For a moment the doctor was sorely tempted to keep the credit thus

enthusiastically given; but he was too truthful for that, and so

watching her as her eyes glistened with pleased excitement, he said: "I am glad you like them, Miss Clyde, and so will Mr. Remington be. He

sent them to you from his conservatory."

"Not Mr. Remington from Aikenside--not Jessie's brother?" and Maddy's

eyes now fairly danced as they sought the doctor's face.

"Yes Jessie's brother. He came here with her. He is interested in you,

and brought these down this morning."

"It was Jessie, I guess, who sent them," Maddy suggested, but the

doctor persisted that it was Guy.

"He wished me to present them with his compliments. He thought they

might please you."

"Oh! they do, they do!" Maddy replied. "They almost make me well. Tell

him how much I thank him, and like him too, though I never saw him."

The doctor opened his lips to tell her she had seen him, but changed

his mind ere the words were uttered. She might not think as well of

Guy, he thought, and there was no harm in keeping it back.

So Maddy had no suspicion that the face she thought of so much

belonged to Guy Remington. She had never seen him, of course; but she

hoped she would some time, so as to thank him for his generosity to

her grandfather and his kindness to herself. Then, as she remembered

the message she had sent him, she began to think that it sounded too

familiar, and said to the doctor: "If you please, don't tell Mr. Remington that I said I liked him--only

that I thank him. He would think it queer for a poor girl like me to

send such word to him. He is very rich, and handsome, and splendid,

isn't he?"

"Yes, Guy's rich and handsome, and everybody likes him. We were in

college together."

"You were?" Maddy exclaimed. "Then you know him well, and Jessie, and

you've been to Aikenside often? There's nothing in the world I want so

much as to go to Aikenside. They say it is so beautiful."

"Maybe I'll carry you up there some day when you are strong enough to

ride," the doctor answered, thinking of his light buggy at home, and

wondering he had not used it more, instead of always riding on

horseback.

Dr. Holbrook looked much older than he was, and to Maddy he seemed

quite fatherly, so that the idea of riding with him, aside from the

honor it might be to her, struck her much as riding with Farmer Green

would have done. The doctor, too, imagined that his proposition was

prompted solely from disinterested motives, but he found himself

wondering how long it would be before Maddy would be able to ride a

little distance, just over the hill and back. He was tiring her all

out talking to her; but somehow it was very delightful there in that

sick room, with the summer sunshine stealing through the window and

falling upon the soft reddish-brown head resting on the pillows. Once

he fixed those pillows, arranging them so nicely that grandma, who had

come in from her hens and yeast cakes, declared "he was as handy as a

woman," and after receiving a few general directions with regard to

the future, "guessed, if he wasn't in a hurry, she'd leave him with

Maddy a spell, as there were a few chores she must do."




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