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<h1> THE STORY GIRL </h1>
<h2> By L. M. Montgomery </h2>
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<h2> CHAPTER I. THE HOME OF OUR FATHERS </h2>
<p>“I do like a road, because you can be always wondering what is at the end
of it.”</p>
<p>The Story Girl said that once upon a time. Felix and I, on the May morning
when we left Toronto for Prince Edward Island, had not then heard her say
it, and, indeed, were but barely aware of the existence of such a person
as the Story Girl. We did not know her at all under that name. We knew
only that a cousin, Sara Stanley, whose mother, our Aunt Felicity, was
dead, was living down on the Island with Uncle Roger and Aunt Olivia King,
on a farm adjoining the old King homestead in Carlisle. We supposed we
should get acquainted with her when we reached there, and we had an idea,
from Aunt Olivia’s letters to father, that she would be quite a jolly
creature. Further than that we did not think about her. We were more
interested in Felicity and Cecily and Dan, who lived on the homestead and
would therefore be our roofmates for a season.</p>
<p>But the spirit of the Story Girl’s yet unuttered remark was thrilling in
our hearts that morning, as the train pulled out of Toronto. We were
faring forth on a long road; and, though we had some idea what would be at
the end of it, there was enough glamour of the unknown about it to lend a
wonderful charm to our speculations concerning it.</p>
<p>We were delighted at the thought of seeing father’s old home, and living
among the haunts of his boyhood. He had talked so much to us about it, and
described its scenes so often and so minutely, that he had inspired us
with some of his own deep-seated affection for it—an affection that
had never waned in all his years of exile. We had a vague feeling that we,
somehow, belonged there, in that cradle of our family, though we had never
seen it. We had always looked forward eagerly to the promised day when
father would take us “down home,” to the old house with the spruces behind
it and the famous “King orchard” before it—when we might ramble in
“Uncle Stephen’s Walk,” drink from the deep well with the Chinese roof
over it, stand on “the Pulpit Stone,” and eat apples from our “birthday
trees.”</p>
<p>The time had come sooner than we had dared to hope; but father could not
take us after all. His firm asked him to go to Rio de Janeiro that spring
to take charge of their new branch there. It was too good a chance to
lose, for father was a poor man and it meant promotion and increase of
salary; but it also meant the temporary breaking up of our home. Our
mother had died before either of us was old enough to remember her; father
could not take us to Rio de Janeiro. In the end he decided to send us to
Uncle Alec and Aunt Janet down on the homestead; and our housekeeper, who
belonged to the Island and was now returning to it, took charge of us on
the journey. I fear she had an anxious trip of it, poor woman! She was
constantly in a quite justifiable terror lest we should be lost or killed;
she must have felt great relief when she reached Charlottetown and handed
us over to the keeping of Uncle Alec. Indeed, she said as much.</p>
<p>“The fat one isn’t so bad. He isn’t so quick to move and get out of your
sight while you’re winking as the thin one. But the only safe way to
travel with those young ones would be to have ‘em both tied to you with a
short rope—a MIGHTY short rope.”</p>
<p>“The fat one” was Felix, who was very sensitive about his plumpness. He
was always taking exercises to make him thin, with the dismal result that
he became fatter all the time. He vowed that he didn’t care; but he DID
care terribly, and he glowered at Mrs. MacLaren in a most undutiful
fashion. He had never liked her since the day she had told him he would
soon be as broad as he was long.</p>
<p>For my own part, I was rather sorry to see her going; and she cried over
us and wished us well; but we had forgotten all about her by the time we
reached the open country, driving along, one on either side of Uncle Alec,
whom we loved from the moment we saw him. He was a small man, with thin,
delicate features, close-clipped gray beard, and large, tired, blue eyes—father’s
eyes over again. We knew that Uncle Alec was fond of children and was
heart-glad to welcome “Alan’s boys.” We felt at home with him, and were
not afraid to ask him questions on any subject that came uppermost in our
minds. We became very good friends with him on that twenty-four mile
drive.</p>
<p>Much to our disappointment it was dark when we reached Carlisle—too
dark to see anything very distinctly, as we drove up the lane of the old
King homestead on the hill. Behind us a young moon was hanging over
southwestern meadows of spring-time peace, but all about us were the soft,
moist shadows of a May night. We peered eagerly through the gloom.</p>
<p>“There’s the big willow, Bev,” whispered Felix excitedly, as we turned in
at the gate.</p>
<p>There it was, in truth—the tree Grandfather King had planted when he
returned one evening from ploughing in the brook field and stuck the
willow switch he had used all day in the soft soil by the gate.</p>
<p>It had taken root and grown; our father and our uncles and aunts had
played in its shadow; and now it was a massive thing, with a huge girth of
trunk and great spreading boughs, each of them as large as a tree in
itself.</p>
<p>“I’m going to climb it to-morrow,” I said joyfully.</p>
<p>Off to the right was a dim, branching place which we knew was the orchard;
and on our left, among sibilant spruces and firs, was the old, whitewashed
house—from which presently a light gleamed through an open door, and
Aunt Janet, a big, bustling, sonsy woman, with full-blown peony cheeks,
came to welcome us.</p>
<p>Soon after we were at supper in the kitchen, with its low, dark, raftered
ceiling from which substantial hams and flitches of bacon were hanging.
