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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Story Girl, by Lucy Maud Montgomery
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Story Girl
+
+Author: Lucy Maud Montgomery
+
+
+Release Date: March, 2004 [EBook #5342]
+[This file was first posted on July 2, 2002]
+Last Updated: October 6, 2016
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE STORY GIRL ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Leslee Suttie, Mary Mark Ockerbloom, and Ben Crowder
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE STORY GIRL
+
+By L. M. Montgomery
+
+
+Author of “Anne of Green Gables,” “Anne of Avonlea,” “Kilmeny of the
+Orchard,” etc.
+
+
+With frontispiece and cover in colour by George Gibbs
+
+
+
+This book has been put on-line as part of the BUILD-A-BOOK Initiative
+at the Celebration of Women Writers through the combined work of Leslee
+Suttie and Mary Mark Ockerbloom.
+
+http://digital.library.upenn.edu/women/
+
+Reformatted by Ben Crowder
+
+
+
+ “She was a form of life and light
+ That seen, became a part of sight,
+ And rose, where’er I turn’d mine eye,
+ The morning-star of Memory!” --Byron.
+
+
+TO MY COUSIN
+
+Frederica E. Campbell
+
+IN REMEMBRANCE OF OLD DAYS, OLD DREAMS, AND OLD LAUGHTER
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ I. The Home of Our Fathers
+ II. A Queen of Hearts
+ III. Legends of the Old Orchard
+ IV. The Wedding Veil of the Proud Princess
+ V. Peter Goes to Church
+ VI. The Mystery of Golden Milestone
+ VII. How Betty Sherman Won a Husband
+ VIII. A Tragedy of Childhood
+ IX. Magic Seed
+ X. A Daughter of Eve
+ XI. The Story Girl Does Penance
+ XII. The Blue Chest of Rachel Ward
+ XIII. An Old Proverb With a New Meaning
+ XIV. Forbidden Fruit
+ XV. A Disobedient Brother
+ XVI. The Ghostly Bell
+ XVII. The Proof of the Pudding
+ XVIII. How Kissing Was Discovered
+ XIX. A Dread Prophecy
+ XX. The Judgment Sunday
+ XXI. Dreamers of Dreams
+ XXII. The Dream Books
+ XXIII. Such Stuff as Dreams Are Made On
+ XXIV. The Bewitchment of Pat
+ XXV. A Cup of Failure
+ XXVI. Peter Makes an Impression
+ XXVII. The Ordeal of Bitter Apples
+ XXVIII. The Tale of the Rainbow Bridge
+ XXIX. The Shadow Feared of Man
+ XXX. A Compound Letter
+ XXXI. On the Edge of Light and Dark
+ XXXII. The Opening of the Blue Chest
+
+
+
+
+THE STORY GIRL
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I. THE HOME OF OUR FATHERS
+
+“I do like a road, because you can be always wondering what is at the
+end of it.”
+
+The Story Girl said that once upon a time. Felix and I, on the May
+morning when we left Toronto for Prince Edward Island, had not then
+heard her say it, and, indeed, were but barely aware of the existence of
+such a person as the Story Girl. We did not know her at all under that
+name. We knew only that a cousin, Sara Stanley, whose mother, our Aunt
+Felicity, was dead, was living down on the Island with Uncle Roger
+and Aunt Olivia King, on a farm adjoining the old King homestead in
+Carlisle. We supposed we should get acquainted with her when we reached
+there, and we had an idea, from Aunt Olivia’s letters to father, that
+she would be quite a jolly creature. Further than that we did not think
+about her. We were more interested in Felicity and Cecily and Dan,
+who lived on the homestead and would therefore be our roofmates for a
+season.
+
+But the spirit of the Story Girl’s yet unuttered remark was thrilling
+in our hearts that morning, as the train pulled out of Toronto. We were
+faring forth on a long road; and, though we had some idea what would be
+at the end of it, there was enough glamour of the unknown about it to
+lend a wonderful charm to our speculations concerning it.
+
+We were delighted at the thought of seeing father’s old home, and living
+among the haunts of his boyhood. He had talked so much to us about it,
+and described its scenes so often and so minutely, that he had inspired
+us with some of his own deep-seated affection for it--an affection that
+had never waned in all his years of exile. We had a vague feeling that
+we, somehow, belonged there, in that cradle of our family, though we had
+never seen it. We had always looked forward eagerly to the promised day
+when father would take us “down home,” to the old house with the spruces
+behind it and the famous “King orchard” before it--when we might ramble
+in “Uncle Stephen’s Walk,” drink from the deep well with the Chinese
+roof over it, stand on “the Pulpit Stone,” and eat apples from our
+“birthday trees.”
+
+The time had come sooner than we had dared to hope; but father could
+not take us after all. His firm asked him to go to Rio de Janeiro that
+spring to take charge of their new branch there. It was too good a
+chance to lose, for father was a poor man and it meant promotion and
+increase of salary; but it also meant the temporary breaking up of our
+home. Our mother had died before either of us was old enough to remember
+her; father could not take us to Rio de Janeiro. In the end he decided
+to send us to Uncle Alec and Aunt Janet down on the homestead; and our
+housekeeper, who belonged to the Island and was now returning to it,
+took charge of us on the journey. I fear she had an anxious trip of it,
+poor woman! She was constantly in a quite justifiable terror lest we
+should be lost or killed; she must have felt great relief when she
+reached Charlottetown and handed us over to the keeping of Uncle Alec.
+Indeed, she said as much.
+
+“The fat one isn’t so bad. He isn’t so quick to move and get out of your
+sight while you’re winking as the thin one. But the only safe way to
+travel with those young ones would be to have ‘em both tied to you with
+a short rope--a MIGHTY short rope.”
+
+“The fat one” was Felix, who was very sensitive about his plumpness.
+He was always taking exercises to make him thin, with the dismal result
+that he became fatter all the time. He vowed that he didn’t care; but he
+DID care terribly, and he glowered at Mrs. MacLaren in a most undutiful
+fashion. He had never liked her since the day she had told him he would
+soon be as broad as he was long.
+
+For my own part, I was rather sorry to see her going; and she cried over
+us and wished us well; but we had forgotten all about her by the time
+we reached the open country, driving along, one on either side of Uncle
+Alec, whom we loved from the moment we saw him. He was a small man, with
+thin, delicate features, close-clipped gray beard, and large, tired,
+blue eyes--father’s eyes over again. We knew that Uncle Alec was fond
+of children and was heart-glad to welcome “Alan’s boys.” We felt at home
+with him, and were not afraid to ask him questions on any subject that
+came uppermost in our minds. We became very good friends with him on
+that twenty-four mile drive.
+
+Much to our disappointment it was dark when we reached Carlisle--too
+dark to see anything very distinctly, as we drove up the lane of the
+old King homestead on the hill. Behind us a young moon was hanging over
+southwestern meadows of spring-time peace, but all about us were the
+soft, moist shadows of a May night. We peered eagerly through the gloom.
+
+“There’s the big willow, Bev,” whispered Felix excitedly, as we turned
+in at the gate.
+
+There it was, in truth--the tree Grandfather King had planted when he
+returned one evening from ploughing in the brook field and stuck the
+willow switch he had used all day in the soft soil by the gate.
+
+It had taken root and grown; our father and our uncles and aunts had
+played in its shadow; and now it was a massive thing, with a huge girth
+of trunk and great spreading boughs, each of them as large as a tree in
+itself.
+
+“I’m going to climb it to-morrow,” I said joyfully.
+
+Off to the right was a dim, branching place which we knew was the
+orchard; and on our left, among sibilant spruces and firs, was the old,
+whitewashed house--from which presently a light gleamed through an open
+door, and Aunt Janet, a big, bustling, sonsy woman, with full-blown
+peony cheeks, came to welcome us.
+
+Soon after we were at supper in the kitchen, with its low, dark,
+raftered ceiling from which substantial hams and flitches of bacon were
+hanging. Everything was just as father had described it. We felt that we
+had come home, leaving exile behind us.
+
+Felicity, Cecily, and Dan were sitting opposite us, staring at us when
+they thought we would be too busy eating to see them. We tried to stare
+at them when THEY were eating; and as a result we were always catching
+each other at it and feeling cheap and embarrassed.
+
+Dan was the oldest; he was my age--thirteen. He was a lean, freckled
+fellow with rather long, lank, brown hair and the shapely King nose. We
+recognized it at once. His mouth was his own, however, for it was like
+to no mouth on either the King or the Ward side; and nobody would have
+been anxious to claim it, for it was an undeniably ugly one--long and
+narrow and twisted. But it could grin in friendly fashion, and both
+Felix and I felt that we were going to like Dan.
+
+Felicity was twelve. She had been called after Aunt Felicity, who was
+the twin sister of Uncle Felix. Aunt Felicity and Uncle Felix, as father
+had often told us, had died on the same day, far apart, and were buried
+side by side in the old Carlisle graveyard.
+
+We had known from Aunt Olivia’s letters, that Felicity was the beauty of
+the connection, and we had been curious to see her on that account. She
+fully justified our expectations. She was plump and dimpled, with big,
+dark-blue, heavy-lidded eyes, soft, feathery, golden curls, and a pink
+and white skin--“the King complexion.” The Kings were noted for their
+noses and complexion. Felicity had also delightful hands and wrists. At
+every turn of them a dimple showed itself. It was a pleasure to wonder
+what her elbows must be like.
+
+She was very nicely dressed in a pink print and a frilled muslin apron;
+and we understood, from something Dan said, that she had “dressed up”
+ in honour of our coming. This made us feel quite important. So far as we
+knew, no feminine creatures had ever gone to the pains of dressing up on
+our account before.
+
+Cecily, who was eleven, was pretty also--or would have been had Felicity
+not been there. Felicity rather took the colour from other girls. Cecily
+looked pale and thin beside her; but she had dainty little features,
+smooth brown hair of satin sheen, and mild brown eyes, with just a hint
+of demureness in them now and again. We remembered that Aunt Olivia
+had written to father that Cecily was a true Ward--she had no sense
+of humour. We did not know what this meant, but we thought it was not
+exactly complimentary.
+
+Still, we were both inclined to think we would like Cecily better than
+Felicity. To be sure, Felicity was a stunning beauty. But, with the
+swift and unerring intuition of childhood, which feels in a moment what
+it sometimes takes maturity much time to perceive, we realized that
+she was rather too well aware of her good looks. In brief, we saw that
+Felicity was vain.
+
+“It’s a wonder the Story Girl isn’t over to see you,” said Uncle Alec.
+“She’s been quite wild with excitement about your coming.”
+
+“She hasn’t been very well all day,” explained Cecily, “and Aunt Olivia
+wouldn’t let her come out in the night air. She made her go to bed
+instead. The Story Girl was awfully disappointed.”
+
+“Who is the Story Girl?” asked Felix.
+
+“Oh, Sara--Sara Stanley. We call her the Story Girl partly because
+she’s such a hand to tell stories--oh, I can’t begin to describe it--and
+partly because Sara Ray, who lives at the foot of the hill, often comes
+up to play with us, and it is awkward to have two girls of the same name
+in the same crowd. Besides, Sara Stanley doesn’t like her name and she’d
+rather be called the Story Girl.”
+
+Dan speaking for the first time, rather sheepishly volunteered the
+information that Peter had also been intending to come over but had to
+go home to take some flour to his mother instead.
+
+“Peter?” I questioned. I had never heard of any Peter.
+
+“He is your Uncle Roger’s handy boy,” said Uncle Alec. “His name is
+Peter Craig, and he is a real smart little chap. But he’s got his share
+of mischief, that same lad.”
+
+“He wants to be Felicity’s beau,” said Dan slyly.
+
+“Don’t talk silly nonsense, Dan,” said Aunt Janet severely.
+
+Felicity tossed her golden head and shot an unsisterly glance at Dan.
+
+“I wouldn’t be very likely to have a hired boy for a beau,” she
+observed.
+
+We saw that her anger was real, not affected. Evidently Peter was not an
+admirer of whom Felicity was proud.
+
+We were very hungry boys; and when we had eaten all we could--and oh,
+what suppers Aunt Janet always spread!--we discovered that we were very
+tired also--too tired to go out and explore our ancestral domains, as we
+would have liked to do, despite the dark.
+
+We were quite willing to go to bed; and presently we found ourselves
+tucked away upstairs in the very room, looking out eastward into the
+spruce grove, which father had once occupied. Dan shared it with us,
+sleeping in a bed of his own in the opposite corner. The sheets and
+pillow-slips were fragrant with lavender, and one of Grandmother King’s
+noted patchwork quilts was over us. The window was open and we heard the
+frogs singing down in the swamp of the brook meadow. We had heard frogs
+sing in Ontario, of course; but certainly Prince Edward Island frogs
+were more tuneful and mellow. Or was it simply the glamour of old family
+traditions and tales which was over us, lending its magic to all sights
+and sounds around us? This was home--father’s home--OUR home! We
+had never lived long enough in any one house to develop a feeling
+of affection for it; but here, under the roof-tree built by
+Great-Grandfather King ninety years ago, that feeling swept into our
+boyish hearts and souls like a flood of living sweetness and tenderness.
+
+“Just think, those are the very frogs father listened to when he was a
+little boy,” whispered Felix.
+
+“They can hardly be the SAME frogs,” I objected doubtfully, not feeling
+very certain about the possible longevity of frogs. “It’s twenty years
+since father left home.”
+
+“Well, they’re the descendants of the frogs he heard,” said Felix, “and
+they’re singing in the same swamp. That’s near enough.”
+
+Our door was open and in their room across the narrow hall the girls
+were preparing for bed, and talking rather more loudly than they might
+have done had they realized how far their sweet, shrill voices carried.
+
+“What do you think of the boys?” asked Cecily.
+
+“Beverley is handsome, but Felix is too fat,” answered Felicity
+promptly.
+
+Felix twitched the quilt rather viciously and grunted. But I began to
+think I would like Felicity. It might not be altogether her fault that
+she was vain. How could she help it when she looked in the mirror?
+
+“I think they’re both nice and nice looking,” said Cecily.
+
+Dear little soul!
+
+“I wonder what the Story Girl will think of them,” said Felicity, as if,
+after all, that was the main thing.
+
+Somehow, we, too, felt that it was. We felt that if the Story Girl did
+not approve of us it made little difference who else did or did not.
+
+“I wonder if the Story Girl is pretty,” said Felix aloud.
+
+“No, she isn’t,” said Dan instantly, from across the room. “But you’ll
+think she is while she’s talking to you. Everybody does. It’s only when
+you go away from her that you find out she isn’t a bit pretty after
+all.”
+
+The girls’ door shut with a bang. Silence fell over the house. We
+drifted into the land of sleep, wondering if the Story Girl would like
+us.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II. A QUEEN OF HEARTS
+
+I wakened shortly after sunrise. The pale May sunshine was showering
+through the spruces, and a chill, inspiring wind was tossing the boughs
+about.
+
+“Felix, wake up,” I whispered, shaking him.
+
+“What’s the matter?” he murmured reluctantly.
+
+“It’s morning. Let’s get up and go down and out. I can’t wait another
+minute to see the places father has told us of.”
+
+We slipped out of bed and dressed, without arousing Dan, who was still
+slumbering soundly, his mouth wide open, and his bed-clothes kicked off
+on the floor. I had hard work to keep Felix from trying to see if he
+could “shy” a marble into that tempting open mouth. I told him it would
+waken Dan, who would then likely insist on getting up and accompanying
+us, and it would be so much nicer to go by ourselves for the first time.
+
+Everything was very still as we crept downstairs. Out in the kitchen we
+heard some one, presumably Uncle Alec, lighting the fire; but the heart
+of house had not yet begun to beat for the day.
+
+We paused a moment in the hall to look at the big “Grandfather” clock.
+It was not going, but it seemed like an old, familiar acquaintance to
+us, with the gilt balls on its three peaks; the little dial and pointer
+which would indicate the changes of the moon, and the very dent in its
+wooden door which father had made when he was a boy, by kicking it in a
+fit of naughtiness.
+
+Then we opened the front door and stepped out, rapture swelling in our
+bosoms. There was a rare breeze from the south blowing to meet us; the
+shadows of the spruces were long and clear-cut; the exquisite skies of
+early morning, blue and wind-winnowed, were over us; away to the west,
+beyond the brook field, was a long valley and a hill purple with firs
+and laced with still leafless beeches and maples.
+
+Behind the house was a grove of fir and spruce, a dim, cool place where
+the winds were fond of purring and where there was always a resinous,
+woodsy odour. On the further side of it was a thick plantation of
+slender silver birches and whispering poplars; and beyond it was Uncle
+Roger’s house.
+
+Right before us, girt about with its trim spruce hedge, was the
+famous King orchard, the history of which was woven into our earliest
+recollections. We knew all about it, from father’s descriptions, and in
+fancy we had roamed in it many a time and oft.
+
+It was now nearly sixty years since it had had its beginning, when
+Grandfather King brought his bride home. Before the wedding he had
+fenced off the big south meadow that sloped to the sun; it was the
+finest, most fertile field on the farm, and the neighbours told young
+Abraham King that he would raise many a fine crop of wheat in that
+meadow. Abraham King smiled and, being a man of few words, said nothing;
+but in his mind he had a vision of the years to be, and in that vision
+he saw, not rippling acres of harvest gold, but great, leafy avenues of
+wide-spreading trees laden with fruit to gladden the eyes of children
+and grandchildren yet unborn.
+
+It was a vision to develop slowly into fulfilment. Grandfather King was
+in no hurry. He did not set his whole orchard out at once, for he wished
+it to grow with his life and history, and be bound up with all of good
+and joy that should come to his household. So the morning after he had
+brought his young wife home they went together to the south meadow and
+planted their bridal trees. These trees were no longer living; but they
+had been when father was a boy, and every spring bedecked themselves in
+blossom as delicately tinted as Elizabeth King’s face when she walked
+through the old south meadow in the morn of her life and love.
+
+When a son was born to Abraham and Elizabeth a tree was planted in the
+orchard for him. They had fourteen children in all, and each child
+had its “birth tree.” Every family festival was commemorated in like
+fashion, and every beloved visitor who spent a night under their roof
+was expected to plant a tree in the orchard. So it came to pass that
+every tree in it was a fair green monument to some love or delight of
+the vanished years. And each grandchild had its tree, there, also, set
+out by grandfather when the tidings of its birth reached him; not always
+an apple tree--perhaps it was a plum, or cherry or pear. But it was
+always known by the name of the person for whom, or by whom, it was
+planted; and Felix and I knew as much about “Aunt Felicity’s pears,” and
+“Aunt Julia’s cherries,” and “Uncle Alec’s apples,” and the “Rev. Mr.
+Scott’s plums,” as if we had been born and bred among them.
+
+And now we had come to the orchard; it was before us; we had only
+to open that little whitewashed gate in the hedge and we might find
+ourselves in its storied domain. But before we reached the gate we
+glanced to our left, along the grassy, spruce-bordered lane which led
+over to Uncle Roger’s; and at the entrance of that lane we saw a girl
+standing, with a gray cat at her feet. She lifted her hand and beckoned
+blithely to us; and, the orchard forgotten, we followed her summons. For
+we knew that this must be the Story Girl; and in that gay and graceful
+gesture was an allurement not to be gainsaid or denied.
+
+We looked at her as we drew near with such interest that we forgot to
+feel shy. No, she was not pretty. She was tall for her fourteen years,
+slim and straight; around her long, white face--rather too long and too
+white--fell sleek, dark-brown curls, tied above either ear with rosettes
+of scarlet ribbon. Her large, curving mouth was as red as a poppy, and
+she had brilliant, almond-shaped, hazel eyes; but we did not think her
+pretty.
+
+Then she spoke; she said,
+
+“Good morning.”
+
+Never had we heard a voice like hers. Never, in all my life since, have
+I heard such a voice. I cannot describe it. I might say it was clear; I
+might say it was sweet; I might say it was vibrant and far-reaching and
+bell-like; all this would be true, but it would give you no real idea of
+the peculiar quality which made the Story Girl’s voice what it was.
+
+If voices had colour, hers would have been like a rainbow. It made words
+LIVE. Whatever she said became a breathing entity, not a mere verbal
+statement or utterance. Felix and I were too young to understand or
+analyze the impression it made upon us; but we instantly felt at her
+greeting that it WAS a good morning--a surpassingly good morning--the
+very best morning that had ever happened in this most excellent of
+worlds.
+
+“You are Felix and Beverley,” she went on, shaking our hands with an air
+of frank comradeship, which was very different from the shy, feminine
+advances of Felicity and Cecily. From that moment we were as good
+friends as if we had known each other for a hundred years. “I am glad to
+see you. I was so disappointed I couldn’t go over last night. I got up
+early this morning, though, for I felt sure you would be up early, too,
+and that you’d like to have me tell you about things. I can tell things
+so much better than Felicity or Cecily. Do you think Felicity is VERY
+pretty?”
+
+“She’s the prettiest girl I ever saw,” I said enthusiastically,
+remembering that Felicity had called me handsome.
+
+“The boys all think so,” said the Story Girl, not, I fancied, quite well
+pleased. “And I suppose she is. She is a splendid cook, too, though she
+is only twelve. I can’t cook. I am trying to learn, but I don’t make
+much progress. Aunt Olivia says I haven’t enough natural gumption ever
+to be a cook; but I’d love to be able to make as good cakes and pies as
+Felicity can make. But then, Felicity is stupid. It’s not ill-natured
+of me to say that. It’s just the truth, and you’d soon find it out for
+yourselves. I like Felicity very well, but she IS stupid. Cecily is ever
+so much cleverer. Cecily’s a dear. So is Uncle Alec; and Aunt Janet is
+pretty nice, too.”
+
+“What is Aunt Olivia like?” asked Felix.
+
+“Aunt Olivia is very pretty. She is just like a pansy--all velvety and
+purply and goldy.”
+
+Felix and I SAW, somewhere inside of our heads, a velvet and purple and
+gold pansy-woman, just as the Story Girl spoke.
+
+“But is she NICE?” I asked. That was the main question about grown-ups.
+Their looks mattered little to us.
+
+“She is lovely. But she is twenty-nine, you know. That’s pretty old. She
+doesn’t bother me much. Aunt Janet says that I’d have no bringing up at
+all, if it wasn’t for her. Aunt Olivia says children should just be let
+COME up--that everything else is settled for them long before they are
+born. I don’t understand that. Do you?”
+
+No, we did not. But it was our experience that grown-ups had a habit of
+saying things hard to understand.
+
+“What is Uncle Roger like?” was our next question.
+
+“Well, I like Uncle Roger,” said the Story Girl meditatively. “He is big
+and jolly. But he teases people too much. You ask him a serious question
+and you get a ridiculous answer. He hardly ever scolds or gets cross,
+though, and THAT is something. He is an old bachelor.”
+
+“Doesn’t he ever mean to get married?” asked Felix.
+
+“I don’t know. Aunt Olivia wishes he would, because she’s tired keeping
+house for him, and she wants to go to Aunt Julia in California. But she
+says he’ll never get married, because he is looking for perfection, and
+when he finds her she won’t have HIM.”
+
+By this time we were all sitting down on the gnarled roots of the
+spruces, and the big gray cat came over and made friends with us. He was
+a lordly animal, with a silver-gray coat beautifully marked with darker
+stripes. With such colouring most cats would have had white or silver
+feet; but he had four black paws and a black nose. Such points gave him
+an air of distinction, and marked him out as quite different from the
+common or garden variety of cats. He seemed to be a cat with a tolerably
+good opinion of himself, and his response to our advances was slightly
+tinged with condescension.
+
+“This isn’t Topsy, is it?” I asked. I knew at once that the question was
+a foolish one. Topsy, the cat of which father had talked, had flourished
+thirty years before, and all her nine lives could scarcely have lasted
+so long.
+
+“No, but it is Topsy’s great-great-great-great-grandson,” said the Story
+Girl gravely. “His name is Paddy and he is my own particular cat. We
+have barn cats, but Paddy never associates with them. I am very good
+friends with all cats. They are so sleek and comfortable and dignified.
+And it is so easy to make them happy. Oh, I’m so glad you boys have come
+to live here. Nothing ever happens here, except days, so we have to make
+our own good times. We were short of boys before--only Dan and Peter to
+four girls.”
+
+“FOUR girls? Oh, yes, Sara Ray. Felicity mentioned her. What is she
+like? Where does she live?”
+
+“Just down the hill. You can’t see the house for the spruce bush. Sara
+is a nice girl. She’s only eleven, and her mother is dreadfully strict.
+She never allows Sara to read a single story. JUST you fancy! Sara’s
+conscience is always troubling her for doing things she’s sure her
+mother won’t approve, but it never prevents her from doing them. It
+only spoils her fun. Uncle Roger says that a mother who won’t let you do
+anything, and a conscience that won’t let you enjoy anything is an awful
+combination, and he doesn’t wonder Sara is pale and thin and nervous.
+But, between you and me, I believe the real reason is that her mother
+doesn’t give her half enough to eat. Not that she’s mean, you know--but
+she thinks it isn’t healthy for children to eat much, or anything but
+certain things. Isn’t it fortunate we weren’t born into that sort of a
+family?”
+
+“I think it’s awfully lucky we were all born into the same family,”
+ Felix remarked.
+
+“Isn’t it? I’ve often thought so. And I’ve often thought what a dreadful
+thing it would have been if Grandfather and Grandmother King had never
+got married to each other. I don’t suppose there would have been a
+single one of us children here at all; or if we were, we would be part
+somebody else and that would be almost as bad. When I think it all over
+I can’t feel too thankful that Grandfather and Grandmother King happened
+to marry each other, when there were so many other people they might
+have married.”
+
+Felix and I shivered. We felt suddenly that we had escaped a dreadful
+danger--the danger of having been born somebody else. But it took
+the Story Girl to make us realize just how dreadful it was and what a
+terrible risk we had run years before we, or our parents either, had
+existed.
+
+“Who lives over there?” I asked, pointing to a house across the fields.
+
+“Oh, that belongs to the Awkward Man. His name is Jasper Dale, but
+everybody calls him the Awkward Man. And they do say he writes poetry.
+He calls his place Golden Milestone. I know why, because I’ve read
+Longfellow’s poems. He never goes into society because he is so awkward.
+The girls laugh at him and he doesn’t like it. I know a story about him
+and I’ll tell it to you sometime.”
+
+“And who lives in that other house?” asked Felix, looking over the
+westering valley where a little gray roof was visible among the trees.
+
+“Old Peg Bowen. She’s very queer. She lives there with a lot of pet
+animals in winter, and in summer she roams over the country and begs her
+meals. They say she is crazy. People have always tried to frighten us
+children into good behaviour by telling us that Peg Bowen would catch us
+if we didn’t behave. I’m not so frightened of her as I once was, but
+I don’t think I would like to be caught by her. Sara Ray is dreadfully
+scared of her. Peter Craig says she is a witch and that he bets she’s at
+the bottom of it when the butter won’t come. But I don’t believe THAT.
+Witches are so scarce nowadays. There may be some somewhere in the
+world, but it’s not likely there are any here right in Prince Edward
+Island. They used to be very plenty long ago. I know some splendid witch
+stories I’ll tell you some day. They’ll just make your blood freeze in
+your veins.”
+
+We hadn’t a doubt of it. If anybody could freeze the blood in our veins
+this girl with the wonderful voice could. But it was a May morning, and
+our young blood was running blithely in our veins. We suggested a visit
+to the orchard would be more agreeable.
+
+“All right. I know stories about it, too,” she said, as we walked across
+the yard, followed by Paddy of the waving tail. “Oh, aren’t you glad it
+is spring? The beauty of winter is that it makes you appreciate spring.”
+
+The latch of the gate clicked under the Story Girl’s hand, and the next
+moment we were in the King orchard.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III. LEGENDS OF THE OLD ORCHARD
+
+Outside of the orchard the grass was only beginning to grow green; but
+here, sheltered by the spruce hedges from uncertain winds and sloping to
+southern suns, it was already like a wonderful velvet carpet; the leaves
+on the trees were beginning to come out in woolly, grayish clusters;
+and there were purple-pencilled white violets at the base of the Pulpit
+Stone.
+
+“It’s all just as father described it,” said Felix with a blissful sigh,
+“and there’s the well with the Chinese roof.”
+
+We hurried over to it, treading on the spears of mint that were
+beginning to shoot up about it. It was a very deep well, and the curb
+was of rough, undressed stones. Over it, the queer, pagoda-like roof,
+built by Uncle Stephen on his return from a voyage to China, was covered
+with yet leafless vines.
+
+“It’s so pretty, when the vines leaf out and hang down in long
+festoons,” said the Story Girl. “The birds build their nests in it. A
+pair of wild canaries come here every summer. And ferns grow out between
+the stones of the well as far down as you can see. The water is lovely.
+Uncle Edward preached his finest sermon about the Bethlehem well
+where David’s soldiers went to get him water, and he illustrated it by
+describing his old well at the homestead--this very well--and how in
+foreign lands he had longed for its sparkling water. So you see it is
+quite famous.”
+
+“There’s a cup just like the one that used to be here in father’s time,”
+ exclaimed Felix, pointing to an old-fashioned shallow cup of clouded
+blue ware on a little shelf inside the curb.
+
+“It is the very same cup,” said the Story Girl impressively. “Isn’t it
+an amazing thing? That cup has been here for forty years, and hundreds
+of people have drunk from it, and it has never been broken. Aunt Julia
+dropped it down the well once, but they fished it up, not hurt a bit
+except for that little nick in the rim. I think it is bound up with the
+fortunes of the King family, like the Luck of Edenhall in Longfellow’s
+poem. It is the last cup of Grandmother King’s second best set. Her best
+set is still complete. Aunt Olivia has it. You must get her to show it
+to you. It’s so pretty, with red berries all over it, and the funniest
+little pot-bellied cream jug. Aunt Olivia never uses it except on a
+family anniversary.”
+
+We took a drink from the blue cup and then went to find our birthday
+trees. We were rather disappointed to find them quite large, sturdy
+ones. It seemed to us that they should still be in the sapling stage
+corresponding to our boyhood.
+
+“Your apples are lovely to eat,” the Story Girl said to me, “but Felix’s
+are only good for pies. Those two big trees behind them are the twins’
+trees--my mother and Uncle Felix, you know. The apples are so dead sweet
+that nobody but us children and the French boys can eat them. And that
+tall, slender tree over there, with the branches all growing straight
+up, is a seedling that came up of itself, and NOBODY can eat its apples,
+they are so sour and bitter. Even the pigs won’t eat them. Aunt Janet
+tried to make pies of them once, because she said she hated to see them
+going to waste. But she never tried again. She said it was better to
+waste apples alone than apples and sugar too. And then she tried giving
+them away to the French hired men, but they wouldn’t even carry them
+home.”
+
+The Story Girl’s words fell on the morning air like pearls and diamonds.
+Even her prepositions and conjunctions had untold charm, hinting at
+mystery and laughter and magic bound up in everything she mentioned.
+Apple pies and sour seedlings and pigs became straightway invested with
+a glamour of romance.
+
+“I like to hear you talk,” said Felix in his grave, stodgy way.
+
+“Everybody does,” said the Story Girl coolly. “I’m glad you like the way
+I talk. But I want you to like ME, too--AS WELL as you like Felicity and
+Cecily. Not BETTER. I wanted that once but I’ve got over it. I found
+out in Sunday School, the day the minister taught our class, that it was
+selfish. But I want you to like me AS WELL.”
+
+“Well, I will, for one,” said Felix emphatically. I think he was
+remembering that Felicity had called him fat.
+
+Cecily now joined us. It appeared that it was Felicity’s morning to help
+prepare breakfast, therefore she could not come. We all went to Uncle
+Stephen’s Walk.
+
+This was a double row of apple trees, running down the western side of
+the orchard. Uncle Stephen was the first born of Abraham and Elizabeth
+King. He had none of grandfather’s abiding love for woods and meadows
+and the kindly ways of the warm red earth. Grandmother King had been a
+Ward, and in Uncle Stephen the blood of the seafaring race claimed its
+own. To sea he must go, despite the pleadings and tears of a reluctant
+mother; and it was from the sea he came to set out his avenue in the
+orchard with trees brought from a foreign land.
+
+Then he sailed away again--and the ship was never heard of more. The
+gray first came in grandmother’s brown hair in those months of waiting.
+The, for the first time, the orchard heard the sound of weeping and was
+consecrated by a sorrow.
+
+“When the blossoms come out it’s wonderful to walk here,” said the
+Story Girl. “It’s like a dream of fairyland--as if you were walking in
+a king’s palace. The apples are delicious, and in winter it’s a splendid
+place for coasting.”
+
+From the Walk we went to the Pulpit Stone--a huge gray boulder, as high
+as a man’s head, in the southeastern corner. It was straight and smooth
+in front, but sloped down in natural steps behind, with a ledge midway
+on which one could stand. It had played an important part in the games
+of our uncles and aunts, being fortified castle, Indian ambush, throne,
+pulpit, or concert platform, as occasion required. Uncle Edward had
+preached his first sermon at the age of eight from that old gray
+boulder; and Aunt Julia, whose voice was to delight thousands, sang her
+earliest madrigals there.
+
+The Story Girl mounted to the ledge, sat on the rim, and looked at us.
+Pat sat gravely at its base and daintily washed his face with his black
+paws.
+
+“Now for your stories about the orchard,” said I.
+
+“There are two important ones,” said the Story Girl. “The story of the
+Poet Who Was Kissed, and the Tale of the Family Ghost. Which one shall I
+tell?”
+
+“Tell them both,” said Felix greedily, “but tell the ghost one first.”
+
+“I don’t know.” The Story Girl looked dubious. “That sort of story ought
+to be told in the twilight among the shadows. Then it would frighten the
+souls out of your bodies.”
+
+We thought it might be more agreeable not to have the souls frightened
+out of our bodies, and we voted for the Family Ghost.
+
+“Ghost stories are more comfortable in daytime,” said Felix.
+
+The Story Girl began it and we listened avidly. Cecily, who had heard it
+many times before, listened just as eagerly as we did. She declared to
+me afterwards that no matter how often the Story Girl told a story it
+always seemed as new and exciting as if you had just heard it for the
+first time.
+
+“Long, long ago,” began the Story Girl, her voice giving us an
+impression of remote antiquity, “even before Grandfather King was born,
+an orphan cousin of his lived here with his parents. Her name was Emily
+King. She was very small and very sweet. She had soft brown eyes that
+were too timid to look straight at anybody--like Cecily’s there--and
+long, sleek, brown curls--like mine; and she had a tiny birthmark like a
+pink butterfly on one cheek--right here.
+
+“Of course, there was no orchard here then. It was just a field;
+but there was a clump of white birches in it, right where that big,
+spreading tree of Uncle Alec’s is now, and Emily liked to sit among the
+ferns under the birches and read or sew. She had a lover. His name was
+Malcolm Ward and he was as handsome as a prince. She loved him with all
+her heart and he loved her the same; but they had never spoken about
+it. They used to meet under the birches and talk about everything except
+love. One day he told her he was coming the next day to ask A VERY
+IMPORTANT QUESTION, and he wanted to find her under the birches when he
+came. Emily promised to meet him there. I am sure she stayed awake that
+night, thinking about it, and wondering what the important question
+would be, although she knew perfectly well. I would have. And the next
+day she dressed herself beautifully in her best pale blue muslin and
+sleeked her curls and went smiling to the birches. And while she was
+waiting there, thinking such lovely thoughts, a neighbour’s boy came
+running up--a boy who didn’t know about her romance--and cried out that
+Malcolm Ward had been killed by his gun going off accidentally. Emily
+just put her hands to her heart--so--and fell, all white and broken
+among the ferns. And when she came back to life she never cried or
+lamented. She was CHANGED. She was never, never like herself again; and
+she was never contented unless she was dressed in her blue muslin and
+waiting under the birches. She got paler and paler every day, but the
+pink butterfly grew redder, until it looked just like a stain of blood
+on her white cheek. When the winter came she died. But next spring”--the
+Story Girl dropped her voice to a whisper that was as audible and
+thrilling as her louder tones--“people began to tell that Emily was
+sometimes seen waiting under the birches still. Nobody knew just who
+told it first. But more than one person saw her. Grandfather saw her
+when he was a little boy. And my mother saw her once.”
+
+“Did YOU ever see her?” asked Felix skeptically.
+
+“No, but I shall some day, if I keep on believing in her,” said the
+Story Girl confidently.
+
+“I wouldn’t like to see her. I’d be afraid,” said Cecily with a shiver.
+
+“There wouldn’t be anything to be afraid of,” said the Story Girl
+reassuringly. “It’s not as if it were a strange ghost. It’s our own
+family ghost, so of course it wouldn’t hurt us.”
+
+We were not so sure of this. Ghosts were unchancy folk, even if they
+were our family ghosts. The Story Girl had made the tale very real to
+us. We were glad we had not heard it in the evening. How could we ever
+have got back to the house through the shadows and swaying branches of a
+darkening orchard? As it was, we were almost afraid to look up it, lest
+we should see the waiting, blue-clad Emily under Uncle Alec’s tree.
+But all we saw was Felicity, tearing over the green sward, her curls
+streaming behind her in a golden cloud.
+
+“Felicity’s afraid she’s missed something,” remarked the Story Girl in
+a tone of quiet amusement. “Is your breakfast ready, Felicity, or have I
+time to tell the boys the Story of the Poet Who Was Kissed?”
+
+“Breakfast is ready, but we can’t have it till father is through
+attending to the sick cow, so you will likely have time,” answered
+Felicity.
+
+Felix and I couldn’t keep our eyes off her. Crimson-cheeked,
+shining-eyed from her haste, her face was like a rose of youth. But when
+the Story Girl spoke, we forgot to look at Felicity.
+
+“About ten years after Grandfather and Grandmother King were married, a
+young man came to visit them. He was a distant relative of grandmother’s
+and he was a Poet. He was just beginning to be famous. He was VERY
+famous afterward. He came into the orchard to write a poem, and he fell
+asleep with his head on a bench that used to be under grandfather’s
+tree. Then Great-Aunt Edith came into the orchard. She was not a
+Great-Aunt then, of course. She was only eighteen, with red lips and
+black, black hair and eyes. They say she was always full of mischief.
+She had been away and had just come home, and she didn’t know about the
+Poet. But when she saw him, sleeping there, she thought he was a cousin
+they had been expecting from Scotland. And she tiptoed up--so--and bent
+over--so--and kissed his cheek. Then he opened his big blue eyes and
+looked up into Edith’s face. She blushed as red as a rose, for she
+knew she had done a dreadful thing. This could not be her cousin from
+Scotland. She knew, for he had written so to her, that he had eyes as
+black as her own. Edith ran away and hid; and of course she felt still
+worse when she found out that he was a famous poet. But he wrote one of
+his most beautiful poems on it afterwards and sent it to her--and it was
+published in one of his books.”
+
+We had SEEN it all--the sleeping genius--the roguish, red-lipped
+girl--the kiss dropped as lightly as a rose-petal on the sunburned
+cheek.
+
+“They should have got married,” said Felix.
+
+“Well, in a book they would have, but you see this was in real life,”
+ said the Story Girl. “We sometimes act the story out. I like it when
+Peter plays the poet. I don’t like it when Dan is the poet because he
+is so freckled and screws his eyes up so tight. But you can hardly ever
+coax Peter to be the poet--except when Felicity is Edith--and Dan is so
+obliging that way.”
+
+“What is Peter like?” I asked.
+
+“Peter is splendid. His mother lives on the Markdale road and washes
+for a living. Peter’s father ran away and left them when Peter was only
+three years old. He has never come back, and they don’t know whether he
+is alive or dead. Isn’t that a nice way to behave to your family? Peter
+has worked for his board ever since he was six. Uncle Roger sends him
+to school, and pays him wages in summer. We all like Peter, except
+Felicity.”
+
+“I like Peter well enough in his place,” said Felicity primly, “but you
+make far too much of him, mother says. He is only a hired boy, and he
+hasn’t been well brought up, and hasn’t much education. I don’t think
+you should make such an equal of him as you do.”
+
+Laughter rippled over the Story Girl’s face as shadow waves go over ripe
+wheat before a wind.
+
+“Peter is a real gentleman, and he is more interesting than YOU could
+ever be, if you were brought up and educated for a hundred years,” she
+said.
+
+“He can hardly write,” said Felicity.
+
+“William the Conqueror couldn’t write at all,” said the Story Girl
+crushingly.
+
+“He never goes to church, and he never says his prayers,” retorted
+Felicity, uncrushed.
+
+“I do, too,” said Peter himself, suddenly appearing through a little gap
+in the hedge. “I say my prayers sometimes.”
+
+This Peter was a slim, shapely fellow, with laughing black eyes and
+thick black curls. Early in the season as it was, he was barefooted. His
+attire consisted of a faded, gingham shirt and a scanty pair of corduroy
+knickerbockers; but he wore it with such an unconscious air of purple
+and fine linen that he seemed to be much better dressed than he really
+was.
+
+“You don’t pray very often,” insisted Felicity.
+
+“Well, God will be all the more likely to listen to me if I don’t pester
+Him all the time,” argued Peter.
+
+This was rank heresy to Felicity, but the Story Girl looked as if she
+thought there might be something in it.
+
+“You NEVER go to church, anyhow,” continued Felicity, determined not to
+be argued down.
+
+“Well, I ain’t going to church till I’ve made up my mind whether I’m
+going to be a Methodist or a Presbyterian. Aunt Jane was a Methodist.
+My mother ain’t much of anything but I mean to be something. It’s more
+respectable to be a Methodist or a Presbyterian, or SOMETHING, than not
+to be anything. When I’ve settled what I’m to be I’m going to church
+same as you.”
+
+“That’s not the same as being BORN something,” said Felicity loftily.
+
+“I think it’s a good deal better to pick your own religion than have to
+take it just because it was what your folks had,” retorted Peter.
+
+“Now, never mind quarrelling,” said Cecily. “You leave Peter alone,
+Felicity. Peter, this is Beverley King, and this is Felix. And we’re all
+going to be good friends and have a lovely summer together. Think of the
+games we can have! But if you go squabbling you’ll spoil it all. Peter,
+what are you going to do to-day?”
+
+“Harrow the wood field and dig your Aunt Olivia’s flower beds.”
+
+“Aunt Olivia and I planted sweet peas yesterday,” said the Story Girl,
+“and I planted a little bed of my own. I am NOT going to dig them up
+this year to see if they have sprouted. It is bad for them. I shall try
+to cultivate patience, no matter how long they are coming up.”
+
+“I am going to help mother plant the vegetable garden to-day,” said
+Felicity.
+
+“Oh, I never like the vegetable garden,” said the Story Girl. “Except
+when I am hungry. Then I DO like to go and look at the nice little rows
+of onions and beets. But I love a flower garden. I think I could be
+always good if I lived in a garden all the time.”
+
+“Adam and Eve lived in a garden all the time,” said Felicity, “and THEY
+were far from being always good.”
+
+“They mightn’t have kept good as long as they did if they hadn’t lived
+in a garden,” said the Story Girl.
+
+We were now summoned to breakfast. Peter and the Story Girl slipped away
+through the gap, followed by Paddy, and the rest of us walked up the
+orchard to the house.
+
+“Well, what do you think of the Story Girl?” asked Felicity.
+
+“She’s just fine,” said Felix, enthusiastically. “I never heard anything
+like her to tell stories.”
+
+“She can’t cook,” said Felicity, “and she hasn’t a good complexion. Mind
+you, she says she’s going to be an actress when she grows up. Isn’t that
+dreadful?”
+
+We didn’t exactly see why.
+
+“Oh, because actresses are always wicked people,” said Felicity in a
+shocked tone. “But I daresay the Story Girl will go and be one just as
+soon as she can. Her father will back her up in it. He is an artist, you
+know.”
+
+Evidently Felicity thought artists and actresses and all such poor trash
+were members one of another.
+
+“Aunt Olivia says the Story Girl is fascinating,” said Cecily.
+
+The very adjective! Felix and I recognized its beautiful fitness at
+once. Yes, the Story Girl WAS fascinating and that was the final word to
+be said on the subject.
+
+Dan did not come down until breakfast was half over, and Aunt Janet
+talked to him after a fashion which made us realize that it would be
+well to keep, as the piquant country phrase went, from the rough side
+of her tongue. But all things considered, we liked the prospect of our
+summer very much. Felicity to look at--the Story Girl to tell us tales
+of wonder--Cecily to admire us--Dan and Peter to play with--what more
+could reasonable fellows want?
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV. THE WEDDING VEIL OF THE PROUD PRINCESS
+
+When we had lived for a fortnight in Carlisle we belonged there, and the
+freedom of all its small fry was conferred on us. With Peter and Dan,
+with Felicity and Cecily and the Story Girl, with pale, gray-eyed little
+Sara Ray, we were boon companions. We went to school, of course;
+and certain home chores were assigned to each of us for the faithful
+performance of which we were held responsible. But we had long hours for
+play. Even Peter had plenty of spare time when the planting was over.
+
+We got along very well with each other in the main, in spite of some
+minor differences of opinion. As for the grown-up denizens of our small
+world, they suited us also.
+
+We adored Aunt Olivia; she was pretty and merry and kind; and, above
+all, she had mastered to perfection the rare art of letting children
+alone. If we kept ourselves tolerably clean, and refrained from
+quarrelling or talking slang, Aunt Olivia did not worry us. Aunt Janet,
+on the contrary, gave us so much good advice and was so constantly
+telling us to do this or not to do the other thing, that we could not
+remember half her instructions, and did not try.
+
+Uncle Roger was, as we had been informed, quite jolly and fond of
+teasing. We liked him; but we had an uncomfortable feeling that the
+meaning of his remarks was not always that which met the ear. Sometimes
+we believed Uncle Roger was making fun of us, and the deadly seriousness
+of youth in us resented that.
+
+To Uncle Alec we gave our warmest love. We felt that we always had a
+friend at court in Uncle Alec, no matter what we did or left undone. And
+we never had to turn HIS speeches inside out to discover their meaning.
+
+The social life of juvenile Carlisle centred in the day and Sunday
+Schools. We were especially interested in our Sunday School, for we were
+fortunate enough to be assigned to a teacher who made our lessons so
+interesting that we no longer regarded Sunday School attendance as
+a disagreeable weekly duty; but instead looked forward to it with
+pleasure, and tried to carry out our teacher’s gentle precepts--at least
+on Mondays and Tuesdays. I am afraid the remembrance grew a little dim
+the rest of the week.
+
+She was also deeply interested in missions; and one talk on this subject
+inspired the Story Girl to do a little home missionary work on her own
+account. The only thing she could think of, along this line, was to
+persuade Peter to go to church.
+
+Felicity did not approve of the design, and said so plainly.
+
+“He won’t know how to behave, for he’s never been inside a church door
+in his life,” she warned the Story Girl. “He’ll likely do something
+awful, and then you’ll feel ashamed and wish you’d never asked him to
+go, and we’ll all be disgraced. It’s all right to have our mite boxes
+for the heathen, and send missionaries to them. They’re far away and we
+don’t have to associate with them. But I don’t want to have to sit in a
+pew with a hired boy.”
+
+But the Story Girl undauntedly continued to coax the reluctant Peter. It
+was not an easy matter. Peter did not come of a churchgoing stock; and
+besides, he alleged, he had not yet made up his mind whether to be a
+Presbyterian or a Methodist.
+
+“It isn’t a bit of difference which you are,” pleaded the Story Girl.
+“They both go to heaven.”
+
+“But one way must be easier or better than the other, or else they’d all
+be one kind,” argued Peter. “I want to find the easiest way. And I’ve
+got a hankering after the Methodists. My Aunt Jane was a Methodist.”
+
+“Isn’t she one still?” asked Felicity pertly.
+
+“Well, I don’t know exactly. She’s dead,” said Peter rebukingly. “Do
+people go on being just the same after they’re dead?”
+
+“No, of course not. They’re angels then--not Methodists or anything, but
+just angels. That is, if they go to heaven.”
+
+“S’posen they went to the other place?”
+
+But Felicity’s theology broke down at this point. She turned her back on
+Peter and walked disdainfully away.
+
+The Story Girl returned to the main point with a new argument.
+
+“We have such a lovely minister, Peter. He looks just like the picture
+of St. John my father sent me, only he is old and his hair is white.
+I know you’d like him. And even if you are going to be a Methodist it
+won’t hurt you to go to the Presbyterian church. The nearest Methodist
+church is six miles away, at Markdale, and you can’t attend there just
+now. Go to the Presbyterian church until you’re old enough to have a
+horse.”
+
+“But s’posen I got too fond of being Presbyterian and couldn’t change if
+I wanted to?” objected Peter.
+
+Altogether, the Story Girl had a hard time of it; but she persevered;
+and one day she came to us with the announcement that Peter had yielded.
+
+“He’s going to church with us to-morrow,” she said triumphantly.
+
+We were out in Uncle Roger’s hill pasture, sitting on some smooth, round
+stones under a clump of birches. Behind us was an old gray fence, with
+violets and dandelions thick in its corners. Below us was the Carlisle
+valley, with its orchard-embowered homesteads, and fertile meadows. Its
+upper end was dim with a delicate spring mist. Winds blew up the field
+like wave upon wave of sweet savour--spice of bracken and balsam.
+
+We were eating little jam “turnovers,” which Felicity had made for us.
+Felicity’s turnovers were perfection. I looked at her and wondered why
+it was not enough that she should be so pretty and capable of making
+such turnovers. If she were only more interesting! Felicity had not a
+particle of the nameless charm and allurement which hung about every
+motion of the Story Girl, and made itself manifest in her lightest word
+and most careless glance. Ah well, one cannot have every good gift! The
+Story Girl had no dimples at her slim, brown wrists.
+
+We all enjoyed our turnovers except Sara Ray. She ate hers but she
+knew she should not have done so. Her mother did not approve of snacks
+between meals, or of jam turnovers at any time. Once, when Sara was in a
+brown study, I asked her what she was thinking of.
+
+“I’m trying to think of something ma hasn’t forbid,” she answered with a
+sigh.
+
+We were all glad to hear that Peter was going to church, except
+Felicity. She was full of gloomy forebodings and warnings.
+
+“I’m surprised at you, Felicity King,” said Cecily severely. “You ought
+to be glad that poor boy is going to get started in the right way.”
+
+“There’s a great big patch on his best pair of trousers,” protested
+Felicity.
+
+“Well, that’s better than a hole,” said the Story Girl, addressing
+herself daintily to her turnover. “God won’t notice the patch.”
+
+“No, but the Carlisle people will,” retorted Felicity, in a tone which
+implied that what the Carlisle people thought was far more important.
+“And I don’t believe that Peter has got a decent stocking to his name.
+What will you feel like if he goes to church with the skin of his legs
+showing through the holes, Miss Story Girl?”
+
+“I’m not a bit afraid,” said the Story Girl staunchly. “Peter knows
+better than that.”
+
+“Well, all I hope is that he’ll wash behind his ears,” said Felicity
+resignedly.
+
+“How is Pat to-day?” asked Cecily, by way of changing the conversation.
+
+“Pat isn’t a bit better. He just mopes about the kitchen,” said the
+Story Girl anxiously. “I went out to the barn and I saw a mouse. I had
+a stick in my hand and I fetched a swipe at it--so. I killed it stone
+dead. Then I took it in to Paddy. Will you believe it? He wouldn’t even
+look at it. I’m so worried. Uncle Roger says he needs a dose of physic.
+But how is he to be made take it, that’s the question. I mixed a powder
+in some milk and tried to pour it down his throat while Peter held him.
+Just look at the scratches I got! And the milk went everywhere except
+down Pat’s throat.”
+
+“Wouldn’t it be awful if--if anything happened to Pat?” whispered
+Cecily.
+
+“Well, we could have a jolly funeral, you know,” said Dan.
+
+We looked at him in such horror that Dan hastened to apologize.
+
+“I’d be awful sorry myself if Pat died. But if he DID, we’d have to give
+him the right kind of a funeral,” he protested. “Why, Paddy just seems
+like one of the family.”
+
+The Story Girl finished her turnover, and stretched herself out on the
+grasses, pillowing her chin in her hands and looking at the sky. She was
+bare headed, as usual, and her scarlet ribbon was bound filletwise about
+her head. She had twined freshly plucked dandelions around it and the
+effect was that of a crown of brilliant golden stars on her sleek, brown
+curls.
+
+“Look at that long, thin, lacy cloud up there,” she said. “What does it
+make you think of, girls?”
+
+“A wedding veil,” said Cecily.
+
+“That is just what it is--the Wedding Veil of the Proud Princess. I
+know a story about it. I read it in a book. Once upon a time”--the Story
+Girl’s eyes grew dreamy, and her accents floated away on the summer
+air like wind-blown rose petals--“there was a princess who was the most
+beautiful princess in the world, and kings from all lands came to woo
+her for a bride. But she was as proud as she was beautiful. She laughed
+all her suitors to scorn. And when her father urged her to choose one of
+them as her husband she drew herself up haughtily--so--”
+
+The Story Girl sprang to her feet and for a moment we saw the proud
+princess of the old tale in all her scornful loveliness--
+
+“and she said,
+
+“‘I will not wed until a king comes who can conquer all kings. Then I
+shall be the wife of the king of the world and no one can hold herself
+higher than I.’
+
+“So every king went to war to prove that he could conquer every one
+else, and there was a great deal of bloodshed and misery. But the proud
+princess laughed and sang, and she and her maidens worked at a wonderful
+lace veil which she meant to wear when the king of all kings came. It
+was a very beautiful veil; but her maidens whispered that a man had died
+and a woman’s heart had broken for every stitch set in it.
+
+“Just when a king thought he had conquered everybody some other king
+would come and conquer HIM; and so it went on until it did not seem
+likely the proud princess would ever get a husband at all. But still
+her pride was so great that she would not yield, even though everybody
+except the kings who wanted to marry her, hated her for the suffering
+she had caused. One day a horn was blown at the palace gate; and there
+was one tall man in complete armor with his visor down, riding on a
+white horse. When he said he had come to marry the princess every one
+laughed, for he had no retinue and no beautiful apparel, and no golden
+crown.
+
+“‘But I am the king who conquers all kings,’ he said.
+
+“‘You must prove it before I shall marry you,’ said the proud princess.
+But she trembled and turned pale, for there was something in his voice
+that frightened her. And when he laughed, his laughter was still more
+dreadful.
+
+“‘I can easily prove it, beautiful princess,’ he said, ‘but you must
+go with me to my kingdom for the proof. Marry me now, and you and I and
+your father and all your court will ride straightway to my kingdom; and
+if you are not satisfied then that I am the king who conquers all kings
+you may give me back my ring and return home free of me forever more.’
+
+“It was a strange wooing and the friends of the princess begged her to
+refuse. But her pride whispered that it would be such a wonderful thing
+to be the queen of the king of the world; so she consented; and her
+maidens dressed her, and put on the long lace veil that had been so many
+years a-making. Then they were married at once, but the bridegroom
+never lifted his visor and no one saw his face. The proud princess held
+herself more proudly than ever, but she was as white as her veil. And
+there was no laughter or merry-making, such as should be at a wedding,
+and every one looked at every one else with fear in his eyes.
+
+“After the wedding the bridegroom lifted his bride before him on his
+white horse, and her father and all the members of his court mounted,
+too, and rode after them. On and on they rode, and the skies grew darker
+and the wind blew and wailed, and the shades of evening came down. And
+just in the twilight they rode into a dark valley, filled with tombs and
+graves.
+
+“‘Why have you brought me here?’ cried the proud princess angrily.
+
+“‘This is my kingdom,’ he answered. ‘These are the tombs of the kings I
+have conquered. Behold me, beautiful princess. I am Death!’
+
+“He lifted his visor. All saw his awful face. The proud princess
+shrieked.
+
+“‘Come to my arms, my bride,’ he cried. ‘I have won you fairly. I am the
+king who conquers all kings!’
+
+“He clasped her fainting form to his breast and spurred his white horse
+to the tombs. A tempest of rain broke over the valley and blotted them
+from sight. Very sadly the old king and courtiers rode home, and never,
+never again did human eye behold the proud princess. But when those
+long, white clouds sweep across the sky, the country people in the land
+where she lived say, ‘Look you, there is the Wedding Veil of the Proud
+Princess.’”
+
+The weird spell of the tale rested on us for some moments after the
+Story Girl had finished. We had walked with her in the place of death
+and grown cold with the horror that chilled the heart of the poor
+princess. Dan presently broke the spell.
+
+“You see it doesn’t do to be too proud, Felicity,” he remarked, giving
+her a poke. “You’d better not say too much about Peter’s patches.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V. PETER GOES TO CHURCH
+
+There was no Sunday School the next afternoon, as superintendent and
+teachers wished to attend a communion service at Markdale. The Carlisle
+service was in the evening, and at sunset we were waiting at Uncle
+Alec’s front door for Peter and the Story Girl.
+
+None of the grown-ups were going to church. Aunt Olivia had a sick
+headache and Uncle Roger stayed home with her. Aunt Janet and Uncle Alec
+had gone to the Markdale service and had not yet returned.
+
+Felicity and Cecily were wearing their new summer muslins for the first
+time--and were acutely conscious of the fact. Felicity, her pink and
+white face shadowed by her drooping, forget-me-not-wreathed, leghorn
+hat, was as beautiful as usual; but Cecily, having tortured her hair
+with curl papers all night, had a rampant bush of curls all about her
+head which quite destroyed the sweet, nun-like expression of her little
+features. Cecily cherished a grudge against fate because she had not
+been given naturally curly hair as had the other two girls. But she
+attained the desire of her heart on Sundays at least, and was quite
+well satisfied. It was impossible to convince her that the satin smooth
+lustre of her week-day tresses was much more becoming to her.
+
+Presently Peter and the Story Girl appeared, and we were all more or
+less relieved to see that Peter looked quite respectable, despite the
+indisputable patch on his trousers. His face was rosy, his thick black
+curls were smoothly combed, and his tie was neatly bowed; but it was his
+legs which we scrutinized most anxiously. At first glance they seemed
+well enough; but closer inspection revealed something not altogether
+customary.
+
+“What is the matter with your stockings, Peter?” asked Dan bluntly.
+
+“Oh, I hadn’t a pair without holes in the legs,” answered Peter easily,
+“because ma hadn’t time to darn them this week. So I put on two pairs.
+The holes don’t come in the same places, and you’d never notice them
+unless you looked right close.”
+
+“Have you got a cent for collection?” demanded Felicity.
+
+“I’ve got a Yankee cent. I s’pose it will do, won’t it?”
+
+Felicity shook her head vehemently.
+
+“Oh, no, no. It may be all right to pass a Yankee cent on a store keeper
+or an egg peddler, but it would never do for church.”
+
+“I’ll have to go without any, then,” said Peter. “I haven’t another
+cent. I only get fifty cents a week and I give it all to ma last night.”
+
+But Peter must have a cent. Felicity would have given him one
+herself--and she was none too lavish of her coppers--rather than
+have him go without one. Dan, however, lent him one, on the distinct
+understanding that it was to be repaid the next week.
+
+Uncle Roger wandered by at this moment and, beholding Peter, said,
+
+“‘Is Saul also among the prophets?’ What can have induced you to turn
+church-goer, Peter, when all Olivia’s gentle persuasions were of no
+avail? The old, old argument I suppose--‘beauty draws us with a single
+hair.’”
+
+Uncle Roger looked quizzically at Felicity. We did not know what his
+quotations meant, but we understood he thought Peter was going to church
+because of Felicity. Felicity tossed her head.
+
+“It isn’t my fault that he’s going to church,” she said snappishly.
+“It’s the Story Girl’s doings.”
+
+Uncle Roger sat down on the doorstep, and gave himself over to one
+of the silent, inward paroxysms of laughter we all found so very
+aggravating. He shook his big, blond head, shut his eyes, and murmured,
+
+“Not her fault! Oh, Felicity, Felicity, you’ll be the death of your dear
+Uncle yet if you don’t watch out.”
+
+Felicity started off indignantly, and we followed, picking up Sara Ray
+at the foot of the hill.
+
+The Carlisle church was a very old-fashioned one, with a square,
+ivy-hung tower. It was shaded by tall elms, and the graveyard surrounded
+it completely, many of the graves being directly under its windows. We
+always took the corner path through it, passing the King plot where our
+kindred of four generations slept in a green solitude of wavering light
+and shadow.
+
+There was Great-grandfather King’s flat tombstone of rough Island
+sandstone, so overgrown with ivy that we could hardly read its lengthy
+inscription, recording his whole history in brief, and finishing with
+eight lines of original verse composed by his widow. I do not think that
+poetry was Great-grandmother King’s strong point. When Felix read it, on
+our first Sunday in Carlisle, he remarked dubiously that it LOOKED like
+poetry but didn’t SOUND like it.
+
+There, too, slept the Emily whose faithful spirit was supposed to haunt
+the orchard; but Edith who had kissed the poet lay not with her kindred.
+She had died in a far, foreign land, and the murmur of an alien sea
+sounded about her grave.
+
+White marble tablets, ornamented with weeping willow trees, marked where
+Grandfather and Grandmother King were buried, and a single shaft of
+red Scotch granite stood between the graves of Aunt Felicity and Uncle
+Felix. The Story Girl lingered to lay a bunch of wild violets, misty
+blue and faintly sweet, on her mother’s grave; and then she read aloud
+the verse on the stone.
+
+“‘They were lovely and pleasant in their lives and in their death they
+were not divided.’”
+
+The tones of her voice brought out the poignant and immortal beauty and
+pathos of that wonderful old lament. The girls wiped their eyes; and
+we boys felt as if we might have done so, too, had nobody been looking.
+What better epitaph could any one wish than to have it said that he was
+lovely and pleasant in his life? When I heard the Story Girl read it I
+made a secret compact with myself that I would try to deserve such an
+epitaph.
+
+“I wish I had a family plot,” said Peter, rather wistfully. “I haven’t
+ANYTHING you fellows have. The Craigs are just buried anywhere they
+happen to die.”
+
+“I’d like to be buried here when I die,” said Felix. “But I hope it
+won’t be for a good while yet,” he added in a livelier tone, as we moved
+onward to the church.
+
+The interior of the church was as old-fashioned as its exterior. It was
+furnished with square box pews; the pulpit was a “wine-glass” one, and
+was reached by a steep, narrow flight of steps. Uncle Alec’s pew was at
+the top of the church, quite near the pulpit.
+
+Peter’s appearance did not attract as much attention as we had fondly
+expected. Indeed, nobody seemed to notice him at all. The lamps were
+not yet lighted and the church was filled with a soft twilight and hush.
+Outside, the sky was purple and gold and silvery green, with a delicate
+tangle of rosy cloud above the elms.
+
+“Isn’t it awful nice and holy in here?” whispered Peter reverently. “I
+didn’t know church was like this. It’s nice.”
+
+Felicity frowned at him, and the Story Girl touched her with her
+slippered foot to remind him that he must not talk in church. Peter
+stiffened up and sat at attention during the service. Nobody could have
+behaved better. But when the sermon was over and the collection was
+being taken up, he made the sensation which his entrance had not
+produced.
+
+Elder Frewen, a tall, pale man, with long, sandy side-whiskers, appeared
+at the door of our pew with the collection plate. We knew Elder Frewen
+quite well and liked him; he was Aunt Janet’s cousin and often visited
+her. The contrast between his week-day jollity and the unearthly
+solemnity of his countenance on Sundays always struck us as very funny.
+It seemed so to strike Peter; for as Peter dropped his cent into the
+plate he laughed aloud!
+
+Everybody looked at our pew. I have always wondered why Felicity did
+not die of mortification on the spot. The Story Girl turned white, and
+Cecily turned red. As for that poor, unlucky Peter, the shame of his
+countenance was pitiful to behold. He never lifted his head for the
+remainder of the service; and he followed us down the aisle and across
+the graveyard like a beaten dog. None of us uttered a word until we
+reached the road, lying in the white moonshine of the May night. Then
+Felicity broke the tense silence by remarking to the Story Girl,
+
+“I told you so!”
+
+The Story Girl made no response. Peter sidled up to her.
+
+“I’m awful sorry,” he said contritely. “I never meant to laugh. It just
+happened before I could stop myself. It was this way--”
+
+“Don’t you ever speak to me again,” said the Story Girl, in a tone of
+cold concentrated fury. “Go and be a Methodist, or a Mohammedan, or
+ANYTHING! I don’t care what you are! You have HUMILIATED me!”
+
+She marched off with Sara Ray, and Peter dropped back to us with a
+frightened face.
+
+“What is it I’ve done to her?” he whispered. “What does that big word
+mean?”
+
+“Oh, never mind,” I said crossly--for I felt that Peter HAD disgraced
+us--“She’s just mad--and no wonder. Whatever made you act so crazy,
+Peter?”
+
+“Well, I didn’t mean to. And I wanted to laugh twice before that and
+DIDN’T. It was the Story Girl’s stories made me want to laugh, so I
+don’t think it’s fair for her to be mad at me. She hadn’t ought to tell
+me stories about people if she don’t want me to laugh when I see them.
+When I looked at Samuel Ward I thought of him getting up in meeting
+one night, and praying that he might be guided in his upsetting and
+downrising. I remembered the way she took him off, and I wanted to
+laugh. And then I looked at the pulpit and thought of the story she told
+about the old Scotch minister who was too fat to get in at the door
+of it, and had to h’ist himself by his two hands over it, and then
+whispered to the other minister so that everybody heard him.
+
+“‘_This pulpit door was made for speerits_’--and I wanted to laugh.
+And then Mr. Frewen come--and I thought of her story about his
+sidewhiskers--how when his first wife died of information of the lungs
+he went courting Celia Ward, and Celia told him she wouldn’t marry
+him unless he shaved them whiskers off. And he wouldn’t, just to be
+stubborn. And one day one of them caught fire, when he was burning
+brush, and burned off, and every one thought he’d HAVE to shave the
+other off then. But he didn’t and just went round with one whisker till
+the burned one grew out. And then Celia gave in and took him, because
+she saw there wasn’t no hope of HIM ever giving in. I just remembered
+that story, and I thought I could see him, taking up the cents so
+solemn, with one long whisker; and the laugh just laughed itself before
+I could help it.”
+
+We all exploded with laughter on the spot, much to the horror of Mrs.
+Abraham Ward, who was just driving past, and who came up the next day
+and told Aunt Janet we had “acted scandalous” on the road home from
+church. We felt ashamed ourselves, because we knew people should conduct
+themselves decently and in order on Sunday farings-forth. But, as with
+Peter, it “had laughed itself.”
+
+Even Felicity laughed. Felicity was not nearly so angry with Peter as
+might have been expected. She even walked beside him and let him carry
+her Bible. They talked quite confidentially. Perhaps she forgave him the
+more easily, because he had justified her in her predictions, and thus
+afforded her a decided triumph over the Story Girl.
+
+“I’m going to keep on going to church,” Peter told her. “I like it.
+Sermons are more int’resting than I thought, and I like the singing.
+I wish I could make up my mind whether to be a Presbyterian or a
+Methodist. I s’pose I might ask the ministers about it.”
+
+“Oh, no, no, don’t do that,” said Felicity in alarm. “Ministers wouldn’t
+want to be bothered with such questions.”
+
+“Why not? What are ministers for if they ain’t to tell people how to get
+to heaven?”
+
+“Oh, well, it’s all right for grown-ups to ask them things, of course.
+But it isn’t respectful for little boys--especially hired boys.”
+
+“I don’t see why. But anyhow, I s’pose it wouldn’t be much use, because
+if he was a Presbyterian minister he’d say I ought to be a Presbyterian,
+and if he was a Methodist he’d tell me to be one, too. Look here,
+Felicity, what IS the difference between them?”
+
+“I--I don’t know,” said Felicity reluctantly. “I s’pose children can’t
+understand such things. There must be a great deal of difference, of
+course, if we only knew what it was. Anyhow, I am a Presbyterian, and
+I’m glad of it.”
+
+We walked on in silence for a time, thinking our own young thoughts.
+Presently they were scattered by an abrupt and startling question from
+Peter.
+
+“What does God look like?” he said.
+
+It appeared that none of us had any idea.
+
+“The Story Girl would prob’ly know,” said Cecily.
+
+“I wish I knew,” said Peter gravely. “I wish I could see a picture of
+God. It would make Him seem lots more real.”
+
+“I’ve often wondered myself what he looks like,” said Felicity in a
+burst of confidence. Even in Felicity, so it would seem, there were
+depths of thought unplumbed.
+
+“I’ve seen pictures of Jesus,” said Felix meditatively. “He looks just
+like a man, only better and kinder. But now that I come to think of it,
+I’ve never seen a picture of God.”
+
+“Well, if there isn’t one in Toronto it isn’t likely there’s one
+anywhere,” said Peter disappointedly. “I saw a picture of the devil
+once,” he added. “It was in a book my Aunt Jane had. She got it for a
+prize in school. My Aunt Jane was clever.”
+
+“It couldn’t have been a very good book if there was such a picture in
+it,” said Felicity.
+
+“It was a real good book. My Aunt Jane wouldn’t have a book that wasn’t
+good,” retorted Peter sulkily.
+
+He refused to discuss the subject further, somewhat to our
+disappointment. For we had never seen a picture of the person referred
+to, and we were rather curious regarding it.
+
+“We’ll ask Peter to describe it sometime when he’s in a better humour,”
+ whispered Felix.
+
+Sara Ray having turned in at her own gate, I ran ahead to join the Story
+Girl, and we walked up the hill together. She had recovered her calmness
+of mind, but she made no reference to Peter. When we reached our lane
+and passed under Grandfather King’s big willow the fragrance of the
+orchard struck us in the face like a wave. We could see the long rows of
+trees, a white gladness in the moonshine. It seemed to us that there
+was in the orchard something different from other orchards that we had
+known. We were too young to analyze the vague sensation. In later years
+we were to understand that it was because the orchard blossomed not only
+apple blossoms but all the love, faith, joy, pure happiness and pure
+sorrow of those who had made it and walked there.
+
+“The orchard doesn’t seem the same place by moonlight at all,” said the
+Story Girl dreamily. “It’s lovely, but it’s different. When I was very
+small I used to believe the fairies danced in it on moonlight nights. I
+would like to believe it now but I can’t.”
+
+“Why not?”
+
+“Oh, it’s so hard to believe things you know are not true. It was Uncle
+Edward who told me there were no such things as fairies. I was just
+seven. He is a minister, so of course I knew he spoke the truth. It was
+his duty to tell me, and I do not blame him, but I have never felt quite
+the same to Uncle Edward since.”
+
+Ah, do we ever “feel quite the same” towards people who destroy our
+illusions? Shall I ever be able to forgive the brutal creature who first
+told me there was no such person as Santa Claus? He was a boy, three
+years older than myself; and he may now, for aught I know, be a most
+useful and respectable member of society, beloved by his kind. But I
+know what he must ever seem to me!
+
+We waited at Uncle Alec’s door for the others to come up. Peter was by
+way of skulking shamefacedly past into the shadows; but the Story Girl’s
+brief, bitter anger had vanished.
+
+“Wait for me, Peter,” she called.
+
+She went over to him and held out her hand.
+
+“I forgive you,” she said graciously.
+
+Felix and I felt that it would really be worth while to offend her,
+just to be forgiven in such an adorable voice. Peter eagerly grasped her
+hand.
+
+“I tell you what, Story Girl, I’m awfully sorry I laughed in church,
+but you needn’t be afraid I ever will again. No, sir! And I’m going to
+church and Sunday School regular, and I’ll say my prayers every night. I
+want to be like the rest of you. And look here! I’ve thought of the way
+my Aunt Jane used to give medicine to a cat. You mix the powder in lard,
+and spread it on his paws and his sides and he’ll lick it off, ‘cause a
+cat can’t stand being messy. If Paddy isn’t any better to-morrow, we’ll
+do that.”
+
+They went away together hand in hand, children-wise, up the lane of
+spruces crossed with bars of moonlight. And there was peace over all
+that fresh and flowery land, and peace in our little hearts.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI. THE MYSTERY OF GOLDEN MILESTONE
+
+Paddy was smeared with medicated lard the next day, all of us assisting
+at the rite, although the Story Girl was high priestess. Then, out of
+regard for mats and cushions, he was kept in durance vile in the granary
+until he had licked his fur clean. This treatment being repeated every
+day for a week, Pat recovered his usual health and spirits, and our
+minds were set at rest to enjoy the next excitement--collecting for a
+school library fund.
+
+Our teacher thought it would be an excellent thing to have a library
+in connection with the school; and he suggested that each of the pupils
+should try to see how much money he or she could raise for the project
+during the month of June. We might earn it by honest toil, or gather it
+in by contributions levied on our friends.
+
+The result was a determined rivalry as to which pupil should collect
+the largest sum; and this rivalry was especially intense in our home
+coterie.
+
+Our relatives started us with a quarter apiece. For the rest, we knew we
+must depend on our own exertions. Peter was handicapped at the beginning
+by the fact that he had no family friend to finance him.
+
+“If my Aunt Jane’d been living she’d have given me something,” he
+remarked. “And if my father hadn’t run away he might have given me
+something too. But I’m going to do the best I can anyhow. Your Aunt
+Olivia says I can have the job of gathering the eggs, and I’m to have
+one egg out of every dozen to sell for myself.”
+
+Felicity made a similar bargain with her mother. The Story Girl and
+Cecily were each to be paid ten cents a week for washing dishes in their
+respective homes. Felix and Dan contracted to keep the gardens free from
+weeds. I caught brook trout in the westering valley of spruces and sold
+them for a cent apiece.
+
+Sara Ray was the only unhappy one among us. She could do nothing. She
+had no relatives in Carlisle except her mother, and her mother did not
+approve of the school library project, and would not give Sara a cent,
+or put her in any way of earning one. To Sara, this was humiliation
+indescribable. She felt herself an outcast and an alien to our busy
+little circle, where each member counted every day, with miserly
+delight, his slowly increasing hoard of small cash.
+
+“I’m just going to pray to God to send me some money,” she announced
+desperately at last.
+
+“I don’t believe that will do any good,” said Dan. “He gives lots of
+things, but he doesn’t give money, because people can earn that for
+themselves.”
+
+“I can’t,” said Sara, with passionate defiance. “I think He ought to
+take that into account.”
+
+“Don’t worry, dear,” said Cecily, who always poured balm. “If you can’t
+collect any money everybody will know it isn’t your fault.”
+
+“I won’t ever feel like reading a single book in the library if I can’t
+give something to it,” mourned Sara.
+
+Dan and the girls and I were sitting in a row on Aunt Olivia’s garden
+fence, watching Felix weed. Felix worked well, although he did not like
+weeding--“fat boys never do,” Felicity informed him. Felix pretended not
+to hear her, but I knew he did, because his ears grew red. Felix’s face
+never blushed, but his ears always gave him away. As for Felicity, she
+did not say things like that out of malice prepense. It never occurred
+to her that Felix did not like to be called fat.
+
+“I always feel so sorry for the poor weeds,” said the Story Girl
+dreamily. “It must be very hard to be rooted up.”
+
+“They shouldn’t grow in the wrong place,” said Felicity mercilessly.
+
+“When weeds go to heaven I suppose they will be flowers,” continued the
+Story Girl.
+
+“You do think such queer things,” said Felicity.
+
+“A rich man in Toronto has a floral clock in his garden,” I said. “It
+looks just like the face of a clock, and there are flowers in it that
+open at every hour, so that you can always tell the time.”
+
+“Oh, I wish we had one here,” exclaimed Cecily.
+
+“What would be the use of it?” asked the Story Girl a little
+disdainfully. “Nobody ever wants to know the time in a garden.”
+
+I slipped away at this point, suddenly remembering that it was time to
+take a dose of magic seed. I had bought it from Billy Robinson three
+days before in school. Billy had assured me that it would make me grow
+fast.
+
+I was beginning to feel secretly worried because I did not grow. I had
+overheard Aunt Janet say I was going to be short, like Uncle Alec. Now,
+I loved Uncle Alec, but I wanted to be taller than he was. So when Billy
+confided to me, under solemn promise of secrecy, that he had some “magic
+seed,” which would make boys grow, and would sell me a box of it for ten
+cents, I jumped at the offer. Billy was taller than any boy of his age
+in Carlisle, and he assured me it all came from taking magic seed.
+
+“I was a regular runt before I begun,” he said, “and look at me now. I
+got it from Peg Bowen. She’s a witch, you know. I wouldn’t go near her
+again for a bushel of magic seed. It was an awful experience. I haven’t
+much left, but I guess I’ve enough to do me till I’m as tall as I want
+to be. You must take a pinch of the seed every three hours, walking
+backward, and you must never tell a soul you’re taking it, or it won’t
+work. I wouldn’t spare any of it to any one but you.”
+
+I felt deeply grateful to Billy, and sorry that I had not liked him
+better. Somehow, nobody did like Billy Robinson over and above. But I
+vowed I WOULD like him in future. I paid him the ten cents cheerfully
+and took the magic seed as directed, measuring myself carefully every
+day by a mark on the hall door. I could not see any advance in growth
+yet, but then I had been taking it only three days.
+
+One day the Story Girl had an inspiration.
+
+“Let us go and ask the Awkward Man and Mr. Campbell for a contribution
+to the library fund,” she said. “I am sure no one else has asked them,
+because nobody in Carlisle is related to them. Let us all go, and if
+they give us anything we’ll divide it equally among us.”
+
+It was a daring proposition, for both Mr. Campbell and the Awkward Man
+were regarded as eccentric personages; and Mr. Campbell was supposed
+to detest children. But where the Story Girl led we would follow to the
+death. The next day being Saturday, we started out in the afternoon.
+
+We took a short cut to Golden Milestone, over a long, green, dewy land
+full of placid meadows, where sunshine had fallen asleep. At first all
+was not harmonious. Felicity was in an ill humour; she had wanted to
+wear her second best dress, but Aunt Janet had decreed that her school
+clothes were good enough to go “traipsing about in the dust.” Then the
+Story Girl arrived, arrayed not in any second best but in her very best
+dress and hat, which her father had sent her from Paris--a dress of
+soft, crimson silk, and a white leghorn hat encircled by flame-red
+poppies. Neither Felicity nor Cecily could have worn it; but it became
+the Story Girl perfectly. In it she was a thing of fire and laughter
+and glow, as if the singular charm of her temperament were visible and
+tangible in its vivid colouring and silken texture.
+
+“I shouldn’t think you’d put on your best clothes to go begging for the
+library in,” said Felicity cuttingly.
+
+“Aunt Olivia says that when you are going to have an important interview
+with a man you ought to look your very best,” said the Story Girl,
+giving her skirt a lustrous swirl and enjoying the effect.
+
+“Aunt Olivia spoils you,” said Felicity.
+
+“She doesn’t either, Felicity King! Aunt Olivia is just sweet. She
+kisses me good-night every night, and your mother NEVER kisses you.”
+
+“My mother doesn’t make kisses so common,” retorted Felicity. “But she
+gives us pie for dinner every day.”
+
+“So does Aunt Olivia.”
+
+“Yes, but look at the difference in the size of the pieces! And Aunt
+Olivia only gives you skim milk. My mother gives us cream.”
+
+“Aunt Olivia’s skim milk is as good as your mother’s cream,” cried the
+Story Girl hotly.
+
+“Oh, girls, don’t fight,” said Cecily, the peacemaker. “It’s such a nice
+day, and we’ll have a nice time if you don’t spoil it by fighting.”
+
+“We’re NOT fighting,” said Felicity. “And I like Aunt Olivia. But my
+mother is just as good as Aunt Olivia, there now!”
+
+“Of course she is. Aunt Janet is splendid,” agreed the Story Girl.
+
+They smiled at each other amicably. Felicity and the Story Girl were
+really quite fond of each other, under the queer surface friction that
+commonly resulted from their intercourse.
+
+“You said once you knew a story about the Awkward Man,” said Felix. “You
+might tell it to us.”
+
+“All right,” agreed the Story Girl. “The only trouble is, I don’t know
+the whole story. But I’ll tell you all I do know. I call it ‘The Mystery
+of the Golden Milestone.’”
+
+“Oh, I don’t believe that story is true,” said Felicity. “I believe Mrs.
+Griggs was just romancing. She DOES romance, mother says.”
+
+“Yes; but I don’t believe she could ever have thought of such a thing
+as this herself, so I believe it must be true,” said the Story Girl.
+“Anyway, this is the story, boys. You know the Awkward Man has lived
+alone ever since his mother died, ten years ago. Abel Griggs is his
+hired man, and he and his wife live in a little house down the Awkward
+Man’s lane. Mrs. Griggs makes his bread for him, and she cleans up his
+house now and then. She says he keeps it very neat. But till last fall
+there was one room she never saw. It was always locked--the west one,
+looking out over his garden. One day last fall the Awkward Man went to
+Summerside, and Mrs. Griggs scrubbed his kitchen. Then she went over the
+whole house and she tried the door of the west room. Mrs. Griggs is a
+VERY curious woman. Uncle Roger says all women have as much curiosity
+as is good for them, but Mrs. Griggs has more. She expected to find the
+door locked as usual. It was NOT locked. She opened it and went in. What
+do you suppose she found?”
+
+“Something like--like Bluebeard’s chamber?” suggested Felix in a scared
+tone.
+
+“Oh, no, NO! Nothing like THAT could happen in Prince Edward Island. But
+if there HAD been beautiful wives hanging up by their hair all round the
+walls I don’t believe Mrs. Griggs could have been much more astonished.
+The room had never been furnished in his mother’s time, but now it was
+ELEGANTLY furnished, though Mrs. Griggs says SHE doesn’t know when or
+how that furniture was brought there. She says she never saw a room
+like it in a country farmhouse. It was like a bed-room and sitting-room
+combined. The floor was covered with a carpet like green velvet. There
+were fine lace curtains at the windows and beautiful pictures on the
+walls. There was a little white bed, and a dressing-table, a bookcase
+full of books, a stand with a work basket on it, and a rocking-chair.
+There was a woman’s picture above the bookcase. Mrs. Griggs says she
+thinks it was a coloured photograph, but she didn’t know who it was.
+Anyway, it was a very pretty girl. But the most amazing thing of all was
+that A WOMAN’S DRESS was hanging over a chair by the table. Mrs. Griggs
+says it NEVER belonged to Jasper Dale’s mother, for she thought it a sin
+to wear anything but print and drugget; and this dress was of PALE BLUE
+silk. Besides that, there was a pair of blue satin slippers on the floor
+beside it--HIGH-HEELED slippers. And on the fly-leaves of the books
+the name ‘Alice’ was written. Now, there never was an Alice in the Dale
+connection and nobody ever heard of the Awkward Man having a sweetheart.
+There, isn’t that a lovely mystery?”
+
+“It’s a pretty queer yarn,” said Felix. “I wonder if it is true--and
+what it means.”
+
+“I intend to find out what it means,” said the Story Girl. “I am going
+to get acquainted with the Awkward Man sometime, and then I’ll find out
+his Alice-secret.”
+
+“I don’t see how you’ll ever get acquainted with him,” said Felicity.
+“He never goes anywhere except to church. He just stays home and reads
+books when he isn’t working. Mother says he is a perfect hermit.”
+
+“I’ll manage it somehow,” said the Story Girl--and we had no doubt that
+she would. “But I must wait until I’m a little older, for he wouldn’t
+tell the secret of the west room to a little girl. And I mustn’t wait
+till I’m TOO old, for he is frightened of grown-up girls, because he
+thinks they laugh at his awkwardness. I know I will like him. He has
+such a nice face, even if he is awkward. He looks like a man you could
+tell things to.”
+
+“Well, I’d like a man who could move around without falling over his own
+feet,” said Felicity. “And then the look of him! Uncle Roger says he is
+long, lank, lean, narrow, and contracted.”
+
+“Things always sound worse than they are when Uncle Roger says them,”
+ said the Story Girl. “Uncle Edward says Jasper Dale is a very clever man
+and it’s a great pity he wasn’t able to finish his college course. He
+went to college two years, you know. Then his father died, and he stayed
+home with his mother because she was very delicate. I call him a hero. I
+wonder if it is true that he writes poetry. Mrs. Griggs says it is. She
+says she has seen him writing it in a brown book. She said she couldn’t
+get near enough to read it, but she knew it was poetry by the shape of
+it.”
+
+“Very likely. If that blue silk dress story is true, I’d believe
+ANYTHING of him,” said Felicity.
+
+We were near Golden Milestone now. The house was a big, weather-gray
+structure, overgrown with vines and climbing roses. Something about
+the three square windows in the second story gave it an appearance of
+winking at us in a friendly fashion through its vines--at least, so the
+Story Girl said; and, indeed, we could see it for ourselves after she
+had once pointed it out to us.
+
+We did not get into the house, however. We met the Awkward man in his
+yard, and he gave us a quarter apiece for our library. He did not seem
+awkward or shy; but then we were only children, and his foot was on his
+native heath.
+
+He was a tall, slender man, who did not look his forty years, so
+unwrinkled was his high, white forehead, so clear and lustrous his
+large, dark-blue eyes, so free from silver threads his rather long black
+hair. He had large hands and feet, and walked with a slight stoop. I
+am afraid we stared at him rather rudely while the Story Girl talked
+to him. But was not an Awkward Man, who was also a hermit and kept blue
+silk dresses in a locked room, and possibly wrote poetry, a legitimate
+object of curiosity? I leave it to you.
+
+When we got away we compared notes, and found that we all liked him--and
+this, although he had said little and had appeared somewhat glad to get
+rid of us.
+
+“He gave us the money like a gentleman,” said the Story Girl. “I felt he
+didn’t grudge it. And now for Mr. Campbell. It was on HIS account I put
+on my red silk. I don’t suppose the Awkward Man noticed it at all, but
+Mr. Campbell will, or I’m much mistaken.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII. HOW BETTY SHERMAN WON A HUSBAND
+
+The rest of us did not share the Story Girl’s enthusiasm regarding
+our call on Mr. Campbell. We secretly dreaded it. If, as was said, he
+detested children, who knew what sort of a reception we might meet?
+
+Mr. Campbell was a rich, retired farmer, who took life easily. He had
+visited New York and Boston, Toronto and Montreal; he had even been as
+far as the Pacific coast. Therefore he was regarded in Carlisle as a
+much travelled man; and he was known to be “well read” and intelligent.
+But it was also known that Mr. Campbell was not always in a good
+humour. If he liked you there was nothing he would not do for you; if he
+disliked you--well, you were not left in ignorance of it. In short, we
+had the impression that Mr. Campbell resembled the famous little girl
+with the curl in the middle of her forehead. “When he was good, he was
+very, very good, and when he was bad he was horrid.” What if this were
+one of his horrid days?
+
+“He can’t DO anything to us, you know,” said the Story Girl. “He may be
+rude, but that won’t hurt any one but himself.”
+
+“Hard words break no bones,” observed Felicity philosophically.
+
+“But they hurt your feelings. I am afraid of Mr. Campbell,” said Cecily
+candidly.
+
+“Perhaps we’d better give up and go home,” suggested Dan.
+
+“You can go home if you like,” said the Story Girl scornfully. “But I am
+going to see Mr. Campbell. I know I can manage him. But if I have to go
+alone, and he gives me anything, I’ll keep it all for my own collection,
+mind you.”
+
+That settled it. We were not going to let the Story Girl get ahead of us
+in the manner of collecting.
+
+Mr. Campbell’s housekeeper ushered us into his parlour and left us.
+Presently Mr. Campbell himself was standing in the doorway, looking us
+over. We took heart of grace. It seemed to be one of his good days,
+for there was a quizzical smile on his broad, clean-shaven,
+strongly-featured face. Mr. Campbell was a tall man, with a massive
+head, well thatched with thick, black hair, gray-streaked. He had
+big, black eyes, with many wrinkles around them, and a thin, firm,
+long-lipped mouth. We thought him handsome, for an old man.
+
+His gaze wandered over us with uncomplimentary indifference until it
+fell on the Story Girl, leaning back in an arm-chair. She looked like a
+slender red lily in the unstudied grace of her attitude. A spark flashed
+into Mr. Campbell’s black eyes.
+
+“Is this a Sunday School deputation?” he inquired rather ironically.
+
+“No. We have come to ask a favour of you,” said the Story Girl.
+
+The magic of her voice worked its will on Mr. Campbell, as on all
+others. He came in, sat down, hooked his thumb into his vest pocket, and
+smiled at her.
+
+“What is it?” he asked.
+
+“We are collecting for our school library, and we have called to ask you
+for a contribution,” she replied.
+
+“Why should I contribute to your school library?” demanded Mr. Campbell.
+
+This was a poser for us. Why should he, indeed? But the Story Girl
+was quite equal to it. Leaning forward, and throwing an indescribable
+witchery into tone and eyes and smile, she said,
+
+“Because a lady asks you.”
+
+Mr. Campbell chuckled.
+
+“The best of all reasons,” he said. “But see here, my dear young lady,
+I’m an old miser and curmudgeon, as you may have heard. I HATE to part
+with my money, even for a good reason. And I NEVER part with any of
+it, unless I am to receive some benefit from the expenditure. Now, what
+earthly good could I get from your three by six school library? None
+whatever. But I shall make you a fair offer. I have heard from my
+housekeeper’s urchin of a son that you are a ‘master hand’ to tell
+stories. Tell me one, here and now. I shall pay you in proportion to the
+entertainment you afford me. Come now, and do your prettiest.”
+
+There was a fine mockery in his tone that put the Story Girl on her
+mettle instantly. She sprang to her feet, an amazing change coming over
+her. Her eyes flashed and burned; crimson spots glowed in her cheeks.
+
+“I shall tell you the story of the Sherman girls, and how Betty Sherman
+won a husband,” she said.
+
+We gasped. Was the Story Girl crazy? Or had she forgotten that Betty
+Sherman was Mr. Campbell’s own great-grandmother, and that her method
+of winning a husband was not exactly in accordance with maidenly
+traditions.
+
+But Mr. Campbell chuckled again.
+
+“An excellent test,” he said. “If you can amuse ME with that story you
+must be a wonder. I’ve heard it so often that it has no more interest
+for me than the alphabet.”
+
+“One cold winter day, eighty years ago,” began the Story Girl without
+further parley, “Donald Fraser was sitting by the window of his new
+house, playing his fiddle for company, and looking out over the white,
+frozen bay before his door. It was bitter, bitter cold, and a storm was
+brewing. But, storm, or no storm, Donald meant to go over the bay that
+evening to see Nancy Sherman. He was thinking of her as he played ‘Annie
+Laurie,’ for Nancy was more beautiful than the lady of the song. ‘Her
+face, it is the fairest that e’er the sun shone on,’ hummed Donald--and
+oh, he thought so, too! He did not know whether Nancy cared for him or
+not. He had many rivals. But he knew that if she would not come to be
+the mistress of his new house no one else ever should. So he sat there
+that afternoon and dreamed of her, as he played sweet old songs and
+rollicking jigs on his fiddle.
+
+“While he was playing a sleigh drove up to the door, and Neil Campbell
+came in. Donald was not overly glad to see him, for he suspected where
+he was going. Neil Campbell, who was Highland Scotch and lived down
+at Berwick, was courting Nancy Sherman, too; and, what was far worse,
+Nancy’s father favoured him, because he was a richer man than Donald
+Fraser. But Donald was not going to show all he thought--Scotch people
+never do--and he pretended to be very glad to see Neil and made him
+heartily welcome.
+
+“Neil sat down by the roaring fire, looking quite well satisfied with
+himself. It was ten miles from Berwick to the bay shore, and a call at
+a half way house was just the thing. Then Donald brought out the whisky.
+They always did that eighty years ago, you know. If you were a woman,
+you could give your visitors a dish of tea; but if you were a man and
+did not offer them a ‘taste’ of whisky, you were thought either very
+mean or very ignorant.
+
+“‘You look cold,’ said Donald, in his great, hearty voice. ‘Sit nearer
+the fire, man, and put a bit of warmth in your veins. It’s bitter cold
+the day. And now tell me the Berwick news. Has Jean McLean made up
+with her man yet? And is it true that Sandy McQuarrie is to marry Kate
+Ferguson? ‘Twill be a match now! Sure, with her red hair, Sandy will not
+be like to lose his bride past finding.’
+
+“Neil had plenty of news to tell. And the more whisky he drank the more
+he told. He didn’t notice that Donald was not taking much. Neil talked
+on and on, and of course he soon began to tell things it would have been
+much wiser not to tell. Finally he told Donald that he was going over
+the bay to ask Nancy Sherman that very night to marry him. And if she
+would have him, then Donald and all the folks should see a wedding that
+WAS a wedding.
+
+“Oh, wasn’t Donald taken aback! This was more than he had expected. Neil
+hadn’t been courting Nancy very long, and Donald never dreamed he would
+propose to her QUITE so soon.
+
+“At first Donald didn’t know what to do. He felt sure deep down in his
+heart, that Nancy liked HIM. She was very shy and modest, but you know
+a girl can let a man see she likes him without going out of her way. But
+Donald knew that if Neil proposed first he would have the best chance.
+Neil was rich and the Shermans were poor, and old Elias Sherman would
+have the most to say in the matter. If he told Nancy she must take Neil
+Campbell she would never dream of disobeying him. Old Elias Sherman was
+a man who had to be obeyed. But if Nancy had only promised some one else
+first her father would not make her break her word.
+
+“Wasn’t it a hard plight for poor Donald? But he was a Scotchman,
+you know, and it’s pretty hard to stick a Scotchman long. Presently a
+twinkle came into his eyes, for he remembered that all was fair in love
+and war. So he said to Neil, oh, so persuasively,
+
+“‘Have some more, man, have some more. ‘Twill keep the heart in you in
+the teeth of that wind. Help yourself. There’s plenty more where that
+came from.’
+
+“Neil didn’t want MUCH persuasion. He took some more, and said slyly,
+
+“‘Is it going over the bay the night that yourself will be doing?’
+
+“Donald shook his head.
+
+“‘I had thought of it,’ he owned, ‘but it looks a wee like a storm, and
+my sleigh is at the blacksmith’s to be shod. If I went it must be on
+Black Dan’s back, and he likes a canter over the ice in a snow-storm
+as little as I. His own fireside is the best place for a man to-night,
+Campbell. Have another taste, man, have another taste.’
+
+“Neil went on ‘tasting,’ and that sly Donald sat there with a sober
+face, but laughing eyes, and coaxed him on. At last Neil’s head fell
+forward on his breast, and he was sound asleep. Donald got up, put on
+his overcoat and cap, and went to the door.
+
+“‘May your sleep be long and sweet, man,’ he said, laughing softly, ‘and
+as for the waking, ‘twill be betwixt you and me.’
+
+“With that he untied Neil’s horse, climbed into Neil’s sleigh, and
+tucked Neil’s buffalo robe about him.
+
+“‘Now, Bess, old girl, do your bonniest,’ he said. ‘There’s more than
+you know hangs on your speed. If the Campbell wakes too soon Black Dan
+could show you a pair of clean heels for all your good start. On, my
+girl.’
+
+“Brown Bess went over the ice like a deer, and Donald kept thinking of
+what he should say to Nancy--and more still of what she would say to
+him. SUPPOSE he was mistaken. SUPPOSE she said ‘no!’
+
+“‘Neil would have the laugh on me then. Sure he’s sleeping well. And the
+snow is coming soon. There’ll be a bonny swirl on the bay ere long. I
+hope no harm will come to the lad if he starts to cross. When he wakes
+he’ll be in such a fine Highland temper that he’ll never stop to think
+of danger. Well, Bess, old girl, here we are. Now, Donald Fraser, pluck
+up heart and play the man. Never flinch because a slip of a lass looks
+scornful at you out of the bonniest dark-blue eyes on earth.’
+
+“But in spite of his bold words Donald’s heart was thumping as he drove
+into the Sherman yard. Nancy was there milking a cow by the stable door,
+but she stood up when she saw Donald coming. Oh, she was very beautiful!
+Her hair was like a skein of golden silk, and her eyes were as blue as
+the gulf water when the sun breaks out after a storm. Donald felt more
+nervous than ever. But he knew he must make the most of his chance. He
+might not see Nancy alone again before Neil came. He caught her hand and
+stammered out,
+
+“‘Nan, lass, I love you. You may think ‘tis a hasty wooing, but that’s a
+story I can tell you later maybe. I know well I’m not worthy of you, but
+if true love could make a man worthy there’d be none before me. Will you
+have me, Nan?’
+
+“Nancy didn’t SAY she would have him. She just LOOKED it, and Donald
+kissed her right there in the snow.
+
+“The next morning the storm was over. Donald knew Neil must be soon
+on his track. He did not want to make the Sherman house the scene of
+a quarrel, so he resolved to get away before the Campbell came.
+He persuaded Nancy to go with him to visit some friends in another
+settlement. As he brought Neil’s sleigh up to the door he saw a black
+speck far out on the bay and laughed.
+
+“‘Black Dan goes well, but he’ll not be quick enough,’ he said.
+
+“Half an hour later Neil Campbell rushed into the Sherman kitchen and
+oh, how angry he was! There was nobody there but Betty Sherman, and
+Betty was not afraid of him. She was never afraid of anybody. She was
+very handsome, with hair as brown as October nuts and black eyes and
+crimson cheeks; and she had always been in love with Neil Campbell
+herself.
+
+“‘Good morning, Mr. Campbell,’ she said, with a toss of her head. ‘It’s
+early abroad you are. And on Black Dan, no less! Was I mistaken in
+thinking that Donald Fraser said once that his favourite horse should
+never be backed by any man but him? But doubtless a fair exchange is no
+robbery, and Brown Bess is a good mare in her way.’
+
+“‘Where is Donald Fraser?’ said Neil, shaking his fist. ‘It’s him I’m
+seeking, and it’s him I will be finding. Where is he, Betty Sherman?’
+
+“‘Donald Fraser is far enough away by this time,’ mocked Betty. ‘He is a
+prudent fellow, and has some quickness of wit under that sandy thatch of
+his. He came here last night at sunset, with a horse and sleigh not his
+own, or lately gotten, and he asked Nan in the stable yard to marry him.
+Did a man ask ME to marry him at the cow’s side with a milking pail
+in my hand, it’s a cold answer he’d get for his pains. But Nan thought
+differently, and they sat late together last night, and ‘twas a bonny
+story Nan wakened me to hear when she came to bed--the story of a braw
+lover who let his secret out when the whisky was above the wit, and then
+fell asleep while his rival was away to woo and win his lass. Did you
+ever hear a like story, Mr. Campbell?’
+
+“‘Oh, yes,’ said Neil fiercely. ‘It is laughing at me over the country
+side and telling that story that Donald Fraser will be doing, is it? But
+when I meet him it is not laughing he will be doing. Oh, no. There will
+be another story to tell!’
+
+“‘Now, don’t meddle with the man,’ cried Betty. ‘What a state to be in
+because one good-looking lass likes sandy hair and gray eyes better
+than Highland black and blue! You have not the spirit of a wren, Neil
+Campbell. Were I you, I would show Donald Fraser that I could woo and
+win a lass as speedily as any Lowlander of them all; that I would!
+There’s many a girl would gladly say ‘yes’ for your asking. And here
+stands one! Why not marry ME, Neil Campbell? Folks say I’m as bonny as
+Nan--and I could love you as well as Nan loves her Donald--ay, and ten
+times better!’
+
+“What do you suppose the Campbell did? Why, just the thing he ought to
+have done. He took Betty at her word on the spot; and there was a double
+wedding soon after. And it is said that Neil and Betty were the happiest
+couple in the world--happier even than Donald and Nancy. So all was well
+because it ended well!”
+
+The Story Girl curtsied until her silken skirts swept the floor. Then
+she flung herself in her chair and looked at Mr. Campbell, flushed,
+triumphant, daring.
+
+The story was old to us. It had once been published in a Charlottetown
+paper, and we had read in Aunt Olivia’s scrapbook, where the Story Girl
+had learned it. But we had listened entranced. I have written down the
+bare words of the story, as she told it; but I can never reproduce the
+charm and colour and spirit she infused into it. It LIVED for us. Donald
+and Neil, Nancy and Betty, were there in that room with us. We saw the
+flashes of expression on their faces, we heard their voices, angry or
+tender, mocking or merry, in Lowland and Highland accent. We realized
+all the mingled coquetry and feeling and defiance and archness in Betty
+Sherman’s daring speech. We had even forgotten all about Mr. Campbell.
+
+That gentleman, in silence, took out his wallet, extracted a note
+therefrom, and handed it gravely to the Story Girl.
+
+“There are five dollars for you,” he said, “and your story was well
+worth it. You ARE a wonder. Some day you will make the world realize
+it. I’ve been about a bit, and heard some good things, but I’ve never
+enjoyed anything more than that threadbare old story I heard in my
+cradle. And now, will you do me a favour?”
+
+“Of course,” said the delighted Story Girl.
+
+“Recite the multiplication table for me,” said Mr. Campbell.
+
+We stared. Well might Mr. Campbell be called eccentric. What on earth
+did he want the multiplication table recited for? Even the Story Girl
+was surprised. But she began promptly, with twice one and went through
+it to twelve times twelve. She repeated it simply, but her voice changed
+from one tone to another as each in succession grew tired. We had never
+dreamed that there was so much in the multiplication table. As she
+announced it, the fact that three times three was nine was exquisitely
+ridiculous, five times six almost brought tears to our eyes, eight times
+seven was the most tragic and frightful thing ever heard of, and twelve
+times twelve rang like a trumpet call to victory.
+
+Mr. Campbell nodded his satisfaction.
+
+“I thought you could do it,” he said. “The other day I found this
+statement in a book. ‘Her voice would have made the multiplication
+table charming!’ I thought of it when I heard yours. I didn’t believe it
+before, but I do now.”
+
+Then he let us go.
+
+“You see,” said the Story Girl as we went home, “you need never be
+afraid of people.”
+
+“But we are not all Story Girls,” said Cecily.
+
+That night we heard Felicity talking to Cecily in their room.
+
+“Mr. Campbell never noticed one of us except the Story Girl,” she said,
+“but if I had put on MY best dress as she did maybe she wouldn’t have
+taken all the attention.”
+
+“Could you ever do what Betty Sherman did, do you suppose?” asked Cecily
+absently.
+
+“No; but I believe the Story Girl could,” answered Felicity rather
+snappishly.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII. A TRAGEDY OF CHILDHOOD
+
+The Story Girl went to Charlottetown for a week in June to visit Aunt
+Louisa. Life seemed very colourless without her, and even Felicity
+admitted that it was lonesome. But three days after her departure Felix
+told us something on the way home from school which lent some spice to
+existence immediately.
+
+“What do you think?” he said in a very solemn, yet excited, tone. “Jerry
+Cowan told me at recess this afternoon that he HAD SEEN A PICTURE OF
+GOD--that he has it at home in an old, red-covered history of the world,
+and has looked at it OFTEN.”
+
+To think that Jerry Cowan should have seen such a picture often! We were
+as deeply impressed as Felix had meant us to be.
+
+“Did he say what it was like?” asked Peter.
+
+“No--only that it was a picture of God, walking in the garden of Eden.”
+
+“Oh,” whispered Felicity--we all spoke in low tones on the subject, for,
+by instinct and training, we thought and uttered the Great Name with
+reverence, in spite of our devouring curiosity--“oh, WOULD Jerry Cowan
+bring it to school and let us see it?”
+
+“I asked him that, soon as ever he told me,” said Felix. “He said he
+might, but he couldn’t promise, for he’d have to ask his mother if
+he could bring the book to school. If she’ll let him he’ll bring it
+to-morrow.”
+
+“Oh, I’ll be almost afraid to look at it,” said Sara Ray tremulously.
+
+I think we all shared her fear to some extent. Nevertheless, we went to
+school the next day burning with curiosity. And we were disappointed.
+Possibly night had brought counsel to Jerry Cowan; or perhaps his mother
+had put him up to it. At all events, he announced to us that he couldn’t
+bring the red-covered history to school, but if we wanted to buy the
+picture outright he would tear it out of the book and sell it to us for
+fifty cents.
+
+We talked the matter over in serious conclave in the orchard that
+evening. We were all rather short of hard cash, having devoted most of
+our spare means to the school library fund. But the general consensus
+of opinion was that we must have the picture, no matter what pecuniary
+sacrifices were involved. If we could each give about seven cents we
+would have the amount. Peter could only give four, but Dan gave eleven,
+which squared matters.
+
+“Fifty cents would be pretty dear for any other picture, but of course
+this is different,” said Dan.
+
+“And there’s a picture of Eden thrown in, too, you know,” added
+Felicity.
+
+“Fancy selling God’s picture,” said Cecily in a shocked, awed tone.
+
+“Nobody but a Cowan would do it, and that’s a fact,” said Dan.
+
+“When we get it we’ll keep it in the family Bible,” said Felicity.
+“That’s the only proper place.”
+
+“Oh, I wonder what it will be like,” breathed Cecily.
+
+We all wondered. Next day in school we agreed to Jerry Cowan’s terms,
+and Jerry promised to bring the picture up to Uncle Alec’s the following
+afternoon.
+
+We were all intensely excited Saturday morning. To our dismay, it began
+to rain just before dinner.
+
+“What if Jerry doesn’t bring the picture to-day because of the rain?” I
+suggested.
+
+“Never you fear,” answered Felicity decidedly. “A Cowan would come
+through ANYTHING for fifty cents.”
+
+After dinner we all, without any verbal decision about it, washed our
+faces and combed our hair. The girls put on their second best dresses,
+and we boys donned white collars. We all had the unuttered feeling that
+we must do such honour to that Picture as we could. Felicity and Dan
+began a small spat over something, but stopped at once when Cecily said
+severely,
+
+“How DARE you quarrel when you are going to look at a picture of God
+to-day?”
+
+Owing to the rain we could not foregather in the orchard, where we had
+meant to transact the business with Jerry. We did not wish our grown-ups
+around at our great moment, so we betook ourselves to the loft of the
+granary in the spruce wood, from whose window we could see the main road
+and hail Jerry. Sara Ray had joined us, very pale and nervous, having
+had, so it appeared, a difference of opinion with her mother about
+coming up the hill in the rain.
+
+“I’m afraid I did very wrong to come against ma’s will,” she said
+miserably, “but I COULDN’T wait. I wanted to see the picture as soon as
+you did.”
+
+We waited and watched at the window. The valley was full of mist, and
+the rain was coming down in slanting lines over the tops of the spruces.
+But as we waited the clouds broke away and the sun came out flashingly;
+the drops on the spruce boughs glittered like diamonds.
+
+“I don’t believe Jerry can be coming,” said Cecily in despair. “I
+suppose his mother must have thought it was dreadful, after all, to sell
+such a picture.”
+
+“There he is now!” cried Dan, waving excitedly from the window.
+
+“He’s carrying a fish-basket,” said Felicity. “You surely don’t suppose
+he would bring THAT picture in a fish-basket!”
+
+Jerry HAD brought it in a fish-basket, as appeared when he mounted
+the granary stairs shortly afterwards. It was folded up in a newspaper
+packet on top of the dried herring with which the basket was filled. We
+paid him his money, but we would not open the packet until he had gone.
+
+“Cecily,” said Felicity in a hushed tone. “You are the best of us all.
+YOU open the parcel.”
+
+“Oh, I’m no gooder than the rest of you,” breathed Cecily, “but I’ll
+open it if you like.”
+
+With trembling fingers Cecily opened the parcel. We stood around, hardly
+breathing. She unfolded it and held it up. We saw it.
+
+Suddenly Sara began to cry.
+
+“Oh, oh, oh, does God look like THAT?” she wailed.
+
+Felix and I spoke not. Disappointment, and something worse, sealed our
+speech. DID God look like that--like that stern, angrily frowning old
+man with the tossing hair and beard of the wood-cut Cecily held.
+
+“I suppose He must, since that is His picture,” said Dan miserably.
+
+“He looks awful cross,” said Peter simply.
+
+“Oh, I wish we’d never, never seen it,” cried Cecily.
+
+We all wished that--too late. Our curiosity had led us into some Holy of
+Holies, not to be profaned by human eyes, and this was our punishment.
+
+“I’ve always had a feeling right along,” wept Sara, “that it wasn’t
+RIGHT to buy--or LOOK AT--God’s picture.”
+
+As we stood there wretchedly we heard flying feet below and a blithe
+voice calling,
+
+“Where are you, children?”
+
+The Story Girl had returned! At any other moment we would have rushed to
+meet her in wild joy. But now we were too crushed and miserable to move.
+
+“Whatever is the matter with you all?” demanded the Story Girl,
+appearing at the top of the stairs. “What is Sara crying about? What
+have you got there?”
+
+“A picture of God,” said Cecily with a sob in her voice, “and oh, it is
+so dreadful and ugly. Look!”
+
+The Story Girl looked. An expression of scorn came over her face.
+
+“Surely you don’t believe God looks like that,” she said impatiently,
+while her fine eyes flashed. “He doesn’t--He couldn’t. He is wonderful
+and beautiful. I’m surprised at you. THAT is nothing but the picture of
+a cross old man.”
+
+Hope sprang up in our hearts, although we were not wholly convinced.
+
+“I don’t know,” said Dan dubiously. “It says under the picture ‘God in
+the Garden of Eden.’ It’s PRINTED.”
+
+“Well, I suppose that’s what the man who drew it thought God was like,”
+ answered the Story Girl carelessly. “But HE couldn’t have known any more
+than you do. HE had never seen Him.”
+
+“It’s all very well for you to say so,” said Felicity, “but YOU don’t
+know either. I wish I could believe that isn’t like God--but I don’t
+know what to believe.”
+
+“Well, if you won’t believe me, I suppose you’ll believe the minister,”
+ said the Story Girl. “Go and ask him. He’s in the house this very
+minute. He came up with us in the buggy.”
+
+At any other time we would never have dared catechize the minister
+about anything. But desperate cases call for desperate measures. We
+drew straws to see who should go and do the asking, and the lot fell to
+Felix.
+
+“Better wait until Mr. Marwood leaves, and catch him in the lane,”
+ advised the Story Girl. “You’ll have a lot of grown-ups around you in
+the house.”
+
+Felix took her advice. Mr. Marwood, presently walking benignantly
+along the lane, was confronted by a fat, small boy with a pale face but
+resolute eyes.
+
+The rest of us remained in the background but within hearing.
+
+“Well, Felix, what is it?” asked Mr. Marwood kindly.
+
+“Please, sir, does God really look like this?” asked Felix, holding out
+the picture. “We hope He doesn’t--but we want to know the truth, and
+that is why I’m bothering you. Please excuse us and tell me.”
+
+The minister looked at the picture. A stern expression came into his
+gentle blue eyes and he got as near to frowning as it was possible for
+him to get.
+
+“Where did you get that thing?” he asked.
+
+THING! We began to breathe easier.
+
+“We bought it from Jerry Cowan. He found it in a red-covered history of
+the world. It SAYS it’s God’s picture,” said Felix.
+
+“It is nothing of the sort,” said Mr. Marwood indignantly. “There is
+no such thing as a picture of God, Felix. No human being knows what he
+looks like--no human being CAN know. We should not even try to think
+what He looks like. But, Felix, you may be sure that God is infinitely
+more beautiful and loving and tender and kind than anything we can
+imagine of Him. Never believe anything else, my boy. As for this--this
+SACRILEGE--take it and burn it.”
+
+We did not know what a sacrilege meant, but we knew that Mr. Marwood had
+declared that the picture was not like God. That was enough for us. We
+felt as if a terrible weight had been lifted from our minds.
+
+“I could hardly believe the Story Girl, but of course the minister
+KNOWS,” said Dan happily.
+
+“We’ve lost fifty cents because of it,” said Felicity gloomily.
+
+We had lost something of infinitely more value than fifty cents,
+although we did not realize it just then. The minister’s words had
+removed from our minds the bitter belief that God was like that picture;
+but on something deeper and more enduring than mind an impression had
+been made that was never to be removed. The mischief was done. From
+that day to this the thought or the mention of God brings up before us
+involuntarily the vision of a stern, angry, old man. Such was the price
+we were to pay for the indulgence of a curiosity which each of us, deep
+in our hearts, had, like Sara Ray, felt ought not to be gratified.
+
+“Mr. Marwood told me to burn it,” said Felix.
+
+“It doesn’t seem reverent to do that,” said Cecily. “Even if it isn’t
+God’s picture, it has His name on it.”
+
+“Bury it,” said the Story Girl.
+
+We did bury it after tea, in the depths of the spruce grove; and then we
+went into the orchard. It was so nice to have the Story Girl back again.
+She had wreathed her hair with Canterbury Bells, and looked like the
+incarnation of rhyme and story and dream.
+
+“Canterbury Bells is a lovely name for a flower, isn’t it?” she said.
