The little man stood in the door of his greenhouse with a transplanting trowel in his hand. He was dressed in clay-colored nankeen, and could get down in the dirt without seeming to get dirty. His small eyes twinkled shrewdly, but not unkindly, as she advanced toward him. He was fond of flowers, and she looked like one herself that spring morning.
"I was directed to call upon you," she said, with conciliatory politeness, "understanding that you sometimes assist people with their gardens."
"Weel, noo and then I do, but I canna give mooch time with a' my ain work."
"But you would help a lady who has no one else to help her, wouldn't you?" said Edith sweetly.
Old Malcom was not to be caught with a sugar-plum, so he said with a little Scotch caution:
"I canna vera weel say till I hear mair aboot it."
Edith told him how she was situated, and in view of her perplexity and trouble, her voice had a little appealing pathos in it. Malcom's eyes twinkled more and more kindly, and as he explained afterward to his wife, "Her face was sae like a pink hyacinth beent doon by the storm and a wantin' proppin' oop," that by the time she was done he was ready to accede to her wishes.
"Weel," said he, "I canna refuse a blithe young leddy like yoursel, but ye must let me have my ain way."
Edith was inclined to demur at this, for she had been reading up and had many plans and theories to carry out. But she concluded to accept the condition, thinking that with her feminine tact she would have her own way after all. She did not realize that she was dealing with a Scotchman.
"I'll send ye a mon as will plow the garden, and not scratch it, the morrow, God willin'," for Mr. McTrump was a very pious man, his only fault being that he would take a drop too much occasionally.