Everything was just as father had described it. We felt that we had come
home, leaving exile behind us.</p>
<p>Felicity, Cecily, and Dan were sitting opposite us, staring at us when
they thought we would be too busy eating to see them. We tried to stare at
them when THEY were eating; and as a result we were always catching each
other at it and feeling cheap and embarrassed.</p>
<p>Dan was the oldest; he was my age—thirteen. He was a lean, freckled
fellow with rather long, lank, brown hair and the shapely King nose. We
recognized it at once. His mouth was his own, however, for it was like to
no mouth on either the King or the Ward side; and nobody would have been
anxious to claim it, for it was an undeniably ugly one—long and
narrow and twisted. But it could grin in friendly fashion, and both Felix
and I felt that we were going to like Dan.</p>
<p>Felicity was twelve. She had been called after Aunt Felicity, who was the
twin sister of Uncle Felix. Aunt Felicity and Uncle Felix, as father had
often told us, had died on the same day, far apart, and were buried side
by side in the old Carlisle graveyard.</p>
<p>We had known from Aunt Olivia’s letters, that Felicity was the beauty of
the connection, and we had been curious to see her on that account. She
fully justified our expectations. She was plump and dimpled, with big,
dark-blue, heavy-lidded eyes, soft, feathery, golden curls, and a pink and
white skin—“the King complexion.” The Kings were noted for their
noses and complexion. Felicity had also delightful hands and wrists. At
every turn of them a dimple showed itself. It was a pleasure to wonder
what her elbows must be like.</p>
<p>She was very nicely dressed in a pink print and a frilled muslin apron;
and we understood, from something Dan said, that she had “dressed up” in
honour of our coming. This made us feel quite important. So far as we
knew, no feminine creatures had ever gone to the pains of dressing up on
our account before.</p>
<p>Cecily, who was eleven, was pretty also—or would have been had
Felicity not been there. Felicity rather took the colour from other girls.
Cecily looked pale and thin beside her; but she had dainty little
features, smooth brown hair of satin sheen, and mild brown eyes, with just
a hint of demureness in them now and again. We remembered that Aunt Olivia
had written to father that Cecily was a true Ward—she had no sense
of humour. We did not know what this meant, but we thought it was not
exactly complimentary.</p>
<p>Still, we were both inclined to think we would like Cecily better than
Felicity. To be sure, Felicity was a stunning beauty. But, with the swift
and unerring intuition of childhood, which feels in a moment what it
sometimes takes maturity much time to perceive, we realized that she was
rather too well aware of her good looks. In brief, we saw that Felicity
was vain.</p>
<p>“It’s a wonder the Story Girl isn’t over to see you,” said Uncle Alec.