+“It makes you think of cathedrals and chimes, doesn’t it? Let’s go over
+to Uncle Stephen’s Walk, and sit on the branches of the big tree. It’s
+too wet on the grass, and I know a story--a TRUE story, about an old
+lady I saw in town at Aunt Louisa’s. Such a dear old lady, with lovely
+silvery curls.”
+
+After the rain the air seemed dripping with odours in the warm west
+wind--the tang of fir balsam, the spice of mint, the wild woodsiness of
+ferns, the aroma of grasses steeping in the sunshine,--and with it all a
+breath of wild sweetness from far hill pastures.
+
+Scattered through the grass in Uncle Stephen’s Walk, were blossoming
+pale, aerial flowers which had no name that we could ever discover.
+Nobody seemed to know anything about them. They had been there when
+Great-grandfather King bought the place. I have never seen them
+elsewhere, or found them described in any floral catalogue. We called
+them the White Ladies. The Story Girl gave them the name. She said they
+looked like the souls of good women who had had to suffer much and had
+been very patient. They were wonderfully dainty, with a strange, faint,
+aromatic perfume which was only to be detected at a little distance and
+vanished if you bent over them. They faded soon after they were plucked;
+and, although strangers, greatly admiring them, often carried away roots
+and seeds, they could never be coaxed to grow elsewhere.
+
+“My story is about Mrs. Dunbar and the Captain of the FANNY,” said the
+Story Girl, settling herself comfortably on a bough, with her brown head
+against a gnarled trunk. “It’s sad and beautiful--and true. I do love to
+tell stories that I know really happened. Mrs. Dunbar lives next door to
+Aunt Louisa in town. She is so sweet. You wouldn’t think to look at her
+that she had a tragedy in her life, but she has. Aunt Louisa told me the
+tale. It all happened long, long ago. Interesting things like this all
+did happen long ago, it seems to me. They never seem to happen now. This
+was in ‘49, when people were rushing to the gold fields in California.
+It was just like a fever, Aunt Louisa says. People took it, right here
+on the Island; and a number of young men determined they would go to
+California.
+
+“It is easy to go to California now; but it was a very different matter
+then. There were no railroads across the land, as there are now, and if
+you wanted to go to California you had to go in a sailing vessel, all
+the way around Cape Horn. It was a long and dangerous journey; and
+sometimes it took over six months. When you got there you had no way of
+sending word home again except by the same plan. It might be over a year
+before your people at home heard a word about you--and fancy what their
+feelings would be!
+
+“But these young men didn’t think of these things; they were led on by a
+golden vision. They made all their arrangements, and they chartered the
+brig _Fanny_ to take them to California.
+
+“The captain of the _Fanny_ is the hero of my story. His name was Alan
+Dunbar, and he was young and handsome. Heroes always are, you know,
+but Aunt Louisa says he really was. And he was in love--wildly in
+love,--with Margaret Grant. Margaret was as beautiful as a dream, with
+soft blue eyes and clouds of golden hair; and she loved Alan Dunbar just
+as much as he loved her. But her parents were bitterly opposed to him,
+and they had forbidden Margaret to see him or speak to him. They hadn’t
+anything against him as a MAN, but they didn’t want her to throw herself
+away on a sailor.
+
+“Well, when Alan Dunbar knew that he must go to California in the
+_Fanny_ he was in despair. He felt that he could NEVER go so far away
+for so long and leave his Margaret behind. And Margaret felt that she
+could never let him go. I know EXACTLY how she felt.”
+
+“How can you know?” interrupted Peter suddenly. “You ain’t old enough to
+have a beau. How can you know?”
+
+The Story Girl looked at Peter with a frown. She did not like to be
+interrupted when telling a story.
+
+“Those are not things one KNOWS about,” she said with dignity. “One
+FEELS about them.”
+
+Peter, crushed but not convinced, subsided, and the Story Girl went on.
+
+“Finally, Margaret ran away with Alan, and they were married in
+Charlottetown. Alan intended to take his wife with him to California in
+the _Fanny_. If it was a hard journey for a man it was harder still for
+a woman, but Margaret would have dared anything for Alan’s sake. They
+had three days--ONLY three days--of happiness, and then the blow fell.
+The crew and the passengers of the _Fanny_ refused to let Captain Dunbar
+take his wife with him. They told him he must leave her behind. And
+all his prayers were of no avail. They say he stood on the deck of the
+_Fanny_ and pleaded with the men while the tears ran down his face; but
+they would not yield, and he had to leave Margaret behind. Oh, what a
+parting it was!”
+
+There was heartbreak in the Story Girl’s voice and tears came into our
+eyes. There, in the green bower of Uncle Stephen’s Walk, we cried over
+the pathos of a parting whose anguish had been stilled for many years.
+
+“When it was all over, Margaret’s father and mother forgave her, and she
+went back home to wait--to WAIT. Oh, it is so dreadful just to WAIT,
+and do nothing else. Margaret waited for nearly a year. How long it must
+have seemed to her! And at last there came a letter--but not from Alan.
+Alan was DEAD. He had died in California and had been buried there.
+While Margaret had been thinking of him and longing for him and praying
+for him he had been lying in his lonely, faraway grave.”
+
+Cecily sprang up, shaking with sobs.
+
+“Oh, don’t--don’t go on,” she implored. “I CAN’T bear any more.”
+
+“There is no more,” said the Story Girl. “That was the end of it--the
+end of everything for Margaret. It didn’t kill HER, but her heart died.”
+
+“I just wish I’d hold of those fellows who wouldn’t let the Captain take
+his wife,” said Peter savagely.
+
+“Well, it was awful said,” said Felicity, wiping her eyes. “But it was
+long ago and we can’t do any good by crying over it now. Let us go
+and get something to eat. I made some nice little rhubarb tarts this
+morning.”
+
+We went. In spite of new disappointments and old heartbreaks we had
+appetites. And Felicity did make scrumptious rhubarb tarts!
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX. MAGIC SEED
+
+When the time came to hand in our collections for the library fund Peter
+had the largest--three dollars. Felicity was a good second with two and
+a half. This was simply because the hens had laid so well.
+
+“If you’d had to pay father for all the extra handfuls of wheat you’ve
+fed to those hens, Miss Felicity, you wouldn’t have so much,” said Dan
+spitefully.
+
+“I didn’t,” said Felicity indignantly. “Look how Aunt Olivia’s hens
+laid, too, and she fed them herself just the same as usual.”
+
+“Never mind,” said Cecily, “we have all got something to give. If you
+were like poor Sara Ray, and hadn’t been able to collect anything, you
+might feel bad.”
+
+But Sara Ray HAD something to give. She came up the hill after tea, all
+radiant. When Sara Ray smiled--and she did not waste her smiles--she was
+rather pretty in a plaintive, apologetic way. A dimple or two came
+into sight, and she had very nice teeth--small and white, like the
+traditional row of pearls.
+
+“Oh, just look,” she said. “Here are three dollars--and I’m going to
+give it all to the library fund. I had a letter to-day from Uncle Arthur
+in Winnipeg, and he sent me three dollars. He said I was to use it ANY
+way I liked, so ma couldn’t refuse to let me give it to the fund. She
+thinks it’s an awful waste, but she always goes by what Uncle Arthur
+says. Oh, I’ve prayed so hard that some money might come some way, and
+now it has. See what praying does!”
+
+I was very much afraid that we did not rejoice quite as unselfishly
+in Sara’s good fortune as we should have done. WE had earned our
+contributions by the sweat of our brow, or by the scarcely less
+disagreeable method of “begging.” And Sara’s had as good as descended
+upon her out of the skies, as much like a miracle as anything you could
+imagine.
+
+“She prayed for it, you know,” said Felix, after Sara had gone home.
+
+“That’s too easy a way of earning money,” grumbled Peter resentfully.
+“If the rest of us had just set down and done nothing, only prayed, how
+much do you s’pose we’d have? It don’t seem fair to me.”
+
+“Oh, well, it’s different with Sara,” said Dan. “We COULD earn money and
+she COULDN’T. You see? But come on down to the orchard. The Story Girl
+had a letter from her father to-day and she’s going to read it to us.”
+
+We went promptly. A letter from the Story Girl’s father was always an
+event; and to hear her read it was almost as good as hearing her tell a
+story.
+
+Before coming to Carlisle, Uncle Blair Stanley had been a mere name
+to us. Now he was a personality. His letters to the Story Girl, the
+pictures and sketches he sent her, her adoring and frequent mention of
+him, all combined to make him very real to us.
+
+We FELT then, what we did not understand till later years, that our
+grown-up relatives did not altogether admire or approve of Uncle Blair.
+He belonged to a different world from theirs. They had never known him
+very intimately or understood him. I realize now that Uncle Blair was a
+bit of a Bohemian--a respectable sort of tramp. Had he been a poor man
+he might have been a more successful artist. But he had a small fortune
+of his own and, lacking the spur of necessity, or of disquieting
+ambition, he remained little more than a clever amateur. Once in a while
+he painted a picture which showed what he could do; but for the rest,
+he was satisfied to wander over the world, light-hearted and content.
+We knew that the Story Girl was thought to resemble him strongly in
+appearance and temperament, but she had far more fire and intensity and
+strength of will--her inheritance from King and Ward. She would never
+be satisfied as a dabbler; whatever her future career should be, into it
+she would throw all her powers of mind and heart and soul.
+
+But Uncle Blair could do at least one thing surpassingly well. He could
+write letters. Such letters! By contrast, Felix and I were secretly
+ashamed of father’s epistles. Father could talk well but, as Felix said,
+he couldn’t write worth a cent. The letters we had received from him
+since his arrival in Rio de Janeiro were mere scrawls, telling us to be
+good boys and not trouble Aunt Janet, incidentally adding that he was
+well and lonesome. Felix and I were always glad to get his letters, but
+we never read them aloud to an admiring circle in the orchard.
+
+Uncle Blair was spending the summer in Switzerland; and the letter the
+Story Girl read to us, among the fair, frail White Ladies of the Walk,
+where the west wind came now with a sigh, and again with a rush, and
+then brushed our faces as softly as the down of a thistle, was full of
+the glamour of mountain-rimmed lakes, and purple chalets, and “snowy
+summits old in story.” We climbed Mount Blanc, saw the Jungfrau soaring
+into cloudland, and walked among the gloomy pillars of Bonnivard’s
+prison. Finally, the Story Girl told us the tale of the Prisoner of
+Chillon, in words that were Byron’s, but in a voice that was all her
+own.
+
+“It must be splendid to go to Europe,” sighed Cecily longingly.
+
+“I am going some day,” said the Story Girl airily.
+
+We looked at her with a slightly incredulous awe. To us, in those years,
+Europe seemed almost as remote and unreachable as the moon. It was
+hard to believe that one of US should ever go there. But Aunt Julia had
+gone--and SHE had been brought up in Carlisle on this very farm. So it
+was possible that the Story Girl might go too.
+
+“What will you do there?” asked Peter practically.
+
+“I shall learn how to tell stories to all the world,” said the Story
+Girl dreamily.
+
+It was a lovely, golden-brown evening; the orchard, and the farm-lands
+beyond, were full of ruby lights and kissing shadows. Over in the east,
+above the Awkward Man’s house, the Wedding Veil of the Proud Princess
+floated across the sky, presently turning as rosy as if bedewed with her
+heart’s blood. We sat there and talked until the first star lighted a
+white taper over the beech hill.
+
+Then I remembered that I had forgotten to take my dose of magic seed,
+and I hastened to do it, although I was beginning to lose faith in it. I
+had not grown a single bit, by the merciless testimony of the hall door.
+
+I took the box of seed out of my trunk in the twilit room and swallowed
+the decreed pinch. As I did so, Dan’s voice rang out behind me.
+
+“Beverley King, what have you got there?”
+
+I thrust the box hastily into my trunk and confronted Dan.
+
+“None of your business,” I said defiantly.
+
+“Yes, ‘tis.” Dan was too much in earnest to resent my blunt speech.
+“Look here, Bev, is that magic seed? And did you get it from Billy
+Robinson?”
+
+Dan and I looked at each other, suspicion dawning in our eyes.
+
+“What do you know about Billy Robinson and his magic seed?” I demanded.
+
+“Just this. I bought a box from him for--for--something. He said he
+wasn’t going to sell any of it to anybody else. Did he sell any to you?”
+
+“Yes, he did,” I said in disgust--for I was beginning to understand that
+Billy and his magic seed were arrant frauds.
+
+“What for? YOUR mouth is a decent size,” said Dan.
+
+“Mouth? It had nothing to do with my mouth! He said it would make me
+grow tall. And it hasn’t--not an inch! I don’t see what you wanted it
+for! You are tall enough.”
+
+“I got it for my mouth,” said Dan with a shame-faced grin. “The girls in
+school laugh at it so. Kate Marr says it’s like a gash in a pie. Billy
+said that seed would shrink it for sure.”
+
+Well, there it was! Billy had deceived us both. Nor were we the only
+victims. We did not find the whole story out at once. Indeed, the summer
+was almost over before, in one way or another, the full measure of that
+shameless Billy Robinson’s iniquity was revealed to us. But I shall
+anticipate the successive relations in this chapter. Every pupil of
+Carlisle school, so it eventually appeared, had bought magic seed, under
+solemn promise of secrecy. Felix had believed blissfully that it would
+make him thin. Cecily’s hair was to become naturally curly, and Sara Ray
+was not to be afraid of Peg Bowen any more. It was to make Felicity as
+clever as the Story Girl and it was to make the Story Girl as good a
+cook as Felicity. What Peter had bought magic seed for remained a secret
+longer than any of the others. Finally--it was the night before what we
+expected would be the Judgment Day--he confessed to me that he had taken
+it to make Felicity fond of him. Skilfully indeed had that astute Billy
+played on our respective weaknesses.
+
+The keenest edge to our humiliation was given by the discovery that
+the magic seed was nothing more or less than caraway, which grew in
+abundance at Billy Robinson’s uncle’s in Markdale. Peg Bowen had had
+nothing to do with it.
+
+Well, we had all been badly hoaxed. But we did not trumpet our wrongs
+abroad. We did not even call Billy to account. We thought that least
+said was soonest mended in such a matter. We went very softly indeed,
+lest the grown-ups, especially that terrible Uncle Roger, should hear of
+it.
+
+“We should have known better than to trust Billy Robinson,” said
+Felicity, summing up the case one evening when all had been made known.
+“After all, what could you expect from a pig but a grunt?”
+
+We were not surprised to find that Billy Robinson’s contribution to the
+library fund was the largest handed in by any of the scholars. Cecily
+said she didn’t envy him his conscience. But I am afraid she measured
+his conscience by her own. I doubt very much if Billy’s troubled him at
+all.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X. A DAUGHTER OF EVE
+
+“I hate the thought of growing up,” said the Story Girl reflectively,
+“because I can never go barefooted then, and nobody will ever see what
+beautiful feet I have.”
+
+She was sitting, the July sunlight, on the ledge of the open hayloft
+window in Uncle Roger’s big barn; and the bare feet below her print
+skirt WERE beautiful. They were slender and shapely and satin smooth
+with arched insteps, the daintiest of toes, and nails like pink shells.
+
+We were all in the hayloft. The Story Girl had been telling us a tale
+
+ “Of old, unhappy, far-off things,
+ And battles long ago.”
+
+Felicity and Cecily were curled up in a corner, and we boys sprawled
+idly on the fragrant, sun-warm heaps. We had “stowed” the hay in the
+loft that morning for Uncle Roger, so we felt that we had earned the
+right to loll on our sweet-smelling couch. Haylofts are delicious
+places, with just enough of shadow and soft, uncertain noises to give
+an agreeable tang of mystery. The swallows flew in and out of their nest
+above our heads, and whenever a sunbeam fell through a chink the air
+swarmed with golden dust. Outside of the loft was a vast, sunshiny gulf
+of blue sky and mellow air, wherein floated argosies of fluffy cloud,
+and airy tops of maple and spruce.
+
+Pat was with us, of course, prowling about stealthily, or making
+frantic, bootless leaps at the swallows. A cat in a hayloft is a
+beautiful example of the eternal fitness of things. We had not heard of
+this fitness then, but we all felt that Paddy was in his own place in a
+hayloft.
+
+“I think it is very vain to talk about anything you have yourself being
+beautiful,” said Felicity.
+
+“I am not a bit vain,” said the Story Girl, with entire truthfulness.
+“It is not vanity to know your own good points. It would just be
+stupidity if you didn’t. It’s only vanity when you get puffed up about
+them. I am not a bit pretty. My only good points are my hair and eyes
+and feet. So I think it’s real mean that one of them has to be covered
+up the most of the time. I’m always glad when it gets warm enough to go
+barefooted. But, when I grow up they’ll have to covered all the time. It
+IS mean.”
+
+“You’ll have to put your shoes and stockings on when you go to the magic
+lantern show to-night,” said Felicity in a tone of satisfaction.
+
+“I don’t know that. I’m thinking of going barefooted.”
+
+“Oh, you wouldn’t! Sara Stanley, you’re not in earnest!” exclaimed
+Felicity, her blue eyes filling with horror.
+
+The Story Girl winked with the side of her face next to Felix and me,
+but the side next the girls changed not a muscle. She dearly loved to
+“take a rise” out of Felicity now and then.
+
+“Indeed, I would if I just made up my mind to. Why not? Why not bare
+feet--if they’re clean--as well as bare hands and face?”
+
+“Oh, you wouldn’t! It would be such a disgrace!” said poor Felicity in
+real distress.
+
+“We went to school barefooted all June,” argued that wicked Story Girl.
+“What is the difference between going to the schoolhouse barefooted in
+the daytime and going in the evening?”
+
+“Oh, there’s EVERY difference. I can’t just explain it--but every one
+KNOWS there is a difference. You know it yourself. Oh, PLEASE, don’t do
+such a thing, Sara.”
+
+“Well, I won’t, just to oblige you,” said the Story Girl, who would
+have died the death before she would have gone to a “public meeting”
+ barefooted.
+
+We were all rather excited over the magic lantern show which an
+itinerant lecturer was to give in the schoolhouse that evening. Even
+Felix and I, who had seen such shows galore, were interested, and the
+rest were quite wild. There had never been such a thing in Carlisle
+before. We were all going, Peter included. Peter went everywhere with us
+now. He was a regular attendant at church and Sunday School, where his
+behaviour was as irreproachable as if he had been “raised” in the caste
+of Vere de Vere. It was a feather in the Story Girl’s cap, for she took
+all the credit of having started Peter on the right road. Felicity was
+resigned, although the fatal patch on Peter’s best trousers was still
+an eyesore to her. She declared she never got any good of the singing,
+because Peter stood up then and every one could see the patch. Mrs.
+James Clark, whose pew was behind ours, never took her eye off it--or so
+Felicity averred.
+
+But Peter’s stockings were always darned. Aunt Olivia had seen to that,
+ever since she heard of Peter’s singular device regarding them on his
+first Sunday. She had also given Peter a Bible, of which he was so proud
+that he hated to use it lest he should soil it.
+
+“I think I’ll wrap it up and keep it in my box,” he said. “I’ve an old
+Bible of Aunt Jane’s at home that I can use. I s’pose it’s just the
+same, even if it is old, isn’t it?”
+
+“Oh, yes,” Cecily had assured him. “The Bible is always the same.”
+
+“I thought maybe they’d got some new improvements on it since Aunt
+Jane’s day,” said Peter, relieved.
+
+“Sara Ray is coming along the lane, and she’s crying,” announced Dan,
+who was peering out of a knot-hole on the opposite side of the loft.
+
+“Sara Ray is crying half her time,” said Cecily impatiently. “I’m sure
+she cries a quartful of tears a month. There are times when you can’t
+help crying. But I hide then. Sara just goes and cries in public.”
+
+The lachrymose Sara presently joined us and we discovered the cause of
+her tears to be the doleful fact that her mother had forbidden her to
+go to the magic lantern show that night. We all showed the sympathy we
+felt.
+
+“She SAID yesterday you could go,” said the Story Girl indignantly. “Why
+has she changed her mind?”
+
+“Because of the measles in Markdale,” sobbed Sara. “She says Markdale is
+full of them, and there’ll be sure to be some of the Markdale people at
+the show. So I’m not to go. And I’ve never seen a magic lantern--I’ve
+never seen ANYTHING.”
+
+“I don’t believe there’s any danger of catching measles,” said Felicity.
+“If there was we wouldn’t be allowed to go.”
+
+“I wish I COULD get the measles,” said Sara defiantly. “Maybe I’d be of
+some importance to ma then.”
+
+“Suppose Cecily goes down with you and coaxes your mother,” suggested
+the Story Girl. “Perhaps she’d let you go then. She likes Cecily. She
+doesn’t like either Felicity or me, so it would only make matters worse
+for us to try.”
+
+“Ma’s gone to town--pa and her went this afternoon--and they’re not
+coming back till to-morrow. There’s nobody home but Judy Pineau and me.”
+
+“Then,” said the Story Girl, “why don’t you just go to the show anyhow?
+Your mother won’t ever know, if you coax Judy to hold her tongue.”
+
+“Oh, but that’s wrong,” said Felicity. “You shouldn’t put Sara up to
+disobeying her mother.”
+
+Now, Felicity for once was undoubtedly right. The Story Girl’s
+suggestion WAS wrong; and if it had been Cecily who protested, the Story
+Girl would probably have listened to her, and proceeded no further
+in the matter. But Felicity was one of those unfortunate people whose
+protests against wrong-doing serve only to drive the wrong-doer further
+on her sinful way.
+
+The Story Girl resented Felicity’s superior tone, and proceeded to tempt
+Sara in right good earnest. The rest of us held our tongues. It was, we
+told ourselves, Sara’s own lookout.
+
+“I have a good mind to do it,” said Sara, “but I can’t get my good
+clothes; they’re in the spare room, and ma locked the door, for fear
+somebody would get at the fruit cake. I haven’t a single thing to wear,
+except my school gingham.”
+
+“Well, that’s new and pretty,” said the Story Girl. “We’ll lend you
+some things. You can have my lace collar. That’ll make the gingham quite
+elegant. And Cecily will lend you her second best hat.”
+
+“But I’ve no shoes or stockings. They’re locked up too.”
+
+“You can have a pair of mine,” said Felicity, who probably thought that
+since Sara was certain to yield to temptation, she might as well be
+garbed decently for her transgression.
+
+Sara did yield. When the Story Girl’s voice entreated it was not easy
+to resist its temptation, even if you wanted to. That evening, when
+we started for the schoolhouse, Sara Ray was among us, decked out in
+borrowed plumes.
+
+“Suppose she DOES catch the measles?” Felicity said aside.
+
+“I don’t believe there’ll be anybody there from Markdale. The lecturer
+is going to Markdale next week. They’ll wait for that,” said the Story
+Girl airily.
+
+It was a cool, dewy evening, and we walked down the long, red hill in
+the highest of spirits. Over a valley filled with beech and spruce was
+a sunset afterglow--creamy yellow and a hue that was not so much red as
+the dream of red, with a young moon swung low in it. The air was sweet
+with the breath of mown hayfields where swaths of clover had been
+steeping in the sun. Wild roses grew pinkly along the fences, and the
+roadsides were star-dusted with buttercups.
+
+Those of us who had nothing the matter with our consciences enjoyed our
+walk to the little whitewashed schoolhouse in the valley. Felicity
+and Cecily were void of offence towards all men. The Story Girl walked
+uprightly like an incarnate flame in her crimson silk. Her pretty feet
+were hidden in the tan-coloured, buttoned Paris boots which were the
+secret envy of every school girl in Carlisle.
+
+But Sara Ray was not happy. Her face was so melancholy that the Story
+Girl lost patience with her. The Story Girl herself was not altogether
+at ease. Probably her own conscience was troubling her. But admit it she
+would not.
+
+“Now, Sara,” she said, “you just take my advice and go into this with
+all your heart if you go at all. Never mind if it is bad. There’s no
+use being naughty if you spoil your fun by wishing all the time you were
+good. You can repent afterwards, but there is no use in mixing the two
+things together.”
+
+“I’m not repenting,” protested Sara. “I’m only scared of ma finding it
+out.”
+
+“Oh!” The Story Girl’s voice expressed her scorn. For remorse she
+had understanding and sympathy; but fear of her fellow creatures was
+something unknown to her. “Didn’t Judy Pineau promise you solemnly she
+wouldn’t tell?”
+
+“Yes; but maybe some one who sees me there will mention it to ma.”
+
+“Well, if you’re so scared you’d better not go. It isn’t too late.
+Here’s your own gate,” said Cecily.
+
+But Sara could not give up the delights of the show. So she walked on,
+a small, miserable testimony that the way of the transgressor is never
+easy, even when said transgressor is only a damsel of eleven.
+
+The magic lantern show was a splendid one. The views were good and the
+lecturer witty. We repeated his jokes to each other all the way home.
+Sara, who had not enjoyed the exhibition at all, seemed to feel more
+cheerful when it was over and she was going home. The Story Girl on the
+contrary was gloomy.
+
+“There WERE Markdale people there,” she confided to me, “and the
+Williamsons live next door to the Cowans, who have measles. I wish I’d
+never egged Sara on to going--but don’t tell Felicity I said so. If Sara
+Ray had really enjoyed the show I wouldn’t mind. But she didn’t. I could
+see that. So I’ve done wrong and made her do wrong--and there’s nothing
+to show for it.”
+
+The night was scented and mysterious. The wind was playing an eerie
+fleshless melody in the reeds of the brook hollow. The sky was dark and
+starry, and across it the Milky Way flung its shimmering misty ribbons.
+
+“There’s four hundred million stars in the Milky Way,” quoth Peter, who
+frequently astonished us by knowing more than any hired boy could be
+expected to. He had a retentive memory, and never forgot anything he
+heard or read. The few books left to him by his oft-referred-to Aunt
+Jane had stocked his mind with a miscellaneous information which
+sometimes made Felix and me doubt if we knew as much as Peter after all.
+Felicity was so impressed by his knowledge of astronomy that she dropped
+back from the other girls and walked beside him. She had not done so
+before because he was barefooted. It was permissible for hired boys to
+go to public meetings--when not held in the church--with bare feet, and
+no particular disgrace attached to it. But Felicity would not walk with
+a barefooted companion. It was dark now, so nobody would notice his
+feet.
+
+“I know a story about the Milky Way,” said the Story Girl, brightening
+up. “I read it in a book of Aunt Louisa’s in town, and I learned it
+off by heart. Once there were two archangels in heaven, named Zerah and
+Zulamith--”
+
+“Have angels names--same as people?” interrupted Peter.
+
+“Yes, of course. They MUST have. They’d be all mixed up if they hadn’t.”
+
+“And when I’m an angel--if I ever get to be one--will my name still be
+Peter?”
+
+“No. You’ll have a new name up there,” said Cecily gently. “It says so
+in the Bible.”
+
+“Well, I’m glad of that. Peter would be such a funny name for an angel.
+And what is the difference between angels and archangels?”
+
+“Oh, archangels are angels that have been angels so long that they’ve
+had time to grow better and brighter and more beautiful than newer
+angels,” said the Story Girl, who probably made that explanation up on
+the spur of the moment, just to pacify Peter.
+
+“How long does it take for an angel to grow into an archangel?” pursued
+Peter.
+
+“Oh, I don’t know. Millions of years likely. And even then I don’t
+suppose ALL the angels do. A good many of them must just stay plain
+angels, I expect.”
+
+“I shall be satisfied just to be a plain angel,” said Felicity modestly.
+
+“Oh, see here, if you’re going to interrupt and argue over everything,
+we’ll never get the story told,” said Felix. “Dry up, all of you, and
+let the Story Girl go on.”
+
+We dried up, and the Story Girl went on.
+
+“Zerah and Zulamith loved each other, just as mortals love, and this is
+forbidden by the laws of the Almighty. And because Zerah and Zulamith
+had so broken God’s law they were banished from His presence to the
+uttermost bounds of the universe. If they had been banished TOGETHER it
+would have been no punishment; so Zerah was exiled to a star on one side
+of the universe, and Zulamith was sent to a star on the other side of
+the universe; and between them was a fathomless abyss which thought
+itself could not cross. Only one thing could cross it--and that was
+love. Zulamith yearned for Zerah with such fidelity and longing that
+he began to build up a bridge of light from his star; and Zerah, not
+knowing this, but loving and longing for him, began to build a similar
+bridge of light from her star. For a thousand thousand years they both
+built the bridge of light, and at last they met and sprang into each
+other’s arms. Their toil and loneliness and suffering were all over and
+forgotten, and the bridge they had built spanned the gulf between their
+stars of exile.
+
+“Now, when the other archangels saw what had been done they flew in fear
+and anger to God’s white throne, and cried to Him,
+
+“‘See what these rebellious ones have done! They have built them a
+bridge of light across the universe, and set Thy decree of separation at
+naught. Do Thou, then, stretch forth Thine arm and destroy their impious
+work.’
+
+“They ceased--and all heaven was hushed. Through the silence sounded the
+voice of the Almighty.
+
+“‘Nay,’ He said, ‘whatsoever in my universe true love hath builded not
+even the Almighty can destroy. The bridge must stand forever.’
+
+“And,” concluded the Story Girl, her face upturned to the sky and her
+big eyes filled with starlight, “it stands still. That bridge is the
+Milky Way.”
+
+“What a lovely story,” sighed Sara Ray, who had been wooed to a
+temporary forgetfulness of her woes by its charm.
+
+The rest of us came back to earth, feeling that we had been wandering
+among the hosts of heaven. We were not old enough to appreciate fully
+the wonderful meaning of the legend; but we felt its beauty and
+its appeal. To us forevermore the Milky Way would be, not Peter’s
+overwhelming garland of suns, but the lucent bridge, love-created, on
+which the banished archangels crossed from star to star.
+
+We had to go up Sara Ray’s lane with her to her very door, for she was
+afraid Peg Bowen would catch her if she went alone. Then the Story Girl
+and I walked up the hill together. Peter and Felicity lagged behind.
+Cecily and Dan and Felix were walking before us, hand in hand, singing a
+hymn. Cecily had a very sweet voice, and I listened in delight. But the
+Story Girl sighed.
+
+“What if Sara does take the measles?” she asked miserably.
+
+“Everyone has to have the measles sometime,” I said comfortingly, “and
+the younger you are the better.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI. THE STORY GIRL DOES PENANCE
+
+Ten days later, Aunt Olivia and Uncle Roger went to town one evening,
+to remain over night, and the next day. Peter and the Story Girl were to
+stay at Uncle Alec’s during their absence.
+
+We were in the orchard at sunset, listening to the story of King
+Cophetua and the beggar maid--all of us, except Peter, who was hoeing
+turnips, and Felicity, who had gone down the hill on an errand to Mrs.
+Ray.
+
+The Story Girl impersonated the beggar maid so vividly, and with such
+an illusion of beauty, that we did not wonder in the least at the king’s
+love for her. I had read the story before, and it had been my opinion
+that it was “rot.” No king, I felt certain, would ever marry a beggar
+maid when he had princesses galore from whom to choose. But now I
+understood it all.
+
+When Felicity returned we concluded from her expression that she had
+news. And she had.
+
+“Sara is real sick,” she said, with regret, and something that was not
+regret mingled in her voice. “She has a cold and sore throat, and she is
+feverish. Mrs. Ray says if she isn’t better by the morning she’s going
+to send for the doctor. AND SHE IS AFRAID IT’S THE MEASLES.”
+
+Felicity flung the last sentence at the Story Girl, who turned very
+pale.
+
+“Oh, do you suppose she caught them at the magic lantern show?” she said
+miserably.
+
+“Where else could she have caught them?” said Felicity mercilessly. “I
+didn’t see her, of course--Mrs. Ray met me at the door and told me not
+to come in. But Mrs. Ray says the measles always go awful hard with the
+Rays--if they don’t die completely of them it leaves them deaf or half
+blind, or something like that. Of course,” added Felicity, her heart
+melting at sight of the misery in the Story Girl’s piteous eyes, “Mrs.
+Ray always looks on the dark side, and it may not be the measles Sara
+has after all.”
+
+But Felicity had done her work too thoroughly. The Story Girl was not to
+be comforted.
+
+“I’d give anything if I’d never put Sara up to going to that show,” she
+said. “It’s all my fault--but the punishment falls on Sara, and that
+isn’t fair. I’d go this minute and confess the whole thing to Mrs. Ray;
+but if I did it might get Sara into more trouble, and I mustn’t do that.
+I sha’n’t sleep a wink to-night.”
+
+I don’t think she did. She looked very pale and woebegone when she came
+down to breakfast. But, for all that, there was a certain exhilaration
+about her.
+
+“I’m going to do penance all day for coaxing Sara to disobey her
+mother,” she announced with chastened triumph.
+
+“Penance?” we murmured in bewilderment.
+
+“Yes. I’m going to deny myself everything I like, and do everything
+I can think of that I don’t like, just to punish myself for being so
+wicked. And if any of you think of anything I don’t, just mention it to
+me. I thought it out last night. Maybe Sara won’t be so very sick if God
+sees I’m truly sorry.”
+
+“He can see it anyhow, without your doing anything,” said Cecily.
+
+“Well, my conscience will feel better.”
+
+“I don’t believe Presbyterians ever do penance,” said Felicity
+dubiously. “I never heard of one doing it.”
+
+But the rest of us rather looked with favour on the Story Girl’s idea.
+We felt sure that she would do penance as picturesquely and thoroughly
+as she did everything else.
+
+“You might put peas in your shoes, you know,” suggested Peter.
+
+“The very thing! I never thought of that. I’ll get some after breakfast.
+I’m not going to eat a single thing all day, except bread and water--and
+not much of that!”
+
+This, we felt, was a heroic measure indeed. To sit down to one of Aunt
+Janet’s meals, in ordinary health and appetite, and eat nothing but
+bread and water--that would be penance with a vengeance! We felt WE
+could never do it. But the Story Girl did it. We admired and pitied her.
+But now I do not think that she either needed our pity or deserved our
+admiration. Her ascetic fare was really sweeter to her than honey
+of Hymettus. She was, though quite unconsciously, acting a part,
+and tasting all the subtle joy of the artist, which is so much more
+exquisite than any material pleasure.
+
+Aunt Janet, of course, noticed the Story Girl’s abstinence and asked if
+she was sick.
+
+“No. I am just doing penance, Aunt Janet, for a sin I committed. I can’t
+confess it, because that would bring trouble on another person. So I’m
+going to do penance all day. You don’t mind, do you?”
+
+Aunt Janet was in a very good humour that morning, so she merely
+laughed.
+
+“Not if you don’t go too far with your nonsense,” she said tolerantly.
+
+“Thank you. And will you give me a handful of hard peas after breakfast,
+Aunt Janet? I want to put them in my shoes.”
+
+“There isn’t any; I used the last in the soup yesterday.”
+
+“Oh!” The Story Girl was much disappointed. “Then I suppose I’ll have
+to do without. The new peas wouldn’t hurt enough. They’re so soft they’d
+just squash flat.”
+
+“I’ll tell you,” said Peter, “I’ll pick up a lot of those little round
+pebbles on Mr. King’s front walk. They’ll be just as good as peas.”
+
+“You’ll do nothing of the sort,” said Aunt Janet. “Sara must not do
+penance in that way. She would wear holes in her stockings, and might
+seriously bruise her feet.”
+
+“What would you say if I took a whip and whipped my bare shoulders till
+the blood came?” demanded the Story Girl aggrieved.
+
+“I wouldn’t SAY anything,” retorted Aunt Janet. “I’d simply turn you
+over my knee and give you a sound, solid spanking, Miss Sara. You’d find
+that penance enough.”
+
+The Story Girl was crimson with indignation. To have such a remark made
+to you--when you were fourteen and a half--and before the boys, too!
+Really, Aunt Janet could be very dreadful.
+
+It was vacation, and there was not much to do that day; we were soon
+free to seek the orchard. But the Story Girl would not come. She had
+seated herself in the darkest, hottest corner of the kitchen, with a
+piece of old cotton in her hand.
+
+“I am not going to play to-day,” she said, “and I’m not going to tell a
+single story. Aunt Janet won’t let me put pebbles in my shoes, but I’ve
+put a thistle next my skin on my back and it sticks into me if I lean
+back the least bit. And I’m going to work buttonholes all over this
+cotton. I hate working buttonholes worse than anything in the world, so
+I’m going to work them all day.”
+
+“What’s the good of working buttonholes on an old rag?” asked Felicity.
+
+“It isn’t any good. The beauty of penance is that it makes you feel
+uncomfortable. So it doesn’t matter what you do, whether it’s useful or
+not, so long as it’s nasty. Oh, I wonder how Sara is this morning.”
+
+“Mother’s going down this afternoon,” said Felicity. “She says none
+of us must go near the place till we know whether it is the measles or
+not.”
+
+“I’ve thought of a great penance,” said Cecily eagerly. “Don’t go to the
+missionary meeting to-night.”
+
+The Story Girl looked piteous.
+
+“I thought of that myself--but I CAN’T stay home, Cecily. It would be
+more than flesh and blood could endure. I MUST hear that missionary
+speak. They say he was all but eaten by cannibals once. Just think how
+many new stories I’d have to tell after I’d heard him! No, I must go,
+but I’ll tell you what I’ll do. I’ll wear my school dress and hat. THAT
+will be penance. Felicity, when you set the table for dinner, put the
+broken-handled knife for me. I hate it so. And I’m going to take a dose
+of Mexican Tea every two hours. It’s such dreadful tasting stuff--but
+it’s a good blood purifier, so Aunt Janet can’t object to it.”
+
+The Story Girl carried out her self-imposed penance fully. All day she
+sat in the kitchen and worked buttonholes, subsisting on bread and water
+and Mexican Tea.
+
+Felicity did a mean thing. She went to work and made little raisin pies,
+right there in the kitchen before the Story Girl. The smell of raisin
+pies is something to tempt an anchorite; and the Story Girl was
+exceedingly fond of them. Felicity ate two in her very presence, and
+then brought the rest out to us in the orchard. The Story Girl could see
+us through the window, carousing without stint on raisin pies and Uncle
+Edward’s cherries. But she worked on at her buttonholes. She would not
+look at the exciting serial in the new magazine Dan brought home from
+the post-office, neither would she open a letter from her father. Pat
+came over, but his most seductive purrs won no notice from his mistress,
+who refused herself the pleasure of even patting him.
+
+Aunt Janet could not go down the hill in the afternoon to find out how
+Sara was because company came to tea--the Millwards from Markdale. Mr.
+Millward was a doctor, and Mrs. Millward was a B.A. Aunt Janet was very
+desirous that everything should be as nice as possible, and we were
+all sent to our rooms before tea to wash and dress up. The Story Girl
+slipped over home, and when she came back we gasped. She had combed her
+hair out straight, and braided it in a tight, kinky, pudgy braid; and
+she wore an old dress of faded print, with holes in the elbows and
+ragged flounces, which was much too short for her.
+
+“Sara Stanley, have you taken leave of your senses?” demanded Aunt
+Janet. “What do you mean by putting on such a rig! Don’t you know I have
+company to tea?”
+
+“Yes, and that is just why I put it on, Aunt Janet. I want to mortify
+the flesh--”
+
+“I’ll ‘mortify’ you, if I catch you showing yourself to the Millwards
+like that, my girl! Go right home and dress yourself decently--or eat
+your supper in the kitchen.”
+
+The Story Girl chose the latter alternative. She was highly indignant.
+I verily believe that to sit at the dining-room table, in that shabby,
+outgrown dress, conscious of looking her ugliest, and eating only bread
+and water before the critical Millwards would have been positive bliss
+to her.
+
+When we went to the missionary meeting that evening, the Story Girl wore
+her school dress and hat, while Felicity and Cecily were in their pretty
+muslins. And she had tied her hair with a snuff-brown ribbon which was
+very unbecoming to her.
+
+The first person we saw in the church porch was Mrs. Ray. She told us
+that Sara had nothing worse than a feverish cold.
+
+The missionary had at least seven happy listeners that night. We were
+all glad that Sara did not have measles, and the Story Girl was radiant.
+
+“Now you see all your penance was wasted,” said Felicity, as we walked
+home, keeping close together because of the rumour that Peg Bowen was
+abroad.
+
+“Oh, I don’t know. I feel better since I punished myself. But I’m going
+to make up for it to-morrow,” said the Story Girl energetically. “In
+fact, I’ll begin to-night. I’m going to the pantry as soon as I get
+home, and I’ll read father’s letter before I go to bed. Wasn’t the
+missionary splendid? That cannibal story was simply grand. I tried
+to remember every word, so that I can tell it just as he told it.
+Missionaries are such noble people.”
+
+“I’d like to be a missionary and have adventures like that,” said Felix.
+
+“It would be all right if you could be sure the cannibals would be
+interrupted in the nick of time as his were,” said Dan. “But sposen they
+weren’t?”
+
+“Nothing would prevent cannibals from eating Felix if they once caught
+him,” giggled Felicity. “He’s so nice and fat.”
+
+I am sure Felix felt very unlike a missionary at that precise moment.
+
+“I’m going to put two cents more a week in my missionary box than I’ve
+been doing,” said Cecily determinedly.
+
+Two cents more a week out of Cecily’s egg money, meant something of a
+sacrifice. It inspired the rest of us. We all decided to increase
+our weekly contribution by a cent or so. And Peter, who had had no
+missionary box at all, up to this time, determined to start one.
+
+“I don’t seem to be able to feel as int’rested in missionaries as you
+folks do,” he said, “but maybe if I begin to give something I’ll get
+int’rested. I’ll want to know how my money’s being spent. I won’t be
+able to give much. When your father’s run away, and your mother goes out
+washing, and you’re only old enough to get fifty cents a week, you can’t
+give much to the heathen. But I’ll do the best I can. My Aunt Jane was
+fond of missions. Are there any Methodist heathen? I s’pose I ought to
+give my box to them, rather than to Presbyterian heathen.”
+
+“No, it’s only after they’re converted that they’re anything in
+particular,” said Felicity. “Before that, they’re just plain heathen.
+But if you want your money to go to a Methodist missionary you can give
+it to the Methodist minister at Markdale. I guess the Presbyterians can
+get along without it, and look after their own heathen.”
+
+“Just smell Mrs. Sampson’s flowers,” said Cecily, as we passed a trim
+white paling close to the road, over which blew odours sweeter than the
+perfume of Araby’s shore. “Her roses are all out and that bed of Sweet
+William is a sight by daylight.”
+
+“Sweet William is a dreadful name for a flower,” said the Story Girl.
+“William is a man’s name, and men are NEVER sweet. They are a great many
+nice things, but they are NOT sweet and shouldn’t be. That is for women.
+Oh, look at the moonshine on the road in that gap between the spruces!
+I’d like a dress of moonshine, with stars for buttons.”
+
+“It wouldn’t do,” said Felicity decidedly. “You could see through it.”
+
+Which seemed to settle the question of moonshine dresses effectually.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII. THE BLUE CHEST OF RACHEL WARD
+
+“It’s utterly out of the question,” said Aunt Janet seriously. When Aunt
+Janet said seriously that anything was out of the question it meant that
+she was thinking about it, and would probably end up by doing it. If a
+thing really was out of the question she merely laughed and refused to
+discuss it at all.
+
+The particular matter in or out of the question that opening day of
+August was a project which Uncle Edward had recently mooted. Uncle
+Edward’s youngest daughter was to be married; and Uncle Edward had
+written over, urging Uncle Alec, Aunt Janet and Aunt Olivia to go down
+to Halifax for the wedding and spend a week there.
+
+Uncle Alec and Aunt Olivia were eager to go; but Aunt Janet at first
+declared it was impossible.
+
+“How could we go away and leave the place to the mercy of all those
+young ones?” she demanded. “We’d come home and find them all sick, and
+the house burned down.”
+
+“Not a bit of fear of it,” scoffed Uncle Roger. “Felicity is as good a
+housekeeper as you are; and I shall be here to look after them all, and
+keep them from burning the house down. You’ve been promising Edward for
+years to visit him, and you’ll never have a better chance. The haying
+is over and harvest isn’t on, and Alec needs a change. He isn’t looking
+well at all.”
+
+I think it was Uncle Roger’s last argument which convinced Aunt Janet.
+In the end she decided to go. Uncle Roger’s house was to be closed, and
+he and Peter and the Story Girl were to take up their abode with us.
+
+We were all delighted. Felicity, in especial, seemed to be in seventh
+heaven. To be left in sole charge of a big house, with three meals a
+day to plan and prepare, with poultry and cows and dairy and garden
+to superintend, apparently furnished forth Felicity’s conception of
+Paradise. Of course, we were all to help; but Felicity was to “run
+things,” and she gloried in it.
+
+The Story Girl was pleased, too.
+
+“Felicity is going to give me cooking lessons,” she confided to me, as
+we walked in the orchard. “Isn’t that fine? It will be easier when
+there are no grown-ups around to make me nervous, and laugh if I make
+mistakes.”
+
+Uncle Alec and aunts left on Monday morning. Poor Aunt Janet was full of
+dismal forebodings, and gave us so many charges and warnings that we did
+not try to remember any of them; Uncle Alec merely told us to be good
+and mind what Uncle Roger said. Aunt Olivia laughed at us out of her
+pansy-blue eyes, and told us she knew exactly what we felt like and
+hoped we’d have a gorgeous time.
+
+“Mind they go to bed at a decent hour,” Aunt Janet called back to Uncle
+Roger as she drove out of the gate. “And if anything dreadful happens
+telegraph us.”
+
+Then they were really gone and we were all left “to keep house.”
+
+Uncle Roger and Peter went away to their work. Felicity at once set the
+preparations for dinner a-going, and allotted to each of us his portion
+of service. The Story Girl was to prepare the potatoes; Felix and Dan
+were to pick and shell the peas; Cecily was to attend the fire; I was to
+peel the turnips. Felicity made our mouths water by announcing that she
+was going to make a roly-poly jam pudding for dinner.
+
+I peeled my turnips on the back porch, put them in their pot, and set
+them on the stove. Then I was at liberty to watch the others, who had
+longer jobs. The kitchen was a scene of happy activity. The Story Girl
+peeled her potatoes, somewhat slowly and awkwardly--for she was not
+deft at household tasks; Dan and Felix shelled peas and tormented Pat
+by attaching pods to his ears and tail; Felicity, flushed and serious,
+measured and stirred skilfully.
+
+“I am sitting on a tragedy,” said the Story Girl suddenly.
+
+Felix and I stared. We were not quite sure what a “tragedy” was, but we
+did not think it was an old blue wooden chest, such as the Story Girl
+was undoubtedly sitting on, if eyesight counted for anything.
+
+The old chest filled up the corner between the table and the wall.
+Neither Felix nor I had ever thought about it particularly. It was very
+large and heavy, and Felicity generally said hard things of it when she
+swept the kitchen.
+
+“This old blue chest holds a tragedy,” explained the Story Girl. “I know
+a story about it.”
+
+“Cousin Rachel Ward’s wedding things are all in that old chest,” said
+Felicity.
+
+Who was Cousin Rachel Ward? And why were her wedding things shut up
+in an old blue chest in Uncle Alec’s kitchen? We demanded the tale
+instantly. The Story Girl told it to us as she peeled her potatoes.
+Perhaps the potatoes suffered--Felicity declared the eyes were not
+properly done at all--but the story did not.
+
+“It is a sad story,” said the Story Girl, “and it happened fifty
+years ago, when Grandfather and Grandmother King were quite young.
+Grandmother’s cousin Rachel Ward came to spend a winter with them. She
+belonged to Montreal and she was an orphan too, just like the Family
+Ghost. I have never heard what she looked like, but she MUST have been
+beautiful, of course.”
+
+“Mother says she was awful sentimental and romantic,” interjected
+Felicity.
+
+“Well, anyway, she met Will Montague that winter. He was
+handsome--everybody says so”--
+
+“And an awful flirt,” said Felicity.
+
+“Felicity, I WISH you wouldn’t interrupt. It spoils the effect. What
+would you feel like if I went and kept stirring things that didn’t
+belong to it into that pudding? I feel just the same way. Well, Will
+Montague fell in love with Rachel Ward, and she with him, and it was
+all arranged that they were to be married from here in the spring. Poor
+Rachel was so happy that winter; she made all her wedding things with
+her own hands. Girls did, then, you know, for there was no such thing as
+a sewing-machine. Well, at last in April the wedding day came, and
+all the guests were here, and Rachel was dressed in her wedding robes,
+waiting for her bridegroom. And”--the Story Girl laid down her knife and
+potato and clasped her wet hands--“WILL MONTAGUE NEVER CAME!”
+
+We felt as much of a shock as if we had been one of the expectant guests
+ourselves.
+
+“What happened to him? Was HE killed too?” asked Felix.
+
+The Story Girl sighed and resumed her work.
+
+“No, indeed. I wish he had been. THAT would have been suitable and
+romantic. No, it was just something horrid. He had to run away for debt!
+Fancy! He acted mean right through, Aunt Janet says. He never sent even
+a word to Rachel, and she never heard from him again.”
+
+“Pig!” said Felix forcibly.
+
+“She was broken-hearted of course. When she found out what had happened,
+she took all her wedding things, and her supply of linen, and some
+presents that had been given her, and packed them all away in this old
+blue chest. Then she went away back to Montreal, and took the key with
+her. She never came back to the Island again--I suppose she couldn’t
+bear to. And she has lived in Montreal ever since and never married. She
+is an old woman now--nearly seventy-five. And this chest has never been
+opened since.”
+
+“Mother wrote to Cousin Rachel ten years ago,” said Cecily, “and asked
+her if she might open the chest to see if the moths had got into it.
+There’s a crack in the back as big as your finger. Cousin Rachel wrote
+back that if it wasn’t for one thing that was in the trunk she would ask
+mother to open the chest and dispose of the things as she liked. But
+she could not bear that any one but herself should see or touch that one
+thing. So she wanted it left as it was. Ma said she washed her hands of
+it, moths or no moths. She said if Cousin Rachel had to move that
+chest every time the floor had to be scrubbed it would cure her of her
+sentimental nonsense. But I think,” concluded Cecily, “that I would feel
+just like Cousin Rachel in her place.”
+
+“What was the thing she couldn’t bear any one to see?” I asked.
+
+“Ma thinks it was her wedding dress. But father says he believes it was
+Will Montague’s picture,” said Felicity. “He saw her put it in. Father
+knows some of the things that are in the chest. He was ten years old,
+and he saw her pack it. There’s a white muslin wedding dress and a
+veil--and--and--a--a”--Felicity dropped her eyes and blushed painfully.
+
+“A petticoat, embroidered by hand from hem to belt,” said the Story Girl
+calmly.
+
+“And a china fruit basket with an apple on the handle,” went on
+Felicity, much relieved. “And a tea set, and a blue candle-stick.”
+
+“I’d dearly love to see all the things that are in it,” said the Story
+Girl.
+
+“Pa says it must never be opened without Cousin Rachel’s permission,”
+ said Cecily.
+
+Felix and I looked at the chest reverently. It had taken on a new
+significance in our eyes, and seemed like a tomb wherein lay buried some
+dead romance of the vanished years.
+
+“What happened to Will Montague?” I asked.
+
+“Nothing!” said the Story Girl viciously. “He just went on living and
+flourishing. He patched up matters with his creditors after awhile, and
+came back to the Island; and in the end he married a real nice girl,
+with money, and was very happy. Did you ever HEAR of anything so
+unjust?”
+
+“Beverley King,” suddenly cried Felicity, who had been peering into
+a pot, “YOU’VE GONE AND PUT THE TURNIPS ON TO BOIL WHOLE JUST LIKE
+POTATOES!”
+
+“Wasn’t that right?” I cried, in an agony of shame.
+
+“Right!” but Felicity had already whisked the turnips out, and was
+slicing them, while all the others were laughing at me. I had added a
+tradition on my own account to the family archives.
+
+Uncle Roger roared when he heard it; and he roared again at night over
+Peter’s account of Felix attempting to milk a cow. Felix had previously
+acquired the knack of extracting milk from the udder. But he had never
+before tried to “milk a whole cow.” He did not get on well; the cow
+tramped on his foot, and finally upset the bucket.
+
+“What are you to do when a cow won’t stand straight?” spluttered Felix
+angrily.
+
+“That’s the question,” said Uncle Roger, shaking his head gravely.
+
+Uncle Roger’s laughter was hard to bear, but his gravity was harder.
+
+Meanwhile, in the pantry the Story Girl, apron-enshrouded, was being
+initiated into the mysteries of bread-making. Under Felicity’s eyes she
+set the bread, and on the morrow she was to bake it.
+
+“The first thing you must do in the morning is knead it well,” said
+Felicity, “and the earlier it’s done the better--because it’s such a
+warm night.”
+
+With that we went to bed, and slept as soundly as if tragedies of blue
+chests and turnips and crooked cows had no place in the scheme of things
+at all.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII. AN OLD PROVERB WITH A NEW MEANING
+
+It was half-past five when we boys got up the next morning. We were
+joined on the stairs by Felicity, yawning and rosy.
+
+“Oh, dear me, I overslept myself. Uncle Roger wanted breakfast at six.
+Well, I suppose the fire is on anyhow, for the Story Girl is up. I guess
+she got up early to knead the bread. She couldn’t sleep all night for
+worrying over it.”
+
+The fire was on, and a flushed and triumphant Story Girl was taking a
+loaf of bread from the oven.
+
+“Just look,” she said proudly. “I have every bit of the bread baked. I
+got up at three, and it was lovely and light, so I just gave it a right
+good kneading and popped it into the oven. And it’s all done and out of
+the way. But the loaves don’t seem quite as big as they should be,” she
+added doubtfully.
+
+“Sara Stanley!” Felicity flew across the kitchen. “Do you mean that you
+put the bread right into the oven after you kneaded it without leaving
+it to rise a second time?”
+
+The Story Girl turned quite pale.
+
+“Yes, I did,” she faltered. “Oh, Felicity, wasn’t it right?”
+
+“You’ve ruined the bread,” said Felicity flatly. “It’s as heavy as a
+stone. I declare, Sara Stanley, I’d rather have a little common sense
+than be a great story teller.”
+
+Bitter indeed was the poor Story Girl’s mortification.
+
+“Don’t tell Uncle Roger,” she implored humbly.
+
+“Oh, I won’t tell him,” promised Felicity amiably. “It’s lucky there’s
+enough old bread to do to-day. This will go to the hens. But it’s an
+awful waste of good flour.”
+
+The Story Girl crept out with Felix and me to the morning orchard, while
+Dan and Peter went to do the barn work.
+
+“It isn’t ANY use for me to try to learn to cook,” she said.
+
+“Never mind,” I said consolingly. “You can tell splendid stories.”
+
+“But what good would that do a hungry boy?” wailed the Story Girl.
+
+“Boys ain’t ALWAYS hungry,” said Felix gravely. “There’s times when they
+ain’t.”
+
+“I don’t believe it,” said the Story Girl drearily.
+
+“Besides,” added Felix in the tone of one who says while there is life
+there is yet hope, “you may learn to cook yet if you keep on trying.”
+
+“But Aunt Olivia won’t let me waste the stuff. My only hope was to learn
+this week. But I suppose Felicity is so disgusted with me now that she
+won’t give me any more lessons.”
+
+“I don’t care,” said Felix. “I like you better than Felicity, even if
+you can’t cook. There’s lots of folks can make bread. But there isn’t
+many who can tell a story like you.”
+
+“But it’s better to be useful than just interesting,” sighed the Story
+Girl bitterly.
+
+And Felicity, who was useful, would, in her secret soul, have given
+anything to be interesting. Which is the way of human nature.
+
+Company descended on us that afternoon. First came Aunt Janet’s sister,
+Mrs. Patterson, with a daughter of sixteen years and a son of two. They
+were followed by a buggy-load of Markdale people; and finally, Mrs.
+Elder Frewen and her sister from Vancouver, with two small daughters of
+the latter, arrived.
+
+“It never rains but it pours,” said Uncle Roger, as he went out to take
+their horse. But Felicity’s foot was on her native heath. She had been
+baking all the afternoon, and, with a pantry well stocked with biscuits,
+cookies, cakes, and pies, she cared not if all Carlisle came to tea.
+Cecily set the table, and the Story Girl waited on it and washed all the
+dishes afterwards. But all the blushing honours fell to Felicity, who
+received so many compliments that her airs were quite unbearable for
+the rest of the week. She presided at the head of the table with as much
+grace and dignity as if she had been five times twelve years old, and
+seemed to know by instinct just who took sugar and who took it not. She
+was flushed with excitement and pleasure, and was so pretty that I could
+hardly eat for looking at her--which is the highest compliment in a
+boy’s power to pay.
+
+The Story Girl, on the contrary, was under eclipse. She was pale and
+lustreless from her disturbed night and early rising; and no opportunity
+offered to tell a melting tale. Nobody took any notice of her. It was
+Felicity’s day.
+
+After tea Mrs. Frewen and her sister wished to visit their father’s
+grave in the Carlisle churchyard. It appeared that everybody wanted to
+go with them; but it was evident that somebody must stay home with Jimmy
+Patterson, who had just fallen sound asleep on the kitchen sofa. Dan
+finally volunteered to look after him. He had a new Henty book which he
+wanted to finish, and that, he said, was better fun than a walk to the
+graveyard.
+
+“I think we’ll be back before he wakes,” said Mrs. Patterson, “and
+anyhow he is very good and won’t be any trouble. Don’t let him go
+outside, though. He has a cold now.”
+
+We went away, leaving Dan sitting on the door-sill reading his book, and
+Jimmy P. snoozing blissfully on the sofa. When we returned--Felix and
+the girls and I were ahead of the others--Dan was still sitting in
+precisely the same place and attitude; but there was no Jimmy in sight.
+
+“Dan, where’s the baby?” cried Felicity.
+
+Dan looked around. His jaw fell in blank amazement. I never saw any one
+look as foolish as Dan at that moment.
+
+“Good gracious, I don’t know,” he said helplessly.
+
+“You’ve been so deep in that wretched book that he’s got out, and dear
+knows where he is,” cried Felicity distractedly.
+
+“I wasn’t,” cried Dan. “He MUST be in the house. I’ve been sitting right
+across the door ever since you left, and he couldn’t have got out unless
+he crawled right over me. He must be in the house.”
+
+“He isn’t in the kitchen,” said Felicity rushing about wildly, “and he
+couldn’t get into the other part of the house, for I shut the hall door
+tight, and no baby could open it--and it’s shut tight yet. So are all
+the windows. He MUST have gone out of that door, Dan King, and it’s your
+fault.”
+
+“He DIDN’T go out of this door,” reiterated Dan stubbornly. “I know
+that.”
+
+“Well, where is he, then? He isn’t here. Did he melt into air?” demanded
+Felicity. “Oh, come and look for him, all of you. Don’t stand round like
+ninnies. We MUST find him before his mother gets here. Dan King, you’re
+an idiot!”
+
+Dan was too frightened to resent this, at the time. However and wherever
+Jimmy had gone, he WAS gone, so much was certain. We tore about the
+house and yard like maniacs; we looked into every likely and unlikely
+place. But Jimmy we could not find, anymore than if he had indeed melted
+into air. Mrs. Patterson came, and we had not found him. Things were
+getting serious. Uncle Roger and Peter were summoned from the field.
+Mrs. Patterson became hysterical, and was taken into the spare room with
+such remedies as could be suggested. Everybody blamed poor Dan. Cecily
+asked him what he would feel like if Jimmy was never, never found. The
+Story Girl had a gruesome recollection of some baby at Markdale who had
+wandered away like that--
+
+“And they never found him till the next spring, and all they found
+was--HIS SKELETON, with the grass growing through it,” she whispered.
+
+“This beats me,” said Uncle Roger, when a fruitless hour had elapsed. “I
+do hope that baby hasn’t wandered down to the swamp. It seems impossible
+he could walk so far; but I must go and see. Felicity, hand me my high
+boots out from under the sofa, there’s a girl.”
+
+Felicity, pale and tearful, dropped on her knees and lifted the cretonne
+frill of the sofa. There, his head pillowed hardly on Uncle Roger’s
+boots, lay Jimmy Patterson, still sound asleep!
+
+“Well, I’ll be--jiggered!” said Uncle Roger.
+
+“I KNEW he never went out of the door,” cried Dan triumphantly.
+
+When the last buggy had driven away, Felicity set a batch of bread, and
+the rest of us sat around the back porch steps in the cat’s light and
+ate cherries, shooting the stones at each other. Cecily was in quest of
+information.
+
+“What does ‘it never rains but it pours’ mean?”
+
+“Oh, it means if anything happens something else is sure to happen,”
+ said the Story Girl. “I’ll illustrate. There’s Mrs. Murphy. She never
+had a proposal in her life till she was forty, and then she had three
+in the one week, and she was so flustered she took the wrong one and has
+been sorry ever since. Do you see what it means now?”
+
+“Yes, I guess so,” said Cecily somewhat doubtfully. Later on we heard
+her imparting her newly acquired knowledge to Felicity in the pantry.
+
+“‘It never rains but it pours’ means that nobody wants to marry you for
+ever so long, and then lots of people do.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV. FORBIDDEN FRUIT
+
+We were all, with the exception of Uncle Roger, more or less grumpy in
+the household of King next day. Perhaps our nerves had been upset by the
+excitement attendant on Jimmy Patterson’s disappearance. But it is more
+likely that our crankiness was the result of the supper we had eaten the
+previous night. Even children cannot devour mince pie, and cold fried
+pork ham, and fruit cake before going to bed with entire impunity. Aunt
+Janet had forgotten to warn Uncle Roger to keep an eye on our bedtime
+snacks, and we ate what seemed good unto us.
+
+Some of us had frightful dreams, and all of us carried chips on our
+shoulders at breakfast. Felicity and Dan began a bickering which they
+kept up the entire day. Felicity had a natural aptitude for what we
+called “bossing,” and in her mother’s absence she deemed that she had
+a right to rule supreme. She knew better than to make any attempt to
+assert authority over the Story Girl, and Felix and I were allowed some
+length of tether; but Cecily, Dan, and Peter were expected to submit
+dutifully to her decrees. In the main they did; but on this particular
+morning Dan was plainly inclined to rebel. He had had time to grow sore
+over the things that Felicity had said to him when Jimmy Patterson was
+thought lost, and he began the day with a flatly expressed determination
+that he was not going to let Felicity rule the roost.
+
+It was not a pleasant day, and to make matters worse it rained until
+late in the afternoon. The Story Girl had not recovered from the
+mortifications of the previous day; she would not talk, and she would
+not tell a single story; she sat on Rachel Ward’s chest and ate her
+breakfast with the air of a martyr. After breakfast she washed the
+dishes and did the bed-room work in grim silence; then, with a book
+under one arm and Pat under the other, she betook herself to the
+window-seat in the upstairs hall, and would not be lured from that
+retreat, charmed we never so wisely. She stroked the purring Paddy, and
+read steadily on, with maddening indifference to all our pleadings.
+
+Even Cecily, the meek and mild, was snappish, and complained of
+headache. Peter had gone home to see his mother, and Uncle Roger had
+gone to Markdale on business. Sara Ray came up, but was so snubbed by
+Felicity that she went home, crying. Felicity got the dinner by herself,
+disdaining to ask or command assistance. She banged things about and
+rattled the stove covers until even Cecily protested from her sofa. Dan
+sat on the floor and whittled, his sole aim and object being to make a
+mess and annoy Felicity, in which noble ambition he succeeded perfectly.
+
+“I wish Aunt Janet and Uncle Alec were home,” said Felix. “It’s not half
+so much fun having the grown-ups away as I thought it would be.”
+
+“I wish I was back in Toronto,” I said sulkily. The mince pie was to
+blame for THAT wish.
+
+“I wish you were, I’m sure,” said Felicity, riddling the fire noisily.
+
+“Any one who lives with you, Felicity King, will always be wishing he
+was somewhere else,” said Dan.
+
+“I wasn’t talking to you, Dan King,” retorted Felicity, “‘Speak when
+you’re spoken to, come when you’re called.’”
+
+“Oh, oh, oh,” wailed Cecily on the sofa. “I WISH it would stop raining.
+I WISH my head would stop aching. I WISH ma had never gone away. I WISH
+you’d leave Felicity alone, Dan.”
+
+“I wish girls had some sense,” said Dan--which brought the orgy of
+wishing to an end for the time. A wishing fairy might have had the time
+of her life in the King kitchen that morning--particularly if she were a
+cynically inclined fairy.
+
+But even the effects of unholy snacks wear away at length. By tea-time
+things had brightened up. The rain had ceased, and the old, low-raftered
+room was full of sunshine which danced on the shining dishes of the
+dresser, made mosaics on the floor, and flickered over the table whereon
+a delicious meal was spread. Felicity had put on her blue muslin, and
+looked so beautiful in it that her good humour was quite restored.
+Cecily’s headache was better, and the Story Girl, refreshed by an
+afternoon siesta, came down with smiles and sparkling eyes. Dan alone
+continued to nurse his grievances, and would not even laugh when the
+Story Girl told us a tale brought to mind by some of the “Rev. Mr.
+Scott’s plums” which were on the table.
+
+“The Rev. Mr. Scott was the man who thought the pulpit door must be made
+for speerits, you know,” she said. “I heard Uncle Edward telling ever
+so many stories about him. He was called to this congregation, and he
+laboured here long and faithfully, and was much beloved, though he was
+very eccentric.”
+
+“What does that mean?” asked Peter.
+
+“Hush! It just means queer,” said Cecily, nudging him with her elbow. “A
+common man would be queer, but when it’s a minister, it’s eccentric.”
+
+“When he gets very old,” continued the Story Girl, “the Presbytery
+thought it was time he was retired. HE didn’t think so; but the
+Presbytery had their way, because there were so many of them to one of
+him. He was retired, and a young man was called to Carlisle. Mr. Scott
+went to live in town, but he came out to Carlisle very often, and
+visited all the people regularly, just the same as when he was their
+minister. The young minister was a very good young man, and tried to do
+his duty; but he was dreadfully afraid of meeting old Mr. Scott, because
+he had been told that the old minister was very angry at being set
+aside, and would likely give him a sound drubbing, if he ever met him.
+One day the young minister was visiting the Crawfords in Markdale, when
+they suddenly heard old Mr. Scott’s voice in the kitchen. The young
+minister turned pale as the dead, and implored Mrs. Crawford to hid him.
+But she couldn’t get him out of the room, and all she could do was to
+hide him in the china closet. The young minister slipped into the china
+closet, and old Mr. Scott came into the room. He talked very nicely, and
+read, and prayed. They made very long prayers in those days, you know;
+and at the end of his prayer he said, ‘Oh Lord, bless the poor young man
+hiding in the closet. Give him courage not to fear the face of man. Make
+him a burning and a shining light to this sadly abused congregation.’
+Just imagine the feelings of the young minister in the china closet! But
+he came right out like a man, though his face was very red, as soon as
+Mr. Scott had done praying. And Mr. Scott was lovely to him, and shook
+hands, and never mentioned the china closet. And they were the best of
+friends ever afterwards.”
+
+“How did old Mr. Scott find out the young minister was in the closet?”
+ asked Felix.
+
+“Nobody ever knew. They supposed he had seen him through the
+window before he came into the house, and guessed he must be in the
+closet--because there was no way for him to get out of the room.”
+
+“Mr. Scott planted the yellow plum tree in Grandfather’s time,” said
+Cecily, peeling one of the plums, “and when he did it he said it was
+as Christian an act as he ever did. I wonder what he meant. I don’t see
+anything very Christian about planting a tree.”
+
+“I do,” said the Story Girl sagely.
+
+When next we assembled ourselves together, it was after milking, and the
+cares of the day were done with. We foregathered in the balsam-fragrant
+aisles of the fir wood, and ate early August apples to such an extent
+that the Story Girl said we made her think of the Irishman’s pig.
+
+“An Irishman who lived at Markdale had a little pig,” she said, “and he
+gave it a pailful of mush. The pig ate the whole pailful, and then the
+Irishman put the pig IN the pail, and it didn’t fill more than half the
+pail. Now, how was that, when it held a whole pailful of mush?”
+
+This seemed to be a rather unanswerable kind of conundrum. We discussed
+the problem as we roamed the wood, and Dan and Peter almost quarrelled
+over it, Dan maintaining that the thing was impossible, and Peter being
+of the opinion that the mush was somehow “made thicker” in the process
+of being eaten, and so took up less room. During the discussion we came
+out to the fence of the hill pasture where grew the “bad berry” bushes.
+
+Just what these “bad berries” were I cannot tell. We never knew their
+real name. They were small, red-clustered berries of a glossy, seductive
+appearance, and we were forbidden to eat them, because it was thought
+they might be poisonous. Dan picked a cluster and held it up.
+
+“Dan King, don’t you DARE eat those berries,” said Felicity in her
+“bossiest” tone. “They’re poison. Drop them right away.”
+
+Now, Dan had not had the slightest intention of eating the berries. But
+at Felicity’s prohibition the rebellion which had smouldered in him all
+day broke into sudden flame. He would show her!
+
+“I’ll eat them if I please, Felicity King,” he said in a fury: “I don’t
+believe they’re poison. Look here!”
+
+Dan crammed the whole bunch into his capacious mouth and chewed it up.
+
+“They taste great,” he said, smacking; and he ate two more clusters,
+regardless of our horror-stricken protestations and Felicity’s
+pleadings.
+
+We feared that Dan would drop dead on the spot. But nothing occurred
+immediately. When an hour had passed we concluded that the bad berries
+were not poison after all, and we looked upon Dan as quite a hero for
+daring to eat them.
+
+“I knew they wouldn’t hurt me,” he said loftily. “Felicity’s so fond of
+making a fuss over everything.”
+
+Nevertheless, when it grew dark and we returned to the house, I noticed
+that Dan was rather pale and quiet. He lay down on the kitchen sofa.
+
+“Don’t you feel all right, Dan?” I whispered anxiously.
+
+“Shut up,” he said.
+
+I shut up.
+
+Felicity and Cecily were setting out a lunch in the pantry when we were
+all startled by a loud groan from the sofa.
+
+“Oh, I’m sick--I’m awful sick,” said Dan abjectly, all the defiance and
+bravado gone out of him.
+
+We all went to pieces, except Cecily, who alone retained her presence of
+mind.
+
+“Have you got a pain in your stomach?” she demanded.
+
+“I’ve got an awful pain here, if that’s where my stomach is,” moaned
+Dan, putting his hand on a portion of his anatomy considerably below his
+stomach. “Oh--oh--oh!”
+
+“Go for Uncle Roger,” commanded Cecily, pale but composed. “Felicity,
+put on the kettle. Dan, I’m going to give you mustard and warm water.”
+
+The mustard and warm water produced its proper effect promptly, but gave
+Dan no relief. He continued to writhe and groan. Uncle Roger, who had
+been summoned from his own place, went at once for the doctor, telling
+Peter to go down the hill for Mrs. Ray. Peter went, but returned
+accompanied by Sara only. Mrs. Ray and Judy Pineau were both away. Sara
+might better have stayed home; she was of no use, and could only add to
+the general confusion, wandering aimlessly about, crying and asking if
+Dan was going to die.
+
+Cecily took charge of things. Felicity might charm the palate, and the
+Story Girl bind captive the soul; but when pain and sickness wrung the
+brow it was Cecily who was the ministering angel. She made the writhing
+Dan go to bed. She made him swallow every available antidote which was
+recommended in “the doctor’s book;” and she applied hot cloths to him
+until her faithful little hands were half scalded off.
+
+There was no doubt Dan was suffering intense pain. He moaned and
+writhed, and cried for his mother.
+
+“Oh, isn’t it dreadful!” said Felicity, wringing her hands as she walked
+the kitchen floor. “Oh, why doesn’t the doctor come? I TOLD Dan the bad
+berries were poison. But surely they can’t kill people ALTOGETHER.”
+
+“Pa’s cousin died of eating something forty years ago,” sobbed Sara Ray.
+
+“Hold your tongue,” said Peter in a fierce whisper. “You oughter have
+more sense than to say such things to the girls. They don’t want to be
+any worse scared than they are.”
+
+“But Pa’s cousin DID die,” reiterated Sara.
+
+“My Aunt Jane used to rub whisky on for a pain,” suggested Peter.
+
+“We haven’t any whisky,” said Felicity disapprovingly. “This is a
+temperance house.”
+
+“But rubbing whisky on the OUTSIDE isn’t any harm,” argued Peter. “It’s
+only when you take it inside it is bad for you.”
+
+“Well, we haven’t any, anyhow,” said Felicity. “I suppose blueberry wine
+wouldn’t do in its place?”
+
+Peter did not think blueberry wine would be any good.
+
+It was ten o’clock before Dan began to get better; but from that time
+he improved rapidly. When the doctor, who had been away from home
+when Uncle Roger reached Markdale, came at half past ten, he found his
+patient very weak and white, but free from pain.
+
+Dr. Grier patted Cecily on the head, told her she was a little brick,
+and had done just the right thing, examined some of the fatal
+berries and gave it as his opinion that they were probably poisonous,
+administered some powders to Dan and advised him not to tamper with
+forbidden fruit in future, and went away.
+
+Mrs. Ray now appeared, looking for Sara, and said she would stay all
+night with us.
+
+“I’ll be much obliged to you if you will,” said Uncle Roger. “I feel
+a bit shook. I urged Janet and Alec to go to Halifax, and took the
+responsibility of the children while they were away, but I didn’t know
+what I was letting myself in for. If anything had happened I could never
+have forgiven myself--though I believe it’s beyond the power of mortal
+man to keep watch over the things children WILL eat. Now, you young fry,
+get straight off to your beds. Dan is out of danger, and you can’t do
+any more good. Not that any of you have done much, except Cecily. She’s
+got a head of her shoulders.”
+
+“It’s been a horrid day all through,” said Felicity drearily, as we
+climbed the stairs.
+
+“I suppose we made it horrid ourselves,” said the Story Girl candidly.
+“But it’ll be a good story to tell sometime,” she added.
+
+“I’m awful tired and thankful,” sighed Cecily.
+
+We all felt that way.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV. A DISOBEDIENT BROTHER
+
+Dan was his own man again in the morning, though rather pale and weak;
+he wanted to get up, but Cecily ordered him to stay in bed. Fortunately
+Felicity forgot to repeat the command, so Dan did stay in bed. Cecily
+carried his meals to him, and read a Henty book to him all her spare
+time. The Story Girl went up and told him wondrous tales; and Sara Ray
+brought him a pudding she had made herself. Sara’s intentions were
+good, but the pudding--well, Dan fed most of it to Paddy, who had curled
+himself up at the foot of the bed, giving the world assurance of a cat
+by his mellifluous purring.
+
+“Ain’t he just a great old fellow?” said Dan. “He knows I’m kind of
+sick, just as well as a human. He never pays no attention to me when I’m
+well.”
+
+Felix and Peter and I were required to help Uncle Roger in some
+carpentering work that day, and Felicity indulged in one of the
+house-cleaning orgies so dear to her soul; so that it was evening before
+we were all free to meet in the orchard and loll on the grasses of Uncle
+Stephen’s Walk. In August it was a place of shady sweetness, fragrant
+with the odour of ripening apples, full of dear, delicate shadows.
+Through its openings we looked afar to the blue rims of the hills and
+over green, old, tranquil fields, lying the sunset glow. Overhead the
+lacing leaves made a green, murmurous roof. There was no such thing as
+hurry in the world, while we lingered there and talked of “cabbages and
+kings.” A tale of the Story Girl’s, wherein princes were thicker than
+blackberries, and queens as common as buttercups, led to our discussion
+of kings. We wondered what it would be like to be a king. Peter thought
+it would be fine, only kind of inconvenient, wearing a crown all the
+time.
+
+“Oh, but they don’t,” said the Story Girl. “Maybe they used to once, but
+now they wear hats. The crowns are just for special occasions. They look
+very much like other people, if you can go by their photographs.”
+
+“I don’t believe it would be much fun as a steady thing,” said Cecily.
+“I’d like to SEE a queen though. That is one thing I have against the
+Island--you never have a chance to see things like that here.”
+
+“The Prince of Wales was in Charlottetown once,” said Peter. “My Aunt
+Jane saw him quite close by.”
+
+“That was before we were born, and such a thing won’t happen again until
+after we’re dead,” said Cecily, with very unusual pessimism.
+
+“I think queens and kings were thicker long ago,” said the Story Girl.
+“They do seem dreadfully scarce now. There isn’t one in this country
+anywhere. Perhaps I’ll get a glimpse of some when I go to Europe.”
+
+Well, the Story Girl was destined to stand before kings herself, and she
+was to be one whom they delighted to honour. But we did not know
+that, as we sat in the old orchard. We thought it quite sufficiently
+marvellous that she should expect to have the chance of just seeing
+them.
+
+“Can a queen do exactly as she pleases?” Sara Ray wanted to know.
+
+“Not nowadays,” explained the Story Girl.
+
+“Then I don’t see any use in being one,” Sara decided.
+
+“A king can’t do as he pleases now, either,” said Felix. “If he tries
+to, and if it isn’t what pleases other people, the Parliament or
+something squelches him.”
+
+“Isn’t ‘squelch’ a lovely word?” said the Story Girl irrelevantly. “It’s
+so expressive. Squ-u-e-l-ch!”
+
+Certainly it was a lovely word, as the Story Girl said it. Even a king
+would not have minded being squelched, if it were done to music like
+that.
+
+“Uncle Roger says that Martin Forbes’ wife has squelched HIM,” said
+Felicity. “He says Martin can’t call his soul his own since he was
+married.”
+
+“I’m glad of it,” said Cecily vindictively.
+
+We all stared. This was so very unlike Cecily.
+
+“Martin Forbes is the brother of a horrid man in Summerside who called
+me Johnny, that’s why,” she explained. “He was visiting here with his
+wife two years ago, and he called me Johnny every time he spoke to me.
+Just you fancy! I’ll NEVER forgive him.”
+
+“That isn’t a Christian spirit,” said Felicity rebukingly.
+
+“I don’t care. Would YOU forgive James Forbes if he had called YOU
+Johnny?” demanded Cecily.
+
+“I know a story about Martin Forbes’ grandfather,” said the Story Girl.
+“Long ago they didn’t have any choir in the Carlisle church--just a
+precentor you know. But at last they got a choir, and Andrew McPherson
+was to sing bass in it. Old Mr. Forbes hadn’t gone to church for years,
+because he was so rheumatic, but he went the first Sunday the choir
+sang, because he had never heard any one sing bass, and wanted to hear
+what it was like. Grandfather King asked him what he thought of the
+choir. Mr. Forbes said it was ‘verra guid,’ but as for Andrew’s bass,
+‘there was nae bass aboot it--it was just a bur-r-r-r the hale time.’”
+
+If you could have heard the Story Girl’s “bur-r-r-r!” Not old Mr. Forbes
+himself could have invested it with more of Doric scorn. We rolled over
+in the cool grass and screamed with laughter.
+
+“Poor Dan,” said Cecily compassionately. “He’s up there all alone in his
+room, missing all the fun. I suppose it’s mean of us to be having such a
+good time here, when he has to stay in bed.”
+
+“If Dan hadn’t done wrong eating the bad berries when he was told not
+to, he wouldn’t be sick,” said Felicity. “You’re bound to catch it when
+you do wrong. It was just a Providence he didn’t die.”
+
+“That makes me think of another story about old Mr. Scott,” said
+the Story Girl. “You know, I told you he was very angry because the
+Presbytery made him retire. There were two ministers in particular
+he blamed for being at the bottom of it. One time a friend of his was
+trying to console him, and said to him,
+
+“‘You should be resigned to the will of Providence.’
+
+“‘Providence had nothing to do with it,’ said old Mr. Scott. ‘’Twas the
+McCloskeys and the devil.’”
+
+“You shouldn’t speak of the--the--DEVIL,” said Felicity, rather shocked.
+
+“Well, that’s just what Mr. Scott said.”
+
+“Oh, it’s all right for a MINISTER to speak of him. But it isn’t nice
+for little girls. If you HAVE to speak of--of--him--you might say the
+Old Scratch. That is what mother calls him.”
+
+“‘’Twas the McCloskeys and the Old Scratch,’” said the Story Girl
+reflectively, as if she were trying to see which version was the more
+effective. “It wouldn’t do,” she decided.
+
+“I don’t think it’s any harm to mention the--the--that person, when
+you’re telling a story,” said Cecily. “It’s only in plain talking it
+doesn’t do. It sounds too much like swearing then.”
+
+“I know another story about Mr. Scott,” said the Story Girl. “Not long
+after he was married his wife wasn’t quite ready for church one morning
+when it was time to go. So, just to teach her a lesson, he drove off
+alone, and left her to walk all the way--it was nearly two miles--in
+the heat and dust. She took it very quietly. It’s the best way, I guess,
+when you’re married to a man like old Mr. Scott. But just a few Sundays
+after wasn’t he late himself! I suppose Mrs. Scott thought that what was
+sauce for the goose was sauce for the gander, for she slipped out and
+drove off to church as he had done. Old Mr. Scott finally arrived at
+the church, pretty hot and dusty, and in none too good a temper. He went
+into the pulpit, leaned over it and looked at his wife, sitting calmly
+in her pew at the side.
+
+“‘It was cleverly done,’ he said, right out loud, ‘BUT DINNA TRY IT
+AGAIN!’”
+
+In the midst of our laughter Pat came down the Walk, his stately tail
+waving over the grasses. He proved to be the precursor of Dan, clothed
+and in his right mind.
+
+“Do you think you should have got up, Dan?” said Cecily anxiously.
+
+“I had to,” said Dan. “The window was open, and it was more’n I could
+stand to hear you fellows laughing down here and me missing it all.
+‘Sides, I’m all right again. I feel fine.”
+
+“I guess this will be a lesson to you, Dan King,” said Felicity, in her
+most maddening tone. “I guess you won’t forget it in a hurry. You won’t
+go eating the bad berries another time when you’re told not to.”
+
+Dan had picked out a soft spot in the grass for himself, and was in the
+act of sitting down, when Felicity’s tactful speech arrested him midway.
+He straightened up and turned a wrathful face on his provoking sister.
+Then, red with indignation, but without a word, he stalked up the walk.
+
+“Now he’s gone off mad,” said Cecily reproachfully. “Oh, Felicity, why
+couldn’t you have held your tongue?”
+
+“Why, what did I say to make him mad?” asked Felicity in honest
+perplexity.
+
+“I think it’s awful for brothers and sisters to be always quarrelling,”
+ sighed Cecily. “The Cowans fight all the time; and you and Dan will soon
+be as bad.”
+
+“Oh, talk sense,” said Felicity. “Dan’s got so touchy it isn’t safe to
+speak to him. I should think he’d be sorry for all the trouble he made
+last night. But you just back him up in everything, Cecily.”
+
+“I don’t!”
+
+“You do! And you’ve no business to, specially when mother’s away. She
+left ME in charge.”
+
+“You didn’t take much charge last night when Dan got sick,” said Felix
+maliciously. Felicity had told him at tea that night he was getting
+fatter than ever. This was his tit-for-tat. “You were pretty glad to
+leave it all to Cecily then.”
+
+“Who’s talking to you?” said Felicity.
+
+“Now, look here,” said the Story Girl, “the first thing we know we’ll
+all be quarrelling, and then some of us will sulk all day to-morrow.
+It’s dreadful to spoil a whole day. Just let’s all sit still and count a
+hundred before we say another word.”
+
+We sat still and counted the hundred. When Cecily finished she got up
+and went in search of Dan, resolved to soothe his wounded feelings.
+Felicity called after her to tell Dan there was a jam turnover she had
+put away in the pantry specially for him. Felix held out to Felicity a
+remarkably fine apple which he had been saving for his own consumption;
+and the Story Girl began a tale of an enchanted maiden in a castle by
+the sea; but we never heard the end of it. For, just as the evening star
+was looking whitely through the rosy window of the west, Cecily came
+flying through the orchard, wringing her hands.
+
+“Oh, come, come quick,” she gasped. “Dan’s eating the bad berries
+again--he’s et a whole bunch of them--he says he’ll show Felicity. I
+can’t stop him. Come you and try.”
+
+We rose in a body and rushed towards the house. In the yard we
+encountered Dan, emerging from the fir wood and champing the fatal
+berries with unrepentant relish.
+
+“Dan King, do you want to commit suicide?” demanded the Story Girl.
+
+“Look here, Dan,” I expostulated. “You shouldn’t do this. Think how sick
+you were last night and all the trouble you made for everybody. Don’t
+eat any more, there’s a good chap.”
+
+“All right,” said Dan. “I’ve et all I want. They taste fine. I don’t
+believe it was them made me sick.”
+
+But now that his anger was over he looked a little frightened. Felicity
+was not there. We found her in the kitchen, lighting up the fire.
+
+“Bev, fill the kettle with water and put it on to heat,” she said in a
+resigned tone. “If Dan’s going to be sick again we’ve got to be ready
+for it. I wish mother was home, that’s all. I hope she’ll never go away
+again. Dan King, you just wait till I tell her of the way you’ve acted.”
+
+“Fudge! I ain’t going to be sick,” said Dan. “And if YOU begin telling
+tales, Felicity King, I’LL tell some too. I know how many eggs mother
+said you could use while she was away--and I know how many you HAVE
+used. I counted. So you’d better mind your own business, Miss.”
+
+“A nice way to talk to your sister when you may be dead in an hour’s
+time!” retorted Felicity, in tears between her anger and her real alarm
+about Dan.
+
+But in an hour’s time Dan was still in good health, and announced his
+intention of going to bed. He went, and was soon sleeping as peacefully
+as if he had nothing on either conscience or stomach. But Felicity
+declared she meant to keep the water hot until all danger was past; and
+we sat up to keep her company. We were sitting there when Uncle Roger
+walked in at eleven o’clock.
+
+“What on earth are you young fry doing up at this time of night?” he
+asked angrily. “You should have been in your beds two hours ago. And
+with a roaring fire on a night that’s hot enough to melt a brass monkey!
+Have you taken leave of your senses?”
+
+“It’s because of Dan,” explained Felicity wearily. “He went and et more
+of the bad berries--a whole lot of them--and we were sure he’d be sick
+again. But he hasn’t been yet, and now he’s asleep.”
+
+“Is that boy stark, staring mad?” said Uncle Roger.
+
+“It was Felicity’s fault,” cried Cecily, who always took Dan’s part
+through evil report and good report. “She told him she guessed he’d
+learned a lesson and wouldn’t do what she’d told him not to again. So he
+went and et them because she vexed him so.”
+
+“Felicity King, if you don’t watch out you’ll grow up into the sort of
+woman who drives her husband to drink,” said Uncle Roger gravely.
+
+“How could I tell Dan would act so like a mule!” cried Felicity.
+
+“Get off to bed, every one of you. It’s a thankful man I’ll be when your
+father and mother come home. The wretched bachelor who undertakes to
+look after a houseful of children like you is to be pitied. Nobody will
+ever catch me doing it again. Felicity, is there anything fit to eat in
+the pantry?”
+
+That last question was the most unkindest cut of all. Felicity could
+have forgiven Uncle Roger anything but that. It really was unpardonable.
+She confided to me as we climbed the stairs that she hated Uncle Roger.
+Her red lips quivered and the tears of wounded pride brimmed over in
+her beautiful blue eyes. In the dim candle-light she looked unbelievably
+pretty and appealing. I put my arm about her and gave her a cousinly
+salute.
+
+“Never you mind him, Felicity,” I said. “He’s only a grown-up.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI. THE GHOSTLY BELL
+
+Friday was a comfortable day in the household of King. Everybody was in
+good humour. The Story Girl sparkled through several tales that ranged
+from the afrites and jinns of Eastern myth, through the piping days of
+chivalry, down to the homely anecdotes of Carlisle workaday folks. She
+was in turn an Oriental princess behind a silken veil, the bride who
+followed her bridegroom to the wars of Palestine disguised as a page,
+the gallant lady who ransomed her diamond necklace by dancing a coranto
+with a highwayman on a moonlit heath, and “Buskirk’s girl” who joined
+the Sons and Daughters of Temperance “just to see what was into it;” and
+in each impersonation she was so thoroughly the thing impersonated that
+it was a matter of surprise to us when she emerged from each our own
+familiar Story Girl again.
+
+Cecily and Sara Ray found a “sweet” new knitted lace pattern in an old
+magazine and spent a happy afternoon learning it and “talking secrets.”
+ Chancing--accidentally, I vow--to overhear certain of these secrets, I
+learned that Sara Ray had named an apple for Johnny Price--“and, Cecily,
+true’s you live, there was eight seeds in it, and you know eight means
+‘they both love’ “--while Cecily admitted that Willy Fraser had written
+on his slate and showed it to her,
+
+ “If you love me as I love you,
+ No knife can cut our love in two”--
+
+“but, Sara Ray, NEVER you breathe this to a living soul.”
+
+Felix also averred that he heard Sara ask Cecily very seriously,
+
+“Cecily, how old must we be before we can have a REAL beau?”
+
+But Sara always denied it; so I am inclined to believe Felix simply made
+it up himself.
+
+Paddy distinguished himself by catching a rat, and being intolerably
+conceited about it--until Sara Ray cured him by calling him a “dear,
+sweet cat,” and kissing him between the ears. Then Pat sneaked abjectly
+off, his tail drooping. He resented being called a sweet cat. He had a
+sense of humour, had Pat. Very few cats have; and most of them have such
+an inordinate appetite for flattery that they will swallow any amount
+of it and thrive thereon. Paddy had a finer taste. The Story Girl and
+I were the only ones who could pay him compliments to his liking. The
+Story Girl would box his ears with her fist and say, “Bless your gray
+heart, Paddy, you’re a good sort of old rascal,” and Pat would purr his
+satisfaction; I used to take a handful of the skin on his back, shake
+him gently and say, “Pat, you’ve forgotten more than any human being
+ever knew,” and I vow Paddy would lick his chops with delight. But to be
+called “a sweet cat!” Oh, Sara, Sara!
+
+Felicity tried--and had the most gratifying luck with--a new and
+complicated cake recipe--a gorgeous compound of a plumminess to make
+your mouth water. The number of eggs she used in it would have shocked
+Aunt Janet’s thrifty soul, but that cake, like beauty, was its own
+excuse. Uncle Roger ate three slices of it at tea-time and told Felicity
+she was an artist. The poor man meant it as a compliment; but Felicity,
+who knew Uncle Blair was an artist and had a poor opinion of such fry,
+looked indignant and retorted, indeed she wasn’t!
+
+“Peter says there’s any amount of raspberries back in the maple
+clearing,” said Dan. “S’posen we all go after tea and pick some?”
+
+“I’d like to,” sighed Felicity, “but we’d come home tired and with all
+the milking to do. You boys better go alone.”
+
+“Peter and I will attend to the milking for one evening,” said Uncle
+Roger. “You can all go. I have an idea that a raspberry pie for
+to-morrow night, when the folks come home, would hit the right spot.”
+
+Accordingly, after tea we all set off, armed with jugs and cups.
+Felicity, thoughtful creature, also took a small basketful of jelly
+cookies along with her. We had to go back through the maple woods to
+the extreme end of Uncle Roger’s farm--a pretty walk, through a world of
+green, whispering boughs and spice-sweet ferns, and shifting patches
+of sunlight. The raspberries were plentiful, and we were not long in
+filling our receptacles. Then we foregathered around a tiny wood spring,
+cold and pellucid under its young maples, and ate the jelly cookies;
+and the Story Girl told us a tale of a haunted spring in a mountain glen
+where a fair white lady dwelt, who pledged all comers in a golden cup
+with jewels bright.
+
+“And if you drank of the cup with her,” said the Story Girl, her eyes
+glowing through the emerald dusk about us, “you were never seen in the
+world again; you were whisked straightway to fairyland, and lived there
+with a fairy bride. And you never WANTED to come back to earth, because
+when you drank of the magic cup you forgot all your past life, except
+for one day in every year when you were allowed to remember it.”
+
+“I wish there was such a place as fairyland--and a way to get to it,”
+ said Cecily.
+
+“I think there IS such a place--in spite of Uncle Edward,” said the
+Story Girl dreamily, “and I think there is a way of getting there too,
+if we could only find it.”
+
+Well, the Story Girl was right. There is such a place as fairyland--but
+only children can find the way to it. And they do not know that it is
+fairyland until they have grown so old that they forget the way. One
+bitter day, when they seek it and cannot find it, they realize what they
+have lost; and that is the tragedy of life. On that day the gates of
+Eden are shut behind them and the age of gold is over. Henceforth they
+must dwell in the common light of common day. Only a few, who remain
+children at heart, can ever find that fair, lost path again; and blessed
+are they above mortals. They, and only they, can bring us tidings
+from that dear country where we once sojourned and from which we must
+evermore be exiles. The world calls them its singers and poets and
+artists and story-tellers; but they are just people who have never
+forgotten the way to fairyland.
+
+As we sat there the Awkward Man passed by, with his gun over his
+shoulder and his dog at his side. He did not look like an awkward man,
+there in the heart of the maple woods. He strode along right masterfully
+and lifted his head with the air of one who was monarch of all he
+surveyed.
+
+The Story Girl kissed her fingertips to him with the delightful audacity
+which was a part of her; and the Awkward Man plucked off his hat and
+swept her a stately and graceful bow.
+
+“I don’t understand why they call him the awkward man,” said Cecily,
+when he was out of earshot.
+
+“You’d understand why if you ever saw him at a party or a picnic,” said
+Felicity, “trying to pass plates and dropping them whenever a woman
+looked at him. They say it’s pitiful to see him.”
+
+“I must get well acquainted with that man next summer,” said the Story
+Girl. “If I put it off any longer it will be too late. I’m growing so
+fast, Aunt Olivia says I’ll have to wear ankle skirts next summer. If I
+begin to look grown-up he’ll get frightened of me, and then I’ll never
+find out the Golden Milestone mystery.”
+
+“Do you think he’ll ever tell you who Alice is?” I asked.
+
+“I have a notion who Alice is already,” said the mysterious creature.
+But she would tell us nothing more.
+
+When the jelly cookies were all eaten it was high time to be moving
+homeward, for when the dark comes down there are more comfortable places
+than a rustling maple wood and the precincts of a possibly enchanted
+spring. When we reached the foot of the orchard and entered it through a
+gap in the hedge it was the magical, mystical time of “between lights.”
+ Off to the west was a daffodil glow hanging over the valley of lost
+sunsets, and Grandfather King’s huge willow rose up against it like a
+rounded mountain of foliage. In the east, above the maple woods, was a
+silvery sheen that hinted the moonrise. But the orchard was a place of
+shadows and mysterious sounds. Midway up the open space in its heart we
+met Peter; and if ever a boy was given over to sheer terror that boy was
+Peter. His face was as white as a sunburned face could be, and his eyes
+were brimmed with panic.
+
+“Peter, what is the matter?” cried Cecily.
+
+“There’s--SOMETHING--in the house, RINGING A BELL,” said Peter, in
+a shaking voice. Not the Story Girl herself could have invested that
+“something” with more of creepy horror. We all drew close together. I
+felt a crinkly feeling along my back which I had never known before. If
+Peter had not been so manifestly frightened we might have thought he was
+trying to “pass a joke” on us. But such abject terror as his could not
+be counterfeited.
+
+“Nonsense!” said Felicity, but her voice shook. “There isn’t a bell in
+the house to ring. You must have imagined it, Peter. Or else Uncle Roger
+is trying to fool us.”
+
+“Your Uncle Roger went to Markdale right after milking,” said Peter. “He
+locked up the house and gave me the key. There wasn’t a soul in it then,
+that I’m sure of. I druv the cows to the pasture, and I got back about
+fifteen minutes ago. I set down on the front door steps for a moment,
+and all at once I heard a bell ring in the house eight times. I tell
+you I was skeered. I made a bolt for the orchard--and you won’t catch me
+going near that house till your Uncle Roger comes home.”
+
+You wouldn’t catch any of us doing it. We were almost as badly scared as
+Peter. There we stood in a huddled demoralized group. Oh, what an eerie
+place that orchard was! What shadows! What noises! What spooky swooping
+of bats! You COULDN’T look every way at once, and goodness only knew
+what might be behind you!
+
+“There CAN’T be anybody in the house,” said Felicity.
+
+“Well, here’s the key--go and see for yourself,” said Peter.
+
+Felicity had no intention of going and seeing.
+
+“I think you boys ought to go,” she said, retreating behind the defence
+of sex. “You ought to be braver than girls.”
+
+“But we ain’t,” said Felix candidly. “I wouldn’t be much scared of
+anything REAL. But a haunted house is a different thing.”
+
+“I always thought something had to be done in a place before it could
+be haunted,” said Cecily. “Somebody killed or something like that, you
+know. Nothing like that ever happened in our family. The Kings have
+always been respectable.”
+
+“Perhaps it is Emily King’s ghost,” whispered Felix.
+
+“She never appeared anywhere but in the orchard,” said the Story Girl.
+“Oh, oh, children, isn’t there something under Uncle Alec’s tree?”
+
+We peered fearfully through the gloom. There WAS something--something
+that wavered and fluttered--advanced--retreated--
+
+“That’s only my old apron,” said Felicity. “I hung it there to-day when
+I was looking for the white hen’s nest. Oh, what shall we do? Uncle
+Roger may not be back for hours. I CAN’T believe there’s anything in the
+house.”
+
+“Maybe it’s only Peg Bowen,” suggested Dan.
+
+There was not a great deal of comfort in this. We were almost as much
+afraid of Peg Bowen as we would be of any spectral visitant.
+
+Peter scoffed at the idea.
+
+“Peg Bowen wasn’t in the house before your Uncle Roger locked it up, and
+how could she get in afterwards?” he said. “No, it isn’t Peg Bowen. It’s
+SOMETHING that WALKS.”
+
+“I know a story about a ghost,” said the Story Girl, the ruling passion
+strong even in extremity. “It is about a ghost with eyeholes but no
+eyes--”
+
+“Don’t,” cried Cecily hysterically. “Don’t you go on! Don’t you say
+another word! I can’t bear it! Don’t you!”
+
+The Story Girl didn’t. But she had said enough. There was something in
+the quality of a ghost with eyeholes but no eyes that froze our young
+blood.
+
+There never were in all the world six more badly scared children than
+those who huddled in the old King orchard that August night.
+
+All at once--something--leaped from the bough of a tree and alighted
+before us. We split the air with a simultaneous shriek. We would have
+run, one and all, if there had been anywhere to run to. But there
+wasn’t--all around us were only those shadowy arcades. Then we saw with
+shame that it was only our Paddy.
+
+“Pat, Pat,” I said, picking him up, feeling a certain comfort in his
+soft, solid body. “Stay with us, old fellow.”
+
+But Pat would none of us. He struggled out of my clasp and disappeared
+over the long grasses with soundless leaps. He was no longer our tame,
+domestic, well acquainted Paddy. He was a strange, furtive animal--a
+“questing beast.”
+
+Presently the moon rose; but this only made matters worse. The shadows
+had been still before; now they moved and danced, as the night wind
+tossed the boughs. The old house, with its dreadful secret, was white
+and clear against the dark background of spruces. We were woefully
+tired, but we could not sit down because the grass was reeking with dew.
+
+“The Family Ghost only appears in daylight,” said the Story Girl. “I
+wouldn’t mind seeing a ghost in daylight. But after dark is another
+thing.”
+
+“There’s no such thing as a ghost,” I said contemptuously. Oh, how I
+wished I could believe it!
+
+“Then what rung that bell?” said Peter. “Bells don’t ring of themselves,
+I s’pose, specially when there ain’t any in the house to ring.”
+
+“Oh, will Uncle Roger never come home!” sobbed Felicity. “I know he’ll
+laugh at us awful, but it’s better to be laughed at than scared like
+this.”
+
+Uncle Roger did not come until nearly ten. Never was there a more
+welcome sound than the rumble of his wheels in the lane. We ran to the
+orchard gate and swarmed across the yard, just as Uncle Roger alighted
+at the front door. He stared at us in the moonlight.
+
+“Have you tormented any one into eating more bad berries, Felicity?” he
+demanded.
+
+“Oh, Uncle Roger, don’t go in,” implored Felicity seriously. “There’s
+something dreadful in there--something that rings a bell. Peter heard
+it. Don’t go in.”
+
+“There’s no use asking the meaning of this, I suppose,” said Uncle Roger
+with the calm of despair. “I’ve gave up trying to fathom you young ones.
+Peter, where’s the key? What yarn have you been telling?”
+
+“I DID hear a bell ring,” said Peter stubbornly.
+
+Uncle Roger unlocked and flung open the front door. As he did so, clear
+and sweet, rang out ten bell-like chimes.
+
+“That’s what I heard,” cried Peter. “There’s the bell!”
+
+We had to wait until Uncle Roger stopped laughing before we heard the
+explanation. We thought he never WOULD stop.
+
+“That’s Grandfather King’s old clock striking,” he said, as soon as he
+was able to speak. “Sammy Prott came along after tea, when you were away
+to the forge, Peter, and I gave him permission to clean the old clock.
+He had it going merrily in no time. And now it has almost frightened you
+poor little monkeys to death.”
+
+We heard Uncle Roger chuckling all the way to the barn.
+
+“Uncle Roger can laugh,” said Cecily, with a quiver in her voice, “but
+it’s no laughing matter to be so scared. I just feel sick, I was so
+frightened.”
+
+“I wouldn’t mind if he’d laugh once and have it done with it,” said
+Felicity bitterly. “But he’ll laugh at us for a year, and tell the story
+to every soul that comes to the place.”
+
+“You can’t blame him for that,” said the Story Girl. “I shall tell it,
+too. I don’t care if the joke is as much on myself as any one. A story
+is a story, no matter who it’s on. But it IS hateful to be laughed
+at--and grown-ups always do it. I never will when I’m grown up. I’ll
+remember better.”
+
+“It’s all Peter’s fault,” said Felicity. “I do think he might have had
+more sense than to take a clock striking for a bell ringing.”
+
+“I never heard that kind of a strike before,” protested Peter. “It don’t
+sound a bit like other clocks. And the door was shut and the sound kind
+o’ muffled. It’s all very fine to say you would have known what it was,
+but I don’t believe you would.”
+
+“I wouldn’t have,” said the Story Girl honestly. “I thought it WAS a
+bell when I heard it, and the door open, too. Let us be fair, Felicity.”
+
+“I’m dreadful tired,” sighed Cecily.
+
+We were all “dreadful tired,” for this was the third night of late hours
+and nerve racking strain. But it was over two hours since we had
+eaten the cookies, and Felicity suggested that a saucerful apiece of
+raspberries and cream would not be hard to take. It was not, for any one
+but Cecily, who couldn’t swallow a mouthful.
+
+“I’m glad father and mother will be back to-morrow night,” she said.
+“It’s too exciting when they’re away. That’s my opinion.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII. THE PROOF OF THE PUDDING
+
+Felicity was cumbered with many cares the next morning. For one thing,
+the whole house must be put in apple pie order; and for another,
+an elaborate supper must be prepared for the expected return of the
+travellers that night. Felicity devoted her whole attention to this, and
+left the secondary preparation of the regular meals to Cecily and the
+Story Girl. It was agreed that the latter was to make a cornmeal pudding
+for dinner.
+
+In spite of her disaster with the bread, the Story Girl had been taking
+cooking lessons from Felicity all the week, and getting on tolerably
+well, although, mindful of her former mistake, she never ventured
+on anything without Felicity’s approval. But Felicity had no time to
+oversee her this morning.
+
+“You must attend to the pudding yourself,” she said. “The recipe’s so
+plain and simple even you can’t go astray, and if there’s anything you
+don’t understand you can ask me. But don’t bother me if you can help
+it.”
+
+The Story Girl did not bother her once. The pudding was concocted
+and baked, as the Story Girl proudly informed us when we came to
+the dinner-table, all on her own hook. She was very proud of it; and
+certainly as far as appearance went it justified her triumph. The slices
+were smooth and golden; and, smothered in the luscious maple sugar
+sauce which Cecily had compounded, were very fair to view. Nevertheless,
+although none of us, not even Uncle Roger or Felicity, said a word at
+the time, for fear of hurting the Story Girl’s feelings, the pudding
+did not taste exactly as it should. It was tough--decidedly tough--and
+lacked the richness of flavour which was customary in Aunt Janet’s
+cornmeal puddings. If it had not been for the abundant supply of sauce
+it would have been very dry eating indeed. Eaten it was, however, to the
+last crumb. If it were not just what a cornmeal pudding might be, the
+rest of the bill of fare had been extra good and our appetites matched
+it.
+
+“I wish I was twins so’s I could eat more,” said Dan, when he simply had
+to stop.
+
+“What good would being twins do you?” asked Peter. “People who squint
+can’t eat any more than people who don’t squint, can they?”
+
+We could not see any connection between Peter’s two questions.
+
+“What has squinting got to do with twins?” asked Dan.
+
+“Why, twins are just people that squint, aren’t they?” said Peter.
+
+We thought he was trying to be funny, until we found out that he was
+quite in earnest. Then we laughed until Peter got sulky.
+
+“I don’t care,” he said. “How’s a fellow to know? Tommy and Adam Cowan,
+over at Markdale, are twins; and they’re both cross-eyed. So I s’posed
+that was what being twins meant. It’s all very fine for you fellows
+to laugh. I never went to school half as much as you did; and you was
+brought up in Toronto, too. If you’d worked out ever since you was
+seven, and just got to school in the winter, there’d be lots of things
+you wouldn’t know, either.”
+
+“Never mind, Peter,” said Cecily. “You know lots of things they don’t.”
+
+But Peter was not to be conciliated, and took himself off in high
+dudgeon. To be laughed at before Felicity--to be laughed at BY
+Felicity--was something he could not endure. Let Cecily and the Story
+Girl cackle all they wanted to, and let those stuck-up Toronto boys grin
+like chessy-cats; but when Felicity laughed at him the iron entered into
+Peter’s soul.
+
+If the Story Girl laughed at Peter the mills of the gods ground out
+his revenge for him in mid-afternoon. Felicity, having used up all the
+available cooking materials in the house, had to stop perforce; and she
+now determined to stuff two new pincushions she had been making for
+her room. We heard her rummaging in the pantry as we sat on the cool,
+spruce-shadowed cellar door outside, where Uncle Roger was showing us
+how to make elderberry pop-guns. Presently she came out, frowning.
+
+“Cecily, do you know where mother put the sawdust she emptied out of
+that old beaded pincushion of Grandmother King’s, after she had sifted
+the needles out of it? I thought it was in the tin box.”
+
+“So it is,” said Cecily.
+
+“It isn’t. There isn’t a speck of sawdust in that box.”
+
+The Story Girl’s face wore a quite indescribable expression, compound of
+horror and shame. She need not have confessed. If she had but held her
+tongue the mystery of the sawdust’s disappearance might have forever
+remained a mystery. She WOULD have held her tongue, as she afterwards
+confided to me, if it had not been for a horrible fear which flashed
+into her mind that possibly sawdust puddings were not healthy for people
+to eat--especially if there might be needles in them--and that if any
+mischief had been done in that direction it was her duty to undo it if
+possible at any cost of ridicule to herself.
+
+“Oh, Felicity,” she said, her voice expressing a very anguish of
+humiliation, “I--I--thought that stuff in the box was cornmeal and used
+it to make the pudding.”
+
+Felicity and Cecily stared blankly at the Story Girl. We boys began to
+laugh, but were checked midway by Uncle Roger. He was rocking himself
+back and forth, with his hand pressed against his stomach.
+
+“Oh,” he groaned, “I’ve been wondering what these sharp pains I’ve been
+feeling ever since dinner meant. I know now. I must have swallowed a
+needle--several needles, perhaps. I’m done for!”
+
+The poor Story Girl went very white.
+
+“Oh, Uncle Roger, could it be possible? You COULDN’T have swallowed a
+needle without knowing it. It would have stuck in your tongue or teeth.”
+
+“I didn’t chew the pudding,” groaned Uncle Roger. “It was too tough--I
+just swallowed the chunks whole.”
+
+He groaned and twisted and doubled himself up. But he overdid it. He was
+not as good an actor as the Story Girl. Felicity looked scornfully at
+him.
+
+“Uncle Roger, you are not one bit sick,” she said deliberately. “You are
+just putting on.”
+
+“Felicity, if I die from the effects of eating sawdust pudding,
+flavoured with needles, you’ll be sorry you ever said such a thing to
+your poor old uncle,” said Uncle Roger reproachfully. “Even if there
+were no needles in it, sixty-year-old sawdust can’t be good for my
+tummy. I daresay it wasn’t even clean.”
+
+“Well, you know every one has to eat a peck of dirt in his life,”
+ giggled Felicity.
+
+“But nobody has to eat it all at once,” retorted Uncle Roger, with
+another groan. “Oh, Sara Stanley, it’s a thankful man I am that your
+Aunt Olivia is to be home to-night. You’d have me kilt entirely by
+another day. I believe you did it on purpose to have a story to tell.”
+
+Uncle Roger hobbled off to the barn, still holding on to his stomach.
+
+“Do you think he really feels sick?” asked the Story Girl anxiously.
+
+“No, I don’t,” said Felicity. “You needn’t worry over him. There’s
+nothing the matter with him. I don’t believe there were any needles in
+that sawdust. Mother sifted it very carefully.”
+
+“I know a story about a man whose son swallowed a mouse,” said the Story
+Girl, who would probably have known a story and tried to tell it if she
+were being led to the stake. “And he ran and wakened up a very tired
+doctor just as he had got to sleep.
+
+“‘Oh, doctor, my son has swallowed a mouse,’ he cried. ‘What shall I
+do?’
+
+“‘Tell him to swallow a cat,’ roared the poor doctor, and slammed his
+door.
+
+“Now, if Uncle Roger has swallowed any needles, maybe it would make it
+all right if he swallowed a pincushion.”
+
+We all laughed. But Felicity soon grew sober.
+
+“It seems awful to think of eating a sawdust pudding. How on earth did
+you make such a mistake?”
+
+“It looked just like cornmeal,” said the Story Girl, going from white to
+red in her shame. “Well, I’m going to give up trying to cook, and stick
+to things I can do. And if ever one of you mentions sawdust pudding to
+me I’ll never tell you another story as long as I live.”
+
+The threat was effectual. Never did we mention that unholy pudding. But
+the Story Girl could not so impose silence on the grown-ups, especially
+Uncle Roger. He tormented her for the rest of the summer. Never a
+breakfast did he sit down to, without gravely inquiring if they were
+sure there was no sawdust in the porridge. Not a tweak of rheumatism did
+he feel but he vowed it was due to a needle, travelling about his body.
+And Aunt Olivia was warned to label all the pincushions in the house.
+“Contents, sawdust; not intended for puddings.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII. HOW KISSING WAS DISCOVERED
+
+An August evening, calm, golden, dewless, can be very lovely. At sunset,
+Felicity, Cecily, and Sara Ray, Dan, Felix, and I were in the orchard,
+sitting on the cool grasses at the base of the Pulpit Stone. In the west
+was a field of crocus sky over which pale cloud blossoms were scattered.
+
+Uncle Roger had gone to the station to meet the travellers, and the
+dining-room table was spread with a feast of fat things.
+
+“It’s been a jolly week, take it all round,” said Felix, “but I’m glad
+the grown-ups are coming back to-night, especially Uncle Alec.”
+
+“I wonder if they’ll bring us anything,” said Dan.
+
+“I’m thinking long to hear all about the wedding,” said Felicity, who
+was braiding timothy stalks into a collar for Pat.
+
+“You girls are always thinking about weddings and getting married,” said
+Dan contemptuously.
+
+“We ain’t,” said Felicity indignantly. “I am NEVER going to get married.
+I think it is just horrid, so there!”
+
+“I guess you think it would be a good deal horrider not to be,” said
+Dan.
+
+“It depends on who you’re married to,” said Cecily gravely, seeing that
+Felicity disdained reply. “If you got a man like father it would be all
+right. But S’POSEN you got one like Andrew Ward? He’s so mean and cross
+to his wife that she tells him every day she wishes she’d never set eyes
+on him.”
+
+“Perhaps that’s WHY he’s mean and cross,” said Felix.
+
+“I tell you it isn’t always the man’s fault,” said Dan darkly. “When I
+get married I’ll be good to my wife, but I mean to be boss. When I open
+my mouth my word will be law.”
+
+“If your word is as big as your mouth I guess it will be,” said Felicity
+cruelly.
+
+“I pity the man who gets you, Felicity King, that’s all,” retorted Dan.
+
+“Now, don’t fight,” implored Cecily.
+
+“Who’s fighting?” demanded Dan. “Felicity thinks she can say anything
+she likes to me, but I’ll show her different.”
+
+Probably, in spite of Cecily’s efforts, a bitter spat would have
+resulted between Dan and Felicity, had not a diversion been effected
+at that moment by the Story Girl, who came slowly down Uncle Stephen’s
+Walk.
