The Project Gutenberg EBook of Mrs. Dud's Sister, by Josephine Daskam

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Title: Mrs. Dud's Sister

Author: Josephine Daskam

Release Date: November 6, 2007 [EBook #23369]
Last Updated: March 8, 2018

Language: English

Character set encoding: UTF-8

*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MRS. DUD'S SISTER ***




Produced by David Widger





 










MRS. DUD'S SISTER  

By Josephine Daskam 

Copyright, 1903, by Charles Scribner's  Sons  







They were having tea on the terrace. As Varian strolled up to the group he  wished that Hunter could see the picture they madeHunter, who had  not been in America for thirty years, and who had been so honestly  surprised when Varian had spoken of Mrs. Dud's pretty maidsshe  always had pretty ones, even to the cook's third assistant.  

Maids? Maids? It used to be 'help,' he had protested. You don't mean to  say they have waitresses in Binghamville now?  

Varian had despaired of giving him any idea.  

Come over and see Mrs. Dud, he had urged, and do her portrait. We've  moved on since you left us, you know. She's a wondershe really is.  When you remember how she used to carry her father's dinner to the store  Saturday afternoons  

And now I suppose she sports real Mechlin on her cap, assented Hunter,  anxious to show how perfectly he caught the situation.  

Varian had roared helplessly. Cap? Cap! he had moaned finally. Oh, my  sainted granny! Cap! My poor fellow, your view of Binghamville must be  like the old maps of Africa in the green geography, that said 'desert' and  'interior' and 'savage tribes' from time to time. I should like awfully to  see Mrs. Dud in a cap.  

Hunter had looked puzzled.  

But, dear me! she might very well wear one, I should think, he had  murmured defensively. I don't wish to be invidious, but surely Lizzie  must belet's see; 'eighty, 'ninetywhy, she must be between  forty-five and fifty now.  

Varian had waved his hand dramatically. Nobody considers Mrs. Dud and  time in the same breath. If you could see her in her golf rig! Or on a  horse! She even sheds a lustre on the rest of us. I forget my rheumatism!  

But Hunter, retreating behind his determination to avoid a second  seasicknessit might have been sincere; nobody ever knewhad  stayed in Florence, and Varian had been obliged to come without him to the  house-party.  

On a straw cushion, a cup in her strong white hand, a bunch of adoring  young girls at her feet, sat Mrs. Dud. Rosy and firm-cheeked, crisp in  stiff white duck, deliriously contrasted with her fluffy Parisian parasol,  she scorned the softening ruffles of her presumable contemporaries; her  delicately squared chin, for the most part held high, showed a straight  white collar under a throat only a little fuller than the girlish ones all  around her.  

Old Dudley himself strolled about the group, gossiping here and there with  some pretty woman, sending the grave servants from one to another with  some particularly desirable sandwich, rubbing it in, as he said to the  men who had failed to touch his score on the links, tantalizingly  uncertain as to which one of the young women he would invite to lead the  cotillon with him at the club dance that week: none of the young men could  take his place at that, as they themselves enviously admitted.  

What a well-matched couple it was! What a lot they got out of life! Varian  walked quietly by the group, to enjoy better the pretty, modish picture  they made. Their quick chatter, their bursts of laughter, the sweet faint  odor of the tea, the gay dresses and light flannels, with the quiet,  sombrely attired servants to add tone, all gave him, fresh from Hunter's  quick sense of the effective, an appreciation that gained force from his  separateness; he walked farther away to get a different point of view.  

