Chronicles of Avonlea, by Lucy Maud Montgomery TO THE
MEMORY OF Mrs. William A. Houston, A DEAR
FRIEND, WHO HAS GONE BEYOND
The
unsung beauty hid life's common things
below. --Whittier
Contents
I.
The Hurrying of Ludovic
II. Old Lady Lloyd
III. Each
In His Own Tongue
IV. Little Joscelyn
V. The
Winning of Lucinda
VI. Old Man Shaw's Girl
VII. Aunt
Olivia's Beau
VIII. The Quarantine at Alexander
Abraham's
IX. Pa Sloane's Purchase
X. The Courting
of Prissy Strong
XI. The Miracle at Carmody
XII. The
End of a Quarrel
CHRONICLES OF AVONLEA
I.
The Hurrying of Ludovic
Anne Shirley was curled up on the window-seat
of Theodora Dix's sitting-room one Saturday evening, looking dreamily afar at
some fair starland beyond the hills of sunset. Anne was visiting for a
fortnight of her vacation at Echo Lodge, where Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Irving
were spending the summer, and she often ran over to the old Dix
homestead to chat for awhile with Theodora. They had had their chat out, on
this particular evening, and Anne was giving herself over to the delight
of building an air-castle. She leaned her shapely head, with its
braided coronet of dark red hair, against the window-casing, and her gray
eyes were like the moonlight gleam of shadowy pools.
Then she saw
Ludovic Speed coming down the lane. He was yet far from the house, for the
Dix lane was a long one, but Ludovic could be recognized as far as he could
be seen. No one else in Middle Grafton had such a tall, gently-stooping,
placidly-moving figure. In every kink and turn of it there was an
individuality all Ludovic's own.
Anne roused herself from her dreams,
thinking it would only be tactful to take her departure. Ludovic was courting
Theodora. Everyone in Grafton knew that, or, if anyone were in ignorance of
the fact, it was not because he had not had time to find out. Ludovic had
been coming down that lane to see Theodora, in the same ruminating,
unhastening fashion, for fifteen years!
When Anne, who was slim and
girlish and romantic, rose to go, Theodora, who was plump and middle-aged and
practical, said, with a twinkle in her eye:
"There isn't any hurry,
child. Sit down and have your call out. You've seen Ludovic coming down the
lane, and, I suppose, you think you'll be a crowd. But you won't. Ludovic
rather likes a third person around, and so do I. It spurs up the conversation
as it were. When a man has been coming to see you straight along, twice a
week for fifteen years, you get rather talked out by spells."
Theodora
never pretended to bashfulness where Ludovic was concerned. She was not at
all shy of referring to him and his dilatory courtship. Indeed, it seemed to
amuse her.
Anne sat down again and together they watched Ludovic coming
down the lane, gazing calmly about him at the lush clover fields and the
blue loops of the river winding in and out of the misty valley
below.
Anne looked at Theodora's placid, finely-moulded face and tried
to imagine what she herself would feel like if she were sitting
there, waiting for an elderly lover who had, seemingly, taken so long to
make up his mind. But even Anne's imagination failed her for
this.
"Anyway," she thought, impatiently, "if I wanted him I think I'd
find some way of hurrying him up. Ludovic SPEED! Was there ever such a
misfit of a name? Such a name for such a man is a delusion and a
snare."
Presently Ludovic got to the house, but stood so long on the
doorstep in a brown study, gazing into the tangled green boskage of the
cherry orchard, that Theodora finally went and opened the door before
he knocked. As she brought him into the sitting-room she made a
comical grimace at Anne over his shoulder.
Ludovic smiled pleasantly
at Anne. He liked her; she was the only young girl he knew, for he generally
avoided young girls--they made him feel awkward and out of place. But Anne
did not affect him in this fashion. She had a way of getting on with all
sorts of people, and, although they had not known her very long, both Ludovic
and Theodora looked upon her as an old friend.
Ludovic was tall and
somewhat ungainly, but his unhesitating placidity gave him the appearance of
a dignity that did not otherwise pertain to him. He had a drooping, silky,
brown moustache, and a little curly tuft of imperial,--a fashion which was
regarded as eccentric in Grafton, where men had clean-shaven chins or went
full-bearded. His eyes were dreamy and pleasant, with a touch of melancholy
in their blue depths.
He sat down in the big bulgy old armchair that had
belonged to Theodora's father. Ludovic always sat there, and Anne declared
that the chair had come to look like him.