+
+“Just look how the Story Girl has got herself up!” said Felicity. “Why,
+she’s no more than decent!”
+
+The Story Girl was barefooted and barearmed, having rolled the sleeves
+of her pink gingham up to her shoulders. Around her waist was twisted a
+girdle of the blood-red roses that bloomed in Aunt Olivia’s garden; on
+her sleek curls she wore a chaplet of them; and her hands were full of
+them.
+
+She paused under the outmost tree, in a golden-green gloom, and laughed
+at us over a big branch. Her wild, subtle, nameless charm clothed her as
+with a garment. We always remembered the picture she made there; and
+in later days when we read Tennyson’s poems at a college desk, we knew
+exactly how an oread, peering through the green leaves on some haunted
+knoll of many fountained Ida, must look.
+
+“Felicity,” said the Story Girl reproachfully, “what have you been doing
+to Peter? He’s up there sulking in the granary, and he won’t come
+down, and he says it’s your fault. You must have hurt his feelings
+dreadfully.”
+
+“I don’t know about his feelings,” said Felicity, with an angry toss of
+her shining head, “but I guess I made his ears tingle all right. I boxed
+them both good and hard.”
+
+“Oh, Felicity! What for?”
+
+“Well, he tried to kiss me, that’s what for!” said Felicity, turning
+very red. “As if I would let a hired boy kiss me! I guess Master Peter
+won’t try anything like that again in a hurry.”
+
+The Story Girl came out of her shadows and sat down beside us on the
+grass.
+
+“Well, in that case,” she said gravely, “I think you did right to
+slap his ears--not because he is a hired boy, but because it would be
+impertinent in ANY boy. But talking of kissing makes me think of a story
+I found in Aunt Olivia’s scrapbook the other day. Wouldn’t you like to
+hear it? It is called, ‘How Kissing Was Discovered.’”
+
+“Wasn’t kissing always discovered?” asked Dan.
+
+“Not according to this story. It was just discovered accidentally.”
+
+“Well, let’s hear about it,” said Felix, “although I think kissing’s
+awful silly, and it wouldn’t have mattered much if it hadn’t ever been
+discovered.”
+
+The Story Girl scattered her roses around her on the grass, and clasped
+her slim hands over her knees. Gazing dreamily afar at the tinted sky
+between the apple trees, as if she were looking back to the merry days
+of the world’s gay youth, she began, her voice giving to the words
+and fancies of the old tale the delicacy of hoar frost and the crystal
+sparkle of dew.
+
+“It happened long, long ago in Greece--where so many other beautiful
+things happened. Before that, nobody had ever heard of kissing. And then
+it was just discovered in the twinkling of an eye. And a man wrote it
+down and the account has been preserved ever since.
+
+“There was a young shepherd named Glaucon--a very handsome young
+shepherd--who lived in a little village called Thebes. It became a very
+great and famous city afterwards, but at this time it was only a little
+village, very quiet and simple. Too quiet for Glaucon’s liking. He grew
+tired of it, and he thought he would like to go away from home and
+see something of the world. So he took his knapsack and his shepherd’s
+crook, and wandered away until he came to Thessaly. That is the land of
+the gods’ hill, you know. The name of the hill was Olympus. But it has
+nothing to do with this story. This happened on another mountain--Mount
+Pelion.
+
+“Glaucon hired himself to a wealthy man who had a great many sheep. And
+every day Glaucon had to lead the sheep up to pasture on Mount Pelion,
+and watch them while they ate. There was nothing else to do, and he
+would have found the time very long, if he had not been able to play on
+a flute. So he played very often and very beautifully, as he sat under
+the trees and watched the wonderful blue sea afar off, and thought about
+Aglaia.
+
+“Aglaia was his master’s daughter. She was so sweet and beautiful that
+Glaucon fell in love with her the very moment he first saw her; and
+when he was not playing his flute on the mountain he was thinking about
+Aglaia, and dreaming that some day he might have flocks of his own, and
+a dear little cottage down in the valley where he and Aglaia might live.
+
+“Aglaia had fallen in love with Glaucon just as he had with her. But she
+never let him suspect it for ever so long. He did not know how often
+she would steal up the mountain and hide behind the rocks near where
+the sheep pastured, to listen to Glaucon’s beautiful music. It was very
+lovely music, because he was always thinking of Aglaia while he played,
+though he little dreamed how near him she often was.
+
+“But after awhile Glaucon found out that Aglaia loved him, and
+everything was well. Nowadays I suppose a wealthy man like Aglaia’s
+father wouldn’t be willing to let his daughter marry a hired man; but
+this was in the Golden Age, you know, when nothing like that mattered at
+all.
+
+“After that, almost every day Aglaia would go up the mountain and sit
+beside Glaucon, as he watched the flocks and played on his flute. But he
+did not play as much as he used to, because he liked better to talk with
+Aglaia. And in the evening they would lead the sheep home together.
+
+“One day Aglaia went up the mountain by a new way, and she came to a
+little brook. Something was sparkling very brightly among its pebbles.
+Aglaia picked it up, and it was the most beautiful little stone that
+she had ever seen. It was only as large as a pea, but it glittered and
+flashed in the sunlight with every colour of the rainbow. Aglaia was so
+delighted with it that she resolved to take it as a present to Glaucon.
+
+“But all at once she heard a stamping of hoofs behind her, and when she
+turned she almost died from fright. For there was the great god, Pan,
+and he was a very terrible object, looking quite as much like a goat as
+a man. The gods were not all beautiful, you know. And, beautiful or not,
+nobody ever wanted to meet them face to face.
+
+“‘Give that stone to me,’ said Pan, holding out his hand.
+
+“But Aglaia, though she was frightened, would not give him the stone.
+
+“‘I want it for Glaucon,’ she said.
+
+“‘I want it for one of my wood nymphs,’ said Pan, ‘and I must have it.’
+
+“He advanced threateningly, but Aglaia ran as hard as she could up the
+mountain. If she could only reach Glaucon he would protect her. Pan
+followed her, clattering and bellowing terribly, but in a few minutes
+she rushed into Glaucon’s arms.
+
+“The dreadful sight of Pan and the still more dreadful noise he made, so
+frightened the sheep that they fled in all directions. But Glaucon was
+not afraid at all, because Pan was the god of shepherds, and was bound
+to grant any prayer a good shepherd, who always did his duty, might
+make. If Glaucon had NOT been a good shepherd dear knows what would have
+happened to him and Aglaia. But he was; and when he begged Pan to go
+away and not frighten Aglaia any more, Pan had to go, grumbling a good
+deal--and Pan’s grumblings had a very ugly sound. But still he WENT, and
+that was the main thing.
+
+“‘Now, dearest, what is all this trouble about?’ asked Glaucon; and
+Aglaia told him the story.
+
+“‘But where is the beautiful stone?’ he asked, when she had finished.
+‘Didst thou drop it in thy alarm?’
+
+“No, indeed! Aglaia had done nothing of the sort. When she began to run,
+she had popped it into her mouth, and there it was still, quite safe.
+Now she poked it out between her red lips, where it glittered in the
+sunlight.
+
+“‘Take it,’ she whispered.
+
+“The question was--how was he to take it? Both of Aglaia’s arms were
+held fast to her sides by Glaucon’s arms; and if he loosened his clasp
+ever so little he was afraid she would fall, so weak and trembling was
+she from her dreadful fright. Then Glaucon had a brilliant idea. He
+would take the beautiful stone from Aglaia’s lips with his own lips.
+
+“He bent over until his lips touched hers--and THEN, he forgot all about
+the beautiful pebble and so did Aglaia. Kissing was discovered!
+
+“What a yarn!” said Dan, drawing a long breath, when we had come to
+ourselves and discovered that we were really sitting in a dewy Prince
+Edward Island orchard instead of watching two lovers on a mountain in
+Thessaly in the Golden Age. “I don’t believe a word of it.”
+
+“Of course, we know it wasn’t really true,” said Felicity.
+
+“Well, I don’t know,” said the Story Girl thoughtfully. “I think there
+are two kinds of true things--true things that ARE, and true things that
+are NOT, but MIGHT be.”
+
+“I don’t believe there’s any but the one kind of trueness,” said
+Felicity. “And anyway, this story couldn’t be true. You know there was
+no such thing as a god Pan.”
+
+“How do you know what there might have been in the Golden Age?” asked
+the Story Girl.
+
+Which was, indeed, an unanswerable question for Felicity.
+
+“I wonder what became of the beautiful stone?” said Cecily.
+
+“Likely Aglaia swallowed it,” said Felix practically.
+
+“Did Glaucon and Aglaia ever get married?” asked Sara Ray.
+
+“The story doesn’t say. It stops just there,” said the Story Girl. “But
+of course they did. I will tell you what I think. I don’t think Aglaia
+swallowed the stone. I think it just fell to the ground; and after
+awhile they found it, and it turned out to be of such value that Glaucon
+could buy all the flocks and herds in the valley, and the sweetest
+cottage; and he and Aglaia were married right away.”
+
+“But you only THINK that,” said Sara Ray. “I’d like to be really sure
+that was what happened.”
+
+“Oh, bother, none of it happened,” said Dan. “I believed it while the
+Story Girl was telling it, but I don’t now. Isn’t that wheels?”
+
+Wheels it was. Two wagons were driving up the lane. We rushed to the
+house--and there were Uncle Alec and Aunt Janet and Aunt Olivia! The
+excitement was quite tremendous. Every body talked and laughed at once,
+and it was not until we were all seated around the supper table that
+conversation grew coherent. What laughter and questioning and telling of
+tales followed, what smiles and bright eyes and glad voices. And through
+it all, the blissful purrs of Paddy, who sat on the window sill behind
+the Story Girl, resounded through the din like Andrew McPherson’s
+bass--“just a bur-r-r-r the hale time.”
+
+“Well, I’m thankful to be home again,” said Aunt Janet, beaming on us.
+“We had a real nice time, and Edward’s folks were as kind as could be.
+But give me home for a steady thing. How has everything gone? How did
+the children behave, Roger?”
+
+“Like models,” said Uncle Roger. “They were as good as gold most of the
+days.”
+
+There were times when one couldn’t help liking Uncle Roger.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX. A DREAD PROPHECY
+
+“I’ve got to go and begin stumping out the elderberry pasture this
+afternoon,” said Peter dolefully. “I tell you it’s a tough job. Mr.
+Roger might wait for cool weather before he sets people to stumping out
+elderberries, and that’s a fact.”
+
+“Why don’t you tell him so?” asked Dan.
+
+“It ain’t my business to tell him things,” retorted Peter. “I’m hired
+to do what I’m told, and I do it. But I can have my own opinion all the
+same. It’s going to be a broiling hot day.”
+
+We were all in the orchard, except Felix, who had gone to the
+post-office. It was the forenoon of an August Saturday. Cecily and Sara
+Ray, who had come up to spend the day with us--her mother having gone to
+town--were eating timothy roots. Bertha Lawrence, a Charlottetown girl,
+who had visited Kitty Marr in June, and had gone to school one day
+with her, had eaten timothy roots, affecting to consider them great
+delicacies. The fad was at once taken up by the Carlisle schoolgirls.
+Timothy roots quite ousted “sours” and young raspberry sprouts, both of
+which had the real merit of being quite toothsome, while timothy roots
+were tough and tasteless. But timothy roots were fashionable, therefore
+timothy roots must be eaten. Pecks of them must have been devoured in
+Carlisle that summer.
+
+Pat was there also, padding about from one to the other on his black
+paws, giving us friendly pokes and rubs. We all made much of him except
+Felicity, who would not take any notice of him because he was the Story
+Girl’s cat.
+
+We boys were sprawling on the grass. Our morning chores were done and
+the day was before us. We should have been feeling very comfortable and
+happy, but, as a matter of fact, we were not particularly so.
+
+The Story Girl was sitting on the mint beside the well-house, weaving
+herself a wreath of buttercups. Felicity was sipping from the cup of
+clouded blue with an overdone air of unconcern. Each was acutely and
+miserably conscious of the other’s presence, and each was desirous of
+convincing the rest of us that the other was less than nothing to her.
+Felicity could not succeed. The Story Girl managed it better. If it had
+not been for the fact that in all our foregatherings she was careful to
+sit as far from Felicity as possible, we might have been deceived.
+
+We had not passed a very pleasant week. Felicity and the Story Girl
+had not been “speaking” to each other, and consequently there had been
+something rotten in the state of Denmark. An air of restraint was over
+all our games and conversations.
+
+On the preceding Monday Felicity and the Story Girl had quarrelled over
+something. What the cause of the quarrel was I cannot tell because I
+never knew. It remained a “dead secret” between the parties of the first
+and second part forever. But it was more bitter than the general run
+of their tiffs, and the consequences were apparent to all. They had not
+spoken to each other since.
+
+This was not because the rancour of either lasted so long. On the
+contrary it passed speedily away, not even one low descending sun going
+down on their wrath. But dignity remained to be considered. Neither
+would “speak first,” and each obstinately declared that she would not
+speak first, no, not in a hundred years. Neither argument, entreaty, nor
+expostulation had any effect on those two stubborn girls, nor yet the
+tears of sweet Cecily, who cried every night about it, and mingled in
+her pure little prayers fervent petitions that Felicity and the Story
+Girl might make up.
+
+“I don’t know where you expect to go when you die, Felicity,” she said
+tearfully, “if you don’t forgive people.”
+
+“I have forgiven her,” was Felicity’s answer, “but I am not going to
+speak first for all that.”
+
+“It’s very wrong, and, more than that, it’s so uncomfortable,”
+ complained Cecily. “It spoils everything.”
+
+“Were they ever like this before?” I asked Cecily, as we talked the
+matter over privately in Uncle Stephen’s Walk.
+
+“Never for so long,” said Cecily. “They had a spell like this last
+summer, and one the summer before, but they only lasted a couple of
+days.”
+
+“And who spoke first?”
+
+“Oh, the Story Girl. She got excited about something and spoke to
+Felicity before she thought, and then it was all right. But I’m afraid
+it isn’t going to be like that this time. Don’t you notice how careful
+the Story Girl is not to get excited? That is such a bad sign.”
+
+“We’ve just got to think up something that will excite her, that’s all,”
+ I said.
+
+“I’m--I’m praying about it,” said Cecily in a low voice, her tear-wet
+lashes trembling against her pale, round cheeks. “Do you suppose it will
+do any good, Bev?”
+
+“Very likely,” I assured her. “Remember Sara Ray and the money. That
+came from praying.”
+
+“I’m glad you think so,” said Cecily tremulously. “Dan said it was no
+use for me to bother praying about it. He said if they COULDN’T speak
+God might do something, but when they just WOULDN’T it wasn’t likely
+He would interfere. Dan does say such queer things. I’m so afraid he’s
+going to grow up just like Uncle Robert Ward, who never goes to church,
+and doesn’t believe more than half the Bible is true.”
+
+“Which half does he believe is true?” I inquired with unholy curiosity.
+
+“Oh, just the nice parts. He says there’s a heaven all right,
+but no--no--HELL. I don’t want Dan to grow up like that. It isn’t
+respectable. And you wouldn’t want all kinds of people crowding heaven,
+now, would you?”
+
+“Well, no, I suppose not,” I agreed, thinking of Billy Robinson.
+
+“Of course, I can’t help feeling sorry for those who have to go to THE
+OTHER PLACE,” said Cecily compassionately. “But I suppose they wouldn’t
+be very comfortable in heaven either. They wouldn’t feel at home. Andrew
+Marr said a simply dreadful thing about THE OTHER PLACE one night last
+fall, when Felicity and I were down to see Kitty, and they were burning
+the potato stalks. He said he believed THE OTHER PLACE must be lots more
+interesting than heaven because fires were such jolly things. Now, did
+you ever hear the like?”
+
+“I guess it depends a good deal on whether you’re inside or outside the
+fires,” I said.
+
+“Oh, Andrew didn’t really mean it, of course. He just said it to sound
+smart and make us stare. The Marrs are all like that. But anyhow, I’m
+going to keep on praying that something will happen to excite the Story
+Girl. I don’t believe there is any use in praying that Felicity will
+speak first, because I am sure she won’t.”
+
+“But don’t you suppose God could make her?” I said, feeling that it
+wasn’t quite fair that the Story Girl should always have to speak first.
+If she had spoken first the other times it was surely Felicity’s turn
+this time.
+
+“Well, I believe it would puzzle Him,” said Cecily, out of the depths of
+her experience with Felicity.
+
+Peter, as was to be expected, took Felicity’s part, and said the Story
+Girl ought to speak first because she was the oldest. That, he said, had
+always been his Aunt Jane’s rule.
+
+Sara Ray thought Felicity should speak first, because the Story Girl was
+half an orphan.
+
+Felix tried to make peace between them, and met the usual fate of all
+peacemakers. The Story Girl loftily told him that he was too young
+to understand, and Felicity said that fat boys should mind their own
+business. After that, Felix declared it would serve Felicity right if
+the Story Girl never spoke to her again.
+
+Dan had no patience with either of the girls, especially Felicity.
+
+“What they both want is a right good spanking,” he said.
+
+If only a spanking would mend the matter it was not likely it would ever
+be mended. Both Felicity and the Story Girl were rather too old to be
+spanked, and, if they had not been, none of the grown-ups would have
+thought it worth while to administer so desperate a remedy for what
+they considered so insignificant a trouble. With the usual levity of
+grown-ups, they regarded the coldness between the girls as a subject of
+mirth and jest, and recked not that it was freezing the genial current
+of our youthful souls, and blighting hours that should have been fair
+pages in our book of days.
+
+The Story Girl finished her wreath and put it on. The buttercups drooped
+over her high, white brow and played peep with her glowing eyes. A
+dreamy smile hovered around her poppy-red mouth--a significant smile
+which, to those of us skilled in its interpretation, betokened the
+sentence which soon came.
+
+“I know a story about a man who always had his own opinion--”
+
+The Story Girl got no further. We never heard the story of the man
+who always had his own opinion. Felix came tearing up the lane, with a
+newspaper in his hand. When a boy as fat as Felix runs at full speed
+on a broiling August forenoon, he has something to run for--as Felicity
+remarked.
+
+“He must have got some bad news at the office,” said Sara Ray.
+
+“Oh, I hope nothing has happened to father,” I exclaimed, springing
+anxiously to my feet, a sick, horrible feeling of fear running over me
+like a cool, rippling wave.
+
+“It’s just as likely to be good news he is running for as bad,” said the
+Story Girl, who was no believer in meeting trouble half way.
+
+“He wouldn’t be running so fast for good news,” said Dan cynically.
+
+We were not left long in doubt. The orchard gate flew open and Felix was
+among us. One glimpse of his face told us that he was no bearer of
+glad tidings. He had been running hard and should have been rubicund.
+Instead, he was “as pale as are the dead.” I could not have asked him
+what was the matter had my life depended on it. It was Felicity who
+demanded impatiently of my shaking, voiceless brother:
+
+“Felix King, what has scared you?”
+
+Felix held out the newspaper--it was the Charlottetown _Daily
+Enterprise_.
+
+“It’s there,” he gasped. “Look--read--oh, do you--think it’s--true?
+The--end of--the world--is coming to-morrow--at two--o’clock--in the
+afternoon!”
+
+Crash! Felicity had dropped the cup of clouded blue, which had passed
+unscathed through so many changing years, and now at last lay shattered
+on the stone of the well curb. At any other time we should all have
+been aghast over such a catastrophe, but it passed unnoticed now. What
+mattered it that all the cups in the world be broken to-day if the crack
+o’ doom must sound to-morrow?
+
+“Oh, Sara Stanley, do you believe it? DO you?” gasped Felicity,
+clutching the Story Girl’s hand. Cecily’s prayer had been answered.
+Excitement had come with a vengeance, and under its stress Felicity
+had spoken first. But this, like the breaking of the cup, had no
+significance for us at the moment.
+
+The Story Girl snatched the paper and read the announcement to a group
+on which sudden, tense silence had fallen. Under a sensational headline,
+“The Last Trump will sound at Two O’clock To-morrow,” was a paragraph to
+the effect that the leader of a certain noted sect in the United States
+had predicted that August twelfth would be the Judgment Day, and that
+all his numerous followers were preparing for the dread event by prayer,
+fasting, and the making of appropriate white garments for ascension
+robes.
+
+I laugh at the remembrance now--until I recall the real horror of fear
+that enwrapped us in that sunny orchard that August morning of long ago;
+and then I laugh no more. We were only children, be it remembered, with
+a very firm and simple faith that grown people knew much more than we
+did, and a rooted conviction that whatever you read in a newspaper must
+be true. If the _Daily Enterprise_ said that August twelfth was to be
+the Judgment Day how were you going to get around it?
+
+“Do you believe it, Sara Stanley?” persisted Felicity. “DO you?”
+
+“No--no, I don’t believe a word of it,” said the Story Girl.
+
+But for once her voice failed to carry conviction--or, rather, it
+carried conviction of the very opposite kind. It was borne in upon our
+miserable minds that if the Story Girl did not altogether believe it was
+true she believed it might be true; and the possibility was almost as
+dreadful as the certainty.
+
+“It CAN’T be true,” said Sara Ray, seeking refuge, as usual, in tears.
+“Why, everything looks just the same. Things COULDN’T look the same if
+the Judgment Day was going to be to-morrow.”
+
+“But that’s just the way it’s to come,” I said uncomfortably. “It tells
+you in the Bible. It’s to come just like a thief in the night.”
+
+“But it tells you another thing in the Bible, too,” said Cecily eagerly.
+“It says nobody knows when the Judgment Day is to come--not even the
+angels in heaven. Now, if the angels in heaven don’t know it, do you
+suppose the editor of the _Enterprise_ can know it--and him a Grit,
+too?”
+
+“I guess he knows as much about it as a Tory would,” retorted the Story
+Girl. Uncle Roger was a Liberal and Uncle Alec a Conservative, and
+the girls held fast to the political traditions of their respective
+households. “But it isn’t really the _Enterprise_ editor at all who is
+saying it--it’s a man in the States who claims to be a prophet. If he IS
+a prophet perhaps he has found out somehow.”
+
+“And it’s in the paper, too, and that’s printed as well as the Bible,”
+ said Dan.
+
+“Well, I’m going to depend on the Bible,” said Cecily. “I don’t believe
+it’s the Judgment Day to-morrow--but I’m scared, for all that,” she
+added piteously.
+
+That was exactly the position of us all. As in the case of the
+bell-ringing ghost, we did not believe but we trembled.
+
+“Nobody might have known when the Bible was written,” said Dan, “but
+maybe somebody knows now. Why, the Bible was written thousands of years
+ago, and that paper was printed this very morning. There’s been time to
+find out ever so much more.”
+
+“I want to do so many things,” said the Story Girl, plucking off her
+crown of buttercup gold with a tragic gesture, “but if it’s the Judgment
+Day to-morrow I won’t have time to do any of them.”
+
+“It can’t be much worse than dying, I s’pose,” said Felix, grasping at
+any straw of comfort.
+
+“I’m awful glad I’ve got into the habit of going to church and Sunday
+School this summer,” said Peter very soberly. “I wish I’d made up my
+mind before this whether to be a Presbyterian or a Methodist. Do you
+s’pose it’s too late now?”
+
+“Oh, that doesn’t matter,” said Cecily earnestly. “If--if you’re a
+Christian, Peter, that is all that’s necessary.”
+
+“But it’s too late for that,” said Peter miserably. “I can’t turn into
+a Christian between this and two o’clock to-morrow. I’ll just have to be
+satisfied with making up my mind to be a Presbyterian or a Methodist. I
+wanted to wait till I got old enough to make out what was the difference
+between them, but I’ll have to chance it now. I guess I’ll be a
+Presbyterian, ‘cause I want to be like the rest of you. Yes, I’ll be a
+Presbyterian.”
+
+“I know a story about Judy Pineau and the word Presbyterian,” said the
+Story Girl, “but I can’t tell it now. If to-morrow isn’t the Judgment
+Day I’ll tell it Monday.”
+
+“If I had known that to-morrow might be the Judgment Day I wouldn’t have
+quarrelled with you last Monday, Sara Stanley, or been so horrid and
+sulky all the week. Indeed I wouldn’t,” said Felicity, with very unusual
+humility.
+
+Ah, Felicity! We were all, in the depths of our pitiful little souls,
+reviewing the innumerable things we would or would not have done “if
+we had known.” What a black and endless list they made--those sins
+of omission and commission that rushed accusingly across our young
+memories! For us the leaves of the Book of Judgment were already opened;
+and we stood at the bar of our own consciences, than which for youth
+or eld, there can be no more dread tribunal. I thought of all the evil
+deeds of my short life--of pinching Felix to make him cry out at family
+prayers, of playing truant from Sunday School and going fishing one
+day, of a certain fib--no, no away from this awful hour with all such
+euphonious evasions--of a LIE I had once told, of many a selfish and
+unkind word and thought and action. And to-morrow might be the great
+and terrible day of the last accounting! Oh, if I had only been a better
+boy!
+
+“The quarrel was as much my fault as yours, Felicity,” said the Story
+Girl, putting her arm around Felicity. “We can’t undo it now. But if
+to-morrow isn’t the Judgment Day we must be careful never to quarrel
+again. Oh, I wish father was here.”
+
+“He will be,” said Cecily. “If it’s the Judgment Day for Prince Edward
+Island it will be for Europe, too.”
+
+“I wish we could just KNOW whether what the paper says is true or not,”
+ said Felix desperately. “It seems to me I could brace up if I just
+KNEW.”
+
+But to whom could we appeal? Uncle Alec was away and would not be back
+until late that night. Neither Aunt Janet nor Uncle Roger were people to
+whom we cared to apply in such a crisis. We were afraid of the Judgment
+Day; but we were almost equally afraid of being laughed at. How about
+Aunt Olivia?
+
+“No, Aunt Olivia has gone to bed with a sick headache and mustn’t be
+disturbed,” said the Story Girl. “She said I must get dinner ready,
+because there was plenty of cold meat, and nothing to do but boil the
+potatoes and peas, and set the table. I don’t know how I can put my
+thoughts into it when the Judgment Day may be to-morrow. Besides, what
+is the good of asking the grown-ups? They don’t know anything more about
+this than we do.”
+
+“But if they’d just SAY they didn’t believe it, it would be a sort of
+comfort,” said Cecily.
+
+“I suppose the minister would know, but he’s away on his vacation” said
+Felicity. “Anyhow, I’ll go and ask mother what she thinks of it.”
+
+Felicity picked up the _Enterprise_ and betook herself to the house. We
+awaited her return in dire suspense.
+
+“Well, what does she say?” asked Cecily tremulously.
+
+“She said, ‘Run away and don’t bother me. I haven’t any time for your
+nonsense.’” responded Felicity in an injured tone. “And I said, ‘But,
+ma, the paper SAYS to-morrow is the Judgment Day,’ and ma just said
+‘Judgment Fiddlesticks!’”
+
+“Well, that’s kind of comforting,” said Peter. “She can’t put any faith
+in it, or she’d be more worked up.”
+
+“If it only wasn’t PRINTED!” said Dan gloomily.
+
+“Let’s all go over and ask Uncle Roger,” said Felix desperately.
+
+That we should make Uncle Roger a court of last resort indicated all
+too clearly the state of our minds. But we went. Uncle Roger was in
+his barn-yard, hitching his black mare into the buggy. His copy of the
+_Enterprise_ was sticking out of his pocket. He looked, as we saw with
+sinking hearts, unusually grave and preoccupied. There was not a glimmer
+of a smile about his face.
+
+“You ask him,” said Felicity, nudging the Story Girl.
+
+“Uncle Roger,” said the Story Girl, the golden notes of her voice
+threaded with fear and appeal, “the _Enterprise_ says that to-morrow is
+the Judgment Day? IS it? Do YOU think it is?”
+
+“I’m afraid so,” said Uncle Roger gravely. “The _Enterprise_ is always
+very careful to print only reliable news.”
+
+“But mother doesn’t believe it,” cried Felicity.
+
+Uncle Roger shook his head.
+
+“That is just the trouble,” he said. “People won’t believe it till it’s
+too late. I’m going straight to Markdale to pay a man there some money I
+owe him, and after dinner I’m going to Summerside to buy me a new suit.
+My old one is too shabby for the Judgment Day.”
+
+He got into his buggy and drove away, leaving eight distracted mortals
+behind him.
+
+“Well, I suppose that settles it,” said Peter, in despairing tone.
+
+“Is there anything we can do to PREPARE?” asked Cecily.
+
+“I wish I had a white dress like you girls,” sobbed Sara Ray. “But I
+haven’t, and it’s too late to get one. Oh, I wish I had minded what ma
+said better. I wouldn’t have disobeyed her so often if I’d thought the
+Judgment Day was so near. When I go home I’m going to tell her about
+going to the magic lantern show.”
+
+“I’m not sure that Uncle Roger meant what he said,” remarked the Story
+Girl. “I couldn’t get a look into his eyes. If he was trying to hoax
+us there would have been a twinkle in them. He can never help that.
+You know he would think it a great joke to frighten us like this. It’s
+really dreadful to have no grown-ups you can depend on.”
+
+“We could depend on father if he was here,” said Dan stoutly. “HE’D tell
+us the truth.”
+
+“He would tell us what he THOUGHT was true, Dan, but he couldn’t KNOW.
+He’s not such a well-educated man as the editor of the _Enterprise_. No,
+there’s nothing to do but wait and see.”
+
+“Let us go into the house and read just what the Bible does say about
+it,” suggested Cecily.
+
+We crept in carefully, lest we disturb Aunt Olivia, and Cecily found and
+read the significant portion of Holy Writ. There was little comfort for
+us in that vivid and terrible picture.
+
+“Well,” said the Story Girl finally. “I must go and get the potatoes
+ready. I suppose they must be boiled even if it is the Judgment Day
+to-morrow. But I don’t believe it is.”
+
+“And I’ve got to go and stump elderberries,” said Peter. “I don’t see
+how I can do it--go away back there alone. I’ll feel scared to death the
+whole time.”
+
+“Tell Uncle Roger that, and say if to-morrow is the end of the world
+that there is no good in stumping any more fields,” I suggested.
+
+“Yes, and if he lets you off then we’ll know he was in earnest,” chimed
+in Cecily. “But if he still says you must go that’ll be a sign he
+doesn’t believe it.”
+
+Leaving the Story Girl and Peter to peel their potatoes, the rest of
+us went home, where Aunt Janet, who had gone to the well and found the
+fragments of the old blue cup, gave poor Felicity a bitter scolding
+about it. But Felicity bore it very patiently--nay, more, she seemed to
+delight in it.
+
+“Ma can’t believe to-morrow is the last day, or she wouldn’t scold like
+that,” she told us; and this comforted us until after dinner, when the
+Story Girl and Peter came over and told us that Uncle Roger had really
+gone to Summerside. Then we plunged down into fear and wretchedness
+again.
+
+“But he said I must go and stump elderberries just the same” said Peter.
+“He said it might NOT be the Judgment Day to-morrow, though he believed
+it was, and it would keep me out of mischief. But I just can’t stand it
+back there alone. Some of you fellows must come with me. I don’t want
+you to work, but just for company.”
+
+It was finally decided that Dan and Felix should go. I wanted to go
+also, but the girls protested.
+
+“YOU must stay and keep us cheered up,” implored Felicity. “I just don’t
+know how I’m ever going to put in the afternoon. I promised Kitty Marr
+that I’d go down and spend it with her, but I can’t now. And I can’t
+knit any at my lace. I’d just keep thinking, ‘What is the use? Perhaps
+it’ll all be burned up to-morrow.’”
+
+So I stayed with the girls, and a miserable afternoon we had of it. The
+Story Girl again and again declared that she “didn’t believe it,” but
+when we asked her to tell a story, she evaded it with a flimsy excuse.
+Cecily pestered Aunt Janet’s life out, asking repeatedly, “Ma, will you
+be washing Monday?” “Ma, will you be going to prayer meeting Tuesday
+night?” “Ma, will you be preserving raspberries next week?” and various
+similar questions. It was a huge comfort to her that Aunt Janet always
+said, “Yes,” or “Of course,” as if there could be no question about it.
+
+Sara Ray cried until I wondered how one small head could contain all the
+tears she shed. But I do not believe she was half as much frightened as
+disappointed that she had no white dress. In mid-afternoon Cecily came
+downstairs with her forget-me-not jug in her hand--a dainty bit of
+china, wreathed with dark blue forget-me-nots, which Cecily prized
+highly, and in which she always kept her toothbrush.
+
+“Sara, I am going to give you this jug,” she said solemnly.
+
+Now, Sara had always coveted this particular jug. She stopped crying
+long enough to clutch it delightedly.
+
+“Oh, Cecily, thank you. But are you sure you won’t want it back if
+to-morrow isn’t the Judgment Day?”
+
+“No, it’s yours for good,” said Cecily, with the high, remote air of one
+to whom forget-me-not jugs and all such pomps and vanities of the world
+were as a tale that is told.
+
+“Are you going to give any one your cherry vase?” asked Felicity, trying
+to speak indifferently. Felicity had never admired the forget-me-not
+jug, but she had always hankered after the cherry vase--an affair of
+white glass, with a cluster of red glass cherries and golden-green glass
+leaves on its side, which Aunt Olivia had given Cecily one Christmas.
+
+“No, I’m not,” answered Cecily, with a change of tone.
+
+“Oh, well, I don’t care,” said Felicity quickly. “Only, if to-morrow is
+the last day, the cherry vase won’t be much use to you.”
+
+“I guess it will be as much use to me as to any one else,” said Cecily
+indignantly. She had sacrificed her dear forget-me-not jug to satisfy
+some pang of conscience, or propitiate some threatening fate, but
+surrender her precious cherry vase she could not and would not. Felicity
+needn’t be giving any hints!
+
+With the gathering shades of night our plight became pitiful. In the
+daylight, surrounded by homely, familiar sights and sounds, it was not
+so difficult to fortify our souls with a cheering incredulity. But now,
+in this time of shadows, dread belief clutched us and wrung us with
+terror. If there had been one wise older friend to tell us, in serious
+fashion, that we need not be afraid, that the _Enterprise_ paragraph
+was naught save the idle report of a deluded fanatic, it would have been
+well for us. But there was not. Our grown-ups, instead, considered our
+terror an exquisite jest. At that very moment, Aunt Olivia, who had
+recovered from her headache, and Aunt Janet were laughing in the kitchen
+over the state the children were in because they were afraid the end
+of the world was close at hand. Aunt Janet’s throaty gurgle and Aunt
+Olivia’s trilling mirth floated out through the open window.
+
+“Perhaps they’ll laugh on the other side of their faces to-morrow,” said
+Dan, with gloomy satisfaction.
+
+We were sitting on the cellar hatch, watching what might be our last
+sunset o’er the dark hills of time. Peter was with us. It was his last
+Sunday to go home, but he had elected to remain.
+
+“If to-morrow is the Judgment Day I want to be with you fellows,” he
+said.
+
+Sara Ray had also yearned to stay, but could not because her mother had
+told her she must be home before dark.
+
+“Never mind, Sara,” comforted Cecily. “It’s not to be till two o’clock
+to-morrow, so you’ll have plenty of time to get up here before anything
+happens.”
+
+“But there might be a mistake,” sobbed Sara. “It might be two o’clock
+to-night instead of to-morrow.”
+
+It might, indeed. This was a new horror, which had not occurred to us.
+
+“I’m sure I won’t sleep a wink to-night,” said Felix.
+
+“The paper SAYS two o’clock to-morrow,” said Dan. “You needn’t worry,
+Sara.”
+
+But Sara departed, weeping. She did not, however, forget to carry the
+forget-me-not jug with her. All things considered, her departure was a
+relief. Such a constantly tearful damsel was not a pleasant companion.
+Cecily and Felicity and the Story Girl did not cry. They were made of
+finer, firmer stuff. Dry-eyed, with such courage as they might, they
+faced whatever might be in store for them.
+
+“I wonder where we’ll all be this time to-morrow night,” said Felix
+mournfully, as we watched the sunset between the dark fir boughs. It was
+an ominous sunset. The sun dropped down amid dark, livid clouds, that
+turned sullen shades of purple and fiery red behind him.
+
+“I hope we’ll be all together, wherever we are,” said Cecily gently.
+“Nothing can be so very bad then.”
+
+“I’m going to read the Bible all to-morrow forenoon,” said Peter.
+
+When Aunt Olivia came out to go home the Story Girl asked her permission
+to stay all night with Felicity and Cecily. Aunt Olivia assented
+lightly, swinging her hat on her arm and including us all in a friendly
+smile. She looked very pretty, with her big blue eyes and warm-hued
+golden hair. We loved Aunt Olivia; but just now we resented her having
+laughed at us with Aunt Janet, and we refused to smile back.
+
+“What a sulky, sulky lot of little people,” said Aunt Olivia, going away
+across the yard, holding her pretty dress up from the dewy grass.
+
+Peter resolved to stay all night with us, too, not troubling himself
+about anybody’s permission. When we went to bed it was settling down for
+a stormy night, and the rain was streaming wetly on the roof, as if the
+world, like Sara Ray, were weeping because its end was so near. Nobody
+forgot or hurried over his prayers that night. We would dearly have
+loved to leave the candle burning, but Aunt Janet’s decree regarding
+this was as inexorable as any of Mede and Persia. Out the candle must
+go; and we lay there, quaking, with the wild rain streaming down on the
+roof above us, and the voices of the storm wailing through the writhing
+spruce trees.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX. THE JUDGMENT SUNDAY
+
+Sunday morning broke, dull and gray. The rain had ceased, but the
+clouds hung dark and brooding above a world which, in its windless
+calm, following the spent storm-throe, seemed to us to be waiting “till
+judgment spoke the doom of fate.” We were all up early. None of us, it
+appeared, had slept well, and some of us not at all. The Story Girl
+had been among the latter, and she looked very pale and wan, with black
+shadows under her deep-set eyes. Peter, however, had slept soundly
+enough after twelve o’clock.
+
+“When you’ve been stumping out elderberries all the afternoon it’ll take
+more than the Judgment Day to keep you awake all night,” he said. “But
+when I woke up this morning it was just awful. I’d forgot it for a
+moment, and then it all came back with a rush, and I was worse scared
+than before.”
+
+Cecily was pale but brave. For the first time in years she had not put
+her hair up in curlers on Saturday night. It was brushed and braided
+with Puritan simplicity.
+
+“If it’s the Judgment Day I don’t care whether my hair is curly or not,”
+ she said.
+
+“Well,” said Aunt Janet, when we all descended to the kitchen, “this is
+the first time you young ones have ever all got up without being called,
+and that’s a fact.”
+
+At breakfast our appetites were poor. How could the grown-ups eat
+as they did? After breakfast and the necessary chores there was the
+forenoon to be lived through. Peter, true to his word, got out his Bible
+and began to read from the first chapter in Genesis.
+
+“I won’t have time to read it all through, I s’pose,” he said, “but I’ll
+get along as far as I can.”
+
+There was no preaching in Carlisle that day, and Sunday School was not
+till the evening. Cecily got out her Lesson Slip and studied the lesson
+conscientiously. The rest of us did not see how she could do it. We
+could not, that was very certain.
+
+“If it isn’t the Judgment Day, I want to have the lesson learned,” she
+said, “and if it is I’ll feel I’ve done what was right. But I never
+found it so hard to remember the Golden Text before.”
+
+The long dragging hours were hard to endure. We roamed restlessly about,
+and went to and fro--all save Peter, who still steadily read away at his
+Bible. He was through Genesis by eleven and beginning on Exodus.
+
+“There’s a good deal of it I don’t understand,” he said, “but I read
+every word, and that’s the main thing. That story about Joseph and his
+brother was so int’resting I almost forgot about the Judgment Day.”
+
+But the long drawn out dread was beginning to get on Dan’s nerves.
+
+“If it is the Judgment Day,” he growled, as we went in to dinner, “I
+wish it’d hurry up and have it over.”
+
+“Oh, Dan!” cried Felicity and Cecily together, in a chorus of horror.
+But the Story Girl looked as if she rather sympathized with Dan.
+
+If we had eaten little at breakfast we could eat still less at dinner.
+After dinner the clouds rolled away, and the sun came joyously and
+gloriously out. This, we thought, was a good omen. Felicity opined that
+it wouldn’t have cleared up if it was the Judgment Day. Nevertheless, we
+dressed ourselves carefully, and the girls put on their white dresses.
+
+Sara Ray came up, still crying, of course. She increased our uneasiness
+by saying that her mother believed the _Enterprise_ paragraph, and was
+afraid that the end of the world was really at hand.
+
+“That’s why she let me come up,” she sobbed. “If she hadn’t been afraid
+I don’t believe she would have let me come up. But I’d have died if I
+couldn’t have come. And she wasn’t a bit cross when I told her I had
+gone to the magic lantern show. That’s an awful bad sign. I hadn’t a
+white dress, but I put on my white muslin apron with the frills.”
+
+“That seems kind of queer,” said Felicity doubtfully. “You wouldn’t put
+on an apron to go to church, and so it doesn’t seem as if it was proper
+to put it on for Judgment Day either.”
+
+“Well, it’s the best I could do,” said Sara disconsolately. “I wanted to
+have something white on. It’s just like a dress only it hasn’t sleeves.”
+
+“Let’s go into the orchard and wait,” said the Story Girl. “It’s one
+o’clock now, so in another hour we’ll know the worst. We’ll leave the
+front door open, and we’ll hear the big clock when it strikes two.”
+
+No better plan being suggested, we betook ourselves to the orchard, and
+sat on the boughs of Uncle Alec’s tree because the grass was wet. The
+world was beautiful and peaceful and green. Overhead was a dazzling blue
+sky, spotted with heaps of white cloud.
+
+“Pshaw, I don’t believe there’s any fear of it being the last day,” said
+Dan, beginning a whistle out of sheer bravado.
+
+“Well, don’t whistle on Sunday anyhow,” said Felicity severely.
+
+“I don’t see a thing about Methodists or Presbyterians, as far as I’ve
+gone, and I’m most through Exodus,” said Peter suddenly. “When does it
+begin to tell about them?”
+
+“There’s nothing about Methodists or Presbyterians in the Bible,” said
+Felicity scornfully.
+
+Peter looked amazed.
+
+“Well, how did they happen then?” he asked. “When did they begin to be?”
+
+“I’ve often thought it such a strange thing that there isn’t a word
+about either of them in the Bible,” said Cecily. “Especially when it
+mentions Baptists--or at least one Baptist.”
+
+“Well, anyhow,” said Peter, “even if it isn’t the Judgment Day I’m
+going to keep on reading the Bible until I’ve got clean through. I never
+thought it was such an int’resting book.”
+
+“It sounds simply dreadful to hear you call the Bible an interesting
+book,” said Felicity, with a shudder at the sacrilege. “Why, you might
+be talking about ANY common book.”
+
+“I didn’t mean any harm,” said Peter, crestfallen.
+
+“The Bible IS an interesting book,” said the Story Girl, coming to
+Peter’s rescue. “And there are magnificent stories in it--yes, Felicity,
+MAGNIFICENT. If the world doesn’t come to an end I’ll tell you the
+story of Ruth next Sunday--or look here! I’ll tell it anyhow. That’s a
+promise. Wherever we are next Sunday I’ll tell you about Ruth.”
+
+“Why, you wouldn’t tell stories in heaven,” said Cecily, in a very timid
+voice.
+
+“Why not?” said the Story Girl, with a flash of her eyes. “Indeed I
+shall. I’ll tell stories as long as I’ve a tongue to talk with, or any
+one to listen.”
+
+Ay, doubtless. That dauntless spirit would soar triumphantly above the
+wreck of matter and the crash of worlds, taking with it all its own wild
+sweetness and daring. Even the young-eyed cherubim, choiring on meadows
+of asphodel, might cease their harping for a time to listen to a tale
+of the vanished earth, told by that golden tongue. Some vague thought of
+this was in our minds as we looked at her; and somehow it comforted us.
+Not even the Judgment was so greatly to be feared if after it we were
+the SAME, our own precious little identities unchanged.
+
+“It must be getting handy two,” said Cecily. “It seems as if we’d been
+waiting here for ever so much longer than an hour.”
+
+Conversation languished. We watched and waited nervously. The moments
+dragged by, each seeming an hour. Would two o’clock never come and end
+the suspense? We all became very tense. Even Peter had to stop reading.
+Any unaccustomed sound or sight in the world about us struck on our taut
+senses like the trump of doom. A cloud passed over the sun and as the
+sudden shadow swept across the orchard we turned pale and trembled. A
+wagon rumbling over a plank bridge in the hollow made Sara Ray start up
+with a shriek. The slamming of a barn door over at Uncle Roger’s caused
+the cold perspiration to break out on our faces.
+
+“I don’t believe it’s the Judgment Day,” said Felix, “and I never have
+believed it. But oh, I wish that clock would strike two.”
+
+“Can’t you tell us a story to pass the time?” I entreated the Story
+Girl.
+
+She shook her head.
+
+“No, it would be no use to try. But if this isn’t the Judgment Day I’ll
+have a great one to tell of us being so scared.”
+
+Pat presently came galloping up the orchard, carrying in his mouth a big
+field mouse, which, sitting down before us, he proceeded to devour, body
+and bones, afterwards licking his chops with great satisfaction.
+
+“It can’t be the Judgment Day,” said Sara Ray, brightening up. “Paddy
+would never be eating mice if it was.”
+
+“If that clock doesn’t soon strike two I shall go out of my seven
+senses,” declared Cecily with unusual vehemence.
+
+“Time always seems long when you’re waiting,” said the Story Girl. “But
+it does seem as if we had been here more than an hour.”
+
+“Maybe the clock struck and we didn’t hear it,” suggested Dan.
+“Somebody’d better go and see.”
+
+“I’ll go,” said Cecily. “I suppose, even if anything happens, I’ll have
+time to get back to you.”
+
+We watched her white-clad figure pass through the gate and enter the
+front door. A few minutes passed--or a few years--we could not have told
+which. Then Cecily came running at full speed back to us. But when she
+reached us she trembled so much that at first she could not speak.
+
+“What is it? Is it past two?” implored the Story Girl.
+
+“It’s--it’s four,” said Cecily with a gasp. “The old clock isn’t going.
+Mother forgot to wind it up last night and it stopped. But it’s four by
+the kitchen clock--so it isn’t the Judgment Day--and tea is ready--and
+mother says to come in.”
+
+We looked at each other, realizing what our dread had been, now that it
+was lifted. It was not the Judgment Day. The world and life were still
+before us, with all their potent lure of years unknown.
+
+“I’ll never believe anything I read in the papers again,” said Dan,
+rushing to the opposite extreme.
+
+“I told you the Bible was more to be depended on than the newspapers,”
+ said Cecily triumphantly.
+
+Sara Ray and Peter and the Story Girl went home, and we went in to
+tea with royal appetites. Afterwards, as we dressed for Sunday School
+upstairs, our spirits carried us away to such an extent that Aunt
+Janet had to come twice to the foot of the stairs and inquire severely,
+“Children, have you forgotten what day this is?”
+
+“Isn’t it nice that we’re going to live a spell longer in this nice
+world?” said Felix, as we walked down the hill.
+
+“Yes, and Felicity and the Story Girl are speaking again,” said Cecily
+happily.
+
+“And Felicity DID speak first,” I said.
+
+“Yes, but it took the Judgment Day to make her. I wish,” added Cecily
+with a sigh, “that I hadn’t been in quite such a hurry giving away my
+forget-me-not jug.”
+
+“And I wish I hadn’t been in such a hurry deciding I’d be a
+Presbyterian,” said Peter.
+
+“Well, it’s not too late for that,” said Dan. “You can change your mind
+now.”
+
+“No, sir,” said Peter with a flash of spirit, “I ain’t one of the kind
+that says they’ll be something just because they’re scared, and when the
+scare is over go back on it. I said I’d be Presbyterian and I mean to
+stick to it.”
+
+“You said you knew a story that had something to do with Presbyterians,”
+ I said to the Story Girl. “Tell us it now.”
+
+“Oh, no, it isn’t the right kind of story to tell on Sunday,” she
+replied. “But I’ll tell it to-morrow morning.”
+
+Accordingly, we heard it the next morning in the orchard.
+
+“Long ago, when Judy Pineau was young,” said the Story Girl, “she was
+hired with Mrs. Elder Frewen--the first Mrs. Elder Frewen. Mrs. Frewen
+had been a school-teacher, and she was very particular as to how people
+talked, and the grammar they used. And she didn’t like anything but
+refined words. One very hot day she heard Judy Pineau say she was ‘all
+in a sweat.’ Mrs. Frewen was greatly shocked, and said, ‘Judy, you
+shouldn’t say that. It’s horses that sweat. You should say you are in
+a perspiration.’ Well, Judy promised she’d remember, because she liked
+Mrs. Frewen and was anxious to please her. Not long afterwards Judy was
+scrubbing the kitchen floor one morning, and when Mrs. Frewen came in
+Judy looked up and said, quite proud over using the right word, ‘Oh,
+Mees Frewen, ain’t it awful hot? I declare I’m all in a Presbyterian.’”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI. DREAMERS OF DREAMS
+
+August went out and September came in. Harvest was ended; and though
+summer was not yet gone, her face was turned westering. The asters
+lettered her retreating footsteps in a purple script, and over the hills
+and valleys hung a faint blue smoke, as if Nature were worshipping at
+her woodland altar. The apples began to burn red on the bending boughs;
+crickets sang day and night; squirrels chattered secrets of Polichinelle
+in the spruces; the sunshine was as thick and yellow as molten gold;
+school opened, and we small denizens of the hill farms lived happy days
+of harmless work and necessary play, closing in nights of peaceful,
+undisturbed slumber under a roof watched over by autumnal stars.
+
+At least, our slumbers were peaceful and undisturbed until our orgy of
+dreaming began.
+
+“I would really like to know what especial kind of deviltry you young
+fry are up to this time,” said Uncle Roger one evening, as he passed
+through the orchard with his gun on his shoulder, bound for the swamp.
+
+We were sitting in a circle before the Pulpit Stone, each writing
+diligently in an exercise book, and eating the Rev. Mr. Scott’s plums,
+which always reached their prime of juicy, golden-green flesh and bloomy
+blue skin in September. The Rev. Mr. Scott was dead and gone, but those
+plums certainly kept his memory green, as his forgotten sermons could
+never have done.
+
+“Oh,” said Felicity in a shocked tone, when Uncle Roger had passed by,
+“Uncle Roger SWORE.”
+
+“Oh, no, he didn’t,” said the Story Girl quickly. “‘Deviltry’ isn’t
+swearing at all. It only means extra bad mischief.”
+
+“Well, it’s not a very nice word, anyhow,” said Felicity.
+
+“No, it isn’t,” agreed the Story Girl with a regretful sigh. “It’s
+very expressive, but it isn’t nice. That is the way with so many words.
+They’re expressive, but they’re not nice, and so a girl can’t use them.”
+
+The Story Girl sighed again. She loved expressive words, and treasured
+them as some girls might have treasured jewels. To her, they were as
+lustrous pearls, threaded on the crimson cord of a vivid fancy. When she
+met with a new one she uttered it over and over to herself in solitude,
+weighing it, caressing it, infusing it with the radiance of her voice,
+making it her own in all its possibilities for ever.
+
+“Well, anyhow, it isn’t a suitable word in this case,” insisted
+Felicity. “We are not up to any dev--any extra bad mischief. Writing
+down one’s dreams isn’t mischief at all.”
+
+Certainly it wasn’t. Surely not even the straitest sect of the grown-ups
+could call it so. If writing down your dreams, with agonizing care as
+to composition and spelling--for who knew that the eyes of generations
+unborn might not read the record?--were not a harmless amusement, could
+anything be called so? I trow not.
+
+We had been at it for a fortnight, and during that time we only lived to
+have dreams and write them down. The Story Girl had originated the idea
+one evening in the rustling, rain-wet ways of the spruce wood, where we
+were picking gum after a day of showers. When we had picked enough, we
+sat down on the moss-grown stones at the end of a long arcade, where it
+opened out on the harvest-golden valley below us, our jaws exercising
+themselves vigorously on the spoil of our climbings. We were never
+allowed to chew gum in school or in company, but in wood and field,
+orchard and hayloft, such rules were in abeyance.
+
+“My Aunt Jane used to say it wasn’t polite to chew gum anywhere,” said
+Peter rather ruefully.
+
+“I don’t suppose your Aunt Jane knew all the rules of etiquette,” said
+Felicity, designing to crush Peter with a big word, borrowed from the
+_Family Guide_. But Peter was not to be so crushed. He had in him a
+certain toughness of fibre, that would have been proof against a whole
+dictionary.
+
+“She did, too,” he retorted. “My Aunt Jane was a real lady, even if she
+was only a Craig. She knew all those rules and she kept them when there
+was nobody round to see her, just the same as when any one was. And she
+was smart. If father had had half her git-up-and-git I wouldn’t be a
+hired boy to-day.”
+
+“Have you any idea where your father is?” asked Dan.
+
+“No,” said Peter indifferently. “The last we heard of him he was in the
+Maine lumber woods. But that was three years ago. I don’t know where he
+is now, and,” added Peter deliberately, taking his gum from his mouth to
+make his statement more impressive, “I don’t care.”
+
+“Oh, Peter, that sounds dreadful,” said Cecily. “Your own father!”
+
+“Well,” said Peter defiantly, “if your own father had run away when
+you was a baby, and left your mother to earn her living by washing and
+working out, I guess you wouldn’t care much about him either.”
+
+“Perhaps your father may come home some of these days with a huge
+fortune,” suggested the Story Girl.
+
+“Perhaps pigs may whistle, but they’ve poor mouths for it,” was all the
+answer Peter deigned to this charming suggestion.
+
+“There goes Mr. Campbell down the road,” said Dan. “That’s his new mare.
+Isn’t she a dandy? She’s got a skin like black satin. He calls her Betty
+Sherman.”
+
+“I don’t think it’s very nice to call a horse after your own
+grandmother,” said Felicity.
+
+“Betty Sherman would have thought it a compliment,” said the Story Girl.
+
+“Maybe she would. She couldn’t have been very nice herself, or she would
+never have gone and asked a man to marry her,” said Felicity.
+
+“Why not?”
+
+“Goodness me, it was dreadful! Would YOU do such a thing yourself?”
+
+“Well, I don’t know,” said the Story Girl, her eyes gleaming with impish
+laughter. “If I wanted him DREADFULLY, and HE wouldn’t do the asking,
+perhaps I would.”
+
+“I’d rather die an old maid forty times over,” exclaimed Felicity.
+
+“Nobody as pretty as you will ever be an old maid, Felicity,” said
+Peter, who never put too fine an edge on his compliments.
+
+Felicity tossed her golden tressed head and tried to look angry, but
+made a dismal failure of it.
+
+“It wouldn’t be ladylike to ask any one to marry you, you know,” argued
+Cecily.
+
+“I don’t suppose the _Family Guide_ would think so,” agreed the Story
+Girl lazily, with some sarcasm in her voice. The Story Girl never held
+the _Family Guide_ in such reverence as did Felicity and Cecily. They
+pored over the “etiquette column” every week, and could have told you
+on demand, just exactly what kind of gloves should be worn at a wedding,
+what you should say when introducing or being introduced, and how you
+ought to look when your best young man came to see you.
+
+“They say Mrs. Richard Cook asked HER husband to marry her,” said Dan.
+
+“Uncle Roger says she didn’t exactly ask him, but she helped the lame
+dog over the stile so slick that Richard was engaged to her before he
+knew what had happened to him,” said the Story Girl. “I know a story
+about Mrs. Richard Cook’s grandmother. She was one of those women who
+are always saying ‘I told you so--’”
+
+“Take notice, Felicity,” said Dan aside.
+
+“--And she was very stubborn. Soon after she was married she and
+her husband quarrelled about an apple tree they had planted in their
+orchard. The label was lost. He said it was a Fameuse and she declared
+it was a Yellow Transparent. They fought over it till the neighbours
+came out to listen. Finally he got so angry that he told her to shut up.
+They didn’t have any _Family Guide_ in those days, so he didn’t know
+it wasn’t polite to say shut up to your wife. I suppose she thought she
+would teach him manners, for would you believe it? That woman did shut
+up, and never spoke one single word to her husband for five years. And
+then, in five years’ time, the tree bore apples, and they WERE Yellow
+Transparents. And then she spoke at last. She said, ‘I told you so.’”
+
+“And did she talk to him after that as usual?” asked Sara Ray.
+
+“Oh, yes, she was just the same as she used to be,” said the Story Girl
+wearily. “But that doesn’t belong to the story. It stops when she spoke
+at last. You’re never satisfied to leave a story where it should stop,
+Sara Ray.”
+
+“Well, I always like to know what happens afterwards,” said Sara Ray.
+
+“Uncle Roger says he wouldn’t want a wife he could never quarrel with,”
+ remarked Dan. “He says it would be too tame a life for him.”
+
+“I wonder if Uncle Roger will always stay a bachelor,” said Cecily.
+
+“He seems real happy,” observed Peter.
+
+“Ma says that it’s all right as long as he is a bachelor because he
+won’t take any one,” said Felicity, “but if he wakes up some day and
+finds he is an old bachelor because he can’t get any one it’ll have a
+very different flavour.”
+
+“If your Aunt Olivia was to up and get married what would your Uncle
+Roger do for a housekeeper?” asked Peter.
+
+“Oh, but Aunt Olivia will never be married now,” said Felicity. “Why,
+she’ll be twenty-nine next January.”
+
+“Well, o’ course, that’s pretty old,” admitted Peter, “but she might
+find some one who wouldn’t mind that, seeing she’s so pretty.”
+
+“It would be awful splendid and exciting to have a wedding in the
+family, wouldn’t it?” said Cecily. “I’ve never seen any one married,
+and I’d just love to. I’ve been to four funerals, but not to one single
+wedding.”
+
+“I’ve never even got to a funeral,” said Sara Ray gloomily.
+
+“There’s the wedding veil of the proud princess,” said Cecily, pointing
+to a long drift of filmy vapour in the southwestern sky.
+
+“And look at that sweet pink cloud below it,” added Felicity.
+
+“Maybe that little pink cloud is a dream, getting all ready to float
+down into somebody’s sleep,” suggested the Story Girl.
+
+“I had a perfectly awful dream last night,” said Cecily, with a shudder
+of remembrance. “I dreamed I was on a desert island inhabited by tigers
+and natives with two heads.”
+
+“Oh!” the Story Girl looked at Cecily half reproachfully. “Why couldn’t
+you tell it better than that? If I had such a dream I could tell it so
+that everybody else would feel as if they had dreamed it, too.”
+
+“Well, I’m not you,” countered Cecily, “and I wouldn’t want to frighten
+any one as I was frightened. It was an awful dream--but it was kind of
+interesting, too.”
+
+“I’ve had some real int’resting dreams,” said Peter, “but I can’t
+remember them long. I wish I could.”
+
+“Why don’t you write them down?” suggested the Story Girl. “Oh--” she
+turned upon us a face illuminated with a sudden inspiration. “I’ve an
+idea. Let us each get an exercise book and write down all our dreams,
+just as we dream them. We’ll see who’ll have the most interesting
+collection. And we’ll have them to read and laugh over when we’re old
+and gray.”
+
+Instantly we all saw ourselves and each other by inner vision, old and
+gray--all but the Story Girl. We could not picture her as old. Always,
+as long as she lived, so it seemed to us, must she have sleek brown
+curls, a voice like the sound of a harpstring in the wind, and eyes that
+were stars of eternal youth.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII. THE DREAM BOOKS
+
+The next day the Story Girl coaxed Uncle Roger to take her to Markdale,
+and there she bought our dream books. They were ten cents apiece, with
+ruled pages and mottled green covers. My own lies open beside me as I
+write, its yellowed pages inscribed with the visions that haunted my
+childish slumbers on those nights of long ago.
+
+On the cover is pasted a lady’s visiting card, on which is written,
+“The Dream Book of Beverley King.” Cecily had a packet of visiting cards
+which she was hoarding against the day when she would be grown up and
+could put the calling etiquette of the _Family Guide_ into practice; but
+she generously gave us all one apiece for the covers of our dream books.
+
+As I turn the pages and glance over the (----) records, each one
+beginning, “Last night I dreamed,” the past comes very vividly back to
+me. I see that bowery orchard, shining in memory with a soft glow of
+beauty--“the light that never was on land or sea,”--where we sat on
+those September evenings and wrote down our dreams, when the cares of
+the day were over and there was nothing to interfere with the pleasing
+throes of composition. Peter--Dan--Felix--Cecily--Felicity--Sara
+Ray--the Story Girl--they are all around me once more, in the
+sweet-scented, fading grasses, each with open dream books and pencil in
+hand, now writing busily, now staring fixedly into space in search of
+some elusive word or phrase which might best describe the indescribable.
+I hear their laughing voices, I see their bright, unclouded eyes. In
+this little, old book, filled with cramped, boyish writing, there is a
+spell of white magic that sets the years at naught. Beverley King is a
+boy once more, writing down his dreams in the old King orchard on the
+homestead hill, blown over by musky winds.
+
+Opposite to him sits the Story Girl, with her scarlet rosetted head, her
+beautiful bare feet crossed before her, one slender hand propping her
+high, white brow, on either side of which fall her glossy curls.
+
+There, to the right, is sweet Cecily of the dear, brown eyes, with a
+little bloated dictionary beside her--for you dream of so many things
+you can’t spell, or be expected to spell, when you are only eleven. Next
+to her sits Felicity, beautiful, and conscious that she is beautiful,
+with hair of spun sunshine, and sea-blue eyes, and all the roses of that
+vanished summer abloom in her cheeks.
+
+Peter is beside her, of course, sprawled flat on his stomach among the
+grasses, one hand clutching his black curls, with his dream book on a
+small, round stone before him--for only so can Peter compose at all, and
+even then he finds it hard work. He can handle a hoe more deftly than a
+pencil, and his spelling, even with all his frequent appeals to Cecily,
+is a fearful and wonderful thing. As for punctuation, he never attempts
+it, beyond an occasion period, jotted down whenever he happens to think
+of it, whether in the right place or not. The Story Girl goes over
+his dreams after he has written them out, and puts in the commas and
+semicolons, and straightens out the sentences.
+
+Felix sits on the right of the Story Girl, fat and stodgy, grimly in
+earnest even over dreams. He writes with his knees stuck up to form a
+writing-desk, and he always frowns fiercely the whole time.
+
+Dan, like Peter, writes lying down flat, but with his back towards us;
+and he has a dismal habit of groaning aloud, writhing his whole body,
+and digging his toes into the grass, when he cannot turn a sentence to
+suit him.
+
+Sara Ray is at his left. There is seldom anything to be said of Sara
+except to tell where she is. Like Tennyson’s Maud, in one respect at
+least, Sara is splendidly null.
+
+Well, there we sit and write in our dream books, and Uncle Roger passes
+by and accuses us of being up to dev--to very bad mischief.
+
+Each of us was very anxious to possess the most exciting record; but
+we were an honourable little crew, and I do not think anything was ever
+written down in those dream books which had not really been dreamed. We
+had expected that the Story Girl would eclipse us all in the matter
+of dreams; but, at least in the beginning, her dreams were no more
+remarkable than those of the rest of us. In dreamland we were all equal.
+Cecily, indeed, seemed to have the most decided talent for dramatic
+dreams. That meekest and mildest of girls was in the habit of dreaming
+truly terrible things. Almost every night battle, murder, or sudden
+death played some part in her visions. On the other hand, Dan, who was a
+somewhat truculent fellow, addicted to the perusal of lurid dime novels
+which he borrowed from the other boys in school, dreamed dreams of such
+a peaceful and pastoral character that he was quite disgusted with the
+resulting tame pages of his dream book.
+
+But if the Story Girl could not dream anything more wonderful than the
+rest of us, she scored when it came to the telling. To hear her tell a
+dream was as good--or as bad--as dreaming it yourself.
+
+As far as writing them down was concerned, I believe that I, Beverley
+King, carried off the palm. I was considered to possess a pretty knack
+of composition. But the Story Girl went me one better even there,
+because, having inherited something of her father’s talent for drawing,
+she illustrated her dreams with sketches that certainly caught the
+spirit of them, whatever might be said of their technical excellence.
+She had an especial knack for drawing monstrosities; and I vividly
+recall the picture of an enormous and hideous lizard, looking like a
+reptile of the pterodactyl period, which she had dreamed of seeing crawl
+across the roof of the house. On another occasion she had a frightful
+dream--at least, it seemed frightful while she told us and described the
+dreadful feeling it had given her--of being chased around the parlour
+by the ottoman, which made faces at her. She drew a picture of the
+grimacing ottoman on the margin of her dream book which so scared Sara
+Ray when she beheld it that she cried all the way home, and insisted on
+sleeping that night with Judy Pineau lest the furniture take to pursuing
+her also.
+
+Sara Ray’s own dreams never amounted to much. She was always in trouble
+of some sort--couldn’t get her hair braided, or her shoes on the right
+feet. Consequently, her dream book was very monotonous. The only thing
+worth mentioning in the way of dreams that Sara Ray ever achieved was
+when she dreamed that she went up in a balloon and fell out.
+
+“I expected to come down with an awful thud,” she said shuddering, “but
+I lit as light as a feather and woke right up.”
+
+“If you hadn’t woke up you’d have died,” said Peter with a dark
+significance. “If you dream of falling and DON’T wake you DO land with
+a thud and it kills you. That’s what happens to people who die in their
+sleep.”
+
+“How do you know?” asked Dan skeptically. “Nobody who died in his sleep
+could ever tell it.”
+
+“My Aunt Jane told me so,” said Peter.
+
+“I suppose that settles it,” said Felicity disagreeably.
+
+“You always say something nasty when I mention my Aunt Jane,” said Peter
+reproachfully.
+
+“What did I say that was nasty?” cried Felicity. “I didn’t say a single
+thing.”
+
+“Well, it sounded nasty,” said Peter, who knew that it is the tone that
+makes the music.
+
+“What did your Aunt Jane look like?” asked Cecily sympathetically. “Was
+she pretty?”
+
+“No,” conceded Peter reluctantly, “she wasn’t pretty--but she looked
+like the woman in that picture the Story Girl’s father sent her last
+week--the one with the shiny ring round her head and the baby in her
+lap. I’ve seen Aunt Jane look at me just like that woman looks at her
+baby. Ma never looks so. Poor ma is too busy washing. I wish I could
+dream of my Aunt Jane. I never do.”
+
+“‘Dream of the dead, you’ll hear of the living,’” quoted Felix
+oracularly.
+
+“I dreamed last night that I threw a lighted match into that keg of
+gunpowder in Mr. Cook’s store at Markdale,” said Peter. “It blew up--and
+everything blew up--and they fished me out of the mess--but I woke up
+before I’d time to find out if I was killed or not.”
+
+“One is so apt to wake up just as things get interesting,” remarked the
+Story Girl discontentedly.
+
+“I dreamed last night that I had really truly curly hair,” said Cecily
+mournfully. “And oh, I was so happy! It was dreadful to wake up and find
+it as straight as ever.”
+
+Felix, that sober, solid fellow, dreamed constantly of flying through
+the air. His descriptions of his aerial flights over the tree-tops of
+dreamland always filled us with envy. None of the rest of us could
+ever compass such a dream, not even the Story Girl, who might have
+been expected to dream of flying if anybody did. Felix had a knack
+of dreaming anyhow, and his dream book, while suffering somewhat in
+comparison of literary style, was about the best of the lot when it came
+to subject matter. Cecily’s might be more dramatic, but Felix’s was more
+amusing. The dream which we all counted his masterpiece was the one in
+which a menagerie had camped in the orchard and the rhinoceros chased
+Aunt Janet around and around the Pulpit Stone, but turned into an
+inoffensive pig when it was on the point of catching her.
+
+Felix had a sick spell soon after we began our dream books, and Aunt
+Janet essayed to cure him by administering a dose of liver pills which
+Elder Frewen had assured her were a cure-all for every disease the flesh
+is heir to. But Felix flatly refused to take liver pills; Mexican Tea
+he would drink, but liver pills he would not take, in spite of his
+own suffering and Aunt Janet’s commands and entreaties. I could not
+understand his antipathy to the insignificant little white pellets,
+which were so easy to swallow; but he explained the matter to us in the
+orchard when he had recovered his usual health and spirits.
+
+“I was afraid to take the liver pills for fear they’d prevent me from
+dreaming,” he said. “Don’t you remember old Miss Baxter in Toronto, Bev?
+And how she told Mrs. McLaren that she was subject to terrible dreams,
+and finally she took two liver pills and never had any more dreams after
+that. I’d rather have died than risk it,” concluded Felix solemnly.
+
+“I’d an exciting dream last night for once,” said Dan triumphantly. “I
+dreamt old Peg Bowen chased me. I thought I was up to her house and she
+took after me. You bet I scooted. And she caught me--yes, sir! I
+felt her skinny hand reach out and clutch my shoulder. I let out a
+screech--and woke up.”
+
+“I should think you did screech,” said Felicity. “We heard you clean
+over into our room.”
+
+“I hate to dream of being chased because I can never run,” said Sara
+Ray with a shiver. “I just stand rooted to the ground--and see it
+coming--and can’t stir. It don’t sound much written out, but it’s awful
+to go through. I’m sure I hope I’ll never dream Peg Bowen chases me.
+I’ll die if I do.”
+
+“I wonder what Peg Bowen would really do to a fellow if she caught him,”
+ speculated Dan.
+
+“Peg Bowen doesn’t need to catch you to do things to you,” said Peter
+ominously. “She can put ill-luck on you just by looking at you--and she
+will if you offend her.”
+
+“I don’t believe that,” said the Story Girl airily.
+
+“Don’t you? All right, then! Last summer she called at Lem Hill’s in
+Markdale, and he told her to clear out or he’d set the dog on her. Peg
+cleared out, and she went across his pasture, muttering to herself and
+throwing her arms round. And next day his very best cow took sick and
+died. How do you account for that?”
+
+“It might have happened anyhow,” said the Story Girl--somewhat less
+assuredly, though.
+
+“It might. But I’d just as soon Peg Bowen didn’t look at MY cows,” said
+Peter.
+
+“As if you had any cows!” giggled Felicity.
+
+“I’m going to have cows some day,” said Peter, flushing. “I don’t mean
+to be a hired boy all my life. I’ll have a farm of my own and cows and
+everything. You’ll see if I won’t.”
+
+“I dreamed last night that we opened the blue chest,” said the Story
+Girl, “and all the things were there--the blue china candlestick--only
+it was brass in the dream--and the fruit basket with the apple on
+it, and the wedding dress, and the embroidered petticoat. And we were
+laughing, and trying the things on, and having such fun. And Rachel Ward
+herself came and looked at us--so sad and reproachful--and we all felt
+ashamed, and I began to cry, and woke up crying.”
+
+“I dreamed last night that Felix was thin,” said Peter, laughing. “He
+did look so queer. His clothes just hung loose, and he was going round
+trying to hold them on.”
+
+Everybody thought this was funny, except Felix. He would not speak to
+Peter for two days because of it. Felicity also got into trouble because
+of her dreams. One night she woke up, having just had a very exciting
+dream; but she went to sleep again, and in the morning she could not
+remember the dream at all. Felicity determined she would never let
+another dream get away from her in such a fashion; and the next time she
+wakened in the night--having dreamed that she was dead and buried--she
+promptly arose, lighted a candle, and proceeded to write the dream down
+then and there. While so employed she contrived to upset the candle and
+set fire to her nightgown--a brand-new one, trimmed with any quantity
+of crocheted lace. A huge hole was burned in it, and when Aunt Janet
+discovered it she lifted up her voice with no uncertain sound.
+Felicity had never received a sharper scolding. But she took it very
+philosophically. She was used to her mother’s bitter tongue, and she was
+not unduly sensitive.
+
+“Anyhow, I saved my dream,” she said placidly.
+
+And that, of course, was all that really mattered. Grown people were so
+strangely oblivious to the truly important things of life. Material
+for new garments, of night or day, could be bought in any shop for a
+trifling sum and made up out of hand. But if a dream escape you, in what
+market-place the wide world over can you hope to regain it? What coin of
+earthly minting will ever buy back for you that lost and lovely vision?
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII. SUCH STUFF AS DREAMS ARE MADE ON
+
+Peter took Dan and me aside one evening, as we were on our way to the
+orchard with our dream books, saying significantly that he wanted our
+advice. Accordingly, we went round to the spruce wood, where the girls
+would not see us to the rousing of their curiosity, and then Peter told
+us of his dilemma.
+
+“Last night I dreamed I was in church,” he said. “I thought it was
+full of people, and I walked up the aisle to your pew and set down, as
+unconcerned as a pig on ice. And then I found that I hadn’t a stitch of
+clothes on--NOT ONE BLESSED STITCH. Now”--Peter dropped his voice--“what
+is bothering me is this--would it be proper to tell a dream like that
+before the girls?”
+
+I was of the opinion that it would be rather questionable; but Dan vowed
+he didn’t see why. HE’D tell it quick as any other dream. There was
+nothing bad in it.
+
+“But they’re your own relations,” said Peter. “They’re no relation to
+me, and that makes a difference. Besides, they’re all such ladylike
+girls. I guess I’d better not risk it. I’m pretty sure Aunt Jane
+wouldn’t think it was proper to tell such a dream. And I don’t want to
+offend Fel--any of them.”
+
+So Peter never told that dream, nor did he write it down. Instead,
+I remember seeing in his dream book, under the date of September
+fifteenth, an entry to this effect:--
+
+“Last nite i dremed a drem. it wasent a polit drem so i won’t rite it
+down.”
+
+The girls saw this entry but, to their credit be it told, they never
+tried to find out what the “drem” was. As Peter said, they were “ladies”
+ in the best and truest sense of that much abused appellation. Full of
+fun and frolic and mischief they were, with all the defects of their
+qualities and all the wayward faults of youth. But no indelicate thought
+or vulgar word could have been shaped or uttered in their presence. Had
+any of us boys ever been guilty of such, Cecily’s pale face would have
+coloured with the blush of outraged purity, Felicity’s golden head would
+have lifted itself in the haughty indignation of insulted womanhood, and
+the Story Girl’s splendid eyes would have flashed with such anger and
+scorn as would have shrivelled the very soul of the wretched culprit.
+
+Dan was once guilty of swearing. Uncle Alec whipped him for it--the only
+time he ever so punished any of his children. But it was because Cecily
+cried all night that Dan was filled with saving remorse and repentance.
+He vowed next day to Cecily that he would never swear again, and he kept
+his word.
+
+All at once the Story Girl and Peter began to forge ahead in the matter
+of dreaming. Their dreams suddenly became so lurid and dreadful and
+picturesque that it was hard for the rest of us to believe that they
+were not painting the lily rather freely in their accounts of them. But
+the Story Girl was the soul of honour; and Peter, early in life, had had
+his feet set in the path of truthfulness by his Aunt Jane and had never
+been known to stray from it. When they assured us solemnly that their
+dreams all happened exactly as they described them we were compelled to
+believe them. But there was something up, we felt sure of that. Peter
+and the Story Girl certainly had a secret between them, which they kept
+for a whole fortnight. There was no finding it out from the Story Girl.
+She had a knack of keeping secrets, anyhow; and, moreover, all that
+fortnight she was strangely cranky and petulant, and we found it was not
+wise to tease her. She was not well, so Aunt Olivia told Aunt Janet.
+
+“I don’t know what is the matter with the child,” said the former
+anxiously. “She hasn’t seemed like herself the past two weeks. She
+complains of headache, and she has no appetite, and she is a dreadful
+colour. I’ll have to see a doctor about her if she doesn’t get better
+soon.”
+
+“Give her a good dose of Mexican Tea and try that first,” said Aunt
+Janet. “I’ve saved many a doctor’s bill in my family by using Mexican
+Tea.”
+
+The Mexican Tea was duly administered, but produced no improvement in
+the condition of the Story Girl, who, however, went on dreaming after
+a fashion which soon made her dream book a veritable curiosity of
+literature.
+
+“If we can’t soon find out what makes Peter and the Story Girl dream
+like that, the rest of us might as well give up trying to write dream
+books,” said Felix discontentedly.
+
+Finally, we did find out. Felicity wormed the secret out of Peter by
+the employment of Delilah wiles, such as have been the undoing of many
+a miserable male creature since Samson’s day. She first threatened that
+she would never speak to him again if he didn’t tell her; and then she
+promised him that, if he did, she would let him walk beside her to and
+from Sunday School all the rest of the summer, and carry her books for
+her. Peter was not proof against this double attack. He yielded and told
+the secret.
+
+I expected the Story Girl would overwhelm him with scorn and
+indignation. But she took it very coolly.
+
+“I knew Felicity would get it out of him sometime,” she said. “I think
+he has done well to hold out this long.”
+
+Peter and the Story Girl, so it appeared, had wooed wild dreams to their
+pillows by the simple device of eating rich, indigestible things before
+they went to bed. Aunt Olivia knew nothing about it, of course. She
+permitted them only a plain, wholesome lunch at bed-time. But during
+the day the Story Girl would smuggle upstairs various tidbits from the
+pantry, putting half in Peter’s room and half in her own; and the result
+was these visions which had been our despair.
+
+“Last night I ate a piece of mince pie,” she said, “and a lot of
+pickles, and two grape jelly tarts. But I guess I overdid it, because I
+got real sick and couldn’t sleep at all, so of course I didn’t have
+any dreams. I should have stopped with the pie and pickles and left
+the tarts alone. Peter did, and he had an elegant dream that Peg Bowen
+caught him and put him on to boil alive in that big black pot that hangs
+outside her door. He woke up before the water got hot, though. Well,
+Miss Felicity, you’re pretty smart. But how will you like to walk to
+Sunday School with a boy who wears patched trousers?”
+
+“I won’t have to,” said Felicity triumphantly. “Peter is having a new
+suit made. It’s to be ready by Saturday. I knew that before I promised.”
+
+Having discovered how to produce exciting dreams, we all promptly
+followed the example of Peter and the Story Girl.
+
+“There is no chance for me to have any horrid dreams,” lamented Sara
+Ray, “because ma won’t let me having anything at all to eat before I go
+to bed. I don’t think it’s fair.”
+
+“Can’t you hide something away through the day as we do?” asked
+Felicity.
+
+“No.” Sara shook her fawn-coloured head mournfully. “Ma always keeps the
+pantry locked, for fear Judy Pineau will treat her friends.”
+
+For a week we ate unlawful lunches and dreamed dreams after our own
+hearts--and, I regret to say, bickered and squabbled incessantly
+throughout the daytime, for our digestions went out of order and our
+tempers followed suit. Even the Story Girl and I had a fight--something
+that had never happened before. Peter was the only one who kept his
+normal poise. Nothing could upset that boy’s stomach.
+
+One night Cecily came into the pantry with a large cucumber, and
+proceeded to devour the greater part of it. The grown-ups were away that
+evening, attending a lecture at Markdale, so we ate our snacks openly,
+without any recourse to ways that were dark. I remember I supped that
+night off a solid hunk of fat pork, topped off with a slab of cold plum
+pudding.
+
+“I thought you didn’t like cucumber, Cecily,” Dan remarked.
+
+“Neither I do,” said Cecily with a grimace. “But Peter says they’re
+splendid for dreaming. He et one that night he had the dream about being
+caught by cannibals. I’d eat three cucumbers if I could have a dream
+like that.”
+
+Cecily finished her cucumber, and then drank a glass of milk, just as we
+heard the wheels of Uncle Alec’s buggy rambling over the bridge in the
+hollow. Felicity quickly restored pork and pudding to their own places,
+and by the time Aunt Janet came in we were all in our respective beds.
+Soon the house was dark and silent. I was just dropping into an uneasy
+slumber when I heard a commotion in the girls’ room across the hall.
+
+Their door opened and through our own open door I saw Felicity’s
+white-clad figure flit down the stairs to Aunt Janet’s room. From the
+room she had left came moans and cries.
+
+“Cecily’s sick,” said Dan, springing out of bed. “That cucumber must
+have disagreed with her.”
+
+In a few minutes the whole house was astir. Cecily was sick--very, very
+sick, there was no doubt of that. She was even worse than Dan had been
+when he had eaten the bad berries. Uncle Alec, tired as he was from his
+hard day’s work and evening outing, was despatched for the doctor. Aunt
+Janet and Felicity administered all the homely remedies they could think
+of, but to no effect. Felicity told Aunt Janet of the cucumber, but Aunt
+Janet did not think the cucumber alone could be responsible for Cecily’s
+alarming condition.
+
+“Cucumbers are indigestible, but I never knew of them making any one as
+sick as this,” she said anxiously. “What made the child eat a cucumber
+before going to bed? I didn’t think she liked them.”
+
+“It was that wretched Peter,” sobbed Felicity indignantly. “He told her
+it would make her dream something extra.”
+
+“What on earth did she want to dream for?” demanded Aunt Janet in
+bewilderment.
+
+“Oh, to have something worth while to write in her dream book, ma. We
+all have dream books, you know, and every one wants their own to be the
+most exciting--and we’ve been eating rich things to make us dream--and
+it does--but if Cecily--oh, I’ll never forgive myself,” said Felicity,
+incoherently, letting all kinds of cats out of the bag in her excitement
+and alarm.
+
+“Well, I wonder what on earth you young ones will do next,” said Aunt
+Janet in the helpless tone of a woman who gives it up.
+
+Cecily was no better when the doctor came. Like Aunt Janet, he declared
+that cucumbers alone would not have made her so ill; but when he found
+out that she had drunk a glass of milk also the mystery was solved.
+
+“Why, milk and cucumbers together make a rank poison,” he said. “No
+wonder the child is sick. There--there now--” seeing the alarmed faces
+around him, “don’t be frightened. As old Mrs. Fraser says, ‘It’s no
+deidly.’ It won’t kill her, but she’ll probably be a pretty miserable
+girl for two or three days.”
+
+She was. And we were all miserable in company. Aunt Janet investigated
+the whole affair and the matter of our dream books was aired in family
+conclave. I do not know which hurt our feelings most--the scolding
+we got from Aunt Janet, or the ridicule which the other grown-ups,
+especially Uncle Roger, showered on us. Peter received an extra “setting
+down,” which he considered rank injustice.
+
+“I didn’t tell Cecily to drink the milk, and the cucumber alone wouldn’t
+have hurt her,” he grumbled. Cecily was able to be out with us again
+that day, so Peter felt that he might venture on a grumble. “‘Sides, she
+coaxed me to tell her what would be good for dreams. I just told her as
+a favour. And now your Aunt Janet blames me for the whole trouble.”
+
+“And Aunt Janet says we are never to have anything to eat before we go
+to bed after this except plain bread and milk,” said Felix sadly.
+
+“They’d like to stop us from dreaming altogether if they could,” said
+the Story Girl wrathfully.
+
+“Well, anyway, they can’t prevent us from growing up,” consoled Dan.
+
+“We needn’t worry about the bread and milk rule,” added Felicity. “Ma
+made a rule like that once before, and kept it for a week, and then we
+just slipped back to the old way. That will be what will happen this
+time, too. But of course we won’t be able to get any more rich things
+for supper, and our dreams will be pretty flat after this.”
+
+“Well, let’s go down to the Pulpit Stone and I’ll tell you a story I
+know,” said the Story Girl.
+
+We went--and straightway drank of the waters of forgetfulness. In a
+brief space we were laughing right merrily, no longer remembering our
+wrongs at the hands of those cruel grown-ups. Our laughter echoed back
+from the barns and the spruce grove, as if elfin denizens of upper air
+were sharing in our mirth.
+
+Presently, also, the laughter of the grown-ups mingled with ours.
+Aunt Olivia and Uncle Roger, Aunt Janet and Uncle Alec, came strolling
+through the orchard and joined our circle, as they sometimes did when
+the toil of the day was over, and the magic time ‘twixt light and dark
+brought truce of care and labour. ‘Twas then we liked our grown-ups
+best, for then they seemed half children again. Uncle Roger and Uncle
+Alec lolled in the grass like boys; Aunt Olivia, looking more like a
+pansy than ever in the prettiest dress of pale purple print, with a knot
+of yellow ribbon at her throat, sat with her arm about Cecily and smiled
+on us all; and Aunt Janet’s motherly face lost its every-day look of
+anxious care.
+
+The Story Girl was in great fettle that night. Never had her tales
+sparkled with such wit and archness.
+
+“Sara Stanley,” said Aunt Olivia, shaking her finger at her after a
+side-splitting yarn, “if you don’t watch out you’ll be famous some day.”
+
+“These funny stories are all right,” said Uncle Roger, “but for real
+enjoyment give me something with a creep in it. Sara, tell us that story
+of the Serpent Woman I heard you tell one day last summer.”
+
+The Story Girl began it glibly. But before she had gone far with it,
+I, who was sitting beside her, felt an unaccountable repulsion creeping
+over me. For the first time since I had known her I wanted to draw away
+from the Story Girl. Looking around on the faces of the group, I saw
+that they all shared my feeling. Cecily had put her hands over her eyes.
+Peter was staring at the Story Girl with a fascinated, horror-strickened
+gaze. Aunt Olivia was pale and troubled. All looked as if they were held
+prisoners in the bonds of a fearsome spell which they would gladly break
+but could not.
+
+It was not our Story Girl who sat there, telling that weird tale in
+a sibilant, curdling voice. She had put on a new personality like a
+garment, and that personality was a venomous, evil, loathly thing. I
+would rather have died than have touched the slim, brown wrist on which
+she supported herself. The light in her narrowed orbs was the cold,
+merciless gleam of the serpent’s eye. I felt frightened of this unholy
+creature who had suddenly come in our dear Story Girl’s place.
+
+When the tale ended there was a brief silence. Then Aunt Janet said
+severely, but with a sigh of relief,
+
+“Little girls shouldn’t tell such horrible stories.”
+
+This truly Aunt Janetian remark broke the spell. The grown-ups laughed,
+rather shakily, and the Story Girl--our own dear Story Girl once more,
+and no Serpent Woman--said protestingly,
+
+“Well, Uncle Roger asked me to tell it. I don’t like telling such
+stories either. They make me feel dreadful. Do you know, for just a
+little while, I felt exactly like a snake.”
+
+“You looked like one,” said Uncle Roger. “How on earth do you do it?”
+
+“I can’t explain how I do it,” said the Story Girl perplexedly. “It just
+does itself.”
+
+Genius can never explain how it does it. It would not be genius if it
+could. And the Story Girl had genius.
+
+As we left the orchard I walked along behind Uncle Roger and Aunt
+Olivia.
+
+“That was an uncanny exhibition for a girl of fourteen, you know,
+Roger,” said Aunt Olivia musingly. “What is in store for that child?”
+
+“Fame,” said Uncle Roger. “If she ever has a chance, that is, and I
+suppose her father will see to that. At least, I hope he will. You and
+I, Olivia, never had our chance. I hope Sara will have hers.”
+
+This was my first inkling of what I was to understand more fully in
+later years. Uncle Roger and Aunt Olivia had both cherished certain
+dreams and ambitions in youth, but circumstances had denied them their
+“chance” and those dreams had never been fulfilled.
+
+“Some day, Olivia,” went on Uncle Roger, “you and I may find ourselves
+the aunt and uncle of the foremost actress of her day. If a girl
+of fourteen can make a couple of practical farmers and a pair of
+matter-of-fact housewives half believe for ten minutes that she really
+is a snake, what won’t she be able to do when she is thirty? Here, you,”
+ added Uncle Roger, perceiving me, “cut along and get off to your bed.
+And mind you don’t eat cucumbers and milk before you go.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV. THE BEWITCHMENT OF PAT
+
+We were all in the doleful dumps--at least, all we “young fry” were, and
+even the grown-ups were sorry and condescended to take an interest
+in our troubles. Pat, our own, dear, frolicsome Paddy, was sick
+again--very, very sick.
+
+On Friday he moped and refused his saucer of new milk at milking time.
+The next morning he stretched himself down on the platform by Uncle
+Roger’s back door, laid his head on his black paws, and refused to take
+any notice of anything or anybody. In vain we stroked and entreated and
+brought him tidbits. Only when the Story Girl caressed him did he give
+one plaintive little mew, as if to ask piteously why she could not do
+something for him. At that Cecily and Felicity and Sara Ray all began
+crying, and we boys felt choky. Indeed, I caught Peter behind Aunt
+Olivia’s dairy later in the day, and if ever a boy had been crying I vow
+that boy was Peter. Nor did he deny it when I taxed him with it, but he
+would not give in that he was crying about Paddy. Nonsense!
+
+“What were you crying for, then?” I said.
+
+“I’m crying because--because my Aunt Jane is dead,” said Peter
+defiantly.
+
+“But your Aunt Jane died two years ago,” I said skeptically.
+
+“Well, ain’t that all the more reason for crying?” retorted Peter. “I’ve
+had to do without her for two years, and that’s worse than if it had
+just been a few days.”
+
+“I believe you were crying because Pat is so sick,” I said firmly.
+
+“As if I’d cry about a cat!” scoffed Peter. And he marched off
+whistling.
+
+Of course we had tried the lard and powder treatment again, smearing
+Pat’s paws and sides liberally. But to our dismay, Pat made no effort to
+lick it off.
+
+“I tell you he’s a mighty sick cat,” said Peter darkly. “When a cat
+don’t care what he looks like he’s pretty far gone.”
+
+“If we only knew what was the matter with him we might do something,”
+ sobbed the Story Girl, stroking her poor pet’s unresponsive head.
+
+“I could tell you what’s the matter with him, but you’d only laugh at
+me,” said Peter.
+
+We all looked at him.
+
+“Peter Craig, what do you mean?” asked Felicity.
+
+“‘Zackly what I say.”
+
+“Then, if you know what is the matter with Paddy, tell us,” commanded
+the Story Girl, standing up. She said it quietly; but Peter obeyed. I
+think he would have obeyed if she, in that tone and with those eyes, had
+ordered him to cast himself into the depths of the sea. I know I should.
+
+“He’s BEWITCHED--that’s what’s the matter with him,” said Peter, half
+defiantly, half shamefacedly.
+
+“Bewitched? Nonsense!”
+
+“There now, what did I tell you?” complained Peter.
+
+The Story Girl looked at Peter, at the rest of us, and then at poor Pat.
+
+“How could he be bewitched?” she asked irresolutely, “and who could
+bewitch him?”
+
+“I don’t know HOW he was bewitched,” said Peter. “I’d have to be a witch
+myself to know that. But Peg Bowen bewitched him.”
+
+“Nonsense!” said the Story Girl again.
+
+“All right,” said Peter. “You don’t have to believe me.”
+
+“If Peg Bowen could bewitch anything--and I don’t believe she could--why
+should she bewitch Pat?” asked the Story Girl. “Everybody here and at
+Uncle Alec’s is always kind to her.”
+
+“I’ll tell you why,” said Peter. “Thursday afternoon, when you fellows
+were all in school, Peg Bowen came here. Your Aunt Olivia gave her a
+lunch--a good one. You may laugh at the notion of Peg being a witch,
+but I notice your folks are always awful good to her when she comes, and
+awful careful never to offend her.”
+
+“Aunt Olivia would be good to any poor creature, and so would mother,”
+ said Felicity. “And of course nobody wants to offend Peg, because she
+is spiteful, and she once set fire to a man’s barn in Markdale when he
+offended her. But she isn’t a witch--that’s ridiculous.”
+
+“All right. But wait till I tell you. When Peg Bowen was leaving Pat
+stretched out on the steps. She tramped on his tail. You know Pat
+doesn’t like to have his tail meddled with. He slewed himself round and
+clawed her bare foot. If you’d just seen the look she gave him you’d
+know whether she was a witch or not. And she went off down the lane,
+muttering and throwing her hands round, just like she did in Lem Hill’s
+cow pasture. She put a spell on Pat, that’s what she did. He was sick
+the next morning.”
+
+We looked at each other in miserable, perplexed silence. We were only
+children--and we believed that there had been such things as witches
+once upon a time--and Peg Bowen WAS an eerie creature.
+
+“If that’s so--though I can’t believe it--we can’t do anything,” said
+the Story Girl drearily. “Pat must die.”
+
+Cecily began to weep afresh.
+
+“I’d do anything to save Pat’s life,” she said. “I’d BELIEVE anything.”
+
+“There’s nothing we can do,” said Felicity impatiently.
+
+“I suppose,” sobbed Cecily, “we might go to Peg Bowen and ask her to
+forgive Pat and take the spell off him. She might, if we apologized real
+humble.”
+
+At first we were appalled by the suggestion. We didn’t believe that Peg
+Bowen was a witch. But to go to her--to seek her out in that mysterious
+woodland retreat of hers which was invested with all the terrors of the
+unknown! And that this suggestion should come from timid Cecily, of all
+people! But then, there was poor Pat!
+
+“Would it do any good?” said the Story Girl desperately. “Even if she
+did make Pat sick I suppose it would only make her crosser if we went
+and accused her of bewitching him. Besides, she didn’t do anything of
+the sort.”
+
+But there was some uncertainty in the Story Girl’s voice.
+
+“It wouldn’t do any harm to try,” said Cecily. “If she didn’t make him
+sick it won’t matter if she is cross.”
+
+“It won’t matter to Pat, but it might to the one who goes to her,”
+ said Felicity. “She isn’t a witch, but she’s a spiteful old woman, and
+goodness knows what she’d do to us if she caught us. I’m scared of Peg
+Bowen, and I don’t care who knows it. Ever since I can mind ma’s been
+saying, ‘If you’re not good Peg Bowen will catch you.’”
+
+“If I thought she really made Pat sick and could make him better,
+I’d try to pacify her somehow,” said the Story Girl decidedly. “I’m
+frightened of her, too--but just look at poor, darling Paddy.”
+
+We looked at Paddy who continued to stare fixedly before him with
+unwinking eyes. Uncle Roger came out and looked at him also, with what
+seemed to us positively brutal unconcern.
+
+“I’m afraid it’s all up with Pat,” he said.
+
+“Uncle Roger,” said Cecily imploringly, “Peter says Peg Bowen has
+bewitched Pat for scratching her. Do you think it can be so?”
+
+“Did Pat scratch Peg?” asked Uncle Roger, with a horror-stricken face.
+“Dear me! Dear me! That mystery is solved. Poor Pat!”
+
+Uncle Roger nodded his head, as if resigning himself and Pat to the
+worst.
+
+“Do you really think Peg Bowen is a witch, Uncle Roger?” demanded the
+Story Girl incredulously.
+
+“Do I think Peg Bowen is a witch? My dear Sara, what do YOU think of a
+woman who can turn herself into a black cat whenever she likes? Is she a
+witch? Or is she not? I leave it to you.”
+
+“Can Peg Bowen turn herself into a black cat?” asked Felix, staring.
+
+“It’s my belief that that is the least of Peg Bowen’s accomplishments,”
+ answered Uncle Roger. “It’s the easiest thing in the world for a witch
+to turn herself into any animal you choose to mention. Yes, Pat is
+bewitched--no doubt of that--not the least in the world.”
+
+“What are you telling those children such stuff for?” asked Aunt Olivia,
+passing on her way to the well.
+
+“It’s an irresistible temptation,” answered Uncle Roger, strolling over
+to carry her pail.
+
+“You can see your Uncle Roger believes Peg is a witch,” said Peter.
+
+“And you can see Aunt Olivia doesn’t,” I said, “and I don’t either.”
+
+“See here,” said the Story Girl resolutely, “I don’t believe it, but
+there MAY be something in it. Suppose there is. The question is, what
+can we do?”
+
+“I’ll tell you what I’D do,” said Peter. “I’d take a present for Peg,
+and ask her to make Pat well. I wouldn’t let on I thought she’d made
+him sick. Then she couldn’t be offended--and maybe she’d take the spell
+off.”
+
+“I think we’d better all give her something,” said Felicity. “I’m
+willing to do that. But who’s going to take the presents to her?”
+
+“We must all go together,” said the Story Girl.
+
+“I won’t,” cried Sara Ray in terror. “I wouldn’t go near Peg Bowen’s
+house for the world, no matter who was with me.”
+
+“I’ve thought of a plan,” said the Story Girl. “Let’s all give her
+something, as Felicity says. And let us all go up to her place this
+evening, and if we see her outside we’ll just go quietly and set
+the things down before her with the letter, and say nothing but come
+respectfully away.”
+
+“If she’ll let us,” said Dan significantly.
+
+“Can Peg read a letter?” I asked.
+
+“Oh, yes. Aunt Olivia says she is a good scholar. She went to school and
+was a smart girl until she became crazy. We’ll write it very plain.”
+
+“What if we don’t see her?” asked Felicity.
+
+“We’ll put the things on her doorstep then and leave them.”
+
+“She may be miles away over the country by this time,” sighed Cecily,
+“and never find them until it’s too late for Pat. But it’s the only
+thing to do. What can we give her?”
+
+“We mustn’t offer her any money,” said the Story Girl. “She’s very
+indignant when any one does that. She says she isn’t a beggar. But
+she’ll take anything else. I shall give her my string of blue beads.
+She’s fond of finery.”
+
+“I’ll give her that sponge cake I made this morning,” said Felicity. “I
+guess she doesn’t get sponge cake very often.”
+
+“I’ve nothing but the rheumatism ring I got as a premium for selling
+needles last winter,” said Peter. “I’ll give her that. Even if she
+hasn’t got rheumatism it’s a real handsome ring. It looks like solid
+gold.”
+
+“I’ll give her a roll of peppermint candy,” said Felix.
+
+“I’ll give one of those little jars of cherry preserve I made,” said
+Cecily.
+
+“I won’t go near her,” quavered Sara Ray, “but I want to do something
+for Pat, and I’ll send that piece of apple leaf lace I knit last week.”
+
+I decided to give the redoubtable Peg some apples from my birthday tree,
+and Dan declared he would give her a plug of tobacco.
+
+“Oh, won’t she be insulted?” exclaimed Felix, rather horrified.
+
+“Naw,” grinned Dan. “Peg chews tobacco like a man. She’d rather have
+it than your rubbishy peppermints, I can tell you. I’ll run down to old
+Mrs. Sampson’s and get a plug.”
+
+“Now, we must write the letter and take it and the presents to her right
+away, before it gets dark,” said the Story Girl.
+
+We adjourned to the granary to indite the important document, which the
+Story Girl was to compose.
+
+“How shall I begin it?” she asked in perplexity. “It would never do to
+say, ‘Dear Peg,’ and ‘Dear Miss Bowen’ sounds too ridiculous.”
+
+“Besides, nobody knows whether she is Miss Bowen or not,” said Felicity.
+“She went to Boston when she grew up, and some say she was married there
+and her husband deserted her, and that’s why she went crazy. If she’s
+married, she won’t like being called Miss.”
+
+“Well, how am I to address her?” asked the Story Girl in despair.
+
+Peter again came to the rescue with a practical suggestion.
+
+“Begin it, ‘Respected Madam,’” he said. “Ma has a letter a school
+trustee once writ to my Aunt Jane and that’s how it begins.”
+
+“Respected Madam,” wrote the Story Girl. “We want to ask a very great
+favour of you and we hope you will kindly grant it if you can. Our
+favourite cat, Paddy, is very sick, and we are afraid he is going to
+die. Do you think you could cure him? And will you please try? We are
+all so fond of him, and he is such a good cat, and has no bad habits. Of
+course, if any of us tramps on his tail he will scratch us, but you know
+a cat can’t bear to have his tail tramped on. It’s a very tender part
+of him, and it’s his only way of preventing it, and he doesn’t mean any
+harm. If you can cure Paddy for us we will always be very, very grateful
+to you. The accompanying small offerings are a testimonial of our
+respect and gratitude, and we entreat you to honour us by accepting
+them.
+
+“Very respectfully yours,
+
+“SARA STANLEY.”
+
+“I tell you that last sentence has a fine sound,” said Peter admiringly.
+
+“I didn’t make that up,” admitted the Story Girl honestly. “I read it
+somewhere and remembered it.”
+
+“I think it’s TOO fine,” criticized Felicity. “Peg Bowen won’t know the
+meaning of such big words.”
+
+But it was decided to leave them in and we all signed the letter.
+
+Then we got our “testimonials,” and started on our reluctant journey
+to the domains of the witch. Sara Ray would not go, of course, but she
+volunteered to stay with Pat while we were away. We did not think
+it necessary to inform the grown-ups of our errand, or its nature.
+Grown-ups had such peculiar views. They might forbid our going at
+all--and they would certainly laugh at us.
+
+Peg Bowen’s house was nearly a mile away, even by the short cut past the
+swamp and up the wooded hill. We went down through the brook field and
+over the little plank bridge in the hollow, half lost in its surrounding
+sea of farewell summers. When we reached the green gloom of the woods
+beyond we began to feel frightened, but nobody would admit it. We
+walked very closely together, and we did not talk. When you are near the
+retreat of witches and folk of that ilk the less you say the better, for
+their feelings are so notoriously touchy. Of course, Peg wasn’t a witch,
+but it was best to be on the safe side.
+
+Finally we came to the lane which led directly to her abode. We were all
+very pale now, and our hearts were beating. The red September sun hung
+low between the tall spruces to the west. It did not look to me just
+right for a sun. In fact, everything looked uncanny. I wished our errand
+were well over.
+
+A sudden bend in the lane brought us out to the little clearing where
+Peg’s house was before we were half ready to see it. In spite of my fear
+I looked at it with some curiosity. It was a small, shaky building with
+a sagging roof, set amid a perfect jungle of weeds. To our eyes, the odd
+thing about it was that there was no entrance on the ground floor, as
+there should be in any respectable house. The only door was in the upper
+story, and was reached by a flight of rickety steps. There was no sign
+of life about the place except--sight of ill omen--a large black cat,
+sitting on the topmost step. We thought of Uncle Roger’s gruesome hints.
+Could that black cat be Peg? Nonsense! But still--it didn’t look like
+an ordinary cat. It was so large--and had such green, malicious eyes!
+Plainly, there was something out of the common about the beastie!
+
+In a tense, breathless silence the Story Girl placed our parcels on
+the lowest step, and laid her letter on the top of the pile. Her brown
+fingers trembled and her face was very pale.
+
+Suddenly the door above us opened, and Peg Bowen herself appeared on the
+threshold. She was a tall, sinewy old woman, wearing a short, ragged,
+drugget skirt which reached scantly below her knees, a scarlet print
+blouse, and a man’s hat. Her feet, arms, and neck were bare, and she had
+a battered old clay pipe in her mouth. Her brown face was seamed with a
+hundred wrinkles, and her tangled, grizzled hair fell unkemptly over
+her shoulders. She was scowling, and her flashing black eyes held no
+friendly light.
+
+We had borne up bravely enough hitherto, in spite of our inward,
+unconfessed quakings. But now our strained nerves gave way, and sheer
+panic seized us. Peter gave a little yelp of pure terror. We turned and
+fled across the clearing and into the woods. Down the long hill we tore,
+like mad, hunted creatures, firmly convinced that Peg Bowen was after
+us. Wild was that scamper, as nightmare-like as any recorded in our
+dream books. The Story Girl was in front of me, and I can recall the
+tremendous leaps she made over fallen logs and little spruce bushes,
+with her long brown curls streaming out behind her from their scarlet
+fillet. Cecily, behind me, kept gasping out the contradictory sentences,
+“Oh, Bev, wait for me,” and “Oh, Bev, hurry, hurry!” More by blind
+instinct than anything else we kept together and found our way out of
+the woods. Presently we were in the field beyond the brook. Over us was
+a dainty sky of shell pink, placid cows were pasturing around us; the
+farewell summers nodded to us in the friendly breezes. We halted, with a
+glad realization that we were back in our own haunts and that Peg Bowen
+had not caught us.
+
+“Oh, wasn’t that an awful experience?” gasped Cecily, shuddering. “I
+wouldn’t go through it again--I couldn’t, not even for Pat.”
+
+“It come on a fellow so suddent,” said Peter shamefacedly. “I think I
+could a-stood my ground if I’d known she was going to come out. But when
+she popped out like that I thought I was done for.”
+
+“We shouldn’t have run,” said Felicity gloomily. “It showed we were
+afraid of her, and that always makes her awful cross. She won’t do a
+thing for Pat now.”
+
+“I don’t believe she could do anything, anyway,” said the Story Girl. “I
+think we’ve just been a lot of geese.”
+
+We were all, except Peter, more or less inclined to agree with her. And
+the conviction of our folly deepened when we reached the granary and
+found that Pat, watched over by the faithful Sara Ray, was no better.
+The Story Girl announced that she would take him into the kitchen and
+sit up all night with him.
+
+“He sha’n’t die alone, anyway,” she said miserably, gathering his limp
+body up in her arms.
+
+We did not think Aunt Olivia would give her permission to stay up; but
+Aunt Olivia did. Aunt Olivia really was a duck. We wanted to stay with
+her also, but Aunt Janet wouldn’t hear of such a thing. She ordered us
+off to bed, saying that it was positively sinful in us to be so worked
+up over a cat. Five heart-broken children, who knew that there are many
+worse friends than dumb, furry folk, climbed Uncle Alec’s stairs to bed
+that night.
+
+“There’s nothing we can do now, except pray God to make Pat better,”
+ said Cecily.
+
+I must candidly say that her tone savoured strongly of a last resort;
+but this was owing more to early training than to any lack of faith on
+Cecily’s part. She knew and we knew, that prayer was a solemn rite, not
+to be lightly held, nor degraded to common uses. Felicity voiced this
+conviction when she said,
+
+“I don’t believe it would be right to pray about a cat.”
+
+“I’d like to know why not,” retorted Cecily, “God made Paddy just as
+much as He made you, Felicity King, though perhaps He didn’t go to
+so much trouble. And I’m sure He’s abler to help him than Peg Bowen.
+Anyhow, I’m going to pray for Pat with all my might and main, and I’d
+like to see you try to stop me. Of course I won’t mix it up with more
+important things. I’ll just tack it on after I’ve finished asking the
+blessings, but before I say amen.”
+
+More petitions than Cecily’s were offered up that night on behalf of
+Paddy. I distinctly heard Felix--who always said his prayers in a loud
+whisper, owing to some lasting conviction of early life that God could
+not hear him if he did not pray audibly--mutter pleadingly, after the
+“important” part of his devotions was over, “Oh, God, please make Pat
+better by the morning. PLEASE do.”
+
+And I, even in these late years of irreverence for the dreams of youth,
+am not in the least ashamed to confess that when I knelt down to say my
+boyish prayer, I thought of our little furry comrade in his extremity,
+and prayed as reverently as I knew how for his healing. Then I went to
+sleep, comforted by the simple hope that the Great Father would, after
+“important things” were all attended to, remember poor Pat.
+
+As soon as we were up the next morning we rushed off to Uncle Roger’s.
+But we met Peter and the Story Girl in the lane, and their faces were as
+the faces of those who bring glad tidings upon the mountains.
+
+“Pat’s better,” cried the Story Girl, blithe, triumphant. “Last night,
+just at twelve, he began to lick his paws. Then he licked himself all
+over and went to sleep, too, on the sofa. When I woke Pat was washing
+his face, and he has taken a whole saucerful of milk. Oh, isn’t it
+splendid?”
+
+“You see Peg Bowen did put a spell on him,” said Peter, “and then she
+took it off.”
+
+“I guess Cecily’s prayer had more to do with Pat’s getting better than
+Peg Bowen,” said Felicity. “She prayed for Pat over and over again. That
+is why he’s better.”
+
+“Oh, all right,” said Peter, “but I’d advise Pat not to scratch Peg
+Bowen again, that’s all.”
+
+“I wish I knew whether it was the praying or Peg Bowen that cured Pat,”
+ said Felix in perplexity.
+
+“I don’t believe it was either of them,” said Dan. “Pat just got sick
+and got better again of his own accord.”
+
+“I’m going to believe that it was the praying,” said Cecily decidedly.
+“It’s so much nicer to believe that God cured Pat than that Peg Bowen
+did.”
+
+“But you oughtn’t to believe a thing just ‘cause it would be more
+comfortable,” objected Peter. “Mind you, I ain’t saying God couldn’t
+cure Pat. But nothing and nobody can’t ever make me believe that Peg
+Bowen wasn’t at the bottom of it all.”
+
+Thus faith, superstition, and incredulity strove together amongst us, as
+in all history.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV. A CUP OF FAILURE
+
+One warm Sunday evening in the moon of golden-rod, we all, grown-ups and
+children, were sitting in the orchard by the Pulpit Stone singing sweet
+old gospel hymns. We could all sing more or less, except poor Sara Ray,
+who had once despairingly confided to me that she didn’t know what she’d
+ever do when she went to heaven, because she couldn’t sing a note.
+
+That whole scene comes out clearly for me in memory--the arc of primrose
+sky over the trees behind the old house, the fruit-laden boughs of the
+orchard, the bank of golden-rod, like a wave of sunshine, behind the
+Pulpit Stone, the nameless colour seen on a fir wood in a ruddy sunset.
+I can see Uncle Alec’s tired, brilliant, blue eyes, Aunt Janet’s
+wholesome, matronly face, Uncle Roger’s sweeping blond beard and red
+cheeks, and Aunt Olivia’s full-blown beauty. Two voices ring out for
+me above all others in the music that echoes through the halls of
+recollection. Cecily’s sweet and silvery, and Uncle Alec’s fine tenor.
+“If you’re a King, you sing,” was a Carlisle proverb in those days. Aunt
+Julia had been the flower of the flock in that respect and had become a
+noted concert singer. The world had never heard of the rest. Their music
+echoed only along the hidden ways of life, and served but to lighten the
+cares of the trivial round and common task.
+
+That evening, after they tired of singing, our grown-ups began talking
+of their youthful days and doings.
+
+This was always a keen delight to us small fry. We listened avidly to
+the tales of our uncles and aunts in the days when they, too--hard fact
+to realize--had been children. Good and proper as they were now, once,
+so it seemed, they had gotten into mischief and even had their quarrels
+and disagreements. On this particular evening Uncle Roger told many
+stories of Uncle Edward, and one in which the said Edward had preached
+sermons at the mature age of ten from the Pulpit Stone fired, as the
+sequel will show, the Story Girl’s imagination.
+
+“Can’t I just see him at it now,” said Uncle Roger, “leaning over
+that old boulder, his cheeks red and his eyes burning with excitement,
+banging the top of it as he had seen the ministers do in church. It
+wasn’t cushioned, however, and he always bruised his hands in his
+self-forgetful earnestness. We thought him a regular wonder. We loved to
+hear him preach, but we didn’t like to hear him pray, because he
+always insisted on praying for each of us by name, and it made us feel
+wretchedly uncomfortable, somehow. Alec, do you remember how furious
+Julia was because Edward prayed one day that she might be preserved from
+vanity and conceit over her singing?”
+
+“I should think I do,” laughed Uncle Alec. “She was sitting right there
+where Cecily is now, and she got up at once and marched right out of the
+orchard, but at the gate she turned to call back indignantly, ‘I guess
+you’d better wait till you’ve prayed the conceit out of yourself before
+you begin on me, Ned King. I never heard such stuck-up sermons as you
+preach.’ Ned went on praying and never let on he heard her, but at the
+end of his prayer he wound up with ‘Oh, God, I pray you to keep an
+eye on us all, but I pray you to pay particular attention to my sister
+Julia, for I think she needs it even more than the rest of us, world
+without end, Amen.’”
+
+Our uncles roared with laughter over the recollection. We all laughed,
+indeed, especially over another tale in which Uncle Edward, leaning too
+far over the “pulpit” in his earnestness, lost his balance altogether
+and tumbled ingloriously into the grass below.
+
+“He lit on a big Scotch thistle,” said Uncle Roger, chuckling, “and
+besides that, he skinned his forehead on a stone. But he was determined
+to finish his sermon, and finish it he did. He climbed back into the
+pulpit, with the tears rolling over his cheeks, and preached for
+ten minutes longer, with sobs in his voice and drops of blood on his
+forehead. He was a plucky little beggar. No wonder he succeeded in
+life.”
+
+“And his sermons and prayers were always just about as outspoken as
+those Julia objected to,” said Uncle Alec. “Well, we’re all getting on
+in life and Edward is gray; but when I think of him I always see him
+a little, rosy, curly-headed chap, laying down the law to us from
+the Pulpit Stone. It seems like the other day that we were all
+here together, just as these children are, and now we are scattered
+everywhere. Julia in California, Edward in Halifax, Alan in South
+America, Felix and Felicity and Stephen gone to the land that is very
+far off.”
+
+There was a little space of silence; and then Uncle Alec began, in a
+low, impressive voice, to repeat the wonderful verses of the ninetieth
+Psalm--verses which were thenceforth bound up for us with the beauty
+of that night and the memories of our kindred. Very reverently we all
+listened to the majestic words.
