“I do,” said Natty, “but I thought you said you were full.”
“I guess I can make room for you,” said Cooper. “A boy with such grit and muscle ain’t to be allowed to go to seed on Blue Point, that’s what. Yesser, we’ll make room for you.”
And Natty’s cup of happiness was full.
Penelope’s Party Waist
“It’s perfectly horrid to be so poor,” grumbled Penelope. Penelope did not often grumble, but just now, as she sat tapping with one pink-tipped finger her invitation to Blanche Anderson’s party, she felt that grumbling was the only relief she had.
Penelope was seventeen, and when one is seventeen and cannot go to a party because one hasn’t a suitable dress to wear, the world is very apt to seem a howling wilderness.
“I wish I could think of some way to get you a new waist,” said Doris, with what these sisters called “the poverty pucker” coming in the centre of her pretty forehead. “If your black skirt were sponged and pressed and re-hung, it would do very well.”
Penelope saw the poverty pucker and immediately repented with all her impetuous heart having grumbled. That pucker came often enough without being brought there by extra worries.
“Well, there is no use sitting here sighing for the unattainable,” she said, jumping up briskly. “I’d better be putting my grey matter into that algebra instead of wasting it plotting for a party dress that I certainly can’t get. It’s a sad thing for a body to lack brains when she wants to be a teacher, isn’t it? If I could only absorb algebra and history as I can music, what a blessing it would be! Come now, Dorrie dear, smooth that pucker out. Next year I shall be earning a princely salary, which we can squander on party gowns at will — if people haven’t given up inviting us by that time, in sheer despair of ever being able to conquer our exclusiveness.”
Penelope went off to her detested algebra with a laugh, but the pucker did not go out of Doris’ forehead. She wanted Penelope to go to that party.
Penelope has studied so hard all winter and she hasn’t gone anywhere, thought the older sister wistfully. She is getting discouraged over those examinations and she needs just a good, jolly time to hearten her up. If it could only be managed!
But Doris did not see how it could. It took every cent of her small salary as typewriter in an uptown office to run their tiny establishment and keep Penelope in school dresses and books. Indeed, she could not have done even that much if they had not owned their little cottage. Next year it would be easier if Penelope got through her examinations successfully, but just now there was absolutely not a spare penny.
“It is hard to be poor. We are a pair of misfits,” said Doris, with a patient little smile, thinking of Penelope’s uncultivated talent for music and her own housewifely gifts, which had small chance of flowering out in her business life.
Doris dreamed of pretty dresses all that night and thought about them all the next day. So, it must be confessed, did Penelope, though she would not have admitted it for the world.
When Doris reached home the next evening, she found Penelope hovering over a bulky parcel on the sitting-room table.
“I’m so glad you’ve come,” she said with an exaggerated gasp of relief. “I really don’t think my curiosity could have borne the strain for another five minutes. The expressman brought this parcel an hour ago, and there’s a letter for you from Aunt Adella on the clock shelf, and I think they belong to each other. Hurry up and find out. Dorrie, darling, what if it should be a — a — present of some sort or other!”
“I suppose it can’t be anything else,” smiled Doris. She knew that Penelope had started out to say “a new dress.” She cut the strings and removed the wrappings. Both girls stared.
“Is it — it isn’t — yes, it is! Doris Hunter, I believe it’s an old quilt!”
Doris unfolded the odd present with a queer feeling of disappointment. She did not know just what she had expected the package to contain, but certainly not this. She laughed a little shakily.
“Well, we can’t say after this that Aunt Adella never gave us anything,” she said, when she had opened her letter. “Listen, Penelope.”
My Dear Doris:
I have decided to give up housekeeping and go out West to live with Robert. So I am disposing of such of the family heirlooms as I do not wish to take with me. I am sending you by express your Grandmother Hunter’s silk quilt. It is a handsome article still and I hope you will prize it as you should. It took your grandmother five years to make it. There is a bit of the wedding dress of every member of the family in it. Love to Penelope and yourself.
Your affectionate aunt,
Adella Hunter.
