The Awakening of Helena Richie - Page 91/229

In the stage the day he started for Philadelphia, William King read

over his Martha's memorandum with the bewildered carefulness peculiar

to good husbands: ten yards of crash; a pitcher for sorghum; samples

of yarn; an ounce of sachet-powder, and so forth.

"Now, what on earth does she want sachet-powder for?" he reflected.

But he did not reflect long; it suddenly came into his mind that

though Mrs. Richie had not given him any commission, he could

nevertheless do something for her. He could go, when he was in

Philadelphia, and call on her brother. "How pleased she'll be!" he

said to himself. Naturally, with this project in mind, he gave no more

thought to sachet-powders. He decided that he would turn up at Mr.

Pryor's house at six o'clock, and Pryor would ask him to supper. It

would save time to do that, and he needed to save time, for this one

day in Philadelphia was to be very busy. He had those errands for

Martha, and two medical appointments, and a visit to the tailor,--for

of late William thought a good deal about his clothes and discovered

that he was very shabby. He wished he had asked Mrs. Richie for her

brother's address; it took so long to look it up in the Directory.

Happily, the first name was unusual; there was only one Lloyd, or he

would have given up the search. He could not have called on all the

Johns or Thomases!

What with matching the yarn, and getting his drugs, and being terribly

cowed by the tailor, William had a hurried day. However, he managed to

reach Mr. Lloyd Pryor's house as the clock struck six. "Just in good

time," he said to himself, complacently. Indeed, he was ahead of time,

for it appeared that Mr. Pryor had not yet come home.

"But Miss Alice is in, sir," the smiling darky announced.

"Very well," said William King; "tell her 'Dr. King, from Old

Chester.'" He followed the man into a parlor that seemed to the

country doctor very splendid, and while he waited, he looked about

with artless curiosity, thinking that he must tell Martha of all this

grandeur. "No wonder she thinks we are stupid people in Old Chester,"

he thought. Now, certainly Martha had never had so disloyal a thought!

At that moment he heard a girlish step, and Lloyd Pryor's daughter

came into the room,--a pretty young creature, with blond hair parted

over a candid brow, and sweet, frank eyes.

"Dr. King?" she said smiling.