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<h2> CHAPTER III. LEGENDS OF THE OLD ORCHARD </h2>
<p>Outside of the orchard the grass was only beginning to grow green; but
here, sheltered by the spruce hedges from uncertain winds and sloping to
southern suns, it was already like a wonderful velvet carpet; the leaves
on the trees were beginning to come out in woolly, grayish clusters; and
there were purple-pencilled white violets at the base of the Pulpit Stone.</p>
<p>“It’s all just as father described it,” said Felix with a blissful sigh,
“and there’s the well with the Chinese roof.”</p>
<p>We hurried over to it, treading on the spears of mint that were beginning
to shoot up about it. It was a very deep well, and the curb was of rough,
undressed stones. Over it, the queer, pagoda-like roof, built by Uncle
Stephen on his return from a voyage to China, was covered with yet
leafless vines.</p>
<p>“It’s so pretty, when the vines leaf out and hang down in long festoons,”
said the Story Girl. “The birds build their nests in it. A pair of wild
canaries come here every summer. And ferns grow out between the stones of
the well as far down as you can see. The water is lovely. Uncle Edward
preached his finest sermon about the Bethlehem well where David’s soldiers
went to get him water, and he illustrated it by describing his old well at
the homestead—this very well—and how in foreign lands he had
longed for its sparkling water. So you see it is quite famous.”</p>
<p>“There’s a cup just like the one that used to be here in father’s time,”
exclaimed Felix, pointing to an old-fashioned shallow cup of clouded blue
ware on a little shelf inside the curb.</p>
<p>“It is the very same cup,” said the Story Girl impressively. “Isn’t it an
amazing thing? That cup has been here for forty years, and hundreds of
people have drunk from it, and it has never been broken. Aunt Julia
dropped it down the well once, but they fished it up, not hurt a bit
except for that little nick in the rim. I think it is bound up with the
fortunes of the King family, like the Luck of Edenhall in Longfellow’s
poem. It is the last cup of Grandmother King’s second best set. Her best
set is still complete. Aunt Olivia has it. You must get her to show it to
you. It’s so pretty, with red berries all over it, and the funniest little
pot-bellied cream jug. Aunt Olivia never uses it except on a family
anniversary.”</p>
<p>We took a drink from the blue cup and then went to find our birthday
trees. We were rather disappointed to find them quite large, sturdy ones.
It seemed to us that they should still be in the sapling stage
corresponding to our boyhood.</p>
<p>“Your apples are lovely to eat,” the Story Girl said to me, “but Felix’s
are only good for pies. Those two big trees behind them are the twins’
trees—my mother and Uncle Felix, you know. The apples are so dead
sweet that nobody but us children and the French boys can eat them. And
that tall, slender tree over there, with the branches all growing straight
up, is a seedling that came up of itself, and NOBODY can eat its apples,
they are so sour and bitter. Even the pigs won’t eat them. Aunt Janet
tried to make pies of them once, because she said she hated to see them
going to waste. But she never tried again. She said it was better to waste
apples alone than apples and sugar too. And then she tried giving them
away to the French hired men, but they wouldn’t even carry them home.”</p>
<p>The Story Girl’s words fell on the morning air like pearls and diamonds.
Even her prepositions and conjunctions had untold charm, hinting at
mystery and laughter and magic bound up in everything she mentioned. Apple
pies and sour seedlings and pigs became straightway invested with a
glamour of romance.</p>
<p>“I like to hear you talk,” said Felix in his grave, stodgy way.</p>
<p>“Everybody does,” said the Story Girl coolly. “I’m glad you like the way I
talk. But I want you to like ME, too—AS WELL as you like Felicity
and Cecily. Not BETTER. I wanted that once but I’ve got over it. I found
out in Sunday School, the day the minister taught our class, that it was
selfish. But I want you to like me AS WELL.”</p>
<p>“Well, I will, for one,” said Felix emphatically. I think he was
remembering that Felicity had called him fat.</p>
<p>Cecily now joined us. It appeared that it was Felicity’s morning to help
prepare breakfast, therefore she could not come. We all went to Uncle
Stephen’s Walk.</p>
<p>This was a double row of apple trees, running down the western side of the
orchard. Uncle Stephen was the first born of Abraham and Elizabeth King.
