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<h2> CHAPTER XVI. AUNT UNA'S STORY </h2>
<p>Felicity, and Cecily, Dan, Felix, Sara Ray and I were sitting one evening
on the mossy stones in Uncle Roger's hill pasture, where we had sat the
morning the Story Girl told us the tale of the Wedding Veil of the Proud
Princess. But it was evening now and the valley beneath us was brimmed up
with the glow of the afterlight. Behind us, two tall, shapely spruce trees
rose up against the sunset, and through the dark oriel of their sundered
branches an evening star looked down. We sat on a little strip of emerald
grassland and before us was a sloping meadow all white with daisies.</p>
<p>We were waiting for Peter and the Story Girl. Peter had gone to Markdale
after dinner to spend the afternoon with his reunited parents because it
was his birthday. He had left us grimly determined to confess to his
father the dark secret of his Presbyterianism, and we were anxious to know
what the result had been. The Story Girl had gone that morning with Miss
Reade to visit the latter's home near Charlottetown, and we expected soon
to see her coming gaily along over the fields from the Armstrong place.</p>
<p>Presently Peter came jauntily stepping along the field path up the hill.</p>
<p>"Hasn't Peter got tall?" said Cecily.</p>
<p>"Peter is growing to be a very fine looking boy," decreed Felicity.</p>
<p>"I notice he's got ever so much handsomer since his father came home,"
said Dan, with a killing sarcasm that was wholly lost on Felicity, who
gravely responded that she supposed it was because Peter felt so much
freer from care and responsibility.</p>
<p>"What luck, Peter?" yelled Dan, as soon as Peter was within earshot.</p>
<p>"Everything's all right," he shouted jubilantly. "I told father right off,
licketty-split, as soon as I got home," he added when he reached us. "I
was anxious to have it over with. I says, solemn-like, 'Dad, there's
something I've got to tell you, and I don't know how you'll take it, but
it can't be helped,' I says. Dad looked pretty sober, and he says, says
he, 'What have you been up to, Peter? Don't be afraid to tell me. I've
been forgiven to seventy times seven, so surely I can forgive a little,
too?' 'Well,' I says, desperate-like, 'the truth is, father, I'm a
Presbyterian. I made up my mind last summer, the time of the Judgment Day,
that I'd be a Presbyterian, and I've got to stick to it. I'm sorry I can't
be a Methodist, like you and mother and Aunt Jane, but I can't and that's
all there is to it,' I says. Then I waited, scared-like. But father, he
just looked relieved and he says, says he, 'Goodness, boy, you can be a
Presbyterian or anything else you like, so long as it's Protestant. I'm
not caring,' he says. 'The main thing is that you must be good and do
what's right.' I tell you," concluded Peter emphatically, "father is a
Christian all right."</p>
<p>"Well, I suppose your mind will be at rest now," said Felicity. "What's
that you have in your buttonhole?"</p>
<p>"That's a four-leaved clover," answered Peter exultantly. "That means good
luck for the summer. I found it in Markdale. There ain't much clover in
Carlisle this year of any kind of leaf. The crop is going to be a failure.
Your Uncle Roger says it's because there ain't enough old maids in
Carlisle. There's lots of them in Markdale, and that's the reason, he
says, why they always have such good clover crops there."</p>
<p>"What on earth have old maids to do with it?" cried Cecily.</p>
<p>"I don't believe they've a single thing to do with it, but Mr. Roger says
they have, and he says a man called Darwin proved it. This is the
rigmarole he got off to me the other day. The clover crop depends on there
being plenty of bumble-bees, because they are the only insects with
tongues long enough to—to—fer—fertilize—I think he
called it the blossoms. But mice eat bumble-bees and cats eat mice and old
maids keep cats. So your Uncle Roger says the more old maids the more
cats, and the more cats the fewer field-mice, and the fewer field-mice the
more bumble-bees, and the more bumble-bees the better clover crops."</p>
<p>"So don't worry if you do get to be old maids, girls," said Dan.
"Remember, you'll be helping the clover crops."</p>
<p>"I never heard such stuff as you boys talk," said Felicity, "and Uncle
Roger is no better."</p>
<p>"There comes the Story Girl," cried Cecily eagerly. "Now we'll hear all
about Beautiful Alice's home."</p>
<p>The Story Girl was bombarded with eager questions as soon as she arrived.