The conversation soon grew
animated enough. Ludovic was a good talker when he had somebody to draw him
out. He was well read, and frequently surprised Anne by his shrewd comments
on men and matters out in the world, of which only the faint echoes reached
Deland River. He had also a liking for religious arguments with Theodora, who
did not care much for politics or the making of history, but was avid of
doctrines, and read everything pertaining thereto. When the conversation
drifted into an eddy of friendly wrangling between Ludovic and Theodora
over Christian Science, Anne understood that her usefulness was ended for
the time being, and that she would not be missed.
"It's star time and
good-night time," she said, and went away quietly.
But she had to stop to
laugh when she was well out of sight of the house, in a green meadow
bestarred with the white and gold of daisies. A wind, odour-freighted, blew
daintily across it. Anne leaned against a white birch tree in the corner and
laughed heartily, as she was apt to do whenever she thought of Ludovic and
Theodora. To her eager youth, this courtship of theirs seemed a very amusing
thing. She liked Ludovic, but allowed herself to be provoked with
him.
"The dear, big, irritating goose!" she said aloud. "There never was
such a lovable idiot before. He's just like the alligator in the old
rhyme, who wouldn't go along, and wouldn't keep still, but just kept bobbing
up and down."
Two evenings later, when Anne went over to the Dix
place, she and Theodora drifted into a conversation about Ludovic. Theodora,
who was the most industrious soul alive, and had a mania for fancy work
into the bargain, was busying her smooth, plump fingers with a very
elaborate Battenburg lace centre-piece. Anne was lying back in a little
rocker, with her slim hands folded in her lap, watching Theodora. She
realized that Theodora was very handsome, in a stately, Juno-like fashion
of firm, white flesh, large, clearly-chiselled outlines, and great,
cowey, brown eyes. When Theodora was not smiling, she looked very
imposing. Anne thought it likely that Ludovic held her in awe.
"Did
you and Ludovic talk about Christian Science ALL Saturday evening?" she
asked.
Theodora overflowed into a smile.
"Yes, and we even
quarrelled over it. At least _I_ did. Ludovic wouldn't quarrel with anyone.
You have to fight air when you spar with him. I hate to square up to a person
who won't hit back."
"Theodora," said Anne coaxingly, "I am going to be
curious and impertinent. You can snub me if you like. Why don't you and
Ludovic get married?"
Theodora laughed comfortably.
"That's the
question Grafton folks have been asking for quite a while, I reckon, Anne.
Well, I'd have no objection to marrying Ludovic. That's frank enough for you,
isn't it? But it's not easy to marry a man unless he asks you. And Ludovic
has never asked me."
"Is he too shy?" persisted Anne. Since Theodora was
in the mood, she meant to sift this puzzling affair to the
bottom.
Theodora dropped her work and looked meditatively out over the
green slopes of the summer world.
"No, I don't think it is that.
Ludovic isn't shy. It's just his way--the Speed way. The Speeds are all
dreadfully deliberate. They spend years thinking over a thing before they
make up their minds to do it. Sometimes they get so much in the habit of
thinking about it that they never get over it--like old Alder Speed, who was
always talking of going to England to see his brother, but never went, though
there was no earthly reason why he shouldn't. They're not lazy, you know, but
they love to take their time."
"And Ludovic is just an aggravated case
of Speedism," suggested Anne.
"Exactly. He never hurried in his life.
Why, he has been thinking for the last six years of getting his house
painted. He talks it over with me every little while, and picks out the
colour, and there the matter stays. He's fond of me, and he means to ask me
to have him sometime. The only question is--will the time ever
come?"
"Why don't you hurry him up?" asked Anne
impatiently.
Theodora went back to her stitches with another
laugh.
"If Ludovic could be hurried up, I'm not the one to do it. I'm too
shy. It sounds ridiculous to hear a woman of my age and inches say that,
but it is true. Of course, I know it's the only way any Speed ever did
make out to get married. For instance, there's a cousin of mine married
to Ludovic's brother. I don't say she proposed to him out and out,
but, mind you, Anne, it wasn't far from it. I couldn't do anything like
that. I DID try once. When I realized that I was getting sere and mellow,
and all the girls of my generation were going off on either hand, I tried
to give Ludovic a hint. But it stuck in my throat. And now I don't mind.
If I don't change Dix to Speed until I take the initiative, it will be
Dix to the end of life. Ludovic doesn't realize that we are growing old,
you know. He thinks we are giddy young folks yet, with plenty of time
before us. That's the Speed failing. They never find out they're alive
until they're dead."
"You're fond of Ludovic, aren't you?" asked Anne,
detecting a note of real bitterness among Theodora's paradoxes.
