Page:Anna Chapin--Half a dozen boys.djvu/131

Rh advice and sympathy in every question that came up. To him, Miss Bess was the one person in the world, and well might he feel so, for she was most unselfishly kind to him. From the moment when, on leaving his room in the morning, he met her at the door, ready to guide him down the unfamiliar stairs, until, after he was all in bed, she came in to say a  last good-night, she was constant in her attentions to him, and adapted herself to his every mood, bright and full of fun when he was blue, encouraging when he was despondent, and with apparently nothing to do but read to him or talk with him. When she went out, as she did nearly very afternoon, she always came in with some amusing adventure or bit of boy news to tell  him; and while she was gone, he spent the time  petting the dogs, and counting the moments until her return. When her step was heard, he always started to the door, and, as she reached it, he opened it before her, and stood smiling up  at her as she closed it, and, with an arm around his shoulders, swung him about, and marched  him back to the fire. And Bess learned to watch for this greeting, and stepped more