“Did you, now! But there’s a difference in folks. Take my wife: she plants ’em and plants ’em, but she can’t keep none. They up and die on her, sure thing.”
Elliott selected a purple pansy. “This looks to me as though it would like to get into your buttonhole, Mr. Blair.”
“Sho, now!” He flushed with pleasure, driving slowly as the girl fitted the pansy in place, a bit of heliotrope nestling beside it. “Smells good, don’t it? Mother always had heliotrope in her garden. Takes me back to when I was a little shaver.”
Elliott’s deft fingers were busy with the English daisies.
“Now don’t you go and spoil your basket.”
“No, indeed! see what a lot there are left. Here is a little nosegay for your wife. And thank you so much for the lift.”
He cranked the wheel and she jumped out, waving her hand as he drove on. Queer a man like that should love flowers!
It was only when she was walking up the graveled path to the door of the brick house that she remembered to compose her 157 face into a proper gravity. She felt nervous and ill at ease. But she needn’t go in, she reminded herself, just leave the flowers at the door. If only there were a maid, which there probably wasn’t! One couldn’t count for certain on getting right away from these places where the people themselves met one at the door.
“How do you do?” said a voice, advancing from the right. “What a lovely basket!”