"Laws,
yes," said Theodora candidly. She did not think it worth while to blush over
so settled a fact. "I think the world and all of Ludovic. And he certainly
does need somebody to look after HIM. He's neglected--he looks frayed. You
can see that for yourself. That old aunt of his looks after his house in some
fashion, but she doesn't look after him. And he's coming now to the age when
a man needs to be looked after and coddled a bit. I'm lonesome here, and
Ludovic is lonesome up there, and it does seem ridiculous, doesn't it? I
don't wonder that we're the standing joke of Grafton. Goodness knows, I laugh
at it enough myself. I've sometimes thought that if Ludovic could be made
jealous it might spur him along. But I never could flirt and there's nobody
to flirt with if I could. Everybody hereabouts looks upon me as Ludovic's
property and nobody would dream of interfering with him."
"Theodora,"
cried Anne, "I have a plan!"
"Now, what are you going to do?" exclaimed
Theodora.
Anne told her. At first Theodora laughed and protested. In the
end, she yielded somewhat doubtfully, overborne by Anne's
enthusiasm.
"Well, try it, then," she said, resignedly. "If Ludovic gets
mad and leaves me, I'll be worse off than ever. But nothing venture,
nothing win. And there is a fighting chance, I suppose. Besides, I must
admit I'm tired of his dilly-dallying."
Anne went back to Echo Lodge
tingling with delight in her plot. She hunted up Arnold Sherman, and told him
what was required of him. Arnold Sherman listened and laughed. He was an
elderly widower, an intimate friend of Stephen Irving, and had come down to
spend part of the summer with him and his wife in Prince Edward Island. He
was handsome in a mature style, and he had a dash of mischief in him still,
so that he entered readily enough into Anne's plan. It amused him to think
of hurrying Ludovic Speed, and he knew that Theodora Dix could be
depended on to do her part. The comedy would not be dull, whatever its
outcome.
The curtain rose on the first act after prayer meeting on the
next Thursday night. It was bright moonlight when the people came out
of church, and everybody saw it plainly. Arnold Sherman stood upon
the steps close to the door, and Ludovic Speed leaned up against a corner
of the graveyard fence, as he had done for years. The boys said he had
worn the paint off that particular place. Ludovic knew of no reason why
he should paste himself up against the church door. Theodora would come
out as usual, and he would join her as she went past the corner.
This
was what happened, Theodora came down the steps, her stately figure outlined
in its darkness against the gush of lamplight from the porch. Arnold Sherman
asked her if he might see her home. Theodora took his arm calmly, and
together they swept past the stupefied Ludovic, who stood helplessly gazing
after them as if unable to believe his eyes.
For a few moments he stood
there limply; then he started down the road after his fickle lady and her new
admirer. The boys and irresponsible young men crowded after, expecting some
excitement, but they were disappointed. Ludovic strode on until he overtook
Theodora and Arnold Sherman, and then fell meekly in behind
them.
Theodora hardly enjoyed her walk home, although Arnold Sherman
laid himself out to be especially entertaining. Her heart yearned
after Ludovic, whose shuffling footsteps she heard behind her. She feared
that she had been very cruel, but she was in for it now. She steeled
herself by the reflection that it was all for his own good, and she talked
to Arnold Sherman as if he were the one man in the world. Poor,
deserted Ludovic, following humbly behind, heard her, and if Theodora had
known how bitter the cup she was holding to his lips really was, she
would never have been resolute enough to present it, no matter for
what ultimate good.
When she and Arnold turned in at her gate, Ludovic
had to stop. Theodora looked over her shoulder and saw him standing still on
the road. His forlorn figure haunted her thoughts all night. If Anne had not
run over the next day and bolstered up her convictions, she might have
spoiled everything by prematurely relenting.
Ludovic, meanwhile, stood
still on the road, quite oblivious to the hoots and comments of the vastly
amused small boy contingent, until Theodora and his rival disappeared from
his view under the firs in the hollow of her lane. Then he turned about and
went home, not with his usual leisurely amble, but with a perturbed stride
which proclaimed his inward disquiet.
He felt bewildered. If the world
had come suddenly to an end or if the lazy, meandering Grafton River had
turned about and flowed up hill, Ludovic could not have been more astonished.
For fifteen years he had walked home from meetings with Theodora; and now
this elderly stranger, with all the glamour of "the States" hanging about
him, had coolly walked off with her under Ludovic's very nose. Worse--most
unkindest cut of all--Theodora had gone with him willingly; nay, she had
evidently enjoyed his company. Ludovic felt the stirring of a righteous anger
in his easy-going soul.
When he reached the end of his lane, he paused
at his gate, and looked at his house, set back from the lane in a crescent of
birches. Even in the moonlight, its weather-worn aspect was plainly visible.
