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The Blythes Are Quoted

Page 29

by L. M. Montgomery


  He had given her a blue bead and promised her that the next time he came he would bring her a West Indian shell that he had at home. He also promised that when he grew up he would come back and marry her. She had seemed quite pleased at that.

  “Mind you wait for me,” Lincoln had urged. “It’ll be an awful long time before I’m grown up. You won’t get tired waiting, will you?”

  She shook her head. She was not a talkative little girl. Lincoln couldn’t remember much she had said. When ma came to the buttercup field and called him from there he had left her, stirring her pebble raisins into her big sand pie. He had looked back before a sand dune hid her from his sight and waved his hand to her.

  He had never seen her since. She would be middle-aged and married now, of course. But he suddenly felt that he would like to make perfectly sure of that. And how? He did not even know her last name.

  The memory of her dogged him all summer. This was curious ... he had not thought of her for years. He supposed it was Helen’s confounded mewling about marriage that had brought it all back. He did not want to marry; but he thought he would not mind very much if he could find somebody like Mrs. Dr. Blythe or ... or if he could find that little girl of the sandshore and discover she was not married.

  One night, waking from a horrible dream of finding himself married to Lena and Jen and Sara all at once, with Susan Baker thrown in, he made up his mind that he would try to find out.

  With a promptness very surprising in Lincoln he started off the next day, despite the fact that in a recent chat Dr. Blythe had said,

  “Don’t marry till you find the right woman, Lincoln, no matter how much your female relatives nag you.”

  “You were lucky enough to find yours in youth,” said Lincoln. “At my age it’s take what you can get.”

  He got out his horse and buggy and trotted over the long miles between his place and Uncle Charlie’s with dread and a queer hope mingled in his heart. He knew that he was going on a fool’s errand but what of that? Nobody else need know of his folly. There was nothing strange in a fellow going to see his uncle.

  And he remembered Mrs. Blythe say that there were times it made one happy to be a fool. It made you feel that you were driving straight back into the past.

  He had actually never been to Uncle Charlie’s since that long-ago afternoon. It would be different now. His teasing cousins were married and there would be only old Uncle Charlie and Aunt Sophy. But they made him welcome. The parlour was just as ugly as ever ... Lincoln wondered how such ugliness could have lasted all these years. One would think, as Mrs. Blythe said, that God must have got tired of it long ago.

  “Life can’t be all beauty, Anne-girl,” the doctor had said soberly. He had seen a good deal of pain and suffering. “But there’s a lot of beauty in the world for all that. Think of Lover’s Lane.”

  “And the moon coming up over the trees in the Haunted Wood,” agreed Anne.

  But the very sameness gave him a comfortable feeling of having really got back into the past. Luckily they had supper in the sunny old kitchen, where things were not “too fine,” and Lincoln found no difficulty in talking to Uncle Charlie. He even, after many false starts, contrived to ask who lived in the quaint old white house at the other side of the spruce grove.

  “The Harvey Blakes,” said Uncle Charlie.

  “And Janet,” quavered Aunt Sophy.

  “Oh, yes, Janet,” said Uncle Charlie vaguely, as if Janet didn’t count for much.

  Lincoln found his hand trembling as he set down his cup of tea. He shook his head when Aunt Sophy passed him the cake. Nothing more for him.

  “So ... Janet ... is still there?” he found himself saying.

  “And likely to be,” said Uncle Charlie, with the unconscious scorn men feel for all old maids.

  “Janet’s a lovely girl,” protested Aunt Sophy.

  “Too quiet,” said Uncle Charlie. “Far too quiet. The boys like someone with more pep. Like Mrs. Dr. Blythe now. There’s a woman for you. And I never met her till Sophy had pneumonia last winter. She did more good than the doctor, I’ll swear.”

  Lincoln admired Mrs. Blythe as much as anyone, but after all the years of his mother’s ceaseless chatter, he felt that quietness in a woman was not a liability. He got up.

  “I think I’ll take a walk to the shore,” he said.

  He meant to go to the white house but his courage failed him. After all, what could he say? She wouldn’t remember him. He would have a look at the Cove and then go home.

