<p>“I went out for a walk and to post a letter,” he said, after a
moment, and with a perceptible little note of apology in his tone for his
uncivil answer of the half hour before.</p>
<p>“It must have been important,” said Ted, apparently amused at
the thought of anything relating to that younger brother being in reality
of any importance: “I should think though it possibly could have
waited for the morning post.”</p>
<p>“Yes, it could, but I couldn't.” Surprised at this, Ted
elevated his eyebrows.</p>
<p>“It was a letter to Uncle Fritz,” Harold added.</p>
<p>“To Uncle Fritz!” with evident annoyance. “What in
creation have you been writing to him about?”</p>
<p>“I have asked him to come over with Aunt Louise and Marie-Celeste
and make us a visit this summer.” It took Ted a moment to recover
from his astonishment; then he answered curtly, “Well, you can just
write him another letter and take it all back. Did it occur to you I might
have other plans for this house for this summer?”</p>
<p>“I thought you might perhaps propose to have some of your friends
down here, same as last year,” Harold answered frankly.</p>
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<p>“Well, that's exactly what I do propose to do, and here you've
gone ahead in this absurd fashion. What did you do it for, anyway?”
and Ted in his impatience got on to his feet and glared down at Harold as
though he would like to have eaten him up.</p>
<p>Not a bit intimidated, Harold looked him straight in the face. “If
you want to know what I did it for I'll tell you—I did it
because I'm tired of the lonely life here. You haven't any
more interest in me, Ted, than in a stick of wood; so I'm going to
take things into my own hands now and begin to enjoy life in my own way.
This little house is as much mine as yours, and I mean to have my turn
this summer. I didn't like your friends last year, and took myself
off. If you don't like mine this year you can do the same thing.”
The role was such a new one for Harold to play that Ted stood utterly
nonplussed. That Harold should deliberately assert himself in this way was
such an unprecedented performance that he knew not what to say.</p>
<p>“What did you tell Uncle Fritz about me?” he asked presently.
“I suppose you painted me as black as the ace of spades.”</p>
<p>“I didn't say a word about you. I wrote him it was awfully
lonely here the last two years, and that it seemed to grow worse instead
of better, and that if they'd only come over for the summer, we'd
do all in our power to make them have a pleasant time of it.”</p>
<p>“Well, that is cool. Did you really say <i>we'd</i> do all in
our power?”</p>
<p>“Of course I did. You like Uncle Fritz, don't you?”</p>
<p>“Of course I like him, but the cheek of it all,” and Theodore
strode over to the window to think matters over. It was a fine thing
anyway in Harold, he admitted to himself, not to have run him down to
Uncle Fritz. If he was angry enough to take matters into his own hands in
this way, it was a wonder he stopped short of telling him the truth about
himself—not that Ted for a moment faced that truth in any honest
fashion; for he was a very good fellow still in his own estimation. He had
simply not taken Harold into account—no one could have expected that
he should; but now it seemed the boy was beginning to resent that state of
affairs. There was some show of reason in it, too, and he rather admired
his spirit. It was rather natural, perhaps, that he should want to have
“his turn,” as he said; very well, he should have it. For that
matter, he would be rather glad himself to see something of Uncle Fritz.
He had not really decided to ask any of the fellows down for the summer,
though he had angrily made a declaration to that effect. Indeed, there was
some talk of their going over the Continent together instead, which would
be a deal more fun. All this while Harold sat motionless and silent.</p>
<p>“The mean part of it is, that you didn't tell me beforehand
what you wanted to do,” said Ted, as the upshot of the thinking.</p>
<p>“What I wanted to do has not made any difference to you this long
time. Besides, you would have told me I couldn't do it.”</p>
<p>“Of course I would” (for, as it often happens, it is easier to
be reasonable in thinking than in speaking); “and I can tell you one
thing, Harold, you'll be sick enough of your own bargain before it
is over. What do you know about Marie-Celeste? Ten to one she's a
spoiled, forward sort of youngster. American children are a handful
always.”</p>
<p>“I'll risk it,” answered Harold; “and I only ask
one thing of you, Ted, and that is that you'll be decent to them
when they come.”</p>
<p>“Like as not I won't be here.”</p>
<p>Harold's face fell. It would seem such a breach of hospitality for
Ted not to be at home, at least to welcome them. But, never mind, he could
explain to Uncle Fritz, if he must, what an independent life Ted had led
these last few years. He would hurt himself more than any one else by
acting so ungraciously.</p>
<p>“Who's going to pay for things here at home, I'd like to
know?” said Ted, after another few minutes of meditation. “There
isn't enough of my allowance left now to tide me over to the first
of the year, let alone running the house in fine style all summer.”</p>
<p>“You need not bother about that—there's enough of mine,
and I can look after my own guests, which is more than you did for yours
last year.” It was a mean little thrust, perhaps, on Harold's
part, but Ted deserved it, for Harold had paid his half of the heavy
expenses of the previous summer without a murmur.</p>
<p>Be it said to Ted's honor that he appreciated the situation, and
colored up to the roots of his hair.</p>
<p>“You know how to rub a thing in,” he said, which was as wide
of the truth as could be, for Harold had never alluded to the fact before,
and made up his mind on the spot that he never would be mean enough to do
it again. A little later the boys had said goodnight to each other, and
not in an altogether unkindly spirit either. Ted had not been as angry as
Harold had expected, and Harold, sorry for his thrust about money matters,
had wound up by being rather conciliatory, and he was happier, on the
whole, than he had been any time for a twelvemonth. And so it happens with
the children, as with grown folk, that sometimes when there is a climax in
the heart the head rises to the emergency, and is able to think a possible
way out from besetting difficulties.</p>
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