He was out of any path now, and suddenly, hardly beyond reach of their  voices, he found himself in a part of the grounds he had never approached  before. A thick high hedge shut in a kind of court at the side and back of  the great house, and a solid wooden door, carefully matched to its green,  left open by accident, showed a picture so out of line with the succession  of vivid scenes that dazzled the visitor at Wilton Bluffs that he stopped  involuntarily. The rectangle was carpeted with the characteristic emerald  turf of the place, divided by intersecting red brick paths into four  regular squares. In the farther corner of each of these a trim green  clothes-tree was planted, all abloom with snowy fringed napkins that shone  dazzling white against the hedge. One of the squares was a neat little  kitchen-garden; parsley was there in plenty, and other vaguely familiar  green things, curly-leaved and spear-pointed. A warm gust of wind brought  mint to his nostrils. A second plot held a small crab-apple tree covered  with pink and orange globes. A great tortoise-shell cat with two kittens  ornamented the third, and in the middle of the fourth, beside a small  wooden table, a woman sat with her back toward the intruder. On the table  were one or two tin boxes and a yellow earthen dish; in her left hand,  raised to the shoulder-level, was a tall thin bottle, from which an amber  fluid dripped in an almost imperceptibly thin stream; her right arm  stirred vigorously. She was a middle-aged woman with lightly grayed haira  kind of premonitory powdering. Over her full skirt of lavender-striped  cotton stuff fell a broad, competent white apron. Except for the thudding  of the spoon against the bowl, and a faint, homely echo of clashing china  and tin, mingled with occasionally raised voices and laughter from some  farther kitchen region, all was utterly, placidly still.  

Varian stood chained to the open gate. Something in the calm sun-bathed  picture tugged strongly at his heart. He thought suddenly of his mother  and his Aunt Deliahe had been very fond of Aunt Delia. And what  cookies she used to make! Molasses cookies, brown, moist, and crumbly,  they had sweetened his boyhood.  

What was it, that delighted sense of congruity that filled him, every  passing second, with keener familiarity, so strangely tinged with sorrow  and regret? Ah, he had it! He bit his lip as it came clear to him. His  little namesake nephew, dead at eight years old, and dear as only a dearly  loved child can be, had delighted greatly in the Kate Greenaway pictures  that came in painting-books, with colored prints on alternate pages and  corresponding outlines on the others. Dozens of those books the boy had  cleverly filled in with his little japanned paint-box and mussy,  quill-handled brushes; and the scene before him, the rich tints of the  hedge, the symmetrical little tree brilliant with hundreds of tiny globes,  the big white apron, the lazy yellow cats, and everywhere the prim  rectangular lines so amusingly conventional to accentuate the likeness,  almost choked him with the suddenness of the recognition. They must have  colored that very picture a dozen times, Tommy and he.  

Half unconsciously he rested his arms on the top of the gate and drifted  into revery. He forgot that he was at Wilton Bluffs, one of the greatest  of the country palaces, and lived for a while in a mingled vision of his  boyhood on the old farm and in the land of the Greenaway painting-books.  

Suddenly a door opened into the green.  

A housemaid advanced to the table, bearing in both red hands a long tray  covered with a napkin. On the napkin lay, heaped in rich confusion, a  great pile of spicy, smoking brown cookies.  

They're just out o' the oven, she began, but Varian could contain  himself no longer. He could not be deceived: he would have known those  cookies in the Desert of Sahara. He crossed the little plot in three long  steps, and faced the astonished maid.  

I beg your pardon, he said firmly, but it is very necessary that I  should have one of those cookies! I hope you can spare one?  

She giggled convulsively.  

II guess you can, sir, she murmured, laying down the tray and  retreating toward the house door.  

Varian faced the older woman, and, with hat still in hand, instinctively  bowed lower; for this was no housekeeperhe was sure of that. Even  as she met his eyes a great flood of pink rushed to her smooth forehead,  and she dropped her lids as she bowed slightly. He reflected irrelevantly  that he had never seen Mrs. Dudley blush in his life.  

You are very welcome to all you wish, I am sure, she said graciously. II  didn't know any one liked them but me. I always have them made for meI  taught her the rule. I always call themshe laughed nervously, and  it dawned on him that this woman was really shy and talking against  time, as they saidI always call them 'Aunt Delia's cookies.' They  

Aunt Delia's cookies! he interrupted. What Aunt Delia?  