  He went down through the field that had been a glory of buttercups so long ago and was a pasture now, dotted over with clumps of young clover. He was not surprised to see a woman standing at the end of the sandy road, looking out over the sea. Somehow, it all fitted in ... as if it had been planned ages ago. He was quite close to her before she turned.

  He thought he would have known her anywhere ... the same soft, grey-blue eyes and the same beautiful hands. She looked at him a little wonderingly, as if she thought she was looking at no stranger but couldn’t be quite sure.

  “Is the sand pie done?” said Lincoln.

  It was a crazy thing to say, of course ... but wasn’t everything a little crazy today? Not quite normal anyhow. Recognition trembled into her eyes.

  “Is it ... can you be ... Lincoln Burns?”

  Lincoln nodded.

  “So you do remember me ... and the afternoon we made sand pies here?”

  Janet smiled. It made her face look strangely young and wonderful.

  “Of course I remember,” she said, as if it were quite impossible she should have forgotten.

  They found themselves walking along the shore. They did not talk at first. Lincoln was glad. Talk was a commonplace that did not belong to this enchanted time and place. A big moon was rising over the Cove. The wind rustled in the dune grasses and the waves washed softly on the shore.

  Soon they would have to turn back. The rock shore was ahead. The big light at the mouth of Four Winds Harbour was flashing.

  Lincoln felt that something must be settled before they turned but he didn’t know how on earth he was going to settle it. It would be absurd to say, “Do you think you could marry me?” to a woman he had not seen for years. But it was the only thing that came into his head and presently he said it, baldly and flatly.

  “Now I’ve done it,” he thought, quaking.

  Janet looked at him. In the moonlight her eyes were demure and mischievous.

  “I’ve waited for you a long time,” she said. “You promised you’d come back, you know.”

  Lincoln laughed. He was suddenly fearless and confident. He would not be afraid to marry Janet. She would understand why he put up that notice about the orchard and why the little fields back in the woods meant so much to him. He pulled her close to him and kissed her.

  “Well, you know I’m never on time,” he said. “They call me the late Lincoln Burns. But better late than never, Janet darling.”

  “I’ve got the blue bead yet,” she said, “and where is the West Indian shell you promised me?”

  “At home on the parlour mantel,” said Lincoln, “waiting for you.”

  The Pot and the Kettle

  Phyllis Christine opened her eyes ... very large, very dark-brown eyes that had lain all night on her creamy cheeks like silken fans ... well, if not all night at least all that was left of it after the barn dance at Glen St. Mary ... and smiled her prettiest smile at Aunty Clack, who was standing by her bed with a tray, looking just as much like a ripe, rosy apple, sound and wholesome, as she had looked in the faraway years when Christine was a little girl and “Chrissie” only to Clack.

  She was Phyllis to everyone else. And how she hated it!

  “Clack darling, you shouldn’t! I meant to get up. You should have called me. I really like to get up in the mornings ... the earlier the better ... though no one will ever believe me. You’d be amazed if I told you how many sunrises I’ve seen. I’d slip out, you know, and then slip b
ack to bed again. But I don’t want or expect trays here. Dad didn’t send me here to be pampered ... he sent me here to be disciplined. You mustn’t ever do this again.”

  “I dunno’s I will, lamb,” said Mrs. Claxton comfortably. “But I thought you’d be tired after that barn dance.”

  Clack’s voice betrayed considerable disapproval in the intonation of the words “barn dance.” She had not thought Chrissie should go to a barn dance ... the Clarks of Ashburn had never gone to barn dances. Of course Nan and Diana Blythe would be there, though they were very young for that sort of thing. But Dr. Blythe had to curry favour with people.

  The Clarks of Ashburn didn’t likely know that such things as barn dances existed ... although Clack had heard that the young people of Charlottetown had taken to attending them lately.

  But Chrissie had been determined to go ... and when Chrissie was determined on a thing nobody but old Mrs. Clark could stop her ... and she not always, as Mrs. Claxton secretly reflected with concealed satisfaction.

  She had not only gone but she had taken a pie with her ... to be put up at auction ... a pie she had made herself.