“I don’t see its beauty,” said Penelope with a grimace. “It may have been pretty once, but it is all faded now. It is a monument of patience, though. The pattern is what they call ‘Little Thousands,’ isn’t it? Tell me, Dorrie, does it argue a lack of proper respect for my ancestors that I can’t feel very enthusiastic over this heirloom — especially when Grandmother Hunter died years before I was born?”
“It was very kind of Aunt Adella to send it,” said Doris dutifully.
“Oh, very,” agreed Penelope drolly. “Only don’t ever ask me to sleep under it. It would give me the nightmare. O-o-h!”
This last was a little squeal of admiration as Doris turned the quilt over and brought to view the shimmering lining.
“Why, the wrong side is ever so much prettier than the right!” exclaimed Penelope. “What lovely, old-timey stuff! And not a bit faded.”
The lining was certainly very pretty. It was a soft, creamy yellow silk, with a design of brocaded pink rosebuds all over it.
“That was a dress Grandmother Hunter had when she was a girl,” said Doris absently. “I remember hearing Aunt Adella speak of it. When it became old-fashioned, Grandmother used it to line her quilt. I declare, it is as good as new.”
“Well, let us go and have tea,” said Penelope. “I’m decidedly hungry. Besides, I see the poverty pucker coming. Put the quilt in the spare room. It is something to possess an heirloom, after all. It gives one a nice, important-family feeling.”
After tea, when Penelope was patiently grinding away at her studies and thinking dolefully enough of the near-approaching examinations, which she dreaded, and of teaching, which she confidently expected to hate, Doris went up to the tiny spare room to look at the wrong side of the quilt again.
“It would make the loveliest party waist,” she said under her breath. “Creamy yellow is Penelope’s colour, and I could use that bit of old black lace and those knots of velvet ribbon that I have to trim it. I wonder if Grandmother Hunter’s reproachful spirit will forever haunt me if I do it.”
Doris knew very well that she would do it — had known it ever since she had looked at that lovely lining and a vision of Penelope’s vivid face and red-brown hair rising above a waist of the quaint old silk had flashed before her mental sight. That night, after Penelope had gone to bed, Doris ripped the lining out of Grandmother Hunter’s silk quilt.
“If Aunt Adella saw me now!” she laughed softly to herself as she worked.
In the three following evenings Doris made the waist. She thought it a wonderful bit of good luck that Penelope went out each of the evenings to study some especially difficult problems with a school chum.
“It will be such a nice surprise for her,” the sister mused jubilantly.
Penelope was surprised as much as the tender, sisterly heart could wish when Doris flashed out upon her triumphantly on the evening of the party with the black skirt nicely pressed and re-hung, and the prettiest waist imaginable — a waist that was a positive “creation” of dainty rose-besprinkled silk, with a girdle and knots of black velvet.
“Doris Hunter, you are a veritable little witch! Do you mean to tell me that you conjured that perfectly lovely thing for me out of the lining of Grandmother Hunter’s quilt?”
So Penelope went to Blanche’s party and her dress was the admirati
on of every girl there. Mrs. Fairweather, who was visiting Mrs. Anderson, looked closely at it also. She was a very sweet old lady, with silver hair, which she wore in delightful, old-fashioned puffs, and she had very bright, dark eyes. Penelope thought her altogether charming.
“She looks as if she had just stepped out of the frame of some lovely old picture,” she said to herself. “I wish she belonged to me. I’d just love to have a grandmother like her. And I do wonder who it is I’ve seen who looks so much like her.”
A little later on the knowledge came to her suddenly, and she thought with inward surprise: Why, it is Doris, of course. If my sister Doris lives to be seventy years old and wears her hair in pretty white puffs, she will look exactly as Mrs. Fairweather does now.
Mrs. Fairweather asked to have Penelope introduced to her, and when they found themselves alone together she said gently, “My dear, I am going to ask a very impertinent question. Will you tell me where you got the silk of which your waist is made?”
Poor Penelope’s pretty young face turned crimson. She was not troubled with false pride by any means, but she simply could not bring herself to tell Mrs. Fairweather that her waist was made out of the lining of an old heirloom quilt.