Aunt Delia Parmentre, she returned, a little surprised, evidently, at  this stranger, who, with a straw sailor-hat in one hand and a warm  molasses cooky in the other, stared so intently at her. She wasn't really  my aunt, of course  

But she was mine! he burst out, and these are her cookies, and no  mistake. Who are you?  

Again she flushed, but more lightly.  

I am Miss Redding, she said with a gentle dignity, Mrs. Wilton's  sister.  

He stared at her vaguely.  

Mrs. Wiltonoh! you're her sister? I didn't know He stopped  abruptly. As his confusion grew, her own faded away.  

You didn't know she had one? she asked, almost mischievously.  

I didn't know you were here, he recovered himself. You've never been  with Mrs. Dud before, have you?  

No, not here when there was company, she said.  

He hardly noticed the words; his mind was groping among past histories.  

Her sisterher sister, he muttered. Why, then, with an  illuminating smile, I used to go to school with you! I'm Tom Varian!  

She smiled and held out her hand.  

I'm very glad to see you, she said cordially. Won't you She  looked about for a chair, but he dropped on the grass at her feet.  

You've changed since we met last, he remarked, biting into his cooky.  She looked at his bronzed face and thick silvered hair and nodded  thoughtfully.  

I was six years old then, she said; and you were one of the 'big boys'you  were fourteen.  

That's a long while, he suggested laughingly.  

It is thirty-six years, she replied simply.  

He winced. His associates were not accustomed to be so scrupulously  accurate. It seemed indecently long ago. And yet there was a certain  charm, now one faced it, a quaint halo of interest.  

You used to hand me water in a tin dipper, he said.  

She nodded. Yes, that was for a reward, when I was good, she said  seriously. I could hand the water to the big boys. I was very proud of  it. You drank a great deal.  

He chuckled. I was born thirsty, he acknowledged. By George, how it  comes back! I can see it now, that school-house! Funny little red thingremember  how it looked? Big shelf around the sides for a desk, and another under  that for the books? Bench all round the room to sit on, and we just  whopped our legs over and faced round to recite? And carvedLord! I  don't believe there was an inch of the wood, all told, that was clear! I  nearly cut my thumb off there, one day.  

One of the big girls fainted away, she added, and they laid her on the  floor and told me to bring a dipper of water; but my hand shook so I  spilled it all over my apron, and she came to before we got more. I was  very timid.  

He began on another cooky.  

Did you have two pigtails? And striped stockings? he inquired, his eyes  fixed reminiscently on the hedge.  

She nodded softly.  

And played some game with stones? I can't just remember  

It was houses, she reminded him. We little girls used to make little  housesjust marked out with stones in squares on the ground; and if  you boys felt like it, you'd bring us big flat stones to eat our dinner  on.  

Ah, yes! It all came back to him. And then you'd race off to get  flag-root or something, and  

And gobble our dinner as we ran. It was fun, all the same, she added.  

But what a mite you were, to be in school! he said wonderingly. What  under heaven did you study?  

I don't remember at all, she confessed. But I suppose I spelled. Do you  remember the spelling-matches? And how you big ones wanted to 'leave off  head'?  

He chuckled. I should say I did! And sometimes the greatest idiot would  'leave off head' because there wasn't any more time. It was maddening!  

He munched in silence for a while, and she did not dream of interrupting.  

In the winter, thoughGeorge! but it was cold! We used to  positively swim through the drifts. I tell you, there aren't any such  snows now! How did you get there?  

I only went in the summer, she said; and I used to come in all stained  with the berries I ate along the way. It was dreadfulshe grew  stern, as if addressing the little girl in striped stockings and pigtailsthe  way I ate berries! I used to eat the bushes clean on the way to school!  

She had got over her first shyness, and had gained time to realize her big  apron, which she hastily untied. He caught the motion and protested.  

