The sun was shining when Doris opened
her eyes, and she rubbed them to make sure she was
not dreaming. There was no motion, and her bed
was so soft and wide. She sat up straight, half-startled,
and she seemed in a well of fluffy feathers.
There were two white curtained windows and a straight
splint chair at each one, with a queer little knob
on the top of the post that suggested a sprite from
some of the old legends she had been used to hearing.
What enchantment had transported her
thither? Oh, yes-she had been brought
to Cousin Leverett’s, she remembered now; and,
oh, how sleepy she had been last night as she sat
by the warm, crackling fire!
“Well, little Doris!”
exclaimed a fresh, wholesome voice, with a laughing
sound back of it.
“Oh, you are Betty! It
is like a dream. I could not think where I was
at first. And this bed is so high. It’s
like Miss Arabella’s with the curtains around
it. And at home I had a little pallet-just
a low, straight bed almost like a bench, with no curtains.
You slept here with me?”
“Yes. It is my bed and
my room. And it was delightful to have you last
night. I think you never stirred. My niece
Elizabeth was here in the summer from Salem, and after
two nights I turned her out-she kicked
unmercifully, and I couldn’t endure it.
Now, do you want to get up?”
“Oh, yes. Must I jump out or just slip.”
“Here is a stool.”
But Doris had slipped and come down
on a rug of woven rags almost as soft as Persian pile.
Her nightdress fell about her in a train; it was Betty’s,
and she looked like a slim white wraith.
“Now I will help you dress.
Here is a gown of mine that I outgrew when I was a
little girl, and it was so nice mother said it should
be saved for Elizabeth. We call her that because
my other sister Electa has a daughter she calls Bessy.
They are both named after mother. And so am I,
but I have always been called Betty. So many of
one name are confusing. But yours is so pretty
and odd. I never knew a girl called Doris.”
“I am glad you like it,”
said Doris simply. “It was papa’s
choice. My mother’s name was Jacqueline.”
“That is very French.”
“And that is my name, too. But Doris is
easier to say.”
Betty had been helping her dress.
The blue woolen gown was not any too long, but, oh,
it was worlds too wide! They both laughed.
“I wasn’t such
a slim little thing. See here, I will pin a plait
over in front, and that will help it. Now that
does nicely. And you must be choice of that beautiful
brocade. What a pity that you will outgrow it!
It would make such a splendid gown when you go to parties.
I’ve never had a silk gown,” and Betty
sighed.
They went downstairs. It would
seem queer enough now to attend to one’s toilet
in the corner of the kitchen, but it was quite customary
then. In Mrs. Leverett’s room there were
a washing stand with a white cloth, and a china bowl
and ewer in dark blue flowers on a white ground, picked
out with gilt edges. The bowl had scallops around
the edge, and the ewer was tall and slim. There
were a soap dish and a small pitcher, and they looked
beautiful on the thick white cloth, that was fringed
all around. It had been brought over from England
by Mrs. Leverett’s grandmother, and was esteemed
very highly, and had been promised to Betty for her
name. But Mrs. Leverett would have considered
it sacrilege to use it.
It is true, many houses now began
to have wash rooms, which were very nice in summer,
but of small account in winter, when the water froze
so easily, unless you could have a fire.
When people sigh for the good old
times they forget the hardships and the inconveniences.
Doris brushed out her hair and curled
it in a twinkling; then she had some breakfast.
Mrs. Leverett was baking bread and making pies and
a large cake full of raisins that Betty had seeded,
which went by the name of election cake.
The kitchen was a great cheery place
with some sunny windows and a big oven built at one
side, a capacious working table, a dresser, some wooden
chairs, and a yellow-painted floor. The kitchen
opened into mother’s room as well as the hall.
Doris sat and watched both busy women.
At Miss Arabella’s they had an old serving maid
and the kitchen was not a place of tidiness and beauty.
It had a hard dirt floor, and Barby sat out of doors
in the sunshine to do whatever work she could take
out there, and often washed and dried her dishes when
the weather was pleasant.
But here the houses were close enough
to smile at each other. After the great spaces
these yards seemed small, but there were trees and
vines, and Mrs. Leverett had quite a garden spot,
where she raised all manner of sweet herbs and some
vegetables. Mr. Leverett had a shop over on Ann
Street, and attended steadily to his business, early
and late, as men did at that time.
