<h2 id="c18">CHAPTER XVIII <br/><span class="small">WHO WAS MISS FINEFEATHER</span></h2>
<p>Roberta stepped into a drug store to inquire the
way to the address that she had upon a slip of brown
paper. The clerk happened to know the locality
without referring to the directory, and Bobs was
thanking him when one of the customers exclaimed
in a voice that plainly expressed the speaker’s great
joy: “Bobsy Vandergrift, of all people! Where in
the world are you girls living? Dick wrote me that
you had left Long Island, but he failed to tell me
where you had located?”</p>
<p>It was Kathryn De Laney who, as she talked, drew
Bobs into a quiet booth. The girls seated themselves
and clasped hands across the table.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_152">[152]</div>
<p>“Oh, Kathy,” Bobs said, her eyes glowing with
the real pleasure that she felt, “I’ve been meaning
to look you up, for Gloria’s sake, if for no other
reason. I heard Glow say only the other day that
she wanted to see you. I believe you’d do her worlds
of good. You’re so breezy and cheerful.”</p>
<p>Kathryn looked troubled. “Why, is anything
especially wrong with Glow?”</p>
<p>“She’s brooding because Gwen doesn’t write,”
Bobs said. Then she told briefly all that had happened:
how Gwen had refused to come with the
others to try to earn her living, and how instead she
had departed without saying good-bye to them to
visit her school friend, Eloise Rochester, and how
letters, sent there by Gloria, had been returned
marked “Whereabouts unknown.”</p>
<p>“I honestly believe that Gloria thinks of nothing
else. I’ve watched her when she was pretending to
read, and she doesn’t turn a page by the hour. I had
just about made up my mind to put an advertisement
of some kind in the paper. Not that I’m crazy about
Gwen myself. There’s no excuse for one sister being
so superlatively selfish and disagreeable as she is,
but Gloria believes, she honestly does, that if we are
patient and loving, Gwen will change in time, because
after all she is our mother’s daughter.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_153">[153]</div>
<p>“Gloria is right,” was the quiet answer. “I am
sure of that. You all helped to spoil Gwen when she
was a child because she was frail. Then later you
let her have her own way because you dreaded her
temper spells, but I honestly believe that a few hard
knocks will do much toward readjusting Gwendolyn’s
outlook upon life.”</p>
<p>“But, Kathryn!” Bobs exclaimed. “Don’t you
know that Gwen couldn’t stand hard knocks? If it
were a case of sink or swim, Gwen would just give
up and sink.”</p>
<p>“I’m not so sure,” the girl who had been next
door neighbor to the Vandergrifts all her life replied.
“It’s an instinct with all of us to at least try
to keep our heads above water.” Then she added:
“But didn’t I hear you asking the clerk about an
address? That was what first attracted my attention
to you, because it is the same locality as my
destination. I’m visiting nurse now on the lower
West Side.”</p>
<p>Then, after glancing at the slip of paper Bobs
held up, Kathryn continued: “I’ll call a taxi, and
while we are riding down there you can tell me all
about yourself.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_154">[154]</div>
<p>When they were settled for the long ride, Bobs
blurted out: “Say, Kathy, before I begin, please
tell me why you’ve taken up nursing? A girl with
a thousand dollars a month income hardly needs the
salary derived from such service, and, of course, I
know that you take none. Phyl said she thought
you ought to be examined by a lunacy board.”</p>
<p>Kathryn laughed good-naturedly as she replied:
“Oh, Phyl means all right. She does think I’m
crazy, but honestly, Bobsy, anyone who lives the idle,
selfish butterfly life that Phyllis does is worse than
not sane, I think: but she will wake up as Gwen will,
some day, and see the worthlessness of it all. Now
tell me about yourself. Why are you bound for the
lower West Side?”</p>
<p>Bobs told her story. How Kathryn laughed. “A
Vandergrift a detective!” she exclaimed. “What
would that stately old grandfather of yours have to
say if he knew it?”</p>
<p>Roberta’s eyes twinkled. “Just about the same
thing that he would say about aircraft or radio.
Impossible!”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_155">[155]</div>
<p>The recounting of their recent experiences had
occupied so much time that, as its conclusion was
reached, so too was Bobs’ destination.</p>
<p>“I’ll get out with you, if you don’t mind,” Kathryn
said, “for, since Miss Finefeather is ill, I may at
least be able to give her some advice that will help
her.”</p>
<p>Roberta glanced gratefully at her friend. “I had
hoped that you would want to come with me,” she
said, “but I did not like to ask, knowing that your
own mission might be imperative.”</p>
<p>“No, it is not.” Then, having dismissed the taxi
driver. Kathryn said: “I know this building. It is
where a large number of poor struggling artists
have rooms. On each floor there is one community
kitchen.”</p>
<p>A janitor appeared from the basement at their
ring. She said that Miss Finefeather lived on the
very top floor and that the young ladies might go
right up, and she did hope that they would be on
time.</p>
<p>“On time for what?” Kathryn paused to inquire.
The woman gave an indifferent shrug.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_156">[156]</div>
<p>“Oh,” she informed them, “ever so often one of
the artists gets discouraged, and then she happens
to remember that the river isn’t so very far away.
Also they just go to sleep sometimes.” Another
shrug, and, with the added remark that she didn’t
blame them much, the woman returned to her dreary
home.</p>
<p>Bobs shuddered. What if they were too late?
Poor Miss Finefeather, if she were really Winnie
Waring-Winston, as Roberta so hoped, would not
need be discouraged when she had a fine home and
a mother whose only interest in life was to find her.</p>
<p>They were half-way up the long, steep flight of
stairs leading to the top floor when Bobs paused and
looked back at her friend, as she said: “I’m almost
afraid that this girl cannot be the one I am seeking.
Winnie could not be discouraged in only three days.”</p>
<p>“I thought that at once,” Kathryn replied, “but
she is someone in trouble, and so I must go to her
and see if I can help.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_157">[157]</div>
<p>In silence they continued to climb to the top floor,
which was divided into four small rooms. Three of
the doors were locked, but the fourth opened at
their touch, revealing a room so dark that, at first,
they could only see the form of the bed, and were
relieved to note that someone was lying upon it.
But at their entrance there was no movement from
the silent figure.</p>
<p>“Maybe—after all—we came too late,” Bobs said
softly, and how her heart ached for the poor girl
lying there, and she wondered who it might be.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_158">[158]</div>
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