He thought of the "palatial residence" rumour ascribed to Arnold Sherman in
Boston, and stroked his chin nervously with his sunburnt fingers. Then
he doubled up his fist and struck it smartly on the
gate-post.
"Theodora needn't think she is going to jilt me in this
fashion, after keeping company with me for fifteen years," he said.
"I'LL have something to say to it, Arnold Sherman or no Arnold Sherman.
The impudence of the puppy!"
The next morning Ludovic drove to Carmody
and engaged Joshua Pye to come and paint his house, and that evening,
although he was not due till Saturday night, he went down to see
Theodora.
Arnold Sherman was there before him, and was actually sitting
in Ludovic's own prescriptive chair. Ludovic had to deposit himself
in Theodora's new wicker rocker, where he looked and felt lamentably out
of place.
If Theodora felt the situation to be awkward, she carried it
off superbly. She had never looked handsomer, and Ludovic perceived that
she wore her second best silk dress. He wondered miserably if she had
donned it in expectation of his rival's call. She had never put on silk
dresses for him. Ludovic had always been the meekest and mildest of mortals,
but he felt quite murderous as he sat mutely there and listened to
Arnold Sherman's polished conversation.
"You should just have been
here to see him glowering," Theodora told the delighted Anne the next day.
"It may be wicked of me, but I felt real glad. I was afraid he might stay
away and sulk. So long as he comes here and sulks I don't worry. But he is
feeling badly enough, poor soul, and I'm really eaten up by remorse. He tried
to outstay Mr. Sherman last night, but he didn't manage it. You never saw a
more depressed-looking creature than he was as he hurried down the lane. Yes,
he actually hurried."
The following Sunday evening Arnold Sherman
walked to church with Theodora, and sat with her. When they came in Ludovic
Speed suddenly stood up in his pew under the gallery. He sat down again at
once, but everybody in view had seen him, and that night folks in all the
length and breadth of Grafton River discussed the dramatic occurrence with
keen enjoyment.
"Yes, he jumped right up as if he was pulled on his
feet, while the minister was reading the chapter," said his cousin, Lorella
Speed, who had been in church, to her sister, who had not. "His face was as
white as a sheet, and his eyes were just glaring out of his head. I never
felt so thrilled, I declare! I almost expected him to fly at them then
and there. But he just gave a sort of gasp and set down again. I don't
know whether Theodora Dix saw him or not. She looked as cool and
unconcerned as you please."
Theodora had not seen Ludovic, but if she
looked cool and unconcerned, her appearance belied her, for she felt
miserably flustered. She could not prevent Arnold Sherman coming to church
with her, but it seemed to her like going too far. People did not go to
church and sit together in Grafton unless they were the next thing to being
engaged. What if this filled Ludovic with the narcotic of despair instead of
wakening him up! She sat through the service in misery and heard not one word
of the sermon.
But Ludovic's spectacular performances were not yet
over. The Speeds might be hard to get started, but once they were started
their momentum was irresistible. When Theodora and Mr. Sherman came out,
Ludovic was waiting on the steps. He stood up straight and stern, with his
head thrown back and his shoulders squared. There was open defiance in
the look he cast on his rival, and masterfulness in the mere touch of
the hand he laid on Theodora's arm.
"May I see you home, Miss Dix?"
his words said. His tone said, "I am going to see you home whether or
no."
Theodora, with a deprecating look at Arnold Sherman, took his
arm, and Ludovic marched her across the green amid a silence which the
very horses tied to the storm fence seemed to share. For Ludovic 'twas
a crowded hour of glorious life.
Anne walked all the way over from
Avonlea the next day to hear the news. Theodora smiled
consciously.
"Yes, it is really settled at last, Anne. Coming home last
night Ludovic asked me plump and plain to marry him,--Sunday and all as it
was. It's to be right away--for Ludovic won't be put off a week longer
than necessary."
"So Ludovic Speed has been hurried up to some purpose
at last," said Mr. Sherman, when Anne called in at Echo Lodge, brimful with
her news. "And you are delighted, of course, and my poor pride must be the
scapegoat. I shall always be remembered in Grafton as the man from Boston who
wanted Theodora Dix and couldn't get her."
"But that won't be true,
you know," said Anne comfortingly.
Arnold Sherman thought of Theodora's
ripe beauty, and the mellow companionableness she had revealed in their brief
intercourse.
"I'm not perfectly sure of that," he said, with a half
sigh.
