“Which way, this time?” Amy asked, as they reached the street.
“Away from things rather than toward them, please. I shall be very glad when I can tramp off into the open country.”
Amy glanced across the street. “Don’t you want to approach a visit to the country by exploring the old garden, over there? I hear that it has all sorts of treasures of old-fashioned flowers in it. Do you care for old gardens?”
“Very much, though it is a long time since I’ve been in one.”
“Have you heard that the old house over here is to have a new tenant?”
“No, I haven’t heard.”
Leaver opened the gate in the hedge for his companion, looking as if the least interesting thing in the world to him were the matter of tenants for the little old cottage before him. But his tone was, as always, courteously interested.
“I was so sorry, the other day, that it happened you didn’t meet Mrs. Burns’s friend, such an interesting young woman. She is coming here to open a photographic studio in this old house—as an experiment.”
“A professional photographer?”
“I believe not—as yet. She would still call herself an amateur, but from the pictures she showed us she would seem an expert. I never saw anything like them. Dr. Burns—he had never met her—was very much taken with them, especially with one of the little old lady, her grandmother, whom she is to bring here.”
They strolled along the moss-grown path, past the house, aside into the garden, its tangle of flowers and shrubbery rich with neglected bloom and sweet with all manner of scents—sweet-william, larkspur, clove-pink. Leaver, stooping, picked a spicy-smelling, fringe-bordered pink, and sniffed its sun-warmed fragrance.
“It takes me back to my boyhood,” he said, “when I used to think a visit at my grandfather’s old country place the greatest thing that could happen to me. There was a big bed of these flowers under my window. When the sun was hot upon them they rivalled the spices of Araby.”
Miss Mathewson stood looking back at the house. From the garden, which lay at the side and behind it, it showed all of its forlornness and few of its possibilities.
“What will she make of living there, even for the year she means to stay?” she wondered, aloud. “Now, if it were I, it wouldn’t seem strange; I am used to living in a little old house. But such a girl as Miss Ruston—I can hardly imagine her here. She thinks the house and the old garden will make fine backgrounds for her work. I suppose they will.”
“Miss Ruston?” Dr. Leaver repeated. “Was that the name?”
“Miss Charlotte Ruston, of South Carolina, I believe. I never heard the name before, have you?”
“It is an unusual one. I have known only one person of that name.” Leaver walked slowly over to a decayed and tumbling bench beneath an apple-tree, whose boughs had been so long untrimmed that they spread almost to the earth. He sat down upon it, rather heavily, and lifted the clove-pink to his nostrils again. His dark brows contracted slightly. He looked at the house. “It will have to have a good deal done to it before it is fit for any one,” he observed. “You said there was an old lady to come, too?”