when her aunt and her father were together. As
they came to be on more intimate terms, Sylvia was
told a great many details about Aunt Victoria’s
present and past life, in the form of stories, especially
about that early part of it which had been spent with
her brother. Mrs. Marshall-Smith took pains to
talk to Sylvia about her father as he had been when
he was a brilliant dashing youth in Paris at school,
or as the acknowledged social leader of his class
in the famous Eastern college. “You see,
Sylvia,” she explained, “having no father
or mother or any near relatives, we saw more of each
other than a good many brothers and sisters do.
We had nobody else—except old Cousin Ellen,
who kept house for us in the summers in Lydford and
traveled around with us,” Lydford was another
topic on which, although it was already very familiar
to her from her mother’s reminiscences of her
childhood in Vermont, Aunt Victoria shed much light
for Sylvia. Aunt Victoria’s Lydford was
so different from Mother’s, it seemed scarcely
possible they could be the same place. Mother’s
talk was all about the mountains, the sunny upland
pastures, rocky and steep, such a contrast to the
rich, level stretches of country about La Chance;
about the excursions through these slopes of the mountains
every afternoon, accompanied by a marvelously intelligent
collie dog, who helped find the cows; about the orchard
full of old trees more climbable than any others which
have grown since the world began; about the attic
full of drying popcorn and old hair-trunks and dusty
files of the New York
Tribune; about the pantry
with its cookie-jar, and the “back room”
with its churn and cheese-press.
Nothing of all this existed in the Lydford of which
Aunt Victoria spoke, although some of her recollections
were also of childhood hours. Once Sylvia asked
her, “But if you were a little girl there, and
Mother was too,—then you and Father and
she must have played together sometimes?”
Aunt Victoria had replied with decision, “No,
I never saw your mother, and neither did your father—until
a few months before they were married.”
“Well, wasn’t that queer?”
exclaimed Sylvia—“she always
lived in Lydford except when she went away to college.”
Aunt Victoria seemed to hesitate for words, something
unusual with her, and finally brought out, “Your
mother lived on a farm, and we lived in our summer
house in the village.” She added after a
moment’s deliberation: “Her uncle,
who kept the farm, furnished us with our butter.
Sometimes your mother used to deliver it at the kitchen
door.” She looked hard at Sylvia as she
spoke.
“Well, I should have thought you’d have
seen her there!” said Sylvia in surprise.
Nothing came to the Marshalls’ kitchen door which
was not in the children’s field of consciousness.
“It was, in fact, there that your father met
her,” stated Aunt Victoria briefly.