The dining table was set out at noon,
and soon after twelve o’clock the two men made
their appearance.
“Let me look at you,”
said Mr. Leverett, taking both of Doris’ small
hands. “I hardly saw you yesterday.
You were buried in that big hat, and it was getting
so dark. You have not much Adams about you, neither
do you look French.”
“Miss Arabella always said I
looked like papa. There is a picture of him in
my box. He had dark-blue eyes.”
“Well, yours would pass for
black. Do they snap when you get out of temper?”
Doris colored and cast them down.
“Don’t tease her,”
interposed Mrs. Leverett. “She is not going
to get angry. It is a bad thing for little girls.”
“I don’t remember much
of anything about your father. Both of your aunts
are dead. You have one cousin somewhere-Margaret’s
husband married and went South-to Virginia,
didn’t he? Well, there is no end of Adams
connection even if some of them have different names.
Captain Grier dropped into the warehouse with a tin
box of papers, and your things are to be sent this
afternoon. He is coming up this evening, and I’ve
sent for Uncle Win to come over to supper. Then
I suppose the child’s fate will be settled,
and she’ll be a regular Boston girl.”
“I do wonder if Uncle Win will
let her stay here? Mother and I have decided
that it is the best place.”
“Do you think it a good place?”
He turned so suddenly to Doris that
her face was scarlet with embarrassment.
“It’s splendid,”
she said when she caught her breath. “I
should like to stay. And Aunt Elizabeth will
teach me to make pies.”
“Well, pies are pretty good
things, according to my way of thinking. There’s
lots for little girls to learn, though I dare say Uncle
Win will think it can all come out of a book.”
“Some of it might come out of
a cookbook,” said Betty demurely.
“Your mother’s the best
cookbook I know about-good enough for anyone.”
“But we can’t send mother all round the
world.”
“We just don’t want to,” said Warren.
Mrs. Leverett smiled. She was proud of her ability
in the culinary line.
Mr. Leverett looked at Doris presently.
“Come, come,” he began good-naturedly,
“this will never do! You are not eating
enough to keep a bird alive. No wonder you are
so thin!”
“But I ate a great deal of breakfast,”
explained Doris with naïve honesty.
“And you are not homesick?”
Doris thought a moment. “I
don’t want to go away, if that is what you mean.”
“Yes, that’s about it,” nodding
humorously.
Warren thought her the quaintest,
prettiest child he had ever seen, but he hardly knew
what to say to her.
When the men had eaten and gone, the
dishes were soon washed up, and then mother and daughter
brought their sewing. Mrs. Leverett was mending
Warren’s coat. Betty darned a small pile
of stockings, and then she took out some needlework.
She had begun her next summer’s white gown, and
she meant to do it by odd spells, especially when
Aunt Priscilla, who would lecture her on so much vanity,
was not around.
Mrs. Leverett gently questioned Doris-she
was not an aggressive woman, nor unduly curious.
No, Doris had not sewed much. Barby always darned
the stockings, and Miss Easter had come to make whatever
clothes she needed. She used to go to Father
Langhorne and recite, and Mrs. Leverett wondered whether
she and the father both were Roman Catholics.
What did she study? Oh, French and a little Latin,
and she was reading history and “Paradise Lost,”
but she didn’t like sums, and she could make
pillow lace. Miss Arabella made beautiful pillow
lace, and sometimes the grand ladies came in carriages
and paid her ever so much money for it.
And presently dusk began to mingle
with the golden touches of sunset, and Mrs. Leverett
went to make biscuit and fry some chicken, and Uncle
Winthrop came at the same moment that a man on a dray
brought an old-fashioned chest and carried it upstairs
to Betty’s room. But Betty had already
attired Doris in her silk gown.
Doris liked Uncle Winthrop at once,
although he was so different from Uncle Leverett,
who wore all around his face a brownish-red beard that
seemed to grow out of his neck, and had tumbled hair
and a somewhat weather-beaten face. Mr. Winthrop
Adams was two good inches taller and stood up very
straight in spite of his being a bookworm. His
complexion was fair and rather pale, his features
were of the long, slender type, which his beard, worn
in the Vandyke style, intensified. His hair was
light and his eyes were a grayish blue, and he had
a refined and gentle expression.
“So this is our little traveler,”
he said. “Your father was somewhat older,
perhaps, when we bade him good-by, but I have often
thought of him. We corresponded a little off
and on. And I am glad to be able to do all that
I can for his child.”