+
+“Lord, thou hast been our dwelling place in all generations. Before the
+mountains were brought forth, or ever thou hadst formed the earth and
+the world, even from everlasting to everlasting thou art God.... For a
+thousand years in thy sight are but as yesterday when it is past, and as
+a watch in the night.... For all our days are passed away in thy wrath;
+we spend our years as a tale that is told. The days of our years are
+threescore and ten; and if by reason of strength they be fourscore years
+yet is their strength, labour and sorrow; for it is soon cut off and we
+fly away.... So teach us to number our days that we may apply our hearts
+unto wisdom.... Oh, satisfy us early with thy mercy; that we may rejoice
+and be glad all our days.... And let the beauty of the Lord our God be
+upon us; and establish thou the work of our hands upon us; yea, the work
+of our hands establish thou it.”
+
+The dusk crept into the orchard like a dim, bewitching personality. You
+could see her--feel her--hear her. She tiptoed softly from tree to
+tree, ever drawing nearer. Presently her filmy wings hovered over us and
+through them gleamed the early stars of the autumn night.
+
+The grown-ups rose reluctantly and strolled away; but we children
+lingered for a moment to talk over an idea the Story Girl broached--a
+good idea, we thought enthusiastically, and one that promised to add
+considerable spice to life.
+
+We were on the lookout for some new amusement. Dream books had begun to
+pall. We no longer wrote in them very regularly, and our dreams were not
+what they used to be before the mischance of the cucumber. So the Story
+Girl’s suggestion came pat to the psychological moment.
+
+“I’ve thought of a splendid plan,” she said. “It just flashed into my
+mind when the uncles were talking about Uncle Edward. And the beauty of
+it is we can play it on Sundays, and you know there are so few things it
+is proper to play on Sundays. But this is a Christian game, so it will
+be all right.”
+
+“It isn’t like the religious fruit basket game, is it?” asked Cecily
+anxiously.
+
+We had good reason to hope that it wasn’t. One desperate Sunday
+afternoon, when we had nothing to read and the time seemed endless,
+Felix had suggested that we have a game of fruit-basket; only instead
+of taking the names of fruits, we were to take the names of Bible
+characters. This, he argued, would make it quite lawful and proper to
+play on Sunday. We, too desirous of being convinced, also thought so;
+and for a merry hour Lazarus and Martha and Moses and Aaron and sundry
+other worthies of Holy Writ had a lively time of it in the King orchard.
+Peter having a Scriptural name of his own, did not want to take another;
+but we would not allow this, because it would give him an unfair
+advantage over the rest of us. It would be so much easier to call
+out your own name than fit your tongue to an unfamiliar one. So Peter
+retaliated by choosing Nebuchadnezzar, which no one could ever utter
+three times before Peter shrieked it out once.
+
+In the midst of our hilarity, however, Uncle Alec and Aunt Janet came
+down upon us. It is best to draw a veil over what followed. Suffice it
+to say that the recollection gave point to Cecily’s question.
+
+“No, it isn’t that sort of game at all,” said the Story Girl. “It is
+this; each of you boys must preach a sermon, as Uncle Edward used to
+do. One of you next Sunday, and another the next, and so on. And whoever
+preaches the best sermon is to get a prize.”
+
+Dan promptly declared he wouldn’t try to preach a sermon; but Peter,
+Felix and I thought the suggestion a very good one. Secretly, I believed
+I could cut quite a fine figure preaching a sermon.
+
+“Who’ll give the prize?” asked Felix.
+
+“I will,” said the Story Girl. “I’ll give that picture father sent me
+last week.”
+
+As the said picture was an excellent copy of one of Landseer’s stags,
+Felix and I were well pleased; but Peter averred that he would rather
+have the Madonna that looked like his Aunt Jane, and the Story Girl
+agreed that if his sermon was the best she would give him that.
+
+“But who’s to be the judge?” I said, “and what kind of a sermon would
+you call the best?”
+
+“The one that makes the most impression,” answered the Story Girl
+promptly. “And we girls must be the judges, because there’s nobody else.
+Now, who is to preach next Sunday?”
+
+It was decided that I should lead off, and I lay awake for an extra hour
+that night thinking what text I should take for the following Sunday.
+The next day I bought two sheets of foolscap from the schoolmaster, and
+after tea I betook myself to the granary, barred the door, and fell
+to writing my sermon. I did not find it as easy a task as I had
+anticipated; but I pegged grimly away at it, and by dint of severe
+labour for two evenings I eventually got my four pages of foolscap
+filled, although I had to pad the subject-matter not a little with
+verses of quotable hymns. I had decided to preach on missions, as being
+a topic more within my grasp than abstruse theological doctrines
+or evangelical discourses; and, mindful of the need of making an
+impression, I drew a harrowing picture of the miserable plight of the
+heathen who in their darkness bowed down to wood and stone. Then I urged
+our responsibility concerning them, and meant to wind up by reciting,
+in a very solemn and earnest voice, the verse beginning, “Can we whose
+souls are lighted.” When I had completed my sermon I went over it very
+carefully again and wrote with red ink--Cecily made it for me out of an
+aniline dye--the word “thump” wherever I deemed it advisable to chastise
+the pulpit.
+
+I have that sermon still, all its red thumps unfaded, lying beside my
+dream book; but I am not going to inflict it on my readers. I am not so
+proud of it as I once was. I was really puffed up with earthly vanity
+over it at that time. Felix, I thought, would be hard put to it to beat
+it. As for Peter, I did not consider him a rival to be feared. It was
+unsupposable that a hired boy, with little education and less experience
+of church-going, should be able to preach better than could I, in whose
+family there was a real minister.
+
+The sermon written, the next thing was to learn it off by heart and then
+practise it, thumps included, until I was letter and gesture perfect. I
+preached it over several times in the granary with only Paddy, sitting
+immovably on a puncheon, for audience. Paddy stood the test fairly well.
+At least, he made an adorable listener, save at such times as imaginary
+rats distracted his attention.
+
+Mr. Marwood had at least three absorbed listeners the next Sunday
+morning. Felix, Peter and I were all among the chiels who were taking
+mental notes on the art of preaching a sermon. Not a motion, or glance,
+or intonation escaped us. To be sure, none of us could remember the text
+when we got home; but we knew just how you should throw back your head
+and clutch the edge of the pulpit with both hands when you announced it.
+
+In the afternoon we all repaired to the orchard, Bibles and hymn books
+in hand. We did not think it necessary to inform the grown-ups of what
+was in the wind. You could never tell what kink a grown-up would take.
+They might not think it proper to play any sort of a game on Sunday,
+not even a Christian game. Least said was soonest mended where grown-ups
+were concerned.
+
+I mounted the pulpit steps, feeling rather nervous, and my audience sat
+gravely down on the grass before me. Our opening exercises consisted
+solely of singing and reading. We had agreed to omit prayer. Neither
+Felix, Peter nor I felt equal to praying in public. But we took up
+a collection. The proceeds were to go to missions. Dan passed the
+plate--Felicity’s rosebud plate--looking as preternaturally solemn as
+Elder Frewen himself. Every one put a cent on it.
+
+Well, I preached my sermon. And it fell horribly flat. I realized that,
+before I was half way through it. I think I preached it very well; and
+never a thump did I forget or misplace. But my audience was plainly
+bored. When I stepped down from the pulpit, after demanding passionately
+if we whose souls were lighted and so forth, I felt with secret
+humiliation that my sermon was a failure. It had made no impression at
+all. Felix would be sure to get the prize.
+
+“That was a very good sermon for a first attempt,” said the Story Girl
+graciously. “It sounded just like real sermons I have heard.”
+
+For a moment the charm of her voice made me feel that I had not done so
+badly after all; but the other girls, thinking it their duty to pay
+me some sort of a compliment also, quickly dispelled that pleasing
+delusion.
+
+“Every word of it was true,” said Cecily, her tone unconsciously
+implying that this was its sole merit.
+
+“I often feel,” said Felicity primly, “that we don’t think enough about
+the heathens. We ought to think a great deal more.”
+
+Sara Ray put the finishing touch to my mortification.
+
+“It was so nice and short,” she said.
+
+“What was the matter with my sermon?” I asked Dan that night. Since he
+was neither judge nor competitor I could discuss the matter with him.
+
+“It was too much like a reg’lar sermon to be interesting,” said Dan
+frankly.
+
+“I should think the more like a regular sermon it was, the better,” I
+said.
+
+“Not if you want to make an impression,” said Dan seriously. “You
+must have something sort of different for that. Peter, now, HE’LL have
+something different.”
+
+“Oh, Peter! I don’t believe he can preach a sermon,” I said.
+
+“Maybe not, but you’ll see he’ll make an impression,” said Dan.
+
+Dan was neither the prophet nor the son of a prophet, but he had the
+second sight for once; Peter DID make an impression.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI. PETER MAKES AN IMPRESSION
+
+Peter’s turn came next. He did not write his sermon out. That, he
+averred, was too hard work. Nor did he mean to take a text.
+
+“Why, who ever heard of a sermon without a text?” asked Felix blankly.
+
+“I am going to take a SUBJECT instead of a text,” said Peter loftily. “I
+ain’t going to tie myself down to a text. And I’m going to have heads in
+it--three heads. You hadn’t a single head in yours,” he added to me.
+
+“Uncle Alec says that Uncle Edward says that heads are beginning to go
+out of fashion,” I said defiantly--all the more defiantly that I felt I
+should have had heads in my sermon. It would doubtless have made a much
+deeper impression. But the truth was I had forgotten all about such
+things.
+
+“Well, I’m going to have them, and I don’t care if they are
+unfashionable,” said Peter. “They’re good things. Aunt Jane used to say
+if a man didn’t have heads and stick to them he’d go wandering all over
+the Bible and never get anywhere in particular.”
+
+“What are you going to preach on?” asked Felix.
+
+“You’ll find out next Sunday,” said Peter significantly.
+
+The next Sunday was in October, and a lovely day it was, warm and bland
+as June. There was something in the fine, elusive air, that recalled
+beautiful, forgotten things and suggested delicate future hopes. The
+woods had wrapped fine-woven gossamers about them and the westering hill
+was crimson and gold.
+
+We sat around the Pulpit Stone and waited for Peter and Sara Ray. It was
+the former’s Sunday off and he had gone home the night before, but he
+assured us he would be back in time to preach his sermon. Presently he
+arrived and mounted the granite boulder as if to the manor born. He was
+dressed in his new suit and I, perceiving this, felt that he had the
+advantage of me. When I preached I had to wear my second best suit, for
+it was one of Aunt Janet’s laws that we should take our good suits off
+when we came home from church. There were, I saw, compensations for
+being a hired boy.
+
+Peter made quite a handsome little minister, in his navy blue coat,
+white collar, and neatly bowed tie. His black eyes shone, and his black
+curls were brushed up in quite a ministerial pompadour, but threatened
+to tumble over at the top in graceless ringlets.
+
+It was decided that there was no use in waiting for Sara Ray, who might
+or might not come, according to the humour in which her mother was.
+Therefore Peter proceeded with the service.
+
+He read the chapter and gave out the hymn with as much SANG FROID as if
+he had been doing it all his life. Mr. Marwood himself could not have
+bettered the way in which Peter said,
+
+“We will sing the whole hymn, omitting the fourth stanza.”
+
+That was a fine touch which I had not thought of. I began to think that,
+after all, Peter might be a foeman worthy of my steel.
+
+When Peter was ready to begin he thrust his hands into his pockets--a
+totally unorthodox thing. Then he plunged in without further ado,
+speaking in his ordinary conversational tone--another unorthodox thing.
+There was no shorthand reporter present to take that sermon down; but,
+if necessary, I could preach it over verbatim, and so, I doubt not,
+could everyone that heard it. It was not a forgettable kind of sermon.
+
+“Dearly beloved,” said Peter, “my sermon is about the bad place--in
+short, about hell.”
+
+An electric shock seemed to run through the audience. Everybody looked
+suddenly alert. Peter had, in one sentence, done what my whole sermon
+had failed to do. He had made an impression.
+
+“I shall divide my sermon into three heads,” pursued Peter. “The first
+head is, what you must not do if you don’t want to go to the bad place.
+The second head is, what the bad place is like”--sensation in the
+audience--“and the third head is, how to escape going there.
+
+“Now, there’s a great many things you must not do, and it’s very
+important to know what they are. You ought not to lose no time in
+finding out. In the first place you mustn’t ever forget to mind what
+grown-up people tell you--that is, GOOD grown-up people.”
+
+“But how are you going to tell who are the good grown-up people?” asked
+Felix suddenly, forgetting that he was in church.
+
+“Oh, that is easy,” said Peter. “You can always just FEEL who is good
+and who isn’t. And you mustn’t tell lies and you mustn’t murder any
+one. You must be specially careful not to murder any one. You might be
+forgiven for telling lies, if you was real sorry for them, but if you
+murdered any one it would be pretty hard to get forgiven, so you’d
+better be on the safe side. And you mustn’t commit suicide, because
+if you did that you wouldn’t have any chance of repenting it; and you
+mustn’t forget to say your prayers and you mustn’t quarrel with your
+sister.”
+
+At this point Felicity gave Dan a significant poke with her elbow, and
+Dan was up in arms at once.
+
+“Don’t you be preaching at me, Peter Craig,” he cried out. “I won’t
+stand it. I don’t quarrel with my sister any oftener than she quarrels
+with me. You can just leave me alone.”
+
+“Who’s touching you?” demanded Peter. “I didn’t mention no names. A
+minister can say anything he likes in the pulpit, as long as he doesn’t
+mention any names, and nobody can answer back.”
+
+“All right, but just you wait till to-morrow,” growled Dan, subsiding
+reluctantly into silence under the reproachful looks of the girls.
+
+“You must not play any games on Sunday,” went on Peter, “that is, any
+week-day games--or whisper in church, or laugh in church--I did that
+once but I was awful sorry--and you mustn’t take any notice of Paddy--I
+mean of the family cat at family prayers, not even if he climbs up on
+your back. And you mustn’t call names or make faces.”
+
+“Amen,” cried Felix, who had suffered many things because Felicity so
+often made faces at him.
+
+Peter stopped and glared at him over the edge of the Pulpit Stone.
+
+“You haven’t any business to call out a thing like that right in the
+middle of a sermon,” he said.
+
+“They do it in the Methodist church at Markdale,” protested Felix,
+somewhat abashed. “I heard them.”
+
+“I know they do. That’s the Methodist way and it is all right for them.
+I haven’t a word to say against Methodists. My Aunt Jane was one, and
+I might have been one myself if I hadn’t been so scared of the Judgment
+Day. But you ain’t a Methodist. You’re a Presbyterian, ain’t you?”
+
+“Yes, of course. I was born that way.”
+
+“Very well then, you’ve got to do things the Presbyterian way. Don’t let
+me hear any more of your amens or I’ll amen you.”
+
+“Oh, don’t anybody interrupt again,” implored the Story Girl. “It
+isn’t fair. How can any one preach a good sermon if he is always being
+interrupted? Nobody interrupted Beverley.”
+
+“Bev didn’t get up there and pitch into us like that,” muttered Dan.
+
+“You mustn’t fight,” resumed Peter undauntedly. “That is, you mustn’t
+fight for the fun of fighting, nor out of bad temper. You must not
+say bad words or swear. You mustn’t get drunk--although of course you
+wouldn’t be likely to do that before you grow up, and the girls never.
+There’s prob’ly a good many other things you mustn’t do, but these I’ve
+named are the most important. Of course, I’m not saying you’ll go to the
+bad place for sure if you do them. I only say you’re running a risk.
+The devil is looking out for the people who do these things and he’ll
+be more likely to get after them than to waste time over the people who
+don’t do them. And that’s all about the first head of my sermon.”
+
+At this point Sara Ray arrived, somewhat out of breath. Peter looked at
+her reproachfully.
+
+“You’ve missed my whole first head, Sara,” he said, “that isn’t fair,
+when you’re to be one of the judges. I think I ought to preach it over
+again for you.”
+
+“That was really done once. I know a story about it,” said the Story
+Girl.
+
+“Who’s interrupting now?” aid Dan slyly.
+
+“Never mind, tell us the story,” said the preacher himself, eagerly
+leaning over the pulpit.
+
+“It was Mr. Scott who did it,” said the Story Girl. “He was preaching
+somewhere in Nova Scotia, and when he was more than half way through his
+sermon--and you know sermons were VERY long in those days--a man walked
+in. Mr. Scott stopped until he had taken his seat. Then he said, ‘My
+friend, you are very late for this service. I hope you won’t be late for
+heaven. The congregation will excuse me if I recapitulate the sermon for
+our friend’s benefit.’ And then he just preached the sermon over again
+from the beginning. It is said that that particular man was never known
+to be late for church again.”
+
+“It served him right,” said Dan, “but it was pretty hard lines on the
+rest of the congregation.”
+
+“Now, let’s be quiet so Peter can go on with his sermon,” said Cecily.
+
+Peter squared his shoulders and took hold of the edge of the pulpit.
+Never a thump had he thumped, but I realized that his way of leaning
+forward and fixing this one or that one of his hearers with his eye was
+much more effective.
+
+“I’ve come now to the second head of my sermon--what the bad place is
+like.”
+
+He proceeded to describe the bad place. Later on we discovered that
+he had found his material in an illustrated translation of Dante’s
+_Inferno_ which had once been given to his Aunt Jane as a school prize.
+But at the time we supposed he must be drawing from Biblical sources.
+Peter had been reading the Bible steadily ever since what we always
+referred to as “the Judgment Sunday,” and he was by now almost through
+it. None of the rest of us had ever read the Bible completely through,
+and we thought Peter must have found his description of the world of the
+lost in some portion with which we were not acquainted. Therefore, his
+utterances carried all the weight of inspiration, and we sat appalled
+before his lurid phrases. He used his own words to clothe the ideas he
+had found, and the result was a force and simplicity that struck home to
+our imaginations.
+
+Suddenly Sara Ray sprang to her feet with a scream--a scream that
+changed into strange laughter. We all, preacher included, looked at her
+aghast. Cecily and Felicity sprang up and caught hold of her. Sara Ray
+was really in a bad fit of hysterics, but we knew nothing of such a
+thing in our experience, and we thought she had gone mad. She shrieked,
+cried, laughed, and flung herself about.
+
+“She’s gone clean crazy,” said Peter, coming down out of his pulpit with
+a very pale face.
+
+“You’ve frightened her crazy with your dreadful sermon,” said Felicity
+indignantly.
+
+She and Cecily each took Sara by an arm and, half leading, half
+carrying, got her out of the orchard and up to the house. The rest of us
+looked at each other in terrified questioning.
+
+“You’ve made rather too much of an impression, Peter,” said the Story
+Girl miserably.
+
+“She needn’t have got so scared. If she’d only waited for the third head
+I’d have showed her how easy it was to get clear of going to the bad
+place and go to heaven instead. But you girls are always in such a
+hurry,” said Peter bitterly.
+
+“Do you s’pose they’ll have to take her to the asylum?” said Dan in a
+whisper.
+
+“Hush, here’s your father,” said Felix.
+
+Uncle Alec came striding down the orchard. We had never before seen
+Uncle Alec angry. But there was no doubt that he was very angry. His
+blue eyes fairly blazed at us as he said,
+
+“What have you been doing to frighten Sara Ray into such a condition?”
+
+“We--we were just having a sermon contest,” explained the Story Girl
+tremulously. “And Peter preached about the bad place, and it frightened
+Sara. That is all, Uncle Alec.”
+
+“All! I don’t know what the result will be to that nervous delicate
+child. She is shrieking in there and nothing will quiet her. What do
+you mean by playing such a game on Sunday, and making a jest of sacred
+things? No, not a word--” for the Story Girl had attempted to speak.
+“You and Peter march off home. And the next time I find you up to such
+doings on Sunday or any other day I’ll give you cause to remember it to
+your latest hour.”
+
+The Story Girl and Peter went humbly home and we went with them.
+
+“I CAN’T understand grown-up people,” said Felix despairingly. “When
+Uncle Edward preached sermons it was all right, but when we do it it is
+‘making a jest of sacred things.’ And I heard Uncle Alec tell a story
+once about being nearly frightened to death when he was a little boy,
+by a minister preaching on the end of the world; and he said, ‘That was
+something like a sermon. You don’t hear such sermons nowadays.’ But when
+Peter preaches just such a sermon, it’s a very different story.”
+
+“It’s no wonder we can’t understand the grown-ups,” said the Story Girl
+indignantly, “because we’ve never been grown-up ourselves. But THEY have
+been children, and I don’t see why they can’t understand us. Of course,
+perhaps we shouldn’t have had the contest on Sundays. But all the same
+I think it’s mean of Uncle Alec to be so cross. Oh, I do hope poor Sara
+won’t have to be taken to the asylum.”
+
+Poor Sara did not have to be. She was eventually quieted down, and was
+as well as usual the next day; and she humbly begged Peter’s pardon for
+spoiling his sermon. Peter granted it rather grumpily, and I fear that
+he never really quite forgave Sara for her untimely outburst. Felix,
+too, felt resentment against her, because he had lost the chance of
+preaching his sermon.
+
+“Of course I know I wouldn’t have got the prize, for I couldn’t have
+made such an impression as Peter,” he said to us mournfully, “but I’d
+like to have had a chance to show what I could do. That’s what comes
+of having those cry-baby girls mixed up in things. Cecily was just as
+scared as Sara Ray, but she’d more sense than to show it like that.”
+
+“Well, Sara couldn’t help it,” said the Story Girl charitably, “but it
+does seem as if we’d had dreadful luck in everything we’ve tried lately.
+I thought of a new game this morning, but I’m almost afraid to mention
+it, for I suppose something dreadful will come of it, too.”
+
+“Oh, tell us, what is it?” everybody entreated.
+
+“Well, it’s a trial by ordeal, and we’re to see which of us can pass it.
+The ordeal is to eat one of the bitter apples in big mouthfuls without
+making a single face.”
+
+Dan made a face to begin with.
+
+“I don’t believe any of us can do that,” he said.
+
+“YOU can’t, if you take bites big enough to fill your mouth,” giggled
+Felicity, with cruelty and without provocation.
+
+“Well, maybe you could,” retorted Dan sarcastically. “You’d be so afraid
+of spoiling your looks that you’d rather die than make a face, I s’pose,
+no matter what you et.”
+
+“Felicity makes enough faces when there’s nothing to make faces at,”
+ said Felix, who had been grimaced at over the breakfast table that
+morning and hadn’t liked it.
+
+“I think the bitter apples would be real good for Felix,” said Felicity.
+“They say sour things make people thin.”
+
+“Let’s go and get the bitter apples,” said Cecily hastily, seeing that
+Felix, Felicity and Dan were on the verge of a quarrel more bitter than
+the apples.
+
+We went to the seedling tree and got an apple apiece. The game was that
+every one must take a bite in turn, chew it up, and swallow it, without
+making a face. Peter again distinguished himself. He, and he alone,
+passed the ordeal, munching those dreadful mouthfuls without so much as
+a change of expression on his countenance, while the facial contortions
+the rest of us went through baffled description. In every subsequent
+trial it was the same. Peter never made a face, and no one else
+could help making them. It sent him up fifty per cent in Felicity’s
+estimation.
+
+“Peter is a real smart boy,” she said to me. “It’s such a pity he is a
+hired boy.”
+
+But, if we could not pass the ordeal, we got any amount of fun out of
+it, at least. Evening after evening the orchard re-echoed to our peals
+of laughter.
+
+“Bless the children,” said Uncle Alec, as he carried the milk pails
+across the yard. “Nothing can quench their spirits for long.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII. THE ORDEAL OF BITTER APPLES
+
+I could never understand why Felix took Peter’s success in the Ordeal
+of Bitter Apples so much to heart. He had not felt very keenly over the
+matter of the sermons, and certainly the mere fact that Peter could
+eat sour apples without making faces did not cast any reflection on
+the honour or ability of the other competitors. But to Felix everything
+suddenly became flat, stale, and unprofitable, because Peter continued
+to hold the championship of bitter apples. It haunted his waking hours
+and obsessed his nights. I heard him talking in his sleep about it. If
+anything could have made him thin the way he worried over this matter
+would have done it.
+
+For myself, I cared not a groat. I had wished to be successful in the
+sermon contest, and felt sore whenever I thought of my failure. But I
+had no burning desire to eat sour apples without grimacing, and I did
+not sympathize over and above with my brother. When, however, he took
+to praying about it, I realized how deeply he felt on the subject, and
+hoped he would be successful.
+
+Felix prayed earnestly that he might be enabled to eat a bitter apple
+without making a face. And when he had prayed three nights after this
+manner, he contrived to eat a bitter apple without a grimace until he
+came to the last bite, which proved too much for him. But Felix was
+vastly encouraged.
+
+“Another prayer or two, and I’ll be able to eat a whole one,” he said
+jubilantly.
+
+But this devoutly desired consummation did not come to pass. In spite
+of prayers and heroic attempts, Felix could never get beyond that last
+bite. Not even faith and works in combination could avail. For a time
+he could not understand this. But he thought the mystery was solved when
+Cecily came to him one day and told him that Peter was praying against
+him.
+
+“He’s praying that you’ll never be able to eat a bitter apple without
+making a face,” she said. “He told Felicity and Felicity told me. She
+said she thought it was real cute of him. I think that is a dreadful way
+to talk about praying and I told her so. She wanted me to promise not to
+tell you, but I wouldn’t promise, because I think it’s fair for you to
+know what is going on.”
+
+Felix was very indignant--and aggrieved as well.
+
+“I don’t see why God should answer Peter’s prayers instead of mine,” he
+said bitterly. “I’ve gone to church and Sunday School all my life, and
+Peter never went till this summer. It isn’t fair.”
+
+“Oh, Felix, don’t talk like that,” said Cecily, shocked. “God MUST be
+fair. I’ll tell you what I believe is the reason. Peter prays three
+times a day regular--in the morning and at dinner time and at night--and
+besides that, any time through the day when he happens to think of it,
+he just prays, standing up. Did you ever hear of such goings-on?”
+
+“Well, he’s got to stop praying against me, anyhow,” said Felix
+resolutely. “I won’t put up with it, and I’ll go and tell him so right
+off.”
+
+Felix marched over to Uncle Roger’s, and we trailed after, scenting
+a scene. We found Peter shelling beans in the granary, and whistling
+cheerily, as with a conscience void of offence towards all men.
+
+“Look here, Peter,” said Felix ominously, “they tell me that you’ve
+been praying right along that I couldn’t eat a bitter apple. Now, I tell
+you--”
+
+“I never did!” exclaimed Peter indignantly. “I never mentioned your
+name. I never prayed that you couldn’t eat a bitter apple. I just prayed
+that I’d be the only one that could.”
+
+“Well, that’s the same thing,” cried Felix. “You’ve just been praying
+for the opposite to me out of spite. And you’ve got to stop it, Peter
+Craig.”
+
+“Well, I just guess I won’t,” said Peter angrily. “I’ve just as good
+a right to pray for what I want as you, Felix King, even if you was
+brought up in Toronto. I s’pose you think a hired boy hasn’t any
+business to pray for particular things, but I’ll show you. I’ll just
+pray for what I please, and I’d like to see you try and stop me.”
+
+“You’ll have to fight me, if you keep on praying against me,” said
+Felix.
+
+The girls gasped; but Dan and I were jubilant, snuffing battle afar off.
+
+“All right. I can fight as well as pray.”
+
+“Oh, don’t fight,” implored Cecily. “I think it would be dreadful.
+Surely you can arrange it some other way. Let’s all give up the Ordeal,
+anyway. There isn’t much fun in it. And then neither of you need pray
+about it.”
+
+“I don’t want to give up the Ordeal,” said Felix, “and I won’t.”
+
+“Oh, well, surely you can settle it some way without fighting,”
+ persisted Cecily.
+
+“I’m not wanting to fight,” said Peter. “It’s Felix. If he don’t
+interfere with my prayers there’s no need of fighting. But if he does
+there’s no other way to settle it.”
+
+“But how will that settle it?” asked Cecily.
+
+“Oh, whoever’s licked will have to give in about the praying,” said
+Peter. “That’s fair enough. If I’m licked I won’t pray for that
+particular thing any more.”
+
+“It’s dreadful to fight about anything so religious as praying,” sighed
+poor Cecily.
+
+“Why, they were always fighting about religion in old times,” said
+Felix. “The more religious anything was the more fighting there was
+about it.”
+
+“A fellow’s got a right to pray as he pleases,” said Peter, “and if
+anybody tries to stop him he’s bound to fight. That’s my way of looking
+at it.”
+
+“What would Miss Marwood say if she knew you were going to fight?” asked
+Felicity.
+
+Miss Marwood was Felix’ Sunday School teacher and he was very fond of
+her. But by this time Felix was quite reckless.
+
+“I don’t care what she would say,” he retorted.
+
+Felicity tried another tack.
+
+“You’ll be sure to get whipped if you fight with Peter,” she said.
+“You’re too fat to fight.”
+
+After that, no moral force on earth could have prevented Felix from
+fighting. He would have faced an army with banners.
+
+“You might settle it by drawing lots,” said Cecily desperately.
+
+“Drawing lots is wickeder that fighting,” said Dan. “It’s a kind of
+gambling.”
+
+“What would Aunt Jane say if she knew you were going to fight?” Cecily
+demanded of Peter.
+
+“Don’t you drag my Aunt Jane into this affair,” said Peter darkly.
+
+“You said you were going to be a Presbyterian,” persisted Cecily. “Good
+Presbyterians don’t fight.”
+
+“Oh, don’t they! I heard your Uncle Roger say that Presbyterians were
+the best for fighting in the world--or the worst, I forget which he
+said, but it means the same thing.”
+
+Cecily had but one more shot in her locker.
+
+“I thought you said in your sermon, Master Peter, that people shouldn’t
+fight.”
+
+“I said they oughtn’t to fight for fun, or for bad temper,” retorted
+Peter. “This is different. I know what I’m fighting for but I can’t
+think of the word.”
+
+“I guess you mean principle,” I suggested.
+
+“Yes, that’s it,” agreed Peter. “It’s all right to fight for principle.
+It’s kind of praying with your fists.”
+
+“Oh, can’t you do something to prevent them from fighting, Sara?”
+ pleaded Cecily, turning to the Story Girl, who was sitting on a bin,
+swinging her shapely bare feet to and fro.
+
+“It doesn’t do to meddle in an affair of this kind between boys,” said
+the Story Girl sagely.
+
+I may be mistaken, but I do not believe the Story Girl wanted that fight
+stopped. And I am far from being sure that Felicity did either.
+
+It was ultimately arranged that the combat should take place in the fir
+wood behind Uncle Roger’s granary. It was a nice, remote, bosky place
+where no prowling grown-up would be likely to intrude. And thither we
+all resorted at sunset.
+
+“I hope Felix will beat,” said the Story Girl to me, “not only for the
+family honour, but because that was a mean, mean prayer of Peter’s. Do
+you think he will?”
+
+“I don’t know,” I confessed dubiously. “Felix is too fat. He’ll get out
+of breath in no time. And Peter is such a cool customer, and he’s a year
+older than Felix. But then Felix has had some practice. He has fought
+boys in Toronto. And this is Peter’s first fight.”
+
+“Did you ever fight?” asked the Story Girl.
+
+“Once,” I said briefly, dreading the next question, which promptly came.
+
+“Who beat?”
+
+It is sometimes a bitter thing to tell the truth, especially to a
+young lady for whom you have a great admiration. I had a struggle with
+temptation in which I frankly confess I might have been worsted had it
+not been for a saving and timely remembrance of a certain resolution
+made on the day preceding Judgment Sunday.
+
+“The other fellow,” I said with reluctant honesty.
+
+“Well,” said the Story Girl, “I think it doesn’t matter whether you get
+whipped or not so long as you fight a good, square fight.”
+
+Her potent voice made me feel that I was quite a hero after all, and the
+sting went out of my recollection of that old fight.
+
+When we arrived behind the granary the others were all there. Cecily was
+very pale, and Felix and Peter were taking off their coats. There was
+a pure yellow sunset that evening, and the aisles of the fir wood were
+flooded with its radiance. A cool, autumnal wind was whistling among the
+dark boughs and scattering blood red leaves from the maple at the end of
+the granary.
+
+“Now,” said Dan, “I’ll count, and when I say three you pitch in, and
+hammer each other until one of you has had enough. Cecily, keep quiet.
+Now, one--two--three!”
+
+Peter and Felix “pitched in,” with more zeal than discretion on both
+sides. As a result, Peter got what later developed into a black eye,
+and Felix’s nose began to bleed. Cecily gave a shriek and ran out of the
+wood. We thought she had fled because she could not endure the sight of
+blood, and we were not sorry, for her manifest disapproval and anxiety
+were damping the excitement of the occasion.
+
+Felix and Peter drew apart after that first onset, and circled about one
+another warily. Then, just as they had come to grips again, Uncle Alec
+walked around the corner of the granary, with Cecily behind him.
+
+He was not angry. There was a quizzical look in his eyes. But he took
+the combatants by their shirt collars and dragged them apart.
+
+“This stops right here, boys,” he said. “You know I don’t allow
+fighting.”
+
+“Oh, but Uncle Alec, it was this way,” began Felix eagerly. “Peter--”
+
+“No, I don’t want to hear about it,” said Uncle Alec sternly. “I don’t
+care what you were fighting about, but you must settle your quarrels
+in a different fashion. Remember my commands, Felix. Peter, Roger is
+looking for you to wash his buggy. Be off.”
+
+Peter went off rather sullenly, and Felix, also sullenly, sat down and
+began to nurse his nose. He turned his back on Cecily.
+
+Cecily “caught it” after Uncle Alec had gone. Dan called her a tell-tale
+and a baby, and sneered at her until Cecily began to cry.
+
+“I couldn’t stand by and watch Felix and Peter pound each other all to
+pieces,” she sobbed. “They’ve been such friends, and it was dreadful to
+see them fighting.”
+
+“Uncle Roger would have let them fight it out,” said the Story Girl
+discontentedly. “Uncle Roger believes in boys fighting. He says it’s as
+harmless a way as any of working off their original sin. Peter and Felix
+wouldn’t have been any worse friends after it. They’d have been better
+friends because the praying question would have been settled. And now
+it can’t be--unless Felicity can coax Peter to give up praying against
+Felix.”
+
+For once in her life the Story Girl was not as tactful as her wont.
+Or--is it possible that she said it out of malice prepense? At all
+events, Felicity resented the imputation that she had more influence
+with Peter than any one else.
+
+“I don’t meddle with hired boys’ prayers,” she said haughtily.
+
+“It was all nonsense fighting about such prayers, anyhow,” said Dan, who
+probably thought that since all chance of a fight was over, he might as
+well avow his real sentiments as to its folly. “Just as much nonsense as
+praying about the bitter apples in the first place.”
+
+“Oh, Dan, don’t you believe there is some good in praying?” said Cecily
+reproachfully.
+
+“Yes, I believe there’s some good in some kinds of praying, but not
+in that kind,” said Dan sturdily. “I don’t believe God cares whether
+anybody can eat an apple without making a face or not.”
+
+“I don’t believe it’s right to talk of God as if you were well
+acquainted with Him,” said Felicity, who felt that it was a good chance
+to snub Dan.
+
+“There’s something wrong somewhere,” said Cecily perplexedly. “We ought
+to pray for what we want, of that I’m sure--and Peter wanted to be the
+only one who could pass the Ordeal. It seems as if he must be right--and
+yet it doesn’t seem so. I wish I could understand it.”
+
+“Peter’s prayer was wrong because it was a selfish prayer, I guess,”
+ said the Story Girl thoughtfully. “Felix’s prayer was all right, because
+it wouldn’t have hurt any one else; but it was selfish of Peter to want
+to be the only one. We mustn’t pray selfish prayers.”
+
+“Oh, I see through it now,” said Cecily joyfully.
+
+“Yes, but,” said Dan triumphantly, “if you believe God answers prayers
+about particular things, it was Peter’s prayer He answered. What do you
+make of that?”
+
+“Oh!” the Story Girl shook her head impatiently. “There’s no use trying
+to make such things out. We only get more mixed up all the time. Let’s
+leave it alone and I’ll tell you a story. Aunt Olivia had a letter today
+from a friend in Nova Scotia, who lives in Shubenacadie. When I said I
+thought it a funny name, she told me to go and look in her scrap book,
+and I would find a story about the origin of the name. And I did. Don’t
+you want to hear it?”
+
+Of course we did. We all sat down at the roots of the firs. Felix,
+having finally squared matters with his nose, turned around and listened
+also. He would not look at Cecily, but every one else had forgiven her.
+
+The Story Girl leaned that brown head of hers against the fir trunk
+behind her, and looked up at the apple-green sky through the dark boughs
+above us. She wore, I remember, a dress of warm crimson, and she had
+wound around her head a string of waxberries, that looked like a fillet
+of pearls. Her cheeks were still flushed with the excitement of the
+evening. In the dim light she was beautiful, with a wild, mystic
+loveliness, a compelling charm that would not be denied.
+
+“Many, many moons ago, an Indian tribe lived on the banks of a river
+in Nova Scotia. One of the young braves was named Accadee. He was the
+tallest and bravest and handsomest young man in the tribe--”
+
+“Why is it they’re always so handsome in stories?” asked Dan. “Why are
+there never no stories about ugly people?”
+
+“Perhaps ugly people never have stories happen to them,” suggested
+Felicity.
+
+“I think they’re just as interesting as the handsome people,” retorted
+Dan.
+
+“Well, maybe they are in real life,” said Cecily, “but in stories it’s
+just as easy to make them handsome as not. I like them best that way. I
+just love to read a story where the heroine is beautiful as a dream.”
+
+“Pretty people are always conceited,” said Felix, who was getting tired
+of holding his tongue.
+
+“The heroes in stories are always nice,” said Felicity, with apparent
+irrelevance. “They’re always so tall and slender. Wouldn’t it be awful
+funny if any one wrote a story about a fat hero--or about one with too
+big a mouth?”
+
+“It doesn’t matter what a man LOOKS like,” I said, feeling that Felix
+and Dan were catching it rather too hotly. “He must be a good sort of
+chap and DO heaps of things. That’s all that’s necessary.”
+
+“Do any of you happen to want to hear the rest of my story?” asked the
+Story Girl in an ominously polite voice that recalled us to a sense of
+our bad manners. We apologized and promised to behave better; she went
+on, appeased:
+
+“Accadee was all these things that I have mentioned, and he was the
+best hunter in the tribe besides. Never an arrow of his that did not go
+straight to the mark. Many and many a snow white moose he shot, and gave
+the beautiful skin to his sweetheart. Her name was Shuben and she was
+as lovely as the moon when it rises from the sea, and as pleasant as a
+summer twilight. Her eyes were dark and soft, her foot was as light as
+a breeze, and her voice sounded like a brook in the woods, or the wind
+that comes over the hills at night. She and Accadee were very much in
+love with each other, and often they hunted together, for Shuben was
+almost as skilful with her bow and arrow as Accadee himself. They had
+loved each other ever since they were small pappooses, and they had
+vowed to love each other as long as the river ran.
+
+“One twilight, when Accadee was out hunting in the woods, he shot a snow
+white moose; and he took off its skin and wrapped it around him. Then
+he went on through the woods in the starlight; and he felt so happy and
+light of heart that he sometimes frisked and capered about just as a
+real moose would do. And he was doing this when Shuben, who was also out
+hunting, saw him from afar and thought he was a real moose. She stole
+cautiously through the woods until she came to the brink of a little
+valley. Below her stood the snow white moose. She drew her arrow to her
+eye--alas, she knew the art only too well!--and took careful aim. The
+next moment Accadee fell dead with her arrow in his heart.”
+
+The Story Girl paused--a dramatic pause. It was quite dark in the fir
+wood. We could see her face and eyes but dimly through the gloom. A
+silvery moon was looking down on us over the granary. The stars twinkled
+through the softly waving boughs. Beyond the wood we caught a glimpse of
+a moonlit world lying in the sharp frost of the October evening. The sky
+above it was chill and ethereal and mystical.
+
+But all about us were shadows; and the weird little tale, told in a
+voice fraught with mystery and pathos, had peopled them for us with
+furtive folk in belt and wampum, and dark-tressed Indian maidens.
+
+“What did Shuben do when she found out she had killed Accadee?” asked
+Felicity.
+
+“She died of a broken heart before the spring, and she and Accadee were
+buried side by side on the bank of the river which has ever since borne
+their names--the river Shubenacadie,” said the Story Girl.
+
+The sharp wind blew around the granary and Cecily shivered. We heard
+Aunt Janet’s voice calling “Children, children.” Shaking off the spell
+of firs and moonlight and romantic tale, we scrambled to our feet and
+went homeward.
+
+“I kind of wish I’d been born an Injun,” said Dan. “It must have been a
+jolly life--nothing to do but hunt and fight.”
+
+“It wouldn’t be so nice if they caught you and tortured you at the
+stake,” said Felicity.
+
+“No,” said Dan reluctantly. “I suppose there’d be some drawback to
+everything, even being an Injun.”
+
+“Isn’t it cold?” said Cecily, shivering again. “It will soon be winter.
+I wish summer could last forever. Felicity likes the winter, and so does
+the Story Girl, but I don’t. It always seems so long till spring.”
+
+“Never mind, we’ve had a splendid summer,” I said, slipping my arm
+about her to comfort some childish sorrow that breathed in her plaintive
+voice.
+
+Truly, we had had a delectable summer; and, having had it, it was ours
+forever. “The gods themselves cannot recall their gifts.” They may rob
+us of our future and embitter our present, but our past they may not
+touch. With all its laughter and delight and glamour it is our eternal
+possession.
+
+Nevertheless, we all felt a little of the sadness of the waning year.
+There was a distinct weight on our spirits until Felicity took us into
+the pantry and stayed us with apple tarts and comforted us with cream.
+Then we brightened up. It was really a very decent world after all.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII. THE TALE OF THE RAINBOW BRIDGE
+
+Felix, so far as my remembrance goes, never attained to success in the
+Ordeal of Bitter Apples. He gave up trying after awhile; and he also
+gave up praying about it, saying in bitterness of spirit that there was
+no use in praying when other fellows prayed against you out of spite. He
+and Peter remained on bad terms for some time, however.
+
+We were all of us too tired those nights to do any special praying.
+Sometimes I fear our “regular” prayers were slurred over, or mumbled in
+anything but reverent haste. October was a busy month on the hill farms.
+The apples had to be picked, and this work fell mainly to us children.
+We stayed home from school to do it. It was pleasant work and there was
+a great deal of fun in it; but it was hard, too, and our arms and backs
+ached roundly at night. In the mornings it was very delightful; in the
+afternoons tolerable; but in the evenings we lagged, and the laughter
+and zest of fresher hours were lacking.
+
+Some of the apples had to be picked very carefully. But with others it
+did not matter; we boys would climb the trees and shake the apples down
+until the girls shrieked for mercy. The days were crisp and mellow, with
+warm sunshine and a tang of frost in the air, mingled with the woodsy
+odours of the withering grasses. The hens and turkeys prowled about,
+pecking at windfalls, and Pat made mad rushes at them amid the fallen
+leaves. The world beyond the orchard was in a royal magnificence of
+colouring, under the vivid blue autumn sky. The big willow by the gate
+was a splendid golden dome, and the maples that were scattered through
+the spruce grove waved blood-red banners over the sombre cone-bearers.
+The Story Girl generally had her head garlanded with their leaves. They
+became her vastly. Neither Felicity nor Cecily could have worn them.
+Those two girls were of a domestic type that assorted ill with the
+wildfire in Nature’s veins. But when the Story Girl wreathed her nut
+brown tresses with crimson leaves it seemed, as Peter said, that they
+grew on her--as if the gold and flame of her spirit had broken out in
+a coronal, as much a part of her as the pale halo seems a part of the
+Madonna it encircles.
+
+What tales she told us on those far-away autumn days, peopling the
+russet arcades with folk of an elder world. Many a princess rode by us
+on her palfrey, many a swaggering gallant ruffled it bravely in velvet
+and plume adown Uncle Stephen’s Walk, many a stately lady, silken clad,
+walked in that opulent orchard!
+
+When we had filled our baskets they had to be carried to the granary
+loft, and the contents stored in bins or spread on the floor to ripen
+further. We ate a good many, of course, feeling that the labourer was
+worthy of his hire. The apples from our own birthday trees were stored
+in separate barrels inscribed with our names. We might dispose of them
+as we willed. Felicity sold hers to Uncle Alec’s hired man--and was
+badly cheated to boot, for he levanted shortly afterwards, taking the
+apples with him, having paid her only half her rightful due. Felicity
+has not gotten over that to this day.
+
+Cecily, dear heart, sent most of hers to the hospital in town, and no
+doubt gathered in therefrom dividends of gratitude and satisfaction of
+soul, such as can never be purchased by any mere process of bargain and
+sale. The rest of us ate our apples, or carried them to school where
+we bartered them for such treasures as our schoolmates possessed and we
+coveted.
+
+There was a dusky, little, pear-shaped apple--from one of Uncle
+Stephen’s trees--which was our favourite; and next to it a delicious,
+juicy yellow apple from Aunt Louisa’s tree. We were also fond of the big
+sweet apples; we used to throw them up in the air and let them fall on
+the ground until they were bruised and battered to the bursting point.
+Then we sucked on the juice; sweeter was it than the nectar drunk by
+blissful gods on the Thessalian hill.
+
+Sometimes we worked until the cold yellow sunsets faded out over the
+darkening distances, and the hunter’s moon looked down on us through the
+sparkling air. The constellations of autumn scintillated above us. Peter
+and the Story Girl knew all about them, and imparted their knowledge to
+us generously. I recall Peter standing on the Pulpit Stone, one night
+ere moonrise, and pointing them out to us, occasionally having a
+difference of opinion with the Story Girl over the name of some
+particular star. Job’s Coffin and the Northern Cross were to the west of
+us; south of us flamed Fomalhaut. The Great Square of Pegasus was
+over our heads. Cassiopeia sat enthroned in her beautiful chair in the
+north-east; and north of us the Dippers swung untiringly around the
+Pole Star. Cecily and Felix were the only ones who could distinguish the
+double star in the handle of the Big Dipper, and greatly did they plume
+themselves thereon. The Story Girl told us the myths and legends woven
+around these immemorial clusters, her very voice taking on a clear,
+remote, starry sound as she talked of them. When she ceased, we came
+back to earth, feeling as if we had been millions of miles away in the
+blue ether, and that all our old familiar surroundings were momentarily
+forgotten and strange.
+
+That night when he pointed out the stars to us from the Pulpit Stone was
+the last time for several weeks that Peter shared our toil and pastime.
+The next day he complained of headache and sore throat, and seemed to
+prefer lying on Aunt Olivia’s kitchen sofa to doing any work. As it was
+not in Peter to be a malingerer he was left in peace, while we picked
+apples. Felix alone, must unjustly and spitefully, declared that Peter
+was simply shirking.
+
+“He’s just lazy, that’s what’s the matter with him,” he said.
+
+“Why don’t you talk sense, if you must talk?” said Felicity. “There’s no
+sense in calling Peter lazy. You might as well say I had black hair. Of
+course, Peter, being a Craig, has his faults, but he’s a smart boy. His
+father was lazy but his mother hasn’t a lazy bone in her body, and Peter
+takes after her.”
+
+“Uncle Roger says Peter’s father wasn’t exactly lazy,” said the Story
+Girl. “The trouble was, there were so many other things he liked better
+than work.”
+
+“I wonder if he’ll ever come back to his family,” said Cecily. “Just
+think how dreadful it would be if OUR father had left us like that!”
+
+“Our father is a King,” said Felicity loftily, “and Peter’s father was
+only a Craig. A member of our family COULDN’T behave like that.”
+
+“They say there must be a black sheep in every family,” said the Story
+Girl.
+
+“There isn’t any in ours,” said Cecily loyally.
+
+“Why do white sheep eat more than black?” asked Felix.
+
+“Is that a conundrum?” asked Cecily cautiously. “If it is I won’t try to
+guess the reason. I never can guess conundrums.”
+
+“It isn’t a conundrum,” said Felix. “It’s a fact. They do--and there’s a
+good reason for it.”
+
+We stopped picking apples, sat down on the grass, and tried to reason
+it out--with the exception of Dan, who declared that he knew there was
+a catch somewhere and he wasn’t going to be caught. The rest of us could
+not see where any catch could exist, since Felix solemnly vowed, ‘cross
+his heart, white sheep did eat more than black. We argued over it
+seriously, but finally had to give it up.
+
+“Well, what is the reason?” asked Felicity.
+
+“Because there’s more of them,” said Felix, grinning.
+
+I forget what we did to Felix.
+
+A shower came up in the evening and we had to stop picking. After the
+shower there was a magnificent double rainbow. We watched it from the
+granary window, and the Story Girl told us an old legend, culled from
+one of Aunt Olivia’s many scrapbooks.
+
+“Long, long ago, in the Golden Age, when the gods used to visit the
+earth so often that it was nothing uncommon to see them, Odin made a
+pilgrimage over the world. Odin was the great god of the northland,
+you know. And wherever he went among men he taught them love and
+brotherhood, and skilful arts; and great cities sprang up where he had
+trodden, and every land through which he passed was blessed because one
+of the gods had come down to men. But many men and women followed Odin
+himself, giving up all their worldly possessions and ambitions; and to
+these he promised the gift of eternal life. All these people were good
+and noble and unselfish and kind; but the best and noblest of them all
+was a youth named Ving; and this youth was beloved by Odin above all
+others, for his beauty and strength and goodness. Always he walked on
+Odin’s right hand, and always the first light of Odin’s smile fell on
+him. Tall and straight was he as a young pine, and his long hair was
+the colour of ripe wheat in the sun; and his blue eyes were like the
+northland heavens on a starry night.
+
+“In Odin’s band was a beautiful maiden named Alin. She was as fair and
+delicate as a young birch tree in spring among the dark old pines and
+firs, and Ving loved her with all his heart. His soul thrilled with
+rapture at the thought that he and she together should drink from the
+fountain of immortality, as Odin had promised, and be one thereafter in
+eternal youth.
+
+“At last they came to the very place where the rainbow touched the
+earth. And the rainbow was a great bridge, built of living colours, so
+dazzling and wonderful that beyond it the eye could see nothing, only
+far away a great, blinding, sparkling glory, where the fountain of life
+sprang up in a shower of diamond fire. But under the Rainbow Bridge
+rolled a terrible flood, deep and wide and violent, full of rocks and
+rapids and whirlpools.
+
+“There was a Warder of the bridge, a god, dark and stern and sorrowful.
+And to him Odin gave command that he should open the gate and allow
+his followers to cross the Rainbow Bridge, that they might drink of the
+fountain of life beyond. And the Warder set open the gate.
+
+“‘Pass on and drink of the fountain,’ he said. ‘To all who taste of it
+shall immortality be given. But only to that one who shall drink of it
+first shall be permitted to walk at Odin’s right hand forever.’
+
+“Then the company passed through in great haste, all fired with a desire
+to be the first to drink of the fountain and win so marvellous a boon.
+Last of all came Ving. He had lingered behind to pluck a thorn from the
+foot of a beggar child he had met on the highway, and he had not heard
+the Warder’s words. But when, eager, joyous, radiant, he set his foot
+on the rainbow, the stern, sorrowful Warder took him by the arm and drew
+him back.
+
+“‘Ving, strong, noble, and valiant,’ he said, ‘Rainbow Bridge is not for
+thee.’
+
+“Very dark grew Ving’s face. Hot rebellion rose in his heart and rushed
+over his pale lips.
+
+“‘Why dost thou keep back the draught of immortality from me?’ he
+demanded passionately.
+
+“The Warder pointed to the dark flood that rolled under the bridge.
+
+“‘The path of the rainbow is not for thee,’ he said, ‘but yonder way is
+open. Ford that flood. On the furthest bank is the fountain of life.’
+
+“‘Thou mockest me,’ muttered Ving sullenly. ‘No mortal could cross that
+flood. Oh, Master,’ he prayed, turning beseechingly to Odin, ‘thou didst
+promise to me eternal life as to the others. Wilt thou not keep that
+promise? Command the Warder to let me pass. He must obey thee.’
+
+“But Odin stood silent, with his face turned from his beloved, and
+Ving’s heart was filled with unspeakable bitterness and despair.
+
+“‘Thou mayest return to earth if thou fearest to essay the flood,’ said
+the Warder.
+
+“‘Nay,’ said Ving wildly, ‘earthly life without Alin is more dreadful
+than the death which awaits me in yon dark river.’
+
+“And he plunged fiercely in. He swam, and struggled, he buffetted the
+turmoil. The waves went over his head again and again, the whirlpools
+caught him and flung him on the cruel rocks. The wild, cold spray beat
+on his eyes and blinded him, so that he could see nothing, and the roar
+of the river deafened him so that he could hear nothing; but he felt
+keenly the wounds and bruises of the cruel rocks, and many a time he
+would have given up the struggle had not the thought of sweet Alin’s
+loving eyes brought him the strength and desire to struggle as long
+as it was possible. Long, long, long, to him seemed that bitter and
+perilous passage; but at last he won through to the furthest side.
+Breathless and reeling, his vesture torn, his great wounds bleeding, he
+found himself on the shore where the fountain of immortality sprang up.
+He staggered to its brink and drank of its clear stream. Then all pain
+and weariness fell away from him, and he rose up, a god, beautiful with
+immortality. And as he did there came rushing over the Rainbow Bridge a
+great company--the band of fellow travellers. But all were too late to
+win the double boon. Ving had won to it through the danger and suffering
+of the dark river.”
+
+The rainbow had faded out, and the darkness of the October dusk was
+falling.
+
+“I wonder,” said Dan meditatively, as we went away from that redolent
+spot, “what it would be like to live for ever in this world.”
+
+“I expect we’d get tired of it after awhile,” said the Story Girl.
+“But,” she added, “I think it would be a goodly while before I would.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX. THE SHADOW FEARED OF MAN
+
+We were all up early the next morning, dressing by candlelight. But
+early as it was we found the Story Girl in the kitchen when we went
+down, sitting on Rachel Ward’s blue chest and looking important.
+
+“What do you think?” she exclaimed. “Peter has the measles! He was
+dreadfully sick all night, and Uncle Roger had to go for the doctor. He
+was quite light-headed, and didn’t know any one. Of course he’s far too
+sick to be taken home, so his mother has come up to wait on him, and I’m
+to live over here until he is better.”
+
+This was mingled bitter and sweet. We were sorry to hear that Peter had
+the measles; but it would be jolly to have the Story Girl living with us
+all the time. What orgies of story telling we should have!
+
+“I suppose we’ll all have the measles now,” grumbled Felicity. “And
+October is such an inconvenient time for measles--there’s so much to
+do.”
+
+“I don’t believe any time is very convenient to have the measles,”
+ Cecily said.
+
+“Oh, perhaps we won’t have them,” said the Story Girl cheerfully. “Peter
+caught them at Markdale, the last time he was home, his mother says.”
+
+“I don’t want to catch the measles from Peter,” said Felicity decidedly.
+“Fancy catching them from a hired boy!”
+
+“Oh, Felicity, don’t call Peter a hired boy when he’s sick,” protested
+Cecily.
+
+During the next two days we were very busy--too busy to tell tales or
+listen to them. Only in the frosty dusk did we have time to wander afar
+in realms of gold with the Story Girl. She had recently been digging
+into a couple of old volumes of classic myths and northland folklore
+which she had found in Aunt Olivia’s attic; and for us, god and goddess,
+laughing nymph and mocking satyr, norn and valkyrie, elf and troll, and
+“green folk” generally, were real creatures once again, inhabiting the
+orchards and woods and meadows around us, until it seemed as if the
+Golden Age had returned to earth.
+
+Then, on the third day, the Story Girl came to us with a very white
+face. She had been over to Uncle Roger’s yard to hear the latest
+bulletin from the sick room. Hitherto they had been of a non-committal
+nature; but now it was only too evident that she had bad news.
+
+“Peter is very, very sick,” she said miserably. “He has caught cold
+someway--and the measles have struck in--and--and--” the Story Girl
+wrung her brown hands together--“the doctor is afraid he--he--won’t get
+better.”
+
+We all stood around, stricken, incredulous.
+
+“Do you mean,” said Felix, finding voice at length, “that Peter is going
+to die?”
+
+The Story Girl nodded miserably.
+
+“They’re afraid so.”
+
+Cecily sat down by her half filled basket and began to cry. Felicity
+said violently that she didn’t believe it.
+
+“I can’t pick another apple to-day and I ain’t going to try,” said Dan.
+
+None of us could. We went to the grown-ups and told them so; and the
+grown-ups, with unaccustomed understanding and sympathy, told us that we
+need not. Then we roamed about in our wretchedness and tried to comfort
+one another. We avoided the orchard; it was for us too full of happy
+memories to accord with our bitterness of soul. Instead, we resorted
+to the spruce wood, where the hush and the sombre shadows and the soft,
+melancholy sighing of the wind in the branches over us did not jar
+harshly on our new sorrow.
+
+We could not really believe that Peter was going to die--to DIE. Old
+people died. Grown-up people died. Even children of whom we had heard
+died. But that one of US--of our merry little band--should die was
+unbelievable. We could not believe it. And yet the possibility struck us
+in the face like a blow. We sat on the mossy stones under the dark old
+evergreens and gave ourselves up to wretchedness. We all, even Dan,
+cried, except the Story Girl.
+
+“I don’t see how you can be so unfeeling, Sara Stanley,” said Felicity
+reproachfully. “You’ve always been such friends with Peter--and made out
+you thought so much of him--and now you ain’t shedding a tear for him.”
+
+I looked at the Story Girl’s dry, piteous eyes, and suddenly remembered
+that I had never seen her cry. When she told us sad tales, in a voice
+laden with all the tears that had ever been shed, she had never shed one
+of her own.
+
+“I can’t cry,” she said drearily. “I wish I could. I’ve a dreadful
+feeling here--” she touched her slender throat--“and if I could cry I
+think it would make it better. But I can’t.”
+
+“Maybe Peter will get better after all,” said Dan, swallowing a sob.
+“I’ve heard of lots of people who went and got better after the doctor
+said they were going to die.”
+
+“While there’s life there’s hope, you know,” said Felix. “We shouldn’t
+cross bridges till we come to them.”
+
+“Those are only proverbs,” said the Story Girl bitterly. “Proverbs are
+all very fine when there’s nothing to worry you, but when you’re in real
+trouble they’re not a bit of help.”
+
+“Oh, I wish I’d never said Peter wasn’t fit to associate with,”
+ moaned Felicity. “If he ever gets better I’ll never say such a thing
+again--I’ll never THINK it. He’s just a lovely boy and twice as smart as
+lots that aren’t hired out.”
+
+“He was always so polite and good-natured and obliging,” sighed Cecily.
+
+“He was just a real gentleman,” said the Story Girl.
+
+“There ain’t many fellows as fair and square as Peter,” said Dan.
+
+“And such a worker,” said Felix.
+
+“Uncle Roger says he never had a boy he could depend on like Peter,” I
+said.
+
+“It’s too late to be saying all these nice things about him now,” said
+the Story Girl. “He won’t ever know how much we thought of him. It’s too
+late.”
+
+“If he gets better I’ll tell him,” said Cecily resolutely.
+
+“I wish I hadn’t boxed his ears that day he tried to kiss me,” went on
+Felicity, who was evidently raking her conscience for past offences in
+regard to Peter. “Of course I couldn’t be expected to let a hir--to let
+a boy kiss me. But I needn’t have been so cross about it. I might have
+been more dignified. And I told him I just hated him. That wasn’t true,
+but I s’pose he’ll die thinking it is. Oh, dear me, what makes people
+say things they’ve got to be so sorry for afterwards?”
+
+“I suppose if Peter d-d-dies he’ll go to heaven anyhow,” sobbed Cecily.
+“He’s been real good all this summer, but he isn’t a church member.”
+
+“He’s a Presbyterian, you know,” said Felicity reassuringly. Her tone
+expressed her conviction that that would carry Peter through if anything
+would. “We’re none of us church members. But of course Peter couldn’t be
+sent to the bad place. That would be ridiculous. What would they do with
+him there, when he’s so good and polite and honest and kind?”
+
+“Oh, I think he’ll be all right, too,” sighed Cecily, “but you know he
+never did go to church and Sunday School before this summer.”
+
+“Well, his father run away, and his mother was too busy earning a
+living to bring him up right,” argued Felicity. “Don’t you suppose that
+anybody, even God, would make allowances for that?”
+
+“Of course Peter will go to heaven,” said the Story Girl. “He’s not
+grown up enough to go anywhere else. Children always go to heaven. But
+I don’t want him to go there or anywhere else. I want him to stay right
+here. I know heaven must be a splendid place, but I’m sure Peter would
+rather be here, having fun with us.”
+
+“Sara Stanley,” rebuked Felicity. “I should think you wouldn’t say such
+things at such a solemn time. You’re such a queer girl.”
+
+“Wouldn’t you rather be here yourself than in heaven?” said the Story
+Girl bluntly. “Wouldn’t you now, Felicity King? Tell the truth, ‘cross
+your heart.”
+
+But Felicity took refuge from this inconvenient question in tears.
+
+“If we could only DO something to help Peter!” I said desperately. “It
+seems dreadful not to be able to do a single thing.”
+
+“There’s one thing we can do,” said Cecily gently. “We can pray for
+him.”
+
+“So we can,” I agreed.
+
+“I’m going to pray like sixty,” said Felix energetically.
+
+“We’ll have to be awful good, you know,” warned Cecily. “There’s no use
+praying if you’re not good.”
+
+“That will be easy,” sighed Felicity. “I don’t feel a bit like being
+bad. If anything happens to Peter I feel sure I’ll never be naughty
+again. I won’t have the heart.”
+
+We did, indeed, pray most sincerely for Peter’s recovery. We did not, as
+in the case of Paddy, “tack it on after more important things,” but put
+it in the very forefront of our petitions. Even skeptical Dan prayed,
+his skepticism falling away from him like a discarded garment in this
+valley of the shadow, which sifts out hearts and tries souls, until we
+all, grown-up or children, realize our weakness, and, finding that our
+own puny strength is as a reed shaken in the wind, creep back humbly to
+the God we have vainly dreamed we could do without.
+
+Peter was no better the next day. Aunt Olivia reported that his mother
+was broken-hearted. We did not again ask to be released from work.
+Instead, we went at it with feverish zeal. If we worked hard there was
+less time for grief and grievious thoughts. We picked apples and dragged
+them to the granary doggedly. In the afternoon Aunt Janet brought us a
+lunch of apple turnovers; but we could not eat them. Peter, as Felicity
+reminded us with a burst of tears, had been so fond of apple turnovers.
+
+And, oh, how good we were! How angelically and unnaturally good! Never
+was there such a band of kind, sweet-tempered, unselfish children in any
+orchard. Even Felicity and Dan, for once in their lives, got through the
+day without any exchange of left-handed compliments. Cecily confided to
+me that she never meant to put her hair up in curlers on Saturday
+nights again, because it was pretending. She was so anxious to repent of
+something, sweet girl, and this was all she could think of.
+
+During the afternoon Judy Pineau brought up a tear-blotted note from
+Sara Ray. Sara had not been allowed to visit the hill farm since Peter
+had developed measles. She was an unhappy little exile, and could
+only relieve her anguish of soul by daily letters to Cecily, which the
+faithful and obliging Judy Pineau brought up for her. These epistles
+were as gushingly underlined as if Sara had been a correspondent of
+early Victorian days.
+
+Cecily did not write back, because Mrs. Ray had decreed that no letters
+must be taken down from the hill farm lest they carry infection. Cecily
+had offered to bake every epistle thoroughly in the oven before sending
+it; but Mrs. Ray was inexorable, and Cecily had to content herself by
+sending long verbal messages with Judy Pineau.
+
+“My OWN DEAREST Cecily,” ran Sara’s letter. “I have just heard the
+sad news about POOR DEAR PETER. I can’t describe MY FEELINGS. They are
+DREADFUL. I have been crying ALL THE AFTERNOON. I wish I could FLY to
+you, but ma will not let me. She is afraid I will catch the measles, but
+I would rather have the measles A DOZEN TIMES OVER than be sepparated
+from you all like this. But I have felt, ever since the Judgment Sunday
+that I MUST OBEY MA BETTER than I used to do. If ANYTHING HAPPENS to
+Peter and you are let see him BEFORE IT HAPPENS give him MY LOVE and
+tell him HOW SORRY I AM, and that I hope we will ALL meet in A BETTER
+WORLD Everything in school is about the same. The master is awful cross
+by spells. Jimmy Frewen walked home with Nellie Bowan last night
+from prayer-meeting and HER ONLY FOURTEEN. Don’t you think it horrid
+BEGINNING SO YOUNG? YOU AND ME would NEVER do anything like that till we
+were GROWN UP, would we? Willy Fraser looks SO LONESOME in school these
+days. I must stop for ma says I waste FAR TOO MUCH TIME writing letters.
+Tell Judy ALL THE NEWS for me.
+
+“Your OWN TRUE FRIEND,
+
+“SARA RAY.
+
+“P.S. Oh I DO hope Peter will get better. Ma is going to get me a new
+brown dress for the winter.
+
+“S. R.”
+
+When evening came we went to our seats under the whispering, sighing
+fir trees. It was a beautiful night--clear, windless, frosty. Some one
+galloped down the road on horseback, lustily singing a comic song. How
+dared he? We felt that it was an insult to our wretchedness. If Peter
+were going to--going to--well, if anything happened to Peter, we felt so
+miserably sure that the music of life would be stilled for us for ever.
+How could any one in the world be happy when we were so unhappy?
+
+Presently Aunt Olivia came down the long twilight arcade. Her bright
+hair was uncovered and she looked slim and queen-like in her light
+dress. We thought Aunt Olivia very pretty then. Looking back from
+a mature standpoint I realize that she must have been an unusually
+beautiful woman; and she looked her prettiest as she stood under the
+swaying boughs in the last faint light of the autumn dusk and smiled
+down at our woebegone faces.
+
+“Dear, sorrowful little people, I bring you glad tidings of great
+joy,” she said. “The doctor has just been here, and he finds Peter much
+better, and thinks he will pull through after all.”
+
+We gazed up at her in silence for a few moments. When we had heard the
+news of Paddy’s recovery we had been noisy and jubilant; but we were
+very quiet now. We had been too near something dark and terrible and
+menacing; and though it was thus suddenly removed the chill and shadow
+of it were about us still. Presently the Story Girl, who had been
+standing up, leaning against a tall fir, slipped down to the ground in
+a huddled fashion and broke into a very passion of weeping. I had never
+heard any one cry so, with dreadful, rending sobs. I was used to hearing
+girls cry. It was as much Sara Ray’s normal state as any other, and even
+Felicity and Cecily availed themselves occasionally of the privilege of
+sex. But I had never heard any girl cry like this. It gave me the same
+unpleasant sensation which I had felt one time when I had seen my father
+cry.
+
+“Oh, don’t, Sara, don’t,” I said gently, patting her convulsed shoulder.
+
+“You ARE a queer girl,” said Felicity--more tolerantly than usual
+however--“you never cried a speck when you thought Peter was going to
+die--and now when he is going to get better you cry like that.”
+
+“Sara, child, come with me,” said Aunt Olivia, bending over her. The
+Story Girl got up and went away, with Aunt Olivia’s arms around her. The
+sound of her crying died away under the firs, and with it seemed to go
+the dread and grief that had been our portion for hours. In the reaction
+our spirits rose with a bound.
+
+“Oh, ain’t it great that Peter’s going to be all right?” said Dan,
+springing up.
+
+“I never was so glad of anything in my whole life,” declared Felicity in
+shameless rapture.
+
+“Can’t we send word somehow to Sara Ray to-night?” asked Cecily, the
+ever-thoughtful. “She’s feeling so bad--and she’ll have to feel that way
+till to-morrow if we can’t.”
+
+“Let’s all go down to the Ray gate and holler to Judy Pineau till she
+comes out,” suggested Felix.
+
+Accordingly, we went and “hollered,” with a right good will. We were
+much taken aback to find that Mrs. Ray came to the gate instead of Judy,
+and rather sourly demanded what we were yelling about. When she heard
+our news, however, she had the decency to say she was glad, and to
+promise she would convey the good tidings to Sara--“who is already in
+bed, where all children of her age should be,” added Mrs. Ray severely.
+
+WE had no intention of going to bed for a good two hours yet. Instead,
+after devoutly thanking goodness that our grown-ups, in spite of some
+imperfections, were not of the Mrs. Ray type, we betook ourselves to the
+granary, lighted a huge lantern which Dan had made out of a turnip, and
+proceeded to devour all the apples we might have eaten through the day
+but had not. We were a blithe little crew, sitting there in the light of
+our goblin lantern. We had in very truth been given beauty for ashes and
+the oil of joy for mourning. Life was as a red rose once more.
+
+“I’m going to make a big batch of patty-pans, first thing in the
+morning,” said Felicity jubilantly. “Isn’t it queer? Last night I felt
+just like praying, and tonight I feel just like cooking.”
+
+“We mustn’t forget to thank God for making Peter better,” said Cecily,
+as we finally went to the house.
+
+“Do you s’pose Peter wouldn’t have got better anyway?” said Dan.
+
+“Oh, Dan, what makes you ask such questions?” exclaimed Cecily in real
+distress.
+
+“I dunno,” said Dan. “They just kind of come into my head, like. But of
+course I mean to thank God when I say my prayers to-night. That’s only
+decent.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX. A COMPOUND LETTER
+
+Once Peter was out of danger he recovered rapidly, but he found his
+convalescence rather tedious; and Aunt Olivia suggested to us one day
+that we write a “compound letter” to amuse him, until he could come to
+the window and talk to us from a safe distance. The idea appealed to
+us; and, the day being Saturday and the apples all picked, we betook
+ourselves to the orchard to compose our epistles, Cecily having first
+sent word by a convenient caller to Sara Ray, that she, too, might have
+a letter ready. Later, I, having at that time a mania for preserving all
+documents relating to our life in Carlisle, copied those letters in the
+blank pages at the back of my dream book. Hence I can reproduce them
+verbatim, with the bouquet they have retained through all the long years
+since they were penned in that autumnal orchard on the hill, with
+its fading leaves and frosted grasses, and the “mild, delightsome
+melancholy” of the late October day enfolding.
+
+
+CECILY’S LETTER
+
+“DEAR PETER:--I am so very glad and thankful that you are going to
+get better. We were so afraid you would not last Tuesday, and we felt
+dreadful, even Felicity. We all prayed for you. I think the others have
+stopped now, but I keep it up every night still, for fear you might have
+a relaps. (I don’t know if that is spelled right. I haven’t the dixonary
+handy, and if I ask the others Felicity will laugh at me, though she
+cannot spell lots of words herself.) I am saving some of the Honourable
+Mr. Whalen’s pears for you. I’ve got them hid where nobody can find
+them. There’s only a dozen because Dan et all the rest, but I guess you
+will like them. We have got all the apples picked, and are all ready to
+take the measles now, if we have to, but I hope we won’t. If we have to,
+though, I’d rather catch them from you than from any one else, because
+we are acquainted with you. If I do take the measles and anything
+happens to me Felicity is to have my cherry vase. I’d rather give it to
+the Story Girl, but Dan says it ought to be kept in the family, even if
+Felicity is a crank. I haven’t anything else valuable, since I gave Sara
+Ray my forget-me-not jug, but if you would like anything I’ve got let me
+know and I’ll leave instructions for you to have it. The Story Girl has
+told us some splendid stories lately. I wish I was clever like her. Ma
+says it doesn’t matter if you’re not clever as long as you are good, but
+I am not even very good.
+
+“I think this is all my news, except that I want to tell you how much
+we all think of you, Peter. When we heard you were sick we all said nice
+things about you, but we were afraid it was too late, and I said if you
+got better I’d tell you. It is easier to write it than to tell it out
+to your face. We think you are smart and polite and obliging and a great
+worker and a gentleman.
+
+“Your true friend,
+
+“CECILY KING.
+
+“P.S. If you answer my letter don’t say anything about the pears,
+because I don’t want Dan to find out there’s any left. C. K.”
+
+
+FELICITY’S LETTER
+
+“DEAR PETER:--Aunt Olivia says for us all to write a compound letter to
+cheer you up. We are all awful glad you are getting better. It gave us
+an awful scare when we heard you were going to die. But you will soon be
+all right and able to get out again. Be careful you don’t catch cold. I
+am going to bake some nice things for you and send them over, now that
+the doctor says you can eat them. And I’ll send you my rosebud plate to
+eat off of. I’m only lending it, you know, not giving it. I let very few
+people use it because it is my greatest treasure. Mind you don’t break
+it. Aunt Olivia must always wash it, not your mother.
+
+“I do hope the rest of us won’t catch the measles. It must look horrid
+to have red spots all over your face. We all feel pretty well yet. The
+Story Girl says as many queer things as ever. Felix thinks he is getting
+thin, but he is fatter than ever, and no wonder, with all the apples he
+eats. He has give up trying to eat the bitter apples at last. Beverley
+has grown half an inch since July, by the mark on the hall door, and
+he is awful pleased about it. I told him I guessed the magic seed was
+taking effect at last, and he got mad. He never gets mad at anything
+the Story Girl says, and yet she is so sarkastic by times. Dan is pretty
+hard to get along with as usul, but I try to bear pashently with him.
+Cecily is well and says she isn’t going to curl her hair any more. She
+is so conscienshus. I am glad my hair curls of itself, ain’t you?
+
+“We haven’t seen Sara Ray since you got sick. She is awful lonesome,
+and Judy says she cries nearly all the time but that is nothing new. I’m
+awful sorry for Sara but I’m glad I’m not her. She is going to write you
+a letter too. You’ll let me see what she puts in it, won’t you? You’d
+better take some Mexican Tea now. It’s a great blood purifyer.
+
+“I am going to get a lovely dark blue dress for the winter. It is ever
+so much prettier than Sara Ray’s brown one. Sara Ray’s mother has no
+taste. The Story Girl’s father is sending her a new red dress, and a red
+velvet cap from Paris. She is so fond of red. I can’t bear it, it looks
+so common. Mother says I can get a velvet hood too. Cecily says she
+doesn’t believe it’s right to wear velvet when it’s so expensive and
+the heathen are crying for the gospel. She got that idea from a Sunday
+School paper but I am going to get my hood all the same.
+
+“Well, Peter, I have no more news so I will close for this time.
+
+“hoping you will soon be quite well, I remain
+
+“yours sincerely,
+
+“FELICITY KING.
+
+“P.S. The Story Girl peeked over my shoulder and says I ought to have
+signed it ‘yours affeckshunately,’ but I know better, because the
+_Family Guide_ has told lots of times how you should sign yourself when
+you are writing to a young man who is only a friend. F. K.”
+
+
+FELIX’ LETTER
+
+“DEAR PETER:--I am awful glad you are getting better. We all felt bad
+when we thought you wouldn’t, but I felt worse than the others because
+we hadn’t been on very good terms lately and I had said mean things
+about you. I’m sorry and, Peter, you can pray for anything you like and
+I won’t ever object again. I’m glad Uncle Alec interfered and stopped
+the fight. If I had licked you and you had died of the measles it would
+have been a dreadful thing.
+
+“We have all the apples in and haven’t much to do just now and we are
+having lots of fun but we wish you were here to join in. I’m a lot
+thinner than I was. I guess working so hard picking apples is a good
+thing to make you thin. The girls are all well. Felicity puts on as
+many airs as ever, but she makes great things to eat. I have had some
+splendid dreams since we gave up writing them down. That is always the
+way. We ain’t going to school till we’re sure we are not going to have
+the measles. This is all I can think of, so I will draw to a close.
+Remember, you can pray for anything you like. FELIX KING.”
+
+
+SARA RAY’S LETTER
+
+“DEAR PETER:--I never wrote to A BOY before, so PLEASE excuse ALL
+mistakes. I am SO glad you are getting better. We were SO afraid you
+were GOING TO DIE. I CRIED ALL NIGHT about it. But now that you are OUT
+OF DANGER will you tell me WHAT IT REALLY FEELS LIKE to think you are
+going to die? Does it FEEL QUEER? Were you VERY badly frightened?
+
+“Ma won’t let me go up the hill AT ALL now. I would DIE if it was not
+for Judy Pinno. (The French names are SO HARD TO SPELL.) JUDY IS VERY
+OBLIGING and I feel that she SIMPATHISES WITH ME. In my LONELY HOURS I
+read my dream book and Cecily’s old letters and they are SUCH A COMFORT
+to me. I have been reading one of the school library books too. I is
+PRETTY GOOD but I wish they had got more LOVE STORIES because they are
+so exciting. But the master would not let them.
+
+“If you had DIED, Peter, and YOUR FATHER had heard it wouldn’t he have
+FELT DREADFUL? We are having BEAUTIFUL WEATHER and the seenary is fine
+since the leaves turned. I think there is nothing so pretty as Nature
+after all.
+
+“I hope ALL DANGER from the measles will soon be over and we can ALL
+MEET AGAIN AT THE HOME ON THE HILL. Till then FAREWELL.
+
+“Your true friend,
+
+“SARA RAY.
+
+“P. S. Don’t let Felicity see this letter. S. R.”
+
+
+DAN’S LETTER
+
+“DEAR OLD PETE:--Awful glad you cheated the doctor. I thought you
+weren’t the kind to turn up your toes so easy. You should of heard the
+girls crying.
+
+“They’re all getting their winter finery now and the talk about it would
+make you sick. The Story Girl is getting hers from Paris and Felicity is
+awful jealous though she pretends she isn’t. I can see through her.
+
+“Kitt Mar was up here Thursday to see the girls. She’s had the measles
+so she isn’t scared. She’s a great girl to laugh. I like a girl that
+laughs, don’t you?
+
+“We had a call from Peg Bowen yesterday. You should of seen the Story
+Girl hustling Pat out of the way, for all she says she don’t believe he
+was bewitched. Peg had your rheumatism ring on and the Story Girl’s blue
+beads and Sara Ray’s lace soed across the front of her dress. She wanted
+some tobacco and some pickles. Ma gave her some pickles but said we
+didn’t have no tobacco and Peg went off mad but I guess she wouldn’t
+bewitch anything on account of the pickles.
+
+“I ain’t any hand to write letters so I guess I’ll stop. Hope you’ll be
+out soon. DAN.”
+
+
+THE STORY GIRL’S LETTER
+
+“DEAR PETER:--Oh, how glad I am that you are getting better! Those
+days when we thought you wouldn’t were the hardest of my whole life. It
+seemed too dreadful to be true that perhaps you would die. And then when
+we heard you were going to get better that seemed too good to be true.
+Oh, Peter, hurry up and get well, for we are having such good times and
+we miss you so much. I have coaxed Uncle Alec not to burn his potato
+stalks till you are well, because I remember how you always liked to see
+the potato stalks burn. Uncle Alec consented, though Aunt Janet said it
+was high time they were burned. Uncle Roger burned his last night and it
+was such fun.
+
+“Pat is splendid. He has never had a sick spell since that bad one.
+I would send him over to be company for you, but Aunt Janet says no,
+because he might carry the measles back. I don’t see how he could, but
+we must obey Aunt Janet. She is very good to us all, but I know she
+does not approve of me. She says I’m my father’s own child. I know that
+doesn’t mean anything complimentary because she looked so queer when she
+saw that I had heard her, but I don’t care. I’m glad I’m like father. I
+had a splendid letter from him this week, with the darlingest pictures
+in it. He is painting a new picture which is going to make him famous. I
+wonder what Aunt Janet will say then.
+
+“Do you know, Peter, yesterday I thought I saw the Family Ghost at last.
+I was coming through the gap in the hedge, and I saw somebody in blue
+standing under Uncle Alec’s tree. How my heart beat! My hair should have
+stood up on end with terror but it didn’t. I felt to see, and it was
+lying down quite flat. But it was only a visitor after all. I don’t know
+whether I was glad or disappointed. I don’t think it would be a pleasant
+experience to see the ghost. But after I had seen it think what a
+heroine I would be!
+
+“Oh, Peter, what do you think? I have got acquainted with the Awkward
+Man at last. I never thought it would be so easy. Yesterday Aunt Olivia
+wanted some ferns, so I went back to the maple woods to get them for
+her, and I found some lovely ones by the spring. And while I was sitting
+there, looking into the spring who should come along but the Awkward Man
+himself. He sat right down beside me and began to talk. I never was so
+surprised in my life. We had a very interesting talk, and I told him
+two of my best stories, and a great many of my secrets into the bargain.
+They may say what they like, but he was not one bit shy or awkward,
+and he has beautiful eyes. He did not tell me any of his secrets, but
+I believe he will some day. Of course I never said a word about his
+Alice-room. But I gave him a hint about his little brown book. I said
+I loved poetry and often felt like writing it, and then I said, ‘Do you
+ever feel like that, Mr. Dale?’ He said, yes, he sometimes felt that
+way, but he did not mention the brown book. I thought he might have. But
+after all I don’t like people who tell you everything the first time
+you meet them, like Sara Ray. When he went away he said, ‘I hope I shall
+have the pleasure of meeting you again,’ just as seriously and politely
+as if I was a grown-up young lady. I am sure he could never have said
+it if I had been really grown up. I told him it was likely he would and
+that he wasn’t to mind if I had a longer skirt on next time, because I’d
+be just the same person.
+
+“I told the children a beautiful new fairy story to-day. I made them go
+to the spruce wood to hear it. A spruce wood is the proper place to
+tell fairy stories in. Felicity says she can’t see that it makes any
+difference where you tell them, but oh, it does. I wish you had been
+there to hear it too, but when you are well I will tell it over again
+for you.
+
+“I am going to call the southernwood ‘appleringie’ after this. Beverley
+says that is what they call it in Scotland, and I think it sounds so
+much more poetical than southernwood. Felicity says the right name is
+‘Boy’s Love,’ but I think that sounds silly.
+
+“Oh, Peter, shadows are such pretty things. The orchard is full of
+them this very minute. Sometimes they are so still you would think them
+asleep. Then they go laughing and skipping. Outside, in the oat field,
+they are always chasing each other. They are the wild shadows. The
+shadows in the orchard are the tame shadows.
+
+“Everything seems to be rather tired growing except the spruces and
+chrysanthemums in Aunt Olivia’s garden. The sunshine is so thick and
+yellow and lazy, and the crickets sing all day long. The birds are
+nearly all gone and most of the maple leaves have fallen.
+
+“Just to make you laugh I’ll write you a little story I heard Uncle Alec
+telling last night. It was about Elder Frewen’s grandfather taking a
+pair of rope reins to lead a piano home. Everybody laughed except Aunt
+Janet. Old Mr. Frewen was HER grandfather too, and she wouldn’t laugh.
+One day when old Mr. Frewen was a young man of eighteen his father came
+home and said, ‘Sandy, I bought a piano at Simon Ward’s sale to-day.
+You’re to go to-morrow and bring it home.’ So next day Sandy started
+off on horseback with a pair of rope reins to lead the piano home. He
+thought it was some kind of livestock.
+
+“And then Uncle Roger told about old Mark Ward who got up to make a
+speech at a church missionary social when he was drunk. (Of course he
+didn’t get drunk at the social. He went there that way.) And this was
+his speech.
+
+“‘Ladies and gentlemen, Mr. Chairman, I can’t express my thoughts
+on this grand subject of missions. It’s in this poor human
+critter’--patting himself on the breast--‘but he can’t git it out.’
+
+“I’ll tell you these stories when you get well. I can tell them ever so
+much better than I can write them.
+
+“I know Felicity is wondering why I’m writing such a long letter, so
+perhaps I’d better stop. If your mother reads it to you there is a good
+deal of it she may not understand, but I think your Aunt Jane would.
+
+“I remain
+
+“your very affectionate friend,
+
+“SARA STANLEY.”
+
+
+I did not keep a copy of my own letter, and I have forgotten everything
+that was in it, except the first sentence, in which I told Peter I was
+awful glad he was getting better.
+
+Peter’s delight on receiving our letters knew no bounds. He insisted
+on answering them and his letter, painstakingly disinfected, was duly
+delivered to us. Aunt Olivia had written it at his dictation, which
+was a gain, as far as spelling and punctuation went. But Peter’s
+individuality seemed merged and lost in Aunt Olivia’s big, dashing
+script. Not until the Story Girl read the letter to us in the granary by
+jack-o-lantern light, in a mimicry of Peter’s very voice, did we savour
+the real bouquet of it.
+
+
+PETER’S LETTER
+
+“DEAR EVERYBODY, BUT ESPECIALLY FELICITY:--I was awful glad to get your
+letters. It makes you real important to be sick, but the time seems
+awful long when you’re getting better. Your letters were all great, but
+I liked Felicity’s best, and next to hers the Story Girl’s. Felicity,
+it will be awful good of you to send me things to eat and the rosebud
+plate. I’ll be awful careful of it. I hope you won’t catch the measles,
+for they are not nice, especially when they strike in, but you would
+look all right, even if you did have red spots on your face. I would
+like to try the Mexican Tea, because you want me to, but mother says
+no, she doesn’t believe in it, and Burtons Bitters are a great deal
+healthier. If I was you I would get the velvet hood all right. The
+heathen live in warm countries so they don’t want hoods.
+
+“I’m glad you are still praying for me, Cecily, for you can’t trust
+the measles. And I’m glad you’re keeping you know what for me. I don’t
+believe anything will happen to you if you do take the measles; but
+if anything does I’d like that little red book of yours, _The Safe
+Compass_, just to remember you by. It’s such a good book to read on
+Sundays. It is interesting and religious, too. So is the Bible. I hadn’t
+quite finished the Bible before I took the measles, but ma is reading
+the last chapters to me. There’s an awful lot in that book. I can’t
+understand the whole of it, since I’m only a hired boy, but some parts
+are real easy.
+
+“I’m awful glad you have such a good opinion of me. I don’t deserve it,
+but after this I’ll try to. I can’t tell you how I feel about all your
+kindness. I’m like the fellow the Story Girl wrote about who couldn’t
+get it out. I have the picture the Story Girl gave me for my sermon on
+the wall at the foot of my bed. I like to look at it, it looks so much
+like Aunt Jane.
+
+“Felix, I’ve given up praying that I’d be the only one to eat the bitter
+apples, and I’ll never pray for anything like that again. It was a
+horrid mean prayer. I didn’t know it then, but after the measles struck
+in I found out it was. Aunt Jane wouldn’t have liked it. After this I’m
+going to pray prayers I needn’t be ashamed of.
+
+“Sara Ray, I don’t know what it feels like to be going to die because I
+didn’t know I was going to die till I got better. Mother says I was luny
+most of the time after they struck in. It was just because they struck
+in I was luny. I ain’t luny naturally, Felicity. I will do what you
+asked in your postscript, Sara, although it will be hard.
+
+“I’m glad Peg Bowen didn’t catch you, Dan. Maybe she bewitched me that
+night we were at her place, and that is why the measles struck in. I’m
+awful glad Mr. King is going to leave the potato stalks until I get
+well, and I’m obliged to the Story Girl for coaxing him. I guess she
+will find out about Alice yet. There were some parts of her letter I
+couldn’t see through, but when the measles strike in, they leave you
+stupid for a spell. Anyhow, it was a fine letter, and they were all
+fine, and I’m awful glad I have so many nice friends, even if I am only
+a hired boy. Perhaps I’d never have found it out if the measles hadn’t
+struck in. So I’m glad they did but I hope they never will again.
+
+“Your obedient servant,
+
+“PETER CRAIG.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI. ON THE EDGE OF LIGHT AND DARK
+
+We celebrated the November day when Peter was permitted to rejoin us
+by a picnic in the orchard. Sara Ray was also allowed to come, under
+protest; and her joy over being among us once more was almost pathetic.
+She and Cecily cried in one another’s arms as if they had been parted
+for years.
+
+We had a beautiful day for our picnic. November dreamed that it was May.
+The air was soft and mellow, with pale, aerial mists in the valleys and
+over the leafless beeches on the western hill. The sere stubble fields
+brooded in glamour, and the sky was pearly blue. The leaves were
+still thick on the apple trees, though they were russet hued, and the
+after-growth of grass was richly green, unharmed as yet by the nipping
+frosts of previous nights. The wind made a sweet, drowsy murmur in the
+boughs, as of bees among apple blossoms.
+
+“It’s just like spring, isn’t it?” asked Felicity.
+
+The Story Girl shook her head.
+
+“No, not quite. It looks like spring, but it isn’t spring. It’s as
+if everything was resting--getting ready to sleep. In spring they’re
+getting ready to grow. Can’t you FEEL the difference?”
+
+“I think it’s just like spring,” insisted Felicity.
+
+In the sun-sweet place before the Pulpit Stone we boys had put up a
+board table. Aunt Janet allowed us to cover it with an old
+tablecloth, the worn places in which the girls artfully concealed with
+frost-whitened ferns. We had the kitchen dishes, and the table was gaily
+decorated with Cecily’s three scarlet geraniums and maple leaves in
+the cherry vase. As for the viands, they were fit for the gods on high
+Olympus. Felicity had spent the whole previous day and the forenoon of
+the picnic day in concocting them. Her crowning achievement was a rich
+little plum cake, on the white frosting of which the words “Welcome
+Back” were lettered in pink candies. This was put before Peter’s place,
+and almost overcame him.
+
+“To think that you’d go to so much trouble for me!” he said, with a
+glance of adoring gratitude at Felicity. Felicity got all the gratitude,
+although the Story Girl had originated the idea and seeded the raisins
+and beaten the eggs, while Cecily had trudged all the way to Mrs.
+Jameson’s little shop below the church to buy the pink candies. But that
+is the way of the world.
+
+“We ought to have grace,” said Felicity, as we sat down at the festal
+board. “Will any one say it?”
+
+She looked at me, but I blushed to the roots of my hair and shook my
+head sheepishly. An awkward pause ensued; it looked as if we would have
+to proceed without grace, when Felix suddenly shut his eyes, bent
+his head, and said a very good grace without any appearance of
+embarrassment. We looked at him when it was over with an increase of
+respect.
+
+“Where on earth did you learn that, Felix?” I asked.
+
+“It’s the grace Uncle Alec says at every meal,” answered Felix.
+
+We felt rather ashamed of ourselves. Was it possible that we had paid so
+little attention to Uncle Alec’s grace that we did not recognize it when
+we heard it on other lips?
+
+“Now,” said Felicity jubilantly, “let’s eat everything up.”
+
+In truth, it was a merry little feast. We had gone without our dinners,
+in order to “save our appetites,” and we did ample justice to Felicity’s
+good things. Paddy sat on the Pulpit Stone and watched us with great
+yellow eyes, knowing that tidbits would come his way later on.
+Many witty things were said--or at least we thought them witty--and
+uproarious was the laughter. Never had the old King orchard known a
+blither merrymaking or lighter hearts.
+
+The picnic over, we played games until the early falling dusk, and then
+we went with Uncle Alec to the back field to burn the potato stalks--the
+crowning delight of the day.
+
+The stalks were in heaps all over the field, and we were allowed the
+privilege of setting fire to them. ‘Twas glorious! In a few minutes the
+field was alight with blazing bonfires, over which rolled great, pungent
+clouds of smoke. From pile to pile we ran, shrieking with delight, to
+poke each up with a long stick and watch the gush of rose-red sparks
+stream off into the night. In what a whirl of smoke and firelight and
+wild, fantastic, hurtling shadows we were!
+
+When we grew tired of our sport we went to the windward side of the
+field and perched ourselves on the high pole fence that skirted a dark
+spruce wood, full of strange, furtive sounds. Over us was a great, dark
+sky, blossoming with silver stars, and all around lay dusky, mysterious
+reaches of meadow and wood in the soft, empurpled night. Away to
+the east a shimmering silveryness beneath a palace of aerial cloud
+foretokened moonrise. But directly before us the potato field, with its
+wreathing smoke and sullen flames, the gigantic shadow of Uncle Alec
+crossing and recrossing it, reminded us of Peter’s famous description of
+the bad place, and probably suggested the Story Girl’s remark.
+
+“I know a story,” she said, infusing just the right shade of weirdness
+into her voice, “about a man who saw the devil. Now, what’s the matter,
+Felicity?”
+
+“I can never get used to the way you mention the--the--that name,”
+ complained Felicity. “To hear you speak of the Old Scratch any one would
+think he was just a common person.”
+
+“Never mind. Tell us the story,” I said curiously.
+
+“It is about Mrs. John Martin’s uncle at Markdale,” said the Story Girl.
+“I heard Uncle Roger telling it the other night. He didn’t know I was
+sitting on the cellar hatch outside the window, or I don’t suppose he
+would have told it. Mrs. Martin’s uncle’s name was William Cowan, and he
+has been dead for twenty years; but sixty years ago he was a young man,
+and a very wild, wicked young man. He did everything bad he could think
+of, and never went to church, and he laughed at everything religious,
+even the devil. He didn’t believe there was a devil at all. One
+beautiful summer Sunday evening his mother pleaded with him to go to
+church with her, but he would not. He told her that he was going fishing
+instead, and when church time came he swaggered past the church, with
+his fishing rod over his shoulder, singing a godless song. Half way
+between the church and the harbour there was a thick spruce wood, and
+the path ran through it. When William Cowan was half way through it
+SOMETHING came out of the wood and walked beside him.”
+
+I have never heard anything more horribly suggestive than that innocent
+word “something,” as enunciated by the Story Girl. I felt Cecily’s hand,
+icy cold, clutching mine.
+
+“What--what--was IT like?” whispered Felix, curiosity getting the better
+of his terror.
+
+“IT was tall, and black, and hairy,” said the Story Girl, her eyes
+glowing with uncanny intensity in the red glare of the fires, “and IT
+lifted one great, hairy hand, with claws on the end of it, and clapped
+William Cowan, first on one shoulder and then on the other, and said,
+‘Good sport to you, brother.’ William Cowan gave a horrible scream and
+fell on his face right there in the wood. Some of the men around the
+church door heard the scream, and they rushed down to the wood. They saw
+nothing but William Cowan, lying like a dead man on the path. They took
+him up and carried him home; and when they undressed him to put him to
+bed, there, on each shoulder, was the mark of a big hand, BURNED INTO
+THE FLESH. It was weeks before the burns healed, and the scars never
+went away. Always, as long as William Cowan lived, he carried on his
+shoulders the prints of the devil’s hand.”
+
+I really do not know how we should ever have got home, had we been left
+to our own devices. We were cold with fright. How could we turn our
+backs on the eerie spruce wood, out of which SOMETHING might pop at
+any moment? How cross those long, shadowy fields between us and our
+rooftree? How venture through the darkly mysterious bracken hollow?
+
+Fortunately, Uncle Alec came along at this crisis and said he thought
+we’d better come home now, since the fires were nearly out. We slid down
+from the fence and started, taking care to keep close together and in
+front of Uncle Alec.
+
+“I don’t believe a word of that yarn,” said Dan, trying to speak with
+his usual incredulity.
+
+“I don’t see how you can help believing it,” said Cecily. “It isn’t as
+if it was something we’d read of, or that happened far away. It happened
+just down at Markdale, and I’ve seen that very spruce wood myself.”
+
+“Oh, I suppose William Cowan got a fright of some kind,” conceded Dan,
+“but I don’t believe he saw the devil.”
+
+“Old Mr. Morrison at Lower Markdale was one of the men who undressed
+him, and he remembers seeing the marks,” said the Story Girl
+triumphantly.
+
+“How did William Cowan behave afterwards?” I asked.
+
+“He was a changed man,” said the Story Girl solemnly. “Too much changed.
+He never was known to laugh again, or even smile. He became a very
+religious man, which was a good thing, but he was dreadfully gloomy and
+thought everything pleasant sinful. He wouldn’t even eat any more than
+was actually necessary to keep him alive. Uncle Roger says that if he
+had been a Roman Catholic he would have become a monk, but, as he was a
+Presbyterian, all he could do was to turn into a crank.”
+
+“Yes, but your Uncle Roger was never clapped on the shoulder and called
+brother by the devil,” said Peter. “If he had, he mightn’t have been so
+precious jolly afterwards himself.”
+
+“I do wish to goodness,” said Felicity in exasperation, “that you’d stop
+talking of the--the--of such subjects in the dark. I’m so scared now
+that I keep thinking father’s steps behind us are SOMETHING’S. Just
+think, my own father!”
+
+The Story Girl slipped her arm through Felicity’s.
+
+“Never mind,” she said soothingly. “I’ll tell you another story--such a
+beautiful story that you’ll forget all about the devil.”
+
+She told us one of Hans Andersen’s most exquisite tales; and the magic
+of her voice charmed away all our fear, so that when we reached the
+bracken hollow, a lake of shadow surrounded by the silver shore of
+moonlit fields, we all went through it without a thought of His Satanic
+Majesty at all. And beyond us, on the hill, the homelight was glowing
+from the farmhouse window like a beacon of old loves.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII. THE OPENING OF THE BLUE CHEST
+
+November wakened from her dream of May in a bad temper. The day after
+the picnic a cold autumn rain set in, and we got up to find our world
+a drenched, wind-writhen place, with sodden fields and dour skies. The
+rain was weeping on the roof as if it were shedding the tears of old
+sorrows; the willow by the gate tossed its gaunt branches wildly, as if
+it were some passionate, spectral thing, wringing its fleshless hands
+in agony; the orchard was haggard and uncomely; nothing seemed the same
+except the staunch, trusty, old spruces.
+
+It was Friday, but we were not to begin going to school again until
+Monday, so we spent the day in the granary, sorting apples and hearing
+tales. In the evening the rain ceased, the wind came around to the
+northwest, freezing suddenly, and a chilly yellow sunset beyond the dark
+hills seemed to herald a brighter morrow.
+
+Felicity and the Story Girl and I walked down to the post-office for the
+mail, along a road where fallen leaves went eddying fitfully up and down
+before us in weird, uncanny dances of their own. The evening was full of
+eerie sounds--the creaking of fir boughs, the whistle of the wind in the
+tree-tops, the vibrations of strips of dried bark on the rail fences.
+But we carried summer and sunshine in our hearts, and the bleak
+unloveliness of the outer world only intensified our inner radiance.
+
+Felicity wore her new velvet hood, with a coquettish little collar of
+white fur about her neck. Her golden curls framed her lovely face, and
+the wind stung the pink of her cheeks to crimson. On my left hand walked
+the Story Girl, her red cap on her jaunty brown head. She scattered her
+words along the path like the pearls and diamonds of the old fairy tale.
+I remember that I strutted along quite insufferably, for we met several
+of the Carlisle boys and I felt that I was an exceptionally lucky fellow
+to have such beauty on one side and such charm on the other.
+
+There was one of father’s thin letters for Felix, a fat, foreign letter
+for the Story Girl, addressed in her father’s minute handwriting, a
+drop letter for Cecily from some school friend, with “In Haste” written
+across the corner, and a letter for Aunt Janet, postmarked Montreal.
+
+“I can’t think who that is from,” said Felicity. “Nobody in Montreal
+ever writes to mother. Cecily’s letter is from Em Frewen. She always
+puts ‘In Haste’ on her letters, no matter what is in them.”
+
+When we reached home, Aunt Janet opened and read her Montreal letter.
+Then she laid it down and looked about her in astonishment.
+
+“Well, did ever any mortal!” she said.
+
+“What in the world is the matter?” said Uncle Alec.
+
+“This letter is from James Ward’s wife in Montreal,” said Aunt Janet
+solemnly. “Rachel Ward is dead. And she told James’ wife to write to me
+and tell me to open the old blue chest.”
+
+“Hurrah!” shouted Dan.
+
+“Donald King,” said his mother severely, “Rachel Ward was your relation
+and she is dead. What do you mean by such behaviour?”
+
+“I never was acquainted with her,” said Dan sulkily. “And I wasn’t
+hurrahing because she is dead. I hurrahed because that blue chest is to
+be opened at last.”
+
+“So poor Rachel is gone,” said Uncle Alec. “She must have been an old
+woman--seventy-five I suppose. I remember her as a fine, blooming young
+woman. Well, well, and so the old chest is to be opened at last. What is
+to be done with its contents?”
+
+“Rachel left instructions about them,” answered Aunt Janet, referring
+to the letter. “The wedding dress and veil and letters are to be burned.
+There are two jugs in it which are to be sent to James’ wife. The rest
+of the things are to be given around among the connection. Each members
+is to have one, ‘to remember her by.’”
+
+“Oh, can’t we open it right away this very night?” said Felicity
+eagerly.
+
+“No, indeed!” Aunt Janet folded up the letter decidedly. “That chest has
+been locked up for fifty years, and it’ll stand being locked up one more
+night. You children wouldn’t sleep a wink to-night if we opened it now.
+You’d go wild with excitement.”
+
+“I’m sure I won’t sleep anyhow,” said Felicity. “Well, at least you’ll
+open it the first thing in the morning, won’t you, ma?”
+
+“No, I’ll do nothing of the sort,” was Aunt Janet’s pitiless decree.
+“I want to get the work out of the way first--and Roger and Olivia will
+want to be here, too. We’ll say ten o’clock to-morrow forenoon.”
+
+“That’s sixteen whole hours yet,” sighed Felicity.
+
+“I’m going right over to tell the Story Girl,” said Cecily. “Won’t she
+be excited!”
+
+We were all excited. We spent the evening speculating on the possible
+contents of the chest, and Cecily dreamed miserably that night that the
+moths had eaten everything in it.
+
+The morning dawned on a beautiful world. A very slight fall of snow had
+come in the night--just enough to look like a filmy veil of lace flung
+over the dark evergreens, and the hard frozen ground. A new blossom time
+seemed to have revisited the orchard. The spruce wood behind the house
+appeared to be woven out of enchantment. There is nothing more beautiful
+than a thickly growing wood of firs lightly powdered with new-fallen
+snow. As the sun remained hidden by gray clouds, this fairy-beauty
+lasted all day.
+
+The Story Girl came over early in the morning, and Sara Ray, to whom
+faithful Cecily had sent word, was also on hand. Felicity did not
+approve of this.
+
+“Sara Ray isn’t any relation to our family,” she scolded to Cecily, “and
+she has no right to be present.”
+
+“She’s a particular friend of mine,” said Cecily with dignity. “We have
+her in everything, and it would hurt her feelings dreadfully to be left
+out of this. Peter is no relation either, but he is going to be here
+when we open it, so why shouldn’t Sara?”
+
+“Peter ain’t a member of the family YET, but maybe he will be some day.
+Hey, Felicity?” said Dan.
+
+“You’re awful smart, aren’t you, Dan King?” said Felicity, reddening.
+“Perhaps you’d like to send for Kitty Marr, too--though she DOES laugh
+at your big mouth.”
+
+“It seems as if ten o’clock would never come,” sighed the Story Girl.
+“The work is all done, and Aunt Olivia and Uncle Roger are here, and the
+chest might just as well be opened right away.”
+
+“Mother SAID ten o’clock and she’ll stick to it,” said Felicity crossly.
+“It’s only nine now.”
+
+“Let us put the clock on half an hour,” said the Story Girl. “The clock
+in the hall isn’t going, so no one will know the difference.”
+
+We all looked at each other.
+
+“I wouldn’t dare,” said Felicity irresolutely.
+
+“Oh, if that’s all, I’ll do it,” said the Story Girl.
+
+When ten o’clock struck Aunt Janet came into the kitchen, remarking
+innocently that it hadn’t seemed anytime since nine. We must have looked
+horribly guilty, but none of the grown-ups suspected anything. Uncle
+Alec brought in the axe, and pried off the cover of the old blue chest,
+while everybody stood around in silence.
+
+Then came the unpacking. It was certainly an interesting performance.
+Aunt Janet and Aunt Olivia took everything out and laid it on the
+kitchen table. We children were forbidden to touch anything, but
+fortunately we were not forbidden the use of our eyes and tongues.
+
+“There are the pink and gold vases Grandmother King gave her,” said
+Felicity, as Aunt Olivia unwrapped from their tissue paper swathings a
+pair of slender, old-fashioned, twisted vases of pink glass, over which
+little gold leaves were scattered. “Aren’t they handsome?”
+
+“And oh,” exclaimed Cecily in delight, “there’s the china fruit basket
+with the apple on the handle. Doesn’t it look real? I’ve thought so much
+about it. Oh, mother, please let me hold it for a minute. I’ll be as
+careful as careful.”
+
+“There comes the china set Grandfather King gave her,” said the Story
+Girl wistfully. “Oh, it makes me feel sad. Think of all the hopes
+that Rachel Ward must have put away in this chest with all her pretty
+things.”
+
+Following these, came a quaint little candlestick of blue china, and the
+two jugs which were to be sent to James’ wife.
+
+“They ARE handsome,” said Aunt Janet rather enviously. “They must be a
+hundred years old. Aunt Sara Ward gave them to Rachel, and she had them
+for at least fifty years. I should have thought one would have been
+enough for James’ wife. But of course we must do just as Rachel wished.
+I declare, here’s a dozen tin patty pans!”
+
+“Tin patty pans aren’t very romantic,” said the Story Girl
+discontentedly.
+
+“I notice that you are as fond as any one of what is baked in them,”
+ said Aunt Janet. “I’ve heard of those patty pans. An old servant
+Grandmother King had gave them to Rachel. Now we are coming to the
+linen. That was Uncle Edward Ward’s present. How yellow it has grown.”
+
+We children were not greatly interested in the sheets and tablecloths
+and pillow-cases which now came out of the capacious depths of the old
+blue chest. But Aunt Olivia was quite enraptured over them.
+
+“What sewing!” she said. “Look, Janet, you’d almost need a magnifying
+glass to see the stitches. And the dear, old-fashioned pillow-slips with
+buttons on them!”
+
+“Here are a dozen handkerchiefs,” said Aunt Janet. “Look at the
+initial in the corner of each. Rachel learned that stitch from a nun in
+Montreal. It looks as if it was woven into the material.”
+
+“Here are her quilts,” said Aunt Olivia. “Yes, there is the blue and
+white counterpane Grandmother Ward gave her--and the Rising Sun quilt
+her Aunt Nancy made for her--and the braided rug. The colours are not
+faded one bit. I want that rug, Janet.”
+
+Underneath the linen were Rachel Ward’s wedding clothes. The excitement
+of the girls waxed red hot over these. There was a Paisley shawl in the
+wrappings in which it had come from the store, and a wide scarf of
+some yellowed lace. There was the embroidered petticoat which had cost
+Felicity such painful blushes, and a dozen beautifully worked sets of
+the fine muslin “undersleeves” which had been the fashion in Rachel
+Ward’s youth.
+
+“This was to have been her appearing out dress,” said Aunt Olivia,
+lifting out a shot green silk. “It is all cut to pieces--but what a
+pretty soft shade it was! Look at the skirt, Janet. How many yards must
+it measure around?”
+
+“Hoopskirts were in then,” said Aunt Janet. “I don’t see her wedding hat
+here. I was always told that she packed it away, too.”
+
+“So was I. But she couldn’t have. It certainly isn’t here. I have heard
+that the white plume on it cost a small fortune. Here is her black silk
+mantle. It seems like sacrilege to meddle with these clothes.”
+
+“Don’t be foolish, Olivia. They must be unpacked at least. And they must
+all be burned since they have cut so badly. This purple cloth dress is
+quite good, however. It can be made over nicely, and it would become you
+very well, Olivia.”
+
+“No, thank you,” said Aunt Olivia, with a little shudder. “I should feel
+like a ghost. Make it over for yourself, Janet.”
+
+“Well, I will, if you don’t want it. I am not troubled with fancies.
+That seems to be all except this box. I suppose the wedding dress is in
+it.”
+
+“Oh,” breathed the girls, crowding about Aunt Olivia, as she lifted out
+the box and cut the cord around it. Inside was lying a dress of soft
+silk, that had once been white but was now yellowed with age, and,
+enfolding it like a mist, a long, white bridal veil, redolent with some
+strange, old-time perfume that had kept its sweetness through all the
+years.
+
+“Poor Rachel Ward,” said Aunt Olivia softly. “Here is her point lace
+handkerchief. She made it herself. It is like a spider’s web. Here are
+the letters Will Montague wrote her. And here,” she added, taking up
+a crimson velvet case with a tarnished gilt clasp, “are their
+photographs--his and hers.”
+
+We looked eagerly at the daguerreotypes in the old case.
+
+“Why, Rachel Ward wasn’t a bit pretty!” exclaimed the Story Girl in
+poignant disappointment.
+
+No, Rachel Ward was not pretty, that had to be admitted. The picture
+showed a fresh young face, with strongly marked, irregular features,
+large black eyes, and black curls hanging around the shoulders in
+old-time style.
+
+“Rachel wasn’t pretty,” said Uncle Alec, “but she had a lovely colour,
+and a beautiful smile. She looks far too sober in that picture.”
+
+“She has a beautiful neck and bust,” said Aunt Olivia critically.
+
+“Anyhow, Will Montague was really handsome,” said the Story Girl.
+
+“A handsome rogue,” growled Uncle Alec. “I never liked him. I was only
+a little chap of ten but I saw through him. Rachel Ward was far too good
+for him.”
+
+We would dearly have liked to get a peep into the letters, too. But Aunt
+Olivia would not allow that. They must be burned unread, she declared.
+She took the wedding dress and veil, the picture case, and the letters
+away with her. The rest of the things were put back into the chest,
+pending their ultimate distribution. Aunt Janet gave each of us boys a
+handkerchief. The Story Girl got the blue candlestick, and Felicity and
+Cecily each got a pink and gold vase. Even Sara Ray was made happy by
+the gift of a little china plate, with a loudly coloured picture of
+Moses and Aaron before Pharaoh in the middle of it. Moses wore a scarlet
+cloak, while Aaron disported himself in bright blue. Pharaoh was arrayed
+in yellow. The plate had a scalloped border with a wreath of green
+leaves around it.
+
+“I shall never use it to eat off,” said Sara rapturously. “I’ll put it
+up on the parlour mantelpiece.”
+
+“I don’t see much use in having a plate just for ornament,” said
+Felicity.
+
+“It’s nice to have something interesting to look at,” retorted Sara, who
+felt that the soul must have food as well as the body.
+
+“I’m going to get a candle for my candlestick, and use it every night to
+go to bed with,” said the Story Girl. “And I’ll never light it without
+thinking of poor Rachel Ward. But I DO wish she had been pretty.”
+
+“Well,” said Felicity, with a glance at the clock, “it’s all over, and
+it has been very interesting. But that clock has got to be put back to
+the right time some time through the day. I don’t want bedtime coming a
+whole half-hour before it ought to.”
+
+In the afternoon, when Aunt Janet was over at Uncle Roger’s, seeing him
+and Aunt Olivia off to town, the clock was righted. The Story Girl and
+Peter came over to stay all night with us, and we made taffy in the
+kitchen, which the grown-ups kindly gave over to us for that purpose.
+
+“Of course it was very interesting to see the old chest unpacked,” said
+the Story Girl as she stirred the contents of a saucepan vigorously.
+“But now that it is over I believe I am sorry that it is opened. It
+isn’t mysterious any longer. We know all about it now, and we can never
+imagine what things are in it any more.”
+
+“It’s better to know than to imagine,” said Felicity.
+
+“Oh, no, it isn’t,” said the Story Girl quickly. “When you know things
+you have to go by facts. But when you just dream about things there’s
+nothing to hold you down.”
+
+“You’re letting the taffy scorch, and THAT’S a fact you’d better go by,”
+ said Felicity sniffing. “Haven’t you got a nose?”
+
+When we went to bed, that wonderful white enchantress, the moon, was
+making an elf-land of the snow-misted world outside. From where I lay
+I could see the sharp tops of the spruces against the silvery sky. The
+frost was abroad, and the winds were still and the land lay in glamour.
+
+Across the hall, the Story Girl was telling Felicity and Cecily the old,
+old tale of Argive Helen and “evil-hearted Paris.”
+
+“But that’s a bad story,” said Felicity when the tale was ended. “She
+left her husband and run away with another man.”
+
+“I suppose it was bad four thousand years ago,” admitted the Story Girl.
+“But by this time the bad must have all gone out of it. It’s only the
+good that could last so long.”
+
+
+Our summer was over. It had been a beautiful one. We had known the
+sweetness of common joys, the delight of dawns, the dream and glamour
+of noontides, the long, purple peace of carefree nights. We had had the
+pleasure of bird song, of silver rain on greening fields, of storm among
+the trees, of blossoming meadows, and of the converse of whispering
+leaves. We had had brotherhood with wind and star, with books and tales,
+and hearth fires of autumn. Ours had been the little, loving tasks of
+every day, blithe companionship, shared thoughts, and adventuring.
