despair. "Why, what we believe, boy,--what we believe! The
rest of my flock know better, Mr. Ward, I assure you."
"I don't think we know what we do believe, uncle," Helen said lightly.
"This grows worse and worse," said the rector. "Come, Helen, when an
intelligent young woman, I might say a bright young woman, makes a
commonplace speech, it is a mental yawn, and denotes exhaustion. You
and Lois are tired; run up-stairs. Vanish! I say. Good night, dear child,
and God bless you!"
CHAPTER II.
Ashurst Rectory, in a green seclusion of vines and creepers, stood close
to the lane,--Strawberry Lane it was called, because of a tradition that
wild strawberries grew there. The richness of the garden was scarcely
kept in bounds by its high fence; the tops of the bushes looked over it,
and climbing roses shed their petals on the path below, and cherries,
blossoms, and fruit were picked by the passer-by. "There is enough for
us inside," said the rector.
The house itself was of gray stone, which seemed to have caught,
where it was not hidden by Virginia creepers and wistaria, the mellow
coloring of the sunset light, which flooded it from a gap in the western
hills. Its dormer-windows, their roofs like brown caps bent about their
ears, had lattices opening outward; and from one of these Lois Howe,
on the evening of Helen's wedding day, had seen her father wandering
about the garden, with the red setter at his heels, and had gone down to
join him.
"I wonder," she said, as she wound her round young arm in his, which
was behind him, and held his stick, "if John Ward has a garden? I hope
so; Helen is so fond of flowers. But he never said anything about it; he
just went around as though he was in a dream. He was perfectly happy
if he could only look at Helen!"
"Well, that's right," said the rector; "that's proper. What else would you
have? The fact is, Lois, you don't like Ward. Now, he is a good fellow;
yes, good is just the word for him. Bless my soul, there's a pitch of
virtue about him that is exhausting. But that's our fault," he added
candidly.
"Oh, I'll like him," Lois said quickly, "if he will just make Helen
happy."
The rector shook his head. "I know how you feel," he said, "and I
acknowledge he is odd; that talk of his last night about slavery being a
righteous institution"--
"Oh, he didn't say that, father," Lois interrupted.
--"was preposterous," continued Dr. Howe, not noticing her; "but he's
earnest, he's sincere, and I have a great deal of respect for earnestness.
And look here, Lois, you must not let anybody see you are not in
sympathy with Helen's choice; be careful of that tongue of yours, child.
It's bad taste to make one's private disappointments public. I wouldn't
speak of it even to your aunt Deely, if I were you."
He stooped down to pull some matted grass from about the roots of a
laburnum-tree, whose dark leaves were lighted by golden loops of
blossoms, "Thirty-eight years ago," he said, "your mother and I planted
this; we had just come home from our wedding journey, and she had
brought this slip from her mother's garden in Virginia. But dear me, I
suppose I've told you that a dozen times. What? How to-day brings
back that trip of ours! We came through Lockhaven, but it was by
stage-coach. I remember we thought we were so fortunate because the
other two passengers got out there, and we had the coach to ourselves.
Your mother had a striped ribbon, or gauze,--I don't know what you
call it,--on her bonnet, and it kept blowing out of the window of the
coach, like a little flag. You young people can go further in less time,
when you travel, but you will never know the charm of staging it
through the mountains. I declare, I haven't thought of it for years, but
to-day brings it all back to me!"
They had reached the rectory porch, and Dr. Howe settled himself in
his wicker chair and lighted his cigar, while Lois sat down on the steps,
and began to dig small holes in the gravel with the stick her father had
resigned to her.
The flood of soft lamplight from the open hall door threw the portly
figure of the rector into full relief, and, touching Lois's head, as she sat
in the shadow at the foot of the steps, with a faint aureole, fell in a
broad bright square on the lawn in front of the house. They had begun
to speak again of the wedding, when the click of the gate latch and the
swinging glimmer of a
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