“She’s been quite wild with excitement about your coming.”</p>
<p>“She hasn’t been very well all day,” explained Cecily, “and Aunt Olivia
wouldn’t let her come out in the night air. She made her go to bed
instead. The Story Girl was awfully disappointed.”</p>
<p>“Who is the Story Girl?” asked Felix.</p>
<p>“Oh, Sara—Sara Stanley. We call her the Story Girl partly because
she’s such a hand to tell stories—oh, I can’t begin to describe it—and
partly because Sara Ray, who lives at the foot of the hill, often comes up
to play with us, and it is awkward to have two girls of the same name in
the same crowd. Besides, Sara Stanley doesn’t like her name and she’d
rather be called the Story Girl.”</p>
<p>Dan speaking for the first time, rather sheepishly volunteered the
information that Peter had also been intending to come over but had to go
home to take some flour to his mother instead.</p>
<p>“Peter?” I questioned. I had never heard of any Peter.</p>
<p>“He is your Uncle Roger’s handy boy,” said Uncle Alec. “His name is Peter
Craig, and he is a real smart little chap. But he’s got his share of
mischief, that same lad.”</p>
<p>“He wants to be Felicity’s beau,” said Dan slyly.</p>
<p>“Don’t talk silly nonsense, Dan,” said Aunt Janet severely.</p>
<p>Felicity tossed her golden head and shot an unsisterly glance at Dan.</p>
<p>“I wouldn’t be very likely to have a hired boy for a beau,” she observed.</p>
<p>We saw that her anger was real, not affected. Evidently Peter was not an
admirer of whom Felicity was proud.</p>
<p>We were very hungry boys; and when we had eaten all we could—and oh,
what suppers Aunt Janet always spread!—we discovered that we were
very tired also—too tired to go out and explore our ancestral
domains, as we would have liked to do, despite the dark.</p>
<p>We were quite willing to go to bed; and presently we found ourselves
tucked away upstairs in the very room, looking out eastward into the
spruce grove, which father had once occupied. Dan shared it with us,
sleeping in a bed of his own in the opposite corner. The sheets and
pillow-slips were fragrant with lavender, and one of Grandmother King’s
noted patchwork quilts was over us. The window was open and we heard the
frogs singing down in the swamp of the brook meadow. We had heard frogs
sing in Ontario, of course; but certainly Prince Edward Island frogs were
more tuneful and mellow. Or was it simply the glamour of old family
traditions and tales which was over us, lending its magic to all sights
and sounds around us? This was home—father’s home—OUR home! We
had never lived long enough in any one house to develop a feeling of
affection for it; but here, under the roof-tree built by Great-Grandfather
King ninety years ago, that feeling swept into our boyish hearts and souls
like a flood of living sweetness and tenderness.</p>
<p>“Just think, those are the very frogs father listened to when he was a
little boy,” whispered Felix.</p>
<p>“They can hardly be the SAME frogs,” I objected doubtfully, not feeling
very certain about the possible longevity of frogs. “It’s twenty years
since father left home.”</p>
<p>“Well, they’re the descendants of the frogs he heard,” said Felix, “and
they’re singing in the same swamp. That’s near enough.”</p>
<p>Our door was open and in their room across the narrow hall the girls were
preparing for bed, and talking rather more loudly than they might have
done had they realized how far their sweet, shrill voices carried.</p>
<p>“What do you think of the boys?” asked Cecily.</p>
<p>“Beverley is handsome, but Felix is too fat,” answered Felicity promptly.</p>
<p>Felix twitched the quilt rather viciously and grunted. But I began to
think I would like Felicity. It might not be altogether her fault that she
was vain. How could she help it when she looked in the mirror?</p>
<p>“I think they’re both nice and nice looking,” said Cecily.</p>
<p>Dear little soul!</p>
<p>“I wonder what the Story Girl will think of them,” said Felicity, as if,
after all, that was the main thing.</p>
<p>Somehow, we, too, felt that it was. We felt that if the Story Girl did not
approve of us it made little difference who else did or did not.</p>
<p>“I wonder if the Story Girl is pretty,” said Felix aloud.</p>
<p>“No, she isn’t,” said Dan instantly, from across the room. “But you’ll
think she is while she’s talking to you. Everybody does. It’s only when
you go away from her that you find out she isn’t a bit pretty after all.”</p>
<p>The girls’ door shut with a bang. Silence fell over the house. We drifted
into the land of sleep, wondering if the Story Girl would like us.</p>
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