+Rich were we in the memory of those opulent months that had gone from
+us--richer than we then knew or suspected. And before us was the dream
+of spring. It is always safe to dream of spring. For it is sure to come;
+and if it be not just as we have pictured it, it will be infinitely
+sweeter.
+
+THE END.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Story Girl, by Lucy Maud Montgomery
+
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+ .foot { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 90%; }
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+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+ .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;}
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+ div.middle { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; }
+ .figleft {float: left; margin-left: 0%; margin-right: 1%;}
+ .figright {float: right; margin-right: 0%; margin-left: 1%;}
+ .pagenum {display:inline; font-size: 70%; font-style:normal;
+ margin: 0; padding: 0; position: absolute; right: 1%;
+ text-align: right;}
+ pre { font-style: italic; font-size: 90%; margin-left: 10%;}
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+</style>
+ </head>
+ <body>
+
+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Story Girl, by Lucy Maud Montgomery
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Story Girl
+
+Author: Lucy Maud Montgomery
+
+
+Release Date: March, 2004 [EBook #5342]
+[This file was first posted on July 2, 2002]
+Last Updated: October 6, 2016
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE STORY GIRL ***
+
+
+
+
+Text file produced by Leslee Suttie, Mary Mark Ockerbloom, and Ben Crowder
+
+HTML file produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <div style="height: 8em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h1>
+ THE STORY GIRL
+ </h1>
+ <h2>
+ By L. M. Montgomery
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h5>
+ Author of &ldquo;Anne of Green Gables,&rdquo; &ldquo;Anne of Avonlea,"<br /> &ldquo;Kilmeny of the
+ Orchard,&rdquo; etc.
+ </h5>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h5>
+ With frontispiece and cover in colour by George Gibbs (not available in
+ this file)
+ </h5>
+ <hr />
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ This book has been put on-line as part of the BUILD-A-BOOK Initiative at
+ the Celebration of Women Writers through the combined work of Leslee
+ Suttie and Mary Mark Ockerbloom. <br /> <br />
+ http://digital.library.upenn.edu/women/ <br /> Reformatted by Ben Crowder
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <hr />
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;She was a form of life and light
+ That seen, became a part of sight,
+ And rose, where&rsquo;er I turn&rsquo;d mine eye,
+ The morning-star of Memory!&rdquo; &mdash;Byron.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h4>
+ TO MY COUSIN <br /> <br /> Frederica E. Campbell <br /> <br /> IN REMEMBRANCE
+ OF OLD DAYS, OLD DREAMS, AND OLD LAUGHTER
+ </h4>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <b>CONTENTS</b>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0001"> <b>THE STORY GIRL</b> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I. THE HOME OF OUR FATHERS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II. A QUEEN OF HEARTS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III. LEGENDS OF THE OLD ORCHARD </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV. THE WEDDING VEIL OF THE PROUD
+ PRINCESS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V. PETER GOES TO CHURCH </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI. THE MYSTERY OF GOLDEN MILESTONE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII. HOW BETTY SHERMAN WON A HUSBAND </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII. A TRAGEDY OF CHILDHOOD </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX. MAGIC SEED </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X. A DAUGHTER OF EVE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI. THE STORY GIRL DOES PENANCE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII. THE BLUE CHEST OF RACHEL WARD </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII. AN OLD PROVERB WITH A NEW MEANING
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV. FORBIDDEN FRUIT </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV. A DISOBEDIENT BROTHER </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER XVI. THE GHOSTLY BELL </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER XVII. THE PROOF OF THE PUDDING </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0018"> CHAPTER XVIII. HOW KISSING WAS DISCOVERED </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0019"> CHAPTER XIX. A DREAD PROPHECY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0020"> CHAPTER XX. THE JUDGMENT SUNDAY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0021"> CHAPTER XXI. DREAMERS OF DREAMS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0022"> CHAPTER XXII. THE DREAM BOOKS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0023"> CHAPTER XXIII. SUCH STUFF AS DREAMS ARE MADE ON
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0024"> CHAPTER XXIV. THE BEWITCHMENT OF PAT </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0025"> CHAPTER XXV. A CUP OF FAILURE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0026"> CHAPTER XXVI. PETER MAKES AN IMPRESSION </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0027"> CHAPTER XXVII. THE ORDEAL OF BITTER APPLES </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0028"> CHAPTER XXVIII. THE TALE OF THE RAINBOW BRIDGE
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0029"> CHAPTER XXIX. THE SHADOW FEARED OF MAN </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0030"> CHAPTER XXX. A COMPOUND LETTER </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0031"> CHAPTER XXXI. ON THE EDGE OF LIGHT AND DARK </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0032"> CHAPTER XXXII. THE OPENING OF THE BLUE CHEST </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h1>
+ THE STORY GIRL
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I. THE HOME OF OUR FATHERS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do like a road, because you can be always wondering what is at the end
+ of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl said that once upon a time. Felix and I, on the May morning
+ when we left Toronto for Prince Edward Island, had not then heard her say
+ it, and, indeed, were but barely aware of the existence of such a person
+ as the Story Girl. We did not know her at all under that name. We knew
+ only that a cousin, Sara Stanley, whose mother, our Aunt Felicity, was
+ dead, was living down on the Island with Uncle Roger and Aunt Olivia King,
+ on a farm adjoining the old King homestead in Carlisle. We supposed we
+ should get acquainted with her when we reached there, and we had an idea,
+ from Aunt Olivia&rsquo;s letters to father, that she would be quite a jolly
+ creature. Further than that we did not think about her. We were more
+ interested in Felicity and Cecily and Dan, who lived on the homestead and
+ would therefore be our roofmates for a season.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the spirit of the Story Girl&rsquo;s yet unuttered remark was thrilling in
+ our hearts that morning, as the train pulled out of Toronto. We were
+ faring forth on a long road; and, though we had some idea what would be at
+ the end of it, there was enough glamour of the unknown about it to lend a
+ wonderful charm to our speculations concerning it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were delighted at the thought of seeing father&rsquo;s old home, and living
+ among the haunts of his boyhood. He had talked so much to us about it, and
+ described its scenes so often and so minutely, that he had inspired us
+ with some of his own deep-seated affection for it&mdash;an affection that
+ had never waned in all his years of exile. We had a vague feeling that we,
+ somehow, belonged there, in that cradle of our family, though we had never
+ seen it. We had always looked forward eagerly to the promised day when
+ father would take us &ldquo;down home,&rdquo; to the old house with the spruces behind
+ it and the famous &ldquo;King orchard&rdquo; before it&mdash;when we might ramble in
+ &ldquo;Uncle Stephen&rsquo;s Walk,&rdquo; drink from the deep well with the Chinese roof
+ over it, stand on &ldquo;the Pulpit Stone,&rdquo; and eat apples from our &ldquo;birthday
+ trees.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The time had come sooner than we had dared to hope; but father could not
+ take us after all. His firm asked him to go to Rio de Janeiro that spring
+ to take charge of their new branch there. It was too good a chance to
+ lose, for father was a poor man and it meant promotion and increase of
+ salary; but it also meant the temporary breaking up of our home. Our
+ mother had died before either of us was old enough to remember her; father
+ could not take us to Rio de Janeiro. In the end he decided to send us to
+ Uncle Alec and Aunt Janet down on the homestead; and our housekeeper, who
+ belonged to the Island and was now returning to it, took charge of us on
+ the journey. I fear she had an anxious trip of it, poor woman! She was
+ constantly in a quite justifiable terror lest we should be lost or killed;
+ she must have felt great relief when she reached Charlottetown and handed
+ us over to the keeping of Uncle Alec. Indeed, she said as much.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The fat one isn&rsquo;t so bad. He isn&rsquo;t so quick to move and get out of your
+ sight while you&rsquo;re winking as the thin one. But the only safe way to
+ travel with those young ones would be to have &lsquo;em both tied to you with a
+ short rope&mdash;a MIGHTY short rope.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The fat one&rdquo; was Felix, who was very sensitive about his plumpness. He
+ was always taking exercises to make him thin, with the dismal result that
+ he became fatter all the time. He vowed that he didn&rsquo;t care; but he DID
+ care terribly, and he glowered at Mrs. MacLaren in a most undutiful
+ fashion. He had never liked her since the day she had told him he would
+ soon be as broad as he was long.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For my own part, I was rather sorry to see her going; and she cried over
+ us and wished us well; but we had forgotten all about her by the time we
+ reached the open country, driving along, one on either side of Uncle Alec,
+ whom we loved from the moment we saw him. He was a small man, with thin,
+ delicate features, close-clipped gray beard, and large, tired, blue eyes&mdash;father&rsquo;s
+ eyes over again. We knew that Uncle Alec was fond of children and was
+ heart-glad to welcome &ldquo;Alan&rsquo;s boys.&rdquo; We felt at home with him, and were
+ not afraid to ask him questions on any subject that came uppermost in our
+ minds. We became very good friends with him on that twenty-four mile
+ drive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Much to our disappointment it was dark when we reached Carlisle&mdash;too
+ dark to see anything very distinctly, as we drove up the lane of the old
+ King homestead on the hill. Behind us a young moon was hanging over
+ southwestern meadows of spring-time peace, but all about us were the soft,
+ moist shadows of a May night. We peered eagerly through the gloom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There&rsquo;s the big willow, Bev,&rdquo; whispered Felix excitedly, as we turned in
+ at the gate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There it was, in truth&mdash;the tree Grandfather King had planted when he
+ returned one evening from ploughing in the brook field and stuck the
+ willow switch he had used all day in the soft soil by the gate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It had taken root and grown; our father and our uncles and aunts had
+ played in its shadow; and now it was a massive thing, with a huge girth of
+ trunk and great spreading boughs, each of them as large as a tree in
+ itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m going to climb it to-morrow,&rdquo; I said joyfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Off to the right was a dim, branching place which we knew was the orchard;
+ and on our left, among sibilant spruces and firs, was the old, whitewashed
+ house&mdash;from which presently a light gleamed through an open door, and
+ Aunt Janet, a big, bustling, sonsy woman, with full-blown peony cheeks,
+ came to welcome us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon after we were at supper in the kitchen, with its low, dark, raftered
+ ceiling from which substantial hams and flitches of bacon were hanging.
+ Everything was just as father had described it. We felt that we had come
+ home, leaving exile behind us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Felicity, Cecily, and Dan were sitting opposite us, staring at us when
+ they thought we would be too busy eating to see them. We tried to stare at
+ them when THEY were eating; and as a result we were always catching each
+ other at it and feeling cheap and embarrassed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan was the oldest; he was my age&mdash;thirteen. He was a lean, freckled
+ fellow with rather long, lank, brown hair and the shapely King nose. We
+ recognized it at once. His mouth was his own, however, for it was like to
+ no mouth on either the King or the Ward side; and nobody would have been
+ anxious to claim it, for it was an undeniably ugly one&mdash;long and
+ narrow and twisted. But it could grin in friendly fashion, and both Felix
+ and I felt that we were going to like Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Felicity was twelve. She had been called after Aunt Felicity, who was the
+ twin sister of Uncle Felix. Aunt Felicity and Uncle Felix, as father had
+ often told us, had died on the same day, far apart, and were buried side
+ by side in the old Carlisle graveyard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We had known from Aunt Olivia&rsquo;s letters, that Felicity was the beauty of
+ the connection, and we had been curious to see her on that account. She
+ fully justified our expectations. She was plump and dimpled, with big,
+ dark-blue, heavy-lidded eyes, soft, feathery, golden curls, and a pink and
+ white skin&mdash;&ldquo;the King complexion.&rdquo; The Kings were noted for their
+ noses and complexion. Felicity had also delightful hands and wrists. At
+ every turn of them a dimple showed itself. It was a pleasure to wonder
+ what her elbows must be like.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was very nicely dressed in a pink print and a frilled muslin apron;
+ and we understood, from something Dan said, that she had &ldquo;dressed up&rdquo; in
+ honour of our coming. This made us feel quite important. So far as we
+ knew, no feminine creatures had ever gone to the pains of dressing up on
+ our account before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cecily, who was eleven, was pretty also&mdash;or would have been had
+ Felicity not been there. Felicity rather took the colour from other girls.
+ Cecily looked pale and thin beside her; but she had dainty little
+ features, smooth brown hair of satin sheen, and mild brown eyes, with just
+ a hint of demureness in them now and again. We remembered that Aunt Olivia
+ had written to father that Cecily was a true Ward&mdash;she had no sense
+ of humour. We did not know what this meant, but we thought it was not
+ exactly complimentary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still, we were both inclined to think we would like Cecily better than
+ Felicity. To be sure, Felicity was a stunning beauty. But, with the swift
+ and unerring intuition of childhood, which feels in a moment what it
+ sometimes takes maturity much time to perceive, we realized that she was
+ rather too well aware of her good looks. In brief, we saw that Felicity
+ was vain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It&rsquo;s a wonder the Story Girl isn&rsquo;t over to see you,&rdquo; said Uncle Alec.
+ &ldquo;She&rsquo;s been quite wild with excitement about your coming.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She hasn&rsquo;t been very well all day,&rdquo; explained Cecily, &ldquo;and Aunt Olivia
+ wouldn&rsquo;t let her come out in the night air. She made her go to bed
+ instead. The Story Girl was awfully disappointed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who is the Story Girl?&rdquo; asked Felix.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, Sara&mdash;Sara Stanley. We call her the Story Girl partly because
+ she&rsquo;s such a hand to tell stories&mdash;oh, I can&rsquo;t begin to describe it&mdash;and
+ partly because Sara Ray, who lives at the foot of the hill, often comes up
+ to play with us, and it is awkward to have two girls of the same name in
+ the same crowd. Besides, Sara Stanley doesn&rsquo;t like her name and she&rsquo;d
+ rather be called the Story Girl.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan speaking for the first time, rather sheepishly volunteered the
+ information that Peter had also been intending to come over but had to go
+ home to take some flour to his mother instead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Peter?&rdquo; I questioned. I had never heard of any Peter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is your Uncle Roger&rsquo;s handy boy,&rdquo; said Uncle Alec. &ldquo;His name is Peter
+ Craig, and he is a real smart little chap. But he&rsquo;s got his share of
+ mischief, that same lad.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He wants to be Felicity&rsquo;s beau,&rdquo; said Dan slyly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t talk silly nonsense, Dan,&rdquo; said Aunt Janet severely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Felicity tossed her golden head and shot an unsisterly glance at Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t be very likely to have a hired boy for a beau,&rdquo; she observed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We saw that her anger was real, not affected. Evidently Peter was not an
+ admirer of whom Felicity was proud.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were very hungry boys; and when we had eaten all we could&mdash;and oh,
+ what suppers Aunt Janet always spread!&mdash;we discovered that we were
+ very tired also&mdash;too tired to go out and explore our ancestral
+ domains, as we would have liked to do, despite the dark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were quite willing to go to bed; and presently we found ourselves
+ tucked away upstairs in the very room, looking out eastward into the
+ spruce grove, which father had once occupied. Dan shared it with us,
+ sleeping in a bed of his own in the opposite corner. The sheets and
+ pillow-slips were fragrant with lavender, and one of Grandmother King&rsquo;s
+ noted patchwork quilts was over us. The window was open and we heard the
+ frogs singing down in the swamp of the brook meadow. We had heard frogs
+ sing in Ontario, of course; but certainly Prince Edward Island frogs were
+ more tuneful and mellow. Or was it simply the glamour of old family
+ traditions and tales which was over us, lending its magic to all sights
+ and sounds around us? This was home&mdash;father&rsquo;s home&mdash;OUR home! We
+ had never lived long enough in any one house to develop a feeling of
+ affection for it; but here, under the roof-tree built by Great-Grandfather
+ King ninety years ago, that feeling swept into our boyish hearts and souls
+ like a flood of living sweetness and tenderness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Just think, those are the very frogs father listened to when he was a
+ little boy,&rdquo; whispered Felix.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They can hardly be the SAME frogs,&rdquo; I objected doubtfully, not feeling
+ very certain about the possible longevity of frogs. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s twenty years
+ since father left home.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, they&rsquo;re the descendants of the frogs he heard,&rdquo; said Felix, &ldquo;and
+ they&rsquo;re singing in the same swamp. That&rsquo;s near enough.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our door was open and in their room across the narrow hall the girls were
+ preparing for bed, and talking rather more loudly than they might have
+ done had they realized how far their sweet, shrill voices carried.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What do you think of the boys?&rdquo; asked Cecily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Beverley is handsome, but Felix is too fat,&rdquo; answered Felicity promptly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Felix twitched the quilt rather viciously and grunted. But I began to
+ think I would like Felicity. It might not be altogether her fault that she
+ was vain. How could she help it when she looked in the mirror?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think they&rsquo;re both nice and nice looking,&rdquo; said Cecily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dear little soul!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wonder what the Story Girl will think of them,&rdquo; said Felicity, as if,
+ after all, that was the main thing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Somehow, we, too, felt that it was. We felt that if the Story Girl did not
+ approve of us it made little difference who else did or did not.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wonder if the Story Girl is pretty,&rdquo; said Felix aloud.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, she isn&rsquo;t,&rdquo; said Dan instantly, from across the room. &ldquo;But you&rsquo;ll
+ think she is while she&rsquo;s talking to you. Everybody does. It&rsquo;s only when
+ you go away from her that you find out she isn&rsquo;t a bit pretty after all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girls&rsquo; door shut with a bang. Silence fell over the house. We drifted
+ into the land of sleep, wondering if the Story Girl would like us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II. A QUEEN OF HEARTS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ I wakened shortly after sunrise. The pale May sunshine was showering
+ through the spruces, and a chill, inspiring wind was tossing the boughs
+ about.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Felix, wake up,&rdquo; I whispered, shaking him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What&rsquo;s the matter?&rdquo; he murmured reluctantly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It&rsquo;s morning. Let&rsquo;s get up and go down and out. I can&rsquo;t wait another
+ minute to see the places father has told us of.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We slipped out of bed and dressed, without arousing Dan, who was still
+ slumbering soundly, his mouth wide open, and his bed-clothes kicked off on
+ the floor. I had hard work to keep Felix from trying to see if he could
+ &ldquo;shy&rdquo; a marble into that tempting open mouth. I told him it would waken
+ Dan, who would then likely insist on getting up and accompanying us, and
+ it would be so much nicer to go by ourselves for the first time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Everything was very still as we crept downstairs. Out in the kitchen we
+ heard some one, presumably Uncle Alec, lighting the fire; but the heart of
+ house had not yet begun to beat for the day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We paused a moment in the hall to look at the big &ldquo;Grandfather&rdquo; clock. It
+ was not going, but it seemed like an old, familiar acquaintance to us,
+ with the gilt balls on its three peaks; the little dial and pointer which
+ would indicate the changes of the moon, and the very dent in its wooden
+ door which father had made when he was a boy, by kicking it in a fit of
+ naughtiness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then we opened the front door and stepped out, rapture swelling in our
+ bosoms. There was a rare breeze from the south blowing to meet us; the
+ shadows of the spruces were long and clear-cut; the exquisite skies of
+ early morning, blue and wind-winnowed, were over us; away to the west,
+ beyond the brook field, was a long valley and a hill purple with firs and
+ laced with still leafless beeches and maples.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Behind the house was a grove of fir and spruce, a dim, cool place where
+ the winds were fond of purring and where there was always a resinous,
+ woodsy odour. On the further side of it was a thick plantation of slender
+ silver birches and whispering poplars; and beyond it was Uncle Roger&rsquo;s
+ house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Right before us, girt about with its trim spruce hedge, was the famous
+ King orchard, the history of which was woven into our earliest
+ recollections. We knew all about it, from father&rsquo;s descriptions, and in
+ fancy we had roamed in it many a time and oft.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was now nearly sixty years since it had had its beginning, when
+ Grandfather King brought his bride home. Before the wedding he had fenced
+ off the big south meadow that sloped to the sun; it was the finest, most
+ fertile field on the farm, and the neighbours told young Abraham King that
+ he would raise many a fine crop of wheat in that meadow. Abraham King
+ smiled and, being a man of few words, said nothing; but in his mind he had
+ a vision of the years to be, and in that vision he saw, not rippling acres
+ of harvest gold, but great, leafy avenues of wide-spreading trees laden
+ with fruit to gladden the eyes of children and grandchildren yet unborn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a vision to develop slowly into fulfilment. Grandfather King was in
+ no hurry. He did not set his whole orchard out at once, for he wished it
+ to grow with his life and history, and be bound up with all of good and
+ joy that should come to his household. So the morning after he had brought
+ his young wife home they went together to the south meadow and planted
+ their bridal trees. These trees were no longer living; but they had been
+ when father was a boy, and every spring bedecked themselves in blossom as
+ delicately tinted as Elizabeth King&rsquo;s face when she walked through the old
+ south meadow in the morn of her life and love.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When a son was born to Abraham and Elizabeth a tree was planted in the
+ orchard for him. They had fourteen children in all, and each child had its
+ &ldquo;birth tree.&rdquo; Every family festival was commemorated in like fashion, and
+ every beloved visitor who spent a night under their roof was expected to
+ plant a tree in the orchard. So it came to pass that every tree in it was
+ a fair green monument to some love or delight of the vanished years. And
+ each grandchild had its tree, there, also, set out by grandfather when the
+ tidings of its birth reached him; not always an apple tree&mdash;perhaps
+ it was a plum, or cherry or pear. But it was always known by the name of
+ the person for whom, or by whom, it was planted; and Felix and I knew as
+ much about &ldquo;Aunt Felicity&rsquo;s pears,&rdquo; and &ldquo;Aunt Julia&rsquo;s cherries,&rdquo; and
+ &ldquo;Uncle Alec&rsquo;s apples,&rdquo; and the &ldquo;Rev. Mr. Scott&rsquo;s plums,&rdquo; as if we had been
+ born and bred among them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now we had come to the orchard; it was before us; we had only to open
+ that little whitewashed gate in the hedge and we might find ourselves in
+ its storied domain. But before we reached the gate we glanced to our left,
+ along the grassy, spruce-bordered lane which led over to Uncle Roger&rsquo;s;
+ and at the entrance of that lane we saw a girl standing, with a gray cat
+ at her feet. She lifted her hand and beckoned blithely to us; and, the
+ orchard forgotten, we followed her summons. For we knew that this must be
+ the Story Girl; and in that gay and graceful gesture was an allurement not
+ to be gainsaid or denied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We looked at her as we drew near with such interest that we forgot to feel
+ shy. No, she was not pretty. She was tall for her fourteen years, slim and
+ straight; around her long, white face&mdash;rather too long and too white&mdash;fell
+ sleek, dark-brown curls, tied above either ear with rosettes of scarlet
+ ribbon. Her large, curving mouth was as red as a poppy, and she had
+ brilliant, almond-shaped, hazel eyes; but we did not think her pretty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then she spoke; she said,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good morning.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Never had we heard a voice like hers. Never, in all my life since, have I
+ heard such a voice. I cannot describe it. I might say it was clear; I
+ might say it was sweet; I might say it was vibrant and far-reaching and
+ bell-like; all this would be true, but it would give you no real idea of
+ the peculiar quality which made the Story Girl&rsquo;s voice what it was.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If voices had colour, hers would have been like a rainbow. It made words
+ LIVE. Whatever she said became a breathing entity, not a mere verbal
+ statement or utterance. Felix and I were too young to understand or
+ analyze the impression it made upon us; but we instantly felt at her
+ greeting that it WAS a good morning&mdash;a surpassingly good morning&mdash;the
+ very best morning that had ever happened in this most excellent of worlds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are Felix and Beverley,&rdquo; she went on, shaking our hands with an air
+ of frank comradeship, which was very different from the shy, feminine
+ advances of Felicity and Cecily. From that moment we were as good friends
+ as if we had known each other for a hundred years. &ldquo;I am glad to see you.
+ I was so disappointed I couldn&rsquo;t go over last night. I got up early this
+ morning, though, for I felt sure you would be up early, too, and that
+ you&rsquo;d like to have me tell you about things. I can tell things so much
+ better than Felicity or Cecily. Do you think Felicity is VERY pretty?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She&rsquo;s the prettiest girl I ever saw,&rdquo; I said enthusiastically,
+ remembering that Felicity had called me handsome.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The boys all think so,&rdquo; said the Story Girl, not, I fancied, quite well
+ pleased. &ldquo;And I suppose she is. She is a splendid cook, too, though she is
+ only twelve. I can&rsquo;t cook. I am trying to learn, but I don&rsquo;t make much
+ progress. Aunt Olivia says I haven&rsquo;t enough natural gumption ever to be a
+ cook; but I&rsquo;d love to be able to make as good cakes and pies as Felicity
+ can make. But then, Felicity is stupid. It&rsquo;s not ill-natured of me to say
+ that. It&rsquo;s just the truth, and you&rsquo;d soon find it out for yourselves. I
+ like Felicity very well, but she IS stupid. Cecily is ever so much
+ cleverer. Cecily&rsquo;s a dear. So is Uncle Alec; and Aunt Janet is pretty
+ nice, too.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is Aunt Olivia like?&rdquo; asked Felix.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aunt Olivia is very pretty. She is just like a pansy&mdash;all velvety
+ and purply and goldy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Felix and I SAW, somewhere inside of our heads, a velvet and purple and
+ gold pansy-woman, just as the Story Girl spoke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But is she NICE?&rdquo; I asked. That was the main question about grown-ups.
+ Their looks mattered little to us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She is lovely. But she is twenty-nine, you know. That&rsquo;s pretty old. She
+ doesn&rsquo;t bother me much. Aunt Janet says that I&rsquo;d have no bringing up at
+ all, if it wasn&rsquo;t for her. Aunt Olivia says children should just be let
+ COME up&mdash;that everything else is settled for them long before they
+ are born. I don&rsquo;t understand that. Do you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No, we did not. But it was our experience that grown-ups had a habit of
+ saying things hard to understand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is Uncle Roger like?&rdquo; was our next question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I like Uncle Roger,&rdquo; said the Story Girl meditatively. &ldquo;He is big
+ and jolly. But he teases people too much. You ask him a serious question
+ and you get a ridiculous answer. He hardly ever scolds or gets cross,
+ though, and THAT is something. He is an old bachelor.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Doesn&rsquo;t he ever mean to get married?&rdquo; asked Felix.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know. Aunt Olivia wishes he would, because she&rsquo;s tired keeping
+ house for him, and she wants to go to Aunt Julia in California. But she
+ says he&rsquo;ll never get married, because he is looking for perfection, and
+ when he finds her she won&rsquo;t have HIM.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this time we were all sitting down on the gnarled roots of the spruces,
+ and the big gray cat came over and made friends with us. He was a lordly
+ animal, with a silver-gray coat beautifully marked with darker stripes.
+ With such colouring most cats would have had white or silver feet; but he
+ had four black paws and a black nose. Such points gave him an air of
+ distinction, and marked him out as quite different from the common or
+ garden variety of cats. He seemed to be a cat with a tolerably good
+ opinion of himself, and his response to our advances was slightly tinged
+ with condescension.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This isn&rsquo;t Topsy, is it?&rdquo; I asked. I knew at once that the question was a
+ foolish one. Topsy, the cat of which father had talked, had flourished
+ thirty years before, and all her nine lives could scarcely have lasted so
+ long.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, but it is Topsy&rsquo;s great-great-great-great-grandson,&rdquo; said the Story
+ Girl gravely. &ldquo;His name is Paddy and he is my own particular cat. We have
+ barn cats, but Paddy never associates with them. I am very good friends
+ with all cats. They are so sleek and comfortable and dignified. And it is
+ so easy to make them happy. Oh, I&rsquo;m so glad you boys have come to live
+ here. Nothing ever happens here, except days, so we have to make our own
+ good times. We were short of boys before&mdash;only Dan and Peter to four
+ girls.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;FOUR girls? Oh, yes, Sara Ray. Felicity mentioned her. What is she like?
+ Where does she live?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Just down the hill. You can&rsquo;t see the house for the spruce bush. Sara is
+ a nice girl. She&rsquo;s only eleven, and her mother is dreadfully strict. She
+ never allows Sara to read a single story. JUST you fancy! Sara&rsquo;s
+ conscience is always troubling her for doing things she&rsquo;s sure her mother
+ won&rsquo;t approve, but it never prevents her from doing them. It only spoils
+ her fun. Uncle Roger says that a mother who won&rsquo;t let you do anything, and
+ a conscience that won&rsquo;t let you enjoy anything is an awful combination,
+ and he doesn&rsquo;t wonder Sara is pale and thin and nervous. But, between you
+ and me, I believe the real reason is that her mother doesn&rsquo;t give her half
+ enough to eat. Not that she&rsquo;s mean, you know&mdash;but she thinks it isn&rsquo;t
+ healthy for children to eat much, or anything but certain things. Isn&rsquo;t it
+ fortunate we weren&rsquo;t born into that sort of a family?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think it&rsquo;s awfully lucky we were all born into the same family,&rdquo; Felix
+ remarked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t it? I&rsquo;ve often thought so. And I&rsquo;ve often thought what a dreadful
+ thing it would have been if Grandfather and Grandmother King had never got
+ married to each other. I don&rsquo;t suppose there would have been a single one
+ of us children here at all; or if we were, we would be part somebody else
+ and that would be almost as bad. When I think it all over I can&rsquo;t feel too
+ thankful that Grandfather and Grandmother King happened to marry each
+ other, when there were so many other people they might have married.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Felix and I shivered. We felt suddenly that we had escaped a dreadful
+ danger&mdash;the danger of having been born somebody else. But it took the
+ Story Girl to make us realize just how dreadful it was and what a terrible
+ risk we had run years before we, or our parents either, had existed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who lives over there?&rdquo; I asked, pointing to a house across the fields.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, that belongs to the Awkward Man. His name is Jasper Dale, but
+ everybody calls him the Awkward Man. And they do say he writes poetry. He
+ calls his place Golden Milestone. I know why, because I&rsquo;ve read
+ Longfellow&rsquo;s poems. He never goes into society because he is so awkward.
+ The girls laugh at him and he doesn&rsquo;t like it. I know a story about him
+ and I&rsquo;ll tell it to you sometime.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And who lives in that other house?&rdquo; asked Felix, looking over the
+ westering valley where a little gray roof was visible among the trees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Old Peg Bowen. She&rsquo;s very queer. She lives there with a lot of pet
+ animals in winter, and in summer she roams over the country and begs her
+ meals. They say she is crazy. People have always tried to frighten us
+ children into good behaviour by telling us that Peg Bowen would catch us
+ if we didn&rsquo;t behave. I&rsquo;m not so frightened of her as I once was, but I
+ don&rsquo;t think I would like to be caught by her. Sara Ray is dreadfully
+ scared of her. Peter Craig says she is a witch and that he bets she&rsquo;s at
+ the bottom of it when the butter won&rsquo;t come. But I don&rsquo;t believe THAT.
+ Witches are so scarce nowadays. There may be some somewhere in the world,
+ but it&rsquo;s not likely there are any here right in Prince Edward Island. They
+ used to be very plenty long ago. I know some splendid witch stories I&rsquo;ll
+ tell you some day. They&rsquo;ll just make your blood freeze in your veins.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We hadn&rsquo;t a doubt of it. If anybody could freeze the blood in our veins
+ this girl with the wonderful voice could. But it was a May morning, and
+ our young blood was running blithely in our veins. We suggested a visit to
+ the orchard would be more agreeable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All right. I know stories about it, too,&rdquo; she said, as we walked across
+ the yard, followed by Paddy of the waving tail. &ldquo;Oh, aren&rsquo;t you glad it is
+ spring? The beauty of winter is that it makes you appreciate spring.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The latch of the gate clicked under the Story Girl&rsquo;s hand, and the next
+ moment we were in the King orchard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III. LEGENDS OF THE OLD ORCHARD
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Outside of the orchard the grass was only beginning to grow green; but
+ here, sheltered by the spruce hedges from uncertain winds and sloping to
+ southern suns, it was already like a wonderful velvet carpet; the leaves
+ on the trees were beginning to come out in woolly, grayish clusters; and
+ there were purple-pencilled white violets at the base of the Pulpit Stone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It&rsquo;s all just as father described it,&rdquo; said Felix with a blissful sigh,
+ &ldquo;and there&rsquo;s the well with the Chinese roof.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We hurried over to it, treading on the spears of mint that were beginning
+ to shoot up about it. It was a very deep well, and the curb was of rough,
+ undressed stones. Over it, the queer, pagoda-like roof, built by Uncle
+ Stephen on his return from a voyage to China, was covered with yet
+ leafless vines.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It&rsquo;s so pretty, when the vines leaf out and hang down in long festoons,&rdquo;
+ said the Story Girl. &ldquo;The birds build their nests in it. A pair of wild
+ canaries come here every summer. And ferns grow out between the stones of
+ the well as far down as you can see. The water is lovely. Uncle Edward
+ preached his finest sermon about the Bethlehem well where David&rsquo;s soldiers
+ went to get him water, and he illustrated it by describing his old well at
+ the homestead&mdash;this very well&mdash;and how in foreign lands he had
+ longed for its sparkling water. So you see it is quite famous.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There&rsquo;s a cup just like the one that used to be here in father&rsquo;s time,&rdquo;
+ exclaimed Felix, pointing to an old-fashioned shallow cup of clouded blue
+ ware on a little shelf inside the curb.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is the very same cup,&rdquo; said the Story Girl impressively. &ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t it an
+ amazing thing? That cup has been here for forty years, and hundreds of
+ people have drunk from it, and it has never been broken. Aunt Julia
+ dropped it down the well once, but they fished it up, not hurt a bit
+ except for that little nick in the rim. I think it is bound up with the
+ fortunes of the King family, like the Luck of Edenhall in Longfellow&rsquo;s
+ poem. It is the last cup of Grandmother King&rsquo;s second best set. Her best
+ set is still complete. Aunt Olivia has it. You must get her to show it to
+ you. It&rsquo;s so pretty, with red berries all over it, and the funniest little
+ pot-bellied cream jug. Aunt Olivia never uses it except on a family
+ anniversary.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We took a drink from the blue cup and then went to find our birthday
+ trees. We were rather disappointed to find them quite large, sturdy ones.
+ It seemed to us that they should still be in the sapling stage
+ corresponding to our boyhood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your apples are lovely to eat,&rdquo; the Story Girl said to me, &ldquo;but Felix&rsquo;s
+ are only good for pies. Those two big trees behind them are the twins&rsquo;
+ trees&mdash;my mother and Uncle Felix, you know. The apples are so dead
+ sweet that nobody but us children and the French boys can eat them. And
+ that tall, slender tree over there, with the branches all growing straight
+ up, is a seedling that came up of itself, and NOBODY can eat its apples,
+ they are so sour and bitter. Even the pigs won&rsquo;t eat them. Aunt Janet
+ tried to make pies of them once, because she said she hated to see them
+ going to waste. But she never tried again. She said it was better to waste
+ apples alone than apples and sugar too. And then she tried giving them
+ away to the French hired men, but they wouldn&rsquo;t even carry them home.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl&rsquo;s words fell on the morning air like pearls and diamonds.
+ Even her prepositions and conjunctions had untold charm, hinting at
+ mystery and laughter and magic bound up in everything she mentioned. Apple
+ pies and sour seedlings and pigs became straightway invested with a
+ glamour of romance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I like to hear you talk,&rdquo; said Felix in his grave, stodgy way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Everybody does,&rdquo; said the Story Girl coolly. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m glad you like the way I
+ talk. But I want you to like ME, too&mdash;AS WELL as you like Felicity
+ and Cecily. Not BETTER. I wanted that once but I&rsquo;ve got over it. I found
+ out in Sunday School, the day the minister taught our class, that it was
+ selfish. But I want you to like me AS WELL.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I will, for one,&rdquo; said Felix emphatically. I think he was
+ remembering that Felicity had called him fat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cecily now joined us. It appeared that it was Felicity&rsquo;s morning to help
+ prepare breakfast, therefore she could not come. We all went to Uncle
+ Stephen&rsquo;s Walk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was a double row of apple trees, running down the western side of the
+ orchard. Uncle Stephen was the first born of Abraham and Elizabeth King.
+ He had none of grandfather&rsquo;s abiding love for woods and meadows and the
+ kindly ways of the warm red earth. Grandmother King had been a Ward, and
+ in Uncle Stephen the blood of the seafaring race claimed its own. To sea
+ he must go, despite the pleadings and tears of a reluctant mother; and it
+ was from the sea he came to set out his avenue in the orchard with trees
+ brought from a foreign land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he sailed away again&mdash;and the ship was never heard of more. The
+ gray first came in grandmother&rsquo;s brown hair in those months of waiting.
+ The, for the first time, the orchard heard the sound of weeping and was
+ consecrated by a sorrow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When the blossoms come out it&rsquo;s wonderful to walk here,&rdquo; said the Story
+ Girl. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s like a dream of fairyland&mdash;as if you were walking in a
+ king&rsquo;s palace. The apples are delicious, and in winter it&rsquo;s a splendid
+ place for coasting.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the Walk we went to the Pulpit Stone&mdash;a huge gray boulder, as
+ high as a man&rsquo;s head, in the southeastern corner. It was straight and
+ smooth in front, but sloped down in natural steps behind, with a ledge
+ midway on which one could stand. It had played an important part in the
+ games of our uncles and aunts, being fortified castle, Indian ambush,
+ throne, pulpit, or concert platform, as occasion required. Uncle Edward
+ had preached his first sermon at the age of eight from that old gray
+ boulder; and Aunt Julia, whose voice was to delight thousands, sang her
+ earliest madrigals there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl mounted to the ledge, sat on the rim, and looked at us. Pat
+ sat gravely at its base and daintily washed his face with his black paws.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now for your stories about the orchard,&rdquo; said I.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There are two important ones,&rdquo; said the Story Girl. &ldquo;The story of the
+ Poet Who Was Kissed, and the Tale of the Family Ghost. Which one shall I
+ tell?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tell them both,&rdquo; said Felix greedily, &ldquo;but tell the ghost one first.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know.&rdquo; The Story Girl looked dubious. &ldquo;That sort of story ought
+ to be told in the twilight among the shadows. Then it would frighten the
+ souls out of your bodies.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We thought it might be more agreeable not to have the souls frightened out
+ of our bodies, and we voted for the Family Ghost.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ghost stories are more comfortable in daytime,&rdquo; said Felix.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl began it and we listened avidly. Cecily, who had heard it
+ many times before, listened just as eagerly as we did. She declared to me
+ afterwards that no matter how often the Story Girl told a story it always
+ seemed as new and exciting as if you had just heard it for the first time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Long, long ago,&rdquo; began the Story Girl, her voice giving us an impression
+ of remote antiquity, &ldquo;even before Grandfather King was born, an orphan
+ cousin of his lived here with his parents. Her name was Emily King. She
+ was very small and very sweet. She had soft brown eyes that were too timid
+ to look straight at anybody&mdash;like Cecily&rsquo;s there&mdash;and long,
+ sleek, brown curls&mdash;like mine; and she had a tiny birthmark like a
+ pink butterfly on one cheek&mdash;right here.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course, there was no orchard here then. It was just a field; but there
+ was a clump of white birches in it, right where that big, spreading tree
+ of Uncle Alec&rsquo;s is now, and Emily liked to sit among the ferns under the
+ birches and read or sew. She had a lover. His name was Malcolm Ward and he
+ was as handsome as a prince. She loved him with all her heart and he loved
+ her the same; but they had never spoken about it. They used to meet under
+ the birches and talk about everything except love. One day he told her he
+ was coming the next day to ask A VERY IMPORTANT QUESTION, and he wanted to
+ find her under the birches when he came. Emily promised to meet him there.
+ I am sure she stayed awake that night, thinking about it, and wondering
+ what the important question would be, although she knew perfectly well. I
+ would have. And the next day she dressed herself beautifully in her best
+ pale blue muslin and sleeked her curls and went smiling to the birches.
+ And while she was waiting there, thinking such lovely thoughts, a
+ neighbour&rsquo;s boy came running up&mdash;a boy who didn&rsquo;t know about her
+ romance&mdash;and cried out that Malcolm Ward had been killed by his gun
+ going off accidentally. Emily just put her hands to her heart&mdash;so&mdash;and
+ fell, all white and broken among the ferns. And when she came back to life
+ she never cried or lamented. She was CHANGED. She was never, never like
+ herself again; and she was never contented unless she was dressed in her
+ blue muslin and waiting under the birches. She got paler and paler every
+ day, but the pink butterfly grew redder, until it looked just like a stain
+ of blood on her white cheek. When the winter came she died. But next
+ spring&rdquo;&mdash;the Story Girl dropped her voice to a whisper that was as
+ audible and thrilling as her louder tones&mdash;&ldquo;people began to tell that
+ Emily was sometimes seen waiting under the birches still. Nobody knew just
+ who told it first. But more than one person saw her. Grandfather saw her
+ when he was a little boy. And my mother saw her once.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did YOU ever see her?&rdquo; asked Felix skeptically.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, but I shall some day, if I keep on believing in her,&rdquo; said the Story
+ Girl confidently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t like to see her. I&rsquo;d be afraid,&rdquo; said Cecily with a shiver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There wouldn&rsquo;t be anything to be afraid of,&rdquo; said the Story Girl
+ reassuringly. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s not as if it were a strange ghost. It&rsquo;s our own family
+ ghost, so of course it wouldn&rsquo;t hurt us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were not so sure of this. Ghosts were unchancy folk, even if they were
+ our family ghosts. The Story Girl had made the tale very real to us. We
+ were glad we had not heard it in the evening. How could we ever have got
+ back to the house through the shadows and swaying branches of a darkening
+ orchard? As it was, we were almost afraid to look up it, lest we should
+ see the waiting, blue-clad Emily under Uncle Alec&rsquo;s tree. But all we saw
+ was Felicity, tearing over the green sward, her curls streaming behind her
+ in a golden cloud.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Felicity&rsquo;s afraid she&rsquo;s missed something,&rdquo; remarked the Story Girl in a
+ tone of quiet amusement. &ldquo;Is your breakfast ready, Felicity, or have I
+ time to tell the boys the Story of the Poet Who Was Kissed?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Breakfast is ready, but we can&rsquo;t have it till father is through attending
+ to the sick cow, so you will likely have time,&rdquo; answered Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Felix and I couldn&rsquo;t keep our eyes off her. Crimson-cheeked, shining-eyed
+ from her haste, her face was like a rose of youth. But when the Story Girl
+ spoke, we forgot to look at Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;About ten years after Grandfather and Grandmother King were married, a
+ young man came to visit them. He was a distant relative of grandmother&rsquo;s
+ and he was a Poet. He was just beginning to be famous. He was VERY famous
+ afterward. He came into the orchard to write a poem, and he fell asleep
+ with his head on a bench that used to be under grandfather&rsquo;s tree. Then
+ Great-Aunt Edith came into the orchard. She was not a Great-Aunt then, of
+ course. She was only eighteen, with red lips and black, black hair and
+ eyes. They say she was always full of mischief. She had been away and had
+ just come home, and she didn&rsquo;t know about the Poet. But when she saw him,
+ sleeping there, she thought he was a cousin they had been expecting from
+ Scotland. And she tiptoed up&mdash;so&mdash;and bent over&mdash;so&mdash;and
+ kissed his cheek. Then he opened his big blue eyes and looked up into
+ Edith&rsquo;s face. She blushed as red as a rose, for she knew she had done a
+ dreadful thing. This could not be her cousin from Scotland. She knew, for
+ he had written so to her, that he had eyes as black as her own. Edith ran
+ away and hid; and of course she felt still worse when she found out that
+ he was a famous poet. But he wrote one of his most beautiful poems on it
+ afterwards and sent it to her&mdash;and it was published in one of his
+ books.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We had SEEN it all&mdash;the sleeping genius&mdash;the roguish, red-lipped
+ girl&mdash;the kiss dropped as lightly as a rose-petal on the sunburned
+ cheek.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They should have got married,&rdquo; said Felix.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, in a book they would have, but you see this was in real life,&rdquo; said
+ the Story Girl. &ldquo;We sometimes act the story out. I like it when Peter
+ plays the poet. I don&rsquo;t like it when Dan is the poet because he is so
+ freckled and screws his eyes up so tight. But you can hardly ever coax
+ Peter to be the poet&mdash;except when Felicity is Edith&mdash;and Dan is
+ so obliging that way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is Peter like?&rdquo; I asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Peter is splendid. His mother lives on the Markdale road and washes for a
+ living. Peter&rsquo;s father ran away and left them when Peter was only three
+ years old. He has never come back, and they don&rsquo;t know whether he is alive
+ or dead. Isn&rsquo;t that a nice way to behave to your family? Peter has worked
+ for his board ever since he was six. Uncle Roger sends him to school, and
+ pays him wages in summer. We all like Peter, except Felicity.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I like Peter well enough in his place,&rdquo; said Felicity primly, &ldquo;but you
+ make far too much of him, mother says. He is only a hired boy, and he
+ hasn&rsquo;t been well brought up, and hasn&rsquo;t much education. I don&rsquo;t think you
+ should make such an equal of him as you do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Laughter rippled over the Story Girl&rsquo;s face as shadow waves go over ripe
+ wheat before a wind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Peter is a real gentleman, and he is more interesting than YOU could ever
+ be, if you were brought up and educated for a hundred years,&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He can hardly write,&rdquo; said Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;William the Conqueror couldn&rsquo;t write at all,&rdquo; said the Story Girl
+ crushingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He never goes to church, and he never says his prayers,&rdquo; retorted
+ Felicity, uncrushed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do, too,&rdquo; said Peter himself, suddenly appearing through a little gap
+ in the hedge. &ldquo;I say my prayers sometimes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This Peter was a slim, shapely fellow, with laughing black eyes and thick
+ black curls. Early in the season as it was, he was barefooted. His attire
+ consisted of a faded, gingham shirt and a scanty pair of corduroy
+ knickerbockers; but he wore it with such an unconscious air of purple and
+ fine linen that he seemed to be much better dressed than he really was.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You don&rsquo;t pray very often,&rdquo; insisted Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, God will be all the more likely to listen to me if I don&rsquo;t pester
+ Him all the time,&rdquo; argued Peter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was rank heresy to Felicity, but the Story Girl looked as if she
+ thought there might be something in it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You NEVER go to church, anyhow,&rdquo; continued Felicity, determined not to be
+ argued down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I ain&rsquo;t going to church till I&rsquo;ve made up my mind whether I&rsquo;m going
+ to be a Methodist or a Presbyterian. Aunt Jane was a Methodist. My mother
+ ain&rsquo;t much of anything but I mean to be something. It&rsquo;s more respectable
+ to be a Methodist or a Presbyterian, or SOMETHING, than not to be
+ anything. When I&rsquo;ve settled what I&rsquo;m to be I&rsquo;m going to church same as
+ you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That&rsquo;s not the same as being BORN something,&rdquo; said Felicity loftily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think it&rsquo;s a good deal better to pick your own religion than have to
+ take it just because it was what your folks had,&rdquo; retorted Peter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, never mind quarrelling,&rdquo; said Cecily. &ldquo;You leave Peter alone,
+ Felicity. Peter, this is Beverley King, and this is Felix. And we&rsquo;re all
+ going to be good friends and have a lovely summer together. Think of the
+ games we can have! But if you go squabbling you&rsquo;ll spoil it all. Peter,
+ what are you going to do to-day?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Harrow the wood field and dig your Aunt Olivia&rsquo;s flower beds.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aunt Olivia and I planted sweet peas yesterday,&rdquo; said the Story Girl,
+ &ldquo;and I planted a little bed of my own. I am NOT going to dig them up this
+ year to see if they have sprouted. It is bad for them. I shall try to
+ cultivate patience, no matter how long they are coming up.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am going to help mother plant the vegetable garden to-day,&rdquo; said
+ Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I never like the vegetable garden,&rdquo; said the Story Girl. &ldquo;Except when
+ I am hungry. Then I DO like to go and look at the nice little rows of
+ onions and beets. But I love a flower garden. I think I could be always
+ good if I lived in a garden all the time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Adam and Eve lived in a garden all the time,&rdquo; said Felicity, &ldquo;and THEY
+ were far from being always good.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They mightn&rsquo;t have kept good as long as they did if they hadn&rsquo;t lived in
+ a garden,&rdquo; said the Story Girl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were now summoned to breakfast. Peter and the Story Girl slipped away
+ through the gap, followed by Paddy, and the rest of us walked up the
+ orchard to the house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, what do you think of the Story Girl?&rdquo; asked Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She&rsquo;s just fine,&rdquo; said Felix, enthusiastically. &ldquo;I never heard anything
+ like her to tell stories.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She can&rsquo;t cook,&rdquo; said Felicity, &ldquo;and she hasn&rsquo;t a good complexion. Mind
+ you, she says she&rsquo;s going to be an actress when she grows up. Isn&rsquo;t that
+ dreadful?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We didn&rsquo;t exactly see why.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, because actresses are always wicked people,&rdquo; said Felicity in a
+ shocked tone. &ldquo;But I daresay the Story Girl will go and be one just as
+ soon as she can. Her father will back her up in it. He is an artist, you
+ know.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Evidently Felicity thought artists and actresses and all such poor trash
+ were members one of another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aunt Olivia says the Story Girl is fascinating,&rdquo; said Cecily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The very adjective! Felix and I recognized its beautiful fitness at once.
+ Yes, the Story Girl WAS fascinating and that was the final word to be said
+ on the subject.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan did not come down until breakfast was half over, and Aunt Janet talked
+ to him after a fashion which made us realize that it would be well to
+ keep, as the piquant country phrase went, from the rough side of her
+ tongue. But all things considered, we liked the prospect of our summer
+ very much. Felicity to look at&mdash;the Story Girl to tell us tales of
+ wonder&mdash;Cecily to admire us&mdash;Dan and Peter to play with&mdash;what
+ more could reasonable fellows want?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV. THE WEDDING VEIL OF THE PROUD PRINCESS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ When we had lived for a fortnight in Carlisle we belonged there, and the
+ freedom of all its small fry was conferred on us. With Peter and Dan, with
+ Felicity and Cecily and the Story Girl, with pale, gray-eyed little Sara
+ Ray, we were boon companions. We went to school, of course; and certain
+ home chores were assigned to each of us for the faithful performance of
+ which we were held responsible. But we had long hours for play. Even Peter
+ had plenty of spare time when the planting was over.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We got along very well with each other in the main, in spite of some minor
+ differences of opinion. As for the grown-up denizens of our small world,
+ they suited us also.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We adored Aunt Olivia; she was pretty and merry and kind; and, above all,
+ she had mastered to perfection the rare art of letting children alone. If
+ we kept ourselves tolerably clean, and refrained from quarrelling or
+ talking slang, Aunt Olivia did not worry us. Aunt Janet, on the contrary,
+ gave us so much good advice and was so constantly telling us to do this or
+ not to do the other thing, that we could not remember half her
+ instructions, and did not try.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Uncle Roger was, as we had been informed, quite jolly and fond of teasing.
+ We liked him; but we had an uncomfortable feeling that the meaning of his
+ remarks was not always that which met the ear. Sometimes we believed Uncle
+ Roger was making fun of us, and the deadly seriousness of youth in us
+ resented that.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To Uncle Alec we gave our warmest love. We felt that we always had a
+ friend at court in Uncle Alec, no matter what we did or left undone. And
+ we never had to turn HIS speeches inside out to discover their meaning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The social life of juvenile Carlisle centred in the day and Sunday
+ Schools. We were especially interested in our Sunday School, for we were
+ fortunate enough to be assigned to a teacher who made our lessons so
+ interesting that we no longer regarded Sunday School attendance as a
+ disagreeable weekly duty; but instead looked forward to it with pleasure,
+ and tried to carry out our teacher&rsquo;s gentle precepts&mdash;at least on
+ Mondays and Tuesdays. I am afraid the remembrance grew a little dim the
+ rest of the week.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was also deeply interested in missions; and one talk on this subject
+ inspired the Story Girl to do a little home missionary work on her own
+ account. The only thing she could think of, along this line, was to
+ persuade Peter to go to church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Felicity did not approve of the design, and said so plainly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He won&rsquo;t know how to behave, for he&rsquo;s never been inside a church door in
+ his life,&rdquo; she warned the Story Girl. &ldquo;He&rsquo;ll likely do something awful,
+ and then you&rsquo;ll feel ashamed and wish you&rsquo;d never asked him to go, and
+ we&rsquo;ll all be disgraced. It&rsquo;s all right to have our mite boxes for the
+ heathen, and send missionaries to them. They&rsquo;re far away and we don&rsquo;t have
+ to associate with them. But I don&rsquo;t want to have to sit in a pew with a
+ hired boy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the Story Girl undauntedly continued to coax the reluctant Peter. It
+ was not an easy matter. Peter did not come of a churchgoing stock; and
+ besides, he alleged, he had not yet made up his mind whether to be a
+ Presbyterian or a Methodist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It isn&rsquo;t a bit of difference which you are,&rdquo; pleaded the Story Girl.
+ &ldquo;They both go to heaven.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But one way must be easier or better than the other, or else they&rsquo;d all
+ be one kind,&rdquo; argued Peter. &ldquo;I want to find the easiest way. And I&rsquo;ve got
+ a hankering after the Methodists. My Aunt Jane was a Methodist.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t she one still?&rdquo; asked Felicity pertly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I don&rsquo;t know exactly. She&rsquo;s dead,&rdquo; said Peter rebukingly. &ldquo;Do
+ people go on being just the same after they&rsquo;re dead?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, of course not. They&rsquo;re angels then&mdash;not Methodists or anything,
+ but just angels. That is, if they go to heaven.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;S&rsquo;posen they went to the other place?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Felicity&rsquo;s theology broke down at this point. She turned her back on
+ Peter and walked disdainfully away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl returned to the main point with a new argument.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We have such a lovely minister, Peter. He looks just like the picture of
+ St. John my father sent me, only he is old and his hair is white. I know
+ you&rsquo;d like him. And even if you are going to be a Methodist it won&rsquo;t hurt
+ you to go to the Presbyterian church. The nearest Methodist church is six
+ miles away, at Markdale, and you can&rsquo;t attend there just now. Go to the
+ Presbyterian church until you&rsquo;re old enough to have a horse.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But s&rsquo;posen I got too fond of being Presbyterian and couldn&rsquo;t change if I
+ wanted to?&rdquo; objected Peter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Altogether, the Story Girl had a hard time of it; but she persevered; and
+ one day she came to us with the announcement that Peter had yielded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He&rsquo;s going to church with us to-morrow,&rdquo; she said triumphantly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were out in Uncle Roger&rsquo;s hill pasture, sitting on some smooth, round
+ stones under a clump of birches. Behind us was an old gray fence, with
+ violets and dandelions thick in its corners. Below us was the Carlisle
+ valley, with its orchard-embowered homesteads, and fertile meadows. Its
+ upper end was dim with a delicate spring mist. Winds blew up the field
+ like wave upon wave of sweet savour&mdash;spice of bracken and balsam.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were eating little jam &ldquo;turnovers,&rdquo; which Felicity had made for us.
+ Felicity&rsquo;s turnovers were perfection. I looked at her and wondered why it
+ was not enough that she should be so pretty and capable of making such
+ turnovers. If she were only more interesting! Felicity had not a particle
+ of the nameless charm and allurement which hung about every motion of the
+ Story Girl, and made itself manifest in her lightest word and most
+ careless glance. Ah well, one cannot have every good gift! The Story Girl
+ had no dimples at her slim, brown wrists.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We all enjoyed our turnovers except Sara Ray. She ate hers but she knew
+ she should not have done so. Her mother did not approve of snacks between
+ meals, or of jam turnovers at any time. Once, when Sara was in a brown
+ study, I asked her what she was thinking of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m trying to think of something ma hasn&rsquo;t forbid,&rdquo; she answered with a
+ sigh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were all glad to hear that Peter was going to church, except Felicity.
+ She was full of gloomy forebodings and warnings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m surprised at you, Felicity King,&rdquo; said Cecily severely. &ldquo;You ought to
+ be glad that poor boy is going to get started in the right way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There&rsquo;s a great big patch on his best pair of trousers,&rdquo; protested
+ Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, that&rsquo;s better than a hole,&rdquo; said the Story Girl, addressing herself
+ daintily to her turnover. &ldquo;God won&rsquo;t notice the patch.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, but the Carlisle people will,&rdquo; retorted Felicity, in a tone which
+ implied that what the Carlisle people thought was far more important. &ldquo;And
+ I don&rsquo;t believe that Peter has got a decent stocking to his name. What
+ will you feel like if he goes to church with the skin of his legs showing
+ through the holes, Miss Story Girl?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m not a bit afraid,&rdquo; said the Story Girl staunchly. &ldquo;Peter knows better
+ than that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, all I hope is that he&rsquo;ll wash behind his ears,&rdquo; said Felicity
+ resignedly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How is Pat to-day?&rdquo; asked Cecily, by way of changing the conversation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pat isn&rsquo;t a bit better. He just mopes about the kitchen,&rdquo; said the Story
+ Girl anxiously. &ldquo;I went out to the barn and I saw a mouse. I had a stick
+ in my hand and I fetched a swipe at it&mdash;so. I killed it stone dead.
+ Then I took it in to Paddy. Will you believe it? He wouldn&rsquo;t even look at
+ it. I&rsquo;m so worried. Uncle Roger says he needs a dose of physic. But how is
+ he to be made take it, that&rsquo;s the question. I mixed a powder in some milk
+ and tried to pour it down his throat while Peter held him. Just look at
+ the scratches I got! And the milk went everywhere except down Pat&rsquo;s
+ throat.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wouldn&rsquo;t it be awful if&mdash;if anything happened to Pat?&rdquo; whispered
+ Cecily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, we could have a jolly funeral, you know,&rdquo; said Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We looked at him in such horror that Dan hastened to apologize.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;d be awful sorry myself if Pat died. But if he DID, we&rsquo;d have to give
+ him the right kind of a funeral,&rdquo; he protested. &ldquo;Why, Paddy just seems
+ like one of the family.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl finished her turnover, and stretched herself out on the
+ grasses, pillowing her chin in her hands and looking at the sky. She was
+ bare headed, as usual, and her scarlet ribbon was bound filletwise about
+ her head. She had twined freshly plucked dandelions around it and the
+ effect was that of a crown of brilliant golden stars on her sleek, brown
+ curls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look at that long, thin, lacy cloud up there,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;What does it
+ make you think of, girls?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A wedding veil,&rdquo; said Cecily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is just what it is&mdash;the Wedding Veil of the Proud Princess. I
+ know a story about it. I read it in a book. Once upon a time&rdquo;&mdash;the
+ Story Girl&rsquo;s eyes grew dreamy, and her accents floated away on the summer
+ air like wind-blown rose petals&mdash;&ldquo;there was a princess who was the
+ most beautiful princess in the world, and kings from all lands came to woo
+ her for a bride. But she was as proud as she was beautiful. She laughed
+ all her suitors to scorn. And when her father urged her to choose one of
+ them as her husband she drew herself up haughtily&mdash;so&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl sprang to her feet and for a moment we saw the proud
+ princess of the old tale in all her scornful loveliness&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;and she said,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;I will not wed until a king comes who can conquer all kings. Then I
+ shall be the wife of the king of the world and no one can hold herself
+ higher than I.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So every king went to war to prove that he could conquer every one else,
+ and there was a great deal of bloodshed and misery. But the proud princess
+ laughed and sang, and she and her maidens worked at a wonderful lace veil
+ which she meant to wear when the king of all kings came. It was a very
+ beautiful veil; but her maidens whispered that a man had died and a
+ woman&rsquo;s heart had broken for every stitch set in it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Just when a king thought he had conquered everybody some other king would
+ come and conquer HIM; and so it went on until it did not seem likely the
+ proud princess would ever get a husband at all. But still her pride was so
+ great that she would not yield, even though everybody except the kings who
+ wanted to marry her, hated her for the suffering she had caused. One day a
+ horn was blown at the palace gate; and there was one tall man in complete
+ armor with his visor down, riding on a white horse. When he said he had
+ come to marry the princess every one laughed, for he had no retinue and no
+ beautiful apparel, and no golden crown.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;But I am the king who conquers all kings,&rsquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;You must prove it before I shall marry you,&rsquo; said the proud princess.
+ But she trembled and turned pale, for there was something in his voice
+ that frightened her. And when he laughed, his laughter was still more
+ dreadful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;I can easily prove it, beautiful princess,&rsquo; he said, &lsquo;but you must go
+ with me to my kingdom for the proof. Marry me now, and you and I and your
+ father and all your court will ride straightway to my kingdom; and if you
+ are not satisfied then that I am the king who conquers all kings you may
+ give me back my ring and return home free of me forever more.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was a strange wooing and the friends of the princess begged her to
+ refuse. But her pride whispered that it would be such a wonderful thing to
+ be the queen of the king of the world; so she consented; and her maidens
+ dressed her, and put on the long lace veil that had been so many years
+ a-making. Then they were married at once, but the bridegroom never lifted
+ his visor and no one saw his face. The proud princess held herself more
+ proudly than ever, but she was as white as her veil. And there was no
+ laughter or merry-making, such as should be at a wedding, and every one
+ looked at every one else with fear in his eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;After the wedding the bridegroom lifted his bride before him on his white
+ horse, and her father and all the members of his court mounted, too, and
+ rode after them. On and on they rode, and the skies grew darker and the
+ wind blew and wailed, and the shades of evening came down. And just in the
+ twilight they rode into a dark valley, filled with tombs and graves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Why have you brought me here?&rsquo; cried the proud princess angrily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;This is my kingdom,&rsquo; he answered. &lsquo;These are the tombs of the kings I
+ have conquered. Behold me, beautiful princess. I am Death!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He lifted his visor. All saw his awful face. The proud princess shrieked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Come to my arms, my bride,&rsquo; he cried. &lsquo;I have won you fairly. I am the
+ king who conquers all kings!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He clasped her fainting form to his breast and spurred his white horse to
+ the tombs. A tempest of rain broke over the valley and blotted them from
+ sight. Very sadly the old king and courtiers rode home, and never, never
+ again did human eye behold the proud princess. But when those long, white
+ clouds sweep across the sky, the country people in the land where she
+ lived say, &lsquo;Look you, there is the Wedding Veil of the Proud Princess.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The weird spell of the tale rested on us for some moments after the Story
+ Girl had finished. We had walked with her in the place of death and grown
+ cold with the horror that chilled the heart of the poor princess. Dan
+ presently broke the spell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You see it doesn&rsquo;t do to be too proud, Felicity,&rdquo; he remarked, giving her
+ a poke. &ldquo;You&rsquo;d better not say too much about Peter&rsquo;s patches.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V. PETER GOES TO CHURCH
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ There was no Sunday School the next afternoon, as superintendent and
+ teachers wished to attend a communion service at Markdale. The Carlisle
+ service was in the evening, and at sunset we were waiting at Uncle Alec&rsquo;s
+ front door for Peter and the Story Girl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ None of the grown-ups were going to church. Aunt Olivia had a sick
+ headache and Uncle Roger stayed home with her. Aunt Janet and Uncle Alec
+ had gone to the Markdale service and had not yet returned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Felicity and Cecily were wearing their new summer muslins for the first
+ time&mdash;and were acutely conscious of the fact. Felicity, her pink and
+ white face shadowed by her drooping, forget-me-not-wreathed, leghorn hat,
+ was as beautiful as usual; but Cecily, having tortured her hair with curl
+ papers all night, had a rampant bush of curls all about her head which
+ quite destroyed the sweet, nun-like expression of her little features.
+ Cecily cherished a grudge against fate because she had not been given
+ naturally curly hair as had the other two girls. But she attained the
+ desire of her heart on Sundays at least, and was quite well satisfied. It
+ was impossible to convince her that the satin smooth lustre of her
+ week-day tresses was much more becoming to her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently Peter and the Story Girl appeared, and we were all more or less
+ relieved to see that Peter looked quite respectable, despite the
+ indisputable patch on his trousers. His face was rosy, his thick black
+ curls were smoothly combed, and his tie was neatly bowed; but it was his
+ legs which we scrutinized most anxiously. At first glance they seemed well
+ enough; but closer inspection revealed something not altogether customary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is the matter with your stockings, Peter?&rdquo; asked Dan bluntly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I hadn&rsquo;t a pair without holes in the legs,&rdquo; answered Peter easily,
+ &ldquo;because ma hadn&rsquo;t time to darn them this week. So I put on two pairs. The
+ holes don&rsquo;t come in the same places, and you&rsquo;d never notice them unless
+ you looked right close.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have you got a cent for collection?&rdquo; demanded Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve got a Yankee cent. I s&rsquo;pose it will do, won&rsquo;t it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Felicity shook her head vehemently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, no, no. It may be all right to pass a Yankee cent on a store keeper
+ or an egg peddler, but it would never do for church.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll have to go without any, then,&rdquo; said Peter. &ldquo;I haven&rsquo;t another cent.
+ I only get fifty cents a week and I give it all to ma last night.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Peter must have a cent. Felicity would have given him one herself&mdash;and
+ she was none too lavish of her coppers&mdash;rather than have him go
+ without one. Dan, however, lent him one, on the distinct understanding
+ that it was to be repaid the next week.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Uncle Roger wandered by at this moment and, beholding Peter, said,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Is Saul also among the prophets?&rsquo; What can have induced you to turn
+ church-goer, Peter, when all Olivia&rsquo;s gentle persuasions were of no avail?
+ The old, old argument I suppose&mdash;&lsquo;beauty draws us with a single
+ hair.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Uncle Roger looked quizzically at Felicity. We did not know what his
+ quotations meant, but we understood he thought Peter was going to church
+ because of Felicity. Felicity tossed her head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It isn&rsquo;t my fault that he&rsquo;s going to church,&rdquo; she said snappishly. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s
+ the Story Girl&rsquo;s doings.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Uncle Roger sat down on the doorstep, and gave himself over to one of the
+ silent, inward paroxysms of laughter we all found so very aggravating. He
+ shook his big, blond head, shut his eyes, and murmured,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not her fault! Oh, Felicity, Felicity, you&rsquo;ll be the death of your dear
+ Uncle yet if you don&rsquo;t watch out.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Felicity started off indignantly, and we followed, picking up Sara Ray at
+ the foot of the hill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Carlisle church was a very old-fashioned one, with a square, ivy-hung
+ tower. It was shaded by tall elms, and the graveyard surrounded it
+ completely, many of the graves being directly under its windows. We always
+ took the corner path through it, passing the King plot where our kindred
+ of four generations slept in a green solitude of wavering light and
+ shadow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was Great-grandfather King&rsquo;s flat tombstone of rough Island
+ sandstone, so overgrown with ivy that we could hardly read its lengthy
+ inscription, recording his whole history in brief, and finishing with
+ eight lines of original verse composed by his widow. I do not think that
+ poetry was Great-grandmother King&rsquo;s strong point. When Felix read it, on
+ our first Sunday in Carlisle, he remarked dubiously that it LOOKED like
+ poetry but didn&rsquo;t SOUND like it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There, too, slept the Emily whose faithful spirit was supposed to haunt
+ the orchard; but Edith who had kissed the poet lay not with her kindred.
+ She had died in a far, foreign land, and the murmur of an alien sea
+ sounded about her grave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ White marble tablets, ornamented with weeping willow trees, marked where
+ Grandfather and Grandmother King were buried, and a single shaft of red
+ Scotch granite stood between the graves of Aunt Felicity and Uncle Felix.
+ The Story Girl lingered to lay a bunch of wild violets, misty blue and
+ faintly sweet, on her mother&rsquo;s grave; and then she read aloud the verse on
+ the stone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;They were lovely and pleasant in their lives and in their death they
+ were not divided.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tones of her voice brought out the poignant and immortal beauty and
+ pathos of that wonderful old lament. The girls wiped their eyes; and we
+ boys felt as if we might have done so, too, had nobody been looking. What
+ better epitaph could any one wish than to have it said that he was lovely
+ and pleasant in his life? When I heard the Story Girl read it I made a
+ secret compact with myself that I would try to deserve such an epitaph.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish I had a family plot,&rdquo; said Peter, rather wistfully. &ldquo;I haven&rsquo;t
+ ANYTHING you fellows have. The Craigs are just buried anywhere they happen
+ to die.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;d like to be buried here when I die,&rdquo; said Felix. &ldquo;But I hope it won&rsquo;t
+ be for a good while yet,&rdquo; he added in a livelier tone, as we moved onward
+ to the church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The interior of the church was as old-fashioned as its exterior. It was
+ furnished with square box pews; the pulpit was a &ldquo;wine-glass&rdquo; one, and was
+ reached by a steep, narrow flight of steps. Uncle Alec&rsquo;s pew was at the
+ top of the church, quite near the pulpit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peter&rsquo;s appearance did not attract as much attention as we had fondly
+ expected. Indeed, nobody seemed to notice him at all. The lamps were not
+ yet lighted and the church was filled with a soft twilight and hush.
+ Outside, the sky was purple and gold and silvery green, with a delicate
+ tangle of rosy cloud above the elms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t it awful nice and holy in here?&rdquo; whispered Peter reverently. &ldquo;I
+ didn&rsquo;t know church was like this. It&rsquo;s nice.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Felicity frowned at him, and the Story Girl touched her with her slippered
+ foot to remind him that he must not talk in church. Peter stiffened up and
+ sat at attention during the service. Nobody could have behaved better. But
+ when the sermon was over and the collection was being taken up, he made
+ the sensation which his entrance had not produced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Elder Frewen, a tall, pale man, with long, sandy side-whiskers, appeared
+ at the door of our pew with the collection plate. We knew Elder Frewen
+ quite well and liked him; he was Aunt Janet&rsquo;s cousin and often visited
+ her. The contrast between his week-day jollity and the unearthly solemnity
+ of his countenance on Sundays always struck us as very funny. It seemed so
+ to strike Peter; for as Peter dropped his cent into the plate he laughed
+ aloud!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Everybody looked at our pew. I have always wondered why Felicity did not
+ die of mortification on the spot. The Story Girl turned white, and Cecily
+ turned red. As for that poor, unlucky Peter, the shame of his countenance
+ was pitiful to behold. He never lifted his head for the remainder of the
+ service; and he followed us down the aisle and across the graveyard like a
+ beaten dog. None of us uttered a word until we reached the road, lying in
+ the white moonshine of the May night. Then Felicity broke the tense
+ silence by remarking to the Story Girl,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I told you so!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl made no response. Peter sidled up to her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m awful sorry,&rdquo; he said contritely. &ldquo;I never meant to laugh. It just
+ happened before I could stop myself. It was this way&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you ever speak to me again,&rdquo; said the Story Girl, in a tone of cold
+ concentrated fury. &ldquo;Go and be a Methodist, or a Mohammedan, or ANYTHING! I
+ don&rsquo;t care what you are! You have HUMILIATED me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She marched off with Sara Ray, and Peter dropped back to us with a
+ frightened face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is it I&rsquo;ve done to her?&rdquo; he whispered. &ldquo;What does that big word
+ mean?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, never mind,&rdquo; I said crossly&mdash;for I felt that Peter HAD disgraced
+ us&mdash;&ldquo;She&rsquo;s just mad&mdash;and no wonder. Whatever made you act so
+ crazy, Peter?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I didn&rsquo;t mean to. And I wanted to laugh twice before that and
+ DIDN&rsquo;T. It was the Story Girl&rsquo;s stories made me want to laugh, so I don&rsquo;t
+ think it&rsquo;s fair for her to be mad at me. She hadn&rsquo;t ought to tell me
+ stories about people if she don&rsquo;t want me to laugh when I see them. When I
+ looked at Samuel Ward I thought of him getting up in meeting one night,
+ and praying that he might be guided in his upsetting and downrising. I
+ remembered the way she took him off, and I wanted to laugh. And then I
+ looked at the pulpit and thought of the story she told about the old
+ Scotch minister who was too fat to get in at the door of it, and had to
+ h&rsquo;ist himself by his two hands over it, and then whispered to the other
+ minister so that everybody heard him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;<i>This pulpit door was made for speerits</i>&rsquo;&mdash;and I wanted to
+ laugh. And then Mr. Frewen come&mdash;and I thought of her story about his
+ sidewhiskers&mdash;how when his first wife died of information of the
+ lungs he went courting Celia Ward, and Celia told him she wouldn&rsquo;t marry
+ him unless he shaved them whiskers off. And he wouldn&rsquo;t, just to be
+ stubborn. And one day one of them caught fire, when he was burning brush,
+ and burned off, and every one thought he&rsquo;d HAVE to shave the other off
+ then. But he didn&rsquo;t and just went round with one whisker till the burned
+ one grew out. And then Celia gave in and took him, because she saw there
+ wasn&rsquo;t no hope of HIM ever giving in. I just remembered that story, and I
+ thought I could see him, taking up the cents so solemn, with one long
+ whisker; and the laugh just laughed itself before I could help it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We all exploded with laughter on the spot, much to the horror of Mrs.
+ Abraham Ward, who was just driving past, and who came up the next day and
+ told Aunt Janet we had &ldquo;acted scandalous&rdquo; on the road home from church. We
+ felt ashamed ourselves, because we knew people should conduct themselves
+ decently and in order on Sunday farings-forth. But, as with Peter, it &ldquo;had
+ laughed itself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even Felicity laughed. Felicity was not nearly so angry with Peter as
+ might have been expected. She even walked beside him and let him carry her
+ Bible. They talked quite confidentially. Perhaps she forgave him the more
+ easily, because he had justified her in her predictions, and thus afforded
+ her a decided triumph over the Story Girl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m going to keep on going to church,&rdquo; Peter told her. &ldquo;I like it.
+ Sermons are more int&rsquo;resting than I thought, and I like the singing. I
+ wish I could make up my mind whether to be a Presbyterian or a Methodist.
+ I s&rsquo;pose I might ask the ministers about it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, no, no, don&rsquo;t do that,&rdquo; said Felicity in alarm. &ldquo;Ministers wouldn&rsquo;t
+ want to be bothered with such questions.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why not? What are ministers for if they ain&rsquo;t to tell people how to get
+ to heaven?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, well, it&rsquo;s all right for grown-ups to ask them things, of course. But
+ it isn&rsquo;t respectful for little boys&mdash;especially hired boys.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see why. But anyhow, I s&rsquo;pose it wouldn&rsquo;t be much use, because if
+ he was a Presbyterian minister he&rsquo;d say I ought to be a Presbyterian, and
+ if he was a Methodist he&rsquo;d tell me to be one, too. Look here, Felicity,
+ what IS the difference between them?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&mdash;I don&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; said Felicity reluctantly. &ldquo;I s&rsquo;pose children
+ can&rsquo;t understand such things. There must be a great deal of difference, of
+ course, if we only knew what it was. Anyhow, I am a Presbyterian, and I&rsquo;m
+ glad of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We walked on in silence for a time, thinking our own young thoughts.
+ Presently they were scattered by an abrupt and startling question from
+ Peter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What does God look like?&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It appeared that none of us had any idea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The Story Girl would prob&rsquo;ly know,&rdquo; said Cecily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish I knew,&rdquo; said Peter gravely. &ldquo;I wish I could see a picture of God.
+ It would make Him seem lots more real.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve often wondered myself what he looks like,&rdquo; said Felicity in a burst
+ of confidence. Even in Felicity, so it would seem, there were depths of
+ thought unplumbed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve seen pictures of Jesus,&rdquo; said Felix meditatively. &ldquo;He looks just
+ like a man, only better and kinder. But now that I come to think of it,
+ I&rsquo;ve never seen a picture of God.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, if there isn&rsquo;t one in Toronto it isn&rsquo;t likely there&rsquo;s one
+ anywhere,&rdquo; said Peter disappointedly. &ldquo;I saw a picture of the devil once,&rdquo;
+ he added. &ldquo;It was in a book my Aunt Jane had. She got it for a prize in
+ school. My Aunt Jane was clever.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It couldn&rsquo;t have been a very good book if there was such a picture in
+ it,&rdquo; said Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was a real good book. My Aunt Jane wouldn&rsquo;t have a book that wasn&rsquo;t
+ good,&rdquo; retorted Peter sulkily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He refused to discuss the subject further, somewhat to our disappointment.
+ For we had never seen a picture of the person referred to, and we were
+ rather curious regarding it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll ask Peter to describe it sometime when he&rsquo;s in a better humour,&rdquo;
+ whispered Felix.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sara Ray having turned in at her own gate, I ran ahead to join the Story
+ Girl, and we walked up the hill together. She had recovered her calmness
+ of mind, but she made no reference to Peter. When we reached our lane and
+ passed under Grandfather King&rsquo;s big willow the fragrance of the orchard
+ struck us in the face like a wave. We could see the long rows of trees, a
+ white gladness in the moonshine. It seemed to us that there was in the
+ orchard something different from other orchards that we had known. We were
+ too young to analyze the vague sensation. In later years we were to
+ understand that it was because the orchard blossomed not only apple
+ blossoms but all the love, faith, joy, pure happiness and pure sorrow of
+ those who had made it and walked there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The orchard doesn&rsquo;t seem the same place by moonlight at all,&rdquo; said the
+ Story Girl dreamily. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s lovely, but it&rsquo;s different. When I was very
+ small I used to believe the fairies danced in it on moonlight nights. I
+ would like to believe it now but I can&rsquo;t.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why not?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, it&rsquo;s so hard to believe things you know are not true. It was Uncle
+ Edward who told me there were no such things as fairies. I was just seven.
+ He is a minister, so of course I knew he spoke the truth. It was his duty
+ to tell me, and I do not blame him, but I have never felt quite the same
+ to Uncle Edward since.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ah, do we ever &ldquo;feel quite the same&rdquo; towards people who destroy our
+ illusions? Shall I ever be able to forgive the brutal creature who first
+ told me there was no such person as Santa Claus? He was a boy, three years
+ older than myself; and he may now, for aught I know, be a most useful and
+ respectable member of society, beloved by his kind. But I know what he
+ must ever seem to me!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We waited at Uncle Alec&rsquo;s door for the others to come up. Peter was by way
+ of skulking shamefacedly past into the shadows; but the Story Girl&rsquo;s
+ brief, bitter anger had vanished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wait for me, Peter,&rdquo; she called.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She went over to him and held out her hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I forgive you,&rdquo; she said graciously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Felix and I felt that it would really be worth while to offend her, just
+ to be forgiven in such an adorable voice. Peter eagerly grasped her hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I tell you what, Story Girl, I&rsquo;m awfully sorry I laughed in church, but
+ you needn&rsquo;t be afraid I ever will again. No, sir! And I&rsquo;m going to church
+ and Sunday School regular, and I&rsquo;ll say my prayers every night. I want to
+ be like the rest of you. And look here! I&rsquo;ve thought of the way my Aunt
+ Jane used to give medicine to a cat. You mix the powder in lard, and
+ spread it on his paws and his sides and he&rsquo;ll lick it off, &lsquo;cause a cat
+ can&rsquo;t stand being messy. If Paddy isn&rsquo;t any better to-morrow, we&rsquo;ll do
+ that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They went away together hand in hand, children-wise, up the lane of
+ spruces crossed with bars of moonlight. And there was peace over all that
+ fresh and flowery land, and peace in our little hearts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI. THE MYSTERY OF GOLDEN MILESTONE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Paddy was smeared with medicated lard the next day, all of us assisting at
+ the rite, although the Story Girl was high priestess. Then, out of regard
+ for mats and cushions, he was kept in durance vile in the granary until he
+ had licked his fur clean. This treatment being repeated every day for a
+ week, Pat recovered his usual health and spirits, and our minds were set
+ at rest to enjoy the next excitement&mdash;collecting for a school library
+ fund.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our teacher thought it would be an excellent thing to have a library in
+ connection with the school; and he suggested that each of the pupils
+ should try to see how much money he or she could raise for the project
+ during the month of June. We might earn it by honest toil, or gather it in
+ by contributions levied on our friends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The result was a determined rivalry as to which pupil should collect the
+ largest sum; and this rivalry was especially intense in our home coterie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our relatives started us with a quarter apiece. For the rest, we knew we
+ must depend on our own exertions. Peter was handicapped at the beginning
+ by the fact that he had no family friend to finance him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If my Aunt Jane&rsquo;d been living she&rsquo;d have given me something,&rdquo; he
+ remarked. &ldquo;And if my father hadn&rsquo;t run away he might have given me
+ something too. But I&rsquo;m going to do the best I can anyhow. Your Aunt Olivia
+ says I can have the job of gathering the eggs, and I&rsquo;m to have one egg out
+ of every dozen to sell for myself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Felicity made a similar bargain with her mother. The Story Girl and Cecily
+ were each to be paid ten cents a week for washing dishes in their
+ respective homes. Felix and Dan contracted to keep the gardens free from
+ weeds. I caught brook trout in the westering valley of spruces and sold
+ them for a cent apiece.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sara Ray was the only unhappy one among us. She could do nothing. She had
+ no relatives in Carlisle except her mother, and her mother did not approve
+ of the school library project, and would not give Sara a cent, or put her
+ in any way of earning one. To Sara, this was humiliation indescribable.
+ She felt herself an outcast and an alien to our busy little circle, where
+ each member counted every day, with miserly delight, his slowly increasing
+ hoard of small cash.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m just going to pray to God to send me some money,&rdquo; she announced
+ desperately at last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t believe that will do any good,&rdquo; said Dan. &ldquo;He gives lots of
+ things, but he doesn&rsquo;t give money, because people can earn that for
+ themselves.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can&rsquo;t,&rdquo; said Sara, with passionate defiance. &ldquo;I think He ought to take
+ that into account.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t worry, dear,&rdquo; said Cecily, who always poured balm. &ldquo;If you can&rsquo;t
+ collect any money everybody will know it isn&rsquo;t your fault.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I won&rsquo;t ever feel like reading a single book in the library if I can&rsquo;t
+ give something to it,&rdquo; mourned Sara.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan and the girls and I were sitting in a row on Aunt Olivia&rsquo;s garden
+ fence, watching Felix weed. Felix worked well, although he did not like
+ weeding&mdash;&ldquo;fat boys never do,&rdquo; Felicity informed him. Felix pretended
+ not to hear her, but I knew he did, because his ears grew red. Felix&rsquo;s
+ face never blushed, but his ears always gave him away. As for Felicity,
+ she did not say things like that out of malice prepense. It never occurred
+ to her that Felix did not like to be called fat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I always feel so sorry for the poor weeds,&rdquo; said the Story Girl dreamily.
+ &ldquo;It must be very hard to be rooted up.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They shouldn&rsquo;t grow in the wrong place,&rdquo; said Felicity mercilessly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When weeds go to heaven I suppose they will be flowers,&rdquo; continued the
+ Story Girl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You do think such queer things,&rdquo; said Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A rich man in Toronto has a floral clock in his garden,&rdquo; I said. &ldquo;It
+ looks just like the face of a clock, and there are flowers in it that open
+ at every hour, so that you can always tell the time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I wish we had one here,&rdquo; exclaimed Cecily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What would be the use of it?&rdquo; asked the Story Girl a little disdainfully.
+ &ldquo;Nobody ever wants to know the time in a garden.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I slipped away at this point, suddenly remembering that it was time to
+ take a dose of magic seed. I had bought it from Billy Robinson three days
+ before in school. Billy had assured me that it would make me grow fast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was beginning to feel secretly worried because I did not grow. I had
+ overheard Aunt Janet say I was going to be short, like Uncle Alec. Now, I
+ loved Uncle Alec, but I wanted to be taller than he was. So when Billy
+ confided to me, under solemn promise of secrecy, that he had some &ldquo;magic
+ seed,&rdquo; which would make boys grow, and would sell me a box of it for ten
+ cents, I jumped at the offer. Billy was taller than any boy of his age in
+ Carlisle, and he assured me it all came from taking magic seed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was a regular runt before I begun,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and look at me now. I got
+ it from Peg Bowen. She&rsquo;s a witch, you know. I wouldn&rsquo;t go near her again
+ for a bushel of magic seed. It was an awful experience. I haven&rsquo;t much
+ left, but I guess I&rsquo;ve enough to do me till I&rsquo;m as tall as I want to be.
+ You must take a pinch of the seed every three hours, walking backward, and
+ you must never tell a soul you&rsquo;re taking it, or it won&rsquo;t work. I wouldn&rsquo;t
+ spare any of it to any one but you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I felt deeply grateful to Billy, and sorry that I had not liked him
+ better. Somehow, nobody did like Billy Robinson over and above. But I
+ vowed I WOULD like him in future. I paid him the ten cents cheerfully and
+ took the magic seed as directed, measuring myself carefully every day by a
+ mark on the hall door. I could not see any advance in growth yet, but then
+ I had been taking it only three days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day the Story Girl had an inspiration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let us go and ask the Awkward Man and Mr. Campbell for a contribution to
+ the library fund,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I am sure no one else has asked them,
+ because nobody in Carlisle is related to them. Let us all go, and if they
+ give us anything we&rsquo;ll divide it equally among us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a daring proposition, for both Mr. Campbell and the Awkward Man
+ were regarded as eccentric personages; and Mr. Campbell was supposed to
+ detest children. But where the Story Girl led we would follow to the
+ death. The next day being Saturday, we started out in the afternoon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We took a short cut to Golden Milestone, over a long, green, dewy land
+ full of placid meadows, where sunshine had fallen asleep. At first all was
+ not harmonious. Felicity was in an ill humour; she had wanted to wear her
+ second best dress, but Aunt Janet had decreed that her school clothes were
+ good enough to go &ldquo;traipsing about in the dust.&rdquo; Then the Story Girl
+ arrived, arrayed not in any second best but in her very best dress and
+ hat, which her father had sent her from Paris&mdash;a dress of soft,
+ crimson silk, and a white leghorn hat encircled by flame-red poppies.
+ Neither Felicity nor Cecily could have worn it; but it became the Story
+ Girl perfectly. In it she was a thing of fire and laughter and glow, as if
+ the singular charm of her temperament were visible and tangible in its
+ vivid colouring and silken texture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shouldn&rsquo;t think you&rsquo;d put on your best clothes to go begging for the
+ library in,&rdquo; said Felicity cuttingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aunt Olivia says that when you are going to have an important interview
+ with a man you ought to look your very best,&rdquo; said the Story Girl, giving
+ her skirt a lustrous swirl and enjoying the effect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aunt Olivia spoils you,&rdquo; said Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She doesn&rsquo;t either, Felicity King! Aunt Olivia is just sweet. She kisses
+ me good-night every night, and your mother NEVER kisses you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My mother doesn&rsquo;t make kisses so common,&rdquo; retorted Felicity. &ldquo;But she
+ gives us pie for dinner every day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So does Aunt Olivia.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, but look at the difference in the size of the pieces! And Aunt
+ Olivia only gives you skim milk. My mother gives us cream.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aunt Olivia&rsquo;s skim milk is as good as your mother&rsquo;s cream,&rdquo; cried the
+ Story Girl hotly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, girls, don&rsquo;t fight,&rdquo; said Cecily, the peacemaker. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s such a nice
+ day, and we&rsquo;ll have a nice time if you don&rsquo;t spoil it by fighting.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We&rsquo;re NOT fighting,&rdquo; said Felicity. &ldquo;And I like Aunt Olivia. But my
+ mother is just as good as Aunt Olivia, there now!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course she is. Aunt Janet is splendid,&rdquo; agreed the Story Girl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They smiled at each other amicably. Felicity and the Story Girl were
+ really quite fond of each other, under the queer surface friction that
+ commonly resulted from their intercourse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You said once you knew a story about the Awkward Man,&rdquo; said Felix. &ldquo;You
+ might tell it to us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All right,&rdquo; agreed the Story Girl. &ldquo;The only trouble is, I don&rsquo;t know the
+ whole story. But I&rsquo;ll tell you all I do know. I call it &lsquo;The Mystery of
+ the Golden Milestone.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I don&rsquo;t believe that story is true,&rdquo; said Felicity. &ldquo;I believe Mrs.
+ Griggs was just romancing. She DOES romance, mother says.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; but I don&rsquo;t believe she could ever have thought of such a thing as
+ this herself, so I believe it must be true,&rdquo; said the Story Girl. &ldquo;Anyway,
+ this is the story, boys. You know the Awkward Man has lived alone ever
+ since his mother died, ten years ago. Abel Griggs is his hired man, and he
+ and his wife live in a little house down the Awkward Man&rsquo;s lane. Mrs.
+ Griggs makes his bread for him, and she cleans up his house now and then.
+ She says he keeps it very neat. But till last fall there was one room she
+ never saw. It was always locked&mdash;the west one, looking out over his
+ garden. One day last fall the Awkward Man went to Summerside, and Mrs.
+ Griggs scrubbed his kitchen. Then she went over the whole house and she
+ tried the door of the west room. Mrs. Griggs is a VERY curious woman.
+ Uncle Roger says all women have as much curiosity as is good for them, but
+ Mrs. Griggs has more. She expected to find the door locked as usual. It
+ was NOT locked. She opened it and went in. What do you suppose she found?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Something like&mdash;like Bluebeard&rsquo;s chamber?&rdquo; suggested Felix in a
+ scared tone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, no, NO! Nothing like THAT could happen in Prince Edward Island. But
+ if there HAD been beautiful wives hanging up by their hair all round the
+ walls I don&rsquo;t believe Mrs. Griggs could have been much more astonished.
+ The room had never been furnished in his mother&rsquo;s time, but now it was
+ ELEGANTLY furnished, though Mrs. Griggs says SHE doesn&rsquo;t know when or how
+ that furniture was brought there. She says she never saw a room like it in
+ a country farmhouse. It was like a bed-room and sitting-room combined. The
+ floor was covered with a carpet like green velvet. There were fine lace
+ curtains at the windows and beautiful pictures on the walls. There was a
+ little white bed, and a dressing-table, a bookcase full of books, a stand
+ with a work basket on it, and a rocking-chair. There was a woman&rsquo;s picture
+ above the bookcase. Mrs. Griggs says she thinks it was a coloured
+ photograph, but she didn&rsquo;t know who it was. Anyway, it was a very pretty
+ girl. But the most amazing thing of all was that A WOMAN&rsquo;S DRESS was
+ hanging over a chair by the table. Mrs. Griggs says it NEVER belonged to
+ Jasper Dale&rsquo;s mother, for she thought it a sin to wear anything but print
+ and drugget; and this dress was of PALE BLUE silk. Besides that, there was
+ a pair of blue satin slippers on the floor beside it&mdash;HIGH-HEELED
+ slippers. And on the fly-leaves of the books the name &lsquo;Alice&rsquo; was written.
+ Now, there never was an Alice in the Dale connection and nobody ever heard
+ of the Awkward Man having a sweetheart. There, isn&rsquo;t that a lovely
+ mystery?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It&rsquo;s a pretty queer yarn,&rdquo; said Felix. &ldquo;I wonder if it is true&mdash;and
+ what it means.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I intend to find out what it means,&rdquo; said the Story Girl. &ldquo;I am going to
+ get acquainted with the Awkward Man sometime, and then I&rsquo;ll find out his
+ Alice-secret.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see how you&rsquo;ll ever get acquainted with him,&rdquo; said Felicity. &ldquo;He
+ never goes anywhere except to church. He just stays home and reads books
+ when he isn&rsquo;t working. Mother says he is a perfect hermit.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll manage it somehow,&rdquo; said the Story Girl&mdash;and we had no doubt
+ that she would. &ldquo;But I must wait until I&rsquo;m a little older, for he wouldn&rsquo;t
+ tell the secret of the west room to a little girl. And I mustn&rsquo;t wait till
+ I&rsquo;m TOO old, for he is frightened of grown-up girls, because he thinks
+ they laugh at his awkwardness. I know I will like him. He has such a nice
+ face, even if he is awkward. He looks like a man you could tell things
+ to.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I&rsquo;d like a man who could move around without falling over his own
+ feet,&rdquo; said Felicity. &ldquo;And then the look of him! Uncle Roger says he is
+ long, lank, lean, narrow, and contracted.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Things always sound worse than they are when Uncle Roger says them,&rdquo; said
+ the Story Girl. &ldquo;Uncle Edward says Jasper Dale is a very clever man and
+ it&rsquo;s a great pity he wasn&rsquo;t able to finish his college course. He went to
+ college two years, you know. Then his father died, and he stayed home with
+ his mother because she was very delicate. I call him a hero. I wonder if
+ it is true that he writes poetry. Mrs. Griggs says it is. She says she has
+ seen him writing it in a brown book. She said she couldn&rsquo;t get near enough
+ to read it, but she knew it was poetry by the shape of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very likely. If that blue silk dress story is true, I&rsquo;d believe ANYTHING
+ of him,&rdquo; said Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were near Golden Milestone now. The house was a big, weather-gray
+ structure, overgrown with vines and climbing roses. Something about the
+ three square windows in the second story gave it an appearance of winking
+ at us in a friendly fashion through its vines&mdash;at least, so the Story
+ Girl said; and, indeed, we could see it for ourselves after she had once
+ pointed it out to us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We did not get into the house, however. We met the Awkward man in his
+ yard, and he gave us a quarter apiece for our library. He did not seem
+ awkward or shy; but then we were only children, and his foot was on his
+ native heath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was a tall, slender man, who did not look his forty years, so
+ unwrinkled was his high, white forehead, so clear and lustrous his large,
+ dark-blue eyes, so free from silver threads his rather long black hair. He
+ had large hands and feet, and walked with a slight stoop. I am afraid we
+ stared at him rather rudely while the Story Girl talked to him. But was
+ not an Awkward Man, who was also a hermit and kept blue silk dresses in a
+ locked room, and possibly wrote poetry, a legitimate object of curiosity?
+ I leave it to you.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When we got away we compared notes, and found that we all liked him&mdash;and
+ this, although he had said little and had appeared somewhat glad to get
+ rid of us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He gave us the money like a gentleman,&rdquo; said the Story Girl. &ldquo;I felt he
+ didn&rsquo;t grudge it. And now for Mr. Campbell. It was on HIS account I put on
+ my red silk. I don&rsquo;t suppose the Awkward Man noticed it at all, but Mr.
+ Campbell will, or I&rsquo;m much mistaken.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII. HOW BETTY SHERMAN WON A HUSBAND
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The rest of us did not share the Story Girl&rsquo;s enthusiasm regarding our
+ call on Mr. Campbell. We secretly dreaded it. If, as was said, he detested
+ children, who knew what sort of a reception we might meet?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Campbell was a rich, retired farmer, who took life easily. He had
+ visited New York and Boston, Toronto and Montreal; he had even been as far
+ as the Pacific coast. Therefore he was regarded in Carlisle as a much
+ travelled man; and he was known to be &ldquo;well read&rdquo; and intelligent. But it
+ was also known that Mr. Campbell was not always in a good humour. If he
+ liked you there was nothing he would not do for you; if he disliked you&mdash;well,
+ you were not left in ignorance of it. In short, we had the impression that
+ Mr. Campbell resembled the famous little girl with the curl in the middle
+ of her forehead. &ldquo;When he was good, he was very, very good, and when he
+ was bad he was horrid.&rdquo; What if this were one of his horrid days?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He can&rsquo;t DO anything to us, you know,&rdquo; said the Story Girl. &ldquo;He may be
+ rude, but that won&rsquo;t hurt any one but himself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hard words break no bones,&rdquo; observed Felicity philosophically.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But they hurt your feelings. I am afraid of Mr. Campbell,&rdquo; said Cecily
+ candidly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Perhaps we&rsquo;d better give up and go home,&rdquo; suggested Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You can go home if you like,&rdquo; said the Story Girl scornfully. &ldquo;But I am
+ going to see Mr. Campbell. I know I can manage him. But if I have to go
+ alone, and he gives me anything, I&rsquo;ll keep it all for my own collection,
+ mind you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That settled it. We were not going to let the Story Girl get ahead of us
+ in the manner of collecting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Campbell&rsquo;s housekeeper ushered us into his parlour and left us.
+ Presently Mr. Campbell himself was standing in the doorway, looking us
+ over. We took heart of grace. It seemed to be one of his good days, for
+ there was a quizzical smile on his broad, clean-shaven, strongly-featured
+ face. Mr. Campbell was a tall man, with a massive head, well thatched with
+ thick, black hair, gray-streaked. He had big, black eyes, with many
+ wrinkles around them, and a thin, firm, long-lipped mouth. We thought him
+ handsome, for an old man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His gaze wandered over us with uncomplimentary indifference until it fell
+ on the Story Girl, leaning back in an arm-chair. She looked like a slender
+ red lily in the unstudied grace of her attitude. A spark flashed into Mr.
+ Campbell&rsquo;s black eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is this a Sunday School deputation?&rdquo; he inquired rather ironically.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No. We have come to ask a favour of you,&rdquo; said the Story Girl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The magic of her voice worked its will on Mr. Campbell, as on all others.
+ He came in, sat down, hooked his thumb into his vest pocket, and smiled at
+ her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is it?&rdquo; he asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are collecting for our school library, and we have called to ask you
+ for a contribution,&rdquo; she replied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why should I contribute to your school library?&rdquo; demanded Mr. Campbell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was a poser for us. Why should he, indeed? But the Story Girl was
+ quite equal to it. Leaning forward, and throwing an indescribable witchery
+ into tone and eyes and smile, she said,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because a lady asks you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Campbell chuckled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The best of all reasons,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;But see here, my dear young lady, I&rsquo;m
+ an old miser and curmudgeon, as you may have heard. I HATE to part with my
+ money, even for a good reason. And I NEVER part with any of it, unless I
+ am to receive some benefit from the expenditure. Now, what earthly good
+ could I get from your three by six school library? None whatever. But I
+ shall make you a fair offer. I have heard from my housekeeper&rsquo;s urchin of
+ a son that you are a &lsquo;master hand&rsquo; to tell stories. Tell me one, here and
+ now. I shall pay you in proportion to the entertainment you afford me.
+ Come now, and do your prettiest.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a fine mockery in his tone that put the Story Girl on her mettle
+ instantly. She sprang to her feet, an amazing change coming over her. Her
+ eyes flashed and burned; crimson spots glowed in her cheeks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shall tell you the story of the Sherman girls, and how Betty Sherman
+ won a husband,&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We gasped. Was the Story Girl crazy? Or had she forgotten that Betty
+ Sherman was Mr. Campbell&rsquo;s own great-grandmother, and that her method of
+ winning a husband was not exactly in accordance with maidenly traditions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Mr. Campbell chuckled again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;An excellent test,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;If you can amuse ME with that story you
+ must be a wonder. I&rsquo;ve heard it so often that it has no more interest for
+ me than the alphabet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;One cold winter day, eighty years ago,&rdquo; began the Story Girl without
+ further parley, &ldquo;Donald Fraser was sitting by the window of his new house,
+ playing his fiddle for company, and looking out over the white, frozen bay
+ before his door. It was bitter, bitter cold, and a storm was brewing. But,
+ storm, or no storm, Donald meant to go over the bay that evening to see
+ Nancy Sherman. He was thinking of her as he played &lsquo;Annie Laurie,&rsquo; for
+ Nancy was more beautiful than the lady of the song. &lsquo;Her face, it is the
+ fairest that e&rsquo;er the sun shone on,&rsquo; hummed Donald&mdash;and oh, he
+ thought so, too! He did not know whether Nancy cared for him or not. He
+ had many rivals. But he knew that if she would not come to be the mistress
+ of his new house no one else ever should. So he sat there that afternoon
+ and dreamed of her, as he played sweet old songs and rollicking jigs on
+ his fiddle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;While he was playing a sleigh drove up to the door, and Neil Campbell
+ came in. Donald was not overly glad to see him, for he suspected where he
+ was going. Neil Campbell, who was Highland Scotch and lived down at
+ Berwick, was courting Nancy Sherman, too; and, what was far worse, Nancy&rsquo;s
+ father favoured him, because he was a richer man than Donald Fraser. But
+ Donald was not going to show all he thought&mdash;Scotch people never do&mdash;and
+ he pretended to be very glad to see Neil and made him heartily welcome.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Neil sat down by the roaring fire, looking quite well satisfied with
+ himself. It was ten miles from Berwick to the bay shore, and a call at a
+ half way house was just the thing. Then Donald brought out the whisky.
+ They always did that eighty years ago, you know. If you were a woman, you
+ could give your visitors a dish of tea; but if you were a man and did not
+ offer them a &lsquo;taste&rsquo; of whisky, you were thought either very mean or very
+ ignorant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;You look cold,&rsquo; said Donald, in his great, hearty voice. &lsquo;Sit nearer the
+ fire, man, and put a bit of warmth in your veins. It&rsquo;s bitter cold the
+ day. And now tell me the Berwick news. Has Jean McLean made up with her
+ man yet? And is it true that Sandy McQuarrie is to marry Kate Ferguson?
+ &lsquo;Twill be a match now! Sure, with her red hair, Sandy will not be like to
+ lose his bride past finding.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Neil had plenty of news to tell. And the more whisky he drank the more he
+ told. He didn&rsquo;t notice that Donald was not taking much. Neil talked on and
+ on, and of course he soon began to tell things it would have been much
+ wiser not to tell. Finally he told Donald that he was going over the bay
+ to ask Nancy Sherman that very night to marry him. And if she would have
+ him, then Donald and all the folks should see a wedding that WAS a
+ wedding.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, wasn&rsquo;t Donald taken aback! This was more than he had expected. Neil
+ hadn&rsquo;t been courting Nancy very long, and Donald never dreamed he would
+ propose to her QUITE so soon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At first Donald didn&rsquo;t know what to do. He felt sure deep down in his
+ heart, that Nancy liked HIM. She was very shy and modest, but you know a
+ girl can let a man see she likes him without going out of her way. But
+ Donald knew that if Neil proposed first he would have the best chance.
+ Neil was rich and the Shermans were poor, and old Elias Sherman would have
+ the most to say in the matter. If he told Nancy she must take Neil
+ Campbell she would never dream of disobeying him. Old Elias Sherman was a
+ man who had to be obeyed. But if Nancy had only promised some one else
+ first her father would not make her break her word.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wasn&rsquo;t it a hard plight for poor Donald? But he was a Scotchman, you
+ know, and it&rsquo;s pretty hard to stick a Scotchman long. Presently a twinkle
+ came into his eyes, for he remembered that all was fair in love and war.
+ So he said to Neil, oh, so persuasively,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Have some more, man, have some more. &lsquo;Twill keep the heart in you in the
+ teeth of that wind. Help yourself. There&rsquo;s plenty more where that came
+ from.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Neil didn&rsquo;t want MUCH persuasion. He took some more, and said slyly,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Is it going over the bay the night that yourself will be doing?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Donald shook his head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;I had thought of it,&rsquo; he owned, &lsquo;but it looks a wee like a storm, and my
+ sleigh is at the blacksmith&rsquo;s to be shod. If I went it must be on Black
+ Dan&rsquo;s back, and he likes a canter over the ice in a snow-storm as little
+ as I. His own fireside is the best place for a man to-night, Campbell.
+ Have another taste, man, have another taste.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Neil went on &lsquo;tasting,&rsquo; and that sly Donald sat there with a sober face,
+ but laughing eyes, and coaxed him on. At last Neil&rsquo;s head fell forward on
+ his breast, and he was sound asleep. Donald got up, put on his overcoat
+ and cap, and went to the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;May your sleep be long and sweet, man,&rsquo; he said, laughing softly, &lsquo;and
+ as for the waking, &lsquo;twill be betwixt you and me.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;With that he untied Neil&rsquo;s horse, climbed into Neil&rsquo;s sleigh, and tucked
+ Neil&rsquo;s buffalo robe about him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Now, Bess, old girl, do your bonniest,&rsquo; he said. &lsquo;There&rsquo;s more than you
+ know hangs on your speed. If the Campbell wakes too soon Black Dan could
+ show you a pair of clean heels for all your good start. On, my girl.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Brown Bess went over the ice like a deer, and Donald kept thinking of
+ what he should say to Nancy&mdash;and more still of what she would say to
+ him. SUPPOSE he was mistaken. SUPPOSE she said &lsquo;no!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Neil would have the laugh on me then. Sure he&rsquo;s sleeping well. And the
+ snow is coming soon. There&rsquo;ll be a bonny swirl on the bay ere long. I hope
+ no harm will come to the lad if he starts to cross. When he wakes he&rsquo;ll be
+ in such a fine Highland temper that he&rsquo;ll never stop to think of danger.
+ Well, Bess, old girl, here we are. Now, Donald Fraser, pluck up heart and
+ play the man. Never flinch because a slip of a lass looks scornful at you
+ out of the bonniest dark-blue eyes on earth.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But in spite of his bold words Donald&rsquo;s heart was thumping as he drove
+ into the Sherman yard. Nancy was there milking a cow by the stable door,
+ but she stood up when she saw Donald coming. Oh, she was very beautiful!
+ Her hair was like a skein of golden silk, and her eyes were as blue as the
+ gulf water when the sun breaks out after a storm. Donald felt more nervous
+ than ever. But he knew he must make the most of his chance. He might not
+ see Nancy alone again before Neil came. He caught her hand and stammered
+ out,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Nan, lass, I love you. You may think &lsquo;tis a hasty wooing, but that&rsquo;s a
+ story I can tell you later maybe. I know well I&rsquo;m not worthy of you, but
+ if true love could make a man worthy there&rsquo;d be none before me. Will you
+ have me, Nan?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nancy didn&rsquo;t SAY she would have him. She just LOOKED it, and Donald
+ kissed her right there in the snow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The next morning the storm was over. Donald knew Neil must be soon on his
+ track. He did not want to make the Sherman house the scene of a quarrel,
+ so he resolved to get away before the Campbell came. He persuaded Nancy to
+ go with him to visit some friends in another settlement. As he brought
+ Neil&rsquo;s sleigh up to the door he saw a black speck far out on the bay and
+ laughed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Black Dan goes well, but he&rsquo;ll not be quick enough,&rsquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Half an hour later Neil Campbell rushed into the Sherman kitchen and oh,
+ how angry he was! There was nobody there but Betty Sherman, and Betty was
+ not afraid of him. She was never afraid of anybody. She was very handsome,
+ with hair as brown as October nuts and black eyes and crimson cheeks; and
+ she had always been in love with Neil Campbell herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Good morning, Mr. Campbell,&rsquo; she said, with a toss of her head. &lsquo;It&rsquo;s
+ early abroad you are. And on Black Dan, no less! Was I mistaken in
+ thinking that Donald Fraser said once that his favourite horse should
+ never be backed by any man but him? But doubtless a fair exchange is no
+ robbery, and Brown Bess is a good mare in her way.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Where is Donald Fraser?&rsquo; said Neil, shaking his fist. &lsquo;It&rsquo;s him I&rsquo;m
+ seeking, and it&rsquo;s him I will be finding. Where is he, Betty Sherman?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Donald Fraser is far enough away by this time,&rsquo; mocked Betty. &lsquo;He is a
+ prudent fellow, and has some quickness of wit under that sandy thatch of
+ his. He came here last night at sunset, with a horse and sleigh not his
+ own, or lately gotten, and he asked Nan in the stable yard to marry him.
+ Did a man ask ME to marry him at the cow&rsquo;s side with a milking pail in my
+ hand, it&rsquo;s a cold answer he&rsquo;d get for his pains. But Nan thought
+ differently, and they sat late together last night, and &lsquo;twas a bonny
+ story Nan wakened me to hear when she came to bed&mdash;the story of a
+ braw lover who let his secret out when the whisky was above the wit, and
+ then fell asleep while his rival was away to woo and win his lass. Did you
+ ever hear a like story, Mr. Campbell?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Oh, yes,&rsquo; said Neil fiercely. &lsquo;It is laughing at me over the country
+ side and telling that story that Donald Fraser will be doing, is it? But
+ when I meet him it is not laughing he will be doing. Oh, no. There will be
+ another story to tell!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Now, don&rsquo;t meddle with the man,&rsquo; cried Betty. &lsquo;What a state to be in
+ because one good-looking lass likes sandy hair and gray eyes better than
+ Highland black and blue! You have not the spirit of a wren, Neil Campbell.
+ Were I you, I would show Donald Fraser that I could woo and win a lass as
+ speedily as any Lowlander of them all; that I would! There&rsquo;s many a girl
+ would gladly say &lsquo;yes&rsquo; for your asking. And here stands one! Why not marry
+ ME, Neil Campbell? Folks say I&rsquo;m as bonny as Nan&mdash;and I could love
+ you as well as Nan loves her Donald&mdash;ay, and ten times better!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What do you suppose the Campbell did? Why, just the thing he ought to
+ have done. He took Betty at her word on the spot; and there was a double
+ wedding soon after. And it is said that Neil and Betty were the happiest
+ couple in the world&mdash;happier even than Donald and Nancy. So all was
+ well because it ended well!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl curtsied until her silken skirts swept the floor. Then she
+ flung herself in her chair and looked at Mr. Campbell, flushed,
+ triumphant, daring.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The story was old to us. It had once been published in a Charlottetown
+ paper, and we had read in Aunt Olivia&rsquo;s scrapbook, where the Story Girl
+ had learned it. But we had listened entranced. I have written down the
+ bare words of the story, as she told it; but I can never reproduce the
+ charm and colour and spirit she infused into it. It LIVED for us. Donald
+ and Neil, Nancy and Betty, were there in that room with us. We saw the
+ flashes of expression on their faces, we heard their voices, angry or
+ tender, mocking or merry, in Lowland and Highland accent. We realized all
+ the mingled coquetry and feeling and defiance and archness in Betty
+ Sherman&rsquo;s daring speech. We had even forgotten all about Mr. Campbell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That gentleman, in silence, took out his wallet, extracted a note
+ therefrom, and handed it gravely to the Story Girl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There are five dollars for you,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and your story was well worth
+ it. You ARE a wonder. Some day you will make the world realize it. I&rsquo;ve
+ been about a bit, and heard some good things, but I&rsquo;ve never enjoyed
+ anything more than that threadbare old story I heard in my cradle. And
+ now, will you do me a favour?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course,&rdquo; said the delighted Story Girl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Recite the multiplication table for me,&rdquo; said Mr. Campbell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We stared. Well might Mr. Campbell be called eccentric. What on earth did
+ he want the multiplication table recited for? Even the Story Girl was
+ surprised. But she began promptly, with twice one and went through it to
+ twelve times twelve. She repeated it simply, but her voice changed from
+ one tone to another as each in succession grew tired. We had never dreamed
+ that there was so much in the multiplication table. As she announced it,
+ the fact that three times three was nine was exquisitely ridiculous, five
+ times six almost brought tears to our eyes, eight times seven was the most
+ tragic and frightful thing ever heard of, and twelve times twelve rang
+ like a trumpet call to victory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Campbell nodded his satisfaction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I thought you could do it,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;The other day I found this
+ statement in a book. &lsquo;Her voice would have made the multiplication table
+ charming!&rsquo; I thought of it when I heard yours. I didn&rsquo;t believe it before,
+ but I do now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he let us go.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You see,&rdquo; said the Story Girl as we went home, &ldquo;you need never be afraid
+ of people.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But we are not all Story Girls,&rdquo; said Cecily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That night we heard Felicity talking to Cecily in their room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Campbell never noticed one of us except the Story Girl,&rdquo; she said,
+ &ldquo;but if I had put on MY best dress as she did maybe she wouldn&rsquo;t have
+ taken all the attention.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Could you ever do what Betty Sherman did, do you suppose?&rdquo; asked Cecily
+ absently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; but I believe the Story Girl could,&rdquo; answered Felicity rather
+ snappishly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII. A TRAGEDY OF CHILDHOOD
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl went to Charlottetown for a week in June to visit Aunt
+ Louisa. Life seemed very colourless without her, and even Felicity
+ admitted that it was lonesome. But three days after her departure Felix
+ told us something on the way home from school which lent some spice to
+ existence immediately.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What do you think?&rdquo; he said in a very solemn, yet excited, tone. &ldquo;Jerry
+ Cowan told me at recess this afternoon that he HAD SEEN A PICTURE OF GOD&mdash;that
+ he has it at home in an old, red-covered history of the world, and has
+ looked at it OFTEN.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To think that Jerry Cowan should have seen such a picture often! We were
+ as deeply impressed as Felix had meant us to be.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did he say what it was like?&rdquo; asked Peter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No&mdash;only that it was a picture of God, walking in the garden of
+ Eden.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; whispered Felicity&mdash;we all spoke in low tones on the subject,
+ for, by instinct and training, we thought and uttered the Great Name with
+ reverence, in spite of our devouring curiosity&mdash;&ldquo;oh, WOULD Jerry
+ Cowan bring it to school and let us see it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I asked him that, soon as ever he told me,&rdquo; said Felix. &ldquo;He said he
+ might, but he couldn&rsquo;t promise, for he&rsquo;d have to ask his mother if he
+ could bring the book to school. If she&rsquo;ll let him he&rsquo;ll bring it
+ to-morrow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I&rsquo;ll be almost afraid to look at it,&rdquo; said Sara Ray tremulously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I think we all shared her fear to some extent. Nevertheless, we went to
+ school the next day burning with curiosity. And we were disappointed.