  Chrissie could make superlative pies, though Clack hadn’t the least idea where or how she had learned to make them. Clack had never heard of “domestic courses” or the battle royal between old Mrs. Clark and Chrissie over the matter.

  That pie would have to be sold at auction ... such was the custom. Goodness knew what country bumpkin would have bought it and devoured it in company with Phyllis Christine Dunbar Clark ... so named after two grandmothers, both of whom would have died of horror at the very idea of a descen-dent of theirs eating a pie with a come-by-chance partner at a barn dance.

  It would not have seemed quite so bad if Kenneth Ford had been the buyer ... or Jem Blythe. But they had to take their chance like all the rest. And everyone knew that Jem Blythe and Faith Somebody-or-other were sweet on each other ... though they were far too young for anything like that yet. It seemed that mere children were in love with each other nowadays. It wasn’t so in her young days, Clack reflected with a sigh.

  But old Mrs. Clark, the great-aunt of Chrissie, who had brought her up when her mother died at her birth, was still very much alive. Brought her up, indeed! Clack had her own opinion of that.

  But why in the world had she let Chrissie come down to Memory for a whole month when she had never been allowed to visit her old nurse before?

  It was a puzzle indeed. Old Mrs. Clark and Mrs. Claxton had hated each other very quietly and determinedly during all the years the latter had been at Ashburn ... Mrs. Clark had hated Clack because Phyllis Christine loved her best ... didn’t love Mrs. Clark at all, no matter how many gifts were showered on her.

  “Kissing goes by favour,” Clack used to think complacently under her demure exterior. She loved Chrissie as her own child and took exquisite pleasure in calling her Chrissie because she knew old Mrs. Clark hated it ... she had hated Christine Burton, one of the dead grandmothers ... and would not stoop to admit it.

  But she had power and had seen to it that there was no visiting back and forth when Polly Claxton’s uncle had left her some money and a little down-country house at some out-of-the-way place named Mowbray Narrows. It had the lovely and incredible name of Memory and Polly had gone to live there, leaving the eminently correct and landscaped estate of Ashburn, situated near Charlottetown, with bitter regret over parting from her lamb mingled with satisfaction over escaping from old Mrs. Clark’s thumb. She had hoped that Chrissie would be allowed to visit her but such a hope proved to be vain ... as she told herself bitterly she ought to have known. She did not even know if the cards she sent Chrissie every birthday and Christmas ever reached her.

  As a matter of fact they never did. Old Mrs. Clark saw to that.

  So when Chrissie arrived suddenly and unexpectedly for a whole month’s sojourn, Aunty Clack was dying of curiosity about it all, amid her great joy.

  But she asked no questions. When Chrissie got good and ready she would tell her: and if she never got ready, well and good. It was enough for Aunty Clack to have her motherless lamb with her again after five years separation to pet and cosset and carry up trays for. Not do it again! Indeed! She would please herself about that. If Adam Clark wanted disciplining done he could do it himself. He had never troubled himself much about Chrissie.

  But Clack was firmly convinced that old Mrs. Clark was behind it all, though she could not imagine why. Anyhow, she might rule the roost at Ashburn ... and did she rule it! ... but she was not the mistress at Memory, thank God. She, Polly Claxton, was not going to further her plans, whatever they were. And yet, knowing old Mrs. Clark so well, she felt curious. She had such a knack of getting her way, do what you would. She could make Adam believe that black was white. There was something behind it all she could not understand.

  Clack ... she would always be Aunty Clack to Chrissie, let old Mrs. Clark be as sarcastic as she might ... “Calling a servant aunty, indeed!” ... pulled up the blind and Chrissie ... she would always be Chrissie at Memory, never, never Phyllis ... raised herself on one round elbow and looked out on a tiny river like a gleaming blue snake winding itself around a purple hill. Right below the house was a field white as snow with daisies, and the shadow of the huge maple tree that bent over the little house fell lacily across it. Far beyond were the white crests of Four Winds Harbour and a long range of sun-washed dunes and red cliffs.