No, no! Keep it on! I haven't seen a womana ladyin an apron  for years! Please keep it on! And do go on with thethe mess in the  dish!  

The messshe bent her brows reprovinglyit's mayonnaise  sauce. But I don't think  

He jumped up to put the bowl in her lap. A sudden twinge in his knee wrung  an involuntary groan from him. He walked a little stiffly toward her.  

You have rheumatism! And you sat all the time on that damp grass! she  cried reproachfully. I thought at first it was the craziest thing to do,  but I didn't dare say so.  

He ignored the charge but smiled at the confession.  

And now you're not afraid?  

She blushed again. It was very becoming.  

It seemsit seems foolish to act like strangers when it's been so  longwe remember so well She sighed a little. He studied her  faceso like her sister's and so utterly different. The same gray  eyes, but calm and drooped; the same clear white skin, but a fuller, yes,  a more matronly face, a riper, sweeter, more restful curve. The soft dark  shadows that accentuated Mrs. Dudley's eyes were lacking; a group of tiny  wrinkles at the corners gave her instead a pleasant, humorous regard that  her sister's literal directness missed utterly.  

Nervous under his scrutiny, she rose hastily, and before he could prevent  her she had brought him a roomy arm-chair from the house.  

At our age there's no use in running risks, she said simply, you ought  not to sit on the grass; leave that for the young folks.  

Again he winced, but dropped with relief into the chair.  

Oh, one must keep up with the procession, you know! he said lightly.  

She made no reply; and as she lifted the bottle and began to beat the  yellow mass again, it occurred to him that the remark was exceptionally  silly.  

Does it have to go in slowly like thatthe whole bottleful? he  inquired lazily.  

She nodded. Or it curdles, she explained. The cook sprained his wrist  yesterday. He never allows anybody to make the mayonnaisehe can't  trust themand I was glad to do it for him. He says mine is as good  as his. Did you ever see him?  

Well, no, Varian returned. But he doesn't need to be seen to be  appreciated.  

A strange suspicion crept over him.  

Do you oftenDo you do muchHow is it that you He  could not say it properly. Was it possible that Mrs. Dud It  was unworthy of her!  

She caught his meaning, and her cool gray eyes met his with their  uncompromising directness. He seemed convicted of unnecessary shuffling.  

Oh, Lizzie asked me not to do anything, she said quietly. She wanted me  to enjoy myself with her friends. But I'm not used to so much society, and  I don't want to be any hinderance. I'm not so young as I used to be. I'd  have liked the gayety well enough when I was a girl, but I guess it tires  me a little now. There seems to be so much going on all the time. Lizzie  says she's resting, but it wouldn't rest me. Do you find it so?  

He recalled his yesterday's programme: driving a pulling team all the  morning; carrying Mrs. Dud's heavy bag over the links all the afternoonshe  preferred her friends to caddies; prompting for the dramatics rehearsal,  with a poor light, all the evening, while the actors gossiped and  squabbled and flirted contentedly.  

It is not always restful, he admitted.  

It makes my head ache, she remarked placidly. I like to see the girls  enjoy themselves. I'm glad they're happysome of those visiting  Lizzie are so pretty!but I'm glad I haven't got to run about so  much. I'm very fond of driving myself, if I have a good quiet horse that  won't shy and doesn't go fast, and Lizzie has one for mea white one  that's gentleand I drive about in the phaëton a great deal. The  doctor that came that nightwere you here?when Mrs. Page  fainted and they couldn't bring her to (it seems she was in the habit of  taking some medicine to make her sleep, and it weakened her heart) asked  me if I wouldn't like to take out some patients of his, and so I called  for a very nice ladya Mrs. Williams; you probably don't know her?and  after that a young girl with spinal trouble, andand several others.  They seemed to enjoy it, and I'm sure I did. Once I took a young girl  that's staying hereshe had a bad headache. She was a sweet girl,  and I liked her. She said the drive helped her a great deal. It's  astonishingher eyes met his wonderinglyhow much trouble  you can have, with all the money you want! II was sorry for her,  she added, half to herself.  