He had none of grandfather’s abiding love for woods and meadows and the
kindly ways of the warm red earth. Grandmother King had been a Ward, and
in Uncle Stephen the blood of the seafaring race claimed its own. To sea
he must go, despite the pleadings and tears of a reluctant mother; and it
was from the sea he came to set out his avenue in the orchard with trees
brought from a foreign land.</p>
<p>Then he sailed away again—and the ship was never heard of more. The
gray first came in grandmother’s brown hair in those months of waiting.
The, for the first time, the orchard heard the sound of weeping and was
consecrated by a sorrow.</p>
<p>“When the blossoms come out it’s wonderful to walk here,” said the Story
Girl. “It’s like a dream of fairyland—as if you were walking in a
king’s palace. The apples are delicious, and in winter it’s a splendid
place for coasting.”</p>
<p>From the Walk we went to the Pulpit Stone—a huge gray boulder, as
high as a man’s head, in the southeastern corner. It was straight and
smooth in front, but sloped down in natural steps behind, with a ledge
midway on which one could stand. It had played an important part in the
games of our uncles and aunts, being fortified castle, Indian ambush,
throne, pulpit, or concert platform, as occasion required. Uncle Edward
had preached his first sermon at the age of eight from that old gray
boulder; and Aunt Julia, whose voice was to delight thousands, sang her
earliest madrigals there.</p>
<p>The Story Girl mounted to the ledge, sat on the rim, and looked at us. Pat
sat gravely at its base and daintily washed his face with his black paws.</p>
<p>“Now for your stories about the orchard,” said I.</p>
<p>“There are two important ones,” said the Story Girl. “The story of the
Poet Who Was Kissed, and the Tale of the Family Ghost. Which one shall I
tell?”</p>
<p>“Tell them both,” said Felix greedily, “but tell the ghost one first.”</p>
<p>“I don’t know.” The Story Girl looked dubious. “That sort of story ought
to be told in the twilight among the shadows. Then it would frighten the
souls out of your bodies.”</p>
<p>We thought it might be more agreeable not to have the souls frightened out
of our bodies, and we voted for the Family Ghost.</p>
<p>“Ghost stories are more comfortable in daytime,” said Felix.</p>
<p>The Story Girl began it and we listened avidly. Cecily, who had heard it
many times before, listened just as eagerly as we did. She declared to me
afterwards that no matter how often the Story Girl told a story it always
seemed as new and exciting as if you had just heard it for the first time.</p>
<p>“Long, long ago,” began the Story Girl, her voice giving us an impression
of remote antiquity, “even before Grandfather King was born, an orphan
cousin of his lived here with his parents. Her name was Emily King. She
was very small and very sweet. She had soft brown eyes that were too timid
to look straight at anybody—like Cecily’s there—and long,
sleek, brown curls—like mine; and she had a tiny birthmark like a
pink butterfly on one cheek—right here.</p>
<p>“Of course, there was no orchard here then. It was just a field; but there
was a clump of white birches in it, right where that big, spreading tree
of Uncle Alec’s is now, and Emily liked to sit among the ferns under the
birches and read or sew. She had a lover. His name was Malcolm Ward and he
was as handsome as a prince. She loved him with all her heart and he loved
her the same; but they had never spoken about it. They used to meet under
the birches and talk about everything except love. One day he told her he
was coming the next day to ask A VERY IMPORTANT QUESTION, and he wanted to
find her under the birches when he came. Emily promised to meet him there.
I am sure she stayed awake that night, thinking about it, and wondering
what the important question would be, although she knew perfectly well. I
would have. And the next day she dressed herself beautifully in her best
pale blue muslin and sleeked her curls and went smiling to the birches.