“My Aunt Adella gave me — gave us — the material,” she stammered. “And my elder sister Doris made the waist for me. I think the silk once belonged to my Grandmother Hunter.”
“What was your grandmother’s maiden name?” asked Mrs. Fairweather eagerly.
“Penelope Saverne. I am named after her.”
Mrs. Fairweather suddenly put her arm about Penelope and drew the young girl to her, her lovely old face aglow with delight and tenderness.
“Then you are my grandniece,” she said. “Your grandmother was my half-sister. When I saw your dress, I felt sure you were related to her. I should recognize that rosebud silk if I came across it in Thibet. Penelope Saverne was the daughter of my mother by her first husband. Penelope was four years older than I was, but we were devoted to each other. Oddly enough, our birthdays fell on the same day, and when Penelope was twenty and I sixteen, my father gave us each a silk dress of this very material. I have mine yet.
“Soon after this our mother died and our household was broken up. Penelope went to live with her aunt and I went West with Father. This was long ago, you know, when travelling and correspondence were not the easy, matter-of-course things they are now. After a few years I lost touch with my half-sister. I married out West and have lived there all my life. I never knew what had become of Penelope. But tonight, when I saw you come in in that waist made of the rosebud silk, the whole past rose before me and I felt like a girl again. My dear, I am a very lonely old woman, with nobody belonging to me. You don’t know how delighted I am to find that I have two grandnieces.”
Penelope had listened silently, like a girl in a dream. Now she patted Mrs. Fairweather’s soft old hand affectionately.
“It sounds like a storybook,” she said gaily. “You must come and see Doris. She is such a darling sister. I wouldn’t have had this waist if it hadn’t been for her. I will tell you the whole truth — I don’t mind it now. Doris made my party waist for me out of the lining of an old silk quilt of Grandmother Hunter’s that Aunt Adella sent us.”
Mrs. Fairweather did go to see Doris the very next day, and quite wonderful things came to pass from that interview. Doris and Penelope found their lives and plans changed in the twinkling of an eye. They were both to go and live with Aunt Esther — as Mrs. Fairweather had said they must call her. Penelope was to have, at last, her longed-for musical education and Doris was to be the home girl.
“You must take the place of my own dear little granddaughter,” said Aunt Esther. “She died six years ago, and I have been so lonely since.”
When Mrs. Fairweather had gone, Doris and Penelope looked at each other.
“Pinch me, please,” said Penelope. “I’m half afraid I’ll wake up and find I have been dreaming. Isn’t it all wonderful, Doris Hunter?”
Doris nodded radiantly.
“Oh, Penelope, think of it! Music for you — somebody to pet and fuss over for me — and such a dear, sweet aunty for us both!”
“And no more contriving party waists out of old silk linings,” laughed Penelope. “But it was very fortunate that you did it for once, sister mine. And no more poverty puckers,” she concluded.
The Girl and The Wild Race
“If Judith would only get married,” Mrs. Theodora Whitney was wont to sigh dolorously.
Now, there was no valid reason why Judith ought to get married unless she wanted to. But Judith was twenty-seven and Mrs. Theodora thought it was a terrible disgrace to be an old maid.
“There has never been an old maid in our family so far back as we know of,” she lamented. “And to think that there should be one now! It just drags us down to the level of the McGregors. They have always been noted for their old maids.”
Judith took all her aunt’s lamentations good-naturedly. Sometimes she argued the subject placidly.
“Why are you in such a hurry to be rid of me, Aunt Theo? I’m sure we’re very comfortable here together and you know you would miss me terribly if I went away.”
“If you took the right one you wouldn’t go so very far,” said Mrs. Theodora, darkly significant. “And, anyhow, I’d put up with any amount of lonesomeness rather than have an old maid in the family. It’s all very fine now, when you’re still young enough and good looking, with lots of beaus at your beck and call. But that won’t last much longer and if you go on with your dilly-dallying you’ll wake up some fine day to find that your time for choosing has gone by. Your mother used to be dreadful proud of your good looks when you was a baby. I told her she needn’t be. Nine times out of ten a beauty don’t marry as well as an ordinary girl.”