Before he thought he leaned forward, took her hand with the silver  tablespoon in it, and kissed it gently. He admired her as he would admire  some charming soft pastel hung in a cool white room.  

How sweet and good you are! he said warmly; and then, to cover her deep  embarrassment and his own sudden emotion, he continued quickly, Are you  very busy in the morning, always?  

There are different things, she murmured, still looking at her spoon. I  have letters to writeI keep up with a good many old friends in  Binghamville and Albany, where I lived with my married niece ten years,  till they moved West. I loved her children; I half brought them up. One  died; I can't seem to get over it Her eyes filled, and she made no  effort to cover two tears that slipped over.  

Varian took her hand again. I know about thatI know! he said  softly.  

Then there are my flowers; I do so enjoy the beds and the greenhouses  here, she went on more cheerfully. The gardeners are very kind to meI  think they like to have me come in. Mr. McFadden gives me a good many  slips and cuttings. I love flowers dearly. Then I read a good deal, and  there is always some little thing to do for the young girls here. Theythe  ones I knowcome in for a moment while I mend something, or pin  their things in the back, and it's surprising how much there is to do!  They fly about so they can't stop to take care of their things. They talk  to me while I set them straight, and it's very interesting. I tell Lizzie  I go out a great deal, just hearing about their adventures, when she drops  in to see me. She never forgets me; she brings somebody to my sitting-room  every day or so that she thinks I'd enjoy meetingand I always do.  She never makes a mistake.  

Oh, she's wonderful, Varian agreed easily. There's nobody like Mrs.  Dud, of course.  

She stopped her work a moment and looked curiously at him.  

What do you mean by that? she asked. You all say itin just that  way; but I don't think I quite see what you mean. Why is she wonderful?  Because she looks so young?  

That, in the first place, Varian returned, with a smile, but not only  that.  

Of course that is very strange, she mused. Now Lizzie is three years  older than I. You would never think it, would you?  

No, he agreed, still smiling; but then, Mrs. Dud looks younger than  everybody. It is her specialty. I think what we mean, he continued, is  her amazing capacity; she does so much, so ridiculously much, and so much  better than other people. We try to keep up with thingsyour sister  is a little bit ahead. She seems to have always been doing the very latest  thing, you see. And all her responsibilities, her various affairsit  makes one's head swim! The women have set themselves a tremendous field to  cover nowadays, and when one succeeds so admirably He paused.  

She shook her head thoughtfully.  

But everything is done for her! she protested. Why, I have never yet  seen all the servants in this house! And you know there is a housekeeper?  Lizzie sees her a little while in the morning, that's all. And she never  sews a stitchthere's a seamstress here all the time, you know, and  that has nothing to do with the clothes that come home in boxes. And  little Dudley has his tutor, and his old nurse that looks after his  clothes. What is it that she does to make it so wonderful?  

He only smiled at her perplexity, and she added confidentially:  

Lizzie wanted me to go to her dressmaker, but I didn't like the idea of a  man, to begin with, and then I knew Miss Simms would feel so hurt. She  lives in Albany, and she's made my dresses for so long that I thought,  though she may not be so stylish, I'd better keep up with her; wouldn't  you?  

A perfectly unreasonable tenderness surged through his heart. How sweet  she was!  

If she made that dress, I certainly should! he declared.  

She smoothed the crisp lavender folds deprecatingly.  

Oh, this is only a cotton dress, she said. But she made my gray silk,  too, and Lizzie herself said it fitted beautifully.  

She took up the bottle again: it was nearly empty.  

