impossible, while the yew trees, of which there were
several, grew dark, and thick, and untrimmed, and cast
heavy shadows upon the grass plats near them.
The central part of the garden, however, showed signs
of care. The broad gravel walk was clean and
smooth, and the straight borders beside it were full
of summer flowers, among which roses were conspicuous.
Indeed, there were roses everywhere, for Anthony loved
them as if they were his children, and so did the
white-faced invalid indoors, whose room old Dorothy,
Anthony’s wife, kept filled with the freshest
and choicest. It did not matter to her that the
sick man had wandered very far from the path of duty,
and was dying from excessive dissipation; he was her
pride, her boy, whom she had tended from his babyhood,
and whom she would watch over and care for to the
last. She had defended and stood by him, when
he brought home a pretty little brown-eyed, brown
haired creature, whose only fault was her poverty
and the fact that she was a chorus singer in the operas
in London, where Hugh McPherson had seen and fallen
in love with her. Two years she lived at Stoneleigh,
happy as the singing birds which flew about the place
and built their nests in the yews, and then one summer
morning she died, and left to Dorothy’s care
a little boy of three weeks, who, without much attention
from any one as regarded his moral and mental culture,
had scrambled along somehow, and had reached the age
of sixteen without a single serious thought as to his
future and without ever having made the least exertion
for himself. Dorothy and Anthony, the two servants
of the place, had taken care of him, and would continue
to do so even after his father’s death, or, if
they did not, his uncle, the Hon. John McPherson,
in London, would never see him want, he thought; so,
with no bad habits except his extreme indolence, which
amounted to absolute laziness, the boy’s days
passed on, until the hot summer morning in June, when
he lay asleep on a broad bench under the shade of
a yew tree, with his face upturned to the sunlight
which penetrated through the overchanging boughs and
fell in patches upon him. Occasionally a fly
or honey-bee came and buzzed about him, but never
alighted upon him, because of the watchful vigilance
of the young girl who stood by his side, shielding
him from the sun’s rays with her person and
her while cape bonnet, which she also used to scare
away the insects, for Archie McPherson must not be
troubled even in his sleep, if care of hers could
prevent it.
The girl who was not more than twelve in reality,
though, her training had made her much older in knowledge
and experience, was singularly beautiful, with great
blue eyes and wavy golden hair, which fell in long
curls to her waist. Her dress, though scrupulously
neat and clean, and becoming, indicated that she belonged
to the middle or working class, far below the social
position of the boy. But whatever inequality of
rank there was between them, she had never felt it,
for ever since she could remember anything, Archie
McPherson had played with and petted and teased her,
and she was almost as much at home at Stoneleigh as
in the work-room of her mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Allen,
who made dresses for the ladies of Bangor and vicinity.