It was eight o’clock when Tannis left the Flats; it was ten when she drew bridle before the house on the bluff. Elinor was regaling Tom and his wife with Avonlea gossip when the maid came to the door.
“Pleas’m, there’s a breed girl out on the verandah and she’s asking for Miss Blair.”
Elinor went out wonderingly, followed by Tom. Tannis, whip in hand, stood by the open door, with the stormy night behind her, and the warm ruby light of the hall lamp showering over her white face and the long rope of drenched hair that fell from her bare head. She looked wild enough.
“Jerome Carey was shot in a quarrel at Joe Esquint’s to-night,” she said. “He is dying — he wants you — I have come for you.”
Elinor gave a little cry, and steadied herself on Tom’s shoulder. Tom said he knew he made some exclamation of horror. He had never approved of Carey’s attentions to Elinor, but such news was enough to shock anybody. He was determined, however, that Elinor should not go out in such a night and to such a scene, and told Tannis so in no uncertain terms.
“I came through the storm,” said Tannis, contemptuously. “Cannot she do as much for him as I can?”
The good, old Island blood in Elinor’s veins showed to some purpose. “Yes,” she answered firmly. “No, Tom, don’t object — I must go. Get my horse — and your own.”
Ten minutes later three riders galloped down the bluff road and took the river trail. Fortunately the wind was at their backs and the worst of the storm was over. Still, it was a wild, black ride enough. Tom rode, cursing softly under his breath. He did not like the whole thing — Carey done to death in some low half-breed shack, this handsome, sullen girl coming as his messenger, this nightmare ride, through wind and rain. It all savored too much of melodrama, even for the Northland, where people still did things in a primitive way. He heartily wished Elinor had never left Avonlea.
It was past twelve when they reached the Flats. Tannis was the only one who seemed to be able to think coherently. It was she who told Tom where to take the horses and then led Elinor to the room where Carey was dying. The doctor was sitting by the bedside and Mrs. Joe was curled up in a corner, sniffling to herself. Tannis took her by the shoulder and turned her, none too gently, out of the room. The doctor, understanding, left at once. As Tannis shut the door she saw Elinor sink on her knees by the bed, and Carey’s trembling hand go out to her head.
Tannis sat down on the floor outside of the door and wrapped herself up in a shawl Marie Esquint had dropped. In that attitude she looked exactly like a squaw, and all comers and goers, even old Auguste, who was hunting for her, thought she was one, and left her undisturbed. She watched there until dawn came whitely up over the prairies and Jerome Carey died. She knew when it happened by Elinor’s cry.
Tannis sprang up and rushed in. She was too late for even a parting look.
The girl took Carey’s hand in hers, and turned to the weeping
Elinor with a cold dignity.
“Now go,” she said. “You had him in life to the very last. He is mine now.”
“There must be some arrangements made,” faltered Elinor.
“My father and brother will make all arrangements, as you call them,” said Tannis steadily. “He had no near relatives in the world — none at all in Canada — he told me so. You may send out a Protestant minister from town, if you like; but he will be buried here at the Flats and his grave with be mine — all mine! Go!”
And Elinor, reluctant, sorrowful, yet swayed by a will and an emotion stronger than her own, went slowly out, leaving Tannis of the Flats alone with her dead.
THE ROAD TO YESTERDAY
CONTENTS
An Afternoon with Mr. Jenkins
Retribution
The Twins Pretend
Fancy’s Fool
A Dream Come True
Penelope Struts Her Theories
The Reconciliation
The Cheated Child
Fool’s Errand
The Pot and the Kettle
Here Comes the Bride
Brother Beware
The Road to Yesterday
A Commonplace Woman
An Afternoon with Mr. Jenkins
Timothy yawned. If eight years knew anything about such a word, Timothy was bored. Saturday was a rather stupid day at any time and he could not go down to the Glen. He was not allowed to go out of the home grounds when his aunts were away... not even to Ingleside to play with Jem Blythe. Of course, Jem could come up to his aunts’ place as often as he pleased but Jem often had other fish to fry on Saturday afternoons and Timothy never was allowed away from home alone now at all. His aunts had been more fussy than ever about this lately.
