[Peter’s Mother by Mrs. Henry De La Pasture]@TWC D-Link bookPeter’s Mother CHAPTER XIV 9/25
"Well, make the most of your summer with him.
_You_ will get only too much London--in the near future." "Perhaps," Lady Mary said, smiling. But, in spite of herself, John's confidence communicated itself to her. When Peter and John had departed, Lady Mary went and sat alone in the quiet of the fountain garden, at the eastern end of the terrace.
The thick hedges and laurels which sheltered it had been duly thinned and trimmed, to allow the entrance of the morning sunshine.
Roses and lilies bloomed brightly round the fountain now, but it was still rather a lonely and deserted spot, and silent, save for the sighing of the wind, and the tinkle of the dropping water in the stone basin. A young copper beech, freed from its rankly increasing enemies of branching laurel and encroaching bramble, now spread its glory of transparent ruddy leaf in the sunshine above trim hedges, here and there diversified by the pale gold of a laburnum, or the violet clusters of a rhododendron in full flower.
Rare ferns fringed the edges of the little fountain, where diminutive reptiles whisked in and out of watery homes, or sat motionless on the brink, with fixed, glassy eyes. Lady Mary had come often to this quiet corner for rest and peace and solitude in days gone by.
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