+ Possibly night had brought counsel to Jerry Cowan; or perhaps his mother
+ had put him up to it. At all events, he announced to us that he couldn&rsquo;t
+ bring the red-covered history to school, but if we wanted to buy the
+ picture outright he would tear it out of the book and sell it to us for
+ fifty cents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We talked the matter over in serious conclave in the orchard that evening.
+ We were all rather short of hard cash, having devoted most of our spare
+ means to the school library fund. But the general consensus of opinion was
+ that we must have the picture, no matter what pecuniary sacrifices were
+ involved. If we could each give about seven cents we would have the
+ amount. Peter could only give four, but Dan gave eleven, which squared
+ matters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fifty cents would be pretty dear for any other picture, but of course
+ this is different,&rdquo; said Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And there&rsquo;s a picture of Eden thrown in, too, you know,&rdquo; added Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fancy selling God&rsquo;s picture,&rdquo; said Cecily in a shocked, awed tone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nobody but a Cowan would do it, and that&rsquo;s a fact,&rdquo; said Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When we get it we&rsquo;ll keep it in the family Bible,&rdquo; said Felicity. &ldquo;That&rsquo;s
+ the only proper place.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I wonder what it will be like,&rdquo; breathed Cecily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We all wondered. Next day in school we agreed to Jerry Cowan&rsquo;s terms, and
+ Jerry promised to bring the picture up to Uncle Alec&rsquo;s the following
+ afternoon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were all intensely excited Saturday morning. To our dismay, it began to
+ rain just before dinner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What if Jerry doesn&rsquo;t bring the picture to-day because of the rain?&rdquo; I
+ suggested.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never you fear,&rdquo; answered Felicity decidedly. &ldquo;A Cowan would come through
+ ANYTHING for fifty cents.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After dinner we all, without any verbal decision about it, washed our
+ faces and combed our hair. The girls put on their second best dresses, and
+ we boys donned white collars. We all had the unuttered feeling that we
+ must do such honour to that Picture as we could. Felicity and Dan began a
+ small spat over something, but stopped at once when Cecily said severely,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How DARE you quarrel when you are going to look at a picture of God
+ to-day?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Owing to the rain we could not foregather in the orchard, where we had
+ meant to transact the business with Jerry. We did not wish our grown-ups
+ around at our great moment, so we betook ourselves to the loft of the
+ granary in the spruce wood, from whose window we could see the main road
+ and hail Jerry. Sara Ray had joined us, very pale and nervous, having had,
+ so it appeared, a difference of opinion with her mother about coming up
+ the hill in the rain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m afraid I did very wrong to come against ma&rsquo;s will,&rdquo; she said
+ miserably, &ldquo;but I COULDN&rsquo;T wait. I wanted to see the picture as soon as
+ you did.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We waited and watched at the window. The valley was full of mist, and the
+ rain was coming down in slanting lines over the tops of the spruces. But
+ as we waited the clouds broke away and the sun came out flashingly; the
+ drops on the spruce boughs glittered like diamonds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t believe Jerry can be coming,&rdquo; said Cecily in despair. &ldquo;I suppose
+ his mother must have thought it was dreadful, after all, to sell such a
+ picture.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There he is now!&rdquo; cried Dan, waving excitedly from the window.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He&rsquo;s carrying a fish-basket,&rdquo; said Felicity. &ldquo;You surely don&rsquo;t suppose he
+ would bring THAT picture in a fish-basket!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jerry HAD brought it in a fish-basket, as appeared when he mounted the
+ granary stairs shortly afterwards. It was folded up in a newspaper packet
+ on top of the dried herring with which the basket was filled. We paid him
+ his money, but we would not open the packet until he had gone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Cecily,&rdquo; said Felicity in a hushed tone. &ldquo;You are the best of us all. YOU
+ open the parcel.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I&rsquo;m no gooder than the rest of you,&rdquo; breathed Cecily, &ldquo;but I&rsquo;ll open
+ it if you like.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With trembling fingers Cecily opened the parcel. We stood around, hardly
+ breathing. She unfolded it and held it up. We saw it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly Sara began to cry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, oh, oh, does God look like THAT?&rdquo; she wailed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Felix and I spoke not. Disappointment, and something worse, sealed our
+ speech. DID God look like that&mdash;like that stern, angrily frowning old
+ man with the tossing hair and beard of the wood-cut Cecily held.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suppose He must, since that is His picture,&rdquo; said Dan miserably.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He looks awful cross,&rdquo; said Peter simply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I wish we&rsquo;d never, never seen it,&rdquo; cried Cecily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We all wished that&mdash;too late. Our curiosity had led us into some Holy
+ of Holies, not to be profaned by human eyes, and this was our punishment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve always had a feeling right along,&rdquo; wept Sara, &ldquo;that it wasn&rsquo;t RIGHT
+ to buy&mdash;or LOOK AT&mdash;God&rsquo;s picture.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As we stood there wretchedly we heard flying feet below and a blithe voice
+ calling,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where are you, children?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl had returned! At any other moment we would have rushed to
+ meet her in wild joy. But now we were too crushed and miserable to move.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whatever is the matter with you all?&rdquo; demanded the Story Girl, appearing
+ at the top of the stairs. &ldquo;What is Sara crying about? What have you got
+ there?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A picture of God,&rdquo; said Cecily with a sob in her voice, &ldquo;and oh, it is so
+ dreadful and ugly. Look!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl looked. An expression of scorn came over her face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Surely you don&rsquo;t believe God looks like that,&rdquo; she said impatiently,
+ while her fine eyes flashed. &ldquo;He doesn&rsquo;t&mdash;He couldn&rsquo;t. He is
+ wonderful and beautiful. I&rsquo;m surprised at you. THAT is nothing but the
+ picture of a cross old man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hope sprang up in our hearts, although we were not wholly convinced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; said Dan dubiously. &ldquo;It says under the picture &lsquo;God in the
+ Garden of Eden.&rsquo; It&rsquo;s PRINTED.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I suppose that&rsquo;s what the man who drew it thought God was like,&rdquo;
+ answered the Story Girl carelessly. &ldquo;But HE couldn&rsquo;t have known any more
+ than you do. HE had never seen Him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It&rsquo;s all very well for you to say so,&rdquo; said Felicity, &ldquo;but YOU don&rsquo;t know
+ either. I wish I could believe that isn&rsquo;t like God&mdash;but I don&rsquo;t know
+ what to believe.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, if you won&rsquo;t believe me, I suppose you&rsquo;ll believe the minister,&rdquo;
+ said the Story Girl. &ldquo;Go and ask him. He&rsquo;s in the house this very minute.
+ He came up with us in the buggy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At any other time we would never have dared catechize the minister about
+ anything. But desperate cases call for desperate measures. We drew straws
+ to see who should go and do the asking, and the lot fell to Felix.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Better wait until Mr. Marwood leaves, and catch him in the lane,&rdquo; advised
+ the Story Girl. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll have a lot of grown-ups around you in the house.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Felix took her advice. Mr. Marwood, presently walking benignantly along
+ the lane, was confronted by a fat, small boy with a pale face but resolute
+ eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rest of us remained in the background but within hearing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, Felix, what is it?&rdquo; asked Mr. Marwood kindly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Please, sir, does God really look like this?&rdquo; asked Felix, holding out
+ the picture. &ldquo;We hope He doesn&rsquo;t&mdash;but we want to know the truth, and
+ that is why I&rsquo;m bothering you. Please excuse us and tell me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The minister looked at the picture. A stern expression came into his
+ gentle blue eyes and he got as near to frowning as it was possible for him
+ to get.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where did you get that thing?&rdquo; he asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THING! We began to breathe easier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We bought it from Jerry Cowan. He found it in a red-covered history of
+ the world. It SAYS it&rsquo;s God&rsquo;s picture,&rdquo; said Felix.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is nothing of the sort,&rdquo; said Mr. Marwood indignantly. &ldquo;There is no
+ such thing as a picture of God, Felix. No human being knows what he looks
+ like&mdash;no human being CAN know. We should not even try to think what
+ He looks like. But, Felix, you may be sure that God is infinitely more
+ beautiful and loving and tender and kind than anything we can imagine of
+ Him. Never believe anything else, my boy. As for this&mdash;this SACRILEGE&mdash;take
+ it and burn it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We did not know what a sacrilege meant, but we knew that Mr. Marwood had
+ declared that the picture was not like God. That was enough for us. We
+ felt as if a terrible weight had been lifted from our minds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I could hardly believe the Story Girl, but of course the minister KNOWS,&rdquo;
+ said Dan happily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We&rsquo;ve lost fifty cents because of it,&rdquo; said Felicity gloomily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We had lost something of infinitely more value than fifty cents, although
+ we did not realize it just then. The minister&rsquo;s words had removed from our
+ minds the bitter belief that God was like that picture; but on something
+ deeper and more enduring than mind an impression had been made that was
+ never to be removed. The mischief was done. From that day to this the
+ thought or the mention of God brings up before us involuntarily the vision
+ of a stern, angry, old man. Such was the price we were to pay for the
+ indulgence of a curiosity which each of us, deep in our hearts, had, like
+ Sara Ray, felt ought not to be gratified.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Marwood told me to burn it,&rdquo; said Felix.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It doesn&rsquo;t seem reverent to do that,&rdquo; said Cecily. &ldquo;Even if it isn&rsquo;t
+ God&rsquo;s picture, it has His name on it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bury it,&rdquo; said the Story Girl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We did bury it after tea, in the depths of the spruce grove; and then we
+ went into the orchard. It was so nice to have the Story Girl back again.
+ She had wreathed her hair with Canterbury Bells, and looked like the
+ incarnation of rhyme and story and dream.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Canterbury Bells is a lovely name for a flower, isn&rsquo;t it?&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;It
+ makes you think of cathedrals and chimes, doesn&rsquo;t it? Let&rsquo;s go over to
+ Uncle Stephen&rsquo;s Walk, and sit on the branches of the big tree. It&rsquo;s too
+ wet on the grass, and I know a story&mdash;a TRUE story, about an old lady
+ I saw in town at Aunt Louisa&rsquo;s. Such a dear old lady, with lovely silvery
+ curls.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the rain the air seemed dripping with odours in the warm west wind&mdash;the
+ tang of fir balsam, the spice of mint, the wild woodsiness of ferns, the
+ aroma of grasses steeping in the sunshine,&mdash;and with it all a breath
+ of wild sweetness from far hill pastures.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Scattered through the grass in Uncle Stephen&rsquo;s Walk, were blossoming pale,
+ aerial flowers which had no name that we could ever discover. Nobody
+ seemed to know anything about them. They had been there when
+ Great-grandfather King bought the place. I have never seen them elsewhere,
+ or found them described in any floral catalogue. We called them the White
+ Ladies. The Story Girl gave them the name. She said they looked like the
+ souls of good women who had had to suffer much and had been very patient.
+ They were wonderfully dainty, with a strange, faint, aromatic perfume
+ which was only to be detected at a little distance and vanished if you
+ bent over them. They faded soon after they were plucked; and, although
+ strangers, greatly admiring them, often carried away roots and seeds, they
+ could never be coaxed to grow elsewhere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My story is about Mrs. Dunbar and the Captain of the FANNY,&rdquo; said the
+ Story Girl, settling herself comfortably on a bough, with her brown head
+ against a gnarled trunk. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s sad and beautiful&mdash;and true. I do love
+ to tell stories that I know really happened. Mrs. Dunbar lives next door
+ to Aunt Louisa in town. She is so sweet. You wouldn&rsquo;t think to look at her
+ that she had a tragedy in her life, but she has. Aunt Louisa told me the
+ tale. It all happened long, long ago. Interesting things like this all did
+ happen long ago, it seems to me. They never seem to happen now. This was
+ in &lsquo;49, when people were rushing to the gold fields in California. It was
+ just like a fever, Aunt Louisa says. People took it, right here on the
+ Island; and a number of young men determined they would go to California.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is easy to go to California now; but it was a very different matter
+ then. There were no railroads across the land, as there are now, and if
+ you wanted to go to California you had to go in a sailing vessel, all the
+ way around Cape Horn. It was a long and dangerous journey; and sometimes
+ it took over six months. When you got there you had no way of sending word
+ home again except by the same plan. It might be over a year before your
+ people at home heard a word about you&mdash;and fancy what their feelings
+ would be!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But these young men didn&rsquo;t think of these things; they were led on by a
+ golden vision. They made all their arrangements, and they chartered the
+ brig <i>Fanny</i> to take them to California.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The captain of the <i>Fanny</i> is the hero of my story. His name was
+ Alan Dunbar, and he was young and handsome. Heroes always are, you know,
+ but Aunt Louisa says he really was. And he was in love&mdash;wildly in
+ love,&mdash;with Margaret Grant. Margaret was as beautiful as a dream,
+ with soft blue eyes and clouds of golden hair; and she loved Alan Dunbar
+ just as much as he loved her. But her parents were bitterly opposed to
+ him, and they had forbidden Margaret to see him or speak to him. They
+ hadn&rsquo;t anything against him as a MAN, but they didn&rsquo;t want her to throw
+ herself away on a sailor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, when Alan Dunbar knew that he must go to California in the <i>Fanny</i>
+ he was in despair. He felt that he could NEVER go so far away for so long
+ and leave his Margaret behind. And Margaret felt that she could never let
+ him go. I know EXACTLY how she felt.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How can you know?&rdquo; interrupted Peter suddenly. &ldquo;You ain&rsquo;t old enough to
+ have a beau. How can you know?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl looked at Peter with a frown. She did not like to be
+ interrupted when telling a story.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Those are not things one KNOWS about,&rdquo; she said with dignity. &ldquo;One FEELS
+ about them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peter, crushed but not convinced, subsided, and the Story Girl went on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Finally, Margaret ran away with Alan, and they were married in
+ Charlottetown. Alan intended to take his wife with him to California in
+ the <i>Fanny</i>. If it was a hard journey for a man it was harder still
+ for a woman, but Margaret would have dared anything for Alan&rsquo;s sake. They
+ had three days&mdash;ONLY three days&mdash;of happiness, and then the blow
+ fell. The crew and the passengers of the <i>Fanny</i> refused to let
+ Captain Dunbar take his wife with him. They told him he must leave her
+ behind. And all his prayers were of no avail. They say he stood on the
+ deck of the <i>Fanny</i> and pleaded with the men while the tears ran down
+ his face; but they would not yield, and he had to leave Margaret behind.
+ Oh, what a parting it was!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was heartbreak in the Story Girl&rsquo;s voice and tears came into our
+ eyes. There, in the green bower of Uncle Stephen&rsquo;s Walk, we cried over the
+ pathos of a parting whose anguish had been stilled for many years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When it was all over, Margaret&rsquo;s father and mother forgave her, and she
+ went back home to wait&mdash;to WAIT. Oh, it is so dreadful just to WAIT,
+ and do nothing else. Margaret waited for nearly a year. How long it must
+ have seemed to her! And at last there came a letter&mdash;but not from
+ Alan. Alan was DEAD. He had died in California and had been buried there.
+ While Margaret had been thinking of him and longing for him and praying
+ for him he had been lying in his lonely, faraway grave.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cecily sprang up, shaking with sobs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, don&rsquo;t&mdash;don&rsquo;t go on,&rdquo; she implored. &ldquo;I CAN&rsquo;T bear any more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is no more,&rdquo; said the Story Girl. &ldquo;That was the end of it&mdash;the
+ end of everything for Margaret. It didn&rsquo;t kill HER, but her heart died.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I just wish I&rsquo;d hold of those fellows who wouldn&rsquo;t let the Captain take
+ his wife,&rdquo; said Peter savagely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, it was awful said,&rdquo; said Felicity, wiping her eyes. &ldquo;But it was
+ long ago and we can&rsquo;t do any good by crying over it now. Let us go and get
+ something to eat. I made some nice little rhubarb tarts this morning.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We went. In spite of new disappointments and old heartbreaks we had
+ appetites. And Felicity did make scrumptious rhubarb tarts!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IX. MAGIC SEED
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ When the time came to hand in our collections for the library fund Peter
+ had the largest&mdash;three dollars. Felicity was a good second with two
+ and a half. This was simply because the hens had laid so well.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If you&rsquo;d had to pay father for all the extra handfuls of wheat you&rsquo;ve fed
+ to those hens, Miss Felicity, you wouldn&rsquo;t have so much,&rdquo; said Dan
+ spitefully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t,&rdquo; said Felicity indignantly. &ldquo;Look how Aunt Olivia&rsquo;s hens laid,
+ too, and she fed them herself just the same as usual.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind,&rdquo; said Cecily, &ldquo;we have all got something to give. If you were
+ like poor Sara Ray, and hadn&rsquo;t been able to collect anything, you might
+ feel bad.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Sara Ray HAD something to give. She came up the hill after tea, all
+ radiant. When Sara Ray smiled&mdash;and she did not waste her smiles&mdash;she
+ was rather pretty in a plaintive, apologetic way. A dimple or two came
+ into sight, and she had very nice teeth&mdash;small and white, like the
+ traditional row of pearls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, just look,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Here are three dollars&mdash;and I&rsquo;m going to
+ give it all to the library fund. I had a letter to-day from Uncle Arthur
+ in Winnipeg, and he sent me three dollars. He said I was to use it ANY way
+ I liked, so ma couldn&rsquo;t refuse to let me give it to the fund. She thinks
+ it&rsquo;s an awful waste, but she always goes by what Uncle Arthur says. Oh,
+ I&rsquo;ve prayed so hard that some money might come some way, and now it has.
+ See what praying does!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was very much afraid that we did not rejoice quite as unselfishly in
+ Sara&rsquo;s good fortune as we should have done. WE had earned our
+ contributions by the sweat of our brow, or by the scarcely less
+ disagreeable method of &ldquo;begging.&rdquo; And Sara&rsquo;s had as good as descended upon
+ her out of the skies, as much like a miracle as anything you could
+ imagine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She prayed for it, you know,&rdquo; said Felix, after Sara had gone home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That&rsquo;s too easy a way of earning money,&rdquo; grumbled Peter resentfully. &ldquo;If
+ the rest of us had just set down and done nothing, only prayed, how much
+ do you s&rsquo;pose we&rsquo;d have? It don&rsquo;t seem fair to me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, well, it&rsquo;s different with Sara,&rdquo; said Dan. &ldquo;We COULD earn money and
+ she COULDN&rsquo;T. You see? But come on down to the orchard. The Story Girl had
+ a letter from her father to-day and she&rsquo;s going to read it to us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We went promptly. A letter from the Story Girl&rsquo;s father was always an
+ event; and to hear her read it was almost as good as hearing her tell a
+ story.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before coming to Carlisle, Uncle Blair Stanley had been a mere name to us.
+ Now he was a personality. His letters to the Story Girl, the pictures and
+ sketches he sent her, her adoring and frequent mention of him, all
+ combined to make him very real to us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We FELT then, what we did not understand till later years, that our
+ grown-up relatives did not altogether admire or approve of Uncle Blair. He
+ belonged to a different world from theirs. They had never known him very
+ intimately or understood him. I realize now that Uncle Blair was a bit of
+ a Bohemian&mdash;a respectable sort of tramp. Had he been a poor man he
+ might have been a more successful artist. But he had a small fortune of
+ his own and, lacking the spur of necessity, or of disquieting ambition, he
+ remained little more than a clever amateur. Once in a while he painted a
+ picture which showed what he could do; but for the rest, he was satisfied
+ to wander over the world, light-hearted and content. We knew that the
+ Story Girl was thought to resemble him strongly in appearance and
+ temperament, but she had far more fire and intensity and strength of will&mdash;her
+ inheritance from King and Ward. She would never be satisfied as a dabbler;
+ whatever her future career should be, into it she would throw all her
+ powers of mind and heart and soul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Uncle Blair could do at least one thing surpassingly well. He could
+ write letters. Such letters! By contrast, Felix and I were secretly
+ ashamed of father&rsquo;s epistles. Father could talk well but, as Felix said,
+ he couldn&rsquo;t write worth a cent. The letters we had received from him since
+ his arrival in Rio de Janeiro were mere scrawls, telling us to be good
+ boys and not trouble Aunt Janet, incidentally adding that he was well and
+ lonesome. Felix and I were always glad to get his letters, but we never
+ read them aloud to an admiring circle in the orchard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Uncle Blair was spending the summer in Switzerland; and the letter the
+ Story Girl read to us, among the fair, frail White Ladies of the Walk,
+ where the west wind came now with a sigh, and again with a rush, and then
+ brushed our faces as softly as the down of a thistle, was full of the
+ glamour of mountain-rimmed lakes, and purple chalets, and &ldquo;snowy summits
+ old in story.&rdquo; We climbed Mount Blanc, saw the Jungfrau soaring into
+ cloudland, and walked among the gloomy pillars of Bonnivard&rsquo;s prison.
+ Finally, the Story Girl told us the tale of the Prisoner of Chillon, in
+ words that were Byron&rsquo;s, but in a voice that was all her own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It must be splendid to go to Europe,&rdquo; sighed Cecily longingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am going some day,&rdquo; said the Story Girl airily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We looked at her with a slightly incredulous awe. To us, in those years,
+ Europe seemed almost as remote and unreachable as the moon. It was hard to
+ believe that one of US should ever go there. But Aunt Julia had gone&mdash;and
+ SHE had been brought up in Carlisle on this very farm. So it was possible
+ that the Story Girl might go too.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What will you do there?&rdquo; asked Peter practically.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shall learn how to tell stories to all the world,&rdquo; said the Story Girl
+ dreamily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a lovely, golden-brown evening; the orchard, and the farm-lands
+ beyond, were full of ruby lights and kissing shadows. Over in the east,
+ above the Awkward Man&rsquo;s house, the Wedding Veil of the Proud Princess
+ floated across the sky, presently turning as rosy as if bedewed with her
+ heart&rsquo;s blood. We sat there and talked until the first star lighted a
+ white taper over the beech hill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then I remembered that I had forgotten to take my dose of magic seed, and
+ I hastened to do it, although I was beginning to lose faith in it. I had
+ not grown a single bit, by the merciless testimony of the hall door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I took the box of seed out of my trunk in the twilit room and swallowed
+ the decreed pinch. As I did so, Dan&rsquo;s voice rang out behind me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Beverley King, what have you got there?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I thrust the box hastily into my trunk and confronted Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;None of your business,&rdquo; I said defiantly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, &lsquo;tis.&rdquo; Dan was too much in earnest to resent my blunt speech. &ldquo;Look
+ here, Bev, is that magic seed? And did you get it from Billy Robinson?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan and I looked at each other, suspicion dawning in our eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What do you know about Billy Robinson and his magic seed?&rdquo; I demanded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Just this. I bought a box from him for&mdash;for&mdash;something. He said
+ he wasn&rsquo;t going to sell any of it to anybody else. Did he sell any to
+ you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, he did,&rdquo; I said in disgust&mdash;for I was beginning to understand
+ that Billy and his magic seed were arrant frauds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What for? YOUR mouth is a decent size,&rdquo; said Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mouth? It had nothing to do with my mouth! He said it would make me grow
+ tall. And it hasn&rsquo;t&mdash;not an inch! I don&rsquo;t see what you wanted it for!
+ You are tall enough.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I got it for my mouth,&rdquo; said Dan with a shame-faced grin. &ldquo;The girls in
+ school laugh at it so. Kate Marr says it&rsquo;s like a gash in a pie. Billy
+ said that seed would shrink it for sure.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well, there it was! Billy had deceived us both. Nor were we the only
+ victims. We did not find the whole story out at once. Indeed, the summer
+ was almost over before, in one way or another, the full measure of that
+ shameless Billy Robinson&rsquo;s iniquity was revealed to us. But I shall
+ anticipate the successive relations in this chapter. Every pupil of
+ Carlisle school, so it eventually appeared, had bought magic seed, under
+ solemn promise of secrecy. Felix had believed blissfully that it would
+ make him thin. Cecily&rsquo;s hair was to become naturally curly, and Sara Ray
+ was not to be afraid of Peg Bowen any more. It was to make Felicity as
+ clever as the Story Girl and it was to make the Story Girl as good a cook
+ as Felicity. What Peter had bought magic seed for remained a secret longer
+ than any of the others. Finally&mdash;it was the night before what we
+ expected would be the Judgment Day&mdash;he confessed to me that he had
+ taken it to make Felicity fond of him. Skilfully indeed had that astute
+ Billy played on our respective weaknesses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The keenest edge to our humiliation was given by the discovery that the
+ magic seed was nothing more or less than caraway, which grew in abundance
+ at Billy Robinson&rsquo;s uncle&rsquo;s in Markdale. Peg Bowen had had nothing to do
+ with it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well, we had all been badly hoaxed. But we did not trumpet our wrongs
+ abroad. We did not even call Billy to account. We thought that least said
+ was soonest mended in such a matter. We went very softly indeed, lest the
+ grown-ups, especially that terrible Uncle Roger, should hear of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We should have known better than to trust Billy Robinson,&rdquo; said Felicity,
+ summing up the case one evening when all had been made known. &ldquo;After all,
+ what could you expect from a pig but a grunt?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were not surprised to find that Billy Robinson&rsquo;s contribution to the
+ library fund was the largest handed in by any of the scholars. Cecily said
+ she didn&rsquo;t envy him his conscience. But I am afraid she measured his
+ conscience by her own. I doubt very much if Billy&rsquo;s troubled him at all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER X. A DAUGHTER OF EVE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I hate the thought of growing up,&rdquo; said the Story Girl reflectively,
+ &ldquo;because I can never go barefooted then, and nobody will ever see what
+ beautiful feet I have.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was sitting, the July sunlight, on the ledge of the open hayloft
+ window in Uncle Roger&rsquo;s big barn; and the bare feet below her print skirt
+ WERE beautiful. They were slender and shapely and satin smooth with arched
+ insteps, the daintiest of toes, and nails like pink shells.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were all in the hayloft. The Story Girl had been telling us a tale
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Of old, unhappy, far-off things,
+ And battles long ago.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Felicity and Cecily were curled up in a corner, and we boys sprawled idly
+ on the fragrant, sun-warm heaps. We had &ldquo;stowed&rdquo; the hay in the loft that
+ morning for Uncle Roger, so we felt that we had earned the right to loll
+ on our sweet-smelling couch. Haylofts are delicious places, with just
+ enough of shadow and soft, uncertain noises to give an agreeable tang of
+ mystery. The swallows flew in and out of their nest above our heads, and
+ whenever a sunbeam fell through a chink the air swarmed with golden dust.
+ Outside of the loft was a vast, sunshiny gulf of blue sky and mellow air,
+ wherein floated argosies of fluffy cloud, and airy tops of maple and
+ spruce.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pat was with us, of course, prowling about stealthily, or making frantic,
+ bootless leaps at the swallows. A cat in a hayloft is a beautiful example
+ of the eternal fitness of things. We had not heard of this fitness then,
+ but we all felt that Paddy was in his own place in a hayloft.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think it is very vain to talk about anything you have yourself being
+ beautiful,&rdquo; said Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am not a bit vain,&rdquo; said the Story Girl, with entire truthfulness. &ldquo;It
+ is not vanity to know your own good points. It would just be stupidity if
+ you didn&rsquo;t. It&rsquo;s only vanity when you get puffed up about them. I am not a
+ bit pretty. My only good points are my hair and eyes and feet. So I think
+ it&rsquo;s real mean that one of them has to be covered up the most of the time.
+ I&rsquo;m always glad when it gets warm enough to go barefooted. But, when I
+ grow up they&rsquo;ll have to covered all the time. It IS mean.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll have to put your shoes and stockings on when you go to the magic
+ lantern show to-night,&rdquo; said Felicity in a tone of satisfaction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know that. I&rsquo;m thinking of going barefooted.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, you wouldn&rsquo;t! Sara Stanley, you&rsquo;re not in earnest!&rdquo; exclaimed
+ Felicity, her blue eyes filling with horror.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl winked with the side of her face next to Felix and me, but
+ the side next the girls changed not a muscle. She dearly loved to &ldquo;take a
+ rise&rdquo; out of Felicity now and then.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed, I would if I just made up my mind to. Why not? Why not bare feet&mdash;if
+ they&rsquo;re clean&mdash;as well as bare hands and face?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, you wouldn&rsquo;t! It would be such a disgrace!&rdquo; said poor Felicity in
+ real distress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We went to school barefooted all June,&rdquo; argued that wicked Story Girl.
+ &ldquo;What is the difference between going to the schoolhouse barefooted in the
+ daytime and going in the evening?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, there&rsquo;s EVERY difference. I can&rsquo;t just explain it&mdash;but every one
+ KNOWS there is a difference. You know it yourself. Oh, PLEASE, don&rsquo;t do
+ such a thing, Sara.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I won&rsquo;t, just to oblige you,&rdquo; said the Story Girl, who would have
+ died the death before she would have gone to a &ldquo;public meeting&rdquo;
+ barefooted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were all rather excited over the magic lantern show which an itinerant
+ lecturer was to give in the schoolhouse that evening. Even Felix and I,
+ who had seen such shows galore, were interested, and the rest were quite
+ wild. There had never been such a thing in Carlisle before. We were all
+ going, Peter included. Peter went everywhere with us now. He was a regular
+ attendant at church and Sunday School, where his behaviour was as
+ irreproachable as if he had been &ldquo;raised&rdquo; in the caste of Vere de Vere. It
+ was a feather in the Story Girl&rsquo;s cap, for she took all the credit of
+ having started Peter on the right road. Felicity was resigned, although
+ the fatal patch on Peter&rsquo;s best trousers was still an eyesore to her. She
+ declared she never got any good of the singing, because Peter stood up
+ then and every one could see the patch. Mrs. James Clark, whose pew was
+ behind ours, never took her eye off it&mdash;or so Felicity averred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Peter&rsquo;s stockings were always darned. Aunt Olivia had seen to that,
+ ever since she heard of Peter&rsquo;s singular device regarding them on his
+ first Sunday. She had also given Peter a Bible, of which he was so proud
+ that he hated to use it lest he should soil it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think I&rsquo;ll wrap it up and keep it in my box,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve an old
+ Bible of Aunt Jane&rsquo;s at home that I can use. I s&rsquo;pose it&rsquo;s just the same,
+ even if it is old, isn&rsquo;t it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, yes,&rdquo; Cecily had assured him. &ldquo;The Bible is always the same.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I thought maybe they&rsquo;d got some new improvements on it since Aunt Jane&rsquo;s
+ day,&rdquo; said Peter, relieved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sara Ray is coming along the lane, and she&rsquo;s crying,&rdquo; announced Dan, who
+ was peering out of a knot-hole on the opposite side of the loft.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sara Ray is crying half her time,&rdquo; said Cecily impatiently. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m sure she
+ cries a quartful of tears a month. There are times when you can&rsquo;t help
+ crying. But I hide then. Sara just goes and cries in public.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lachrymose Sara presently joined us and we discovered the cause of her
+ tears to be the doleful fact that her mother had forbidden her to go to
+ the magic lantern show that night. We all showed the sympathy we felt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She SAID yesterday you could go,&rdquo; said the Story Girl indignantly. &ldquo;Why
+ has she changed her mind?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because of the measles in Markdale,&rdquo; sobbed Sara. &ldquo;She says Markdale is
+ full of them, and there&rsquo;ll be sure to be some of the Markdale people at
+ the show. So I&rsquo;m not to go. And I&rsquo;ve never seen a magic lantern&mdash;I&rsquo;ve
+ never seen ANYTHING.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t believe there&rsquo;s any danger of catching measles,&rdquo; said Felicity.
+ &ldquo;If there was we wouldn&rsquo;t be allowed to go.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish I COULD get the measles,&rdquo; said Sara defiantly. &ldquo;Maybe I&rsquo;d be of
+ some importance to ma then.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Suppose Cecily goes down with you and coaxes your mother,&rdquo; suggested the
+ Story Girl. &ldquo;Perhaps she&rsquo;d let you go then. She likes Cecily. She doesn&rsquo;t
+ like either Felicity or me, so it would only make matters worse for us to
+ try.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ma&rsquo;s gone to town&mdash;pa and her went this afternoon&mdash;and they&rsquo;re
+ not coming back till to-morrow. There&rsquo;s nobody home but Judy Pineau and
+ me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then,&rdquo; said the Story Girl, &ldquo;why don&rsquo;t you just go to the show anyhow?
+ Your mother won&rsquo;t ever know, if you coax Judy to hold her tongue.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, but that&rsquo;s wrong,&rdquo; said Felicity. &ldquo;You shouldn&rsquo;t put Sara up to
+ disobeying her mother.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, Felicity for once was undoubtedly right. The Story Girl&rsquo;s suggestion
+ WAS wrong; and if it had been Cecily who protested, the Story Girl would
+ probably have listened to her, and proceeded no further in the matter. But
+ Felicity was one of those unfortunate people whose protests against
+ wrong-doing serve only to drive the wrong-doer further on her sinful way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl resented Felicity&rsquo;s superior tone, and proceeded to tempt
+ Sara in right good earnest. The rest of us held our tongues. It was, we
+ told ourselves, Sara&rsquo;s own lookout.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have a good mind to do it,&rdquo; said Sara, &ldquo;but I can&rsquo;t get my good
+ clothes; they&rsquo;re in the spare room, and ma locked the door, for fear
+ somebody would get at the fruit cake. I haven&rsquo;t a single thing to wear,
+ except my school gingham.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, that&rsquo;s new and pretty,&rdquo; said the Story Girl. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll lend you some
+ things. You can have my lace collar. That&rsquo;ll make the gingham quite
+ elegant. And Cecily will lend you her second best hat.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I&rsquo;ve no shoes or stockings. They&rsquo;re locked up too.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You can have a pair of mine,&rdquo; said Felicity, who probably thought that
+ since Sara was certain to yield to temptation, she might as well be garbed
+ decently for her transgression.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sara did yield. When the Story Girl&rsquo;s voice entreated it was not easy to
+ resist its temptation, even if you wanted to. That evening, when we
+ started for the schoolhouse, Sara Ray was among us, decked out in borrowed
+ plumes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Suppose she DOES catch the measles?&rdquo; Felicity said aside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t believe there&rsquo;ll be anybody there from Markdale. The lecturer is
+ going to Markdale next week. They&rsquo;ll wait for that,&rdquo; said the Story Girl
+ airily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a cool, dewy evening, and we walked down the long, red hill in the
+ highest of spirits. Over a valley filled with beech and spruce was a
+ sunset afterglow&mdash;creamy yellow and a hue that was not so much red as
+ the dream of red, with a young moon swung low in it. The air was sweet
+ with the breath of mown hayfields where swaths of clover had been steeping
+ in the sun. Wild roses grew pinkly along the fences, and the roadsides
+ were star-dusted with buttercups.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Those of us who had nothing the matter with our consciences enjoyed our
+ walk to the little whitewashed schoolhouse in the valley. Felicity and
+ Cecily were void of offence towards all men. The Story Girl walked
+ uprightly like an incarnate flame in her crimson silk. Her pretty feet
+ were hidden in the tan-coloured, buttoned Paris boots which were the
+ secret envy of every school girl in Carlisle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Sara Ray was not happy. Her face was so melancholy that the Story Girl
+ lost patience with her. The Story Girl herself was not altogether at ease.
+ Probably her own conscience was troubling her. But admit it she would not.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, Sara,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;you just take my advice and go into this with all
+ your heart if you go at all. Never mind if it is bad. There&rsquo;s no use being
+ naughty if you spoil your fun by wishing all the time you were good. You
+ can repent afterwards, but there is no use in mixing the two things
+ together.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m not repenting,&rdquo; protested Sara. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m only scared of ma finding it
+ out.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; The Story Girl&rsquo;s voice expressed her scorn. For remorse she had
+ understanding and sympathy; but fear of her fellow creatures was something
+ unknown to her. &ldquo;Didn&rsquo;t Judy Pineau promise you solemnly she wouldn&rsquo;t
+ tell?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; but maybe some one who sees me there will mention it to ma.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, if you&rsquo;re so scared you&rsquo;d better not go. It isn&rsquo;t too late. Here&rsquo;s
+ your own gate,&rdquo; said Cecily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Sara could not give up the delights of the show. So she walked on, a
+ small, miserable testimony that the way of the transgressor is never easy,
+ even when said transgressor is only a damsel of eleven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The magic lantern show was a splendid one. The views were good and the
+ lecturer witty. We repeated his jokes to each other all the way home.
+ Sara, who had not enjoyed the exhibition at all, seemed to feel more
+ cheerful when it was over and she was going home. The Story Girl on the
+ contrary was gloomy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There WERE Markdale people there,&rdquo; she confided to me, &ldquo;and the
+ Williamsons live next door to the Cowans, who have measles. I wish I&rsquo;d
+ never egged Sara on to going&mdash;but don&rsquo;t tell Felicity I said so. If
+ Sara Ray had really enjoyed the show I wouldn&rsquo;t mind. But she didn&rsquo;t. I
+ could see that. So I&rsquo;ve done wrong and made her do wrong&mdash;and there&rsquo;s
+ nothing to show for it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The night was scented and mysterious. The wind was playing an eerie
+ fleshless melody in the reeds of the brook hollow. The sky was dark and
+ starry, and across it the Milky Way flung its shimmering misty ribbons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There&rsquo;s four hundred million stars in the Milky Way,&rdquo; quoth Peter, who
+ frequently astonished us by knowing more than any hired boy could be
+ expected to. He had a retentive memory, and never forgot anything he heard
+ or read. The few books left to him by his oft-referred-to Aunt Jane had
+ stocked his mind with a miscellaneous information which sometimes made
+ Felix and me doubt if we knew as much as Peter after all. Felicity was so
+ impressed by his knowledge of astronomy that she dropped back from the
+ other girls and walked beside him. She had not done so before because he
+ was barefooted. It was permissible for hired boys to go to public meetings&mdash;when
+ not held in the church&mdash;with bare feet, and no particular disgrace
+ attached to it. But Felicity would not walk with a barefooted companion.
+ It was dark now, so nobody would notice his feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know a story about the Milky Way,&rdquo; said the Story Girl, brightening up.
+ &ldquo;I read it in a book of Aunt Louisa&rsquo;s in town, and I learned it off by
+ heart. Once there were two archangels in heaven, named Zerah and Zulamith&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have angels names&mdash;same as people?&rdquo; interrupted Peter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, of course. They MUST have. They&rsquo;d be all mixed up if they hadn&rsquo;t.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And when I&rsquo;m an angel&mdash;if I ever get to be one&mdash;will my name
+ still be Peter?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No. You&rsquo;ll have a new name up there,&rdquo; said Cecily gently. &ldquo;It says so in
+ the Bible.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I&rsquo;m glad of that. Peter would be such a funny name for an angel.
+ And what is the difference between angels and archangels?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, archangels are angels that have been angels so long that they&rsquo;ve had
+ time to grow better and brighter and more beautiful than newer angels,&rdquo;
+ said the Story Girl, who probably made that explanation up on the spur of
+ the moment, just to pacify Peter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How long does it take for an angel to grow into an archangel?&rdquo; pursued
+ Peter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I don&rsquo;t know. Millions of years likely. And even then I don&rsquo;t suppose
+ ALL the angels do. A good many of them must just stay plain angels, I
+ expect.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shall be satisfied just to be a plain angel,&rdquo; said Felicity modestly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, see here, if you&rsquo;re going to interrupt and argue over everything,
+ we&rsquo;ll never get the story told,&rdquo; said Felix. &ldquo;Dry up, all of you, and let
+ the Story Girl go on.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We dried up, and the Story Girl went on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Zerah and Zulamith loved each other, just as mortals love, and this is
+ forbidden by the laws of the Almighty. And because Zerah and Zulamith had
+ so broken God&rsquo;s law they were banished from His presence to the uttermost
+ bounds of the universe. If they had been banished TOGETHER it would have
+ been no punishment; so Zerah was exiled to a star on one side of the
+ universe, and Zulamith was sent to a star on the other side of the
+ universe; and between them was a fathomless abyss which thought itself
+ could not cross. Only one thing could cross it&mdash;and that was love.
+ Zulamith yearned for Zerah with such fidelity and longing that he began to
+ build up a bridge of light from his star; and Zerah, not knowing this, but
+ loving and longing for him, began to build a similar bridge of light from
+ her star. For a thousand thousand years they both built the bridge of
+ light, and at last they met and sprang into each other&rsquo;s arms. Their toil
+ and loneliness and suffering were all over and forgotten, and the bridge
+ they had built spanned the gulf between their stars of exile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, when the other archangels saw what had been done they flew in fear
+ and anger to God&rsquo;s white throne, and cried to Him,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;See what these rebellious ones have done! They have built them a bridge
+ of light across the universe, and set Thy decree of separation at naught.
+ Do Thou, then, stretch forth Thine arm and destroy their impious work.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They ceased&mdash;and all heaven was hushed. Through the silence sounded
+ the voice of the Almighty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Nay,&rsquo; He said, &lsquo;whatsoever in my universe true love hath builded not
+ even the Almighty can destroy. The bridge must stand forever.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And,&rdquo; concluded the Story Girl, her face upturned to the sky and her big
+ eyes filled with starlight, &ldquo;it stands still. That bridge is the Milky
+ Way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What a lovely story,&rdquo; sighed Sara Ray, who had been wooed to a temporary
+ forgetfulness of her woes by its charm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rest of us came back to earth, feeling that we had been wandering
+ among the hosts of heaven. We were not old enough to appreciate fully the
+ wonderful meaning of the legend; but we felt its beauty and its appeal. To
+ us forevermore the Milky Way would be, not Peter&rsquo;s overwhelming garland of
+ suns, but the lucent bridge, love-created, on which the banished
+ archangels crossed from star to star.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We had to go up Sara Ray&rsquo;s lane with her to her very door, for she was
+ afraid Peg Bowen would catch her if she went alone. Then the Story Girl
+ and I walked up the hill together. Peter and Felicity lagged behind.
+ Cecily and Dan and Felix were walking before us, hand in hand, singing a
+ hymn. Cecily had a very sweet voice, and I listened in delight. But the
+ Story Girl sighed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What if Sara does take the measles?&rdquo; she asked miserably.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Everyone has to have the measles sometime,&rdquo; I said comfortingly, &ldquo;and the
+ younger you are the better.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XI. THE STORY GIRL DOES PENANCE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Ten days later, Aunt Olivia and Uncle Roger went to town one evening, to
+ remain over night, and the next day. Peter and the Story Girl were to stay
+ at Uncle Alec&rsquo;s during their absence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were in the orchard at sunset, listening to the story of King Cophetua
+ and the beggar maid&mdash;all of us, except Peter, who was hoeing turnips,
+ and Felicity, who had gone down the hill on an errand to Mrs. Ray.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl impersonated the beggar maid so vividly, and with such an
+ illusion of beauty, that we did not wonder in the least at the king&rsquo;s love
+ for her. I had read the story before, and it had been my opinion that it
+ was &ldquo;rot.&rdquo; No king, I felt certain, would ever marry a beggar maid when he
+ had princesses galore from whom to choose. But now I understood it all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Felicity returned we concluded from her expression that she had news.
+ And she had.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sara is real sick,&rdquo; she said, with regret, and something that was not
+ regret mingled in her voice. &ldquo;She has a cold and sore throat, and she is
+ feverish. Mrs. Ray says if she isn&rsquo;t better by the morning she&rsquo;s going to
+ send for the doctor. AND SHE IS AFRAID IT&rsquo;S THE MEASLES.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Felicity flung the last sentence at the Story Girl, who turned very pale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, do you suppose she caught them at the magic lantern show?&rdquo; she said
+ miserably.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where else could she have caught them?&rdquo; said Felicity mercilessly. &ldquo;I
+ didn&rsquo;t see her, of course&mdash;Mrs. Ray met me at the door and told me
+ not to come in. But Mrs. Ray says the measles always go awful hard with
+ the Rays&mdash;if they don&rsquo;t die completely of them it leaves them deaf or
+ half blind, or something like that. Of course,&rdquo; added Felicity, her heart
+ melting at sight of the misery in the Story Girl&rsquo;s piteous eyes, &ldquo;Mrs. Ray
+ always looks on the dark side, and it may not be the measles Sara has
+ after all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Felicity had done her work too thoroughly. The Story Girl was not to
+ be comforted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;d give anything if I&rsquo;d never put Sara up to going to that show,&rdquo; she
+ said. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s all my fault&mdash;but the punishment falls on Sara, and that
+ isn&rsquo;t fair. I&rsquo;d go this minute and confess the whole thing to Mrs. Ray;
+ but if I did it might get Sara into more trouble, and I mustn&rsquo;t do that. I
+ sha&rsquo;n&rsquo;t sleep a wink to-night.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I don&rsquo;t think she did. She looked very pale and woebegone when she came
+ down to breakfast. But, for all that, there was a certain exhilaration
+ about her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m going to do penance all day for coaxing Sara to disobey her mother,&rdquo;
+ she announced with chastened triumph.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Penance?&rdquo; we murmured in bewilderment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes. I&rsquo;m going to deny myself everything I like, and do everything I can
+ think of that I don&rsquo;t like, just to punish myself for being so wicked. And
+ if any of you think of anything I don&rsquo;t, just mention it to me. I thought
+ it out last night. Maybe Sara won&rsquo;t be so very sick if God sees I&rsquo;m truly
+ sorry.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He can see it anyhow, without your doing anything,&rdquo; said Cecily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, my conscience will feel better.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t believe Presbyterians ever do penance,&rdquo; said Felicity dubiously.
+ &ldquo;I never heard of one doing it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the rest of us rather looked with favour on the Story Girl&rsquo;s idea. We
+ felt sure that she would do penance as picturesquely and thoroughly as she
+ did everything else.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You might put peas in your shoes, you know,&rdquo; suggested Peter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The very thing! I never thought of that. I&rsquo;ll get some after breakfast.
+ I&rsquo;m not going to eat a single thing all day, except bread and water&mdash;and
+ not much of that!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This, we felt, was a heroic measure indeed. To sit down to one of Aunt
+ Janet&rsquo;s meals, in ordinary health and appetite, and eat nothing but bread
+ and water&mdash;that would be penance with a vengeance! We felt WE could
+ never do it. But the Story Girl did it. We admired and pitied her. But now
+ I do not think that she either needed our pity or deserved our admiration.
+ Her ascetic fare was really sweeter to her than honey of Hymettus. She
+ was, though quite unconsciously, acting a part, and tasting all the subtle
+ joy of the artist, which is so much more exquisite than any material
+ pleasure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Aunt Janet, of course, noticed the Story Girl&rsquo;s abstinence and asked if
+ she was sick.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No. I am just doing penance, Aunt Janet, for a sin I committed. I can&rsquo;t
+ confess it, because that would bring trouble on another person. So I&rsquo;m
+ going to do penance all day. You don&rsquo;t mind, do you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Aunt Janet was in a very good humour that morning, so she merely laughed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not if you don&rsquo;t go too far with your nonsense,&rdquo; she said tolerantly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank you. And will you give me a handful of hard peas after breakfast,
+ Aunt Janet? I want to put them in my shoes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There isn&rsquo;t any; I used the last in the soup yesterday.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; The Story Girl was much disappointed. &ldquo;Then I suppose I&rsquo;ll have to
+ do without. The new peas wouldn&rsquo;t hurt enough. They&rsquo;re so soft they&rsquo;d just
+ squash flat.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll tell you,&rdquo; said Peter, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll pick up a lot of those little round
+ pebbles on Mr. King&rsquo;s front walk. They&rsquo;ll be just as good as peas.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll do nothing of the sort,&rdquo; said Aunt Janet. &ldquo;Sara must not do
+ penance in that way. She would wear holes in her stockings, and might
+ seriously bruise her feet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What would you say if I took a whip and whipped my bare shoulders till
+ the blood came?&rdquo; demanded the Story Girl aggrieved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t SAY anything,&rdquo; retorted Aunt Janet. &ldquo;I&rsquo;d simply turn you over
+ my knee and give you a sound, solid spanking, Miss Sara. You&rsquo;d find that
+ penance enough.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl was crimson with indignation. To have such a remark made to
+ you&mdash;when you were fourteen and a half&mdash;and before the boys,
+ too! Really, Aunt Janet could be very dreadful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was vacation, and there was not much to do that day; we were soon free
+ to seek the orchard. But the Story Girl would not come. She had seated
+ herself in the darkest, hottest corner of the kitchen, with a piece of old
+ cotton in her hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am not going to play to-day,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;and I&rsquo;m not going to tell a
+ single story. Aunt Janet won&rsquo;t let me put pebbles in my shoes, but I&rsquo;ve
+ put a thistle next my skin on my back and it sticks into me if I lean back
+ the least bit. And I&rsquo;m going to work buttonholes all over this cotton. I
+ hate working buttonholes worse than anything in the world, so I&rsquo;m going to
+ work them all day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What&rsquo;s the good of working buttonholes on an old rag?&rdquo; asked Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It isn&rsquo;t any good. The beauty of penance is that it makes you feel
+ uncomfortable. So it doesn&rsquo;t matter what you do, whether it&rsquo;s useful or
+ not, so long as it&rsquo;s nasty. Oh, I wonder how Sara is this morning.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mother&rsquo;s going down this afternoon,&rdquo; said Felicity. &ldquo;She says none of us
+ must go near the place till we know whether it is the measles or not.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve thought of a great penance,&rdquo; said Cecily eagerly. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t go to the
+ missionary meeting to-night.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl looked piteous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I thought of that myself&mdash;but I CAN&rsquo;T stay home, Cecily. It would be
+ more than flesh and blood could endure. I MUST hear that missionary speak.
+ They say he was all but eaten by cannibals once. Just think how many new
+ stories I&rsquo;d have to tell after I&rsquo;d heard him! No, I must go, but I&rsquo;ll tell
+ you what I&rsquo;ll do. I&rsquo;ll wear my school dress and hat. THAT will be penance.
+ Felicity, when you set the table for dinner, put the broken-handled knife
+ for me. I hate it so. And I&rsquo;m going to take a dose of Mexican Tea every
+ two hours. It&rsquo;s such dreadful tasting stuff&mdash;but it&rsquo;s a good blood
+ purifier, so Aunt Janet can&rsquo;t object to it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl carried out her self-imposed penance fully. All day she sat
+ in the kitchen and worked buttonholes, subsisting on bread and water and
+ Mexican Tea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Felicity did a mean thing. She went to work and made little raisin pies,
+ right there in the kitchen before the Story Girl. The smell of raisin pies
+ is something to tempt an anchorite; and the Story Girl was exceedingly
+ fond of them. Felicity ate two in her very presence, and then brought the
+ rest out to us in the orchard. The Story Girl could see us through the
+ window, carousing without stint on raisin pies and Uncle Edward&rsquo;s
+ cherries. But she worked on at her buttonholes. She would not look at the
+ exciting serial in the new magazine Dan brought home from the post-office,
+ neither would she open a letter from her father. Pat came over, but his
+ most seductive purrs won no notice from his mistress, who refused herself
+ the pleasure of even patting him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Aunt Janet could not go down the hill in the afternoon to find out how
+ Sara was because company came to tea&mdash;the Millwards from Markdale.
+ Mr. Millward was a doctor, and Mrs. Millward was a B.A. Aunt Janet was
+ very desirous that everything should be as nice as possible, and we were
+ all sent to our rooms before tea to wash and dress up. The Story Girl
+ slipped over home, and when she came back we gasped. She had combed her
+ hair out straight, and braided it in a tight, kinky, pudgy braid; and she
+ wore an old dress of faded print, with holes in the elbows and ragged
+ flounces, which was much too short for her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sara Stanley, have you taken leave of your senses?&rdquo; demanded Aunt Janet.
+ &ldquo;What do you mean by putting on such a rig! Don&rsquo;t you know I have company
+ to tea?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, and that is just why I put it on, Aunt Janet. I want to mortify the
+ flesh&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll &lsquo;mortify&rsquo; you, if I catch you showing yourself to the Millwards like
+ that, my girl! Go right home and dress yourself decently&mdash;or eat your
+ supper in the kitchen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl chose the latter alternative. She was highly indignant. I
+ verily believe that to sit at the dining-room table, in that shabby,
+ outgrown dress, conscious of looking her ugliest, and eating only bread
+ and water before the critical Millwards would have been positive bliss to
+ her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When we went to the missionary meeting that evening, the Story Girl wore
+ her school dress and hat, while Felicity and Cecily were in their pretty
+ muslins. And she had tied her hair with a snuff-brown ribbon which was
+ very unbecoming to her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first person we saw in the church porch was Mrs. Ray. She told us that
+ Sara had nothing worse than a feverish cold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The missionary had at least seven happy listeners that night. We were all
+ glad that Sara did not have measles, and the Story Girl was radiant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now you see all your penance was wasted,&rdquo; said Felicity, as we walked
+ home, keeping close together because of the rumour that Peg Bowen was
+ abroad.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I don&rsquo;t know. I feel better since I punished myself. But I&rsquo;m going to
+ make up for it to-morrow,&rdquo; said the Story Girl energetically. &ldquo;In fact,
+ I&rsquo;ll begin to-night. I&rsquo;m going to the pantry as soon as I get home, and
+ I&rsquo;ll read father&rsquo;s letter before I go to bed. Wasn&rsquo;t the missionary
+ splendid? That cannibal story was simply grand. I tried to remember every
+ word, so that I can tell it just as he told it. Missionaries are such
+ noble people.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;d like to be a missionary and have adventures like that,&rdquo; said Felix.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It would be all right if you could be sure the cannibals would be
+ interrupted in the nick of time as his were,&rdquo; said Dan. &ldquo;But sposen they
+ weren&rsquo;t?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nothing would prevent cannibals from eating Felix if they once caught
+ him,&rdquo; giggled Felicity. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s so nice and fat.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am sure Felix felt very unlike a missionary at that precise moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m going to put two cents more a week in my missionary box than I&rsquo;ve
+ been doing,&rdquo; said Cecily determinedly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two cents more a week out of Cecily&rsquo;s egg money, meant something of a
+ sacrifice. It inspired the rest of us. We all decided to increase our
+ weekly contribution by a cent or so. And Peter, who had had no missionary
+ box at all, up to this time, determined to start one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t seem to be able to feel as int&rsquo;rested in missionaries as you
+ folks do,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;but maybe if I begin to give something I&rsquo;ll get
+ int&rsquo;rested. I&rsquo;ll want to know how my money&rsquo;s being spent. I won&rsquo;t be able
+ to give much. When your father&rsquo;s run away, and your mother goes out
+ washing, and you&rsquo;re only old enough to get fifty cents a week, you can&rsquo;t
+ give much to the heathen. But I&rsquo;ll do the best I can. My Aunt Jane was
+ fond of missions. Are there any Methodist heathen? I s&rsquo;pose I ought to
+ give my box to them, rather than to Presbyterian heathen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, it&rsquo;s only after they&rsquo;re converted that they&rsquo;re anything in
+ particular,&rdquo; said Felicity. &ldquo;Before that, they&rsquo;re just plain heathen. But
+ if you want your money to go to a Methodist missionary you can give it to
+ the Methodist minister at Markdale. I guess the Presbyterians can get
+ along without it, and look after their own heathen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Just smell Mrs. Sampson&rsquo;s flowers,&rdquo; said Cecily, as we passed a trim
+ white paling close to the road, over which blew odours sweeter than the
+ perfume of Araby&rsquo;s shore. &ldquo;Her roses are all out and that bed of Sweet
+ William is a sight by daylight.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sweet William is a dreadful name for a flower,&rdquo; said the Story Girl.
+ &ldquo;William is a man&rsquo;s name, and men are NEVER sweet. They are a great many
+ nice things, but they are NOT sweet and shouldn&rsquo;t be. That is for women.
+ Oh, look at the moonshine on the road in that gap between the spruces! I&rsquo;d
+ like a dress of moonshine, with stars for buttons.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It wouldn&rsquo;t do,&rdquo; said Felicity decidedly. &ldquo;You could see through it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Which seemed to settle the question of moonshine dresses effectually.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XII. THE BLUE CHEST OF RACHEL WARD
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It&rsquo;s utterly out of the question,&rdquo; said Aunt Janet seriously. When Aunt
+ Janet said seriously that anything was out of the question it meant that
+ she was thinking about it, and would probably end up by doing it. If a
+ thing really was out of the question she merely laughed and refused to
+ discuss it at all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The particular matter in or out of the question that opening day of August
+ was a project which Uncle Edward had recently mooted. Uncle Edward&rsquo;s
+ youngest daughter was to be married; and Uncle Edward had written over,
+ urging Uncle Alec, Aunt Janet and Aunt Olivia to go down to Halifax for
+ the wedding and spend a week there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Uncle Alec and Aunt Olivia were eager to go; but Aunt Janet at first
+ declared it was impossible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How could we go away and leave the place to the mercy of all those young
+ ones?&rdquo; she demanded. &ldquo;We&rsquo;d come home and find them all sick, and the house
+ burned down.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not a bit of fear of it,&rdquo; scoffed Uncle Roger. &ldquo;Felicity is as good a
+ housekeeper as you are; and I shall be here to look after them all, and
+ keep them from burning the house down. You&rsquo;ve been promising Edward for
+ years to visit him, and you&rsquo;ll never have a better chance. The haying is
+ over and harvest isn&rsquo;t on, and Alec needs a change. He isn&rsquo;t looking well
+ at all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I think it was Uncle Roger&rsquo;s last argument which convinced Aunt Janet. In
+ the end she decided to go. Uncle Roger&rsquo;s house was to be closed, and he
+ and Peter and the Story Girl were to take up their abode with us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were all delighted. Felicity, in especial, seemed to be in seventh
+ heaven. To be left in sole charge of a big house, with three meals a day
+ to plan and prepare, with poultry and cows and dairy and garden to
+ superintend, apparently furnished forth Felicity&rsquo;s conception of Paradise.
+ Of course, we were all to help; but Felicity was to &ldquo;run things,&rdquo; and she
+ gloried in it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl was pleased, too.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Felicity is going to give me cooking lessons,&rdquo; she confided to me, as we
+ walked in the orchard. &ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t that fine? It will be easier when there are
+ no grown-ups around to make me nervous, and laugh if I make mistakes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Uncle Alec and aunts left on Monday morning. Poor Aunt Janet was full of
+ dismal forebodings, and gave us so many charges and warnings that we did
+ not try to remember any of them; Uncle Alec merely told us to be good and
+ mind what Uncle Roger said. Aunt Olivia laughed at us out of her
+ pansy-blue eyes, and told us she knew exactly what we felt like and hoped
+ we&rsquo;d have a gorgeous time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mind they go to bed at a decent hour,&rdquo; Aunt Janet called back to Uncle
+ Roger as she drove out of the gate. &ldquo;And if anything dreadful happens
+ telegraph us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then they were really gone and we were all left &ldquo;to keep house.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Uncle Roger and Peter went away to their work. Felicity at once set the
+ preparations for dinner a-going, and allotted to each of us his portion of
+ service. The Story Girl was to prepare the potatoes; Felix and Dan were to
+ pick and shell the peas; Cecily was to attend the fire; I was to peel the
+ turnips. Felicity made our mouths water by announcing that she was going
+ to make a roly-poly jam pudding for dinner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I peeled my turnips on the back porch, put them in their pot, and set them
+ on the stove. Then I was at liberty to watch the others, who had longer
+ jobs. The kitchen was a scene of happy activity. The Story Girl peeled her
+ potatoes, somewhat slowly and awkwardly&mdash;for she was not deft at
+ household tasks; Dan and Felix shelled peas and tormented Pat by attaching
+ pods to his ears and tail; Felicity, flushed and serious, measured and
+ stirred skilfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am sitting on a tragedy,&rdquo; said the Story Girl suddenly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Felix and I stared. We were not quite sure what a &ldquo;tragedy&rdquo; was, but we
+ did not think it was an old blue wooden chest, such as the Story Girl was
+ undoubtedly sitting on, if eyesight counted for anything.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old chest filled up the corner between the table and the wall. Neither
+ Felix nor I had ever thought about it particularly. It was very large and
+ heavy, and Felicity generally said hard things of it when she swept the
+ kitchen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This old blue chest holds a tragedy,&rdquo; explained the Story Girl. &ldquo;I know a
+ story about it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Cousin Rachel Ward&rsquo;s wedding things are all in that old chest,&rdquo; said
+ Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Who was Cousin Rachel Ward? And why were her wedding things shut up in an
+ old blue chest in Uncle Alec&rsquo;s kitchen? We demanded the tale instantly.
+ The Story Girl told it to us as she peeled her potatoes. Perhaps the
+ potatoes suffered&mdash;Felicity declared the eyes were not properly done
+ at all&mdash;but the story did not.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is a sad story,&rdquo; said the Story Girl, &ldquo;and it happened fifty years
+ ago, when Grandfather and Grandmother King were quite young. Grandmother&rsquo;s
+ cousin Rachel Ward came to spend a winter with them. She belonged to
+ Montreal and she was an orphan too, just like the Family Ghost. I have
+ never heard what she looked like, but she MUST have been beautiful, of
+ course.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mother says she was awful sentimental and romantic,&rdquo; interjected
+ Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, anyway, she met Will Montague that winter. He was handsome&mdash;everybody
+ says so&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And an awful flirt,&rdquo; said Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Felicity, I WISH you wouldn&rsquo;t interrupt. It spoils the effect. What would
+ you feel like if I went and kept stirring things that didn&rsquo;t belong to it
+ into that pudding? I feel just the same way. Well, Will Montague fell in
+ love with Rachel Ward, and she with him, and it was all arranged that they
+ were to be married from here in the spring. Poor Rachel was so happy that
+ winter; she made all her wedding things with her own hands. Girls did,
+ then, you know, for there was no such thing as a sewing-machine. Well, at
+ last in April the wedding day came, and all the guests were here, and
+ Rachel was dressed in her wedding robes, waiting for her bridegroom. And&rdquo;&mdash;the
+ Story Girl laid down her knife and potato and clasped her wet hands&mdash;&ldquo;WILL
+ MONTAGUE NEVER CAME!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We felt as much of a shock as if we had been one of the expectant guests
+ ourselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What happened to him? Was HE killed too?&rdquo; asked Felix.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl sighed and resumed her work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, indeed. I wish he had been. THAT would have been suitable and
+ romantic. No, it was just something horrid. He had to run away for debt!
+ Fancy! He acted mean right through, Aunt Janet says. He never sent even a
+ word to Rachel, and she never heard from him again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pig!&rdquo; said Felix forcibly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She was broken-hearted of course. When she found out what had happened,
+ she took all her wedding things, and her supply of linen, and some
+ presents that had been given her, and packed them all away in this old
+ blue chest. Then she went away back to Montreal, and took the key with
+ her. She never came back to the Island again&mdash;I suppose she couldn&rsquo;t
+ bear to. And she has lived in Montreal ever since and never married. She
+ is an old woman now&mdash;nearly seventy-five. And this chest has never
+ been opened since.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mother wrote to Cousin Rachel ten years ago,&rdquo; said Cecily, &ldquo;and asked her
+ if she might open the chest to see if the moths had got into it. There&rsquo;s a
+ crack in the back as big as your finger. Cousin Rachel wrote back that if
+ it wasn&rsquo;t for one thing that was in the trunk she would ask mother to open
+ the chest and dispose of the things as she liked. But she could not bear
+ that any one but herself should see or touch that one thing. So she wanted
+ it left as it was. Ma said she washed her hands of it, moths or no moths.
+ She said if Cousin Rachel had to move that chest every time the floor had
+ to be scrubbed it would cure her of her sentimental nonsense. But I
+ think,&rdquo; concluded Cecily, &ldquo;that I would feel just like Cousin Rachel in
+ her place.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What was the thing she couldn&rsquo;t bear any one to see?&rdquo; I asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ma thinks it was her wedding dress. But father says he believes it was
+ Will Montague&rsquo;s picture,&rdquo; said Felicity. &ldquo;He saw her put it in. Father
+ knows some of the things that are in the chest. He was ten years old, and
+ he saw her pack it. There&rsquo;s a white muslin wedding dress and a veil&mdash;and&mdash;and&mdash;a&mdash;a&rdquo;&mdash;Felicity
+ dropped her eyes and blushed painfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A petticoat, embroidered by hand from hem to belt,&rdquo; said the Story Girl
+ calmly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And a china fruit basket with an apple on the handle,&rdquo; went on Felicity,
+ much relieved. &ldquo;And a tea set, and a blue candle-stick.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;d dearly love to see all the things that are in it,&rdquo; said the Story
+ Girl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pa says it must never be opened without Cousin Rachel&rsquo;s permission,&rdquo; said
+ Cecily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Felix and I looked at the chest reverently. It had taken on a new
+ significance in our eyes, and seemed like a tomb wherein lay buried some
+ dead romance of the vanished years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What happened to Will Montague?&rdquo; I asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nothing!&rdquo; said the Story Girl viciously. &ldquo;He just went on living and
+ flourishing. He patched up matters with his creditors after awhile, and
+ came back to the Island; and in the end he married a real nice girl, with
+ money, and was very happy. Did you ever HEAR of anything so unjust?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Beverley King,&rdquo; suddenly cried Felicity, who had been peering into a pot,
+ &ldquo;YOU&rsquo;VE GONE AND PUT THE TURNIPS ON TO BOIL WHOLE JUST LIKE POTATOES!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wasn&rsquo;t that right?&rdquo; I cried, in an agony of shame.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Right!&rdquo; but Felicity had already whisked the turnips out, and was slicing
+ them, while all the others were laughing at me. I had added a tradition on
+ my own account to the family archives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Uncle Roger roared when he heard it; and he roared again at night over
+ Peter&rsquo;s account of Felix attempting to milk a cow. Felix had previously
+ acquired the knack of extracting milk from the udder. But he had never
+ before tried to &ldquo;milk a whole cow.&rdquo; He did not get on well; the cow
+ tramped on his foot, and finally upset the bucket.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What are you to do when a cow won&rsquo;t stand straight?&rdquo; spluttered Felix
+ angrily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That&rsquo;s the question,&rdquo; said Uncle Roger, shaking his head gravely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Uncle Roger&rsquo;s laughter was hard to bear, but his gravity was harder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, in the pantry the Story Girl, apron-enshrouded, was being
+ initiated into the mysteries of bread-making. Under Felicity&rsquo;s eyes she
+ set the bread, and on the morrow she was to bake it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The first thing you must do in the morning is knead it well,&rdquo; said
+ Felicity, &ldquo;and the earlier it&rsquo;s done the better&mdash;because it&rsquo;s such a
+ warm night.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With that we went to bed, and slept as soundly as if tragedies of blue
+ chests and turnips and crooked cows had no place in the scheme of things
+ at all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIII. AN OLD PROVERB WITH A NEW MEANING
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It was half-past five when we boys got up the next morning. We were joined
+ on the stairs by Felicity, yawning and rosy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, dear me, I overslept myself. Uncle Roger wanted breakfast at six.
+ Well, I suppose the fire is on anyhow, for the Story Girl is up. I guess
+ she got up early to knead the bread. She couldn&rsquo;t sleep all night for
+ worrying over it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fire was on, and a flushed and triumphant Story Girl was taking a loaf
+ of bread from the oven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Just look,&rdquo; she said proudly. &ldquo;I have every bit of the bread baked. I got
+ up at three, and it was lovely and light, so I just gave it a right good
+ kneading and popped it into the oven. And it&rsquo;s all done and out of the
+ way. But the loaves don&rsquo;t seem quite as big as they should be,&rdquo; she added
+ doubtfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sara Stanley!&rdquo; Felicity flew across the kitchen. &ldquo;Do you mean that you
+ put the bread right into the oven after you kneaded it without leaving it
+ to rise a second time?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl turned quite pale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, I did,&rdquo; she faltered. &ldquo;Oh, Felicity, wasn&rsquo;t it right?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You&rsquo;ve ruined the bread,&rdquo; said Felicity flatly. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s as heavy as a
+ stone. I declare, Sara Stanley, I&rsquo;d rather have a little common sense than
+ be a great story teller.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bitter indeed was the poor Story Girl&rsquo;s mortification.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t tell Uncle Roger,&rdquo; she implored humbly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I won&rsquo;t tell him,&rdquo; promised Felicity amiably. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s lucky there&rsquo;s
+ enough old bread to do to-day. This will go to the hens. But it&rsquo;s an awful
+ waste of good flour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl crept out with Felix and me to the morning orchard, while
+ Dan and Peter went to do the barn work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It isn&rsquo;t ANY use for me to try to learn to cook,&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind,&rdquo; I said consolingly. &ldquo;You can tell splendid stories.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But what good would that do a hungry boy?&rdquo; wailed the Story Girl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Boys ain&rsquo;t ALWAYS hungry,&rdquo; said Felix gravely. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s times when they
+ ain&rsquo;t.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t believe it,&rdquo; said the Story Girl drearily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Besides,&rdquo; added Felix in the tone of one who says while there is life
+ there is yet hope, &ldquo;you may learn to cook yet if you keep on trying.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But Aunt Olivia won&rsquo;t let me waste the stuff. My only hope was to learn
+ this week. But I suppose Felicity is so disgusted with me now that she
+ won&rsquo;t give me any more lessons.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t care,&rdquo; said Felix. &ldquo;I like you better than Felicity, even if you
+ can&rsquo;t cook. There&rsquo;s lots of folks can make bread. But there isn&rsquo;t many who
+ can tell a story like you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But it&rsquo;s better to be useful than just interesting,&rdquo; sighed the Story
+ Girl bitterly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Felicity, who was useful, would, in her secret soul, have given
+ anything to be interesting. Which is the way of human nature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Company descended on us that afternoon. First came Aunt Janet&rsquo;s sister,
+ Mrs. Patterson, with a daughter of sixteen years and a son of two. They
+ were followed by a buggy-load of Markdale people; and finally, Mrs. Elder
+ Frewen and her sister from Vancouver, with two small daughters of the
+ latter, arrived.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It never rains but it pours,&rdquo; said Uncle Roger, as he went out to take
+ their horse. But Felicity&rsquo;s foot was on her native heath. She had been
+ baking all the afternoon, and, with a pantry well stocked with biscuits,
+ cookies, cakes, and pies, she cared not if all Carlisle came to tea.
+ Cecily set the table, and the Story Girl waited on it and washed all the
+ dishes afterwards. But all the blushing honours fell to Felicity, who
+ received so many compliments that her airs were quite unbearable for the
+ rest of the week. She presided at the head of the table with as much grace
+ and dignity as if she had been five times twelve years old, and seemed to
+ know by instinct just who took sugar and who took it not. She was flushed
+ with excitement and pleasure, and was so pretty that I could hardly eat
+ for looking at her&mdash;which is the highest compliment in a boy&rsquo;s power
+ to pay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl, on the contrary, was under eclipse. She was pale and
+ lustreless from her disturbed night and early rising; and no opportunity
+ offered to tell a melting tale. Nobody took any notice of her. It was
+ Felicity&rsquo;s day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After tea Mrs. Frewen and her sister wished to visit their father&rsquo;s grave
+ in the Carlisle churchyard. It appeared that everybody wanted to go with
+ them; but it was evident that somebody must stay home with Jimmy
+ Patterson, who had just fallen sound asleep on the kitchen sofa. Dan
+ finally volunteered to look after him. He had a new Henty book which he
+ wanted to finish, and that, he said, was better fun than a walk to the
+ graveyard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think we&rsquo;ll be back before he wakes,&rdquo; said Mrs. Patterson, &ldquo;and anyhow
+ he is very good and won&rsquo;t be any trouble. Don&rsquo;t let him go outside,
+ though. He has a cold now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We went away, leaving Dan sitting on the door-sill reading his book, and
+ Jimmy P. snoozing blissfully on the sofa. When we returned&mdash;Felix and
+ the girls and I were ahead of the others&mdash;Dan was still sitting in
+ precisely the same place and attitude; but there was no Jimmy in sight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dan, where&rsquo;s the baby?&rdquo; cried Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan looked around. His jaw fell in blank amazement. I never saw any one
+ look as foolish as Dan at that moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good gracious, I don&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; he said helplessly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You&rsquo;ve been so deep in that wretched book that he&rsquo;s got out, and dear
+ knows where he is,&rdquo; cried Felicity distractedly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wasn&rsquo;t,&rdquo; cried Dan. &ldquo;He MUST be in the house. I&rsquo;ve been sitting right
+ across the door ever since you left, and he couldn&rsquo;t have got out unless
+ he crawled right over me. He must be in the house.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He isn&rsquo;t in the kitchen,&rdquo; said Felicity rushing about wildly, &ldquo;and he
+ couldn&rsquo;t get into the other part of the house, for I shut the hall door
+ tight, and no baby could open it&mdash;and it&rsquo;s shut tight yet. So are all
+ the windows. He MUST have gone out of that door, Dan King, and it&rsquo;s your
+ fault.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He DIDN&rsquo;T go out of this door,&rdquo; reiterated Dan stubbornly. &ldquo;I know that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, where is he, then? He isn&rsquo;t here. Did he melt into air?&rdquo; demanded
+ Felicity. &ldquo;Oh, come and look for him, all of you. Don&rsquo;t stand round like
+ ninnies. We MUST find him before his mother gets here. Dan King, you&rsquo;re an
+ idiot!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan was too frightened to resent this, at the time. However and wherever
+ Jimmy had gone, he WAS gone, so much was certain. We tore about the house
+ and yard like maniacs; we looked into every likely and unlikely place. But
+ Jimmy we could not find, anymore than if he had indeed melted into air.
+ Mrs. Patterson came, and we had not found him. Things were getting
+ serious. Uncle Roger and Peter were summoned from the field. Mrs.
+ Patterson became hysterical, and was taken into the spare room with such
+ remedies as could be suggested. Everybody blamed poor Dan. Cecily asked
+ him what he would feel like if Jimmy was never, never found. The Story
+ Girl had a gruesome recollection of some baby at Markdale who had wandered
+ away like that&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And they never found him till the next spring, and all they found was&mdash;HIS
+ SKELETON, with the grass growing through it,&rdquo; she whispered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This beats me,&rdquo; said Uncle Roger, when a fruitless hour had elapsed. &ldquo;I
+ do hope that baby hasn&rsquo;t wandered down to the swamp. It seems impossible
+ he could walk so far; but I must go and see. Felicity, hand me my high
+ boots out from under the sofa, there&rsquo;s a girl.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Felicity, pale and tearful, dropped on her knees and lifted the cretonne
+ frill of the sofa. There, his head pillowed hardly on Uncle Roger&rsquo;s boots,
+ lay Jimmy Patterson, still sound asleep!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I&rsquo;ll be&mdash;jiggered!&rdquo; said Uncle Roger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I KNEW he never went out of the door,&rdquo; cried Dan triumphantly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the last buggy had driven away, Felicity set a batch of bread, and
+ the rest of us sat around the back porch steps in the cat&rsquo;s light and ate
+ cherries, shooting the stones at each other. Cecily was in quest of
+ information.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What does &lsquo;it never rains but it pours&rsquo; mean?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, it means if anything happens something else is sure to happen,&rdquo; said
+ the Story Girl. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll illustrate. There&rsquo;s Mrs. Murphy. She never had a
+ proposal in her life till she was forty, and then she had three in the one
+ week, and she was so flustered she took the wrong one and has been sorry
+ ever since. Do you see what it means now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, I guess so,&rdquo; said Cecily somewhat doubtfully. Later on we heard her
+ imparting her newly acquired knowledge to Felicity in the pantry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;It never rains but it pours&rsquo; means that nobody wants to marry you for
+ ever so long, and then lots of people do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIV. FORBIDDEN FRUIT
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ We were all, with the exception of Uncle Roger, more or less grumpy in the
+ household of King next day. Perhaps our nerves had been upset by the
+ excitement attendant on Jimmy Patterson&rsquo;s disappearance. But it is more
+ likely that our crankiness was the result of the supper we had eaten the
+ previous night. Even children cannot devour mince pie, and cold fried pork
+ ham, and fruit cake before going to bed with entire impunity. Aunt Janet
+ had forgotten to warn Uncle Roger to keep an eye on our bedtime snacks,
+ and we ate what seemed good unto us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some of us had frightful dreams, and all of us carried chips on our
+ shoulders at breakfast. Felicity and Dan began a bickering which they kept
+ up the entire day. Felicity had a natural aptitude for what we called
+ &ldquo;bossing,&rdquo; and in her mother&rsquo;s absence she deemed that she had a right to
+ rule supreme. She knew better than to make any attempt to assert authority
+ over the Story Girl, and Felix and I were allowed some length of tether;
+ but Cecily, Dan, and Peter were expected to submit dutifully to her
+ decrees. In the main they did; but on this particular morning Dan was
+ plainly inclined to rebel. He had had time to grow sore over the things
+ that Felicity had said to him when Jimmy Patterson was thought lost, and
+ he began the day with a flatly expressed determination that he was not
+ going to let Felicity rule the roost.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not a pleasant day, and to make matters worse it rained until late
+ in the afternoon. The Story Girl had not recovered from the mortifications
+ of the previous day; she would not talk, and she would not tell a single
+ story; she sat on Rachel Ward&rsquo;s chest and ate her breakfast with the air
+ of a martyr. After breakfast she washed the dishes and did the bed-room
+ work in grim silence; then, with a book under one arm and Pat under the
+ other, she betook herself to the window-seat in the upstairs hall, and
+ would not be lured from that retreat, charmed we never so wisely. She
+ stroked the purring Paddy, and read steadily on, with maddening
+ indifference to all our pleadings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even Cecily, the meek and mild, was snappish, and complained of headache.
+ Peter had gone home to see his mother, and Uncle Roger had gone to
+ Markdale on business. Sara Ray came up, but was so snubbed by Felicity
+ that she went home, crying. Felicity got the dinner by herself, disdaining
+ to ask or command assistance. She banged things about and rattled the
+ stove covers until even Cecily protested from her sofa. Dan sat on the
+ floor and whittled, his sole aim and object being to make a mess and annoy
+ Felicity, in which noble ambition he succeeded perfectly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish Aunt Janet and Uncle Alec were home,&rdquo; said Felix. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s not half
+ so much fun having the grown-ups away as I thought it would be.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish I was back in Toronto,&rdquo; I said sulkily. The mince pie was to blame
+ for THAT wish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish you were, I&rsquo;m sure,&rdquo; said Felicity, riddling the fire noisily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Any one who lives with you, Felicity King, will always be wishing he was
+ somewhere else,&rdquo; said Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wasn&rsquo;t talking to you, Dan King,&rdquo; retorted Felicity, &ldquo;&lsquo;Speak when
+ you&rsquo;re spoken to, come when you&rsquo;re called.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, oh, oh,&rdquo; wailed Cecily on the sofa. &ldquo;I WISH it would stop raining. I
+ WISH my head would stop aching. I WISH ma had never gone away. I WISH
+ you&rsquo;d leave Felicity alone, Dan.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish girls had some sense,&rdquo; said Dan&mdash;which brought the orgy of
+ wishing to an end for the time. A wishing fairy might have had the time of
+ her life in the King kitchen that morning&mdash;particularly if she were a
+ cynically inclined fairy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But even the effects of unholy snacks wear away at length. By tea-time
+ things had brightened up. The rain had ceased, and the old, low-raftered
+ room was full of sunshine which danced on the shining dishes of the
+ dresser, made mosaics on the floor, and flickered over the table whereon a
+ delicious meal was spread. Felicity had put on her blue muslin, and looked
+ so beautiful in it that her good humour was quite restored. Cecily&rsquo;s
+ headache was better, and the Story Girl, refreshed by an afternoon siesta,
+ came down with smiles and sparkling eyes. Dan alone continued to nurse his
+ grievances, and would not even laugh when the Story Girl told us a tale
+ brought to mind by some of the &ldquo;Rev. Mr. Scott&rsquo;s plums&rdquo; which were on the
+ table.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The Rev. Mr. Scott was the man who thought the pulpit door must be made
+ for speerits, you know,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I heard Uncle Edward telling ever so
+ many stories about him. He was called to this congregation, and he
+ laboured here long and faithfully, and was much beloved, though he was
+ very eccentric.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What does that mean?&rdquo; asked Peter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hush! It just means queer,&rdquo; said Cecily, nudging him with her elbow. &ldquo;A
+ common man would be queer, but when it&rsquo;s a minister, it&rsquo;s eccentric.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When he gets very old,&rdquo; continued the Story Girl, &ldquo;the Presbytery thought
+ it was time he was retired. HE didn&rsquo;t think so; but the Presbytery had
+ their way, because there were so many of them to one of him. He was
+ retired, and a young man was called to Carlisle. Mr. Scott went to live in
+ town, but he came out to Carlisle very often, and visited all the people
+ regularly, just the same as when he was their minister. The young minister
+ was a very good young man, and tried to do his duty; but he was dreadfully
+ afraid of meeting old Mr. Scott, because he had been told that the old
+ minister was very angry at being set aside, and would likely give him a
+ sound drubbing, if he ever met him. One day the young minister was
+ visiting the Crawfords in Markdale, when they suddenly heard old Mr.
+ Scott&rsquo;s voice in the kitchen. The young minister turned pale as the dead,
+ and implored Mrs. Crawford to hid him. But she couldn&rsquo;t get him out of the
+ room, and all she could do was to hide him in the china closet. The young
+ minister slipped into the china closet, and old Mr. Scott came into the
+ room. He talked very nicely, and read, and prayed. They made very long
+ prayers in those days, you know; and at the end of his prayer he said, &lsquo;Oh
+ Lord, bless the poor young man hiding in the closet. Give him courage not
+ to fear the face of man. Make him a burning and a shining light to this
+ sadly abused congregation.&rsquo; Just imagine the feelings of the young
+ minister in the china closet! But he came right out like a man, though his
+ face was very red, as soon as Mr. Scott had done praying. And Mr. Scott
+ was lovely to him, and shook hands, and never mentioned the china closet.
+ And they were the best of friends ever afterwards.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How did old Mr. Scott find out the young minister was in the closet?&rdquo;
+ asked Felix.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nobody ever knew. They supposed he had seen him through the window before
+ he came into the house, and guessed he must be in the closet&mdash;because
+ there was no way for him to get out of the room.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Scott planted the yellow plum tree in Grandfather&rsquo;s time,&rdquo; said
+ Cecily, peeling one of the plums, &ldquo;and when he did it he said it was as
+ Christian an act as he ever did. I wonder what he meant. I don&rsquo;t see
+ anything very Christian about planting a tree.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do,&rdquo; said the Story Girl sagely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When next we assembled ourselves together, it was after milking, and the
+ cares of the day were done with. We foregathered in the balsam-fragrant
+ aisles of the fir wood, and ate early August apples to such an extent that
+ the Story Girl said we made her think of the Irishman&rsquo;s pig.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;An Irishman who lived at Markdale had a little pig,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;and he
+ gave it a pailful of mush. The pig ate the whole pailful, and then the
+ Irishman put the pig IN the pail, and it didn&rsquo;t fill more than half the
+ pail. Now, how was that, when it held a whole pailful of mush?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This seemed to be a rather unanswerable kind of conundrum. We discussed
+ the problem as we roamed the wood, and Dan and Peter almost quarrelled
+ over it, Dan maintaining that the thing was impossible, and Peter being of
+ the opinion that the mush was somehow &ldquo;made thicker&rdquo; in the process of
+ being eaten, and so took up less room. During the discussion we came out
+ to the fence of the hill pasture where grew the &ldquo;bad berry&rdquo; bushes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just what these &ldquo;bad berries&rdquo; were I cannot tell. We never knew their real
+ name. They were small, red-clustered berries of a glossy, seductive
+ appearance, and we were forbidden to eat them, because it was thought they
+ might be poisonous. Dan picked a cluster and held it up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dan King, don&rsquo;t you DARE eat those berries,&rdquo; said Felicity in her
+ &ldquo;bossiest&rdquo; tone. &ldquo;They&rsquo;re poison. Drop them right away.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, Dan had not had the slightest intention of eating the berries. But at
+ Felicity&rsquo;s prohibition the rebellion which had smouldered in him all day
+ broke into sudden flame. He would show her!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll eat them if I please, Felicity King,&rdquo; he said in a fury: &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t
+ believe they&rsquo;re poison. Look here!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan crammed the whole bunch into his capacious mouth and chewed it up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They taste great,&rdquo; he said, smacking; and he ate two more clusters,
+ regardless of our horror-stricken protestations and Felicity&rsquo;s pleadings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We feared that Dan would drop dead on the spot. But nothing occurred
+ immediately. When an hour had passed we concluded that the bad berries
+ were not poison after all, and we looked upon Dan as quite a hero for
+ daring to eat them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I knew they wouldn&rsquo;t hurt me,&rdquo; he said loftily. &ldquo;Felicity&rsquo;s so fond of
+ making a fuss over everything.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless, when it grew dark and we returned to the house, I noticed
+ that Dan was rather pale and quiet. He lay down on the kitchen sofa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you feel all right, Dan?&rdquo; I whispered anxiously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Shut up,&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I shut up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Felicity and Cecily were setting out a lunch in the pantry when we were
+ all startled by a loud groan from the sofa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I&rsquo;m sick&mdash;I&rsquo;m awful sick,&rdquo; said Dan abjectly, all the defiance
+ and bravado gone out of him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We all went to pieces, except Cecily, who alone retained her presence of
+ mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have you got a pain in your stomach?&rdquo; she demanded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve got an awful pain here, if that&rsquo;s where my stomach is,&rdquo; moaned Dan,
+ putting his hand on a portion of his anatomy considerably below his
+ stomach. &ldquo;Oh&mdash;oh&mdash;oh!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Go for Uncle Roger,&rdquo; commanded Cecily, pale but composed. &ldquo;Felicity, put
+ on the kettle. Dan, I&rsquo;m going to give you mustard and warm water.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mustard and warm water produced its proper effect promptly, but gave
+ Dan no relief. He continued to writhe and groan. Uncle Roger, who had been
+ summoned from his own place, went at once for the doctor, telling Peter to
+ go down the hill for Mrs. Ray. Peter went, but returned accompanied by
+ Sara only. Mrs. Ray and Judy Pineau were both away. Sara might better have
+ stayed home; she was of no use, and could only add to the general
+ confusion, wandering aimlessly about, crying and asking if Dan was going
+ to die.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cecily took charge of things. Felicity might charm the palate, and the
+ Story Girl bind captive the soul; but when pain and sickness wrung the
+ brow it was Cecily who was the ministering angel. She made the writhing
+ Dan go to bed. She made him swallow every available antidote which was
+ recommended in &ldquo;the doctor&rsquo;s book;&rdquo; and she applied hot cloths to him
+ until her faithful little hands were half scalded off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was no doubt Dan was suffering intense pain. He moaned and writhed,
+ and cried for his mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, isn&rsquo;t it dreadful!&rdquo; said Felicity, wringing her hands as she walked
+ the kitchen floor. &ldquo;Oh, why doesn&rsquo;t the doctor come? I TOLD Dan the bad
+ berries were poison. But surely they can&rsquo;t kill people ALTOGETHER.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pa&rsquo;s cousin died of eating something forty years ago,&rdquo; sobbed Sara Ray.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold your tongue,&rdquo; said Peter in a fierce whisper. &ldquo;You oughter have more
+ sense than to say such things to the girls. They don&rsquo;t want to be any
+ worse scared than they are.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But Pa&rsquo;s cousin DID die,&rdquo; reiterated Sara.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My Aunt Jane used to rub whisky on for a pain,&rdquo; suggested Peter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We haven&rsquo;t any whisky,&rdquo; said Felicity disapprovingly. &ldquo;This is a
+ temperance house.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But rubbing whisky on the OUTSIDE isn&rsquo;t any harm,&rdquo; argued Peter. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s
+ only when you take it inside it is bad for you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, we haven&rsquo;t any, anyhow,&rdquo; said Felicity. &ldquo;I suppose blueberry wine
+ wouldn&rsquo;t do in its place?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peter did not think blueberry wine would be any good.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was ten o&rsquo;clock before Dan began to get better; but from that time he
+ improved rapidly. When the doctor, who had been away from home when Uncle
+ Roger reached Markdale, came at half past ten, he found his patient very
+ weak and white, but free from pain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dr. Grier patted Cecily on the head, told her she was a little brick, and
+ had done just the right thing, examined some of the fatal berries and gave
+ it as his opinion that they were probably poisonous, administered some
+ powders to Dan and advised him not to tamper with forbidden fruit in
+ future, and went away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Ray now appeared, looking for Sara, and said she would stay all night
+ with us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll be much obliged to you if you will,&rdquo; said Uncle Roger. &ldquo;I feel a bit
+ shook. I urged Janet and Alec to go to Halifax, and took the
+ responsibility of the children while they were away, but I didn&rsquo;t know
+ what I was letting myself in for. If anything had happened I could never
+ have forgiven myself&mdash;though I believe it&rsquo;s beyond the power of
+ mortal man to keep watch over the things children WILL eat. Now, you young
+ fry, get straight off to your beds. Dan is out of danger, and you can&rsquo;t do
+ any more good. Not that any of you have done much, except Cecily. She&rsquo;s
+ got a head of her shoulders.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It&rsquo;s been a horrid day all through,&rdquo; said Felicity drearily, as we
+ climbed the stairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suppose we made it horrid ourselves,&rdquo; said the Story Girl candidly.
+ &ldquo;But it&rsquo;ll be a good story to tell sometime,&rdquo; she added.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m awful tired and thankful,&rdquo; sighed Cecily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We all felt that way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XV. A DISOBEDIENT BROTHER
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Dan was his own man again in the morning, though rather pale and weak; he
+ wanted to get up, but Cecily ordered him to stay in bed. Fortunately
+ Felicity forgot to repeat the command, so Dan did stay in bed. Cecily
+ carried his meals to him, and read a Henty book to him all her spare time.
+ The Story Girl went up and told him wondrous tales; and Sara Ray brought
+ him a pudding she had made herself. Sara&rsquo;s intentions were good, but the
+ pudding&mdash;well, Dan fed most of it to Paddy, who had curled himself up
+ at the foot of the bed, giving the world assurance of a cat by his
+ mellifluous purring.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ain&rsquo;t he just a great old fellow?&rdquo; said Dan. &ldquo;He knows I&rsquo;m kind of sick,
+ just as well as a human. He never pays no attention to me when I&rsquo;m well.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Felix and Peter and I were required to help Uncle Roger in some
+ carpentering work that day, and Felicity indulged in one of the
+ house-cleaning orgies so dear to her soul; so that it was evening before
+ we were all free to meet in the orchard and loll on the grasses of Uncle
+ Stephen&rsquo;s Walk. In August it was a place of shady sweetness, fragrant with
+ the odour of ripening apples, full of dear, delicate shadows. Through its
+ openings we looked afar to the blue rims of the hills and over green, old,
+ tranquil fields, lying the sunset glow. Overhead the lacing leaves made a
+ green, murmurous roof. There was no such thing as hurry in the world,
+ while we lingered there and talked of &ldquo;cabbages and kings.&rdquo; A tale of the
+ Story Girl&rsquo;s, wherein princes were thicker than blackberries, and queens
+ as common as buttercups, led to our discussion of kings. We wondered what
+ it would be like to be a king. Peter thought it would be fine, only kind
+ of inconvenient, wearing a crown all the time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, but they don&rsquo;t,&rdquo; said the Story Girl. &ldquo;Maybe they used to once, but
+ now they wear hats. The crowns are just for special occasions. They look
+ very much like other people, if you can go by their photographs.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t believe it would be much fun as a steady thing,&rdquo; said Cecily.
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;d like to SEE a queen though. That is one thing I have against the
+ Island&mdash;you never have a chance to see things like that here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The Prince of Wales was in Charlottetown once,&rdquo; said Peter. &ldquo;My Aunt Jane
+ saw him quite close by.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That was before we were born, and such a thing won&rsquo;t happen again until
+ after we&rsquo;re dead,&rdquo; said Cecily, with very unusual pessimism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think queens and kings were thicker long ago,&rdquo; said the Story Girl.
+ &ldquo;They do seem dreadfully scarce now. There isn&rsquo;t one in this country
+ anywhere. Perhaps I&rsquo;ll get a glimpse of some when I go to Europe.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well, the Story Girl was destined to stand before kings herself, and she
+ was to be one whom they delighted to honour. But we did not know that, as
+ we sat in the old orchard. We thought it quite sufficiently marvellous
+ that she should expect to have the chance of just seeing them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Can a queen do exactly as she pleases?&rdquo; Sara Ray wanted to know.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not nowadays,&rdquo; explained the Story Girl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then I don&rsquo;t see any use in being one,&rdquo; Sara decided.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A king can&rsquo;t do as he pleases now, either,&rdquo; said Felix. &ldquo;If he tries to,
+ and if it isn&rsquo;t what pleases other people, the Parliament or something
+ squelches him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t &lsquo;squelch&rsquo; a lovely word?&rdquo; said the Story Girl irrelevantly. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s
+ so expressive. Squ-u-e-l-ch!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certainly it was a lovely word, as the Story Girl said it. Even a king
+ would not have minded being squelched, if it were done to music like that.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Uncle Roger says that Martin Forbes&rsquo; wife has squelched HIM,&rdquo; said
+ Felicity. &ldquo;He says Martin can&rsquo;t call his soul his own since he was
+ married.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m glad of it,&rdquo; said Cecily vindictively.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We all stared. This was so very unlike Cecily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Martin Forbes is the brother of a horrid man in Summerside who called me
+ Johnny, that&rsquo;s why,&rdquo; she explained. &ldquo;He was visiting here with his wife
+ two years ago, and he called me Johnny every time he spoke to me. Just you
+ fancy! I&rsquo;ll NEVER forgive him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That isn&rsquo;t a Christian spirit,&rdquo; said Felicity rebukingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t care. Would YOU forgive James Forbes if he had called YOU
+ Johnny?&rdquo; demanded Cecily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know a story about Martin Forbes&rsquo; grandfather,&rdquo; said the Story Girl.
+ &ldquo;Long ago they didn&rsquo;t have any choir in the Carlisle church&mdash;just a
+ precentor you know. But at last they got a choir, and Andrew McPherson was
+ to sing bass in it. Old Mr. Forbes hadn&rsquo;t gone to church for years,
+ because he was so rheumatic, but he went the first Sunday the choir sang,
+ because he had never heard any one sing bass, and wanted to hear what it
+ was like. Grandfather King asked him what he thought of the choir. Mr.
+ Forbes said it was &lsquo;verra guid,&rsquo; but as for Andrew&rsquo;s bass, &lsquo;there was nae
+ bass aboot it&mdash;it was just a bur-r-r-r the hale time.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If you could have heard the Story Girl&rsquo;s &ldquo;bur-r-r-r!&rdquo; Not old Mr. Forbes
+ himself could have invested it with more of Doric scorn. We rolled over in
+ the cool grass and screamed with laughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Poor Dan,&rdquo; said Cecily compassionately. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s up there all alone in his
+ room, missing all the fun. I suppose it&rsquo;s mean of us to be having such a
+ good time here, when he has to stay in bed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If Dan hadn&rsquo;t done wrong eating the bad berries when he was told not to,
+ he wouldn&rsquo;t be sick,&rdquo; said Felicity. &ldquo;You&rsquo;re bound to catch it when you do
+ wrong. It was just a Providence he didn&rsquo;t die.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That makes me think of another story about old Mr. Scott,&rdquo; said the Story
+ Girl. &ldquo;You know, I told you he was very angry because the Presbytery made
+ him retire. There were two ministers in particular he blamed for being at
+ the bottom of it. One time a friend of his was trying to console him, and
+ said to him,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;You should be resigned to the will of Providence.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Providence had nothing to do with it,&rsquo; said old Mr. Scott. &lsquo;&rsquo;Twas the
+ McCloskeys and the devil.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You shouldn&rsquo;t speak of the&mdash;the&mdash;DEVIL,&rdquo; said Felicity, rather
+ shocked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, that&rsquo;s just what Mr. Scott said.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, it&rsquo;s all right for a MINISTER to speak of him. But it isn&rsquo;t nice for
+ little girls. If you HAVE to speak of&mdash;of&mdash;him&mdash;you might
+ say the Old Scratch. That is what mother calls him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;&rsquo;Twas the McCloskeys and the Old Scratch,&rsquo;&rdquo; said the Story Girl
+ reflectively, as if she were trying to see which version was the more
+ effective. &ldquo;It wouldn&rsquo;t do,&rdquo; she decided.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t think it&rsquo;s any harm to mention the&mdash;the&mdash;that person,
+ when you&rsquo;re telling a story,&rdquo; said Cecily. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s only in plain talking it
+ doesn&rsquo;t do. It sounds too much like swearing then.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know another story about Mr. Scott,&rdquo; said the Story Girl. &ldquo;Not long
+ after he was married his wife wasn&rsquo;t quite ready for church one morning
+ when it was time to go. So, just to teach her a lesson, he drove off
+ alone, and left her to walk all the way&mdash;it was nearly two miles&mdash;in
+ the heat and dust. She took it very quietly. It&rsquo;s the best way, I guess,
+ when you&rsquo;re married to a man like old Mr. Scott. But just a few Sundays
+ after wasn&rsquo;t he late himself! I suppose Mrs. Scott thought that what was
+ sauce for the goose was sauce for the gander, for she slipped out and
+ drove off to church as he had done. Old Mr. Scott finally arrived at the
+ church, pretty hot and dusty, and in none too good a temper. He went into
+ the pulpit, leaned over it and looked at his wife, sitting calmly in her
+ pew at the side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;It was cleverly done,&rsquo; he said, right out loud, &lsquo;BUT DINNA TRY IT
+ AGAIN!&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the midst of our laughter Pat came down the Walk, his stately tail
+ waving over the grasses. He proved to be the precursor of Dan, clothed and
+ in his right mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you think you should have got up, Dan?&rdquo; said Cecily anxiously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I had to,&rdquo; said Dan. &ldquo;The window was open, and it was more&rsquo;n I could
+ stand to hear you fellows laughing down here and me missing it all.
+ &lsquo;Sides, I&rsquo;m all right again. I feel fine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I guess this will be a lesson to you, Dan King,&rdquo; said Felicity, in her
+ most maddening tone. &ldquo;I guess you won&rsquo;t forget it in a hurry. You won&rsquo;t go
+ eating the bad berries another time when you&rsquo;re told not to.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan had picked out a soft spot in the grass for himself, and was in the
+ act of sitting down, when Felicity&rsquo;s tactful speech arrested him midway.
+ He straightened up and turned a wrathful face on his provoking sister.
+ Then, red with indignation, but without a word, he stalked up the walk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now he&rsquo;s gone off mad,&rdquo; said Cecily reproachfully. &ldquo;Oh, Felicity, why
+ couldn&rsquo;t you have held your tongue?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, what did I say to make him mad?&rdquo; asked Felicity in honest
+ perplexity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think it&rsquo;s awful for brothers and sisters to be always quarrelling,&rdquo;
+ sighed Cecily. &ldquo;The Cowans fight all the time; and you and Dan will soon
+ be as bad.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, talk sense,&rdquo; said Felicity. &ldquo;Dan&rsquo;s got so touchy it isn&rsquo;t safe to
+ speak to him. I should think he&rsquo;d be sorry for all the trouble he made
+ last night. But you just back him up in everything, Cecily.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You do! And you&rsquo;ve no business to, specially when mother&rsquo;s away. She left
+ ME in charge.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You didn&rsquo;t take much charge last night when Dan got sick,&rdquo; said Felix
+ maliciously. Felicity had told him at tea that night he was getting fatter
+ than ever. This was his tit-for-tat. &ldquo;You were pretty glad to leave it all
+ to Cecily then.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who&rsquo;s talking to you?&rdquo; said Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, look here,&rdquo; said the Story Girl, &ldquo;the first thing we know we&rsquo;ll all
+ be quarrelling, and then some of us will sulk all day to-morrow. It&rsquo;s
+ dreadful to spoil a whole day. Just let&rsquo;s all sit still and count a
+ hundred before we say another word.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We sat still and counted the hundred. When Cecily finished she got up and
+ went in search of Dan, resolved to soothe his wounded feelings. Felicity
+ called after her to tell Dan there was a jam turnover she had put away in
+ the pantry specially for him. Felix held out to Felicity a remarkably fine
+ apple which he had been saving for his own consumption; and the Story Girl
+ began a tale of an enchanted maiden in a castle by the sea; but we never
+ heard the end of it. For, just as the evening star was looking whitely
+ through the rosy window of the west, Cecily came flying through the
+ orchard, wringing her hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, come, come quick,&rdquo; she gasped. &ldquo;Dan&rsquo;s eating the bad berries again&mdash;he&rsquo;s
+ et a whole bunch of them&mdash;he says he&rsquo;ll show Felicity. I can&rsquo;t stop
+ him. Come you and try.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We rose in a body and rushed towards the house. In the yard we encountered
+ Dan, emerging from the fir wood and champing the fatal berries with
+ unrepentant relish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dan King, do you want to commit suicide?&rdquo; demanded the Story Girl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look here, Dan,&rdquo; I expostulated. &ldquo;You shouldn&rsquo;t do this. Think how sick
+ you were last night and all the trouble you made for everybody. Don&rsquo;t eat
+ any more, there&rsquo;s a good chap.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All right,&rdquo; said Dan. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve et all I want. They taste fine. I don&rsquo;t
+ believe it was them made me sick.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But now that his anger was over he looked a little frightened. Felicity
+ was not there. We found her in the kitchen, lighting up the fire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bev, fill the kettle with water and put it on to heat,&rdquo; she said in a
+ resigned tone. &ldquo;If Dan&rsquo;s going to be sick again we&rsquo;ve got to be ready for
+ it. I wish mother was home, that&rsquo;s all. I hope she&rsquo;ll never go away again.
+ Dan King, you just wait till I tell her of the way you&rsquo;ve acted.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fudge! I ain&rsquo;t going to be sick,&rdquo; said Dan. &ldquo;And if YOU begin telling
+ tales, Felicity King, I&rsquo;LL tell some too. I know how many eggs mother said
+ you could use while she was away&mdash;and I know how many you HAVE used.
+ I counted. So you&rsquo;d better mind your own business, Miss.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A nice way to talk to your sister when you may be dead in an hour&rsquo;s
+ time!&rdquo; retorted Felicity, in tears between her anger and her real alarm
+ about Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But in an hour&rsquo;s time Dan was still in good health, and announced his
+ intention of going to bed. He went, and was soon sleeping as peacefully as
+ if he had nothing on either conscience or stomach. But Felicity declared
+ she meant to keep the water hot until all danger was past; and we sat up
+ to keep her company. We were sitting there when Uncle Roger walked in at
+ eleven o&rsquo;clock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What on earth are you young fry doing up at this time of night?&rdquo; he asked
+ angrily. &ldquo;You should have been in your beds two hours ago. And with a
+ roaring fire on a night that&rsquo;s hot enough to melt a brass monkey! Have you
+ taken leave of your senses?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It&rsquo;s because of Dan,&rdquo; explained Felicity wearily. &ldquo;He went and et more of
+ the bad berries&mdash;a whole lot of them&mdash;and we were sure he&rsquo;d be
+ sick again. But he hasn&rsquo;t been yet, and now he&rsquo;s asleep.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is that boy stark, staring mad?&rdquo; said Uncle Roger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was Felicity&rsquo;s fault,&rdquo; cried Cecily, who always took Dan&rsquo;s part
+ through evil report and good report. &ldquo;She told him she guessed he&rsquo;d
+ learned a lesson and wouldn&rsquo;t do what she&rsquo;d told him not to again. So he
+ went and et them because she vexed him so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Felicity King, if you don&rsquo;t watch out you&rsquo;ll grow up into the sort of
+ woman who drives her husband to drink,&rdquo; said Uncle Roger gravely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How could I tell Dan would act so like a mule!&rdquo; cried Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Get off to bed, every one of you. It&rsquo;s a thankful man I&rsquo;ll be when your
+ father and mother come home. The wretched bachelor who undertakes to look
+ after a houseful of children like you is to be pitied. Nobody will ever
+ catch me doing it again. Felicity, is there anything fit to eat in the
+ pantry?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That last question was the most unkindest cut of all. Felicity could have
+ forgiven Uncle Roger anything but that. It really was unpardonable. She
+ confided to me as we climbed the stairs that she hated Uncle Roger. Her
+ red lips quivered and the tears of wounded pride brimmed over in her
+ beautiful blue eyes. In the dim candle-light she looked unbelievably
+ pretty and appealing. I put my arm about her and gave her a cousinly
+ salute.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never you mind him, Felicity,&rdquo; I said. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s only a grown-up.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0016" id="link2HCH0016">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVI. THE GHOSTLY BELL
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Friday was a comfortable day in the household of King. Everybody was in
+ good humour. The Story Girl sparkled through several tales that ranged
+ from the afrites and jinns of Eastern myth, through the piping days of
+ chivalry, down to the homely anecdotes of Carlisle workaday folks. She was
+ in turn an Oriental princess behind a silken veil, the bride who followed
+ her bridegroom to the wars of Palestine disguised as a page, the gallant
+ lady who ransomed her diamond necklace by dancing a coranto with a
+ highwayman on a moonlit heath, and &ldquo;Buskirk&rsquo;s girl&rdquo; who joined the Sons
+ and Daughters of Temperance &ldquo;just to see what was into it;&rdquo; and in each
+ impersonation she was so thoroughly the thing impersonated that it was a
+ matter of surprise to us when she emerged from each our own familiar Story
+ Girl again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cecily and Sara Ray found a &ldquo;sweet&rdquo; new knitted lace pattern in an old
+ magazine and spent a happy afternoon learning it and &ldquo;talking secrets.&rdquo;
+ Chancing&mdash;accidentally, I vow&mdash;to overhear certain of these
+ secrets, I learned that Sara Ray had named an apple for Johnny Price&mdash;&ldquo;and,
+ Cecily, true&rsquo;s you live, there was eight seeds in it, and you know eight
+ means &lsquo;they both love&rsquo; &ldquo;&mdash;while Cecily admitted that Willy Fraser had
+ written on his slate and showed it to her,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;If you love me as I love you,
+ No knife can cut our love in two&rdquo;&mdash;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;but, Sara Ray, NEVER you breathe this to a living soul.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Felix also averred that he heard Sara ask Cecily very seriously,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Cecily, how old must we be before we can have a REAL beau?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Sara always denied it; so I am inclined to believe Felix simply made
+ it up himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paddy distinguished himself by catching a rat, and being intolerably
+ conceited about it&mdash;until Sara Ray cured him by calling him a &ldquo;dear,
+ sweet cat,&rdquo; and kissing him between the ears. Then Pat sneaked abjectly
+ off, his tail drooping. He resented being called a sweet cat. He had a
+ sense of humour, had Pat. Very few cats have; and most of them have such
+ an inordinate appetite for flattery that they will swallow any amount of
+ it and thrive thereon. Paddy had a finer taste. The Story Girl and I were
+ the only ones who could pay him compliments to his liking. The Story Girl
+ would box his ears with her fist and say, &ldquo;Bless your gray heart, Paddy,
+ you&rsquo;re a good sort of old rascal,&rdquo; and Pat would purr his satisfaction; I
+ used to take a handful of the skin on his back, shake him gently and say,
+ &ldquo;Pat, you&rsquo;ve forgotten more than any human being ever knew,&rdquo; and I vow
+ Paddy would lick his chops with delight. But to be called &ldquo;a sweet cat!&rdquo;
+ Oh, Sara, Sara!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Felicity tried&mdash;and had the most gratifying luck with&mdash;a new and
+ complicated cake recipe&mdash;a gorgeous compound of a plumminess to make
+ your mouth water. The number of eggs she used in it would have shocked
+ Aunt Janet&rsquo;s thrifty soul, but that cake, like beauty, was its own excuse.
+ Uncle Roger ate three slices of it at tea-time and told Felicity she was
+ an artist. The poor man meant it as a compliment; but Felicity, who knew
+ Uncle Blair was an artist and had a poor opinion of such fry, looked
+ indignant and retorted, indeed she wasn&rsquo;t!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Peter says there&rsquo;s any amount of raspberries back in the maple clearing,&rdquo;
+ said Dan. &ldquo;S&rsquo;posen we all go after tea and pick some?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;d like to,&rdquo; sighed Felicity, &ldquo;but we&rsquo;d come home tired and with all the
+ milking to do. You boys better go alone.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Peter and I will attend to the milking for one evening,&rdquo; said Uncle
+ Roger. &ldquo;You can all go. I have an idea that a raspberry pie for to-morrow
+ night, when the folks come home, would hit the right spot.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly, after tea we all set off, armed with jugs and cups. Felicity,
+ thoughtful creature, also took a small basketful of jelly cookies along
+ with her. We had to go back through the maple woods to the extreme end of
+ Uncle Roger&rsquo;s farm&mdash;a pretty walk, through a world of green,
+ whispering boughs and spice-sweet ferns, and shifting patches of sunlight.
+ The raspberries were plentiful, and we were not long in filling our
+ receptacles. Then we foregathered around a tiny wood spring, cold and
+ pellucid under its young maples, and ate the jelly cookies; and the Story
+ Girl told us a tale of a haunted spring in a mountain glen where a fair
+ white lady dwelt, who pledged all comers in a golden cup with jewels
+ bright.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And if you drank of the cup with her,&rdquo; said the Story Girl, her eyes
+ glowing through the emerald dusk about us, &ldquo;you were never seen in the
+ world again; you were whisked straightway to fairyland, and lived there
+ with a fairy bride. And you never WANTED to come back to earth, because
+ when you drank of the magic cup you forgot all your past life, except for
+ one day in every year when you were allowed to remember it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish there was such a place as fairyland&mdash;and a way to get to it,&rdquo;
+ said Cecily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think there IS such a place&mdash;in spite of Uncle Edward,&rdquo; said the
+ Story Girl dreamily, &ldquo;and I think there is a way of getting there too, if
+ we could only find it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well, the Story Girl was right. There is such a place as fairyland&mdash;but
+ only children can find the way to it. And they do not know that it is
+ fairyland until they have grown so old that they forget the way. One
+ bitter day, when they seek it and cannot find it, they realize what they
+ have lost; and that is the tragedy of life. On that day the gates of Eden
+ are shut behind them and the age of gold is over. Henceforth they must
+ dwell in the common light of common day. Only a few, who remain children
+ at heart, can ever find that fair, lost path again; and blessed are they
+ above mortals. They, and only they, can bring us tidings from that dear
+ country where we once sojourned and from which we must evermore be exiles.
+ The world calls them its singers and poets and artists and story-tellers;
+ but they are just people who have never forgotten the way to fairyland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As we sat there the Awkward Man passed by, with his gun over his shoulder
+ and his dog at his side. He did not look like an awkward man, there in the
+ heart of the maple woods. He strode along right masterfully and lifted his
+ head with the air of one who was monarch of all he surveyed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl kissed her fingertips to him with the delightful audacity
+ which was a part of her; and the Awkward Man plucked off his hat and swept
+ her a stately and graceful bow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t understand why they call him the awkward man,&rdquo; said Cecily, when
+ he was out of earshot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You&rsquo;d understand why if you ever saw him at a party or a picnic,&rdquo; said
+ Felicity, &ldquo;trying to pass plates and dropping them whenever a woman looked
+ at him. They say it&rsquo;s pitiful to see him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I must get well acquainted with that man next summer,&rdquo; said the Story
+ Girl. &ldquo;If I put it off any longer it will be too late. I&rsquo;m growing so
+ fast, Aunt Olivia says I&rsquo;ll have to wear ankle skirts next summer. If I
+ begin to look grown-up he&rsquo;ll get frightened of me, and then I&rsquo;ll never
+ find out the Golden Milestone mystery.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you think he&rsquo;ll ever tell you who Alice is?&rdquo; I asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have a notion who Alice is already,&rdquo; said the mysterious creature. But
+ she would tell us nothing more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the jelly cookies were all eaten it was high time to be moving
+ homeward, for when the dark comes down there are more comfortable places
+ than a rustling maple wood and the precincts of a possibly enchanted
+ spring. When we reached the foot of the orchard and entered it through a
+ gap in the hedge it was the magical, mystical time of &ldquo;between lights.&rdquo;
+ Off to the west was a daffodil glow hanging over the valley of lost
+ sunsets, and Grandfather King&rsquo;s huge willow rose up against it like a
+ rounded mountain of foliage. In the east, above the maple woods, was a
+ silvery sheen that hinted the moonrise. But the orchard was a place of
+ shadows and mysterious sounds. Midway up the open space in its heart we
+ met Peter; and if ever a boy was given over to sheer terror that boy was
+ Peter. His face was as white as a sunburned face could be, and his eyes
+ were brimmed with panic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Peter, what is the matter?&rdquo; cried Cecily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There&rsquo;s&mdash;SOMETHING&mdash;in the house, RINGING A BELL,&rdquo; said Peter,
+ in a shaking voice. Not the Story Girl herself could have invested that
+ &ldquo;something&rdquo; with more of creepy horror. We all drew close together. I felt
+ a crinkly feeling along my back which I had never known before. If Peter
+ had not been so manifestly frightened we might have thought he was trying
+ to &ldquo;pass a joke&rdquo; on us. But such abject terror as his could not be
+ counterfeited.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nonsense!&rdquo; said Felicity, but her voice shook. &ldquo;There isn&rsquo;t a bell in the
+ house to ring. You must have imagined it, Peter. Or else Uncle Roger is
+ trying to fool us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your Uncle Roger went to Markdale right after milking,&rdquo; said Peter. &ldquo;He
+ locked up the house and gave me the key. There wasn&rsquo;t a soul in it then,
+ that I&rsquo;m sure of. I druv the cows to the pasture, and I got back about
+ fifteen minutes ago. I set down on the front door steps for a moment, and
+ all at once I heard a bell ring in the house eight times. I tell you I was
+ skeered. I made a bolt for the orchard&mdash;and you won&rsquo;t catch me going
+ near that house till your Uncle Roger comes home.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You wouldn&rsquo;t catch any of us doing it. We were almost as badly scared as
+ Peter. There we stood in a huddled demoralized group. Oh, what an eerie
+ place that orchard was! What shadows! What noises! What spooky swooping of
+ bats! You COULDN&rsquo;T look every way at once, and goodness only knew what
+ might be behind you!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There CAN&rsquo;T be anybody in the house,&rdquo; said Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, here&rsquo;s the key&mdash;go and see for yourself,&rdquo; said Peter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Felicity had no intention of going and seeing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think you boys ought to go,&rdquo; she said, retreating behind the defence of
+ sex. &ldquo;You ought to be braver than girls.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But we ain&rsquo;t,&rdquo; said Felix candidly. &ldquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t be much scared of
+ anything REAL. But a haunted house is a different thing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I always thought something had to be done in a place before it could be
+ haunted,&rdquo; said Cecily. &ldquo;Somebody killed or something like that, you know.