“I’m not much set on marrying at all,” declared Judith sharply. Any reference to the “right one” always disturbed her placidity. The real root of the trouble was that Mrs. Theodora’s “right one” and Judith’s “right one” were two different people.
The Ramble Valley young men were very fond of dancing attendance on Judith, even if she were verging on old maidenhood. Her prettiness was undeniable; the Stewarts came to maturity late and at twenty-seven Judith’s dower of milky-white flesh, dimpled red lips and shining bronze hair was at its fullest splendor. Besides, she was “jolly,” and jollity went a long way in Ramble Valley popularity.
Of all Judith’s admirers Eben King alone found favor in Mrs. Theodora’s eyes. He owned the adjoining farm, was well off and homely — so homely that Judith declared it made her eyes ache to look at him.
Bruce Marshall, Judith’s “right one” was handsome, but Mrs. Theodora looked upon him with sour disapproval. He owned a stony little farm at the remote end of Ramble Valley and was reputed to be fonder of many things than of work. To be sure, Judith had enough capability and energy for two; but Mrs. Theodora detested a lazy man. She ordered Judith not to encourage him and Judith obeyed. Judith generally obeyed her aunt; but, though she renounced Bruce Marshall, she would have nothing to do with Eben King or anybody else and all Mrs. Theodora’s grumblings did not mend matters.
The afternoon that Mrs. Tony Mack came in Mrs. Theodora felt more aggrieved than ever. Ellie McGregor had been married the previous week — Ellie, who was the same age as Judith and not half so good looking. Mrs. Theodora had been nagging Judith ever since.
“But I might as well talk to the trees down there in that hollow,” she complained to Mrs. Tony. “That girl is so set and contrary minded. She doesn’t care a bit for my feelings.”
This was not said behind Judith’s back. The girl herself was standing at the open door, drinking in all the delicate, evasive beauty of the spring afternoon. The Whitney house crested a bare hill that looked down on misty intervals, feathered with young firs that were golden green in the pale sunlight. The fields were bare and smoking, although the lanes and shadowy places were full of moist snow. Judith’s
face was aglow with the delight of mere life and she bent out to front the brisk, dancing wind that blew up from the valley, resinous with the odors of firs and damp mosses.
At her aunt’s words the glow went out of her face. She listened with her eyes brooding on the hollow and a glowing flame of temper smouldering in them. Judith’s long patience was giving way. She had been flicked on the raw too often of late. And now her aunt was confiding her grievances to Mrs. Tony Mack — the most notorious gossip in Ramble Valley or out of it!
“I can’t sleep at nights for worrying over what will become of her when I’m gone,” went on Mrs. Theodora dismally. “She’ll just have to live on alone here — a lonesome, withered-up old maid. And her that might have had her pick, Mrs. Tony, though I do say it as shouldn’t. You must feel real thankful to have all your girls married off — especially when none of them was extry good-looking. Some people have all the luck. I’m tired of talking to Judith. Folks’ll be saying soon that nobody ever really wanted her, for all her flirting. But she just won’t marry.”
“I will!”
Judith whirled about on the sun warm door step and came in. Her black eyes were flashing and her round cheeks were crimson.
“Such a temper you never saw!” reported Mrs. Tony afterwards. “Though ‘tweren’t to be wondered at. Theodora was most awful aggravating.”
“I will,” repeated Judith stormily. “I’m tired of being nagged day in and day out. I’ll marry — and what is more I’ll marry the very first man that asks me — that I will, if it is old Widower Delane himself! How does that suit you, Aunt Theodora?”
Mrs. Theodora’s mental processes were never slow. She dropped her knitting ball and stooped for it. In that time she had decided what to do. She knew that Judith would stick to her word, Stewart-like, and she must trim her sails to catch this new wind.
“It suits me real well, Judith,” she said calmly, “you can marry the first man that asks you and I’ll say no word to hinder.”
The Complete Works of L M Montgomery Page 653