Timothy was very fond of his aunts, especially his Aunt Edith, but he secretly thought they were entirely too fussy about it. He couldn’t understand it. Surely a big boy of eight, who had been going to school two years alone, even if he didn’t altogether like going to sleep in the dark, didn’t need to be cooped up at home just because his aunts had gone to Charlottetown.
They had gone that morning early and Timothy felt sure they were worried. More than usual, that is, for they were always worried over something. Timothy didn’t know what it was, but he sensed it in everything they did or said of late. It hadn’t been so years ago, Timothy reflected with the air of an octogenarian recalling his youth. He could remember them as laughing and jolly, especially Aunt Edith, who was really very jolly for an old maid, as the boys in school called her. And they were great friends with the Ingleside people and thought Dr. and Mrs. Blythe the finest people in the world.
But they had laughed less and less these past two years, and Timothy had an odd feeling that this was somehow connected with him, although he couldn’t understand how that could be. He wasn’t a bad boy. Not even Aunt Kathleen, who, perhaps because she was a widow, thought rather poorly of boys, ever said he was a bad boy. And Jem Blythe had told him that Susan Baker had said he was really one of the best-behaved boys she knew, outside of the Ingleside group.
Now and then, of course... but it was hard to be perfect. Why, then, did they worry so about him? Maybe just because they were women. Maybe women had to worry. But Mrs. Blythe seemed to worry very little and Susan Baker not much more. So why?
Men, now... he never perceived that Dr. Blythe worried. If father had lived! But in that case he, Timothy, might not have been living with Aunt Edith in the little place the Glen St. Mary people called “The Corner.” And Timothy loved The Corner. He felt sure he could never live anywhere else. But when he said this to Aunt Kathleen one day she had sighed and looked at Aunt Edith.
She hadn’t said anything but Aunt Edith had replied passionately,
“I can’t believe God could be so unjust. Surely he... even he couldn’t be so heartless.”
Were they talking about the God whom the Ingleside people said was Love? Even Susan Baker admitted that.
“S-sh,” said Aunt Kathleen warningly.
“He’ll have to know sometime,” said Aunt Edith bitterly.
Why, he knew about God now. Everybody he knew did. So why so much mystery?
“He’ll have to know sometime,” went on Aunt Edith bitterly. “The ten years will soon be up... and probably shortened for good behaviour.”
Aunt Edith’s “he’s” puzzled Timothy hopelessly. He knew now it was not God they were talking about. And what would “he” have to know sometime and in any case why should it be all “s-sh-ed” away? Aunt Kathleen immediately began talking about his music lessons and the possibility of securing Professor Harper of Lowbridge as a teacher. Now Timothy hated the very thought of music lessons. Jem Blythe laughed at the mere idea. Yet he knew he would have to take them. Nothing ever made Aunt Kathleen change her mind.
Timothy felt aggrieved. Aunt Edith had promised to take him to the little lake that was a Lowbridge summer resort. They would go in the car... cars were very new things and Timothy loved riding in them. Dr. Blythe had one and often gave him a “lift�
�� in it. And at the lake he would be let ride a horse on the merry-go-round... another thing he loved and very seldom got because Aunt Kathleen did not approve of it. But he knew Aunt Edith would.
But there had been a letter that morning for Aunt Kathleen. She had turned dreadfully pale when she read it. Then she had said something to Aunt Edith in a queer choking voice and Aunt Edith had turned pale, too, and they had gone out of the room. Timothy heard them having a long conversation with Dr. Blythe on the telephone. Was Aunt Kathleen sick?
After a little while Aunt Edith came back and told Timothy she was very sorry but she could not take him to the lake after all. She and Aunt Kathleen must go to Charlotte-town on some very important business. Dr. Blythe was going to take them.
“Then one of you is sick?” said Timothy anxiously.
“No, neither of us is sick. It... it is worse than that,” said Aunt Edith.
“You’ve been crying, Aunt Edith,” said a troubled Timothy. He got up out of his chair and hugged her. “Just you wait till I grow up and when I’m a man nothing’ll ever make you cry.”