Doris glanced up, feeling rather shy,
and wondering what she ought to say, but in the next
breath Betty had said it all, even to declaring laughingly
that as Doris had come to them they meant to keep her.
“Doris,” he said softly.
“Doris. You have a poetical name. And
you are poetical-looking.”
She wondered what the comparison meant.
“Paradise Lost” was so grand it tired
her. Oh, there was the old volume of Percy’s
“Reliques.” Did he mean like
some of the sweet little things in that? Miss
Arabella had said it wasn’t quite the thing
for a child to read, and had taken it away until she
grew older.
Uncle Winthrop took her hand again-a
small, slim hand; and his was slender as well.
No real physical work had hardened it. He dropped
into the high-backed chair beside the fireplace, and,
putting his arm about her, drew her near to his side.
Uncle Leverett would have taken her on his knee if
he had been moved by an impulse like that, but he was
used to children and grandchildren, and the bookish
man was not.
“It is a great change to you,”
he said in his low tone, which had a fascination for
her. “Was Miss Arabella-were
there any young people in the old Lincolnshire house?”
“Oh, no. Miss Henrietta
was very, very old, but then she had lost her mind
and forgotten everybody. And Miss Arabella had
snowy white hair and a sweet wrinkled face.”
“Did you go to school?”
“There wasn’t any school
except a dame’s school for very little children.
I used to go twice a week to Father Langhorne and read
and write and do sums.”
“Then we will have to educate
you. Do you think you would like to go to school?”
“I don’t know.”
She hung her head a little, and it gave her a still
more winsome expression. There was an indescribable
charm about her.
“What did you read with this father?”
“We read ‘Paradise Lost’ and some
French. And I had begun Latin.”
Winthrop Adams gave a soft, surprised
whistle. By the firelight he looked her over
critically. Prodigies were not to his taste, and
a girl prodigy would be an abhorrence. But her
face had a sweet unconcern that reassured him.
“And did you like it-’Paradise
Lost’?”
“I think I did-not,”
returned Doris with hesitating frankness. “I
liked the verses in Percy’s ‘Reliques’
better. I like verses that rhyme, that you can
sing to yourself.”
“Ah! And how about the sums?”
“I didn’t like them at
all. But Miss Arabella said the right things were
often hard, and the easy things -
“Well, what is the fault of
the easy things that we all like, and ought not to
like?”
“They were not so good for anyone-though
I don’t see why. They are often very pleasant.”
He laughed then, but some intuition
told her he liked pleasant things as well.
“What do you do in such a case?”
“I did the sums. It was
the right thing to do. And I studied Latin, though
Miss Arabella said it was of no use to a girl.”
“And the French?”
“Oh, I learned French when I
was very little and had mamma, and when I was in the
convent, too. But papa talked English, so I had
them both. Isn’t it strange that afterward
you have to learn so much about them, and how to make
right sentences, and why they are right. It seems
as if there were a great many things in the world
to learn. Betty doesn’t know half of them,
and she’s as sweet as -Oh,
I think the wisest person in the world couldn’t
be any sweeter.”
Winthrop Adams smiled at the eager
reasoning. Betty was a bright, gay girl.
What occult quality was sweetness? And Doris had
been in a convent. That startled him the first
moment. The old strict bitterness and narrowness
of Puritanism had been softened and refined away.
The people who had banished Quakers had for a long
while tolerated Roman Catholics. He had known
Father Matignon, and enjoyed the scholarly and well-trained
John Cheverus, who had lately been consecrated bishop.
The Protestants had even been generous to their brethren
of another faith when they were building their church.
As for himself he was a rather stiff Church of England
man, if he could be called stiff about anything.
“And-did you like
the convent?” he asked, after a pause, in which
he generously made up his mind he would not interfere
with her religious belief.
“It’s so long ago”-with
a half-sigh. “I was very sad at first, and
missed mamma. Papa had to go away somewhere and
couldn’t take me. Yes, I liked sister Therese
very much. Mamma was a Huguenot, you know.”
“You see, I really do not know
anything about her, and have known very little about
your father since he was a small boy.”
“A small boy! How queer
that seems,” and she gave a tender, rippling
laugh. “Then you can tell me about him.
He used to come to the convent once in a while, and
when he was ready to go to England he took me.