And while she was waiting there, thinking such lovely thoughts, a
neighbour’s boy came running up—a boy who didn’t know about her
romance—and cried out that Malcolm Ward had been killed by his gun
going off accidentally. Emily just put her hands to her heart—so—and
fell, all white and broken among the ferns. And when she came back to life
she never cried or lamented. She was CHANGED. She was never, never like
herself again; and she was never contented unless she was dressed in her
blue muslin and waiting under the birches. She got paler and paler every
day, but the pink butterfly grew redder, until it looked just like a stain
of blood on her white cheek. When the winter came she died. But next
spring”—the Story Girl dropped her voice to a whisper that was as
audible and thrilling as her louder tones—“people began to tell that
Emily was sometimes seen waiting under the birches still. Nobody knew just
who told it first. But more than one person saw her. Grandfather saw her
when he was a little boy. And my mother saw her once.”</p>
<p>“Did YOU ever see her?” asked Felix skeptically.</p>
<p>“No, but I shall some day, if I keep on believing in her,” said the Story
Girl confidently.</p>
<p>“I wouldn’t like to see her. I’d be afraid,” said Cecily with a shiver.</p>
<p>“There wouldn’t be anything to be afraid of,” said the Story Girl
reassuringly. “It’s not as if it were a strange ghost. It’s our own family
ghost, so of course it wouldn’t hurt us.”</p>
<p>We were not so sure of this. Ghosts were unchancy folk, even if they were
our family ghosts. The Story Girl had made the tale very real to us. We
were glad we had not heard it in the evening. How could we ever have got
back to the house through the shadows and swaying branches of a darkening
orchard? As it was, we were almost afraid to look up it, lest we should
see the waiting, blue-clad Emily under Uncle Alec’s tree. But all we saw
was Felicity, tearing over the green sward, her curls streaming behind her
in a golden cloud.</p>
<p>“Felicity’s afraid she’s missed something,” remarked the Story Girl in a
tone of quiet amusement. “Is your breakfast ready, Felicity, or have I
time to tell the boys the Story of the Poet Who Was Kissed?”</p>
<p>“Breakfast is ready, but we can’t have it till father is through attending
to the sick cow, so you will likely have time,” answered Felicity.</p>
<p>Felix and I couldn’t keep our eyes off her. Crimson-cheeked, shining-eyed
from her haste, her face was like a rose of youth. But when the Story Girl
spoke, we forgot to look at Felicity.</p>
<p>“About ten years after Grandfather and Grandmother King were married, a
young man came to visit them. He was a distant relative of grandmother’s
and he was a Poet. He was just beginning to be famous. He was VERY famous
afterward. He came into the orchard to write a poem, and he fell asleep
with his head on a bench that used to be under grandfather’s tree. Then
Great-Aunt Edith came into the orchard. She was not a Great-Aunt then, of
course. She was only eighteen, with red lips and black, black hair and
eyes. They say she was always full of mischief. She had been away and had
just come home, and she didn’t know about the Poet. But when she saw him,
sleeping there, she thought he was a cousin they had been expecting from
Scotland. And she tiptoed up—so—and bent over—so—and
kissed his cheek. Then he opened his big blue eyes and looked up into
Edith’s face. She blushed as red as a rose, for she knew she had done a
dreadful thing. This could not be her cousin from Scotland. She knew, for
he had written so to her, that he had eyes as black as her own. Edith ran
away and hid; and of course she felt still worse when she found out that
he was a famous poet. But he wrote one of his most beautiful poems on it
afterwards and sent it to her—and it was published in one of his
books.”</p>
<p>We had SEEN it all—the sleeping genius—the roguish, red-lipped
girl—the kiss dropped as lightly as a rose-petal on the sunburned
cheek.</p>
<p>“They should have got married,” said Felix.</p>
<p>“Well, in a book they would have, but you see this was in real life,” said
the Story Girl. “We sometimes act the story out. I like it when Peter
plays the poet. I don’t like it when Dan is the poet because he is so
freckled and screws his eyes up so tight. But you can hardly ever coax
Peter to be the poet—except when Felicity is Edith—and Dan is
so obliging that way.”</p>
<p>“What is Peter like?” I asked.</p>
<p>“Peter is splendid. His mother lives on the Markdale road and washes for a
living. Peter’s father ran away and left them when Peter was only three
years old. He has never come back, and they don’t know whether he is alive
or dead. Isn’t that a nice way to behave to your family? Peter has worked
for his board ever since he was six. Uncle Roger sends him to school, and
pays him wages in summer. We all like Peter, except Felicity.”</p>
<p>“I like Peter well enough in his place,” said Felicity primly, “but you