Now my mother, she began, she was wonderful, if you like. Do you  know what my mother used to do? We lived on the farm, you know, like  yours, and most of the work of that farm mother did. She did the cookingfor  all the hired hands, too; she made the butter, and took care of the hens;  she made the candles and the soap; she made the carpets and all our  clothesmy brothers', too; and she put up preserves and jellies and  cordials, and did the most beautiful embroidery; I have some of mother's  embroidered collars, and I can't do anything like them.  

It was tremendous, he said. My Aunt Delia did that, too.  

We were old-fashioned, even for then, she said. Everybody didn't do so  much, of course, as we did. Lizzie says we were just on the edge of the  new age. It certainly is different. And of course I wouldn't go back to it  for anything. After we came back from boarding-school it was all changed.  We moved, then, nearer the town. But, do you know, my mother went to  singing-school, and Lizzie was looking that up in a book, the other day,  to see what they didshe wanted it for a party!  

He laughed. That isdelicious! he said.  

See what I found to-day! she added, drawing a small object from her  pocket. I hunted it up to show Miss Porter tonight. She was so interested  when I told her about it.  

She showed him, with a tender amusement, a little slender white silk  mitten. Around the wrist was embroidered in dark blue a legend in Old  English script. He puzzled it out: A Whig or no Husband!  

That was mother's, she said, the girls wore them then. She was quite a  belle, mother was! And when people ask me how Lizzie does so much, I say  that she inherits it. But at her age mother was broken down and old. She  had to be. There were nine of us, and here there's only little Dudley, and  it was so long before he came.  

They sat quietly. The setting sun flamed through the crab-apples and  burnished the fur of the tortoise-shell cat. The mint smelled strong. The  sweet, mellow summer evening was reflected in her handsome face, with its  delicate lines, that only added a restful charm to forehead and cheek. He  had no need to talk; it was very, very pleasant sitting there.  

A maid came out to get the mayonnaise, and the spell was broken. He took  out his watch.  

Just time to dress, he sighed. Will you be here again? We must talk old  times once more.  

She smiled and seemed to assent, but her eyes were not on him; she was  still in a revery. He walked softly away. She seemed hardly to notice him,  and his last backward glance found the quiet of the picture unbroken;  again it was a page from the Greenaway book.  

He reached the terrace; laughter and applause from the piazza caught his  ear. Fresh from the atmosphere he had left, he stared in amazement at the  scene before him.  

Swift figures were scudding from one to another of the four great elms  that marked out a natural rectangle on the smooth side lawn.  

Puss! puss! Here, puss! a high voice called, and a tall slender girl in  a swish of lace and pink draperies rushed across one side of the square. A  portly trousered figure essayed to gain the tree she had left, but a  romping girl in white caught him easily, while Mrs. Dud, the tail of her  gown thrown over her arm, skimmed triumphantly across to her partner's  tree.  

One more, one more, colonel. You can't give up, now you're caught! One  more before we go in! called the pink girl.  

Here's Mr. Varian. Come and help us outthe colonel's beaten!  added Mrs. Dud.  

Here, puss! here, puss! With excited little shrieks and laughs they  dashed by, the colonel making ineffectual grabs at their elusive skirts.  Varian shook his head good-naturedly.  

Too late, too late! he called back, and taking pity on the puffing,  purple colonel, he bore him off.  

Thank God! I'm just about winded! I'd have dropped in my tracks,  complained the rescued man, breathing hard as they rounded the shrubbery.  In the corner two figures, half seen in the dark, leaned toward each other  an imperceptible moment. The colonel laughed contentedly.  

When I see that sort of thing, I think we've made a mistakeeh,  Varian? he said, half serious. It's a poor job, getting old alone. Live  at the club, visit here and there, make yourself agreeable to get asked  again, nobody to care if you're sick, always play the other fellow's gamelittle  monotonous after a while, eh?  

Varian nodded. Right enough, he said.  

Different ending to their route! suggested the colonel, jerking his  elbow back toward the two in the shrubbery.  