Yes, I was sorry to leave Sister Therese and Sister
Clare. There were some little girls, too.
And then we went to Lincolnshire. Miss Arabella
was very nice, and Barby was so queer and funny-at
first I could hardly understand her. And then
we went to a pretty little church where they didn’t
count beads nor pray to the Virgin nor Saints.
But it was a good deal like. It was the Church
of England. I suppose it had to be different
from the Church of France.”
“Yes.” He drew her
a little closer. That was a bond of sympathy between
them. And just then Uncle Leverett and Warren
came in, and there was a shaking of hands, and Uncle
Leverett said:
“Well, I declare! The sight
of you, Win, is good for sore eyes-well
ones, too.”
“I am rather remiss in a social
way, I must confess. I’ll try to do better.
The years fly around so, I have always felt sorry that
I saw so little of Cousin Charles until that last
sad year.”
“It takes womenkind to keep
up sociability. Charles and you might as well
have been a couple of old bachelors.”
Uncle Win gave his soft half-smile,
which was really more of an indication than a smile.
“Come to supper now,” said Mrs. Leverett.
Doris kept hold of Uncle Win’s
hand until she reached her place. He went around
to the other side of the table. She decided she
liked him very much. She liked almost everybody:
the captain had been so friendly, and Mrs. Jewett
and some of the ladies on board the vessel so kind.
But Betty and Uncle Win went to the very first place
with her.
The elders had all the conversation,
and it seemed about some coming trouble to the country
that she did not understand. She knew there had
been war in France and various other European countries.
Little girls were not very well up in geography in
those days, but they did learn a good deal listening
to their elders.
They were hardly through supper when
Captain Grier came with the very japanned box papa
had brought over from France and placed in Miss Arabella’s
care. His name was on it-“Charles
Winthrop Adams.” Oh, and that was Uncle
Win’s name, too! Surely, they were
relations! Doris experienced a sense of gladness.
Betty brought out a table standing
against the wainscot. You touched a spring underneath,
and the circular side came up and made a flat top.
The captain took a small key out of a curious long
leathern purse, and Uncle Win unlocked the box and
spread out the papers. There was the marriage
certificate of Jacqueline Marie de la Maur and Charles
Winthrop Adams, and the birth and baptismal record
of Doris Jacqueline de la Maur Adams, and ever so
many other records and letters.
Mr. Winthrop Adams gave the captain
a receipt for them, and thanked him cordially for
all his care and attention to his little niece.
“She was a pretty fair sailor
after the first week,” said the captain with
a twinkle in his eye. He was very much wrinkled
and weather-beaten, but jolly and good-humored.
“And now, sissy, I’m glad you’re
safe with your folks, and I hope you’ll grow
up into a nice clever woman. ’Taint no
use wishin’ you good looks, for you’re
purty as a pink now-one of them rather
palish kind. But you’ll soon have red cheeks.”
Doris had very red cheeks for a moment.
Betty leaned over to her brother, and whispered:
“What a splendid opportunity
lost! Aunt Priscilla ought to be here to say,
‘Handsome is as handsome does.’”
Then Captain Grier shook hands all
round and took his departure.
Afterward the two men discussed business
about the little girl. There must be another
trustee, and papers must be taken out for guardianship.
They would go to the court-house, say at eleven to-morrow,
and put everything in train.
Betty took out some knitting.
It was a stocking of fine linen thread, and along
the instep it had a pretty openwork pattern that was
like lace work.
“That is to wear with slippers,”
she explained to Doris. “But it’s
a sight of work. ’Lecty had six pairs when
she was married. That’s my second sister,
Mrs. King. She lives in Hartford. I want
to go and make her a visit this winter.”
Mrs. Leverett’s stocking was
of the more useful kind, blue-gray yarn, thick and
warm, for her husband’s winter wear. She
did not have to count stitches and make throws, and
take up two here and three there.
“Warren,” said his mother,
when he had poked the fire until she was on ’pins
and needles,’-they didn’t call
it nervous then,-“Warren, I am ’most
out of corn. I wish you’d go shell some.”
“The hens do eat an awful lot,
seems to me. Why, I shelled only a few nights
ago.”
“I touched bottom when I gave
them the last feed this afternoon. By spring
we won’t have so many,” nodding in a half-humorous
fashion.
“Don’t you want to come
out and see me? You don’t have any Indian
corn growing in England, I’ve heard.”