And then the tears welled up in Aunt Edith’s sweet brown eyes again.
But Aunt Kathleen was not crying. She was pale and stern. And she told Timothy very shortly and unsympathetically that he must not go outside the gate until they returned.
“Can’t I go down to Ingleside for a little stroll?” implored Timothy. He wanted to buy something for Aunt Edith’s birthday tomorrow. He had a whole quarter saved out of his allowance and he meant to spend it all on her. There were pretty things in Lowbridge but Carter Flagg kept a glass case with some rather nice things in it. Timothy remembered a lace collar he admired.
But Aunt Kathleen was inexorable. Timothy did not sulk. He never sulked, which was more than could be said of even Jem Blythe, although you would have taken your life in your hands if you had said so to Susan Baker. But he put in a rather dismal forenoon. He ran races with Merrylegs. He counted and re-arranged his birds’ eggs, finding a little comfort in the thought that he had more than Jem had. He tried to jump from one gatepost to the other... and fell in the dust ignominiously. But he would do it some day. He had eaten all the lunch old Linda had set out for him. He also tried to talk to Linda, for Timothy was a sociable little soul. But Linda was grumpy, too. What was the matter with all the folks that day? Linda was usually good-natured, though he did not like her quite so well as Susan Baker at Ingleside. Timothy could not see how he was going to put in the afternoon.
Well, he would go down to the gate again and watch the cars and buggies going by. That wasn’t forbidden anyhow. He wished he had some raisins to eat. Every Sunday afternoon he was given a handful of big, juicy raisins to eat as a “Sunday treat.”
But this was only Saturday and when Linda was grumpy there was no use in asking her for anything. Though, if he had but known it, Linda would gladly have given him the raisins today.
“What are you thinking of, son?” asked a voice.
Timothy jumped. Where had the man come from? There hadn’t been any sound... any footstep. Yet there he was, just outside the gate, looking down at him with a peculiar expression on a handsome, sulky, deep-lined face. He wasn’t a tramp... he was too well-dressed for that. And Timothy, who was always feeling things he couldn’t have explained, had an idea that he wasn’t used to being so well-dressed.
The man’s eyes were grey and smouldering and Timothy felt, too, that he was cross about something... very cross... cross enough to do anything mean that occurred to him. This certainly must be what Mrs. Dr. Blythe called “a Jonah day.”
And yet there was something about the man that Timothy liked.
“I was thinking what a splendid day it would have been for the lake at Lowbridge,” he explained, rather stiffly, for he had always been warned not to talk to strangers.
“Oh, the lake! Yes, I remember what a fascinating spot it was for small boys... though it was not a ‘resort’ then and a good many people called it the pond. Did you want to go there?”
“Yes. Aunt Edith was going to take me. Then she couldn’t. She had to go to town on important business. Dr. Blythe took them.”
“Dr. Blythe! Is he still in Glen St. Mary?”
“Yes, but they live at Ingleside now.”
“Oh! And is your Aunt Kathleen at home?”
Timothy thawed. This man knew Aunt Kathleen, therefore it was allowable to talk to him.
“No, she went, too.”
“When will they be back?”
“Not till the evening. They went to town to see a lawyer. I heard Linda say so.”
“Oh!” The man reflected a moment and then gave a queer inward chuckle. Timothy didn’t like the sound of it particularly.
“Are you a friend of Aunt Kathleen?” he inquired politely.
The man laughed again.
“A friend. Oh, yes, a very near and dear friend. I’m sure she’d have been delighted to see me.”
“You must call again,” said Timothy persuasively.
“It’s quite likely I shall,” said the man.
He sat down on the big red boulder by the gate, lighted a cigarette with fingers that were strangely rough and callous, and looked Timothy over in a cool, appraising manner.
A trim little lad... well set up... curly brown hair... dreamy eyes and a good chin.
“Whom do you look like, boy?” he said abruptly. “Your dad?”
Timothy shook his head.
“No. I wish I did. But I don’t know what he looked like. He’s dead... and there isn’t any picture.”
