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da. "Yes, she's wonderfully simple," Dr. Pierce agreed. "Poor little thing, she's lived in a world of bottles and splints and bandages. She's never had a chance to realize either the value or the worthlessness of things." "And then," Billy went on, "nobody's ever used an ounce of imagination in entertaining the poor child." "Imagination!" "Buffalo" Westabrook growled. "What has imagination to do with it?" Billy grinned. Next to her father and Granny Flynn, Maida loved Billy Potter better than anybody in the world. He was so little that she could never decide whether he was a boy or a man. His chubby, dimply face was the pinkest she had ever seen. From it twinkled a pair of blue eyes the merriest she had ever seen. And falling continually down into his eyes was a great mass of flaxen hair, the most tousled she had ever seen. Billy Potter lived in New York. He earned his living by writing for newspapers and magazines. Whenever there was a fuss in Wall Street--and the papers always blamed "Buffalo" Westabrook if this happened--Billy Potter would have a talk with Maida's father. Then he wrote up what Mr. Westabrook said and it was printed somewhere. Men who wrote for the newspapers were always trying to talk with Mr. Westabrook. Few of them ever got the chance. But "Buffalo" Westabrook never refused to talk with Billy Potter. Indeed, the two men were great friends. "He's one of the few reporters who can turn out a good story and tell it straight as I give it to him," Maida had once heard her father say. Maida knew that Billy could turn out good stories--he had turned out a great many for her. "What has imagination to do with it?" Mr. Westabrook repeated. "It would have a great deal to do with it, I fancy," Billy Potter answered, "if somebody would only imagine the right thing." "Well, imagine it yourself," Mr. Westabrook snarled. "Imagination seems to be the chief stock-in-trade of you newspaper men." Billy grinned. When Billy smiled, two things happened--one to you and the other to him. Your spirits went up and his eyes seemed to disappear. Maida said that Billy's eyes "skrinkled up." The effect was so comic that she always laughed--not with him but at him. "All right," Billy agreed pleasantly; "I'll put the greatest creative mind of the century to work on the job." "You put it to work at once, young man," Dr. Pierce said. "The thing I'm trying to impress on you both is that you can't wait to
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