“Did it belong to the Indians?” asked
Doris.
“I rather guess it did, in the
first instance. But now we plant it for ourselves.
We don’t, because father sold the two-acre
lot, and they’re bringing a street through.
So now we have only the meadow.”
Doris looked at the uncles, but she
couldn’t understand a word they were saying.
“Come!” Warren held out his hand.
“Put the big kitchen apron round
her, Warren,” said Betty, thinking of her silk
gown.
He tied the apron round her neck and
brought back the strings round her waist, so she was
all covered. Then he found her a low chair, and
poked the kitchen fire, putting on a pine log to make
a nice blaze. He brought out from the shed a
tub and a basket of ears of corn. Across the tub
he laid the blade of an old saw and then sat on the
end to keep it firm.
“Now you’ll see business.
Maybe you’ve never seen any corn before?”
She looked over in the basket, and
then took up an ear with a mysterious expression.
“It won’t bite you,” he said laughingly.
“But how queer and hard, with
all these little points,” pinching them with
her dainty fingers.
“Grains,” he explained.
“And a husk grows on the outside to keep it
warm. When the winter is going to be very cold
the husk is very thick.”
“Will this winter be cold?”
“Land alive! yes. Winters always are
cold.”
Warren settled himself and drew the
ear across the blade. A shower of corn rattled
down on the bottom of the tub.
“Oh! is that the way you peel it off?”
He threw his head back and laughed.
“Oh, you Englisher! We shell it
off.”
“Well, it peels too. You
peel a potato and an apple with a knife blade.
Oh, what a pretty white core!”
“Cob. We Americans are
adding new words to the language. A core has
seeds in it. There, see how soft it is.”
Doris took it in her hand and then
laid her cheek against it. “Oh, how soft
and fuzzy it is!” she cried. “And
what do you do with it?”
“We don’t plant that part
of it. That core has no seeds. You have to
plant a grain like this. The little clear point
we call a heart, and that sprouts and grows.
This is a good use for the cob.”
He had finished another, which he
tossed into the fire. A bright blaze seemed to
run over it all at once and die down. Then the
small end flamed out and the fire crept along in a
doubtful manner until it was all covered again.
“They’re splendid to kindle
the fire with. And pine cones. America has
lots of useful things.”
“But they burn cones in France.
I like the spicy smell. It’s queer though,”
wrinkling her forehead. “Did the Indians
know about corn the first?”
“That is the general impression
unless America was settled before the Indians.
Uncle Win has his head full of these things and is
writing a book. And there is tobacco that Sir
Walter Raleigh carried home from Virginia.”
“Oh, I know about Sir Walter and Queen Elizabeth.”
“He was a splendid hero.
I think people are growing tame now; there are no
wars except Indian skirmishes.”
“Why, Napoleon is fighting all the time.”
“Oh, that doesn’t count,”
declared the young man with a lofty air. “We
had some magnificent heroes in the Revolution.
There are lots of places for you to see. Bunker
Hill and Lexington and Concord and the headquarters
of Washington and Lafayette. The French were real
good to us, though we have had some scrimmages with
them. And now that you are to be a Boston girl -
“But I was in Old Boston before,”
and she laughed. “Very old Boston, that
is so far back no one can remember, and it was called
Ikanhoe, which means Boston. There is the old
church and the abbey that St. Botolph founded.
They came over somewhere in six hundred, and were
missionaries from France-St. Botolph and
his brother.”
“Whew!” ejaculated Warren
with a long whistle, looking up at the little girl
as if she were hundreds of years old.
Betty opened the door. “Uncle
Win is going,” she announced. “Come
and say good-by to him.”
He was standing up with the box of
papers in his hand, and saying:
“I must have you all over to
tea some night, and Doris must come and see my old
house. And I have a big boy like Warren.
Yes, we must be a little more friendly, for life is
short at the best. And you are to stay here a
while with good Cousin Elizabeth, and I hope you will
be content and happy.”
She pressed the hand Uncle Win held
out in both of hers. In all the changes she had
learned to be content, and she had a certain adaptiveness
that kept her from being unhappy. She was very
glad she was going to stay with Betty, and glanced
up with a bright smile.
They all said good-night to Cousin
Adams. Mr. Leverett turned the great key in the
hall door, and it gave a shriek.
“I must oil that lock to-morrow.
It groans enough to raise the dead,” said Mrs.
Leverett.