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r. To that end, Cynthia donned a warm coat of pony-skin and drove in a taxicab to G. G.'s mother's address, which she had long since looked up in the telephone book. "If she isn't alone," said Cynthia, "I shan't know what to say or what to do." And she hesitated, with her thumb hovering about the front-door bell--as a humming-bird hovers at a flower. Then she said: "What does it matter? Nobody's going to eat me." And she rang the bell. G. G.'s mother was at home. She was alone. She was sitting in G. G.'s father's library, where she always did sit when she was alone. It was where she kept most of her pictures of G. G.'s father and of G. G., though she had others in her bedroom; and in her dressing-room she had a dapple-gray horse of wood that G. G. had galloped about on when he was little. She had a sweet face, full of courage and affection. And everything in her house was fresh and pretty, though there wasn't anything that could have cost very much. G. G.'s father was a lawyer. He was more interested in leaving a stainless name behind him than a pot of money. And, somehow, fruit doesn't tumble off your neighbor's tree and fall into your own lap--unless you climb the tree when nobody is looking and give the tree a sound shaking. I might have said of G. G., in the very beginning, that he was born of poor _and_ honest parents. It would have saved all this explanation. G. G.'s mother didn't make things hard for Cynthia. One glance was enough to tell her that dropping into the little library out of the blue sky was not a pretty girl but a blessed angel--not a rich man's daughter but a treasure. It wasn't enough to give one hand to such a maiden. G. G.'s mother gave her two. But she didn't kiss her. She felt things too deeply to kiss easily. "I've come to talk about G. G.," said Cynthia. "I couldn't help it. I think he's the _dearest_ boy!" She finished quite breathless--and if there had been any Jacqueminot roses present they might have hung their lovely heads in shame and left the room. "G. G. has shown me pictures of you," said his mother. "And once, when we thought we were going to lose him, he used his last strength to write to you. I mailed the letter. That is a long time ago. Nearly two years. "And I didn't know that he'd been ill in all that time," said Cynthia; "he never told me." "He would have cut off his hand sooner than make you anxious. That was why he _would_ write his daily letter to you
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