  Such peace and calm and beauty didn’t seem real. And dad had sent her here ... though Chrissie knew very well that Aunty had put the idea into his head ... in order that the dullness of this drowsy, remote end of the world might reduce her to obedience. Chrissie smiled at the thought.

  And when Chrissie smiled everybody in the world, except Adam Clark and Aunty, laid down their arms.

  Even Clack thought that, after all, you couldn’t say a well-conducted barn dance wasn’t respectable enough and the Clarks were too proud and had too high a conceit of themselves. She was really thinking of old Mrs. Clark, though she would have died before she would have admitted it. Or that old Mrs. Clark would get her way somehow, whatever her motive was in sending Chrissie to Memory. For Clack knew perfectly well that it was old Mrs. Clark’s doings. She had not lived with her for years for nothing. She always got her way.

  She picked up the flowered daffodil chiffon that Chrissie had worn to the barn dance and hung it tenderly in the closet, secretly delighted that she could do that once more for her darling. She knew old Mrs. Clark thought girls should hang up their own dresses. Susan Baker at Ingleside had told her the Blythe girls had to. But after all, one had to admit that the Blythes were not the Clarks.

  Her lamb must have looked lovely in it. With those little golden-brown curls of hers sleeking out of it and bunched behind her pretty ears.

  Clack did not know ... and would be horrified to know ... that the dress had cost Adam Clark seventy dollars. It was pretty but not any prettier than those the Blythe girls wore ... and Susan Baker had told her they made all their own dresses. The only consolation Clack would have had was that it must have horrified penurious old Mrs. Clark, who thought it sinful to spend money on dresses when it should have been given to missions. Clack would have forgiven old Adam Clark anything for that.

  “Clack darling! Salt-rising bread and butter ... I’ve never tasted any since you left ... Aunty thinks it isn’t wholesome.”

  “Neither it is ... at least Dr. Blythe says so ...”

  “You all seem to swear by Dr. Blythe around here.”

  “For a man he will do,” said Clack cautiously, who would have died for any of the Ingleside family. “But a bit of salt-rising bread, once in a while, is not going to hurt anybody. Susan Baker makes it now and then and Mrs. Blythe winks at it and the doctor says, ‘What good bread this is, Susan.’ Oh, you have to learn how to manage the men!”

  “And wild strawberries!”

  “I picked them strawberries in the back orchard this morning. They’re fres
h as fresh.”

  “And Jersey cream in that lovely little old jug with the verse of poetry on it! Aunty used to want you to sell it to her, you remember?”

  “When I am dead and gone, lamb, you are to have that jug. I have left it to you in my will. Don’t forget that.”

  “Don’t talk about wills and death on such a morning, Clack darling. Look at those gold and purple pansies! Did you grow them yourself, Clack darling?”

  “Susan Baker brought them up to me,” acknowledged Clack reluctantly. “Mrs. Blythe is a great one to grow pansies. Were her twins at the barn dance last night, Chrissie? I suppose so, though they are mere children.”

  “Why, everybody was there! Why were you so opposed to my going, Clack darling?”

  “I ... I thought ... I thought ...”

  “You thought they were beneath the Clarks. Be honest, Clack. Or else you were afraid of Aunty.”

  “I was never afraid of your aunt ... but I am quite sure she was the means of sending you here ... and she always gets her own way.”

  “It wasn’t Aunty ... it was dad.”

  “She put him up to it. But it is of no use to argue with you, my lamb. Are you hungry?”

  “Am I hungry? I’ve had nothing to eat except a slice of pie since your incomparable supper last night. I couldn’t eat more than a slice ... whereat my partner was highly offended. Of course Kenneth Ford bought Nan Blythe’s ... I don’t know how he knew it was hers but he evidently did.”

  “Susan Baker has a special way of crimping the edges of her pies,” explained Clack. “Oh, there are tricks in all trades, my lamb ... even carpenters sometimes drive nails with a screwdriver. And mostly at a barn dance the boys know whose pie is being auctioned off. Though the Blythe girls are rather young to be going to dances ... I suppose Kenneth Ford was disappointed Rilla wasn’t there. However, it is their own business ... I suppose both the Blythe girls had dozens after their pies?”

 

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