+ Nothing like that ever happened in our family. The Kings have always been
+ respectable.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Perhaps it is Emily King&rsquo;s ghost,&rdquo; whispered Felix.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She never appeared anywhere but in the orchard,&rdquo; said the Story Girl.
+ &ldquo;Oh, oh, children, isn&rsquo;t there something under Uncle Alec&rsquo;s tree?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We peered fearfully through the gloom. There WAS something&mdash;something
+ that wavered and fluttered&mdash;advanced&mdash;retreated&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That&rsquo;s only my old apron,&rdquo; said Felicity. &ldquo;I hung it there to-day when I
+ was looking for the white hen&rsquo;s nest. Oh, what shall we do? Uncle Roger
+ may not be back for hours. I CAN&rsquo;T believe there&rsquo;s anything in the house.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Maybe it&rsquo;s only Peg Bowen,&rdquo; suggested Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was not a great deal of comfort in this. We were almost as much
+ afraid of Peg Bowen as we would be of any spectral visitant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peter scoffed at the idea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Peg Bowen wasn&rsquo;t in the house before your Uncle Roger locked it up, and
+ how could she get in afterwards?&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;No, it isn&rsquo;t Peg Bowen. It&rsquo;s
+ SOMETHING that WALKS.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know a story about a ghost,&rdquo; said the Story Girl, the ruling passion
+ strong even in extremity. &ldquo;It is about a ghost with eyeholes but no eyes&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t,&rdquo; cried Cecily hysterically. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you go on! Don&rsquo;t you say
+ another word! I can&rsquo;t bear it! Don&rsquo;t you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl didn&rsquo;t. But she had said enough. There was something in the
+ quality of a ghost with eyeholes but no eyes that froze our young blood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There never were in all the world six more badly scared children than
+ those who huddled in the old King orchard that August night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All at once&mdash;something&mdash;leaped from the bough of a tree and
+ alighted before us. We split the air with a simultaneous shriek. We would
+ have run, one and all, if there had been anywhere to run to. But there
+ wasn&rsquo;t&mdash;all around us were only those shadowy arcades. Then we saw
+ with shame that it was only our Paddy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pat, Pat,&rdquo; I said, picking him up, feeling a certain comfort in his soft,
+ solid body. &ldquo;Stay with us, old fellow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Pat would none of us. He struggled out of my clasp and disappeared
+ over the long grasses with soundless leaps. He was no longer our tame,
+ domestic, well acquainted Paddy. He was a strange, furtive animal&mdash;a
+ &ldquo;questing beast.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently the moon rose; but this only made matters worse. The shadows had
+ been still before; now they moved and danced, as the night wind tossed the
+ boughs. The old house, with its dreadful secret, was white and clear
+ against the dark background of spruces. We were woefully tired, but we
+ could not sit down because the grass was reeking with dew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The Family Ghost only appears in daylight,&rdquo; said the Story Girl. &ldquo;I
+ wouldn&rsquo;t mind seeing a ghost in daylight. But after dark is another
+ thing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There&rsquo;s no such thing as a ghost,&rdquo; I said contemptuously. Oh, how I
+ wished I could believe it!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then what rung that bell?&rdquo; said Peter. &ldquo;Bells don&rsquo;t ring of themselves, I
+ s&rsquo;pose, specially when there ain&rsquo;t any in the house to ring.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, will Uncle Roger never come home!&rdquo; sobbed Felicity. &ldquo;I know he&rsquo;ll
+ laugh at us awful, but it&rsquo;s better to be laughed at than scared like
+ this.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Uncle Roger did not come until nearly ten. Never was there a more welcome
+ sound than the rumble of his wheels in the lane. We ran to the orchard
+ gate and swarmed across the yard, just as Uncle Roger alighted at the
+ front door. He stared at us in the moonlight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have you tormented any one into eating more bad berries, Felicity?&rdquo; he
+ demanded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, Uncle Roger, don&rsquo;t go in,&rdquo; implored Felicity seriously. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s
+ something dreadful in there&mdash;something that rings a bell. Peter heard
+ it. Don&rsquo;t go in.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There&rsquo;s no use asking the meaning of this, I suppose,&rdquo; said Uncle Roger
+ with the calm of despair. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve gave up trying to fathom you young ones.
+ Peter, where&rsquo;s the key? What yarn have you been telling?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I DID hear a bell ring,&rdquo; said Peter stubbornly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Uncle Roger unlocked and flung open the front door. As he did so, clear
+ and sweet, rang out ten bell-like chimes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That&rsquo;s what I heard,&rdquo; cried Peter. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s the bell!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We had to wait until Uncle Roger stopped laughing before we heard the
+ explanation. We thought he never WOULD stop.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That&rsquo;s Grandfather King&rsquo;s old clock striking,&rdquo; he said, as soon as he was
+ able to speak. &ldquo;Sammy Prott came along after tea, when you were away to
+ the forge, Peter, and I gave him permission to clean the old clock. He had
+ it going merrily in no time. And now it has almost frightened you poor
+ little monkeys to death.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We heard Uncle Roger chuckling all the way to the barn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Uncle Roger can laugh,&rdquo; said Cecily, with a quiver in her voice, &ldquo;but
+ it&rsquo;s no laughing matter to be so scared. I just feel sick, I was so
+ frightened.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t mind if he&rsquo;d laugh once and have it done with it,&rdquo; said
+ Felicity bitterly. &ldquo;But he&rsquo;ll laugh at us for a year, and tell the story
+ to every soul that comes to the place.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You can&rsquo;t blame him for that,&rdquo; said the Story Girl. &ldquo;I shall tell it,
+ too. I don&rsquo;t care if the joke is as much on myself as any one. A story is
+ a story, no matter who it&rsquo;s on. But it IS hateful to be laughed at&mdash;and
+ grown-ups always do it. I never will when I&rsquo;m grown up. I&rsquo;ll remember
+ better.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It&rsquo;s all Peter&rsquo;s fault,&rdquo; said Felicity. &ldquo;I do think he might have had
+ more sense than to take a clock striking for a bell ringing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I never heard that kind of a strike before,&rdquo; protested Peter. &ldquo;It don&rsquo;t
+ sound a bit like other clocks. And the door was shut and the sound kind o&rsquo;
+ muffled. It&rsquo;s all very fine to say you would have known what it was, but I
+ don&rsquo;t believe you would.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t have,&rdquo; said the Story Girl honestly. &ldquo;I thought it WAS a bell
+ when I heard it, and the door open, too. Let us be fair, Felicity.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m dreadful tired,&rdquo; sighed Cecily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were all &ldquo;dreadful tired,&rdquo; for this was the third night of late hours
+ and nerve racking strain. But it was over two hours since we had eaten the
+ cookies, and Felicity suggested that a saucerful apiece of raspberries and
+ cream would not be hard to take. It was not, for any one but Cecily, who
+ couldn&rsquo;t swallow a mouthful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m glad father and mother will be back to-morrow night,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s
+ too exciting when they&rsquo;re away. That&rsquo;s my opinion.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0017" id="link2HCH0017">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVII. THE PROOF OF THE PUDDING
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Felicity was cumbered with many cares the next morning. For one thing, the
+ whole house must be put in apple pie order; and for another, an elaborate
+ supper must be prepared for the expected return of the travellers that
+ night. Felicity devoted her whole attention to this, and left the
+ secondary preparation of the regular meals to Cecily and the Story Girl.
+ It was agreed that the latter was to make a cornmeal pudding for dinner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In spite of her disaster with the bread, the Story Girl had been taking
+ cooking lessons from Felicity all the week, and getting on tolerably well,
+ although, mindful of her former mistake, she never ventured on anything
+ without Felicity&rsquo;s approval. But Felicity had no time to oversee her this
+ morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You must attend to the pudding yourself,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;The recipe&rsquo;s so
+ plain and simple even you can&rsquo;t go astray, and if there&rsquo;s anything you
+ don&rsquo;t understand you can ask me. But don&rsquo;t bother me if you can help it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl did not bother her once. The pudding was concocted and
+ baked, as the Story Girl proudly informed us when we came to the
+ dinner-table, all on her own hook. She was very proud of it; and certainly
+ as far as appearance went it justified her triumph. The slices were smooth
+ and golden; and, smothered in the luscious maple sugar sauce which Cecily
+ had compounded, were very fair to view. Nevertheless, although none of us,
+ not even Uncle Roger or Felicity, said a word at the time, for fear of
+ hurting the Story Girl&rsquo;s feelings, the pudding did not taste exactly as it
+ should. It was tough&mdash;decidedly tough&mdash;and lacked the richness
+ of flavour which was customary in Aunt Janet&rsquo;s cornmeal puddings. If it
+ had not been for the abundant supply of sauce it would have been very dry
+ eating indeed. Eaten it was, however, to the last crumb. If it were not
+ just what a cornmeal pudding might be, the rest of the bill of fare had
+ been extra good and our appetites matched it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish I was twins so&rsquo;s I could eat more,&rdquo; said Dan, when he simply had
+ to stop.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What good would being twins do you?&rdquo; asked Peter. &ldquo;People who squint
+ can&rsquo;t eat any more than people who don&rsquo;t squint, can they?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We could not see any connection between Peter&rsquo;s two questions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What has squinting got to do with twins?&rdquo; asked Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, twins are just people that squint, aren&rsquo;t they?&rdquo; said Peter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We thought he was trying to be funny, until we found out that he was quite
+ in earnest. Then we laughed until Peter got sulky.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t care,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;How&rsquo;s a fellow to know? Tommy and Adam Cowan,
+ over at Markdale, are twins; and they&rsquo;re both cross-eyed. So I s&rsquo;posed
+ that was what being twins meant. It&rsquo;s all very fine for you fellows to
+ laugh. I never went to school half as much as you did; and you was brought
+ up in Toronto, too. If you&rsquo;d worked out ever since you was seven, and just
+ got to school in the winter, there&rsquo;d be lots of things you wouldn&rsquo;t know,
+ either.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind, Peter,&rdquo; said Cecily. &ldquo;You know lots of things they don&rsquo;t.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Peter was not to be conciliated, and took himself off in high dudgeon.
+ To be laughed at before Felicity&mdash;to be laughed at BY Felicity&mdash;was
+ something he could not endure. Let Cecily and the Story Girl cackle all
+ they wanted to, and let those stuck-up Toronto boys grin like chessy-cats;
+ but when Felicity laughed at him the iron entered into Peter&rsquo;s soul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the Story Girl laughed at Peter the mills of the gods ground out his
+ revenge for him in mid-afternoon. Felicity, having used up all the
+ available cooking materials in the house, had to stop perforce; and she
+ now determined to stuff two new pincushions she had been making for her
+ room. We heard her rummaging in the pantry as we sat on the cool,
+ spruce-shadowed cellar door outside, where Uncle Roger was showing us how
+ to make elderberry pop-guns. Presently she came out, frowning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Cecily, do you know where mother put the sawdust she emptied out of that
+ old beaded pincushion of Grandmother King&rsquo;s, after she had sifted the
+ needles out of it? I thought it was in the tin box.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So it is,&rdquo; said Cecily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It isn&rsquo;t. There isn&rsquo;t a speck of sawdust in that box.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl&rsquo;s face wore a quite indescribable expression, compound of
+ horror and shame. She need not have confessed. If she had but held her
+ tongue the mystery of the sawdust&rsquo;s disappearance might have forever
+ remained a mystery. She WOULD have held her tongue, as she afterwards
+ confided to me, if it had not been for a horrible fear which flashed into
+ her mind that possibly sawdust puddings were not healthy for people to eat&mdash;especially
+ if there might be needles in them&mdash;and that if any mischief had been
+ done in that direction it was her duty to undo it if possible at any cost
+ of ridicule to herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, Felicity,&rdquo; she said, her voice expressing a very anguish of
+ humiliation, &ldquo;I&mdash;I&mdash;thought that stuff in the box was cornmeal
+ and used it to make the pudding.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Felicity and Cecily stared blankly at the Story Girl. We boys began to
+ laugh, but were checked midway by Uncle Roger. He was rocking himself back
+ and forth, with his hand pressed against his stomach.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; he groaned, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve been wondering what these sharp pains I&rsquo;ve been
+ feeling ever since dinner meant. I know now. I must have swallowed a
+ needle&mdash;several needles, perhaps. I&rsquo;m done for!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The poor Story Girl went very white.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, Uncle Roger, could it be possible? You COULDN&rsquo;T have swallowed a
+ needle without knowing it. It would have stuck in your tongue or teeth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t chew the pudding,&rdquo; groaned Uncle Roger. &ldquo;It was too tough&mdash;I
+ just swallowed the chunks whole.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He groaned and twisted and doubled himself up. But he overdid it. He was
+ not as good an actor as the Story Girl. Felicity looked scornfully at him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Uncle Roger, you are not one bit sick,&rdquo; she said deliberately. &ldquo;You are
+ just putting on.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Felicity, if I die from the effects of eating sawdust pudding, flavoured
+ with needles, you&rsquo;ll be sorry you ever said such a thing to your poor old
+ uncle,&rdquo; said Uncle Roger reproachfully. &ldquo;Even if there were no needles in
+ it, sixty-year-old sawdust can&rsquo;t be good for my tummy. I daresay it wasn&rsquo;t
+ even clean.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, you know every one has to eat a peck of dirt in his life,&rdquo; giggled
+ Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But nobody has to eat it all at once,&rdquo; retorted Uncle Roger, with another
+ groan. &ldquo;Oh, Sara Stanley, it&rsquo;s a thankful man I am that your Aunt Olivia
+ is to be home to-night. You&rsquo;d have me kilt entirely by another day. I
+ believe you did it on purpose to have a story to tell.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Uncle Roger hobbled off to the barn, still holding on to his stomach.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you think he really feels sick?&rdquo; asked the Story Girl anxiously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, I don&rsquo;t,&rdquo; said Felicity. &ldquo;You needn&rsquo;t worry over him. There&rsquo;s nothing
+ the matter with him. I don&rsquo;t believe there were any needles in that
+ sawdust. Mother sifted it very carefully.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know a story about a man whose son swallowed a mouse,&rdquo; said the Story
+ Girl, who would probably have known a story and tried to tell it if she
+ were being led to the stake. &ldquo;And he ran and wakened up a very tired
+ doctor just as he had got to sleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Oh, doctor, my son has swallowed a mouse,&rsquo; he cried. &lsquo;What shall I do?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Tell him to swallow a cat,&rsquo; roared the poor doctor, and slammed his
+ door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, if Uncle Roger has swallowed any needles, maybe it would make it all
+ right if he swallowed a pincushion.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We all laughed. But Felicity soon grew sober.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It seems awful to think of eating a sawdust pudding. How on earth did you
+ make such a mistake?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It looked just like cornmeal,&rdquo; said the Story Girl, going from white to
+ red in her shame. &ldquo;Well, I&rsquo;m going to give up trying to cook, and stick to
+ things I can do. And if ever one of you mentions sawdust pudding to me
+ I&rsquo;ll never tell you another story as long as I live.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The threat was effectual. Never did we mention that unholy pudding. But
+ the Story Girl could not so impose silence on the grown-ups, especially
+ Uncle Roger. He tormented her for the rest of the summer. Never a
+ breakfast did he sit down to, without gravely inquiring if they were sure
+ there was no sawdust in the porridge. Not a tweak of rheumatism did he
+ feel but he vowed it was due to a needle, travelling about his body. And
+ Aunt Olivia was warned to label all the pincushions in the house.
+ &ldquo;Contents, sawdust; not intended for puddings.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0018" id="link2HCH0018">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVIII. HOW KISSING WAS DISCOVERED
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ An August evening, calm, golden, dewless, can be very lovely. At sunset,
+ Felicity, Cecily, and Sara Ray, Dan, Felix, and I were in the orchard,
+ sitting on the cool grasses at the base of the Pulpit Stone. In the west
+ was a field of crocus sky over which pale cloud blossoms were scattered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Uncle Roger had gone to the station to meet the travellers, and the
+ dining-room table was spread with a feast of fat things.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It&rsquo;s been a jolly week, take it all round,&rdquo; said Felix, &ldquo;but I&rsquo;m glad the
+ grown-ups are coming back to-night, especially Uncle Alec.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wonder if they&rsquo;ll bring us anything,&rdquo; said Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m thinking long to hear all about the wedding,&rdquo; said Felicity, who was
+ braiding timothy stalks into a collar for Pat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You girls are always thinking about weddings and getting married,&rdquo; said
+ Dan contemptuously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We ain&rsquo;t,&rdquo; said Felicity indignantly. &ldquo;I am NEVER going to get married. I
+ think it is just horrid, so there!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I guess you think it would be a good deal horrider not to be,&rdquo; said Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It depends on who you&rsquo;re married to,&rdquo; said Cecily gravely, seeing that
+ Felicity disdained reply. &ldquo;If you got a man like father it would be all
+ right. But S&rsquo;POSEN you got one like Andrew Ward? He&rsquo;s so mean and cross to
+ his wife that she tells him every day she wishes she&rsquo;d never set eyes on
+ him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Perhaps that&rsquo;s WHY he&rsquo;s mean and cross,&rdquo; said Felix.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I tell you it isn&rsquo;t always the man&rsquo;s fault,&rdquo; said Dan darkly. &ldquo;When I get
+ married I&rsquo;ll be good to my wife, but I mean to be boss. When I open my
+ mouth my word will be law.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If your word is as big as your mouth I guess it will be,&rdquo; said Felicity
+ cruelly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I pity the man who gets you, Felicity King, that&rsquo;s all,&rdquo; retorted Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, don&rsquo;t fight,&rdquo; implored Cecily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who&rsquo;s fighting?&rdquo; demanded Dan. &ldquo;Felicity thinks she can say anything she
+ likes to me, but I&rsquo;ll show her different.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Probably, in spite of Cecily&rsquo;s efforts, a bitter spat would have resulted
+ between Dan and Felicity, had not a diversion been effected at that moment
+ by the Story Girl, who came slowly down Uncle Stephen&rsquo;s Walk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Just look how the Story Girl has got herself up!&rdquo; said Felicity. &ldquo;Why,
+ she&rsquo;s no more than decent!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl was barefooted and barearmed, having rolled the sleeves of
+ her pink gingham up to her shoulders. Around her waist was twisted a
+ girdle of the blood-red roses that bloomed in Aunt Olivia&rsquo;s garden; on her
+ sleek curls she wore a chaplet of them; and her hands were full of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She paused under the outmost tree, in a golden-green gloom, and laughed at
+ us over a big branch. Her wild, subtle, nameless charm clothed her as with
+ a garment. We always remembered the picture she made there; and in later
+ days when we read Tennyson&rsquo;s poems at a college desk, we knew exactly how
+ an oread, peering through the green leaves on some haunted knoll of many
+ fountained Ida, must look.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Felicity,&rdquo; said the Story Girl reproachfully, &ldquo;what have you been doing
+ to Peter? He&rsquo;s up there sulking in the granary, and he won&rsquo;t come down,
+ and he says it&rsquo;s your fault. You must have hurt his feelings dreadfully.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know about his feelings,&rdquo; said Felicity, with an angry toss of
+ her shining head, &ldquo;but I guess I made his ears tingle all right. I boxed
+ them both good and hard.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, Felicity! What for?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, he tried to kiss me, that&rsquo;s what for!&rdquo; said Felicity, turning very
+ red. &ldquo;As if I would let a hired boy kiss me! I guess Master Peter won&rsquo;t
+ try anything like that again in a hurry.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl came out of her shadows and sat down beside us on the
+ grass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, in that case,&rdquo; she said gravely, &ldquo;I think you did right to slap his
+ ears&mdash;not because he is a hired boy, but because it would be
+ impertinent in ANY boy. But talking of kissing makes me think of a story I
+ found in Aunt Olivia&rsquo;s scrapbook the other day. Wouldn&rsquo;t you like to hear
+ it? It is called, &lsquo;How Kissing Was Discovered.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wasn&rsquo;t kissing always discovered?&rdquo; asked Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not according to this story. It was just discovered accidentally.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, let&rsquo;s hear about it,&rdquo; said Felix, &ldquo;although I think kissing&rsquo;s awful
+ silly, and it wouldn&rsquo;t have mattered much if it hadn&rsquo;t ever been
+ discovered.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl scattered her roses around her on the grass, and clasped
+ her slim hands over her knees. Gazing dreamily afar at the tinted sky
+ between the apple trees, as if she were looking back to the merry days of
+ the world&rsquo;s gay youth, she began, her voice giving to the words and
+ fancies of the old tale the delicacy of hoar frost and the crystal sparkle
+ of dew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It happened long, long ago in Greece&mdash;where so many other beautiful
+ things happened. Before that, nobody had ever heard of kissing. And then
+ it was just discovered in the twinkling of an eye. And a man wrote it down
+ and the account has been preserved ever since.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There was a young shepherd named Glaucon&mdash;a very handsome young
+ shepherd&mdash;who lived in a little village called Thebes. It became a
+ very great and famous city afterwards, but at this time it was only a
+ little village, very quiet and simple. Too quiet for Glaucon&rsquo;s liking. He
+ grew tired of it, and he thought he would like to go away from home and
+ see something of the world. So he took his knapsack and his shepherd&rsquo;s
+ crook, and wandered away until he came to Thessaly. That is the land of
+ the gods&rsquo; hill, you know. The name of the hill was Olympus. But it has
+ nothing to do with this story. This happened on another mountain&mdash;Mount
+ Pelion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Glaucon hired himself to a wealthy man who had a great many sheep. And
+ every day Glaucon had to lead the sheep up to pasture on Mount Pelion, and
+ watch them while they ate. There was nothing else to do, and he would have
+ found the time very long, if he had not been able to play on a flute. So
+ he played very often and very beautifully, as he sat under the trees and
+ watched the wonderful blue sea afar off, and thought about Aglaia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aglaia was his master&rsquo;s daughter. She was so sweet and beautiful that
+ Glaucon fell in love with her the very moment he first saw her; and when
+ he was not playing his flute on the mountain he was thinking about Aglaia,
+ and dreaming that some day he might have flocks of his own, and a dear
+ little cottage down in the valley where he and Aglaia might live.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aglaia had fallen in love with Glaucon just as he had with her. But she
+ never let him suspect it for ever so long. He did not know how often she
+ would steal up the mountain and hide behind the rocks near where the sheep
+ pastured, to listen to Glaucon&rsquo;s beautiful music. It was very lovely
+ music, because he was always thinking of Aglaia while he played, though he
+ little dreamed how near him she often was.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But after awhile Glaucon found out that Aglaia loved him, and everything
+ was well. Nowadays I suppose a wealthy man like Aglaia&rsquo;s father wouldn&rsquo;t
+ be willing to let his daughter marry a hired man; but this was in the
+ Golden Age, you know, when nothing like that mattered at all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;After that, almost every day Aglaia would go up the mountain and sit
+ beside Glaucon, as he watched the flocks and played on his flute. But he
+ did not play as much as he used to, because he liked better to talk with
+ Aglaia. And in the evening they would lead the sheep home together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;One day Aglaia went up the mountain by a new way, and she came to a
+ little brook. Something was sparkling very brightly among its pebbles.
+ Aglaia picked it up, and it was the most beautiful little stone that she
+ had ever seen. It was only as large as a pea, but it glittered and flashed
+ in the sunlight with every colour of the rainbow. Aglaia was so delighted
+ with it that she resolved to take it as a present to Glaucon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But all at once she heard a stamping of hoofs behind her, and when she
+ turned she almost died from fright. For there was the great god, Pan, and
+ he was a very terrible object, looking quite as much like a goat as a man.
+ The gods were not all beautiful, you know. And, beautiful or not, nobody
+ ever wanted to meet them face to face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Give that stone to me,&rsquo; said Pan, holding out his hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But Aglaia, though she was frightened, would not give him the stone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;I want it for Glaucon,&rsquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;I want it for one of my wood nymphs,&rsquo; said Pan, &lsquo;and I must have it.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He advanced threateningly, but Aglaia ran as hard as she could up the
+ mountain. If she could only reach Glaucon he would protect her. Pan
+ followed her, clattering and bellowing terribly, but in a few minutes she
+ rushed into Glaucon&rsquo;s arms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The dreadful sight of Pan and the still more dreadful noise he made, so
+ frightened the sheep that they fled in all directions. But Glaucon was not
+ afraid at all, because Pan was the god of shepherds, and was bound to
+ grant any prayer a good shepherd, who always did his duty, might make. If
+ Glaucon had NOT been a good shepherd dear knows what would have happened
+ to him and Aglaia. But he was; and when he begged Pan to go away and not
+ frighten Aglaia any more, Pan had to go, grumbling a good deal&mdash;and
+ Pan&rsquo;s grumblings had a very ugly sound. But still he WENT, and that was
+ the main thing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Now, dearest, what is all this trouble about?&rsquo; asked Glaucon; and Aglaia
+ told him the story.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;But where is the beautiful stone?&rsquo; he asked, when she had finished.
+ &lsquo;Didst thou drop it in thy alarm?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, indeed! Aglaia had done nothing of the sort. When she began to run,
+ she had popped it into her mouth, and there it was still, quite safe. Now
+ she poked it out between her red lips, where it glittered in the sunlight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Take it,&rsquo; she whispered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The question was&mdash;how was he to take it? Both of Aglaia&rsquo;s arms were
+ held fast to her sides by Glaucon&rsquo;s arms; and if he loosened his clasp
+ ever so little he was afraid she would fall, so weak and trembling was she
+ from her dreadful fright. Then Glaucon had a brilliant idea. He would take
+ the beautiful stone from Aglaia&rsquo;s lips with his own lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He bent over until his lips touched hers&mdash;and THEN, he forgot all
+ about the beautiful pebble and so did Aglaia. Kissing was discovered!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What a yarn!&rdquo; said Dan, drawing a long breath, when we had come to
+ ourselves and discovered that we were really sitting in a dewy Prince
+ Edward Island orchard instead of watching two lovers on a mountain in
+ Thessaly in the Golden Age. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t believe a word of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course, we know it wasn&rsquo;t really true,&rdquo; said Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I don&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; said the Story Girl thoughtfully. &ldquo;I think there are
+ two kinds of true things&mdash;true things that ARE, and true things that
+ are NOT, but MIGHT be.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t believe there&rsquo;s any but the one kind of trueness,&rdquo; said Felicity.
+ &ldquo;And anyway, this story couldn&rsquo;t be true. You know there was no such thing
+ as a god Pan.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How do you know what there might have been in the Golden Age?&rdquo; asked the
+ Story Girl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Which was, indeed, an unanswerable question for Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wonder what became of the beautiful stone?&rdquo; said Cecily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Likely Aglaia swallowed it,&rdquo; said Felix practically.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did Glaucon and Aglaia ever get married?&rdquo; asked Sara Ray.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The story doesn&rsquo;t say. It stops just there,&rdquo; said the Story Girl. &ldquo;But of
+ course they did. I will tell you what I think. I don&rsquo;t think Aglaia
+ swallowed the stone. I think it just fell to the ground; and after awhile
+ they found it, and it turned out to be of such value that Glaucon could
+ buy all the flocks and herds in the valley, and the sweetest cottage; and
+ he and Aglaia were married right away.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you only THINK that,&rdquo; said Sara Ray. &ldquo;I&rsquo;d like to be really sure that
+ was what happened.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, bother, none of it happened,&rdquo; said Dan. &ldquo;I believed it while the
+ Story Girl was telling it, but I don&rsquo;t now. Isn&rsquo;t that wheels?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wheels it was. Two wagons were driving up the lane. We rushed to the house&mdash;and
+ there were Uncle Alec and Aunt Janet and Aunt Olivia! The excitement was
+ quite tremendous. Every body talked and laughed at once, and it was not
+ until we were all seated around the supper table that conversation grew
+ coherent. What laughter and questioning and telling of tales followed,
+ what smiles and bright eyes and glad voices. And through it all, the
+ blissful purrs of Paddy, who sat on the window sill behind the Story Girl,
+ resounded through the din like Andrew McPherson&rsquo;s bass&mdash;&ldquo;just a
+ bur-r-r-r the hale time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I&rsquo;m thankful to be home again,&rdquo; said Aunt Janet, beaming on us. &ldquo;We
+ had a real nice time, and Edward&rsquo;s folks were as kind as could be. But
+ give me home for a steady thing. How has everything gone? How did the
+ children behave, Roger?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Like models,&rdquo; said Uncle Roger. &ldquo;They were as good as gold most of the
+ days.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were times when one couldn&rsquo;t help liking Uncle Roger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0019" id="link2HCH0019">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIX. A DREAD PROPHECY
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve got to go and begin stumping out the elderberry pasture this
+ afternoon,&rdquo; said Peter dolefully. &ldquo;I tell you it&rsquo;s a tough job. Mr. Roger
+ might wait for cool weather before he sets people to stumping out
+ elderberries, and that&rsquo;s a fact.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why don&rsquo;t you tell him so?&rdquo; asked Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It ain&rsquo;t my business to tell him things,&rdquo; retorted Peter. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m hired to
+ do what I&rsquo;m told, and I do it. But I can have my own opinion all the same.
+ It&rsquo;s going to be a broiling hot day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were all in the orchard, except Felix, who had gone to the post-office.
+ It was the forenoon of an August Saturday. Cecily and Sara Ray, who had
+ come up to spend the day with us&mdash;her mother having gone to town&mdash;were
+ eating timothy roots. Bertha Lawrence, a Charlottetown girl, who had
+ visited Kitty Marr in June, and had gone to school one day with her, had
+ eaten timothy roots, affecting to consider them great delicacies. The fad
+ was at once taken up by the Carlisle schoolgirls. Timothy roots quite
+ ousted &ldquo;sours&rdquo; and young raspberry sprouts, both of which had the real
+ merit of being quite toothsome, while timothy roots were tough and
+ tasteless. But timothy roots were fashionable, therefore timothy roots
+ must be eaten. Pecks of them must have been devoured in Carlisle that
+ summer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pat was there also, padding about from one to the other on his black paws,
+ giving us friendly pokes and rubs. We all made much of him except
+ Felicity, who would not take any notice of him because he was the Story
+ Girl&rsquo;s cat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We boys were sprawling on the grass. Our morning chores were done and the
+ day was before us. We should have been feeling very comfortable and happy,
+ but, as a matter of fact, we were not particularly so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl was sitting on the mint beside the well-house, weaving
+ herself a wreath of buttercups. Felicity was sipping from the cup of
+ clouded blue with an overdone air of unconcern. Each was acutely and
+ miserably conscious of the other&rsquo;s presence, and each was desirous of
+ convincing the rest of us that the other was less than nothing to her.
+ Felicity could not succeed. The Story Girl managed it better. If it had
+ not been for the fact that in all our foregatherings she was careful to
+ sit as far from Felicity as possible, we might have been deceived.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We had not passed a very pleasant week. Felicity and the Story Girl had
+ not been &ldquo;speaking&rdquo; to each other, and consequently there had been
+ something rotten in the state of Denmark. An air of restraint was over all
+ our games and conversations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the preceding Monday Felicity and the Story Girl had quarrelled over
+ something. What the cause of the quarrel was I cannot tell because I never
+ knew. It remained a &ldquo;dead secret&rdquo; between the parties of the first and
+ second part forever. But it was more bitter than the general run of their
+ tiffs, and the consequences were apparent to all. They had not spoken to
+ each other since.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was not because the rancour of either lasted so long. On the contrary
+ it passed speedily away, not even one low descending sun going down on
+ their wrath. But dignity remained to be considered. Neither would &ldquo;speak
+ first,&rdquo; and each obstinately declared that she would not speak first, no,
+ not in a hundred years. Neither argument, entreaty, nor expostulation had
+ any effect on those two stubborn girls, nor yet the tears of sweet Cecily,
+ who cried every night about it, and mingled in her pure little prayers
+ fervent petitions that Felicity and the Story Girl might make up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know where you expect to go when you die, Felicity,&rdquo; she said
+ tearfully, &ldquo;if you don&rsquo;t forgive people.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have forgiven her,&rdquo; was Felicity&rsquo;s answer, &ldquo;but I am not going to speak
+ first for all that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It&rsquo;s very wrong, and, more than that, it&rsquo;s so uncomfortable,&rdquo; complained
+ Cecily. &ldquo;It spoils everything.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Were they ever like this before?&rdquo; I asked Cecily, as we talked the matter
+ over privately in Uncle Stephen&rsquo;s Walk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never for so long,&rdquo; said Cecily. &ldquo;They had a spell like this last summer,
+ and one the summer before, but they only lasted a couple of days.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And who spoke first?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, the Story Girl. She got excited about something and spoke to Felicity
+ before she thought, and then it was all right. But I&rsquo;m afraid it isn&rsquo;t
+ going to be like that this time. Don&rsquo;t you notice how careful the Story
+ Girl is not to get excited? That is such a bad sign.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We&rsquo;ve just got to think up something that will excite her, that&rsquo;s all,&rdquo; I
+ said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m&mdash;I&rsquo;m praying about it,&rdquo; said Cecily in a low voice, her tear-wet
+ lashes trembling against her pale, round cheeks. &ldquo;Do you suppose it will
+ do any good, Bev?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very likely,&rdquo; I assured her. &ldquo;Remember Sara Ray and the money. That came
+ from praying.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m glad you think so,&rdquo; said Cecily tremulously. &ldquo;Dan said it was no use
+ for me to bother praying about it. He said if they COULDN&rsquo;T speak God
+ might do something, but when they just WOULDN&rsquo;T it wasn&rsquo;t likely He would
+ interfere. Dan does say such queer things. I&rsquo;m so afraid he&rsquo;s going to
+ grow up just like Uncle Robert Ward, who never goes to church, and doesn&rsquo;t
+ believe more than half the Bible is true.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Which half does he believe is true?&rdquo; I inquired with unholy curiosity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, just the nice parts. He says there&rsquo;s a heaven all right, but no&mdash;no&mdash;HELL.
+ I don&rsquo;t want Dan to grow up like that. It isn&rsquo;t respectable. And you
+ wouldn&rsquo;t want all kinds of people crowding heaven, now, would you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, no, I suppose not,&rdquo; I agreed, thinking of Billy Robinson.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course, I can&rsquo;t help feeling sorry for those who have to go to THE
+ OTHER PLACE,&rdquo; said Cecily compassionately. &ldquo;But I suppose they wouldn&rsquo;t be
+ very comfortable in heaven either. They wouldn&rsquo;t feel at home. Andrew Marr
+ said a simply dreadful thing about THE OTHER PLACE one night last fall,
+ when Felicity and I were down to see Kitty, and they were burning the
+ potato stalks. He said he believed THE OTHER PLACE must be lots more
+ interesting than heaven because fires were such jolly things. Now, did you
+ ever hear the like?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I guess it depends a good deal on whether you&rsquo;re inside or outside the
+ fires,&rdquo; I said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, Andrew didn&rsquo;t really mean it, of course. He just said it to sound
+ smart and make us stare. The Marrs are all like that. But anyhow, I&rsquo;m
+ going to keep on praying that something will happen to excite the Story
+ Girl. I don&rsquo;t believe there is any use in praying that Felicity will speak
+ first, because I am sure she won&rsquo;t.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But don&rsquo;t you suppose God could make her?&rdquo; I said, feeling that it wasn&rsquo;t
+ quite fair that the Story Girl should always have to speak first. If she
+ had spoken first the other times it was surely Felicity&rsquo;s turn this time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I believe it would puzzle Him,&rdquo; said Cecily, out of the depths of
+ her experience with Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peter, as was to be expected, took Felicity&rsquo;s part, and said the Story
+ Girl ought to speak first because she was the oldest. That, he said, had
+ always been his Aunt Jane&rsquo;s rule.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sara Ray thought Felicity should speak first, because the Story Girl was
+ half an orphan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Felix tried to make peace between them, and met the usual fate of all
+ peacemakers. The Story Girl loftily told him that he was too young to
+ understand, and Felicity said that fat boys should mind their own
+ business. After that, Felix declared it would serve Felicity right if the
+ Story Girl never spoke to her again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan had no patience with either of the girls, especially Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What they both want is a right good spanking,&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If only a spanking would mend the matter it was not likely it would ever
+ be mended. Both Felicity and the Story Girl were rather too old to be
+ spanked, and, if they had not been, none of the grown-ups would have
+ thought it worth while to administer so desperate a remedy for what they
+ considered so insignificant a trouble. With the usual levity of grown-ups,
+ they regarded the coldness between the girls as a subject of mirth and
+ jest, and recked not that it was freezing the genial current of our
+ youthful souls, and blighting hours that should have been fair pages in
+ our book of days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl finished her wreath and put it on. The buttercups drooped
+ over her high, white brow and played peep with her glowing eyes. A dreamy
+ smile hovered around her poppy-red mouth&mdash;a significant smile which,
+ to those of us skilled in its interpretation, betokened the sentence which
+ soon came.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know a story about a man who always had his own opinion&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl got no further. We never heard the story of the man who
+ always had his own opinion. Felix came tearing up the lane, with a
+ newspaper in his hand. When a boy as fat as Felix runs at full speed on a
+ broiling August forenoon, he has something to run for&mdash;as Felicity
+ remarked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He must have got some bad news at the office,&rdquo; said Sara Ray.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I hope nothing has happened to father,&rdquo; I exclaimed, springing
+ anxiously to my feet, a sick, horrible feeling of fear running over me
+ like a cool, rippling wave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It&rsquo;s just as likely to be good news he is running for as bad,&rdquo; said the
+ Story Girl, who was no believer in meeting trouble half way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He wouldn&rsquo;t be running so fast for good news,&rdquo; said Dan cynically.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were not left long in doubt. The orchard gate flew open and Felix was
+ among us. One glimpse of his face told us that he was no bearer of glad
+ tidings. He had been running hard and should have been rubicund. Instead,
+ he was &ldquo;as pale as are the dead.&rdquo; I could not have asked him what was the
+ matter had my life depended on it. It was Felicity who demanded
+ impatiently of my shaking, voiceless brother:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Felix King, what has scared you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Felix held out the newspaper&mdash;it was the Charlottetown <i>Daily
+ Enterprise</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It&rsquo;s there,&rdquo; he gasped. &ldquo;Look&mdash;read&mdash;oh, do you&mdash;think
+ it&rsquo;s&mdash;true? The&mdash;end of&mdash;the world&mdash;is coming
+ to-morrow&mdash;at two&mdash;o&rsquo;clock&mdash;in the afternoon!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Crash! Felicity had dropped the cup of clouded blue, which had passed
+ unscathed through so many changing years, and now at last lay shattered on
+ the stone of the well curb. At any other time we should all have been
+ aghast over such a catastrophe, but it passed unnoticed now. What mattered
+ it that all the cups in the world be broken to-day if the crack o&rsquo; doom
+ must sound to-morrow?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, Sara Stanley, do you believe it? DO you?&rdquo; gasped Felicity, clutching
+ the Story Girl&rsquo;s hand. Cecily&rsquo;s prayer had been answered. Excitement had
+ come with a vengeance, and under its stress Felicity had spoken first. But
+ this, like the breaking of the cup, had no significance for us at the
+ moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl snatched the paper and read the announcement to a group on
+ which sudden, tense silence had fallen. Under a sensational headline, &ldquo;The
+ Last Trump will sound at Two O&rsquo;clock To-morrow,&rdquo; was a paragraph to the
+ effect that the leader of a certain noted sect in the United States had
+ predicted that August twelfth would be the Judgment Day, and that all his
+ numerous followers were preparing for the dread event by prayer, fasting,
+ and the making of appropriate white garments for ascension robes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I laugh at the remembrance now&mdash;until I recall the real horror of
+ fear that enwrapped us in that sunny orchard that August morning of long
+ ago; and then I laugh no more. We were only children, be it remembered,
+ with a very firm and simple faith that grown people knew much more than we
+ did, and a rooted conviction that whatever you read in a newspaper must be
+ true. If the <i>Daily Enterprise</i> said that August twelfth was to be
+ the Judgment Day how were you going to get around it?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you believe it, Sara Stanley?&rdquo; persisted Felicity. &ldquo;DO you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No&mdash;no, I don&rsquo;t believe a word of it,&rdquo; said the Story Girl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But for once her voice failed to carry conviction&mdash;or, rather, it
+ carried conviction of the very opposite kind. It was borne in upon our
+ miserable minds that if the Story Girl did not altogether believe it was
+ true she believed it might be true; and the possibility was almost as
+ dreadful as the certainty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It CAN&rsquo;T be true,&rdquo; said Sara Ray, seeking refuge, as usual, in tears.
+ &ldquo;Why, everything looks just the same. Things COULDN&rsquo;T look the same if the
+ Judgment Day was going to be to-morrow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But that&rsquo;s just the way it&rsquo;s to come,&rdquo; I said uncomfortably. &ldquo;It tells
+ you in the Bible. It&rsquo;s to come just like a thief in the night.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But it tells you another thing in the Bible, too,&rdquo; said Cecily eagerly.
+ &ldquo;It says nobody knows when the Judgment Day is to come&mdash;not even the
+ angels in heaven. Now, if the angels in heaven don&rsquo;t know it, do you
+ suppose the editor of the <i>Enterprise</i> can know it&mdash;and him a
+ Grit, too?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I guess he knows as much about it as a Tory would,&rdquo; retorted the Story
+ Girl. Uncle Roger was a Liberal and Uncle Alec a Conservative, and the
+ girls held fast to the political traditions of their respective
+ households. &ldquo;But it isn&rsquo;t really the <i>Enterprise</i> editor at all who
+ is saying it&mdash;it&rsquo;s a man in the States who claims to be a prophet. If
+ he IS a prophet perhaps he has found out somehow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And it&rsquo;s in the paper, too, and that&rsquo;s printed as well as the Bible,&rdquo;
+ said Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I&rsquo;m going to depend on the Bible,&rdquo; said Cecily. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t believe
+ it&rsquo;s the Judgment Day to-morrow&mdash;but I&rsquo;m scared, for all that,&rdquo; she
+ added piteously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That was exactly the position of us all. As in the case of the
+ bell-ringing ghost, we did not believe but we trembled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nobody might have known when the Bible was written,&rdquo; said Dan, &ldquo;but maybe
+ somebody knows now. Why, the Bible was written thousands of years ago, and
+ that paper was printed this very morning. There&rsquo;s been time to find out
+ ever so much more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I want to do so many things,&rdquo; said the Story Girl, plucking off her crown
+ of buttercup gold with a tragic gesture, &ldquo;but if it&rsquo;s the Judgment Day
+ to-morrow I won&rsquo;t have time to do any of them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It can&rsquo;t be much worse than dying, I s&rsquo;pose,&rdquo; said Felix, grasping at any
+ straw of comfort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m awful glad I&rsquo;ve got into the habit of going to church and Sunday
+ School this summer,&rdquo; said Peter very soberly. &ldquo;I wish I&rsquo;d made up my mind
+ before this whether to be a Presbyterian or a Methodist. Do you s&rsquo;pose
+ it&rsquo;s too late now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, that doesn&rsquo;t matter,&rdquo; said Cecily earnestly. &ldquo;If&mdash;if you&rsquo;re a
+ Christian, Peter, that is all that&rsquo;s necessary.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But it&rsquo;s too late for that,&rdquo; said Peter miserably. &ldquo;I can&rsquo;t turn into a
+ Christian between this and two o&rsquo;clock to-morrow. I&rsquo;ll just have to be
+ satisfied with making up my mind to be a Presbyterian or a Methodist. I
+ wanted to wait till I got old enough to make out what was the difference
+ between them, but I&rsquo;ll have to chance it now. I guess I&rsquo;ll be a
+ Presbyterian, &lsquo;cause I want to be like the rest of you. Yes, I&rsquo;ll be a
+ Presbyterian.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know a story about Judy Pineau and the word Presbyterian,&rdquo; said the
+ Story Girl, &ldquo;but I can&rsquo;t tell it now. If to-morrow isn&rsquo;t the Judgment Day
+ I&rsquo;ll tell it Monday.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If I had known that to-morrow might be the Judgment Day I wouldn&rsquo;t have
+ quarrelled with you last Monday, Sara Stanley, or been so horrid and sulky
+ all the week. Indeed I wouldn&rsquo;t,&rdquo; said Felicity, with very unusual
+ humility.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ah, Felicity! We were all, in the depths of our pitiful little souls,
+ reviewing the innumerable things we would or would not have done &ldquo;if we
+ had known.&rdquo; What a black and endless list they made&mdash;those sins of
+ omission and commission that rushed accusingly across our young memories!
+ For us the leaves of the Book of Judgment were already opened; and we
+ stood at the bar of our own consciences, than which for youth or eld,
+ there can be no more dread tribunal. I thought of all the evil deeds of my
+ short life&mdash;of pinching Felix to make him cry out at family prayers,
+ of playing truant from Sunday School and going fishing one day, of a
+ certain fib&mdash;no, no away from this awful hour with all such
+ euphonious evasions&mdash;of a LIE I had once told, of many a selfish and
+ unkind word and thought and action. And to-morrow might be the great and
+ terrible day of the last accounting! Oh, if I had only been a better boy!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The quarrel was as much my fault as yours, Felicity,&rdquo; said the Story
+ Girl, putting her arm around Felicity. &ldquo;We can&rsquo;t undo it now. But if
+ to-morrow isn&rsquo;t the Judgment Day we must be careful never to quarrel
+ again. Oh, I wish father was here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He will be,&rdquo; said Cecily. &ldquo;If it&rsquo;s the Judgment Day for Prince Edward
+ Island it will be for Europe, too.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish we could just KNOW whether what the paper says is true or not,&rdquo;
+ said Felix desperately. &ldquo;It seems to me I could brace up if I just KNEW.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But to whom could we appeal? Uncle Alec was away and would not be back
+ until late that night. Neither Aunt Janet nor Uncle Roger were people to
+ whom we cared to apply in such a crisis. We were afraid of the Judgment
+ Day; but we were almost equally afraid of being laughed at. How about Aunt
+ Olivia?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, Aunt Olivia has gone to bed with a sick headache and mustn&rsquo;t be
+ disturbed,&rdquo; said the Story Girl. &ldquo;She said I must get dinner ready,
+ because there was plenty of cold meat, and nothing to do but boil the
+ potatoes and peas, and set the table. I don&rsquo;t know how I can put my
+ thoughts into it when the Judgment Day may be to-morrow. Besides, what is
+ the good of asking the grown-ups? They don&rsquo;t know anything more about this
+ than we do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But if they&rsquo;d just SAY they didn&rsquo;t believe it, it would be a sort of
+ comfort,&rdquo; said Cecily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suppose the minister would know, but he&rsquo;s away on his vacation&rdquo; said
+ Felicity. &ldquo;Anyhow, I&rsquo;ll go and ask mother what she thinks of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Felicity picked up the <i>Enterprise</i> and betook herself to the house.
+ We awaited her return in dire suspense.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, what does she say?&rdquo; asked Cecily tremulously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She said, &lsquo;Run away and don&rsquo;t bother me. I haven&rsquo;t any time for your
+ nonsense.&rsquo;&rdquo; responded Felicity in an injured tone. &ldquo;And I said, &lsquo;But, ma,
+ the paper SAYS to-morrow is the Judgment Day,&rsquo; and ma just said &lsquo;Judgment
+ Fiddlesticks!&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, that&rsquo;s kind of comforting,&rdquo; said Peter. &ldquo;She can&rsquo;t put any faith in
+ it, or she&rsquo;d be more worked up.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If it only wasn&rsquo;t PRINTED!&rdquo; said Dan gloomily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let&rsquo;s all go over and ask Uncle Roger,&rdquo; said Felix desperately.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That we should make Uncle Roger a court of last resort indicated all too
+ clearly the state of our minds. But we went. Uncle Roger was in his
+ barn-yard, hitching his black mare into the buggy. His copy of the <i>Enterprise</i>
+ was sticking out of his pocket. He looked, as we saw with sinking hearts,
+ unusually grave and preoccupied. There was not a glimmer of a smile about
+ his face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You ask him,&rdquo; said Felicity, nudging the Story Girl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Uncle Roger,&rdquo; said the Story Girl, the golden notes of her voice threaded
+ with fear and appeal, &ldquo;the <i>Enterprise</i> says that to-morrow is the
+ Judgment Day? IS it? Do YOU think it is?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m afraid so,&rdquo; said Uncle Roger gravely. &ldquo;The <i>Enterprise</i> is
+ always very careful to print only reliable news.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But mother doesn&rsquo;t believe it,&rdquo; cried Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Uncle Roger shook his head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is just the trouble,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;People won&rsquo;t believe it till it&rsquo;s
+ too late. I&rsquo;m going straight to Markdale to pay a man there some money I
+ owe him, and after dinner I&rsquo;m going to Summerside to buy me a new suit. My
+ old one is too shabby for the Judgment Day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He got into his buggy and drove away, leaving eight distracted mortals
+ behind him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I suppose that settles it,&rdquo; said Peter, in despairing tone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is there anything we can do to PREPARE?&rdquo; asked Cecily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish I had a white dress like you girls,&rdquo; sobbed Sara Ray. &ldquo;But I
+ haven&rsquo;t, and it&rsquo;s too late to get one. Oh, I wish I had minded what ma
+ said better. I wouldn&rsquo;t have disobeyed her so often if I&rsquo;d thought the
+ Judgment Day was so near. When I go home I&rsquo;m going to tell her about going
+ to the magic lantern show.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m not sure that Uncle Roger meant what he said,&rdquo; remarked the Story
+ Girl. &ldquo;I couldn&rsquo;t get a look into his eyes. If he was trying to hoax us
+ there would have been a twinkle in them. He can never help that. You know
+ he would think it a great joke to frighten us like this. It&rsquo;s really
+ dreadful to have no grown-ups you can depend on.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We could depend on father if he was here,&rdquo; said Dan stoutly. &ldquo;HE&rsquo;D tell
+ us the truth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He would tell us what he THOUGHT was true, Dan, but he couldn&rsquo;t KNOW.
+ He&rsquo;s not such a well-educated man as the editor of the <i>Enterprise</i>.
+ No, there&rsquo;s nothing to do but wait and see.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let us go into the house and read just what the Bible does say about it,&rdquo;
+ suggested Cecily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We crept in carefully, lest we disturb Aunt Olivia, and Cecily found and
+ read the significant portion of Holy Writ. There was little comfort for us
+ in that vivid and terrible picture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said the Story Girl finally. &ldquo;I must go and get the potatoes
+ ready. I suppose they must be boiled even if it is the Judgment Day
+ to-morrow. But I don&rsquo;t believe it is.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And I&rsquo;ve got to go and stump elderberries,&rdquo; said Peter. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see how
+ I can do it&mdash;go away back there alone. I&rsquo;ll feel scared to death the
+ whole time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tell Uncle Roger that, and say if to-morrow is the end of the world that
+ there is no good in stumping any more fields,&rdquo; I suggested.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, and if he lets you off then we&rsquo;ll know he was in earnest,&rdquo; chimed in
+ Cecily. &ldquo;But if he still says you must go that&rsquo;ll be a sign he doesn&rsquo;t
+ believe it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leaving the Story Girl and Peter to peel their potatoes, the rest of us
+ went home, where Aunt Janet, who had gone to the well and found the
+ fragments of the old blue cup, gave poor Felicity a bitter scolding about
+ it. But Felicity bore it very patiently&mdash;nay, more, she seemed to
+ delight in it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ma can&rsquo;t believe to-morrow is the last day, or she wouldn&rsquo;t scold like
+ that,&rdquo; she told us; and this comforted us until after dinner, when the
+ Story Girl and Peter came over and told us that Uncle Roger had really
+ gone to Summerside. Then we plunged down into fear and wretchedness again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But he said I must go and stump elderberries just the same&rdquo; said Peter.
+ &ldquo;He said it might NOT be the Judgment Day to-morrow, though he believed it
+ was, and it would keep me out of mischief. But I just can&rsquo;t stand it back
+ there alone. Some of you fellows must come with me. I don&rsquo;t want you to
+ work, but just for company.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was finally decided that Dan and Felix should go. I wanted to go also,
+ but the girls protested.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;YOU must stay and keep us cheered up,&rdquo; implored Felicity. &ldquo;I just don&rsquo;t
+ know how I&rsquo;m ever going to put in the afternoon. I promised Kitty Marr
+ that I&rsquo;d go down and spend it with her, but I can&rsquo;t now. And I can&rsquo;t knit
+ any at my lace. I&rsquo;d just keep thinking, &lsquo;What is the use? Perhaps it&rsquo;ll
+ all be burned up to-morrow.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So I stayed with the girls, and a miserable afternoon we had of it. The
+ Story Girl again and again declared that she &ldquo;didn&rsquo;t believe it,&rdquo; but when
+ we asked her to tell a story, she evaded it with a flimsy excuse. Cecily
+ pestered Aunt Janet&rsquo;s life out, asking repeatedly, &ldquo;Ma, will you be
+ washing Monday?&rdquo; &ldquo;Ma, will you be going to prayer meeting Tuesday night?&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Ma, will you be preserving raspberries next week?&rdquo; and various similar
+ questions. It was a huge comfort to her that Aunt Janet always said,
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; or &ldquo;Of course,&rdquo; as if there could be no question about it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sara Ray cried until I wondered how one small head could contain all the
+ tears she shed. But I do not believe she was half as much frightened as
+ disappointed that she had no white dress. In mid-afternoon Cecily came
+ downstairs with her forget-me-not jug in her hand&mdash;a dainty bit of
+ china, wreathed with dark blue forget-me-nots, which Cecily prized highly,
+ and in which she always kept her toothbrush.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sara, I am going to give you this jug,&rdquo; she said solemnly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, Sara had always coveted this particular jug. She stopped crying long
+ enough to clutch it delightedly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, Cecily, thank you. But are you sure you won&rsquo;t want it back if
+ to-morrow isn&rsquo;t the Judgment Day?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, it&rsquo;s yours for good,&rdquo; said Cecily, with the high, remote air of one
+ to whom forget-me-not jugs and all such pomps and vanities of the world
+ were as a tale that is told.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are you going to give any one your cherry vase?&rdquo; asked Felicity, trying
+ to speak indifferently. Felicity had never admired the forget-me-not jug,
+ but she had always hankered after the cherry vase&mdash;an affair of white
+ glass, with a cluster of red glass cherries and golden-green glass leaves
+ on its side, which Aunt Olivia had given Cecily one Christmas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, I&rsquo;m not,&rdquo; answered Cecily, with a change of tone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, well, I don&rsquo;t care,&rdquo; said Felicity quickly. &ldquo;Only, if to-morrow is
+ the last day, the cherry vase won&rsquo;t be much use to you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I guess it will be as much use to me as to any one else,&rdquo; said Cecily
+ indignantly. She had sacrificed her dear forget-me-not jug to satisfy some
+ pang of conscience, or propitiate some threatening fate, but surrender her
+ precious cherry vase she could not and would not. Felicity needn&rsquo;t be
+ giving any hints!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the gathering shades of night our plight became pitiful. In the
+ daylight, surrounded by homely, familiar sights and sounds, it was not so
+ difficult to fortify our souls with a cheering incredulity. But now, in
+ this time of shadows, dread belief clutched us and wrung us with terror.
+ If there had been one wise older friend to tell us, in serious fashion,
+ that we need not be afraid, that the <i>Enterprise</i> paragraph was
+ naught save the idle report of a deluded fanatic, it would have been well
+ for us. But there was not. Our grown-ups, instead, considered our terror
+ an exquisite jest. At that very moment, Aunt Olivia, who had recovered
+ from her headache, and Aunt Janet were laughing in the kitchen over the
+ state the children were in because they were afraid the end of the world
+ was close at hand. Aunt Janet&rsquo;s throaty gurgle and Aunt Olivia&rsquo;s trilling
+ mirth floated out through the open window.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Perhaps they&rsquo;ll laugh on the other side of their faces to-morrow,&rdquo; said
+ Dan, with gloomy satisfaction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were sitting on the cellar hatch, watching what might be our last
+ sunset o&rsquo;er the dark hills of time. Peter was with us. It was his last
+ Sunday to go home, but he had elected to remain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If to-morrow is the Judgment Day I want to be with you fellows,&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sara Ray had also yearned to stay, but could not because her mother had
+ told her she must be home before dark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind, Sara,&rdquo; comforted Cecily. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s not to be till two o&rsquo;clock
+ to-morrow, so you&rsquo;ll have plenty of time to get up here before anything
+ happens.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But there might be a mistake,&rdquo; sobbed Sara. &ldquo;It might be two o&rsquo;clock
+ to-night instead of to-morrow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It might, indeed. This was a new horror, which had not occurred to us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m sure I won&rsquo;t sleep a wink to-night,&rdquo; said Felix.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The paper SAYS two o&rsquo;clock to-morrow,&rdquo; said Dan. &ldquo;You needn&rsquo;t worry,
+ Sara.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Sara departed, weeping. She did not, however, forget to carry the
+ forget-me-not jug with her. All things considered, her departure was a
+ relief. Such a constantly tearful damsel was not a pleasant companion.
+ Cecily and Felicity and the Story Girl did not cry. They were made of
+ finer, firmer stuff. Dry-eyed, with such courage as they might, they faced
+ whatever might be in store for them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wonder where we&rsquo;ll all be this time to-morrow night,&rdquo; said Felix
+ mournfully, as we watched the sunset between the dark fir boughs. It was
+ an ominous sunset. The sun dropped down amid dark, livid clouds, that
+ turned sullen shades of purple and fiery red behind him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I hope we&rsquo;ll be all together, wherever we are,&rdquo; said Cecily gently.
+ &ldquo;Nothing can be so very bad then.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m going to read the Bible all to-morrow forenoon,&rdquo; said Peter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Aunt Olivia came out to go home the Story Girl asked her permission
+ to stay all night with Felicity and Cecily. Aunt Olivia assented lightly,
+ swinging her hat on her arm and including us all in a friendly smile. She
+ looked very pretty, with her big blue eyes and warm-hued golden hair. We
+ loved Aunt Olivia; but just now we resented her having laughed at us with
+ Aunt Janet, and we refused to smile back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What a sulky, sulky lot of little people,&rdquo; said Aunt Olivia, going away
+ across the yard, holding her pretty dress up from the dewy grass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peter resolved to stay all night with us, too, not troubling himself about
+ anybody&rsquo;s permission. When we went to bed it was settling down for a
+ stormy night, and the rain was streaming wetly on the roof, as if the
+ world, like Sara Ray, were weeping because its end was so near. Nobody
+ forgot or hurried over his prayers that night. We would dearly have loved
+ to leave the candle burning, but Aunt Janet&rsquo;s decree regarding this was as
+ inexorable as any of Mede and Persia. Out the candle must go; and we lay
+ there, quaking, with the wild rain streaming down on the roof above us,
+ and the voices of the storm wailing through the writhing spruce trees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0020" id="link2HCH0020">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XX. THE JUDGMENT SUNDAY
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Sunday morning broke, dull and gray. The rain had ceased, but the clouds
+ hung dark and brooding above a world which, in its windless calm,
+ following the spent storm-throe, seemed to us to be waiting &ldquo;till judgment
+ spoke the doom of fate.&rdquo; We were all up early. None of us, it appeared,
+ had slept well, and some of us not at all. The Story Girl had been among
+ the latter, and she looked very pale and wan, with black shadows under her
+ deep-set eyes. Peter, however, had slept soundly enough after twelve
+ o&rsquo;clock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When you&rsquo;ve been stumping out elderberries all the afternoon it&rsquo;ll take
+ more than the Judgment Day to keep you awake all night,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;But
+ when I woke up this morning it was just awful. I&rsquo;d forgot it for a moment,
+ and then it all came back with a rush, and I was worse scared than
+ before.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cecily was pale but brave. For the first time in years she had not put her
+ hair up in curlers on Saturday night. It was brushed and braided with
+ Puritan simplicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If it&rsquo;s the Judgment Day I don&rsquo;t care whether my hair is curly or not,&rdquo;
+ she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Aunt Janet, when we all descended to the kitchen, &ldquo;this is
+ the first time you young ones have ever all got up without being called,
+ and that&rsquo;s a fact.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At breakfast our appetites were poor. How could the grown-ups eat as they
+ did? After breakfast and the necessary chores there was the forenoon to be
+ lived through. Peter, true to his word, got out his Bible and began to
+ read from the first chapter in Genesis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I won&rsquo;t have time to read it all through, I s&rsquo;pose,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;but I&rsquo;ll
+ get along as far as I can.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was no preaching in Carlisle that day, and Sunday School was not
+ till the evening. Cecily got out her Lesson Slip and studied the lesson
+ conscientiously. The rest of us did not see how she could do it. We could
+ not, that was very certain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If it isn&rsquo;t the Judgment Day, I want to have the lesson learned,&rdquo; she
+ said, &ldquo;and if it is I&rsquo;ll feel I&rsquo;ve done what was right. But I never found
+ it so hard to remember the Golden Text before.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The long dragging hours were hard to endure. We roamed restlessly about,
+ and went to and fro&mdash;all save Peter, who still steadily read away at
+ his Bible. He was through Genesis by eleven and beginning on Exodus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There&rsquo;s a good deal of it I don&rsquo;t understand,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;but I read every
+ word, and that&rsquo;s the main thing. That story about Joseph and his brother
+ was so int&rsquo;resting I almost forgot about the Judgment Day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the long drawn out dread was beginning to get on Dan&rsquo;s nerves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If it is the Judgment Day,&rdquo; he growled, as we went in to dinner, &ldquo;I wish
+ it&rsquo;d hurry up and have it over.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, Dan!&rdquo; cried Felicity and Cecily together, in a chorus of horror. But
+ the Story Girl looked as if she rather sympathized with Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If we had eaten little at breakfast we could eat still less at dinner.
+ After dinner the clouds rolled away, and the sun came joyously and
+ gloriously out. This, we thought, was a good omen. Felicity opined that it
+ wouldn&rsquo;t have cleared up if it was the Judgment Day. Nevertheless, we
+ dressed ourselves carefully, and the girls put on their white dresses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sara Ray came up, still crying, of course. She increased our uneasiness by
+ saying that her mother believed the <i>Enterprise</i> paragraph, and was
+ afraid that the end of the world was really at hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That&rsquo;s why she let me come up,&rdquo; she sobbed. &ldquo;If she hadn&rsquo;t been afraid I
+ don&rsquo;t believe she would have let me come up. But I&rsquo;d have died if I
+ couldn&rsquo;t have come. And she wasn&rsquo;t a bit cross when I told her I had gone
+ to the magic lantern show. That&rsquo;s an awful bad sign. I hadn&rsquo;t a white
+ dress, but I put on my white muslin apron with the frills.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That seems kind of queer,&rdquo; said Felicity doubtfully. &ldquo;You wouldn&rsquo;t put on
+ an apron to go to church, and so it doesn&rsquo;t seem as if it was proper to
+ put it on for Judgment Day either.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, it&rsquo;s the best I could do,&rdquo; said Sara disconsolately. &ldquo;I wanted to
+ have something white on. It&rsquo;s just like a dress only it hasn&rsquo;t sleeves.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let&rsquo;s go into the orchard and wait,&rdquo; said the Story Girl. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s one
+ o&rsquo;clock now, so in another hour we&rsquo;ll know the worst. We&rsquo;ll leave the
+ front door open, and we&rsquo;ll hear the big clock when it strikes two.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No better plan being suggested, we betook ourselves to the orchard, and
+ sat on the boughs of Uncle Alec&rsquo;s tree because the grass was wet. The
+ world was beautiful and peaceful and green. Overhead was a dazzling blue
+ sky, spotted with heaps of white cloud.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pshaw, I don&rsquo;t believe there&rsquo;s any fear of it being the last day,&rdquo; said
+ Dan, beginning a whistle out of sheer bravado.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, don&rsquo;t whistle on Sunday anyhow,&rdquo; said Felicity severely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see a thing about Methodists or Presbyterians, as far as I&rsquo;ve
+ gone, and I&rsquo;m most through Exodus,&rdquo; said Peter suddenly. &ldquo;When does it
+ begin to tell about them?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There&rsquo;s nothing about Methodists or Presbyterians in the Bible,&rdquo; said
+ Felicity scornfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peter looked amazed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, how did they happen then?&rdquo; he asked. &ldquo;When did they begin to be?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve often thought it such a strange thing that there isn&rsquo;t a word about
+ either of them in the Bible,&rdquo; said Cecily. &ldquo;Especially when it mentions
+ Baptists&mdash;or at least one Baptist.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, anyhow,&rdquo; said Peter, &ldquo;even if it isn&rsquo;t the Judgment Day I&rsquo;m going
+ to keep on reading the Bible until I&rsquo;ve got clean through. I never thought
+ it was such an int&rsquo;resting book.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It sounds simply dreadful to hear you call the Bible an interesting
+ book,&rdquo; said Felicity, with a shudder at the sacrilege. &ldquo;Why, you might be
+ talking about ANY common book.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t mean any harm,&rdquo; said Peter, crestfallen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The Bible IS an interesting book,&rdquo; said the Story Girl, coming to Peter&rsquo;s
+ rescue. &ldquo;And there are magnificent stories in it&mdash;yes, Felicity,
+ MAGNIFICENT. If the world doesn&rsquo;t come to an end I&rsquo;ll tell you the story
+ of Ruth next Sunday&mdash;or look here! I&rsquo;ll tell it anyhow. That&rsquo;s a
+ promise. Wherever we are next Sunday I&rsquo;ll tell you about Ruth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, you wouldn&rsquo;t tell stories in heaven,&rdquo; said Cecily, in a very timid
+ voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why not?&rdquo; said the Story Girl, with a flash of her eyes. &ldquo;Indeed I shall.
+ I&rsquo;ll tell stories as long as I&rsquo;ve a tongue to talk with, or any one to
+ listen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ay, doubtless. That dauntless spirit would soar triumphantly above the
+ wreck of matter and the crash of worlds, taking with it all its own wild
+ sweetness and daring. Even the young-eyed cherubim, choiring on meadows of
+ asphodel, might cease their harping for a time to listen to a tale of the
+ vanished earth, told by that golden tongue. Some vague thought of this was
+ in our minds as we looked at her; and somehow it comforted us. Not even
+ the Judgment was so greatly to be feared if after it we were the SAME, our
+ own precious little identities unchanged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It must be getting handy two,&rdquo; said Cecily. &ldquo;It seems as if we&rsquo;d been
+ waiting here for ever so much longer than an hour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Conversation languished. We watched and waited nervously. The moments
+ dragged by, each seeming an hour. Would two o&rsquo;clock never come and end the
+ suspense? We all became very tense. Even Peter had to stop reading. Any
+ unaccustomed sound or sight in the world about us struck on our taut
+ senses like the trump of doom. A cloud passed over the sun and as the
+ sudden shadow swept across the orchard we turned pale and trembled. A
+ wagon rumbling over a plank bridge in the hollow made Sara Ray start up
+ with a shriek. The slamming of a barn door over at Uncle Roger&rsquo;s caused
+ the cold perspiration to break out on our faces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t believe it&rsquo;s the Judgment Day,&rdquo; said Felix, &ldquo;and I never have
+ believed it. But oh, I wish that clock would strike two.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Can&rsquo;t you tell us a story to pass the time?&rdquo; I entreated the Story Girl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She shook her head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, it would be no use to try. But if this isn&rsquo;t the Judgment Day I&rsquo;ll
+ have a great one to tell of us being so scared.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pat presently came galloping up the orchard, carrying in his mouth a big
+ field mouse, which, sitting down before us, he proceeded to devour, body
+ and bones, afterwards licking his chops with great satisfaction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It can&rsquo;t be the Judgment Day,&rdquo; said Sara Ray, brightening up. &ldquo;Paddy
+ would never be eating mice if it was.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If that clock doesn&rsquo;t soon strike two I shall go out of my seven senses,&rdquo;
+ declared Cecily with unusual vehemence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Time always seems long when you&rsquo;re waiting,&rdquo; said the Story Girl. &ldquo;But it
+ does seem as if we had been here more than an hour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Maybe the clock struck and we didn&rsquo;t hear it,&rdquo; suggested Dan. &ldquo;Somebody&rsquo;d
+ better go and see.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll go,&rdquo; said Cecily. &ldquo;I suppose, even if anything happens, I&rsquo;ll have
+ time to get back to you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We watched her white-clad figure pass through the gate and enter the front
+ door. A few minutes passed&mdash;or a few years&mdash;we could not have
+ told which. Then Cecily came running at full speed back to us. But when
+ she reached us she trembled so much that at first she could not speak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is it? Is it past two?&rdquo; implored the Story Girl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It&rsquo;s&mdash;it&rsquo;s four,&rdquo; said Cecily with a gasp. &ldquo;The old clock isn&rsquo;t
+ going. Mother forgot to wind it up last night and it stopped. But it&rsquo;s
+ four by the kitchen clock&mdash;so it isn&rsquo;t the Judgment Day&mdash;and tea
+ is ready&mdash;and mother says to come in.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We looked at each other, realizing what our dread had been, now that it
+ was lifted. It was not the Judgment Day. The world and life were still
+ before us, with all their potent lure of years unknown.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll never believe anything I read in the papers again,&rdquo; said Dan,
+ rushing to the opposite extreme.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I told you the Bible was more to be depended on than the newspapers,&rdquo;
+ said Cecily triumphantly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sara Ray and Peter and the Story Girl went home, and we went in to tea
+ with royal appetites. Afterwards, as we dressed for Sunday School
+ upstairs, our spirits carried us away to such an extent that Aunt Janet
+ had to come twice to the foot of the stairs and inquire severely,
+ &ldquo;Children, have you forgotten what day this is?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t it nice that we&rsquo;re going to live a spell longer in this nice
+ world?&rdquo; said Felix, as we walked down the hill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, and Felicity and the Story Girl are speaking again,&rdquo; said Cecily
+ happily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And Felicity DID speak first,&rdquo; I said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, but it took the Judgment Day to make her. I wish,&rdquo; added Cecily with
+ a sigh, &ldquo;that I hadn&rsquo;t been in quite such a hurry giving away my
+ forget-me-not jug.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And I wish I hadn&rsquo;t been in such a hurry deciding I&rsquo;d be a Presbyterian,&rdquo;
+ said Peter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, it&rsquo;s not too late for that,&rdquo; said Dan. &ldquo;You can change your mind
+ now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, sir,&rdquo; said Peter with a flash of spirit, &ldquo;I ain&rsquo;t one of the kind
+ that says they&rsquo;ll be something just because they&rsquo;re scared, and when the
+ scare is over go back on it. I said I&rsquo;d be Presbyterian and I mean to
+ stick to it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You said you knew a story that had something to do with Presbyterians,&rdquo; I
+ said to the Story Girl. &ldquo;Tell us it now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, no, it isn&rsquo;t the right kind of story to tell on Sunday,&rdquo; she replied.
+ &ldquo;But I&rsquo;ll tell it to-morrow morning.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly, we heard it the next morning in the orchard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Long ago, when Judy Pineau was young,&rdquo; said the Story Girl, &ldquo;she was
+ hired with Mrs. Elder Frewen&mdash;the first Mrs. Elder Frewen. Mrs.
+ Frewen had been a school-teacher, and she was very particular as to how
+ people talked, and the grammar they used. And she didn&rsquo;t like anything but
+ refined words. One very hot day she heard Judy Pineau say she was &lsquo;all in
+ a sweat.&rsquo; Mrs. Frewen was greatly shocked, and said, &lsquo;Judy, you shouldn&rsquo;t
+ say that. It&rsquo;s horses that sweat. You should say you are in a
+ perspiration.&rsquo; Well, Judy promised she&rsquo;d remember, because she liked Mrs.
+ Frewen and was anxious to please her. Not long afterwards Judy was
+ scrubbing the kitchen floor one morning, and when Mrs. Frewen came in Judy
+ looked up and said, quite proud over using the right word, &lsquo;Oh, Mees
+ Frewen, ain&rsquo;t it awful hot? I declare I&rsquo;m all in a Presbyterian.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0021" id="link2HCH0021">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXI. DREAMERS OF DREAMS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ August went out and September came in. Harvest was ended; and though
+ summer was not yet gone, her face was turned westering. The asters
+ lettered her retreating footsteps in a purple script, and over the hills
+ and valleys hung a faint blue smoke, as if Nature were worshipping at her
+ woodland altar. The apples began to burn red on the bending boughs;
+ crickets sang day and night; squirrels chattered secrets of Polichinelle
+ in the spruces; the sunshine was as thick and yellow as molten gold;
+ school opened, and we small denizens of the hill farms lived happy days of
+ harmless work and necessary play, closing in nights of peaceful,
+ undisturbed slumber under a roof watched over by autumnal stars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At least, our slumbers were peaceful and undisturbed until our orgy of
+ dreaming began.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I would really like to know what especial kind of deviltry you young fry
+ are up to this time,&rdquo; said Uncle Roger one evening, as he passed through
+ the orchard with his gun on his shoulder, bound for the swamp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were sitting in a circle before the Pulpit Stone, each writing
+ diligently in an exercise book, and eating the Rev. Mr. Scott&rsquo;s plums,
+ which always reached their prime of juicy, golden-green flesh and bloomy
+ blue skin in September. The Rev. Mr. Scott was dead and gone, but those
+ plums certainly kept his memory green, as his forgotten sermons could
+ never have done.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; said Felicity in a shocked tone, when Uncle Roger had passed by,
+ &ldquo;Uncle Roger SWORE.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, no, he didn&rsquo;t,&rdquo; said the Story Girl quickly. &ldquo;&lsquo;Deviltry&rsquo; isn&rsquo;t
+ swearing at all. It only means extra bad mischief.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, it&rsquo;s not a very nice word, anyhow,&rdquo; said Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, it isn&rsquo;t,&rdquo; agreed the Story Girl with a regretful sigh. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s very
+ expressive, but it isn&rsquo;t nice. That is the way with so many words. They&rsquo;re
+ expressive, but they&rsquo;re not nice, and so a girl can&rsquo;t use them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl sighed again. She loved expressive words, and treasured
+ them as some girls might have treasured jewels. To her, they were as
+ lustrous pearls, threaded on the crimson cord of a vivid fancy. When she
+ met with a new one she uttered it over and over to herself in solitude,
+ weighing it, caressing it, infusing it with the radiance of her voice,
+ making it her own in all its possibilities for ever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, anyhow, it isn&rsquo;t a suitable word in this case,&rdquo; insisted Felicity.
+ &ldquo;We are not up to any dev&mdash;any extra bad mischief. Writing down one&rsquo;s
+ dreams isn&rsquo;t mischief at all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certainly it wasn&rsquo;t. Surely not even the straitest sect of the grown-ups
+ could call it so. If writing down your dreams, with agonizing care as to
+ composition and spelling&mdash;for who knew that the eyes of generations
+ unborn might not read the record?&mdash;were not a harmless amusement,
+ could anything be called so? I trow not.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We had been at it for a fortnight, and during that time we only lived to
+ have dreams and write them down. The Story Girl had originated the idea
+ one evening in the rustling, rain-wet ways of the spruce wood, where we
+ were picking gum after a day of showers. When we had picked enough, we sat
+ down on the moss-grown stones at the end of a long arcade, where it opened
+ out on the harvest-golden valley below us, our jaws exercising themselves
+ vigorously on the spoil of our climbings. We were never allowed to chew
+ gum in school or in company, but in wood and field, orchard and hayloft,
+ such rules were in abeyance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My Aunt Jane used to say it wasn&rsquo;t polite to chew gum anywhere,&rdquo; said
+ Peter rather ruefully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t suppose your Aunt Jane knew all the rules of etiquette,&rdquo; said
+ Felicity, designing to crush Peter with a big word, borrowed from the <i>Family
+ Guide</i>. But Peter was not to be so crushed. He had in him a certain
+ toughness of fibre, that would have been proof against a whole dictionary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She did, too,&rdquo; he retorted. &ldquo;My Aunt Jane was a real lady, even if she
+ was only a Craig. She knew all those rules and she kept them when there
+ was nobody round to see her, just the same as when any one was. And she
+ was smart. If father had had half her git-up-and-git I wouldn&rsquo;t be a hired
+ boy to-day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have you any idea where your father is?&rdquo; asked Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Peter indifferently. &ldquo;The last we heard of him he was in the
+ Maine lumber woods. But that was three years ago. I don&rsquo;t know where he is
+ now, and,&rdquo; added Peter deliberately, taking his gum from his mouth to make
+ his statement more impressive, &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t care.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, Peter, that sounds dreadful,&rdquo; said Cecily. &ldquo;Your own father!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Peter defiantly, &ldquo;if your own father had run away when you
+ was a baby, and left your mother to earn her living by washing and working
+ out, I guess you wouldn&rsquo;t care much about him either.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Perhaps your father may come home some of these days with a huge
+ fortune,&rdquo; suggested the Story Girl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Perhaps pigs may whistle, but they&rsquo;ve poor mouths for it,&rdquo; was all the
+ answer Peter deigned to this charming suggestion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There goes Mr. Campbell down the road,&rdquo; said Dan. &ldquo;That&rsquo;s his new mare.
+ Isn&rsquo;t she a dandy? She&rsquo;s got a skin like black satin. He calls her Betty
+ Sherman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t think it&rsquo;s very nice to call a horse after your own grandmother,&rdquo;
+ said Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Betty Sherman would have thought it a compliment,&rdquo; said the Story Girl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Maybe she would. She couldn&rsquo;t have been very nice herself, or she would
+ never have gone and asked a man to marry her,&rdquo; said Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why not?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Goodness me, it was dreadful! Would YOU do such a thing yourself?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I don&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; said the Story Girl, her eyes gleaming with impish
+ laughter. &ldquo;If I wanted him DREADFULLY, and HE wouldn&rsquo;t do the asking,
+ perhaps I would.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;d rather die an old maid forty times over,&rdquo; exclaimed Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nobody as pretty as you will ever be an old maid, Felicity,&rdquo; said Peter,
+ who never put too fine an edge on his compliments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Felicity tossed her golden tressed head and tried to look angry, but made
+ a dismal failure of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It wouldn&rsquo;t be ladylike to ask any one to marry you, you know,&rdquo; argued
+ Cecily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t suppose the <i>Family Guide</i> would think so,&rdquo; agreed the Story
+ Girl lazily, with some sarcasm in her voice. The Story Girl never held the
+ <i>Family Guide</i> in such reverence as did Felicity and Cecily. They
+ pored over the &ldquo;etiquette column&rdquo; every week, and could have told you on
+ demand, just exactly what kind of gloves should be worn at a wedding, what
+ you should say when introducing or being introduced, and how you ought to
+ look when your best young man came to see you.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They say Mrs. Richard Cook asked HER husband to marry her,&rdquo; said Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Uncle Roger says she didn&rsquo;t exactly ask him, but she helped the lame dog
+ over the stile so slick that Richard was engaged to her before he knew
+ what had happened to him,&rdquo; said the Story Girl. &ldquo;I know a story about Mrs.
+ Richard Cook&rsquo;s grandmother. She was one of those women who are always
+ saying &lsquo;I told you so&mdash;&lsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Take notice, Felicity,&rdquo; said Dan aside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&mdash;And she was very stubborn. Soon after she was married she and her
+ husband quarrelled about an apple tree they had planted in their orchard.
+ The label was lost. He said it was a Fameuse and she declared it was a
+ Yellow Transparent. They fought over it till the neighbours came out to
+ listen. Finally he got so angry that he told her to shut up. They didn&rsquo;t
+ have any <i>Family Guide</i> in those days, so he didn&rsquo;t know it wasn&rsquo;t
+ polite to say shut up to your wife. I suppose she thought she would teach
+ him manners, for would you believe it? That woman did shut up, and never
+ spoke one single word to her husband for five years. And then, in five
+ years&rsquo; time, the tree bore apples, and they WERE Yellow Transparents. And
+ then she spoke at last. She said, &lsquo;I told you so.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And did she talk to him after that as usual?&rdquo; asked Sara Ray.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, yes, she was just the same as she used to be,&rdquo; said the Story Girl
+ wearily. &ldquo;But that doesn&rsquo;t belong to the story. It stops when she spoke at
+ last. You&rsquo;re never satisfied to leave a story where it should stop, Sara
+ Ray.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I always like to know what happens afterwards,&rdquo; said Sara Ray.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Uncle Roger says he wouldn&rsquo;t want a wife he could never quarrel with,&rdquo;
+ remarked Dan. &ldquo;He says it would be too tame a life for him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wonder if Uncle Roger will always stay a bachelor,&rdquo; said Cecily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He seems real happy,&rdquo; observed Peter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ma says that it&rsquo;s all right as long as he is a bachelor because he won&rsquo;t
+ take any one,&rdquo; said Felicity, &ldquo;but if he wakes up some day and finds he is
+ an old bachelor because he can&rsquo;t get any one it&rsquo;ll have a very different
+ flavour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If your Aunt Olivia was to up and get married what would your Uncle Roger
+ do for a housekeeper?&rdquo; asked Peter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, but Aunt Olivia will never be married now,&rdquo; said Felicity. &ldquo;Why,
+ she&rsquo;ll be twenty-nine next January.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, o&rsquo; course, that&rsquo;s pretty old,&rdquo; admitted Peter, &ldquo;but she might find
+ some one who wouldn&rsquo;t mind that, seeing she&rsquo;s so pretty.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It would be awful splendid and exciting to have a wedding in the family,
+ wouldn&rsquo;t it?&rdquo; said Cecily. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve never seen any one married, and I&rsquo;d just
+ love to. I&rsquo;ve been to four funerals, but not to one single wedding.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve never even got to a funeral,&rdquo; said Sara Ray gloomily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There&rsquo;s the wedding veil of the proud princess,&rdquo; said Cecily, pointing to
+ a long drift of filmy vapour in the southwestern sky.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And look at that sweet pink cloud below it,&rdquo; added Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Maybe that little pink cloud is a dream, getting all ready to float down
+ into somebody&rsquo;s sleep,&rdquo; suggested the Story Girl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I had a perfectly awful dream last night,&rdquo; said Cecily, with a shudder of
+ remembrance. &ldquo;I dreamed I was on a desert island inhabited by tigers and
+ natives with two heads.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; the Story Girl looked at Cecily half reproachfully. &ldquo;Why couldn&rsquo;t
+ you tell it better than that? If I had such a dream I could tell it so
+ that everybody else would feel as if they had dreamed it, too.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I&rsquo;m not you,&rdquo; countered Cecily, &ldquo;and I wouldn&rsquo;t want to frighten
+ any one as I was frightened. It was an awful dream&mdash;but it was kind
+ of interesting, too.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve had some real int&rsquo;resting dreams,&rdquo; said Peter, &ldquo;but I can&rsquo;t remember
+ them long. I wish I could.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why don&rsquo;t you write them down?&rdquo; suggested the Story Girl. &ldquo;Oh&mdash;&rdquo; she
+ turned upon us a face illuminated with a sudden inspiration. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve an
+ idea. Let us each get an exercise book and write down all our dreams, just
+ as we dream them. We&rsquo;ll see who&rsquo;ll have the most interesting collection.
+ And we&rsquo;ll have them to read and laugh over when we&rsquo;re old and gray.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Instantly we all saw ourselves and each other by inner vision, old and
+ gray&mdash;all but the Story Girl. We could not picture her as old.
+ Always, as long as she lived, so it seemed to us, must she have sleek
+ brown curls, a voice like the sound of a harpstring in the wind, and eyes
+ that were stars of eternal youth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0022" id="link2HCH0022">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXII. THE DREAM BOOKS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The next day the Story Girl coaxed Uncle Roger to take her to Markdale,
+ and there she bought our dream books. They were ten cents apiece, with
+ ruled pages and mottled green covers. My own lies open beside me as I
+ write, its yellowed pages inscribed with the visions that haunted my
+ childish slumbers on those nights of long ago.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the cover is pasted a lady&rsquo;s visiting card, on which is written, &ldquo;The
+ Dream Book of Beverley King.&rdquo; Cecily had a packet of visiting cards which
+ she was hoarding against the day when she would be grown up and could put
+ the calling etiquette of the <i>Family Guide</i> into practice; but she
+ generously gave us all one apiece for the covers of our dream books.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As I turn the pages and glance over the (&mdash;&mdash;) records, each one
+ beginning, &ldquo;Last night I dreamed,&rdquo; the past comes very vividly back to me.
+ I see that bowery orchard, shining in memory with a soft glow of beauty&mdash;&ldquo;the
+ light that never was on land or sea,&rdquo;&mdash;where we sat on those
+ September evenings and wrote down our dreams, when the cares of the day
+ were over and there was nothing to interfere with the pleasing throes of
+ composition. Peter&mdash;Dan&mdash;Felix&mdash;Cecily&mdash;Felicity&mdash;Sara
+ Ray&mdash;the Story Girl&mdash;they are all around me once more, in the
+ sweet-scented, fading grasses, each with open dream books and pencil in
+ hand, now writing busily, now staring fixedly into space in search of some
+ elusive word or phrase which might best describe the indescribable. I hear
+ their laughing voices, I see their bright, unclouded eyes. In this little,
+ old book, filled with cramped, boyish writing, there is a spell of white
+ magic that sets the years at naught. Beverley King is a boy once more,
+ writing down his dreams in the old King orchard on the homestead hill,
+ blown over by musky winds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Opposite to him sits the Story Girl, with her scarlet rosetted head, her
+ beautiful bare feet crossed before her, one slender hand propping her
+ high, white brow, on either side of which fall her glossy curls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There, to the right, is sweet Cecily of the dear, brown eyes, with a
+ little bloated dictionary beside her&mdash;for you dream of so many things
+ you can&rsquo;t spell, or be expected to spell, when you are only eleven. Next
+ to her sits Felicity, beautiful, and conscious that she is beautiful, with
+ hair of spun sunshine, and sea-blue eyes, and all the roses of that
+ vanished summer abloom in her cheeks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peter is beside her, of course, sprawled flat on his stomach among the
+ grasses, one hand clutching his black curls, with his dream book on a
+ small, round stone before him&mdash;for only so can Peter compose at all,
+ and even then he finds it hard work. He can handle a hoe more deftly than
+ a pencil, and his spelling, even with all his frequent appeals to Cecily,
+ is a fearful and wonderful thing. As for punctuation, he never attempts
+ it, beyond an occasion period, jotted down whenever he happens to think of
+ it, whether in the right place or not. The Story Girl goes over his dreams
+ after he has written them out, and puts in the commas and semicolons, and
+ straightens out the sentences.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Felix sits on the right of the Story Girl, fat and stodgy, grimly in
+ earnest even over dreams. He writes with his knees stuck up to form a
+ writing-desk, and he always frowns fiercely the whole time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan, like Peter, writes lying down flat, but with his back towards us; and
+ he has a dismal habit of groaning aloud, writhing his whole body, and
+ digging his toes into the grass, when he cannot turn a sentence to suit
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sara Ray is at his left. There is seldom anything to be said of Sara
+ except to tell where she is. Like Tennyson&rsquo;s Maud, in one respect at
+ least, Sara is splendidly null.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well, there we sit and write in our dream books, and Uncle Roger passes by
+ and accuses us of being up to dev&mdash;to very bad mischief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Each of us was very anxious to possess the most exciting record; but we
+ were an honourable little crew, and I do not think anything was ever
+ written down in those dream books which had not really been dreamed. We
+ had expected that the Story Girl would eclipse us all in the matter of
+ dreams; but, at least in the beginning, her dreams were no more remarkable
+ than those of the rest of us. In dreamland we were all equal. Cecily,
+ indeed, seemed to have the most decided talent for dramatic dreams. That
+ meekest and mildest of girls was in the habit of dreaming truly terrible
+ things. Almost every night battle, murder, or sudden death played some
+ part in her visions. On the other hand, Dan, who was a somewhat truculent
+ fellow, addicted to the perusal of lurid dime novels which he borrowed
+ from the other boys in school, dreamed dreams of such a peaceful and
+ pastoral character that he was quite disgusted with the resulting tame
+ pages of his dream book.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But if the Story Girl could not dream anything more wonderful than the
+ rest of us, she scored when it came to the telling. To hear her tell a
+ dream was as good&mdash;or as bad&mdash;as dreaming it yourself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As far as writing them down was concerned, I believe that I, Beverley
+ King, carried off the palm. I was considered to possess a pretty knack of
+ composition. But the Story Girl went me one better even there, because,
+ having inherited something of her father&rsquo;s talent for drawing, she
+ illustrated her dreams with sketches that certainly caught the spirit of
+ them, whatever might be said of their technical excellence. She had an
+ especial knack for drawing monstrosities; and I vividly recall the picture
+ of an enormous and hideous lizard, looking like a reptile of the
+ pterodactyl period, which she had dreamed of seeing crawl across the roof
+ of the house. On another occasion she had a frightful dream&mdash;at
+ least, it seemed frightful while she told us and described the dreadful
+ feeling it had given her&mdash;of being chased around the parlour by the
+ ottoman, which made faces at her. She drew a picture of the grimacing
+ ottoman on the margin of her dream book which so scared Sara Ray when she
+ beheld it that she cried all the way home, and insisted on sleeping that
+ night with Judy Pineau lest the furniture take to pursuing her also.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sara Ray&rsquo;s own dreams never amounted to much. She was always in trouble of
+ some sort&mdash;couldn&rsquo;t get her hair braided, or her shoes on the right
+ feet. Consequently, her dream book was very monotonous. The only thing
+ worth mentioning in the way of dreams that Sara Ray ever achieved was when
+ she dreamed that she went up in a balloon and fell out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I expected to come down with an awful thud,&rdquo; she said shuddering, &ldquo;but I
+ lit as light as a feather and woke right up.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If you hadn&rsquo;t woke up you&rsquo;d have died,&rdquo; said Peter with a dark
+ significance. &ldquo;If you dream of falling and DON&rsquo;T wake you DO land with a
+ thud and it kills you. That&rsquo;s what happens to people who die in their
+ sleep.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How do you know?&rdquo; asked Dan skeptically. &ldquo;Nobody who died in his sleep
+ could ever tell it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My Aunt Jane told me so,&rdquo; said Peter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suppose that settles it,&rdquo; said Felicity disagreeably.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You always say something nasty when I mention my Aunt Jane,&rdquo; said Peter
+ reproachfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What did I say that was nasty?&rdquo; cried Felicity. &ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t say a single
+ thing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, it sounded nasty,&rdquo; said Peter, who knew that it is the tone that
+ makes the music.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What did your Aunt Jane look like?&rdquo; asked Cecily sympathetically. &ldquo;Was
+ she pretty?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; conceded Peter reluctantly, &ldquo;she wasn&rsquo;t pretty&mdash;but she looked
+ like the woman in that picture the Story Girl&rsquo;s father sent her last week&mdash;the
+ one with the shiny ring round her head and the baby in her lap. I&rsquo;ve seen
+ Aunt Jane look at me just like that woman looks at her baby. Ma never
+ looks so. Poor ma is too busy washing. I wish I could dream of my Aunt
+ Jane. I never do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Dream of the dead, you&rsquo;ll hear of the living,&rsquo;&rdquo; quoted Felix oracularly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I dreamed last night that I threw a lighted match into that keg of
+ gunpowder in Mr. Cook&rsquo;s store at Markdale,&rdquo; said Peter. &ldquo;It blew up&mdash;and
+ everything blew up&mdash;and they fished me out of the mess&mdash;but I
+ woke up before I&rsquo;d time to find out if I was killed or not.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;One is so apt to wake up just as things get interesting,&rdquo; remarked the
+ Story Girl discontentedly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I dreamed last night that I had really truly curly hair,&rdquo; said Cecily
+ mournfully. &ldquo;And oh, I was so happy! It was dreadful to wake up and find
+ it as straight as ever.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Felix, that sober, solid fellow, dreamed constantly of flying through the
+ air. His descriptions of his aerial flights over the tree-tops of
+ dreamland always filled us with envy. None of the rest of us could ever
+ compass such a dream, not even the Story Girl, who might have been
+ expected to dream of flying if anybody did. Felix had a knack of dreaming
+ anyhow, and his dream book, while suffering somewhat in comparison of
+ literary style, was about the best of the lot when it came to subject
+ matter. Cecily&rsquo;s might be more dramatic, but Felix&rsquo;s was more amusing. The
+ dream which we all counted his masterpiece was the one in which a
+ menagerie had camped in the orchard and the rhinoceros chased Aunt Janet
+ around and around the Pulpit Stone, but turned into an inoffensive pig
+ when it was on the point of catching her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Felix had a sick spell soon after we began our dream books, and Aunt Janet
+ essayed to cure him by administering a dose of liver pills which Elder
+ Frewen had assured her were a cure-all for every disease the flesh is heir
+ to. But Felix flatly refused to take liver pills; Mexican Tea he would
+ drink, but liver pills he would not take, in spite of his own suffering
+ and Aunt Janet&rsquo;s commands and entreaties. I could not understand his
+ antipathy to the insignificant little white pellets, which were so easy to
+ swallow; but he explained the matter to us in the orchard when he had
+ recovered his usual health and spirits.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was afraid to take the liver pills for fear they&rsquo;d prevent me from
+ dreaming,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you remember old Miss Baxter in Toronto, Bev?
+ And how she told Mrs. McLaren that she was subject to terrible dreams, and
+ finally she took two liver pills and never had any more dreams after that.
+ I&rsquo;d rather have died than risk it,&rdquo; concluded Felix solemnly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;d an exciting dream last night for once,&rdquo; said Dan triumphantly. &ldquo;I
+ dreamt old Peg Bowen chased me. I thought I was up to her house and she
+ took after me. You bet I scooted. And she caught me&mdash;yes, sir! I felt
+ her skinny hand reach out and clutch my shoulder. I let out a screech&mdash;and
+ woke up.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should think you did screech,&rdquo; said Felicity. &ldquo;We heard you clean over
+ into our room.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I hate to dream of being chased because I can never run,&rdquo; said Sara Ray
+ with a shiver. &ldquo;I just stand rooted to the ground&mdash;and see it coming&mdash;and
+ can&rsquo;t stir. It don&rsquo;t sound much written out, but it&rsquo;s awful to go through.
+ I&rsquo;m sure I hope I&rsquo;ll never dream Peg Bowen chases me. I&rsquo;ll die if I do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wonder what Peg Bowen would really do to a fellow if she caught him,&rdquo;
+ speculated Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Peg Bowen doesn&rsquo;t need to catch you to do things to you,&rdquo; said Peter
+ ominously. &ldquo;She can put ill-luck on you just by looking at you&mdash;and
+ she will if you offend her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t believe that,&rdquo; said the Story Girl airily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you? All right, then! Last summer she called at Lem Hill&rsquo;s in
+ Markdale, and he told her to clear out or he&rsquo;d set the dog on her. Peg
+ cleared out, and she went across his pasture, muttering to herself and
+ throwing her arms round. And next day his very best cow took sick and
+ died. How do you account for that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It might have happened anyhow,&rdquo; said the Story Girl&mdash;somewhat less
+ assuredly, though.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It might. But I&rsquo;d just as soon Peg Bowen didn&rsquo;t look at MY cows,&rdquo; said
+ Peter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As if you had any cows!&rdquo; giggled Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m going to have cows some day,&rdquo; said Peter, flushing. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t mean to
+ be a hired boy all my life. I&rsquo;ll have a farm of my own and cows and
+ everything. You&rsquo;ll see if I won&rsquo;t.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I dreamed last night that we opened the blue chest,&rdquo; said the Story Girl,
+ &ldquo;and all the things were there&mdash;the blue china candlestick&mdash;only
+ it was brass in the dream&mdash;and the fruit basket with the apple on it,
+ and the wedding dress, and the embroidered petticoat. And we were
+ laughing, and trying the things on, and having such fun. And Rachel Ward
+ herself came and looked at us&mdash;so sad and reproachful&mdash;and we
+ all felt ashamed, and I began to cry, and woke up crying.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I dreamed last night that Felix was thin,&rdquo; said Peter, laughing. &ldquo;He did
+ look so queer. His clothes just hung loose, and he was going round trying
+ to hold them on.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Everybody thought this was funny, except Felix. He would not speak to
+ Peter for two days because of it. Felicity also got into trouble because
+ of her dreams. One night she woke up, having just had a very exciting
+ dream; but she went to sleep again, and in the morning she could not
+ remember the dream at all. Felicity determined she would never let another
+ dream get away from her in such a fashion; and the next time she wakened
+ in the night&mdash;having dreamed that she was dead and buried&mdash;she
+ promptly arose, lighted a candle, and proceeded to write the dream down
+ then and there. While so employed she contrived to upset the candle and
+ set fire to her nightgown&mdash;a brand-new one, trimmed with any quantity
+ of crocheted lace. A huge hole was burned in it, and when Aunt Janet
+ discovered it she lifted up her voice with no uncertain sound. Felicity
+ had never received a sharper scolding. But she took it very
+ philosophically. She was used to her mother&rsquo;s bitter tongue, and she was
+ not unduly sensitive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Anyhow, I saved my dream,&rdquo; she said placidly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And that, of course, was all that really mattered. Grown people were so
+ strangely oblivious to the truly important things of life. Material for
+ new garments, of night or day, could be bought in any shop for a trifling
+ sum and made up out of hand. But if a dream escape you, in what
+ market-place the wide world over can you hope to regain it? What coin of
+ earthly minting will ever buy back for you that lost and lovely vision?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0023" id="link2HCH0023">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXIII. SUCH STUFF AS DREAMS ARE MADE ON
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Peter took Dan and me aside one evening, as we were on our way to the
+ orchard with our dream books, saying significantly that he wanted our
+ advice. Accordingly, we went round to the spruce wood, where the girls
+ would not see us to the rousing of their curiosity, and then Peter told us
+ of his dilemma.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Last night I dreamed I was in church,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I thought it was full of
+ people, and I walked up the aisle to your pew and set down, as unconcerned
+ as a pig on ice. And then I found that I hadn&rsquo;t a stitch of clothes on&mdash;NOT
+ ONE BLESSED STITCH. Now&rdquo;&mdash;Peter dropped his voice&mdash;&ldquo;what is
+ bothering me is this&mdash;would it be proper to tell a dream like that
+ before the girls?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was of the opinion that it would be rather questionable; but Dan vowed
+ he didn&rsquo;t see why. HE&rsquo;D tell it quick as any other dream. There was
+ nothing bad in it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But they&rsquo;re your own relations,&rdquo; said Peter. &ldquo;They&rsquo;re no relation to me,
+ and that makes a difference. Besides, they&rsquo;re all such ladylike girls. I
+ guess I&rsquo;d better not risk it. I&rsquo;m pretty sure Aunt Jane wouldn&rsquo;t think it
+ was proper to tell such a dream. And I don&rsquo;t want to offend Fel&mdash;any
+ of them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Peter never told that dream, nor did he write it down. Instead, I
+ remember seeing in his dream book, under the date of September fifteenth,
+ an entry to this effect:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Last nite i dremed a drem. it wasent a polit drem so i won&rsquo;t rite it
+ down.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girls saw this entry but, to their credit be it told, they never tried
+ to find out what the &ldquo;drem&rdquo; was. As Peter said, they were &ldquo;ladies&rdquo; in the
+ best and truest sense of that much abused appellation. Full of fun and
+ frolic and mischief they were, with all the defects of their qualities and
+ all the wayward faults of youth. But no indelicate thought or vulgar word
+ could have been shaped or uttered in their presence. Had any of us boys
+ ever been guilty of such, Cecily&rsquo;s pale face would have coloured with the
+ blush of outraged purity, Felicity&rsquo;s golden head would have lifted itself
+ in the haughty indignation of insulted womanhood, and the Story Girl&rsquo;s
+ splendid eyes would have flashed with such anger and scorn as would have
+ shrivelled the very soul of the wretched culprit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan was once guilty of swearing. Uncle Alec whipped him for it&mdash;the
+ only time he ever so punished any of his children. But it was because
+ Cecily cried all night that Dan was filled with saving remorse and
+ repentance. He vowed next day to Cecily that he would never swear again,
+ and he kept his word.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All at once the Story Girl and Peter began to forge ahead in the matter of
+ dreaming. Their dreams suddenly became so lurid and dreadful and
+ picturesque that it was hard for the rest of us to believe that they were
+ not painting the lily rather freely in their accounts of them. But the
+ Story Girl was the soul of honour; and Peter, early in life, had had his
+ feet set in the path of truthfulness by his Aunt Jane and had never been
+ known to stray from it. When they assured us solemnly that their dreams
+ all happened exactly as they described them we were compelled to believe
+ them. But there was something up, we felt sure of that. Peter and the
+ Story Girl certainly had a secret between them, which they kept for a
+ whole fortnight. There was no finding it out from the Story Girl. She had
+ a knack of keeping secrets, anyhow; and, moreover, all that fortnight she
+ was strangely cranky and petulant, and we found it was not wise to tease
+ her. She was not well, so Aunt Olivia told Aunt Janet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know what is the matter with the child,&rdquo; said the former
+ anxiously. &ldquo;She hasn&rsquo;t seemed like herself the past two weeks. She
+ complains of headache, and she has no appetite, and she is a dreadful
+ colour. I&rsquo;ll have to see a doctor about her if she doesn&rsquo;t get better
+ soon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Give her a good dose of Mexican Tea and try that first,&rdquo; said Aunt Janet.
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve saved many a doctor&rsquo;s bill in my family by using Mexican Tea.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Mexican Tea was duly administered, but produced no improvement in the
+ condition of the Story Girl, who, however, went on dreaming after a
+ fashion which soon made her dream book a veritable curiosity of
+ literature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If we can&rsquo;t soon find out what makes Peter and the Story Girl dream like
+ that, the rest of us might as well give up trying to write dream books,&rdquo;
+ said Felix discontentedly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally, we did find out. Felicity wormed the secret out of Peter by the
+ employment of Delilah wiles, such as have been the undoing of many a
+ miserable male creature since Samson&rsquo;s day. She first threatened that she
+ would never speak to him again if he didn&rsquo;t tell her; and then she
+ promised him that, if he did, she would let him walk beside her to and
+ from Sunday School all the rest of the summer, and carry her books for
+ her. Peter was not proof against this double attack. He yielded and told
+ the secret.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I expected the Story Girl would overwhelm him with scorn and indignation.
+ But she took it very coolly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I knew Felicity would get it out of him sometime,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I think he
+ has done well to hold out this long.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peter and the Story Girl, so it appeared, had wooed wild dreams to their
+ pillows by the simple device of eating rich, indigestible things before
+ they went to bed. Aunt Olivia knew nothing about it, of course. She
+ permitted them only a plain, wholesome lunch at bed-time. But during the
+ day the Story Girl would smuggle upstairs various tidbits from the pantry,
+ putting half in Peter&rsquo;s room and half in her own; and the result was these
+ visions which had been our despair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Last night I ate a piece of mince pie,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;and a lot of pickles,
+ and two grape jelly tarts. But I guess I overdid it, because I got real
+ sick and couldn&rsquo;t sleep at all, so of course I didn&rsquo;t have any dreams. I
+ should have stopped with the pie and pickles and left the tarts alone.
+ Peter did, and he had an elegant dream that Peg Bowen caught him and put
+ him on to boil alive in that big black pot that hangs outside her door. He
+ woke up before the water got hot, though. Well, Miss Felicity, you&rsquo;re
+ pretty smart. But how will you like to walk to Sunday School with a boy
+ who wears patched trousers?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I won&rsquo;t have to,&rdquo; said Felicity triumphantly. &ldquo;Peter is having a new suit
+ made. It&rsquo;s to be ready by Saturday. I knew that before I promised.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having discovered how to produce exciting dreams, we all promptly followed
+ the example of Peter and the Story Girl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is no chance for me to have any horrid dreams,&rdquo; lamented Sara Ray,
+ &ldquo;because ma won&rsquo;t let me having anything at all to eat before I go to bed.
+ I don&rsquo;t think it&rsquo;s fair.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Can&rsquo;t you hide something away through the day as we do?&rdquo; asked Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No.&rdquo; Sara shook her fawn-coloured head mournfully. &ldquo;Ma always keeps the
+ pantry locked, for fear Judy Pineau will treat her friends.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a week we ate unlawful lunches and dreamed dreams after our own hearts&mdash;and,
+ I regret to say, bickered and squabbled incessantly throughout the
+ daytime, for our digestions went out of order and our tempers followed
+ suit. Even the Story Girl and I had a fight&mdash;something that had never
+ happened before. Peter was the only one who kept his normal poise. Nothing
+ could upset that boy&rsquo;s stomach.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One night Cecily came into the pantry with a large cucumber, and proceeded
+ to devour the greater part of it. The grown-ups were away that evening,
+ attending a lecture at Markdale, so we ate our snacks openly, without any
+ recourse to ways that were dark. I remember I supped that night off a
+ solid hunk of fat pork, topped off with a slab of cold plum pudding.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I thought you didn&rsquo;t like cucumber, Cecily,&rdquo; Dan remarked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Neither I do,&rdquo; said Cecily with a grimace. &ldquo;But Peter says they&rsquo;re
+ splendid for dreaming. He et one that night he had the dream about being
+ caught by cannibals. I&rsquo;d eat three cucumbers if I could have a dream like
+ that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cecily finished her cucumber, and then drank a glass of milk, just as we
+ heard the wheels of Uncle Alec&rsquo;s buggy rambling over the bridge in the
+ hollow. Felicity quickly restored pork and pudding to their own places,
+ and by the time Aunt Janet came in we were all in our respective beds.
+ Soon the house was dark and silent. I was just dropping into an uneasy
+ slumber when I heard a commotion in the girls&rsquo; room across the hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their door opened and through our own open door I saw Felicity&rsquo;s
+ white-clad figure flit down the stairs to Aunt Janet&rsquo;s room. From the room
+ she had left came moans and cries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Cecily&rsquo;s sick,&rdquo; said Dan, springing out of bed. &ldquo;That cucumber must have
+ disagreed with her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a few minutes the whole house was astir. Cecily was sick&mdash;very,
+ very sick, there was no doubt of that. She was even worse than Dan had
+ been when he had eaten the bad berries. Uncle Alec, tired as he was from
+ his hard day&rsquo;s work and evening outing, was despatched for the doctor.
+ Aunt Janet and Felicity administered all the homely remedies they could
+ think of, but to no effect. Felicity told Aunt Janet of the cucumber, but
+ Aunt Janet did not think the cucumber alone could be responsible for
+ Cecily&rsquo;s alarming condition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Cucumbers are indigestible, but I never knew of them making any one as
+ sick as this,&rdquo; she said anxiously. &ldquo;What made the child eat a cucumber
+ before going to bed? I didn&rsquo;t think she liked them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was that wretched Peter,&rdquo; sobbed Felicity indignantly. &ldquo;He told her it
+ would make her dream something extra.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What on earth did she want to dream for?&rdquo; demanded Aunt Janet in
+ bewilderment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, to have something worth while to write in her dream book, ma. We all
+ have dream books, you know, and every one wants their own to be the most
+ exciting&mdash;and we&rsquo;ve been eating rich things to make us dream&mdash;and
+ it does&mdash;but if Cecily&mdash;oh, I&rsquo;ll never forgive myself,&rdquo; said
+ Felicity, incoherently, letting all kinds of cats out of the bag in her
+ excitement and alarm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I wonder what on earth you young ones will do next,&rdquo; said Aunt
+ Janet in the helpless tone of a woman who gives it up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cecily was no better when the doctor came. Like Aunt Janet, he declared
+ that cucumbers alone would not have made her so ill; but when he found out
+ that she had drunk a glass of milk also the mystery was solved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, milk and cucumbers together make a rank poison,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;No wonder
+ the child is sick. There&mdash;there now&mdash;&rdquo; seeing the alarmed faces
+ around him, &ldquo;don&rsquo;t be frightened. As old Mrs. Fraser says, &lsquo;It&rsquo;s no
+ deidly.&rsquo; It won&rsquo;t kill her, but she&rsquo;ll probably be a pretty miserable girl
+ for two or three days.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was. And we were all miserable in company. Aunt Janet investigated the
+ whole affair and the matter of our dream books was aired in family
+ conclave. I do not know which hurt our feelings most&mdash;the scolding we
+ got from Aunt Janet, or the ridicule which the other grown-ups, especially
+ Uncle Roger, showered on us. Peter received an extra &ldquo;setting down,&rdquo; which
+ he considered rank injustice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t tell Cecily to drink the milk, and the cucumber alone wouldn&rsquo;t
+ have hurt her,&rdquo; he grumbled. Cecily was able to be out with us again that
+ day, so Peter felt that he might venture on a grumble. &ldquo;&lsquo;Sides, she coaxed
+ me to tell her what would be good for dreams. I just told her as a favour.
+ And now your Aunt Janet blames me for the whole trouble.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And Aunt Janet says we are never to have anything to eat before we go to
+ bed after this except plain bread and milk,&rdquo; said Felix sadly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They&rsquo;d like to stop us from dreaming altogether if they could,&rdquo; said the
+ Story Girl wrathfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, anyway, they can&rsquo;t prevent us from growing up,&rdquo; consoled Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We needn&rsquo;t worry about the bread and milk rule,&rdquo; added Felicity. &ldquo;Ma made
+ a rule like that once before, and kept it for a week, and then we just
+ slipped back to the old way. That will be what will happen this time, too.