Miss Reade's home was a dream of a place, it appeared. The house was just
covered with ivy and there was a most delightful old garden—"and,"
added the Story Girl, with the joy of a connoisseur who has found a rare
gem, "the sweetest little story connected with it. And I saw the hero of
the story too."</p>
<p>"Where was the heroine?" queried Cecily.</p>
<p>"She is dead."</p>
<p>"Oh, of course she'd have to die," exclaimed Dan in disgust. "I'd like a
story where somebody lived once in awhile."</p>
<p>"I've told you heaps of stories where people lived," retorted the Story
Girl. "If this heroine hadn't died there wouldn't have been any story. She
was Miss Reade's aunt and her name was Una, and I believe she must have
been just like Miss Reade herself. Miss Reade told me all about her. When
we went into the garden I saw in one corner of it an old stone bench
arched over by a couple of pear trees and all grown about with grass and
violets. And an old man was sitting on it—a bent old man with long,
snow-white hair and beautiful sad blue eyes. He seemed very lonely and
sorrowful and I wondered that Miss Reade didn't speak to him. But she
never let on she saw him and took me away to another part of the garden.
After awhile he got up and went away and then Miss Reade said, 'Come over
to Aunt Una's seat and I will tell you about her and her lover—that
man who has just gone out.'</p>
<p>"'Oh, isn't he too old for a lover?' I said.</p>
<p>"Beautiful Alice laughed and said it was forty years since he had been her
Aunt Una's lover. He had been a tall, handsome young man then, and her
Aunt Una was a beautiful girl of nineteen.</p>
<p>"We went over and sat down and Miss Reade told me all about her. She said
that when she was a child she had heard much of her Aunt Una—that
she seemed to have been one of those people who are not soon forgotten,
whose personality seems to linger about the scenes of their lives long
after they have passed away."</p>
<p>"What is a personality? Is it another word for ghost?" asked Peter.</p>
<p>"No," said the Story Girl shortly. "I can't stop in a story to explain
words."</p>
<p>"I don't believe you know what it is yourself," said Felicity.</p>
<p>The Story Girl picked up her hat, which she had thrown down on the grass,
and placed it defiantly on her brown curls.</p>
<p>"I'm going in," she announced. "I have to help Aunt Olivia ice a cake
tonight, and you all seem more interested in dictionaries than stories."</p>
<p>"That's not fair," I exclaimed. "Dan and Felix and Sara Ray and Cecily and
I have never said a word. It's mean to punish us for what Peter and
Felicity did. We want to hear the rest of the story. Never mind what a
personality is but go on—and, Peter, you young ass, keep still."</p>
<p>"I only wanted to know," muttered Peter sulkily.</p>
<p>"I DO know what personality is, but it's hard to explain," said the Story
Girl, relenting. "It's what makes you different from Dan, Peter, and me
different from Felicity or Cecily. Miss Reade's Aunt Una had a personality
that was very uncommon. And she was beautiful, too, with white skin and
night-black eyes and hair—a 'moonlight beauty,' Miss Reade called
it. She used to keep a kind of a diary, and Miss Reade's mother used to
read parts of it to her. She wrote verses in it and they were lovely; and
she wrote descriptions of the old garden which she loved very much. Miss
Reade said that everything in the garden, plot or shrub or tree, recalled
to her mind some phrase or verse of her Aunt Una's, so that the whole
place seemed full of her, and her memory haunted the walks like a faint,
sweet perfume.</p>
<p>"Una had, as I've told you, a lover; and they were to have been married on
her twentieth birthday. Her wedding dress was to have been a gown of white
brocade with purple violets in it. But a little while before it she took
ill with fever and died; and she was buried on her birthday instead of
being married. It was just in the time of opening roses. Her lover has
been faithful to her ever since; he has never married, and every June, on
her birthday, he makes a pilgrimage to the old garden and sits for a long
time in silence on the bench where he used to woo her on crimson eves and
moonlight nights of long ago. Miss Reade says she always loves to see him
sitting there because it gives her such a deep and lasting sense of the
beauty and strength of love which can thus outlive time and death. And
sometimes, she says, it gives her a little eerie feeling, too, as if her
Aunt Una were really sitting there beside him, keeping tryst, although she
has been in her grave for forty years."</p>
<p>"It would be real romantic to die young and have your lover make a
pilgrimage to your garden every year," reflected Sara Ray.</p>
<p>"It would be more comfortable to go on living and get married to him,"
said Felicity. "Mother says all those sentimental ideas are bosh and I
expect they are. It's a wonder Beautiful Alice hasn't a beau herself. She
is so pretty and lady-like."</p>
<p>"The Carlisle fellows all say she is too stuck up," said Dan.</p>
<p>"There's nobody in Carlisle half good enough for her," cried the Story
Girl, "except—ex-cept—"</p>
<p>"Except who?" asked Felix.</p>
<p>"Never mind," said the Story Girl mysteriously.</p>
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