“There wouldn’t be,” said the man. Again Timothy didn’t like it.
“My dad was a very brave man,” he said quickly. “He was a soldier in the Boer War and he won the Distinguished Service Medal.”
“Who told you that?”
“Aunt Edith. Aunt Kathleen won’t talk of him ever. Aunt Edith won’t either... much... but she told me that.”
“Edith was always a bit of a good scout,” muttered the man. “You don’t look like your... your... mother either.”
“No, I can see that. I have a picture of mother. She died when I was born. Aunt Edith says I look like Grandfather Norris... her father. I’m called after him.”
“Are your aunts good to you?” asked the man.
“They are,” said Timothy emphatically. He would have said the same thing if they had not been. Timothy had a fine sense of loyalty. “Of course... you know... they’re bringing me up. I have to be scolded sometimes... and I have to take music lessons...”
“You don’t like that,” said the man, amused.
“No. But I guess maybe it’s good dis... cipline.”
“You have a dog, I see,” said the man, indicating Merrylegs. “Good breed, too. I thought Kathleen and Edith never liked dogs.”
“They don’t. But they let me have one because Dr. Blythe said every boy ought to have a dog. So my aunts gave in. They don’t even say anything when he sleeps on my bed at nights. They don’t approve of it, you know, but they let him stay. I’m glad because I don’t like going to sleep in the dark.”
“Do they make you do that?”
“Oh, it’s all right,” said Timothy quickly. He wasn’t going to have anyone imagine that he was finding fault with his aunts. “I’m quite old enough to go to sleep in the dark. Only... only...”
“Yes?”
“It’s only that when the light goes out I can’t help imagining faces looking in at the window... awful faces... hateful faces. I heard Aunt Kathleen say once that she was always expecting to look at the window and ‘see his face.’ I don’t know who she meant... but after that I began to see faces in the dark.”
“Your mother was like that,” said the man absently. “She hated the dark. They shouldn’t make you sleep in it.”
“They should,” cried Timothy. “My aunts are bricks. I love them. And I wish they weren’t so worried.”
“Oh, so they’re worried?”
“Terribly.
I don’t know what it is about. I can’t think it’s me... though they look at me sometimes... Do you see anything about me to worry them?”
“Not a thing. So your aunts are pretty good to you? Give you everything you want?”
“Almost everything,” said Timothy cautiously. “Only they won’t have raisins in the rice pudding on Fridays. I can’t imagine why. They always have it at Ingleside. The doctor is especially fond of it, so it must be healthy. Aunt Edith would be willing but Aunt Kathleen says the Norrises have never put raisins in the rice pudding. Oh, are you going?” The man had stood up. He was very tall but he stooped a little. Timothy was sorry he was going although there was something about him he didn’t like, just as there was something he did. And it was nice to have a man to talk to.
“I’m going down to the lake,” said the man. “Would you like to come with me?”
Timothy stared.
“Do you want me to?”
“Very much. We’ll ride on the ponies and eat hot dogs and drink pop... and anything you like.”
It was an irresistible temptation.
“But... but,” stammered Timothy, “Aunt Kathleen said I wasn’t to go off the grounds.”
“Not alone,” said the man. “She meant not alone. I’m sure she’d think it quite... lawful... to go with me.”
“Are you quite sure?”
“Quite,” said the man... and laughed again.
“About the money,” faltered Timothy. “You see I’ve only ten cents. Of course I’ve got a quarter from my allowance but I can’t spend it. I must get Aunt Edith a birthday present with it. But I can spend the ten cents... I’ve had it a long time. I found it on the road.”
“This is my treat,” said the man.
“I must go and shut Merrylegs up,” said Timothy, relieved, “and wash my face and hands. You won’t mind waiting a few minutes?”
“Not at all.”
Timothy flew up the driveway and disposed rather regret-fully of Merrylegs. Then he scrubbed himself, giving special attention to his ears. He hoped they were clean. Why couldn’t ears have been made plain? When Jem Blythe asked Susan Baker the same question one day she told him it was the will of God.
The Complete Works of L M Montgomery Page 572