II. Old Lady Lloyd
I. The May
Chapter
Spencervale gossip always said that "Old Lady Lloyd" was rich
and mean and proud. Gossip, as usual, was one-third right and two-thirds
wrong. Old Lady Lloyd was neither rich nor mean; in reality she was
pitifully poor--so poor that "Crooked Jack" Spencer, who dug her garden
and chopped her wood for her, was opulent by contrast, for he, at
least, never lacked three meals a day, and the Old Lady could sometimes
achieve no more than one. But she WAS very proud--so proud that she would
have died rather than let the Spencervale people, among whom she had
queened it in her youth, suspect how poor she was and to what straits
was sometimes reduced. She much preferred to have them think her miserly
and odd--a queer old recluse who never went anywhere, even to church,
and who paid the smallest subscription to the minister's salary of anyone
in the congregation.
"And her just rolling in wealth!" they said
indignantly. "Well, she didn't get her miserly ways from her parents. THEY
were real generous and neighbourly. There never was a finer gentleman than
old Doctor Lloyd. He was always doing kindnesses to everybody; and he had a
way of doing them that made you feel as if you was doing the favour, not
him. Well, well, let Old Lady Lloyd keep herself and her money to
herself if she wants to. If she doesn't want our company, she doesn't have
to suffer it, that's all. Reckon she isn't none too happy for all her
money and pride."
No, the Old Lady was none too happy, that was
unfortunately true. It is not easy to be happy when your life is eaten up
with loneliness and emptiness on the spiritual side, and when, on the
material side, all you have between you and starvation is the little money
your hens bring you in.
The Old Lady lived "away back at the old Lloyd
place," as it was always called. It was a quaint, low-eaved house, with big
chimneys and square windows and with spruces growing thickly all around it.
The Old Lady lived there all alone and there were weeks at a time when she
never saw a human being except Crooked Jack. What the Old Lady did with
herself and how she put in her time was a puzzle the Spencervale people
could not solve. The children believed she amused herself counting the gold
in the big black box under her bed. Spencervale children held the Old
Lady in mortal terror; some of them--the "Spencer Road" fry--believed
she was a witch; all of them would run if, when wandering about the
woods in search of berries or spruce gum, they saw at a distance the
spare, upright form of the Old Lady, gathering sticks for her fire. Mary
Moore was the only one who was quite sure she was not a
witch.
"Witches are always ugly," she said decisively, "and Old Lady
Lloyd isn't ugly. She's real pretty--she's got such a soft white hair and
big black eyes and a little white face. Those Road children don't know
what they're talking of. Mother says they're a very ignorant
crowd."
"Well, she doesn't ever go to church, and she mutters and talks
to herself all the time she's picking up sticks," maintained Jimmy
Kimball stoutly.
The Old Lady talked to herself because she was really
very fond of company and conversation. To be sure, when you have talked to
nobody but yourself for nearly twenty years, it is apt to grow somewhat
monotonous; and there were times when the Old Lady would have sacrificed
everything but her pride for a little human companionship. At such times she
felt very bitter and resentful toward Fate for having taken
everything from her. She had nothing to love, and that is about as
unwholesome a condition as is possible to anyone.
It was always
hardest in the spring. Once upon a time the Old Lady--when she had not been
the Old Lady, but pretty, wilful, high-spirited Margaret Lloyd--had loved
springs; now she hated them because they hurt her; and this particular spring
of this particular May chapter hurt her more than any that had gone before.
The Old Lady felt as if she could NOT endure the ache of it. Everything hurt
her--the new green tips on the firs, the fairy mists down in the little beech
hollow below the house, the fresh smell of the red earth Crooked Jack spaded
up in her garden. The Old Lady lay awake all one moonlit night and cried for
very heartache. She even forgot her body hunger in her soul hunger; and
the Old Lady had been hungry, more or less, all that week. She was living
on store biscuits and water, so that she might be able to pay Crooked
Jack for digging her garden. When the pale, lovely dawn-colour came
stealing up the sky behind the spruces, the Old Lady buried her face in
her pillow and refused to look at it.
"I hate the new day," she said
rebelliously. "It will be just like all the other hard, common days. I don't
want to get up and live it. And, oh, to think that long ago I reached out my
hands joyfully to every new day, as to a friend who was bringing me good
tidings! I loved the mornings then--sunny or gray, they were as delightful as
an unread book--and now I hate them--hate them--hate them!"
But the
Old Lady got up nevertheless, for she knew Crooked Jack would be coming early
to finish the garden. She arranged her beautiful, thick, white hair very
carefully, and put on her purple silk dress with the little gold spots in it.
The Old Lady always wore silk from motives of economy. It was much cheaper to
wear a silk dress that had belonged to her mother than to buy new print at
the store. The Old Lady had plenty of silk dresses which had belonged to her
mother. She wore them morning, noon, and night, and Spencervale people
considered it an additional evidence of her pride. As for the fashion of
them, it was, of course, just because she was too mean to have them made
over. They did not dream that the Old Lady never put on one of the silk
dresses without agonizing over its unfashionableness, and that even the eyes
of Crooked Jack cast on her antique flounces and overskirts was almost more
than her feminine vanity could endure.
