"You see, sister," persisted uncle Nathan, "this little girl isn"t as the Judge says, a sort of person to make a pet of, like the one Mrs.
Farnham has adopted."
Aunt Hannah started, and looked up with one of those sharp glances, that we have once seen disturb the cold monotony of her face. There was something in the name of Mrs. Farnham, that seemed to sting her into life.
"She isn"t handsome, you know," persisted the good man, "but you won"t care for that, Hannah. The Judge says she"s a bright, good little creature, and she"ll be company for us, don"t you think so?"
Aunt Hannah looked at the Judge, who stood regarding her with some degree of anxiety.
"Judge," she said, "that woman yonder? She is rich, and these two children loved each other--why did she send this girl to me?"
"She did not; I brought her without her knowledge," said the Judge.
"Young Farnham first suggested it."
"Young Farnham?" said the woman, and a glow came to her forehead.
"But why were they put asunder?"
"Mrs. Farnham seems to have taken a dislike to poor Mary," was the reply. "The other child is very pretty, and this was a great recommendation, for a lady like her, you know; besides my ward was very anxious that you should take charge of her."
The quick fire once more came to aunt Hannah"s eyes. She drew herself up, and looking at Enoch Sharp, said, with a degree of feeling very unusual to her,
"Judge Sharp, you can go home. I will take the girl and bring her up after my own fashion; but, as for your money, we are not poor enough--my brother and I--to sell kindness--not, not even to him."
The Judge would have spoken, but aunt Hannah waved her hand, after her usual cold, stately fashion, saying, "take the girl--or leave her with me."
"But she will be a burden upon you!" he began to say.
Aunt Hannah did not answer, but going into "the out room," removed Mary"s bonnet and mantilla, then, taking her by the hand, she led her into the porch directly before uncle Nathan.
"Talk with her," she said; "I have the ch.o.r.es to do up yet."
"Yes, yes, talk with uncle Nathan, Mary; you will feel at home at once," cried the Judge, somewhat annoyed that all his benevolent plans could not be carried out, but glad, nevertheless, that his poor favorite had found a home.
There are faces in the world which a warm-hearted person cannot look upon without a glow of generous emotion. Those faces are seldom among the most beautiful. Certainly, I have never found them so; but, this power of waking up all the sweet emotions of an irrepressible nature is worth all the beauty on earth. Uncle Nathan Heap"s face was of this character. Full and ruddy, it beamed with an expression so benevolent, so warm and true, that you were ready to love and trust him at the first glance.
Mary Fuller had too much character in herself not to feel all that was n.o.ble in his. Her eye lighted up, the color came in a faint hue to her cheeks, and, without a word, she placed her little hands between the plump brown palms that were extended to receive her.
Uncle Nathan drew her close up to his knees, pressing her little hands kindly between his, and perusing her face with his friendly brown eyes.
"There, that will do, you are a nice little girl," he said, "I"m glad the Judge thought of bringing you here."
Mary was ready to cry. This reception was so cheering, after the cold interrogations of aunt Hannah.
"Go, bring that milking-stool, yonder, and sit down here while I talk with you a little," said uncle Nathan, pointing toward three or four stools, that hung on the picket fence in the back garden.
Mary ran across the cabbage patch, and brought the milking-stool, which she placed near the old man.
"Close up, close up," he said, patting his fat knee, as if he expected her to lean against it. "There, now, this will do. Sit still and see how you like the garden while the sunshine strikes it."
Mary looked around full of serious curiosity. The sunshine was falling across the cabbage patch, which she had just crossed, tinging the great heads with gold. The ma.s.sive effect of this blended green and gold; the deep tints of the outer leaves, lined and crimped into a curious network; the inner leaves folded so hard and crisp, in their lighter green; all struck the child as singularly beautiful. Then the dun red of the beet leaves, that took up the slanting sunbeams as they strayed over the garden, scattering gold everywhere; and the delicate and feathery green of the parsnip beds: these all had a charm for her young eyes, a charm that one must feel for the first time to appreciate.
"Don"t you think it a pleasant place out here?" said uncle Nathan, looking blandly down upon her.
"Oh! yes, very, very nice. I never saw so many things growing at once before."
"No! Don"t they have gardens in New York then?"
"Some persons do, but not with these things in them: but they have beautiful roses and honeysuckles, and sights of flowers; don"t you like flowers, sir?"
"Like flowers? Why, yes. Didn"t you see the c.o.xcombs and marigolds in the front garden?"
"Yes," said Mary, a little disappointed; for, to say the truth, she found more beauty in the nicely arranged vegetable beds, with their rich variety of tints, just then bathed in the sunset; besides, a taste for rare flowers had been excited, by many a childish visit to those pretty angles and gra.s.s plats, bright with choice flowers, that beautify many of our up-town dwellings in New York. "Yes, they are large and grand, but I like little tiny flowers, with stems that shake when you only touch them."
"Oh, you"ll find lots of flowers like that in the spring time, I can tell you. Among the rocks and trees up there, the ground is covered with them."
"And can I pick them?" asked the child, lifting her brightening eyes on uncle Nathan, with a world of confiding earnestness in them, but still doubtful if she would dare to touch even a wild blossom without permission.
"Pick them!" repeated the old man, laughing till his double chin trembled like a jelly. "Why the cattle tramp over thousands of them every day. You may pick ap.r.o.ns full, if you have a mind to."
"I shouldn"t like much to pick them in that way," said the child, thoughtfully.
"Why not, ha?"
"I don"t know, sir."
"Call me uncle Nathan!"
"Well, I don"t know, uncle Nathan," repeated the child, blushing, "but it seems to me as if it must hurt the pretty flowers to be picked, as if they had feeling like us, and would cry out in my fingers."
"That is a queer thought," said uncle Nathan, and he looked curiously on the child.
"Is it? I don"t know," was the modest reply, "but I always feel that way about flowers."
"She is a strange little creature," thought uncle Nathan, who had a world of sympathy for every generous emotion the human soul ever knew, "what company she will be here in the old stoop nights like this."
Then in a quiet, gentle way, uncle Nathan began to question the child, as his sister had done; but Mary did not shrink from him as she had from his relative; and the sunset gathered around them, while she was telling her mournful little history.
The old man"s eyes filled with tears more than once, as he listened.
Mary saw it and drew close to him as she spoke, till her little clasped hands rested on his knees.
Just then aunt Hannah came into the porch with a pail in her hand, foaming over with milk.
"Oh!" exclaimed uncle Nathan, lifting himself from the arm-chair with a heavy sigh, "I oughtn"t to have been sitting here, in this way, while you are doing up the ch.o.r.es, Hannah. Give me the stool, little darter, I must do my share of the milking, any how."
"Sit still! The child"s strange yet; I can do up the ch.o.r.es for once, I suppose," answered aunt Hannah, placing a bright tin pan on the dresser, and tightening a snow-white strainer over the pail. "Sit down, I say."
Uncle Nathan dropped into his capacious chair, with a relieving sigh, though half the authority in aunt Hannah"s command was lost in the flow of a pearly torrent of milk which soon filled the pan.
"Can"t I help?" inquired Mary, going up to aunt Hannah, as she lifted the br.i.m.m.i.n.g pan with both hands, and bore it toward a swinging shelf in the pantry.