"No," I smiled back at him. "It didn't happen, I'm afraid--unless we

dreamed it."

"We?"

"I felt that way, too, for a moment."

"The Brushwood Boy!" he said with conviction. "Perhaps we will find a

common dream life, where we knew each other. You remember the Brushwood

Boy loved the girl for years before they really met." But this was a

little too rapid, even for me.

"Nothing so sentimental, I'm afraid," I retorted. "I have had exactly

the same sensation sometimes when I have sneezed."

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Betty Mercer captured him then and took him off to see Jim's newest

picture. Anne pounced on me at once.

"Isn't he delicious?" she demanded. "Did you ever see such shoulders?

And such a nose? And he thinks we are parasites, cumberers of the earth,

Heaven knows what. He says every woman ought to know how to earn her

living, in case of necessity! I said I could make enough at bridge, and

he thought I was joking! He's a dear!" Anne was enthusiastic.

I looked after him. Oddly enough the feeling that we had met before

stuck to me. Which was ridiculous, of course, for we learned afterward

that the nearest we ever came to meeting was that our mothers had been

school friends! Just then I saw Jim beckoning to me crazily from the

den. He looked quite yellow, and he had been running his fingers through

his hair.

"For Heaven's sake, come in, Kit!" he said. "I need a cool head. Didn't

I tell you this is my calamity day?"

"Cook gone?" I asked with interest. I was starving.

He closed the door and took up a tragic attitude in front of the fire.

"Did you ever hear of Aunt Selina?" he demanded.

"I knew there WAS one," I ventured, mindful of certain gossip as to

whence Jimmy derived the Wilson income.

Jim himself was too worried to be cautious. He waved a brazen hand at

the snug room, at the Japanese prints on the walls, at the rugs, at the

teakwood cabinets and the screen inlaid with pearl and ivory.

"All this," he said comprehensively, "every bite I eat, clothes I wear,

drinks I drink--you needn't look like that; I don't drink so darned

much--everything comes from Aunt Selina--buttons," he finished with a

groan.

"Selina Buttons," I said reflectively. "I don't remember ever having

known any one named Buttons, although I had a cat once--"

"Damn the cat!" he said rudely. "Her name isn't Buttons. Her name is

Caruthers, my Aunt Selina Caruthers, and the money comes from buttons."

"Oh!" feebly.

"It's an old business," he went on, with something of proprietary pride.

"My grandfather founded it in 1775. Made buttons for the Continental

Army."

"Oh, yes," I said. "They melted the buttons to make bullets, didn't

they? Or they melted bullets to make buttons? Which was it?"