In spite of the fact that the
Old Lady had not welcomed the new day, its beauty charmed her when she went
out for a walk after her dinner--or, rather, after her mid-day biscuit. It
was so fresh, so sweet, so virgin; and the spruce woods around the old Lloyd
place were athrill with busy spring doings and all sprinkled through with
young lights and shadows. Some of their delight found its way into the Old
Lady's bitter heart as she wandered through them, and when she came out at
the little plank bridge over the brook down under the beeches, she felt
almost gentle and tender once more. There was one big beech there, in
particular, which the Old Lady loved for reasons best known to herself--a
great, tall beech with a trunk like the shaft of a gray marble column and a
leafy spread of branches over the still, golden-brown pool made beneath it
by the brook. It had been a young sapling in the days that were haloed
by the vanished glory of the Old Lady's life.
The Old Lady heard
childish voices and laughter afar up the lane which led to William Spencer's
place just above the woods. William Spencer's front lane ran out to the main
road in a different direction, but this "back lane" furnished a short cut and
his children always went to school that way.
The Old Lady shrank
hastily back behind a clump of young spruces. She did not like the Spencer
children because they always seemed so afraid of her. Through the spruce
screen she could see them coming gaily down the lane--the two older ones in
front, the twins behind, clinging to the hands of a tall, slim, young
girl--the new music teacher, probably. The Old Lady had heard from the egg
pedlar that she was going to board at William Spencer's, but she had not
heard her name.
She looked at her with some curiosity as they drew
near--and then, all at once, the Old Lady's heart gave a great bound and
began to beat as it had not beaten for years, while her breath came quickly
and she trembled violently. Who--WHO could this girl be?
Under the new
music teacher's straw hat were masses of fine chestnut hair of the very shade
and wave that the Old Lady remembered on another head in vanished years; from
under those waves looked large, violet-blue eyes with very black lashes and
brows--and the Old Lady knew those eyes as well as she knew her own; and the
new music teacher's face, with all its beauty of delicate outline and dainty
colouring and glad, buoyant youth, was a face from the Old Lady's past--a
perfect resemblance in every respect save one; the face which the Old Lady
remembered had been weak, with all its charm; but this girl's face possessed
a fine, dominant strength compact of sweetness and womanliness. As she passed
by the Old Lady's hiding place she laughed at something one of the
children said; and oh, but the Old Lady knew that laughter well. She had
heard it before under that very beech tree.
She watched them until
they disappeared over the wooded hill beyond the bridge; and then she went
back home as if she walked in a dream. Crooked Jack was delving vigorously in
the garden; ordinarily the Old Lady did not talk much with Crooked Jack, for
she disliked his weakness for gossip; but now she went into the garden, a
stately old figure in her purple, gold-spotted silk, with the sunshine
gleaming on her white hair.
Crooked Jack had seen her go out and had
remarked to himself that the Old Lady was losing ground; she was pale and
peaked-looking. He now concluded that he had been mistaken. The Old Lady's
cheeks were pink and her eyes shining. Somewhere in her walk she had shed ten
years at least. Crooked Jack leaned on his spade and decided that there
weren't many finer looking women anywhere than Old Lady Lloyd. Pity she was
such an old miser!
"Mr. Spencer," said the Old Lady graciously--she
always spoke very graciously to her inferiors when she talked to them at
all--"can you tell me the name of the new music teacher who is boarding at
Mr. William Spencer's?"
"Sylvia Gray," said Crooked Jack.
The
Old Lady's heart gave another great bound. But she had known it--she had
known that girl with Leslie Gray's hair and eyes and laugh must be Leslie
Gray's daughter.
Crooked Jack spat on his hand and resumed his work, but
his tongue went faster than his spade, and the Old Lady listened greedily.
For the first time she enjoyed and blessed Crooked Jack's garrulity and
gossip. Every word he uttered was as an apple of gold in a picture of silver
to her.
He had been working at William Spencer's the day the new music
teacher had come, and what Crooked Jack couldn't find out about any person
in one whole day--at least as far as outward life went--was hardly
worth finding out. Next to discovering things did he love telling them, and
it would be hard to say which enjoyed that ensuing half-hour
more--Crooked Jack or the Old Lady.
Crooked Jack's account, boiled
down, amounted to this; both Miss Gray's parents had died when she was a
baby, she had been brought up by an aunt, she was very poor and very
ambitious.