That's it! The answer was laconic, but the pictures that swept through  his brain took on a precision and color that half frightened him.  

He had no idea how frequently he dropped in at the little court behind the  hedge after that. Sometimes he sat and mused alone there; more than once  he took a surreptitious afternoon nap. He developed a dormant fancy for  gardening, and walked with his new-old friend contentedly among the  deserted garden paths. He studied her hair especially, wondering why it  was that the little tender flecks of white attracted him so. At dinner he  secretly tried to rouse in himself the same desire to stroke the gleaming  silver fleece, high-dressed, puffed, and ornamented with jet, of the woman  opposite him, whose hair, somewhat prematurely turned snowy, had won her a  great vogue among her friends. But he never succeeded. She was absolutely  too effective. She turned the simplest gathering to a fancy-dress ball, he  decided.  

He had supposed that it was the quaint privacy of their acquaintance that  charmed him particularlythe feeling of an almost double existence;  but when Mrs. Dud, who, he afterwards reflected, was of course omniscient,  restrained herself no longer, and thanked him with a pretty sincerity for  his delicate and appreciated courtesy, intimating charmingly that she  realized the personal motive, a veil suddenly dropped. He gasped, shook  himself, colored a little, and met her eye.  

I'm afraid I'm not so kind as you think, he said, a little awkwardly.  I've been an old fool, I see. Do you thinkis that the way she  looks at it?  

Mary? said Mrs. Dud, wonderingly. Yes, I suppose so. Why?  

The naïve egotism of the answer only threw a softer light on the picture  that had grown to fill his thoughts. He smiled inscrutably.  

Because in that case it is due to her to undeceive her, he said. I am  glad I have entertained her. I should like to have the opportunity to do  so indefinitely. Do you think there's a chance for me?  

What on earth do you mean? asked his hostess, in unassumed stupefaction.  

I mean, do you think she would marry me? Varian brought out plumply. Is  therewas there ever anybody else?  

For one instant Mrs. Dud lost her poise; in her eyes he almost saw more  than she meant; the sheer, flat blow of it levelled her for a breath to  the plane of other and ordinary women. But even as he thought it, it was  gone. She put out her hand; she smiled; she shook her finger at him.  

I think, my friend, she would be a fool not to marry you, she answered  him, clear-eyed; and there was never, her tone was too sweet, he  thought, to carry but one meaningpleasure for him, there was never  anybody else!  

Varian walked straight to the garden. She was training a fiery wall of  nasturtiums with firm white fingers. It occurred to him that he was ready  to give up the tally-ho, and the Berkshires, and the scramble of pretty  girls for the place beside him, to sit quietly and watch her among her  flowers.  

I'm getting oldold! he said to himself, but he said it with a  smile.  

For he knew that no boy's heart ever beat more swiftly, no boy's tongue  ever sought more excitedly to find the right words. But when he faced her  a little doubt chilled him: she was so calm and complete, in her sunny,  busy, balanced life, that he feared to disturb that sweet placidity. With  an undercurrent of fear, a sudden realization that he had no more the  blessed egotism of youth to drive him on, he walked beside her, outwardly  content, at heart a little solitary. At some light question he turned and  faced her.  

You could not have all the greenhouses, but there could be plenty of  flowers, he said pleadingly.  

Flowers? Where? she asked.  

Wherever we lived, he answered. And oh, Mary, I think we could be happy  together! Don't say no! as she shrank a little. Don't, Mary, for  heaven's sake! I care too muchI care terribly. I am too old a man  to care so much andlose.... There, there, my dear girl, never mind.  I can bear it, of course. Only I didn't know I'd planned it all out so,  andBut never mind. I was going to have a bay-window full of  

He turned away from her for a moment. But her hand was on his arm.  

We can plan it out together, she said.  

He knew how she would blush; he had even dared to think how directly her  clear gray eyes would meet hisher sky-ness was never hesitationbut  he had not dreamed how soft her hair could be.  













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