make far too much of him, mother says. He is only a hired boy, and he
hasn’t been well brought up, and hasn’t much education. I don’t think you
should make such an equal of him as you do.”</p>
<p>Laughter rippled over the Story Girl’s face as shadow waves go over ripe
wheat before a wind.</p>
<p>“Peter is a real gentleman, and he is more interesting than YOU could ever
be, if you were brought up and educated for a hundred years,” she said.</p>
<p>“He can hardly write,” said Felicity.</p>
<p>“William the Conqueror couldn’t write at all,” said the Story Girl
crushingly.</p>
<p>“He never goes to church, and he never says his prayers,” retorted
Felicity, uncrushed.</p>
<p>“I do, too,” said Peter himself, suddenly appearing through a little gap
in the hedge. “I say my prayers sometimes.”</p>
<p>This Peter was a slim, shapely fellow, with laughing black eyes and thick
black curls. Early in the season as it was, he was barefooted. His attire
consisted of a faded, gingham shirt and a scanty pair of corduroy
knickerbockers; but he wore it with such an unconscious air of purple and
fine linen that he seemed to be much better dressed than he really was.</p>
<p>“You don’t pray very often,” insisted Felicity.</p>
<p>“Well, God will be all the more likely to listen to me if I don’t pester
Him all the time,” argued Peter.</p>
<p>This was rank heresy to Felicity, but the Story Girl looked as if she
thought there might be something in it.</p>
<p>“You NEVER go to church, anyhow,” continued Felicity, determined not to be
argued down.</p>
<p>“Well, I ain’t going to church till I’ve made up my mind whether I’m going
to be a Methodist or a Presbyterian. Aunt Jane was a Methodist. My mother
ain’t much of anything but I mean to be something. It’s more respectable
to be a Methodist or a Presbyterian, or SOMETHING, than not to be
anything. When I’ve settled what I’m to be I’m going to church same as
you.”</p>
<p>“That’s not the same as being BORN something,” said Felicity loftily.</p>
<p>“I think it’s a good deal better to pick your own religion than have to
take it just because it was what your folks had,” retorted Peter.</p>
<p>“Now, never mind quarrelling,” said Cecily. “You leave Peter alone,
Felicity. Peter, this is Beverley King, and this is Felix. And we’re all
going to be good friends and have a lovely summer together. Think of the
games we can have! But if you go squabbling you’ll spoil it all. Peter,
what are you going to do to-day?”</p>
<p>“Harrow the wood field and dig your Aunt Olivia’s flower beds.”</p>
<p>“Aunt Olivia and I planted sweet peas yesterday,” said the Story Girl,
“and I planted a little bed of my own. I am NOT going to dig them up this
year to see if they have sprouted. It is bad for them. I shall try to
cultivate patience, no matter how long they are coming up.”</p>
<p>“I am going to help mother plant the vegetable garden to-day,” said
Felicity.</p>
<p>“Oh, I never like the vegetable garden,” said the Story Girl. “Except when
I am hungry. Then I DO like to go and look at the nice little rows of
onions and beets. But I love a flower garden. I think I could be always
good if I lived in a garden all the time.”</p>
<p>“Adam and Eve lived in a garden all the time,” said Felicity, “and THEY
were far from being always good.”</p>
<p>“They mightn’t have kept good as long as they did if they hadn’t lived in
a garden,” said the Story Girl.</p>
<p>We were now summoned to breakfast. Peter and the Story Girl slipped away
through the gap, followed by Paddy, and the rest of us walked up the
orchard to the house.</p>
<p>“Well, what do you think of the Story Girl?” asked Felicity.</p>
<p>“She’s just fine,” said Felix, enthusiastically. “I never heard anything
like her to tell stories.”</p>
<p>“She can’t cook,” said Felicity, “and she hasn’t a good complexion. Mind
you, she says she’s going to be an actress when she grows up. Isn’t that
dreadful?”</p>
<p>We didn’t exactly see why.</p>
<p>“Oh, because actresses are always wicked people,” said Felicity in a
shocked tone. “But I daresay the Story Girl will go and be one just as
soon as she can. Her father will back her up in it. He is an artist, you
know.”</p>
<p>Evidently Felicity thought artists and actresses and all such poor trash
were members one of another.</p>
<p>“Aunt Olivia says the Story Girl is fascinating,” said Cecily.</p>
<p>The very adjective! Felix and I recognized its beautiful fitness at once.
Yes, the Story Girl WAS fascinating and that was the final word to be said
on the subject.</p>
<p>Dan did not come down until breakfast was half over, and Aunt Janet talked
to him after a fashion which made us realize that it would be well to
keep, as the piquant country phrase went, from the rough side of her
tongue. But all things considered, we liked the prospect of our summer
very much. Felicity to look at—the Story Girl to tell us tales of
wonder—Cecily to admire us—Dan and Peter to play with—what
more could reasonable fellows want?</p>
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