"Wants a moosical eddication," finished up Crooked Jack, "and,
by jingo, she orter have it, for anything like the voice of her I never
heerd. She sung for us that evening after supper and I thought 'twas an
angel singing. It just went through me like a shaft o' light. The
Spencer young ones are crazy over her already. She's got twenty pupils
around here and in Grafton and Avonlea."
When the Old Lady had found
out everything Crooked Jack could tell her, she went into the house and sat
down by the window of her little sitting-room to think it all over. She was
tingling from head to foot with excitement.
Leslie's daughter! This
Old Lady had had her romance once. Long ago--forty years ago--she had been
engaged to Leslie Gray, a young college student who taught in Spencervale for
the summer term one year--the golden summer of Margaret Lloyd's life. Leslie
had been a shy, dreamy, handsome fellow with literary ambitions, which, as he
and Margaret both firmly believed, would one day bring him fame and
fortune.
Then there had been a foolish, bitter quarrel at the end of that
golden summer. Leslie had gone away in anger, afterwards he had written,
but Margaret Lloyd, still in the grasp of her pride and resentment, had
sent a harsh answer. No more letters came; Leslie Gray never returned;
and one day Margaret wakened to the realization that she had put love out
of her life for ever. She knew it would never be hers again; and from
that moment her feet were turned from youth to walk down the valley of
shadow to a lonely, eccentric age.
Many years later she heard of
Leslie's marriage; then came news of his death, after a life that had not
fulfilled his dreams for him. Nothing more she had heard or known--nothing to
this day, when she had seen his daughter pass her by unseeing in the beech
hollow.
"His daughter! And she might have been MY daughter," murmured the
Old Lady. "Oh, if I could only know her and love her--and perhaps win
her love in return! But I cannot. I could not have Leslie Gray's
daughter know how poor I am--how low I have been brought. I could not bear
that. And to think she is living so near me, the darling--just up the
lane and over the hill. I can see her go by every day--I can have that
dear pleasure, at least. But oh, if I could only do something for
her--give her some little pleasure! It would be such a delight."
When
the Old Lady happened to go into her spare room that evening, she saw from it
a light shining through a gap in the trees on the hill. She knew that it
shone from the Spencers' spare room. So it was Sylvia's light. The Old Lady
stood in the darkness and watched it until it went out--watched it with a
great sweetness breathing in her heart, such as risen from old rose-leaves
when they are stirred. She fancied Sylvia moving about her room, brushing and
braiding her long, glistening hair--laying aside her little trinkets and
girlish adornments--making her simple preparations for sleep. When the light
went out the Old Lady pictured a slight white figure kneeling by the window
in the soft starshine, and the Old Lady knelt down then and there and said
her own prayers in fellowship. She said the simple form of words she had
always used; but a new spirit seemed to inspire them; and she finished
with a new petition--"Let me think of something I can do for her,
dear Father--some little, little thing that I can do for her."
The Old
Lady had slept in the same room all her life--the one looking north into the
spruces--and loved it; but the next day she moved into the spare room without
a regret. It was to be her room after this; she must be where she could see
Sylvia's light, she put the bed where she could lie in it and look at that
earth star which had suddenly shone across the twilight shadows of her heart.
She felt very happy, she had not felt happy for many years; but now a
strange, new, dream-like interest, remote from the harsh realities of her
existence, but none the less comforting and alluring, had entered into her
life. Besides, she had thought of something she could do for Sylvia--"a
little, little thing" that might give her pleasure.
Spencervale people
were wont to say regretfully that there were no Mayflowers in Spencervale;
the Spencervale young fry, when they wanted Mayflowers, thought they had to
go over to the barrens at Avonlea, six miles away, for them. Old Lady Lloyd
knew better. In her many long, solitary rambles, she had discovered a little
clearing far back in the woods--a southward-sloping, sandy hill on a tract of
woodland belonging to a man who lived in town--which in spring was starred
over with the pink and white of arbutus.
To this clearing the Old Lady
betook herself that afternoon, walking through wood lanes and under dim
spruce arches like a woman with a glad purpose. All at once the spring was
dear and beautiful to her once more; for love had entered again into her
heart, and her starved soul was feasting on its divine
nourishment.
Old Lady Lloyd found a wealth of Mayflowers on the sandy
hill. She filled her basket with them, gloating over the loveliness which was
to give pleasure to Sylvia. When she got home she wrote on a slip of
paper, "For Sylvia." It was not likely anyone in Spencervale would know
her handwriting, but, to make sure, she disguised it, writing in round,
big letters like a child's. She carried her Mayflowers down to the
hollow and heaped them in a recess between the big roots of the old beech,
with the little note thrust through a stem on top.
Then the Old Lady
deliberately hid behind the spruce clump. She had put on her dark green silk
on purpose for hiding. She had not long to wait. Soon Sylvia Gray came down
the hill with Mattie Spencer. When she reached the bridge she saw the
Mayflowers and gave an exclamation of delight. Then she saw her name and her
expression changed to wonder. The Old Lady, peering through the boughs, could
have laughed for very pleasure over the success of her little
plot.
"For me!" said Sylvia, lifting the flowers. "CAN they really be for
me, Mattie? Who could have left them here?"
Mattie giggled.
"I
believe it was Chris Stewart," she said. "I know he was over at Avonlea last
night. And ma says he's taken a notion to you--she knows by the way he looked
at you when you were singing night before last. It would be just like him to
do something queer like this--he's such a shy fellow with the
girls."
Sylvia frowned a little. She did not like Mattie's expressions,
but she did like Mayflowers, and she did not dislike Chris Stewart, who
had seemed to her merely a nice, modest, country boy. She lifted the
flowers and buried her face in them.
"Anyway, I'm much obliged to the
giver, whoever he or she is," she said merrily. "There's nothing I love like
Mayflowers. Oh, how sweet they are!"
When they had passed the Old Lady
emerged from her lurking place, flushed with triumph. It did not vex her that
Sylvia should think Chris Stewart had given her the flowers; nay, it was all
the better, since she would be the less likely to suspect the real donor. The
main thing was that Sylvia should have the delight of them. That quite
satisfied the Old Lady, who went back to her lonely house with the cockles of
her heart all in a glow.
It soon was a matter of gossip in Spencervale
that Chris Stewart was leaving Mayflowers at the beech hollow for the music
teacher every other day. Chris himself denied it, but he was not believed.
Firstly, there were no Mayflowers in Spencervale; secondly, Chris had to go
to Carmody every other day to haul milk to the butter factory, and Mayflowers
grew in Carmody, and, thirdly, the Stewarts always had a romantic streak
in them. Was not that enough circumstantial evidence for anybody?
As
for Sylvia, she did not mind if Chris had a boyish admiration for her and
expressed it thus delicately. She thought it very nice of him, indeed, when
he did not vex her with any other advances, and she was quite content to
enjoy his Mayflowers.
Old Lady Lloyd heard all the gossip about it from
the egg pedlar, and listened to him with laughter glimmering far down in her
eyes. The egg pedlar went away and vowed he'd never seen the Old Lady so spry
as she was this spring; she seemed real interested in the young folk's
doings.
The Old Lady kept her secret and grew young in it. She walked
back to the Mayflower hill as long as the Mayflowers lasted; and she always
hid in the spruces to see Sylvia Gray go by. Every day she loved her
more, and yearned after her more deeply. All the long repressed tenderness
of her nature overflowed to this girl who was unconscious of it. She
was proud of Sylvia's grace and beauty, and sweetness of voice and
laughter. She began to like the Spencer children because they worshipped
Sylvia; she envied Mrs. Spencer because the latter could minister to
Sylvia's needs. Even the egg pedlar seemed a delightful person because he
brought news of Sylvia--her social popularity, her professional success,
the love and admiration she had won already.
The Old Lady never
dreamed of revealing herself to Sylvia. That, in her poverty, was not to be
thought of for a moment. It would have been very sweet to know her--sweet to
have her come to the old house--sweet to talk to her--to enter into her life.
But it might not be. The Old Lady's pride was still far stronger than her
love. It was the one thing she had never sacrificed and never--so she
believed--could sacrifice.
II. The June Chapter
There
were no Mayflowers in June; but now the Old Lady's garden was full of
blossoms and every morning Sylvia found a bouquet of them by the beech--the
perfumed ivory of white narcissus, the flame of tulips, the fairy branches of
bleeding-heart, the pink-and-snow of little, thorny, single, sweetbreathed
early roses. The Old Lady had no fear of discovery, for the flowers that grew
in her garden grew in every other Spencervale garden as well, including the
Stewart garden. Chris Stewart, when he was teased about the music teacher,
merely smiled and held his peace. Chris knew perfectly well who was the real
giver of those flowers. He had made it his business to find out when the
Mayflower gossip started. But since it was evident Old Lady Lloyd did not
wish it to be known, Chris told no one. Chris had always liked Old Lady
Lloyd ever since the day, ten years before, when she had found him crying
in the woods with a cut foot and had taken him into her house, and
bathed and bound the wound, and given him ten cents to buy candy at the
store. The Old Lady went without supper that night because of it, but Chris
never knew that. |
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