+ But of course we won&rsquo;t be able to get any more rich things for supper, and
+ our dreams will be pretty flat after this.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, let&rsquo;s go down to the Pulpit Stone and I&rsquo;ll tell you a story I
+ know,&rdquo; said the Story Girl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We went&mdash;and straightway drank of the waters of forgetfulness. In a
+ brief space we were laughing right merrily, no longer remembering our
+ wrongs at the hands of those cruel grown-ups. Our laughter echoed back
+ from the barns and the spruce grove, as if elfin denizens of upper air
+ were sharing in our mirth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently, also, the laughter of the grown-ups mingled with ours. Aunt
+ Olivia and Uncle Roger, Aunt Janet and Uncle Alec, came strolling through
+ the orchard and joined our circle, as they sometimes did when the toil of
+ the day was over, and the magic time &lsquo;twixt light and dark brought truce
+ of care and labour. &lsquo;Twas then we liked our grown-ups best, for then they
+ seemed half children again. Uncle Roger and Uncle Alec lolled in the grass
+ like boys; Aunt Olivia, looking more like a pansy than ever in the
+ prettiest dress of pale purple print, with a knot of yellow ribbon at her
+ throat, sat with her arm about Cecily and smiled on us all; and Aunt
+ Janet&rsquo;s motherly face lost its every-day look of anxious care.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl was in great fettle that night. Never had her tales
+ sparkled with such wit and archness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sara Stanley,&rdquo; said Aunt Olivia, shaking her finger at her after a
+ side-splitting yarn, &ldquo;if you don&rsquo;t watch out you&rsquo;ll be famous some day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;These funny stories are all right,&rdquo; said Uncle Roger, &ldquo;but for real
+ enjoyment give me something with a creep in it. Sara, tell us that story
+ of the Serpent Woman I heard you tell one day last summer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl began it glibly. But before she had gone far with it, I,
+ who was sitting beside her, felt an unaccountable repulsion creeping over
+ me. For the first time since I had known her I wanted to draw away from
+ the Story Girl. Looking around on the faces of the group, I saw that they
+ all shared my feeling. Cecily had put her hands over her eyes. Peter was
+ staring at the Story Girl with a fascinated, horror-strickened gaze. Aunt
+ Olivia was pale and troubled. All looked as if they were held prisoners in
+ the bonds of a fearsome spell which they would gladly break but could not.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not our Story Girl who sat there, telling that weird tale in a
+ sibilant, curdling voice. She had put on a new personality like a garment,
+ and that personality was a venomous, evil, loathly thing. I would rather
+ have died than have touched the slim, brown wrist on which she supported
+ herself. The light in her narrowed orbs was the cold, merciless gleam of
+ the serpent&rsquo;s eye. I felt frightened of this unholy creature who had
+ suddenly come in our dear Story Girl&rsquo;s place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the tale ended there was a brief silence. Then Aunt Janet said
+ severely, but with a sigh of relief,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Little girls shouldn&rsquo;t tell such horrible stories.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This truly Aunt Janetian remark broke the spell. The grown-ups laughed,
+ rather shakily, and the Story Girl&mdash;our own dear Story Girl once
+ more, and no Serpent Woman&mdash;said protestingly,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, Uncle Roger asked me to tell it. I don&rsquo;t like telling such stories
+ either. They make me feel dreadful. Do you know, for just a little while,
+ I felt exactly like a snake.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You looked like one,&rdquo; said Uncle Roger. &ldquo;How on earth do you do it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can&rsquo;t explain how I do it,&rdquo; said the Story Girl perplexedly. &ldquo;It just
+ does itself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Genius can never explain how it does it. It would not be genius if it
+ could. And the Story Girl had genius.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As we left the orchard I walked along behind Uncle Roger and Aunt Olivia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That was an uncanny exhibition for a girl of fourteen, you know, Roger,&rdquo;
+ said Aunt Olivia musingly. &ldquo;What is in store for that child?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fame,&rdquo; said Uncle Roger. &ldquo;If she ever has a chance, that is, and I
+ suppose her father will see to that. At least, I hope he will. You and I,
+ Olivia, never had our chance. I hope Sara will have hers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was my first inkling of what I was to understand more fully in later
+ years. Uncle Roger and Aunt Olivia had both cherished certain dreams and
+ ambitions in youth, but circumstances had denied them their &ldquo;chance&rdquo; and
+ those dreams had never been fulfilled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Some day, Olivia,&rdquo; went on Uncle Roger, &ldquo;you and I may find ourselves the
+ aunt and uncle of the foremost actress of her day. If a girl of fourteen
+ can make a couple of practical farmers and a pair of matter-of-fact
+ housewives half believe for ten minutes that she really is a snake, what
+ won&rsquo;t she be able to do when she is thirty? Here, you,&rdquo; added Uncle Roger,
+ perceiving me, &ldquo;cut along and get off to your bed. And mind you don&rsquo;t eat
+ cucumbers and milk before you go.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0024" id="link2HCH0024">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXIV. THE BEWITCHMENT OF PAT
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ We were all in the doleful dumps&mdash;at least, all we &ldquo;young fry&rdquo; were,
+ and even the grown-ups were sorry and condescended to take an interest in
+ our troubles. Pat, our own, dear, frolicsome Paddy, was sick again&mdash;very,
+ very sick.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On Friday he moped and refused his saucer of new milk at milking time. The
+ next morning he stretched himself down on the platform by Uncle Roger&rsquo;s
+ back door, laid his head on his black paws, and refused to take any notice
+ of anything or anybody. In vain we stroked and entreated and brought him
+ tidbits. Only when the Story Girl caressed him did he give one plaintive
+ little mew, as if to ask piteously why she could not do something for him.
+ At that Cecily and Felicity and Sara Ray all began crying, and we boys
+ felt choky. Indeed, I caught Peter behind Aunt Olivia&rsquo;s dairy later in the
+ day, and if ever a boy had been crying I vow that boy was Peter. Nor did
+ he deny it when I taxed him with it, but he would not give in that he was
+ crying about Paddy. Nonsense!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What were you crying for, then?&rdquo; I said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m crying because&mdash;because my Aunt Jane is dead,&rdquo; said Peter
+ defiantly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But your Aunt Jane died two years ago,&rdquo; I said skeptically.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, ain&rsquo;t that all the more reason for crying?&rdquo; retorted Peter. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve
+ had to do without her for two years, and that&rsquo;s worse than if it had just
+ been a few days.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I believe you were crying because Pat is so sick,&rdquo; I said firmly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As if I&rsquo;d cry about a cat!&rdquo; scoffed Peter. And he marched off whistling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course we had tried the lard and powder treatment again, smearing Pat&rsquo;s
+ paws and sides liberally. But to our dismay, Pat made no effort to lick it
+ off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I tell you he&rsquo;s a mighty sick cat,&rdquo; said Peter darkly. &ldquo;When a cat don&rsquo;t
+ care what he looks like he&rsquo;s pretty far gone.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If we only knew what was the matter with him we might do something,&rdquo;
+ sobbed the Story Girl, stroking her poor pet&rsquo;s unresponsive head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I could tell you what&rsquo;s the matter with him, but you&rsquo;d only laugh at me,&rdquo;
+ said Peter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We all looked at him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Peter Craig, what do you mean?&rdquo; asked Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Zackly what I say.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then, if you know what is the matter with Paddy, tell us,&rdquo; commanded the
+ Story Girl, standing up. She said it quietly; but Peter obeyed. I think he
+ would have obeyed if she, in that tone and with those eyes, had ordered
+ him to cast himself into the depths of the sea. I know I should.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He&rsquo;s BEWITCHED&mdash;that&rsquo;s what&rsquo;s the matter with him,&rdquo; said Peter, half
+ defiantly, half shamefacedly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bewitched? Nonsense!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There now, what did I tell you?&rdquo; complained Peter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl looked at Peter, at the rest of us, and then at poor Pat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How could he be bewitched?&rdquo; she asked irresolutely, &ldquo;and who could
+ bewitch him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know HOW he was bewitched,&rdquo; said Peter. &ldquo;I&rsquo;d have to be a witch
+ myself to know that. But Peg Bowen bewitched him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nonsense!&rdquo; said the Story Girl again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All right,&rdquo; said Peter. &ldquo;You don&rsquo;t have to believe me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If Peg Bowen could bewitch anything&mdash;and I don&rsquo;t believe she could&mdash;why
+ should she bewitch Pat?&rdquo; asked the Story Girl. &ldquo;Everybody here and at
+ Uncle Alec&rsquo;s is always kind to her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll tell you why,&rdquo; said Peter. &ldquo;Thursday afternoon, when you fellows
+ were all in school, Peg Bowen came here. Your Aunt Olivia gave her a lunch&mdash;a
+ good one. You may laugh at the notion of Peg being a witch, but I notice
+ your folks are always awful good to her when she comes, and awful careful
+ never to offend her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aunt Olivia would be good to any poor creature, and so would mother,&rdquo;
+ said Felicity. &ldquo;And of course nobody wants to offend Peg, because she is
+ spiteful, and she once set fire to a man&rsquo;s barn in Markdale when he
+ offended her. But she isn&rsquo;t a witch&mdash;that&rsquo;s ridiculous.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All right. But wait till I tell you. When Peg Bowen was leaving Pat
+ stretched out on the steps. She tramped on his tail. You know Pat doesn&rsquo;t
+ like to have his tail meddled with. He slewed himself round and clawed her
+ bare foot. If you&rsquo;d just seen the look she gave him you&rsquo;d know whether she
+ was a witch or not. And she went off down the lane, muttering and throwing
+ her hands round, just like she did in Lem Hill&rsquo;s cow pasture. She put a
+ spell on Pat, that&rsquo;s what she did. He was sick the next morning.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We looked at each other in miserable, perplexed silence. We were only
+ children&mdash;and we believed that there had been such things as witches
+ once upon a time&mdash;and Peg Bowen WAS an eerie creature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If that&rsquo;s so&mdash;though I can&rsquo;t believe it&mdash;we can&rsquo;t do anything,&rdquo;
+ said the Story Girl drearily. &ldquo;Pat must die.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cecily began to weep afresh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;d do anything to save Pat&rsquo;s life,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I&rsquo;d BELIEVE anything.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There&rsquo;s nothing we can do,&rdquo; said Felicity impatiently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suppose,&rdquo; sobbed Cecily, &ldquo;we might go to Peg Bowen and ask her to
+ forgive Pat and take the spell off him. She might, if we apologized real
+ humble.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At first we were appalled by the suggestion. We didn&rsquo;t believe that Peg
+ Bowen was a witch. But to go to her&mdash;to seek her out in that
+ mysterious woodland retreat of hers which was invested with all the
+ terrors of the unknown! And that this suggestion should come from timid
+ Cecily, of all people! But then, there was poor Pat!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Would it do any good?&rdquo; said the Story Girl desperately. &ldquo;Even if she did
+ make Pat sick I suppose it would only make her crosser if we went and
+ accused her of bewitching him. Besides, she didn&rsquo;t do anything of the
+ sort.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But there was some uncertainty in the Story Girl&rsquo;s voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It wouldn&rsquo;t do any harm to try,&rdquo; said Cecily. &ldquo;If she didn&rsquo;t make him
+ sick it won&rsquo;t matter if she is cross.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It won&rsquo;t matter to Pat, but it might to the one who goes to her,&rdquo; said
+ Felicity. &ldquo;She isn&rsquo;t a witch, but she&rsquo;s a spiteful old woman, and goodness
+ knows what she&rsquo;d do to us if she caught us. I&rsquo;m scared of Peg Bowen, and I
+ don&rsquo;t care who knows it. Ever since I can mind ma&rsquo;s been saying, &lsquo;If
+ you&rsquo;re not good Peg Bowen will catch you.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If I thought she really made Pat sick and could make him better, I&rsquo;d try
+ to pacify her somehow,&rdquo; said the Story Girl decidedly. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m frightened of
+ her, too&mdash;but just look at poor, darling Paddy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We looked at Paddy who continued to stare fixedly before him with
+ unwinking eyes. Uncle Roger came out and looked at him also, with what
+ seemed to us positively brutal unconcern.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m afraid it&rsquo;s all up with Pat,&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Uncle Roger,&rdquo; said Cecily imploringly, &ldquo;Peter says Peg Bowen has
+ bewitched Pat for scratching her. Do you think it can be so?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did Pat scratch Peg?&rdquo; asked Uncle Roger, with a horror-stricken face.
+ &ldquo;Dear me! Dear me! That mystery is solved. Poor Pat!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Uncle Roger nodded his head, as if resigning himself and Pat to the worst.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you really think Peg Bowen is a witch, Uncle Roger?&rdquo; demanded the
+ Story Girl incredulously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do I think Peg Bowen is a witch? My dear Sara, what do YOU think of a
+ woman who can turn herself into a black cat whenever she likes? Is she a
+ witch? Or is she not? I leave it to you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Can Peg Bowen turn herself into a black cat?&rdquo; asked Felix, staring.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It&rsquo;s my belief that that is the least of Peg Bowen&rsquo;s accomplishments,&rdquo;
+ answered Uncle Roger. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s the easiest thing in the world for a witch to
+ turn herself into any animal you choose to mention. Yes, Pat is bewitched&mdash;no
+ doubt of that&mdash;not the least in the world.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What are you telling those children such stuff for?&rdquo; asked Aunt Olivia,
+ passing on her way to the well.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It&rsquo;s an irresistible temptation,&rdquo; answered Uncle Roger, strolling over to
+ carry her pail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You can see your Uncle Roger believes Peg is a witch,&rdquo; said Peter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you can see Aunt Olivia doesn&rsquo;t,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;and I don&rsquo;t either.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;See here,&rdquo; said the Story Girl resolutely, &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t believe it, but there
+ MAY be something in it. Suppose there is. The question is, what can we
+ do?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll tell you what I&rsquo;D do,&rdquo; said Peter. &ldquo;I&rsquo;d take a present for Peg, and
+ ask her to make Pat well. I wouldn&rsquo;t let on I thought she&rsquo;d made him sick.
+ Then she couldn&rsquo;t be offended&mdash;and maybe she&rsquo;d take the spell off.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think we&rsquo;d better all give her something,&rdquo; said Felicity. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m willing
+ to do that. But who&rsquo;s going to take the presents to her?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We must all go together,&rdquo; said the Story Girl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I won&rsquo;t,&rdquo; cried Sara Ray in terror. &ldquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t go near Peg Bowen&rsquo;s house
+ for the world, no matter who was with me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve thought of a plan,&rdquo; said the Story Girl. &ldquo;Let&rsquo;s all give her
+ something, as Felicity says. And let us all go up to her place this
+ evening, and if we see her outside we&rsquo;ll just go quietly and set the
+ things down before her with the letter, and say nothing but come
+ respectfully away.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If she&rsquo;ll let us,&rdquo; said Dan significantly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Can Peg read a letter?&rdquo; I asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, yes. Aunt Olivia says she is a good scholar. She went to school and
+ was a smart girl until she became crazy. We&rsquo;ll write it very plain.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What if we don&rsquo;t see her?&rdquo; asked Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll put the things on her doorstep then and leave them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She may be miles away over the country by this time,&rdquo; sighed Cecily, &ldquo;and
+ never find them until it&rsquo;s too late for Pat. But it&rsquo;s the only thing to
+ do. What can we give her?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We mustn&rsquo;t offer her any money,&rdquo; said the Story Girl. &ldquo;She&rsquo;s very
+ indignant when any one does that. She says she isn&rsquo;t a beggar. But she&rsquo;ll
+ take anything else. I shall give her my string of blue beads. She&rsquo;s fond
+ of finery.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll give her that sponge cake I made this morning,&rdquo; said Felicity. &ldquo;I
+ guess she doesn&rsquo;t get sponge cake very often.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve nothing but the rheumatism ring I got as a premium for selling
+ needles last winter,&rdquo; said Peter. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll give her that. Even if she hasn&rsquo;t
+ got rheumatism it&rsquo;s a real handsome ring. It looks like solid gold.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll give her a roll of peppermint candy,&rdquo; said Felix.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll give one of those little jars of cherry preserve I made,&rdquo; said
+ Cecily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I won&rsquo;t go near her,&rdquo; quavered Sara Ray, &ldquo;but I want to do something for
+ Pat, and I&rsquo;ll send that piece of apple leaf lace I knit last week.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I decided to give the redoubtable Peg some apples from my birthday tree,
+ and Dan declared he would give her a plug of tobacco.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, won&rsquo;t she be insulted?&rdquo; exclaimed Felix, rather horrified.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Naw,&rdquo; grinned Dan. &ldquo;Peg chews tobacco like a man. She&rsquo;d rather have it
+ than your rubbishy peppermints, I can tell you. I&rsquo;ll run down to old Mrs.
+ Sampson&rsquo;s and get a plug.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, we must write the letter and take it and the presents to her right
+ away, before it gets dark,&rdquo; said the Story Girl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We adjourned to the granary to indite the important document, which the
+ Story Girl was to compose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How shall I begin it?&rdquo; she asked in perplexity. &ldquo;It would never do to
+ say, &lsquo;Dear Peg,&rsquo; and &lsquo;Dear Miss Bowen&rsquo; sounds too ridiculous.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Besides, nobody knows whether she is Miss Bowen or not,&rdquo; said Felicity.
+ &ldquo;She went to Boston when she grew up, and some say she was married there
+ and her husband deserted her, and that&rsquo;s why she went crazy. If she&rsquo;s
+ married, she won&rsquo;t like being called Miss.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, how am I to address her?&rdquo; asked the Story Girl in despair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peter again came to the rescue with a practical suggestion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Begin it, &lsquo;Respected Madam,&rsquo;&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Ma has a letter a school trustee
+ once writ to my Aunt Jane and that&rsquo;s how it begins.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Respected Madam,&rdquo; wrote the Story Girl. &ldquo;We want to ask a very great
+ favour of you and we hope you will kindly grant it if you can. Our
+ favourite cat, Paddy, is very sick, and we are afraid he is going to die.
+ Do you think you could cure him? And will you please try? We are all so
+ fond of him, and he is such a good cat, and has no bad habits. Of course,
+ if any of us tramps on his tail he will scratch us, but you know a cat
+ can&rsquo;t bear to have his tail tramped on. It&rsquo;s a very tender part of him,
+ and it&rsquo;s his only way of preventing it, and he doesn&rsquo;t mean any harm. If
+ you can cure Paddy for us we will always be very, very grateful to you.
+ The accompanying small offerings are a testimonial of our respect and
+ gratitude, and we entreat you to honour us by accepting them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very respectfully yours,
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ &ldquo;SARA STANLEY.&rdquo;
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I tell you that last sentence has a fine sound,&rdquo; said Peter admiringly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t make that up,&rdquo; admitted the Story Girl honestly. &ldquo;I read it
+ somewhere and remembered it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think it&rsquo;s TOO fine,&rdquo; criticized Felicity. &ldquo;Peg Bowen won&rsquo;t know the
+ meaning of such big words.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it was decided to leave them in and we all signed the letter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then we got our &ldquo;testimonials,&rdquo; and started on our reluctant journey to
+ the domains of the witch. Sara Ray would not go, of course, but she
+ volunteered to stay with Pat while we were away. We did not think it
+ necessary to inform the grown-ups of our errand, or its nature. Grown-ups
+ had such peculiar views. They might forbid our going at all&mdash;and they
+ would certainly laugh at us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peg Bowen&rsquo;s house was nearly a mile away, even by the short cut past the
+ swamp and up the wooded hill. We went down through the brook field and
+ over the little plank bridge in the hollow, half lost in its surrounding
+ sea of farewell summers. When we reached the green gloom of the woods
+ beyond we began to feel frightened, but nobody would admit it. We walked
+ very closely together, and we did not talk. When you are near the retreat
+ of witches and folk of that ilk the less you say the better, for their
+ feelings are so notoriously touchy. Of course, Peg wasn&rsquo;t a witch, but it
+ was best to be on the safe side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally we came to the lane which led directly to her abode. We were all
+ very pale now, and our hearts were beating. The red September sun hung low
+ between the tall spruces to the west. It did not look to me just right for
+ a sun. In fact, everything looked uncanny. I wished our errand were well
+ over.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A sudden bend in the lane brought us out to the little clearing where
+ Peg&rsquo;s house was before we were half ready to see it. In spite of my fear I
+ looked at it with some curiosity. It was a small, shaky building with a
+ sagging roof, set amid a perfect jungle of weeds. To our eyes, the odd
+ thing about it was that there was no entrance on the ground floor, as
+ there should be in any respectable house. The only door was in the upper
+ story, and was reached by a flight of rickety steps. There was no sign of
+ life about the place except&mdash;sight of ill omen&mdash;a large black
+ cat, sitting on the topmost step. We thought of Uncle Roger&rsquo;s gruesome
+ hints. Could that black cat be Peg? Nonsense! But still&mdash;it didn&rsquo;t
+ look like an ordinary cat. It was so large&mdash;and had such green,
+ malicious eyes! Plainly, there was something out of the common about the
+ beastie!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a tense, breathless silence the Story Girl placed our parcels on the
+ lowest step, and laid her letter on the top of the pile. Her brown fingers
+ trembled and her face was very pale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly the door above us opened, and Peg Bowen herself appeared on the
+ threshold. She was a tall, sinewy old woman, wearing a short, ragged,
+ drugget skirt which reached scantly below her knees, a scarlet print
+ blouse, and a man&rsquo;s hat. Her feet, arms, and neck were bare, and she had a
+ battered old clay pipe in her mouth. Her brown face was seamed with a
+ hundred wrinkles, and her tangled, grizzled hair fell unkemptly over her
+ shoulders. She was scowling, and her flashing black eyes held no friendly
+ light.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We had borne up bravely enough hitherto, in spite of our inward,
+ unconfessed quakings. But now our strained nerves gave way, and sheer
+ panic seized us. Peter gave a little yelp of pure terror. We turned and
+ fled across the clearing and into the woods. Down the long hill we tore,
+ like mad, hunted creatures, firmly convinced that Peg Bowen was after us.
+ Wild was that scamper, as nightmare-like as any recorded in our dream
+ books. The Story Girl was in front of me, and I can recall the tremendous
+ leaps she made over fallen logs and little spruce bushes, with her long
+ brown curls streaming out behind her from their scarlet fillet. Cecily,
+ behind me, kept gasping out the contradictory sentences, &ldquo;Oh, Bev, wait
+ for me,&rdquo; and &ldquo;Oh, Bev, hurry, hurry!&rdquo; More by blind instinct than anything
+ else we kept together and found our way out of the woods. Presently we
+ were in the field beyond the brook. Over us was a dainty sky of shell
+ pink, placid cows were pasturing around us; the farewell summers nodded to
+ us in the friendly breezes. We halted, with a glad realization that we
+ were back in our own haunts and that Peg Bowen had not caught us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, wasn&rsquo;t that an awful experience?&rdquo; gasped Cecily, shuddering. &ldquo;I
+ wouldn&rsquo;t go through it again&mdash;I couldn&rsquo;t, not even for Pat.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It come on a fellow so suddent,&rdquo; said Peter shamefacedly. &ldquo;I think I
+ could a-stood my ground if I&rsquo;d known she was going to come out. But when
+ she popped out like that I thought I was done for.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We shouldn&rsquo;t have run,&rdquo; said Felicity gloomily. &ldquo;It showed we were afraid
+ of her, and that always makes her awful cross. She won&rsquo;t do a thing for
+ Pat now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t believe she could do anything, anyway,&rdquo; said the Story Girl. &ldquo;I
+ think we&rsquo;ve just been a lot of geese.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were all, except Peter, more or less inclined to agree with her. And
+ the conviction of our folly deepened when we reached the granary and found
+ that Pat, watched over by the faithful Sara Ray, was no better. The Story
+ Girl announced that she would take him into the kitchen and sit up all
+ night with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He sha&rsquo;n&rsquo;t die alone, anyway,&rdquo; she said miserably, gathering his limp
+ body up in her arms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We did not think Aunt Olivia would give her permission to stay up; but
+ Aunt Olivia did. Aunt Olivia really was a duck. We wanted to stay with her
+ also, but Aunt Janet wouldn&rsquo;t hear of such a thing. She ordered us off to
+ bed, saying that it was positively sinful in us to be so worked up over a
+ cat. Five heart-broken children, who knew that there are many worse
+ friends than dumb, furry folk, climbed Uncle Alec&rsquo;s stairs to bed that
+ night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There&rsquo;s nothing we can do now, except pray God to make Pat better,&rdquo; said
+ Cecily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I must candidly say that her tone savoured strongly of a last resort; but
+ this was owing more to early training than to any lack of faith on
+ Cecily&rsquo;s part. She knew and we knew, that prayer was a solemn rite, not to
+ be lightly held, nor degraded to common uses. Felicity voiced this
+ conviction when she said,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t believe it would be right to pray about a cat.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;d like to know why not,&rdquo; retorted Cecily, &ldquo;God made Paddy just as much
+ as He made you, Felicity King, though perhaps He didn&rsquo;t go to so much
+ trouble. And I&rsquo;m sure He&rsquo;s abler to help him than Peg Bowen. Anyhow, I&rsquo;m
+ going to pray for Pat with all my might and main, and I&rsquo;d like to see you
+ try to stop me. Of course I won&rsquo;t mix it up with more important things.
+ I&rsquo;ll just tack it on after I&rsquo;ve finished asking the blessings, but before
+ I say amen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ More petitions than Cecily&rsquo;s were offered up that night on behalf of
+ Paddy. I distinctly heard Felix&mdash;who always said his prayers in a
+ loud whisper, owing to some lasting conviction of early life that God
+ could not hear him if he did not pray audibly&mdash;mutter pleadingly,
+ after the &ldquo;important&rdquo; part of his devotions was over, &ldquo;Oh, God, please
+ make Pat better by the morning. PLEASE do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And I, even in these late years of irreverence for the dreams of youth, am
+ not in the least ashamed to confess that when I knelt down to say my
+ boyish prayer, I thought of our little furry comrade in his extremity, and
+ prayed as reverently as I knew how for his healing. Then I went to sleep,
+ comforted by the simple hope that the Great Father would, after &ldquo;important
+ things&rdquo; were all attended to, remember poor Pat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as we were up the next morning we rushed off to Uncle Roger&rsquo;s. But
+ we met Peter and the Story Girl in the lane, and their faces were as the
+ faces of those who bring glad tidings upon the mountains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pat&rsquo;s better,&rdquo; cried the Story Girl, blithe, triumphant. &ldquo;Last night,
+ just at twelve, he began to lick his paws. Then he licked himself all over
+ and went to sleep, too, on the sofa. When I woke Pat was washing his face,
+ and he has taken a whole saucerful of milk. Oh, isn&rsquo;t it splendid?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You see Peg Bowen did put a spell on him,&rdquo; said Peter, &ldquo;and then she took
+ it off.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I guess Cecily&rsquo;s prayer had more to do with Pat&rsquo;s getting better than Peg
+ Bowen,&rdquo; said Felicity. &ldquo;She prayed for Pat over and over again. That is
+ why he&rsquo;s better.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, all right,&rdquo; said Peter, &ldquo;but I&rsquo;d advise Pat not to scratch Peg Bowen
+ again, that&rsquo;s all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish I knew whether it was the praying or Peg Bowen that cured Pat,&rdquo;
+ said Felix in perplexity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t believe it was either of them,&rdquo; said Dan. &ldquo;Pat just got sick and
+ got better again of his own accord.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m going to believe that it was the praying,&rdquo; said Cecily decidedly.
+ &ldquo;It&rsquo;s so much nicer to believe that God cured Pat than that Peg Bowen
+ did.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you oughtn&rsquo;t to believe a thing just &lsquo;cause it would be more
+ comfortable,&rdquo; objected Peter. &ldquo;Mind you, I ain&rsquo;t saying God couldn&rsquo;t cure
+ Pat. But nothing and nobody can&rsquo;t ever make me believe that Peg Bowen
+ wasn&rsquo;t at the bottom of it all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus faith, superstition, and incredulity strove together amongst us, as
+ in all history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0025" id="link2HCH0025">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXV. A CUP OF FAILURE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ One warm Sunday evening in the moon of golden-rod, we all, grown-ups and
+ children, were sitting in the orchard by the Pulpit Stone singing sweet
+ old gospel hymns. We could all sing more or less, except poor Sara Ray,
+ who had once despairingly confided to me that she didn&rsquo;t know what she&rsquo;d
+ ever do when she went to heaven, because she couldn&rsquo;t sing a note.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That whole scene comes out clearly for me in memory&mdash;the arc of
+ primrose sky over the trees behind the old house, the fruit-laden boughs
+ of the orchard, the bank of golden-rod, like a wave of sunshine, behind
+ the Pulpit Stone, the nameless colour seen on a fir wood in a ruddy
+ sunset. I can see Uncle Alec&rsquo;s tired, brilliant, blue eyes, Aunt Janet&rsquo;s
+ wholesome, matronly face, Uncle Roger&rsquo;s sweeping blond beard and red
+ cheeks, and Aunt Olivia&rsquo;s full-blown beauty. Two voices ring out for me
+ above all others in the music that echoes through the halls of
+ recollection. Cecily&rsquo;s sweet and silvery, and Uncle Alec&rsquo;s fine tenor. &ldquo;If
+ you&rsquo;re a King, you sing,&rdquo; was a Carlisle proverb in those days. Aunt Julia
+ had been the flower of the flock in that respect and had become a noted
+ concert singer. The world had never heard of the rest. Their music echoed
+ only along the hidden ways of life, and served but to lighten the cares of
+ the trivial round and common task.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That evening, after they tired of singing, our grown-ups began talking of
+ their youthful days and doings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was always a keen delight to us small fry. We listened avidly to the
+ tales of our uncles and aunts in the days when they, too&mdash;hard fact
+ to realize&mdash;had been children. Good and proper as they were now,
+ once, so it seemed, they had gotten into mischief and even had their
+ quarrels and disagreements. On this particular evening Uncle Roger told
+ many stories of Uncle Edward, and one in which the said Edward had
+ preached sermons at the mature age of ten from the Pulpit Stone fired, as
+ the sequel will show, the Story Girl&rsquo;s imagination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Can&rsquo;t I just see him at it now,&rdquo; said Uncle Roger, &ldquo;leaning over that old
+ boulder, his cheeks red and his eyes burning with excitement, banging the
+ top of it as he had seen the ministers do in church. It wasn&rsquo;t cushioned,
+ however, and he always bruised his hands in his self-forgetful
+ earnestness. We thought him a regular wonder. We loved to hear him preach,
+ but we didn&rsquo;t like to hear him pray, because he always insisted on praying
+ for each of us by name, and it made us feel wretchedly uncomfortable,
+ somehow. Alec, do you remember how furious Julia was because Edward prayed
+ one day that she might be preserved from vanity and conceit over her
+ singing?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should think I do,&rdquo; laughed Uncle Alec. &ldquo;She was sitting right there
+ where Cecily is now, and she got up at once and marched right out of the
+ orchard, but at the gate she turned to call back indignantly, &lsquo;I guess
+ you&rsquo;d better wait till you&rsquo;ve prayed the conceit out of yourself before
+ you begin on me, Ned King. I never heard such stuck-up sermons as you
+ preach.&rsquo; Ned went on praying and never let on he heard her, but at the end
+ of his prayer he wound up with &lsquo;Oh, God, I pray you to keep an eye on us
+ all, but I pray you to pay particular attention to my sister Julia, for I
+ think she needs it even more than the rest of us, world without end,
+ Amen.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our uncles roared with laughter over the recollection. We all laughed,
+ indeed, especially over another tale in which Uncle Edward, leaning too
+ far over the &ldquo;pulpit&rdquo; in his earnestness, lost his balance altogether and
+ tumbled ingloriously into the grass below.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He lit on a big Scotch thistle,&rdquo; said Uncle Roger, chuckling, &ldquo;and
+ besides that, he skinned his forehead on a stone. But he was determined to
+ finish his sermon, and finish it he did. He climbed back into the pulpit,
+ with the tears rolling over his cheeks, and preached for ten minutes
+ longer, with sobs in his voice and drops of blood on his forehead. He was
+ a plucky little beggar. No wonder he succeeded in life.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And his sermons and prayers were always just about as outspoken as those
+ Julia objected to,&rdquo; said Uncle Alec. &ldquo;Well, we&rsquo;re all getting on in life
+ and Edward is gray; but when I think of him I always see him a little,
+ rosy, curly-headed chap, laying down the law to us from the Pulpit Stone.
+ It seems like the other day that we were all here together, just as these
+ children are, and now we are scattered everywhere. Julia in California,
+ Edward in Halifax, Alan in South America, Felix and Felicity and Stephen
+ gone to the land that is very far off.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a little space of silence; and then Uncle Alec began, in a low,
+ impressive voice, to repeat the wonderful verses of the ninetieth Psalm&mdash;verses
+ which were thenceforth bound up for us with the beauty of that night and
+ the memories of our kindred. Very reverently we all listened to the
+ majestic words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lord, thou hast been our dwelling place in all generations. Before the
+ mountains were brought forth, or ever thou hadst formed the earth and the
+ world, even from everlasting to everlasting thou art God.... For a
+ thousand years in thy sight are but as yesterday when it is past, and as a
+ watch in the night.... For all our days are passed away in thy wrath; we
+ spend our years as a tale that is told. The days of our years are
+ threescore and ten; and if by reason of strength they be fourscore years
+ yet is their strength, labour and sorrow; for it is soon cut off and we
+ fly away.... So teach us to number our days that we may apply our hearts
+ unto wisdom.... Oh, satisfy us early with thy mercy; that we may rejoice
+ and be glad all our days.... And let the beauty of the Lord our God be
+ upon us; and establish thou the work of our hands upon us; yea, the work
+ of our hands establish thou it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dusk crept into the orchard like a dim, bewitching personality. You
+ could see her&mdash;feel her&mdash;hear her. She tiptoed softly from tree
+ to tree, ever drawing nearer. Presently her filmy wings hovered over us
+ and through them gleamed the early stars of the autumn night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The grown-ups rose reluctantly and strolled away; but we children lingered
+ for a moment to talk over an idea the Story Girl broached&mdash;a good
+ idea, we thought enthusiastically, and one that promised to add
+ considerable spice to life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were on the lookout for some new amusement. Dream books had begun to
+ pall. We no longer wrote in them very regularly, and our dreams were not
+ what they used to be before the mischance of the cucumber. So the Story
+ Girl&rsquo;s suggestion came pat to the psychological moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve thought of a splendid plan,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;It just flashed into my mind
+ when the uncles were talking about Uncle Edward. And the beauty of it is
+ we can play it on Sundays, and you know there are so few things it is
+ proper to play on Sundays. But this is a Christian game, so it will be all
+ right.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It isn&rsquo;t like the religious fruit basket game, is it?&rdquo; asked Cecily
+ anxiously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We had good reason to hope that it wasn&rsquo;t. One desperate Sunday afternoon,
+ when we had nothing to read and the time seemed endless, Felix had
+ suggested that we have a game of fruit-basket; only instead of taking the
+ names of fruits, we were to take the names of Bible characters. This, he
+ argued, would make it quite lawful and proper to play on Sunday. We, too
+ desirous of being convinced, also thought so; and for a merry hour Lazarus
+ and Martha and Moses and Aaron and sundry other worthies of Holy Writ had
+ a lively time of it in the King orchard. Peter having a Scriptural name of
+ his own, did not want to take another; but we would not allow this,
+ because it would give him an unfair advantage over the rest of us. It
+ would be so much easier to call out your own name than fit your tongue to
+ an unfamiliar one. So Peter retaliated by choosing Nebuchadnezzar, which
+ no one could ever utter three times before Peter shrieked it out once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the midst of our hilarity, however, Uncle Alec and Aunt Janet came down
+ upon us. It is best to draw a veil over what followed. Suffice it to say
+ that the recollection gave point to Cecily&rsquo;s question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, it isn&rsquo;t that sort of game at all,&rdquo; said the Story Girl. &ldquo;It is this;
+ each of you boys must preach a sermon, as Uncle Edward used to do. One of
+ you next Sunday, and another the next, and so on. And whoever preaches the
+ best sermon is to get a prize.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan promptly declared he wouldn&rsquo;t try to preach a sermon; but Peter, Felix
+ and I thought the suggestion a very good one. Secretly, I believed I could
+ cut quite a fine figure preaching a sermon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who&rsquo;ll give the prize?&rdquo; asked Felix.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will,&rdquo; said the Story Girl. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll give that picture father sent me last
+ week.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the said picture was an excellent copy of one of Landseer&rsquo;s stags,
+ Felix and I were well pleased; but Peter averred that he would rather have
+ the Madonna that looked like his Aunt Jane, and the Story Girl agreed that
+ if his sermon was the best she would give him that.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But who&rsquo;s to be the judge?&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;and what kind of a sermon would you
+ call the best?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The one that makes the most impression,&rdquo; answered the Story Girl
+ promptly. &ldquo;And we girls must be the judges, because there&rsquo;s nobody else.
+ Now, who is to preach next Sunday?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was decided that I should lead off, and I lay awake for an extra hour
+ that night thinking what text I should take for the following Sunday. The
+ next day I bought two sheets of foolscap from the schoolmaster, and after
+ tea I betook myself to the granary, barred the door, and fell to writing
+ my sermon. I did not find it as easy a task as I had anticipated; but I
+ pegged grimly away at it, and by dint of severe labour for two evenings I
+ eventually got my four pages of foolscap filled, although I had to pad the
+ subject-matter not a little with verses of quotable hymns. I had decided
+ to preach on missions, as being a topic more within my grasp than abstruse
+ theological doctrines or evangelical discourses; and, mindful of the need
+ of making an impression, I drew a harrowing picture of the miserable
+ plight of the heathen who in their darkness bowed down to wood and stone.
+ Then I urged our responsibility concerning them, and meant to wind up by
+ reciting, in a very solemn and earnest voice, the verse beginning, &ldquo;Can we
+ whose souls are lighted.&rdquo; When I had completed my sermon I went over it
+ very carefully again and wrote with red ink&mdash;Cecily made it for me
+ out of an aniline dye&mdash;the word &ldquo;thump&rdquo; wherever I deemed it
+ advisable to chastise the pulpit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have that sermon still, all its red thumps unfaded, lying beside my
+ dream book; but I am not going to inflict it on my readers. I am not so
+ proud of it as I once was. I was really puffed up with earthly vanity over
+ it at that time. Felix, I thought, would be hard put to it to beat it. As
+ for Peter, I did not consider him a rival to be feared. It was
+ unsupposable that a hired boy, with little education and less experience
+ of church-going, should be able to preach better than could I, in whose
+ family there was a real minister.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sermon written, the next thing was to learn it off by heart and then
+ practise it, thumps included, until I was letter and gesture perfect. I
+ preached it over several times in the granary with only Paddy, sitting
+ immovably on a puncheon, for audience. Paddy stood the test fairly well.
+ At least, he made an adorable listener, save at such times as imaginary
+ rats distracted his attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Marwood had at least three absorbed listeners the next Sunday morning.
+ Felix, Peter and I were all among the chiels who were taking mental notes
+ on the art of preaching a sermon. Not a motion, or glance, or intonation
+ escaped us. To be sure, none of us could remember the text when we got
+ home; but we knew just how you should throw back your head and clutch the
+ edge of the pulpit with both hands when you announced it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the afternoon we all repaired to the orchard, Bibles and hymn books in
+ hand. We did not think it necessary to inform the grown-ups of what was in
+ the wind. You could never tell what kink a grown-up would take. They might
+ not think it proper to play any sort of a game on Sunday, not even a
+ Christian game. Least said was soonest mended where grown-ups were
+ concerned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I mounted the pulpit steps, feeling rather nervous, and my audience sat
+ gravely down on the grass before me. Our opening exercises consisted
+ solely of singing and reading. We had agreed to omit prayer. Neither
+ Felix, Peter nor I felt equal to praying in public. But we took up a
+ collection. The proceeds were to go to missions. Dan passed the plate&mdash;Felicity&rsquo;s
+ rosebud plate&mdash;looking as preternaturally solemn as Elder Frewen
+ himself. Every one put a cent on it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well, I preached my sermon. And it fell horribly flat. I realized that,
+ before I was half way through it. I think I preached it very well; and
+ never a thump did I forget or misplace. But my audience was plainly bored.
+ When I stepped down from the pulpit, after demanding passionately if we
+ whose souls were lighted and so forth, I felt with secret humiliation that
+ my sermon was a failure. It had made no impression at all. Felix would be
+ sure to get the prize.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That was a very good sermon for a first attempt,&rdquo; said the Story Girl
+ graciously. &ldquo;It sounded just like real sermons I have heard.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a moment the charm of her voice made me feel that I had not done so
+ badly after all; but the other girls, thinking it their duty to pay me
+ some sort of a compliment also, quickly dispelled that pleasing delusion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Every word of it was true,&rdquo; said Cecily, her tone unconsciously implying
+ that this was its sole merit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I often feel,&rdquo; said Felicity primly, &ldquo;that we don&rsquo;t think enough about
+ the heathens. We ought to think a great deal more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sara Ray put the finishing touch to my mortification.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was so nice and short,&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What was the matter with my sermon?&rdquo; I asked Dan that night. Since he was
+ neither judge nor competitor I could discuss the matter with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was too much like a reg&rsquo;lar sermon to be interesting,&rdquo; said Dan
+ frankly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should think the more like a regular sermon it was, the better,&rdquo; I
+ said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not if you want to make an impression,&rdquo; said Dan seriously. &ldquo;You must
+ have something sort of different for that. Peter, now, HE&rsquo;LL have
+ something different.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, Peter! I don&rsquo;t believe he can preach a sermon,&rdquo; I said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Maybe not, but you&rsquo;ll see he&rsquo;ll make an impression,&rdquo; said Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan was neither the prophet nor the son of a prophet, but he had the
+ second sight for once; Peter DID make an impression.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0026" id="link2HCH0026">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXVI. PETER MAKES AN IMPRESSION
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Peter&rsquo;s turn came next. He did not write his sermon out. That, he averred,
+ was too hard work. Nor did he mean to take a text.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, who ever heard of a sermon without a text?&rdquo; asked Felix blankly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am going to take a SUBJECT instead of a text,&rdquo; said Peter loftily. &ldquo;I
+ ain&rsquo;t going to tie myself down to a text. And I&rsquo;m going to have heads in
+ it&mdash;three heads. You hadn&rsquo;t a single head in yours,&rdquo; he added to me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Uncle Alec says that Uncle Edward says that heads are beginning to go out
+ of fashion,&rdquo; I said defiantly&mdash;all the more defiantly that I felt I
+ should have had heads in my sermon. It would doubtless have made a much
+ deeper impression. But the truth was I had forgotten all about such
+ things.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I&rsquo;m going to have them, and I don&rsquo;t care if they are
+ unfashionable,&rdquo; said Peter. &ldquo;They&rsquo;re good things. Aunt Jane used to say if
+ a man didn&rsquo;t have heads and stick to them he&rsquo;d go wandering all over the
+ Bible and never get anywhere in particular.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What are you going to preach on?&rdquo; asked Felix.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll find out next Sunday,&rdquo; said Peter significantly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next Sunday was in October, and a lovely day it was, warm and bland as
+ June. There was something in the fine, elusive air, that recalled
+ beautiful, forgotten things and suggested delicate future hopes. The woods
+ had wrapped fine-woven gossamers about them and the westering hill was
+ crimson and gold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We sat around the Pulpit Stone and waited for Peter and Sara Ray. It was
+ the former&rsquo;s Sunday off and he had gone home the night before, but he
+ assured us he would be back in time to preach his sermon. Presently he
+ arrived and mounted the granite boulder as if to the manor born. He was
+ dressed in his new suit and I, perceiving this, felt that he had the
+ advantage of me. When I preached I had to wear my second best suit, for it
+ was one of Aunt Janet&rsquo;s laws that we should take our good suits off when
+ we came home from church. There were, I saw, compensations for being a
+ hired boy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peter made quite a handsome little minister, in his navy blue coat, white
+ collar, and neatly bowed tie. His black eyes shone, and his black curls
+ were brushed up in quite a ministerial pompadour, but threatened to tumble
+ over at the top in graceless ringlets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was decided that there was no use in waiting for Sara Ray, who might or
+ might not come, according to the humour in which her mother was. Therefore
+ Peter proceeded with the service.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He read the chapter and gave out the hymn with as much SANG FROID as if he
+ had been doing it all his life. Mr. Marwood himself could not have
+ bettered the way in which Peter said,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We will sing the whole hymn, omitting the fourth stanza.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That was a fine touch which I had not thought of. I began to think that,
+ after all, Peter might be a foeman worthy of my steel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Peter was ready to begin he thrust his hands into his pockets&mdash;a
+ totally unorthodox thing. Then he plunged in without further ado, speaking
+ in his ordinary conversational tone&mdash;another unorthodox thing. There
+ was no shorthand reporter present to take that sermon down; but, if
+ necessary, I could preach it over verbatim, and so, I doubt not, could
+ everyone that heard it. It was not a forgettable kind of sermon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dearly beloved,&rdquo; said Peter, &ldquo;my sermon is about the bad place&mdash;in
+ short, about hell.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An electric shock seemed to run through the audience. Everybody looked
+ suddenly alert. Peter had, in one sentence, done what my whole sermon had
+ failed to do. He had made an impression.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shall divide my sermon into three heads,&rdquo; pursued Peter. &ldquo;The first
+ head is, what you must not do if you don&rsquo;t want to go to the bad place.
+ The second head is, what the bad place is like&rdquo;&mdash;sensation in the
+ audience&mdash;&ldquo;and the third head is, how to escape going there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, there&rsquo;s a great many things you must not do, and it&rsquo;s very important
+ to know what they are. You ought not to lose no time in finding out. In
+ the first place you mustn&rsquo;t ever forget to mind what grown-up people tell
+ you&mdash;that is, GOOD grown-up people.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But how are you going to tell who are the good grown-up people?&rdquo; asked
+ Felix suddenly, forgetting that he was in church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, that is easy,&rdquo; said Peter. &ldquo;You can always just FEEL who is good and
+ who isn&rsquo;t. And you mustn&rsquo;t tell lies and you mustn&rsquo;t murder any one. You
+ must be specially careful not to murder any one. You might be forgiven for
+ telling lies, if you was real sorry for them, but if you murdered any one
+ it would be pretty hard to get forgiven, so you&rsquo;d better be on the safe
+ side. And you mustn&rsquo;t commit suicide, because if you did that you wouldn&rsquo;t
+ have any chance of repenting it; and you mustn&rsquo;t forget to say your
+ prayers and you mustn&rsquo;t quarrel with your sister.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this point Felicity gave Dan a significant poke with her elbow, and Dan
+ was up in arms at once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you be preaching at me, Peter Craig,&rdquo; he cried out. &ldquo;I won&rsquo;t stand
+ it. I don&rsquo;t quarrel with my sister any oftener than she quarrels with me.
+ You can just leave me alone.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who&rsquo;s touching you?&rdquo; demanded Peter. &ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t mention no names. A
+ minister can say anything he likes in the pulpit, as long as he doesn&rsquo;t
+ mention any names, and nobody can answer back.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All right, but just you wait till to-morrow,&rdquo; growled Dan, subsiding
+ reluctantly into silence under the reproachful looks of the girls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You must not play any games on Sunday,&rdquo; went on Peter, &ldquo;that is, any
+ week-day games&mdash;or whisper in church, or laugh in church&mdash;I did
+ that once but I was awful sorry&mdash;and you mustn&rsquo;t take any notice of
+ Paddy&mdash;I mean of the family cat at family prayers, not even if he
+ climbs up on your back. And you mustn&rsquo;t call names or make faces.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Amen,&rdquo; cried Felix, who had suffered many things because Felicity so
+ often made faces at him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peter stopped and glared at him over the edge of the Pulpit Stone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You haven&rsquo;t any business to call out a thing like that right in the
+ middle of a sermon,&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They do it in the Methodist church at Markdale,&rdquo; protested Felix,
+ somewhat abashed. &ldquo;I heard them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know they do. That&rsquo;s the Methodist way and it is all right for them. I
+ haven&rsquo;t a word to say against Methodists. My Aunt Jane was one, and I
+ might have been one myself if I hadn&rsquo;t been so scared of the Judgment Day.
+ But you ain&rsquo;t a Methodist. You&rsquo;re a Presbyterian, ain&rsquo;t you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, of course. I was born that way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very well then, you&rsquo;ve got to do things the Presbyterian way. Don&rsquo;t let
+ me hear any more of your amens or I&rsquo;ll amen you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, don&rsquo;t anybody interrupt again,&rdquo; implored the Story Girl. &ldquo;It isn&rsquo;t
+ fair. How can any one preach a good sermon if he is always being
+ interrupted? Nobody interrupted Beverley.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bev didn&rsquo;t get up there and pitch into us like that,&rdquo; muttered Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You mustn&rsquo;t fight,&rdquo; resumed Peter undauntedly. &ldquo;That is, you mustn&rsquo;t
+ fight for the fun of fighting, nor out of bad temper. You must not say bad
+ words or swear. You mustn&rsquo;t get drunk&mdash;although of course you
+ wouldn&rsquo;t be likely to do that before you grow up, and the girls never.
+ There&rsquo;s prob&rsquo;ly a good many other things you mustn&rsquo;t do, but these I&rsquo;ve
+ named are the most important. Of course, I&rsquo;m not saying you&rsquo;ll go to the
+ bad place for sure if you do them. I only say you&rsquo;re running a risk. The
+ devil is looking out for the people who do these things and he&rsquo;ll be more
+ likely to get after them than to waste time over the people who don&rsquo;t do
+ them. And that&rsquo;s all about the first head of my sermon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this point Sara Ray arrived, somewhat out of breath. Peter looked at
+ her reproachfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You&rsquo;ve missed my whole first head, Sara,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;that isn&rsquo;t fair, when
+ you&rsquo;re to be one of the judges. I think I ought to preach it over again
+ for you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That was really done once. I know a story about it,&rdquo; said the Story Girl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who&rsquo;s interrupting now?&rdquo; aid Dan slyly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind, tell us the story,&rdquo; said the preacher himself, eagerly
+ leaning over the pulpit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was Mr. Scott who did it,&rdquo; said the Story Girl. &ldquo;He was preaching
+ somewhere in Nova Scotia, and when he was more than half way through his
+ sermon&mdash;and you know sermons were VERY long in those days&mdash;a man
+ walked in. Mr. Scott stopped until he had taken his seat. Then he said,
+ &lsquo;My friend, you are very late for this service. I hope you won&rsquo;t be late
+ for heaven. The congregation will excuse me if I recapitulate the sermon
+ for our friend&rsquo;s benefit.&rsquo; And then he just preached the sermon over again
+ from the beginning. It is said that that particular man was never known to
+ be late for church again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It served him right,&rdquo; said Dan, &ldquo;but it was pretty hard lines on the rest
+ of the congregation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, let&rsquo;s be quiet so Peter can go on with his sermon,&rdquo; said Cecily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peter squared his shoulders and took hold of the edge of the pulpit. Never
+ a thump had he thumped, but I realized that his way of leaning forward and
+ fixing this one or that one of his hearers with his eye was much more
+ effective.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve come now to the second head of my sermon&mdash;what the bad place is
+ like.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He proceeded to describe the bad place. Later on we discovered that he had
+ found his material in an illustrated translation of Dante&rsquo;s <i>Inferno</i>
+ which had once been given to his Aunt Jane as a school prize. But at the
+ time we supposed he must be drawing from Biblical sources. Peter had been
+ reading the Bible steadily ever since what we always referred to as &ldquo;the
+ Judgment Sunday,&rdquo; and he was by now almost through it. None of the rest of
+ us had ever read the Bible completely through, and we thought Peter must
+ have found his description of the world of the lost in some portion with
+ which we were not acquainted. Therefore, his utterances carried all the
+ weight of inspiration, and we sat appalled before his lurid phrases. He
+ used his own words to clothe the ideas he had found, and the result was a
+ force and simplicity that struck home to our imaginations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly Sara Ray sprang to her feet with a scream&mdash;a scream that
+ changed into strange laughter. We all, preacher included, looked at her
+ aghast. Cecily and Felicity sprang up and caught hold of her. Sara Ray was
+ really in a bad fit of hysterics, but we knew nothing of such a thing in
+ our experience, and we thought she had gone mad. She shrieked, cried,
+ laughed, and flung herself about.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She&rsquo;s gone clean crazy,&rdquo; said Peter, coming down out of his pulpit with a
+ very pale face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You&rsquo;ve frightened her crazy with your dreadful sermon,&rdquo; said Felicity
+ indignantly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She and Cecily each took Sara by an arm and, half leading, half carrying,
+ got her out of the orchard and up to the house. The rest of us looked at
+ each other in terrified questioning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You&rsquo;ve made rather too much of an impression, Peter,&rdquo; said the Story Girl
+ miserably.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She needn&rsquo;t have got so scared. If she&rsquo;d only waited for the third head
+ I&rsquo;d have showed her how easy it was to get clear of going to the bad place
+ and go to heaven instead. But you girls are always in such a hurry,&rdquo; said
+ Peter bitterly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you s&rsquo;pose they&rsquo;ll have to take her to the asylum?&rdquo; said Dan in a
+ whisper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hush, here&rsquo;s your father,&rdquo; said Felix.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Uncle Alec came striding down the orchard. We had never before seen Uncle
+ Alec angry. But there was no doubt that he was very angry. His blue eyes
+ fairly blazed at us as he said,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What have you been doing to frighten Sara Ray into such a condition?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We&mdash;we were just having a sermon contest,&rdquo; explained the Story Girl
+ tremulously. &ldquo;And Peter preached about the bad place, and it frightened
+ Sara. That is all, Uncle Alec.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All! I don&rsquo;t know what the result will be to that nervous delicate child.
+ She is shrieking in there and nothing will quiet her. What do you mean by
+ playing such a game on Sunday, and making a jest of sacred things? No, not
+ a word&mdash;&rdquo; for the Story Girl had attempted to speak. &ldquo;You and Peter
+ march off home. And the next time I find you up to such doings on Sunday
+ or any other day I&rsquo;ll give you cause to remember it to your latest hour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl and Peter went humbly home and we went with them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I CAN&rsquo;T understand grown-up people,&rdquo; said Felix despairingly. &ldquo;When Uncle
+ Edward preached sermons it was all right, but when we do it it is &lsquo;making
+ a jest of sacred things.&rsquo; And I heard Uncle Alec tell a story once about
+ being nearly frightened to death when he was a little boy, by a minister
+ preaching on the end of the world; and he said, &lsquo;That was something like a
+ sermon. You don&rsquo;t hear such sermons nowadays.&rsquo; But when Peter preaches
+ just such a sermon, it&rsquo;s a very different story.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It&rsquo;s no wonder we can&rsquo;t understand the grown-ups,&rdquo; said the Story Girl
+ indignantly, &ldquo;because we&rsquo;ve never been grown-up ourselves. But THEY have
+ been children, and I don&rsquo;t see why they can&rsquo;t understand us. Of course,
+ perhaps we shouldn&rsquo;t have had the contest on Sundays. But all the same I
+ think it&rsquo;s mean of Uncle Alec to be so cross. Oh, I do hope poor Sara
+ won&rsquo;t have to be taken to the asylum.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Poor Sara did not have to be. She was eventually quieted down, and was as
+ well as usual the next day; and she humbly begged Peter&rsquo;s pardon for
+ spoiling his sermon. Peter granted it rather grumpily, and I fear that he
+ never really quite forgave Sara for her untimely outburst. Felix, too,
+ felt resentment against her, because he had lost the chance of preaching
+ his sermon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course I know I wouldn&rsquo;t have got the prize, for I couldn&rsquo;t have made
+ such an impression as Peter,&rdquo; he said to us mournfully, &ldquo;but I&rsquo;d like to
+ have had a chance to show what I could do. That&rsquo;s what comes of having
+ those cry-baby girls mixed up in things. Cecily was just as scared as Sara
+ Ray, but she&rsquo;d more sense than to show it like that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, Sara couldn&rsquo;t help it,&rdquo; said the Story Girl charitably, &ldquo;but it
+ does seem as if we&rsquo;d had dreadful luck in everything we&rsquo;ve tried lately. I
+ thought of a new game this morning, but I&rsquo;m almost afraid to mention it,
+ for I suppose something dreadful will come of it, too.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, tell us, what is it?&rdquo; everybody entreated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, it&rsquo;s a trial by ordeal, and we&rsquo;re to see which of us can pass it.
+ The ordeal is to eat one of the bitter apples in big mouthfuls without
+ making a single face.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan made a face to begin with.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t believe any of us can do that,&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;YOU can&rsquo;t, if you take bites big enough to fill your mouth,&rdquo; giggled
+ Felicity, with cruelty and without provocation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, maybe you could,&rdquo; retorted Dan sarcastically. &ldquo;You&rsquo;d be so afraid
+ of spoiling your looks that you&rsquo;d rather die than make a face, I s&rsquo;pose,
+ no matter what you et.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Felicity makes enough faces when there&rsquo;s nothing to make faces at,&rdquo; said
+ Felix, who had been grimaced at over the breakfast table that morning and
+ hadn&rsquo;t liked it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think the bitter apples would be real good for Felix,&rdquo; said Felicity.
+ &ldquo;They say sour things make people thin.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let&rsquo;s go and get the bitter apples,&rdquo; said Cecily hastily, seeing that
+ Felix, Felicity and Dan were on the verge of a quarrel more bitter than
+ the apples.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We went to the seedling tree and got an apple apiece. The game was that
+ every one must take a bite in turn, chew it up, and swallow it, without
+ making a face. Peter again distinguished himself. He, and he alone, passed
+ the ordeal, munching those dreadful mouthfuls without so much as a change
+ of expression on his countenance, while the facial contortions the rest of
+ us went through baffled description. In every subsequent trial it was the
+ same. Peter never made a face, and no one else could help making them. It
+ sent him up fifty per cent in Felicity&rsquo;s estimation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Peter is a real smart boy,&rdquo; she said to me. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s such a pity he is a
+ hired boy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, if we could not pass the ordeal, we got any amount of fun out of it,
+ at least. Evening after evening the orchard re-echoed to our peals of
+ laughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bless the children,&rdquo; said Uncle Alec, as he carried the milk pails across
+ the yard. &ldquo;Nothing can quench their spirits for long.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0027" id="link2HCH0027">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXVII. THE ORDEAL OF BITTER APPLES
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ I could never understand why Felix took Peter&rsquo;s success in the Ordeal of
+ Bitter Apples so much to heart. He had not felt very keenly over the
+ matter of the sermons, and certainly the mere fact that Peter could eat
+ sour apples without making faces did not cast any reflection on the honour
+ or ability of the other competitors. But to Felix everything suddenly
+ became flat, stale, and unprofitable, because Peter continued to hold the
+ championship of bitter apples. It haunted his waking hours and obsessed
+ his nights. I heard him talking in his sleep about it. If anything could
+ have made him thin the way he worried over this matter would have done it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For myself, I cared not a groat. I had wished to be successful in the
+ sermon contest, and felt sore whenever I thought of my failure. But I had
+ no burning desire to eat sour apples without grimacing, and I did not
+ sympathize over and above with my brother. When, however, he took to
+ praying about it, I realized how deeply he felt on the subject, and hoped
+ he would be successful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Felix prayed earnestly that he might be enabled to eat a bitter apple
+ without making a face. And when he had prayed three nights after this
+ manner, he contrived to eat a bitter apple without a grimace until he came
+ to the last bite, which proved too much for him. But Felix was vastly
+ encouraged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Another prayer or two, and I&rsquo;ll be able to eat a whole one,&rdquo; he said
+ jubilantly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But this devoutly desired consummation did not come to pass. In spite of
+ prayers and heroic attempts, Felix could never get beyond that last bite.
+ Not even faith and works in combination could avail. For a time he could
+ not understand this. But he thought the mystery was solved when Cecily
+ came to him one day and told him that Peter was praying against him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He&rsquo;s praying that you&rsquo;ll never be able to eat a bitter apple without
+ making a face,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;He told Felicity and Felicity told me. She said
+ she thought it was real cute of him. I think that is a dreadful way to
+ talk about praying and I told her so. She wanted me to promise not to tell
+ you, but I wouldn&rsquo;t promise, because I think it&rsquo;s fair for you to know
+ what is going on.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Felix was very indignant&mdash;and aggrieved as well.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see why God should answer Peter&rsquo;s prayers instead of mine,&rdquo; he
+ said bitterly. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve gone to church and Sunday School all my life, and
+ Peter never went till this summer. It isn&rsquo;t fair.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, Felix, don&rsquo;t talk like that,&rdquo; said Cecily, shocked. &ldquo;God MUST be
+ fair. I&rsquo;ll tell you what I believe is the reason. Peter prays three times
+ a day regular&mdash;in the morning and at dinner time and at night&mdash;and
+ besides that, any time through the day when he happens to think of it, he
+ just prays, standing up. Did you ever hear of such goings-on?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, he&rsquo;s got to stop praying against me, anyhow,&rdquo; said Felix
+ resolutely. &ldquo;I won&rsquo;t put up with it, and I&rsquo;ll go and tell him so right
+ off.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Felix marched over to Uncle Roger&rsquo;s, and we trailed after, scenting a
+ scene. We found Peter shelling beans in the granary, and whistling
+ cheerily, as with a conscience void of offence towards all men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look here, Peter,&rdquo; said Felix ominously, &ldquo;they tell me that you&rsquo;ve been
+ praying right along that I couldn&rsquo;t eat a bitter apple. Now, I tell you&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I never did!&rdquo; exclaimed Peter indignantly. &ldquo;I never mentioned your name.
+ I never prayed that you couldn&rsquo;t eat a bitter apple. I just prayed that
+ I&rsquo;d be the only one that could.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, that&rsquo;s the same thing,&rdquo; cried Felix. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ve just been praying for
+ the opposite to me out of spite. And you&rsquo;ve got to stop it, Peter Craig.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I just guess I won&rsquo;t,&rdquo; said Peter angrily. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve just as good a
+ right to pray for what I want as you, Felix King, even if you was brought
+ up in Toronto. I s&rsquo;pose you think a hired boy hasn&rsquo;t any business to pray
+ for particular things, but I&rsquo;ll show you. I&rsquo;ll just pray for what I
+ please, and I&rsquo;d like to see you try and stop me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll have to fight me, if you keep on praying against me,&rdquo; said Felix.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girls gasped; but Dan and I were jubilant, snuffing battle afar off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All right. I can fight as well as pray.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, don&rsquo;t fight,&rdquo; implored Cecily. &ldquo;I think it would be dreadful. Surely
+ you can arrange it some other way. Let&rsquo;s all give up the Ordeal, anyway.
+ There isn&rsquo;t much fun in it. And then neither of you need pray about it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t want to give up the Ordeal,&rdquo; said Felix, &ldquo;and I won&rsquo;t.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, well, surely you can settle it some way without fighting,&rdquo; persisted
+ Cecily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m not wanting to fight,&rdquo; said Peter. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s Felix. If he don&rsquo;t interfere
+ with my prayers there&rsquo;s no need of fighting. But if he does there&rsquo;s no
+ other way to settle it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But how will that settle it?&rdquo; asked Cecily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, whoever&rsquo;s licked will have to give in about the praying,&rdquo; said Peter.
+ &ldquo;That&rsquo;s fair enough. If I&rsquo;m licked I won&rsquo;t pray for that particular thing
+ any more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It&rsquo;s dreadful to fight about anything so religious as praying,&rdquo; sighed
+ poor Cecily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, they were always fighting about religion in old times,&rdquo; said Felix.
+ &ldquo;The more religious anything was the more fighting there was about it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A fellow&rsquo;s got a right to pray as he pleases,&rdquo; said Peter, &ldquo;and if
+ anybody tries to stop him he&rsquo;s bound to fight. That&rsquo;s my way of looking at
+ it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What would Miss Marwood say if she knew you were going to fight?&rdquo; asked
+ Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Marwood was Felix&rsquo; Sunday School teacher and he was very fond of her.
+ But by this time Felix was quite reckless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t care what she would say,&rdquo; he retorted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Felicity tried another tack.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll be sure to get whipped if you fight with Peter,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;You&rsquo;re
+ too fat to fight.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After that, no moral force on earth could have prevented Felix from
+ fighting. He would have faced an army with banners.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You might settle it by drawing lots,&rdquo; said Cecily desperately.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Drawing lots is wickeder that fighting,&rdquo; said Dan. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s a kind of
+ gambling.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What would Aunt Jane say if she knew you were going to fight?&rdquo; Cecily
+ demanded of Peter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you drag my Aunt Jane into this affair,&rdquo; said Peter darkly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You said you were going to be a Presbyterian,&rdquo; persisted Cecily. &ldquo;Good
+ Presbyterians don&rsquo;t fight.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, don&rsquo;t they! I heard your Uncle Roger say that Presbyterians were the
+ best for fighting in the world&mdash;or the worst, I forget which he said,
+ but it means the same thing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cecily had but one more shot in her locker.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I thought you said in your sermon, Master Peter, that people shouldn&rsquo;t
+ fight.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I said they oughtn&rsquo;t to fight for fun, or for bad temper,&rdquo; retorted
+ Peter. &ldquo;This is different. I know what I&rsquo;m fighting for but I can&rsquo;t think
+ of the word.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I guess you mean principle,&rdquo; I suggested.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, that&rsquo;s it,&rdquo; agreed Peter. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s all right to fight for principle.
+ It&rsquo;s kind of praying with your fists.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, can&rsquo;t you do something to prevent them from fighting, Sara?&rdquo; pleaded
+ Cecily, turning to the Story Girl, who was sitting on a bin, swinging her
+ shapely bare feet to and fro.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It doesn&rsquo;t do to meddle in an affair of this kind between boys,&rdquo; said the
+ Story Girl sagely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I may be mistaken, but I do not believe the Story Girl wanted that fight
+ stopped. And I am far from being sure that Felicity did either.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was ultimately arranged that the combat should take place in the fir
+ wood behind Uncle Roger&rsquo;s granary. It was a nice, remote, bosky place
+ where no prowling grown-up would be likely to intrude. And thither we all
+ resorted at sunset.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I hope Felix will beat,&rdquo; said the Story Girl to me, &ldquo;not only for the
+ family honour, but because that was a mean, mean prayer of Peter&rsquo;s. Do you
+ think he will?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; I confessed dubiously. &ldquo;Felix is too fat. He&rsquo;ll get out of
+ breath in no time. And Peter is such a cool customer, and he&rsquo;s a year
+ older than Felix. But then Felix has had some practice. He has fought boys
+ in Toronto. And this is Peter&rsquo;s first fight.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did you ever fight?&rdquo; asked the Story Girl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Once,&rdquo; I said briefly, dreading the next question, which promptly came.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who beat?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is sometimes a bitter thing to tell the truth, especially to a young
+ lady for whom you have a great admiration. I had a struggle with
+ temptation in which I frankly confess I might have been worsted had it not
+ been for a saving and timely remembrance of a certain resolution made on
+ the day preceding Judgment Sunday.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The other fellow,&rdquo; I said with reluctant honesty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said the Story Girl, &ldquo;I think it doesn&rsquo;t matter whether you get
+ whipped or not so long as you fight a good, square fight.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her potent voice made me feel that I was quite a hero after all, and the
+ sting went out of my recollection of that old fight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When we arrived behind the granary the others were all there. Cecily was
+ very pale, and Felix and Peter were taking off their coats. There was a
+ pure yellow sunset that evening, and the aisles of the fir wood were
+ flooded with its radiance. A cool, autumnal wind was whistling among the
+ dark boughs and scattering blood red leaves from the maple at the end of
+ the granary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now,&rdquo; said Dan, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll count, and when I say three you pitch in, and
+ hammer each other until one of you has had enough. Cecily, keep quiet.
+ Now, one&mdash;two&mdash;three!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peter and Felix &ldquo;pitched in,&rdquo; with more zeal than discretion on both
+ sides. As a result, Peter got what later developed into a black eye, and
+ Felix&rsquo;s nose began to bleed. Cecily gave a shriek and ran out of the wood.
+ We thought she had fled because she could not endure the sight of blood,
+ and we were not sorry, for her manifest disapproval and anxiety were
+ damping the excitement of the occasion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Felix and Peter drew apart after that first onset, and circled about one
+ another warily. Then, just as they had come to grips again, Uncle Alec
+ walked around the corner of the granary, with Cecily behind him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was not angry. There was a quizzical look in his eyes. But he took the
+ combatants by their shirt collars and dragged them apart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This stops right here, boys,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;You know I don&rsquo;t allow fighting.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, but Uncle Alec, it was this way,&rdquo; began Felix eagerly. &ldquo;Peter&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, I don&rsquo;t want to hear about it,&rdquo; said Uncle Alec sternly. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t
+ care what you were fighting about, but you must settle your quarrels in a
+ different fashion. Remember my commands, Felix. Peter, Roger is looking
+ for you to wash his buggy. Be off.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peter went off rather sullenly, and Felix, also sullenly, sat down and
+ began to nurse his nose. He turned his back on Cecily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cecily &ldquo;caught it&rdquo; after Uncle Alec had gone. Dan called her a tell-tale
+ and a baby, and sneered at her until Cecily began to cry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I couldn&rsquo;t stand by and watch Felix and Peter pound each other all to
+ pieces,&rdquo; she sobbed. &ldquo;They&rsquo;ve been such friends, and it was dreadful to
+ see them fighting.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Uncle Roger would have let them fight it out,&rdquo; said the Story Girl
+ discontentedly. &ldquo;Uncle Roger believes in boys fighting. He says it&rsquo;s as
+ harmless a way as any of working off their original sin. Peter and Felix
+ wouldn&rsquo;t have been any worse friends after it. They&rsquo;d have been better
+ friends because the praying question would have been settled. And now it
+ can&rsquo;t be&mdash;unless Felicity can coax Peter to give up praying against
+ Felix.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For once in her life the Story Girl was not as tactful as her wont. Or&mdash;is
+ it possible that she said it out of malice prepense? At all events,
+ Felicity resented the imputation that she had more influence with Peter
+ than any one else.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t meddle with hired boys&rsquo; prayers,&rdquo; she said haughtily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was all nonsense fighting about such prayers, anyhow,&rdquo; said Dan, who
+ probably thought that since all chance of a fight was over, he might as
+ well avow his real sentiments as to its folly. &ldquo;Just as much nonsense as
+ praying about the bitter apples in the first place.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, Dan, don&rsquo;t you believe there is some good in praying?&rdquo; said Cecily
+ reproachfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, I believe there&rsquo;s some good in some kinds of praying, but not in
+ that kind,&rdquo; said Dan sturdily. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t believe God cares whether anybody
+ can eat an apple without making a face or not.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t believe it&rsquo;s right to talk of God as if you were well acquainted
+ with Him,&rdquo; said Felicity, who felt that it was a good chance to snub Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There&rsquo;s something wrong somewhere,&rdquo; said Cecily perplexedly. &ldquo;We ought to
+ pray for what we want, of that I&rsquo;m sure&mdash;and Peter wanted to be the
+ only one who could pass the Ordeal. It seems as if he must be right&mdash;and
+ yet it doesn&rsquo;t seem so. I wish I could understand it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Peter&rsquo;s prayer was wrong because it was a selfish prayer, I guess,&rdquo; said
+ the Story Girl thoughtfully. &ldquo;Felix&rsquo;s prayer was all right, because it
+ wouldn&rsquo;t have hurt any one else; but it was selfish of Peter to want to be
+ the only one. We mustn&rsquo;t pray selfish prayers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I see through it now,&rdquo; said Cecily joyfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, but,&rdquo; said Dan triumphantly, &ldquo;if you believe God answers prayers
+ about particular things, it was Peter&rsquo;s prayer He answered. What do you
+ make of that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; the Story Girl shook her head impatiently. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s no use trying to
+ make such things out. We only get more mixed up all the time. Let&rsquo;s leave
+ it alone and I&rsquo;ll tell you a story. Aunt Olivia had a letter today from a
+ friend in Nova Scotia, who lives in Shubenacadie. When I said I thought it
+ a funny name, she told me to go and look in her scrap book, and I would
+ find a story about the origin of the name. And I did. Don&rsquo;t you want to
+ hear it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course we did. We all sat down at the roots of the firs. Felix, having
+ finally squared matters with his nose, turned around and listened also. He
+ would not look at Cecily, but every one else had forgiven her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl leaned that brown head of hers against the fir trunk behind
+ her, and looked up at the apple-green sky through the dark boughs above
+ us. She wore, I remember, a dress of warm crimson, and she had wound
+ around her head a string of waxberries, that looked like a fillet of
+ pearls. Her cheeks were still flushed with the excitement of the evening.
+ In the dim light she was beautiful, with a wild, mystic loveliness, a
+ compelling charm that would not be denied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Many, many moons ago, an Indian tribe lived on the banks of a river in
+ Nova Scotia. One of the young braves was named Accadee. He was the tallest
+ and bravest and handsomest young man in the tribe&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why is it they&rsquo;re always so handsome in stories?&rdquo; asked Dan. &ldquo;Why are
+ there never no stories about ugly people?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Perhaps ugly people never have stories happen to them,&rdquo; suggested
+ Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think they&rsquo;re just as interesting as the handsome people,&rdquo; retorted
+ Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, maybe they are in real life,&rdquo; said Cecily, &ldquo;but in stories it&rsquo;s
+ just as easy to make them handsome as not. I like them best that way. I
+ just love to read a story where the heroine is beautiful as a dream.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pretty people are always conceited,&rdquo; said Felix, who was getting tired of
+ holding his tongue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The heroes in stories are always nice,&rdquo; said Felicity, with apparent
+ irrelevance. &ldquo;They&rsquo;re always so tall and slender. Wouldn&rsquo;t it be awful
+ funny if any one wrote a story about a fat hero&mdash;or about one with
+ too big a mouth?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It doesn&rsquo;t matter what a man LOOKS like,&rdquo; I said, feeling that Felix and
+ Dan were catching it rather too hotly. &ldquo;He must be a good sort of chap and
+ DO heaps of things. That&rsquo;s all that&rsquo;s necessary.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do any of you happen to want to hear the rest of my story?&rdquo; asked the
+ Story Girl in an ominously polite voice that recalled us to a sense of our
+ bad manners. We apologized and promised to behave better; she went on,
+ appeased:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Accadee was all these things that I have mentioned, and he was the best
+ hunter in the tribe besides. Never an arrow of his that did not go
+ straight to the mark. Many and many a snow white moose he shot, and gave
+ the beautiful skin to his sweetheart. Her name was Shuben and she was as
+ lovely as the moon when it rises from the sea, and as pleasant as a summer
+ twilight. Her eyes were dark and soft, her foot was as light as a breeze,
+ and her voice sounded like a brook in the woods, or the wind that comes
+ over the hills at night. She and Accadee were very much in love with each
+ other, and often they hunted together, for Shuben was almost as skilful
+ with her bow and arrow as Accadee himself. They had loved each other ever
+ since they were small pappooses, and they had vowed to love each other as
+ long as the river ran.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;One twilight, when Accadee was out hunting in the woods, he shot a snow
+ white moose; and he took off its skin and wrapped it around him. Then he
+ went on through the woods in the starlight; and he felt so happy and light
+ of heart that he sometimes frisked and capered about just as a real moose
+ would do. And he was doing this when Shuben, who was also out hunting, saw
+ him from afar and thought he was a real moose. She stole cautiously
+ through the woods until she came to the brink of a little valley. Below
+ her stood the snow white moose. She drew her arrow to her eye&mdash;alas,
+ she knew the art only too well!&mdash;and took careful aim. The next
+ moment Accadee fell dead with her arrow in his heart.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl paused&mdash;a dramatic pause. It was quite dark in the fir
+ wood. We could see her face and eyes but dimly through the gloom. A
+ silvery moon was looking down on us over the granary. The stars twinkled
+ through the softly waving boughs. Beyond the wood we caught a glimpse of a
+ moonlit world lying in the sharp frost of the October evening. The sky
+ above it was chill and ethereal and mystical.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But all about us were shadows; and the weird little tale, told in a voice
+ fraught with mystery and pathos, had peopled them for us with furtive folk
+ in belt and wampum, and dark-tressed Indian maidens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What did Shuben do when she found out she had killed Accadee?&rdquo; asked
+ Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She died of a broken heart before the spring, and she and Accadee were
+ buried side by side on the bank of the river which has ever since borne
+ their names&mdash;the river Shubenacadie,&rdquo; said the Story Girl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sharp wind blew around the granary and Cecily shivered. We heard Aunt
+ Janet&rsquo;s voice calling &ldquo;Children, children.&rdquo; Shaking off the spell of firs
+ and moonlight and romantic tale, we scrambled to our feet and went
+ homeward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I kind of wish I&rsquo;d been born an Injun,&rdquo; said Dan. &ldquo;It must have been a
+ jolly life&mdash;nothing to do but hunt and fight.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It wouldn&rsquo;t be so nice if they caught you and tortured you at the stake,&rdquo;
+ said Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Dan reluctantly. &ldquo;I suppose there&rsquo;d be some drawback to
+ everything, even being an Injun.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t it cold?&rdquo; said Cecily, shivering again. &ldquo;It will soon be winter. I
+ wish summer could last forever. Felicity likes the winter, and so does the
+ Story Girl, but I don&rsquo;t. It always seems so long till spring.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind, we&rsquo;ve had a splendid summer,&rdquo; I said, slipping my arm about
+ her to comfort some childish sorrow that breathed in her plaintive voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Truly, we had had a delectable summer; and, having had it, it was ours
+ forever. &ldquo;The gods themselves cannot recall their gifts.&rdquo; They may rob us
+ of our future and embitter our present, but our past they may not touch.
+ With all its laughter and delight and glamour it is our eternal
+ possession.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless, we all felt a little of the sadness of the waning year.
+ There was a distinct weight on our spirits until Felicity took us into the
+ pantry and stayed us with apple tarts and comforted us with cream. Then we
+ brightened up. It was really a very decent world after all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0028" id="link2HCH0028">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXVIII. THE TALE OF THE RAINBOW BRIDGE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Felix, so far as my remembrance goes, never attained to success in the
+ Ordeal of Bitter Apples. He gave up trying after awhile; and he also gave
+ up praying about it, saying in bitterness of spirit that there was no use
+ in praying when other fellows prayed against you out of spite. He and
+ Peter remained on bad terms for some time, however.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were all of us too tired those nights to do any special praying.
+ Sometimes I fear our &ldquo;regular&rdquo; prayers were slurred over, or mumbled in
+ anything but reverent haste. October was a busy month on the hill farms.
+ The apples had to be picked, and this work fell mainly to us children. We
+ stayed home from school to do it. It was pleasant work and there was a
+ great deal of fun in it; but it was hard, too, and our arms and backs
+ ached roundly at night. In the mornings it was very delightful; in the
+ afternoons tolerable; but in the evenings we lagged, and the laughter and
+ zest of fresher hours were lacking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some of the apples had to be picked very carefully. But with others it did
+ not matter; we boys would climb the trees and shake the apples down until
+ the girls shrieked for mercy. The days were crisp and mellow, with warm
+ sunshine and a tang of frost in the air, mingled with the woodsy odours of
+ the withering grasses. The hens and turkeys prowled about, pecking at
+ windfalls, and Pat made mad rushes at them amid the fallen leaves. The
+ world beyond the orchard was in a royal magnificence of colouring, under
+ the vivid blue autumn sky. The big willow by the gate was a splendid
+ golden dome, and the maples that were scattered through the spruce grove
+ waved blood-red banners over the sombre cone-bearers. The Story Girl
+ generally had her head garlanded with their leaves. They became her
+ vastly. Neither Felicity nor Cecily could have worn them. Those two girls
+ were of a domestic type that assorted ill with the wildfire in Nature&rsquo;s
+ veins. But when the Story Girl wreathed her nut brown tresses with crimson
+ leaves it seemed, as Peter said, that they grew on her&mdash;as if the
+ gold and flame of her spirit had broken out in a coronal, as much a part
+ of her as the pale halo seems a part of the Madonna it encircles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What tales she told us on those far-away autumn days, peopling the russet
+ arcades with folk of an elder world. Many a princess rode by us on her
+ palfrey, many a swaggering gallant ruffled it bravely in velvet and plume
+ adown Uncle Stephen&rsquo;s Walk, many a stately lady, silken clad, walked in
+ that opulent orchard!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When we had filled our baskets they had to be carried to the granary loft,
+ and the contents stored in bins or spread on the floor to ripen further.
+ We ate a good many, of course, feeling that the labourer was worthy of his
+ hire. The apples from our own birthday trees were stored in separate
+ barrels inscribed with our names. We might dispose of them as we willed.
+ Felicity sold hers to Uncle Alec&rsquo;s hired man&mdash;and was badly cheated
+ to boot, for he levanted shortly afterwards, taking the apples with him,
+ having paid her only half her rightful due. Felicity has not gotten over
+ that to this day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cecily, dear heart, sent most of hers to the hospital in town, and no
+ doubt gathered in therefrom dividends of gratitude and satisfaction of
+ soul, such as can never be purchased by any mere process of bargain and
+ sale. The rest of us ate our apples, or carried them to school where we
+ bartered them for such treasures as our schoolmates possessed and we
+ coveted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a dusky, little, pear-shaped apple&mdash;from one of Uncle
+ Stephen&rsquo;s trees&mdash;which was our favourite; and next to it a delicious,
+ juicy yellow apple from Aunt Louisa&rsquo;s tree. We were also fond of the big
+ sweet apples; we used to throw them up in the air and let them fall on the
+ ground until they were bruised and battered to the bursting point. Then we
+ sucked on the juice; sweeter was it than the nectar drunk by blissful gods
+ on the Thessalian hill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sometimes we worked until the cold yellow sunsets faded out over the
+ darkening distances, and the hunter&rsquo;s moon looked down on us through the
+ sparkling air. The constellations of autumn scintillated above us. Peter
+ and the Story Girl knew all about them, and imparted their knowledge to us
+ generously. I recall Peter standing on the Pulpit Stone, one night ere
+ moonrise, and pointing them out to us, occasionally having a difference of
+ opinion with the Story Girl over the name of some particular star. Job&rsquo;s
+ Coffin and the Northern Cross were to the west of us; south of us flamed
+ Fomalhaut. The Great Square of Pegasus was over our heads. Cassiopeia sat
+ enthroned in her beautiful chair in the north-east; and north of us the
+ Dippers swung untiringly around the Pole Star. Cecily and Felix were the
+ only ones who could distinguish the double star in the handle of the Big
+ Dipper, and greatly did they plume themselves thereon. The Story Girl told
+ us the myths and legends woven around these immemorial clusters, her very
+ voice taking on a clear, remote, starry sound as she talked of them. When
+ she ceased, we came back to earth, feeling as if we had been millions of
+ miles away in the blue ether, and that all our old familiar surroundings
+ were momentarily forgotten and strange.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That night when he pointed out the stars to us from the Pulpit Stone was
+ the last time for several weeks that Peter shared our toil and pastime.
+ The next day he complained of headache and sore throat, and seemed to
+ prefer lying on Aunt Olivia&rsquo;s kitchen sofa to doing any work. As it was
+ not in Peter to be a malingerer he was left in peace, while we picked
+ apples. Felix alone, must unjustly and spitefully, declared that Peter was
+ simply shirking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He&rsquo;s just lazy, that&rsquo;s what&rsquo;s the matter with him,&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why don&rsquo;t you talk sense, if you must talk?&rdquo; said Felicity. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s no
+ sense in calling Peter lazy. You might as well say I had black hair. Of
+ course, Peter, being a Craig, has his faults, but he&rsquo;s a smart boy. His
+ father was lazy but his mother hasn&rsquo;t a lazy bone in her body, and Peter
+ takes after her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Uncle Roger says Peter&rsquo;s father wasn&rsquo;t exactly lazy,&rdquo; said the Story
+ Girl. &ldquo;The trouble was, there were so many other things he liked better
+ than work.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wonder if he&rsquo;ll ever come back to his family,&rdquo; said Cecily. &ldquo;Just think
+ how dreadful it would be if OUR father had left us like that!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Our father is a King,&rdquo; said Felicity loftily, &ldquo;and Peter&rsquo;s father was
+ only a Craig. A member of our family COULDN&rsquo;T behave like that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They say there must be a black sheep in every family,&rdquo; said the Story
+ Girl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There isn&rsquo;t any in ours,&rdquo; said Cecily loyally.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why do white sheep eat more than black?&rdquo; asked Felix.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is that a conundrum?&rdquo; asked Cecily cautiously. &ldquo;If it is I won&rsquo;t try to
+ guess the reason. I never can guess conundrums.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It isn&rsquo;t a conundrum,&rdquo; said Felix. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s a fact. They do&mdash;and
+ there&rsquo;s a good reason for it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We stopped picking apples, sat down on the grass, and tried to reason it
+ out&mdash;with the exception of Dan, who declared that he knew there was a
+ catch somewhere and he wasn&rsquo;t going to be caught. The rest of us could not
+ see where any catch could exist, since Felix solemnly vowed, &lsquo;cross his
+ heart, white sheep did eat more than black. We argued over it seriously,
+ but finally had to give it up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, what is the reason?&rdquo; asked Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because there&rsquo;s more of them,&rdquo; said Felix, grinning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I forget what we did to Felix.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A shower came up in the evening and we had to stop picking. After the
+ shower there was a magnificent double rainbow. We watched it from the
+ granary window, and the Story Girl told us an old legend, culled from one
+ of Aunt Olivia&rsquo;s many scrapbooks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Long, long ago, in the Golden Age, when the gods used to visit the earth
+ so often that it was nothing uncommon to see them, Odin made a pilgrimage
+ over the world. Odin was the great god of the northland, you know. And
+ wherever he went among men he taught them love and brotherhood, and
+ skilful arts; and great cities sprang up where he had trodden, and every
+ land through which he passed was blessed because one of the gods had come
+ down to men. But many men and women followed Odin himself, giving up all
+ their worldly possessions and ambitions; and to these he promised the gift
+ of eternal life. All these people were good and noble and unselfish and
+ kind; but the best and noblest of them all was a youth named Ving; and
+ this youth was beloved by Odin above all others, for his beauty and
+ strength and goodness. Always he walked on Odin&rsquo;s right hand, and always
+ the first light of Odin&rsquo;s smile fell on him. Tall and straight was he as a
+ young pine, and his long hair was the colour of ripe wheat in the sun; and
+ his blue eyes were like the northland heavens on a starry night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In Odin&rsquo;s band was a beautiful maiden named Alin. She was as fair and
+ delicate as a young birch tree in spring among the dark old pines and
+ firs, and Ving loved her with all his heart. His soul thrilled with
+ rapture at the thought that he and she together should drink from the
+ fountain of immortality, as Odin had promised, and be one thereafter in
+ eternal youth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At last they came to the very place where the rainbow touched the earth.
+ And the rainbow was a great bridge, built of living colours, so dazzling
+ and wonderful that beyond it the eye could see nothing, only far away a
+ great, blinding, sparkling glory, where the fountain of life sprang up in
+ a shower of diamond fire. But under the Rainbow Bridge rolled a terrible
+ flood, deep and wide and violent, full of rocks and rapids and whirlpools.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There was a Warder of the bridge, a god, dark and stern and sorrowful.
+ And to him Odin gave command that he should open the gate and allow his
+ followers to cross the Rainbow Bridge, that they might drink of the
+ fountain of life beyond. And the Warder set open the gate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Pass on and drink of the fountain,&rsquo; he said. &lsquo;To all who taste of it
+ shall immortality be given. But only to that one who shall drink of it
+ first shall be permitted to walk at Odin&rsquo;s right hand forever.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then the company passed through in great haste, all fired with a desire
+ to be the first to drink of the fountain and win so marvellous a boon.
+ Last of all came Ving. He had lingered behind to pluck a thorn from the
+ foot of a beggar child he had met on the highway, and he had not heard the
+ Warder&rsquo;s words. But when, eager, joyous, radiant, he set his foot on the
+ rainbow, the stern, sorrowful Warder took him by the arm and drew him
+ back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Ving, strong, noble, and valiant,&rsquo; he said, &lsquo;Rainbow Bridge is not for
+ thee.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very dark grew Ving&rsquo;s face. Hot rebellion rose in his heart and rushed
+ over his pale lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Why dost thou keep back the draught of immortality from me?&rsquo; he demanded
+ passionately.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The Warder pointed to the dark flood that rolled under the bridge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;The path of the rainbow is not for thee,&rsquo; he said, &lsquo;but yonder way is
+ open. Ford that flood. On the furthest bank is the fountain of life.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Thou mockest me,&rsquo; muttered Ving sullenly. &lsquo;No mortal could cross that
+ flood. Oh, Master,&rsquo; he prayed, turning beseechingly to Odin, &lsquo;thou didst
+ promise to me eternal life as to the others. Wilt thou not keep that
+ promise? Command the Warder to let me pass. He must obey thee.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But Odin stood silent, with his face turned from his beloved, and Ving&rsquo;s
+ heart was filled with unspeakable bitterness and despair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Thou mayest return to earth if thou fearest to essay the flood,&rsquo; said
+ the Warder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Nay,&rsquo; said Ving wildly, &lsquo;earthly life without Alin is more dreadful than
+ the death which awaits me in yon dark river.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And he plunged fiercely in. He swam, and struggled, he buffetted the
+ turmoil. The waves went over his head again and again, the whirlpools
+ caught him and flung him on the cruel rocks. The wild, cold spray beat on
+ his eyes and blinded him, so that he could see nothing, and the roar of
+ the river deafened him so that he could hear nothing; but he felt keenly
+ the wounds and bruises of the cruel rocks, and many a time he would have
+ given up the struggle had not the thought of sweet Alin&rsquo;s loving eyes
+ brought him the strength and desire to struggle as long as it was
+ possible. Long, long, long, to him seemed that bitter and perilous
+ passage; but at last he won through to the furthest side. Breathless and
+ reeling, his vesture torn, his great wounds bleeding, he found himself on
+ the shore where the fountain of immortality sprang up. He staggered to its
+ brink and drank of its clear stream. Then all pain and weariness fell away
+ from him, and he rose up, a god, beautiful with immortality. And as he did
+ there came rushing over the Rainbow Bridge a great company&mdash;the band
+ of fellow travellers. But all were too late to win the double boon. Ving
+ had won to it through the danger and suffering of the dark river.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rainbow had faded out, and the darkness of the October dusk was
+ falling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wonder,&rdquo; said Dan meditatively, as we went away from that redolent
+ spot, &ldquo;what it would be like to live for ever in this world.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I expect we&rsquo;d get tired of it after awhile,&rdquo; said the Story Girl. &ldquo;But,&rdquo;
+ she added, &ldquo;I think it would be a goodly while before I would.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0029" id="link2HCH0029">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXIX. THE SHADOW FEARED OF MAN
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ We were all up early the next morning, dressing by candlelight. But early
+ as it was we found the Story Girl in the kitchen when we went down,
+ sitting on Rachel Ward&rsquo;s blue chest and looking important.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What do you think?&rdquo; she exclaimed. &ldquo;Peter has the measles! He was
+ dreadfully sick all night, and Uncle Roger had to go for the doctor. He
+ was quite light-headed, and didn&rsquo;t know any one. Of course he&rsquo;s far too
+ sick to be taken home, so his mother has come up to wait on him, and I&rsquo;m
+ to live over here until he is better.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was mingled bitter and sweet. We were sorry to hear that Peter had
+ the measles; but it would be jolly to have the Story Girl living with us
+ all the time. What orgies of story telling we should have!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suppose we&rsquo;ll all have the measles now,&rdquo; grumbled Felicity. &ldquo;And
+ October is such an inconvenient time for measles&mdash;there&rsquo;s so much to
+ do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t believe any time is very convenient to have the measles,&rdquo; Cecily
+ said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, perhaps we won&rsquo;t have them,&rdquo; said the Story Girl cheerfully. &ldquo;Peter
+ caught them at Markdale, the last time he was home, his mother says.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t want to catch the measles from Peter,&rdquo; said Felicity decidedly.
+ &ldquo;Fancy catching them from a hired boy!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, Felicity, don&rsquo;t call Peter a hired boy when he&rsquo;s sick,&rdquo; protested
+ Cecily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the next two days we were very busy&mdash;too busy to tell tales or
+ listen to them. Only in the frosty dusk did we have time to wander afar in
+ realms of gold with the Story Girl. She had recently been digging into a
+ couple of old volumes of classic myths and northland folklore which she
+ had found in Aunt Olivia&rsquo;s attic; and for us, god and goddess, laughing
+ nymph and mocking satyr, norn and valkyrie, elf and troll, and &ldquo;green
+ folk&rdquo; generally, were real creatures once again, inhabiting the orchards
+ and woods and meadows around us, until it seemed as if the Golden Age had
+ returned to earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, on the third day, the Story Girl came to us with a very white face.
+ She had been over to Uncle Roger&rsquo;s yard to hear the latest bulletin from
+ the sick room. Hitherto they had been of a non-committal nature; but now
+ it was only too evident that she had bad news.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Peter is very, very sick,&rdquo; she said miserably. &ldquo;He has caught cold
+ someway&mdash;and the measles have struck in&mdash;and&mdash;and&mdash;&rdquo;
+ the Story Girl wrung her brown hands together&mdash;&ldquo;the doctor is afraid
+ he&mdash;he&mdash;won&rsquo;t get better.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We all stood around, stricken, incredulous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you mean,&rdquo; said Felix, finding voice at length, &ldquo;that Peter is going
+ to die?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl nodded miserably.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They&rsquo;re afraid so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cecily sat down by her half filled basket and began to cry. Felicity said
+ violently that she didn&rsquo;t believe it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can&rsquo;t pick another apple to-day and I ain&rsquo;t going to try,&rdquo; said Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ None of us could. We went to the grown-ups and told them so; and the
+ grown-ups, with unaccustomed understanding and sympathy, told us that we
+ need not. Then we roamed about in our wretchedness and tried to comfort
+ one another. We avoided the orchard; it was for us too full of happy
+ memories to accord with our bitterness of soul. Instead, we resorted to
+ the spruce wood, where the hush and the sombre shadows and the soft,
+ melancholy sighing of the wind in the branches over us did not jar harshly
+ on our new sorrow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We could not really believe that Peter was going to die&mdash;to DIE. Old
+ people died. Grown-up people died. Even children of whom we had heard
+ died. But that one of US&mdash;of our merry little band&mdash;should die
+ was unbelievable. We could not believe it. And yet the possibility struck
+ us in the face like a blow. We sat on the mossy stones under the dark old
+ evergreens and gave ourselves up to wretchedness. We all, even Dan, cried,
+ except the Story Girl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see how you can be so unfeeling, Sara Stanley,&rdquo; said Felicity
+ reproachfully. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ve always been such friends with Peter&mdash;and made
+ out you thought so much of him&mdash;and now you ain&rsquo;t shedding a tear for
+ him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I looked at the Story Girl&rsquo;s dry, piteous eyes, and suddenly remembered
+ that I had never seen her cry. When she told us sad tales, in a voice
+ laden with all the tears that had ever been shed, she had never shed one
+ of her own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can&rsquo;t cry,&rdquo; she said drearily. &ldquo;I wish I could. I&rsquo;ve a dreadful feeling
+ here&mdash;&rdquo; she touched her slender throat&mdash;&ldquo;and if I could cry I
+ think it would make it better. But I can&rsquo;t.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Maybe Peter will get better after all,&rdquo; said Dan, swallowing a sob. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve
+ heard of lots of people who went and got better after the doctor said they
+ were going to die.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;While there&rsquo;s life there&rsquo;s hope, you know,&rdquo; said Felix. &ldquo;We shouldn&rsquo;t
+ cross bridges till we come to them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Those are only proverbs,&rdquo; said the Story Girl bitterly. &ldquo;Proverbs are all
+ very fine when there&rsquo;s nothing to worry you, but when you&rsquo;re in real
+ trouble they&rsquo;re not a bit of help.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I wish I&rsquo;d never said Peter wasn&rsquo;t fit to associate with,&rdquo; moaned
+ Felicity. &ldquo;If he ever gets better I&rsquo;ll never say such a thing again&mdash;I&rsquo;ll
+ never THINK it. He&rsquo;s just a lovely boy and twice as smart as lots that
+ aren&rsquo;t hired out.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He was always so polite and good-natured and obliging,&rdquo; sighed Cecily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He was just a real gentleman,&rdquo; said the Story Girl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There ain&rsquo;t many fellows as fair and square as Peter,&rdquo; said Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And such a worker,&rdquo; said Felix.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Uncle Roger says he never had a boy he could depend on like Peter,&rdquo; I
+ said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It&rsquo;s too late to be saying all these nice things about him now,&rdquo; said the
+ Story Girl. &ldquo;He won&rsquo;t ever know how much we thought of him. It&rsquo;s too
+ late.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If he gets better I&rsquo;ll tell him,&rdquo; said Cecily resolutely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish I hadn&rsquo;t boxed his ears that day he tried to kiss me,&rdquo; went on
+ Felicity, who was evidently raking her conscience for past offences in
+ regard to Peter. &ldquo;Of course I couldn&rsquo;t be expected to let a hir&mdash;to
+ let a boy kiss me. But I needn&rsquo;t have been so cross about it. I might have
+ been more dignified. And I told him I just hated him. That wasn&rsquo;t true,
+ but I s&rsquo;pose he&rsquo;ll die thinking it is. Oh, dear me, what makes people say
+ things they&rsquo;ve got to be so sorry for afterwards?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suppose if Peter d-d-dies he&rsquo;ll go to heaven anyhow,&rdquo; sobbed Cecily.
+ &ldquo;He&rsquo;s been real good all this summer, but he isn&rsquo;t a church member.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He&rsquo;s a Presbyterian, you know,&rdquo; said Felicity reassuringly. Her tone
+ expressed her conviction that that would carry Peter through if anything
+ would. &ldquo;We&rsquo;re none of us church members. But of course Peter couldn&rsquo;t be
+ sent to the bad place. That would be ridiculous. What would they do with
+ him there, when he&rsquo;s so good and polite and honest and kind?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I think he&rsquo;ll be all right, too,&rdquo; sighed Cecily, &ldquo;but you know he
+ never did go to church and Sunday School before this summer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, his father run away, and his mother was too busy earning a living
+ to bring him up right,&rdquo; argued Felicity. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you suppose that anybody,
+ even God, would make allowances for that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course Peter will go to heaven,&rdquo; said the Story Girl. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s not grown
+ up enough to go anywhere else. Children always go to heaven. But I don&rsquo;t
+ want him to go there or anywhere else. I want him to stay right here. I
+ know heaven must be a splendid place, but I&rsquo;m sure Peter would rather be
+ here, having fun with us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sara Stanley,&rdquo; rebuked Felicity. &ldquo;I should think you wouldn&rsquo;t say such
+ things at such a solemn time. You&rsquo;re such a queer girl.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wouldn&rsquo;t you rather be here yourself than in heaven?&rdquo; said the Story Girl
+ bluntly. &ldquo;Wouldn&rsquo;t you now, Felicity King? Tell the truth, &lsquo;cross your
+ heart.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Felicity took refuge from this inconvenient question in tears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If we could only DO something to help Peter!&rdquo; I said desperately. &ldquo;It
+ seems dreadful not to be able to do a single thing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There&rsquo;s one thing we can do,&rdquo; said Cecily gently. &ldquo;We can pray for him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So we can,&rdquo; I agreed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m going to pray like sixty,&rdquo; said Felix energetically.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll have to be awful good, you know,&rdquo; warned Cecily. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s no use
+ praying if you&rsquo;re not good.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That will be easy,&rdquo; sighed Felicity. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t feel a bit like being bad.
+ If anything happens to Peter I feel sure I&rsquo;ll never be naughty again. I
+ won&rsquo;t have the heart.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We did, indeed, pray most sincerely for Peter&rsquo;s recovery. We did not, as
+ in the case of Paddy, &ldquo;tack it on after more important things,&rdquo; but put it
+ in the very forefront of our petitions. Even skeptical Dan prayed, his
+ skepticism falling away from him like a discarded garment in this valley
+ of the shadow, which sifts out hearts and tries souls, until we all,
+ grown-up or children, realize our weakness, and, finding that our own puny
+ strength is as a reed shaken in the wind, creep back humbly to the God we
+ have vainly dreamed we could do without.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peter was no better the next day. Aunt Olivia reported that his mother was
+ broken-hearted. We did not again ask to be released from work. Instead, we
+ went at it with feverish zeal. If we worked hard there was less time for
+ grief and grievious thoughts. We picked apples and dragged them to the
+ granary doggedly. In the afternoon Aunt Janet brought us a lunch of apple
+ turnovers; but we could not eat them. Peter, as Felicity reminded us with
+ a burst of tears, had been so fond of apple turnovers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And, oh, how good we were! How angelically and unnaturally good! Never was
+ there such a band of kind, sweet-tempered, unselfish children in any
+ orchard. Even Felicity and Dan, for once in their lives, got through the
+ day without any exchange of left-handed compliments. Cecily confided to me
+ that she never meant to put her hair up in curlers on Saturday nights
+ again, because it was pretending. She was so anxious to repent of
+ something, sweet girl, and this was all she could think of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the afternoon Judy Pineau brought up a tear-blotted note from Sara
+ Ray. Sara had not been allowed to visit the hill farm since Peter had
+ developed measles. She was an unhappy little exile, and could only relieve
+ her anguish of soul by daily letters to Cecily, which the faithful and
+ obliging Judy Pineau brought up for her. These epistles were as gushingly
+ underlined as if Sara had been a correspondent of early Victorian days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cecily did not write back, because Mrs. Ray had decreed that no letters
+ must be taken down from the hill farm lest they carry infection. Cecily
+ had offered to bake every epistle thoroughly in the oven before sending
+ it; but Mrs. Ray was inexorable, and Cecily had to content herself by
+ sending long verbal messages with Judy Pineau.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My OWN DEAREST Cecily,&rdquo; ran Sara&rsquo;s letter. &ldquo;I have just heard the sad
+ news about POOR DEAR PETER. I can&rsquo;t describe MY FEELINGS. They are
+ DREADFUL. I have been crying ALL THE AFTERNOON. I wish I could FLY to you,
+ but ma will not let me. She is afraid I will catch the measles, but I
+ would rather have the measles A DOZEN TIMES OVER than be sepparated from
+ you all like this. But I have felt, ever since the Judgment Sunday that I
+ MUST OBEY MA BETTER than I used to do. If ANYTHING HAPPENS to Peter and
+ you are let see him BEFORE IT HAPPENS give him MY LOVE and tell him HOW
+ SORRY I AM, and that I hope we will ALL meet in A BETTER WORLD Everything
+ in school is about the same. The master is awful cross by spells. Jimmy
+ Frewen walked home with Nellie Bowan last night from prayer-meeting and
+ HER ONLY FOURTEEN. Don&rsquo;t you think it horrid BEGINNING SO YOUNG? YOU AND
+ ME would NEVER do anything like that till we were GROWN UP, would we?
+ Willy Fraser looks SO LONESOME in school these days. I must stop for ma
+ says I waste FAR TOO MUCH TIME writing letters. Tell Judy ALL THE NEWS for
+ me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your OWN TRUE FRIEND,
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ &ldquo;SARA RAY.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;P.S. Oh I DO hope Peter will get better. Ma is going to get me a new
+ brown dress for the winter.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ &ldquo;S. R.&rdquo;
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ When evening came we went to our seats under the whispering, sighing fir
+ trees. It was a beautiful night&mdash;clear, windless, frosty. Some one
+ galloped down the road on horseback, lustily singing a comic song. How
+ dared he? We felt that it was an insult to our wretchedness. If Peter were
+ going to&mdash;going to&mdash;well, if anything happened to Peter, we felt
+ so miserably sure that the music of life would be stilled for us for ever.
+ How could any one in the world be happy when we were so unhappy?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently Aunt Olivia came down the long twilight arcade. Her bright hair
+ was uncovered and she looked slim and queen-like in her light dress. We
+ thought Aunt Olivia very pretty then. Looking back from a mature
+ standpoint I realize that she must have been an unusually beautiful woman;
+ and she looked her prettiest as she stood under the swaying boughs in the
+ last faint light of the autumn dusk and smiled down at our woebegone
+ faces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dear, sorrowful little people, I bring you glad tidings of great joy,&rdquo;
+ she said. &ldquo;The doctor has just been here, and he finds Peter much better,
+ and thinks he will pull through after all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We gazed up at her in silence for a few moments. When we had heard the
+ news of Paddy&rsquo;s recovery we had been noisy and jubilant; but we were very
+ quiet now. We had been too near something dark and terrible and menacing;
+ and though it was thus suddenly removed the chill and shadow of it were
+ about us still. Presently the Story Girl, who had been standing up,
+ leaning against a tall fir, slipped down to the ground in a huddled
+ fashion and broke into a very passion of weeping. I had never heard any
+ one cry so, with dreadful, rending sobs. I was used to hearing girls cry.
+ It was as much Sara Ray&rsquo;s normal state as any other, and even Felicity and
+ Cecily availed themselves occasionally of the privilege of sex. But I had
+ never heard any girl cry like this. It gave me the same unpleasant
+ sensation which I had felt one time when I had seen my father cry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, don&rsquo;t, Sara, don&rsquo;t,&rdquo; I said gently, patting her convulsed shoulder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You ARE a queer girl,&rdquo; said Felicity&mdash;more tolerantly than usual
+ however&mdash;&ldquo;you never cried a speck when you thought Peter was going to
+ die&mdash;and now when he is going to get better you cry like that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sara, child, come with me,&rdquo; said Aunt Olivia, bending over her. The Story
+ Girl got up and went away, with Aunt Olivia&rsquo;s arms around her. The sound
+ of her crying died away under the firs, and with it seemed to go the dread
+ and grief that had been our portion for hours. In the reaction our spirits
+ rose with a bound.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, ain&rsquo;t it great that Peter&rsquo;s going to be all right?&rdquo; said Dan,
+ springing up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I never was so glad of anything in my whole life,&rdquo; declared Felicity in
+ shameless rapture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Can&rsquo;t we send word somehow to Sara Ray to-night?&rdquo; asked Cecily, the
+ ever-thoughtful. &ldquo;She&rsquo;s feeling so bad&mdash;and she&rsquo;ll have to feel that
+ way till to-morrow if we can&rsquo;t.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let&rsquo;s all go down to the Ray gate and holler to Judy Pineau till she
+ comes out,&rdquo; suggested Felix.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly, we went and &ldquo;hollered,&rdquo; with a right good will. We were much
+ taken aback to find that Mrs. Ray came to the gate instead of Judy, and
+ rather sourly demanded what we were yelling about. When she heard our
+ news, however, she had the decency to say she was glad, and to promise she
+ would convey the good tidings to Sara&mdash;&ldquo;who is already in bed, where
+ all children of her age should be,&rdquo; added Mrs. Ray severely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WE had no intention of going to bed for a good two hours yet. Instead,
+ after devoutly thanking goodness that our grown-ups, in spite of some
+ imperfections, were not of the Mrs. Ray type, we betook ourselves to the
+ granary, lighted a huge lantern which Dan had made out of a turnip, and
+ proceeded to devour all the apples we might have eaten through the day but
+ had not. We were a blithe little crew, sitting there in the light of our
+ goblin lantern. We had in very truth been given beauty for ashes and the
+ oil of joy for mourning. Life was as a red rose once more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m going to make a big batch of patty-pans, first thing in the morning,&rdquo;
+ said Felicity jubilantly. &ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t it queer? Last night I felt just like
+ praying, and tonight I feel just like cooking.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We mustn&rsquo;t forget to thank God for making Peter better,&rdquo; said Cecily, as
+ we finally went to the house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you s&rsquo;pose Peter wouldn&rsquo;t have got better anyway?&rdquo; said Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, Dan, what makes you ask such questions?&rdquo; exclaimed Cecily in real
+ distress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I dunno,&rdquo; said Dan. &ldquo;They just kind of come into my head, like. But of
+ course I mean to thank God when I say my prayers to-night. That&rsquo;s only
+ decent.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0030" id="link2HCH0030">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXX. A COMPOUND LETTER
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Once Peter was out of danger he recovered rapidly, but he found his
+ convalescence rather tedious; and Aunt Olivia suggested to us one day that
+ we write a &ldquo;compound letter&rdquo; to amuse him, until he could come to the
+ window and talk to us from a safe distance. The idea appealed to us; and,
+ the day being Saturday and the apples all picked, we betook ourselves to
+ the orchard to compose our epistles, Cecily having first sent word by a
+ convenient caller to Sara Ray, that she, too, might have a letter ready.
+ Later, I, having at that time a mania for preserving all documents
+ relating to our life in Carlisle, copied those letters in the blank pages
+ at the back of my dream book. Hence I can reproduce them verbatim, with
+ the bouquet they have retained through all the long years since they were
+ penned in that autumnal orchard on the hill, with its fading leaves and
+ frosted grasses, and the &ldquo;mild, delightsome melancholy&rdquo; of the late
+ October day enfolding.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ CECILY&rsquo;S LETTER
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;DEAR PETER:&mdash;I am so very glad and thankful that you are going to
+ get better. We were so afraid you would not last Tuesday, and we felt
+ dreadful, even Felicity. We all prayed for you. I think the others have
+ stopped now, but I keep it up every night still, for fear you might have a
+ relaps. (I don&rsquo;t know if that is spelled right. I haven&rsquo;t the dixonary
+ handy, and if I ask the others Felicity will laugh at me, though she
+ cannot spell lots of words herself.) I am saving some of the Honourable
+ Mr. Whalen&rsquo;s pears for you. I&rsquo;ve got them hid where nobody can find them.
+ There&rsquo;s only a dozen because Dan et all the rest, but I guess you will
+ like them. We have got all the apples picked, and are all ready to take
+ the measles now, if we have to, but I hope we won&rsquo;t. If we have to,
+ though, I&rsquo;d rather catch them from you than from any one else, because we
+ are acquainted with you. If I do take the measles and anything happens to
+ me Felicity is to have my cherry vase. I&rsquo;d rather give it to the Story
+ Girl, but Dan says it ought to be kept in the family, even if Felicity is
+ a crank. I haven&rsquo;t anything else valuable, since I gave Sara Ray my
+ forget-me-not jug, but if you would like anything I&rsquo;ve got let me know and
+ I&rsquo;ll leave instructions for you to have it. The Story Girl has told us
+ some splendid stories lately. I wish I was clever like her. Ma says it
+ doesn&rsquo;t matter if you&rsquo;re not clever as long as you are good, but I am not
+ even very good.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think this is all my news, except that I want to tell you how much we
+ all think of you, Peter. When we heard you were sick we all said nice
+ things about you, but we were afraid it was too late, and I said if you
+ got better I&rsquo;d tell you. It is easier to write it than to tell it out to
+ your face. We think you are smart and polite and obliging and a great
+ worker and a gentleman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your true friend,
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ &ldquo;CECILY KING.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;P.S. If you answer my letter don&rsquo;t say anything about the pears, because
+ I don&rsquo;t want Dan to find out there&rsquo;s any left. C. K.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ FELICITY&rsquo;S LETTER
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;DEAR PETER:&mdash;Aunt Olivia says for us all to write a compound letter
+ to cheer you up. We are all awful glad you are getting better. It gave us
+ an awful scare when we heard you were going to die. But you will soon be
+ all right and able to get out again. Be careful you don&rsquo;t catch cold. I am
+ going to bake some nice things for you and send them over, now that the
+ doctor says you can eat them. And I&rsquo;ll send you my rosebud plate to eat
+ off of. I&rsquo;m only lending it, you know, not giving it. I let very few
+ people use it because it is my greatest treasure. Mind you don&rsquo;t break it.
+ Aunt Olivia must always wash it, not your mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do hope the rest of us won&rsquo;t catch the measles. It must look horrid to
+ have red spots all over your face. We all feel pretty well yet. The Story
+ Girl says as many queer things as ever. Felix thinks he is getting thin,
+ but he is fatter than ever, and no wonder, with all the apples he eats. He
+ has give up trying to eat the bitter apples at last. Beverley has grown
+ half an inch since July, by the mark on the hall door, and he is awful
+ pleased about it. I told him I guessed the magic seed was taking effect at
+ last, and he got mad. He never gets mad at anything the Story Girl says,
+ and yet she is so sarkastic by times. Dan is pretty hard to get along with
+ as usul, but I try to bear pashently with him. Cecily is well and says she
+ isn&rsquo;t going to curl her hair any more. She is so conscienshus. I am glad
+ my hair curls of itself, ain&rsquo;t you?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We haven&rsquo;t seen Sara Ray since you got sick. She is awful lonesome, and
+ Judy says she cries nearly all the time but that is nothing new. I&rsquo;m awful
+ sorry for Sara but I&rsquo;m glad I&rsquo;m not her. She is going to write you a
+ letter too. You&rsquo;ll let me see what she puts in it, won&rsquo;t you? You&rsquo;d better
+ take some Mexican Tea now. It&rsquo;s a great blood purifyer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am going to get a lovely dark blue dress for the winter. It is ever so
+ much prettier than Sara Ray&rsquo;s brown one. Sara Ray&rsquo;s mother has no taste.
+ The Story Girl&rsquo;s father is sending her a new red dress, and a red velvet
+ cap from Paris. She is so fond of red. I can&rsquo;t bear it, it looks so
+ common. Mother says I can get a velvet hood too. Cecily says she doesn&rsquo;t
+ believe it&rsquo;s right to wear velvet when it&rsquo;s so expensive and the heathen
+ are crying for the gospel. She got that idea from a Sunday School paper
+ but I am going to get my hood all the same.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, Peter, I have no more news so I will close for this time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;hoping you will soon be quite well, I remain
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;yours sincerely,
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ &ldquo;FELICITY KING.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;P.S. The Story Girl peeked over my shoulder and says I ought to have
+ signed it &lsquo;yours affeckshunately,&rsquo; but I know better, because the <i>Family
+ Guide</i> has told lots of times how you should sign yourself when you are
+ writing to a young man who is only a friend. F. K.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ FELIX&rsquo; LETTER
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;DEAR PETER:&mdash;I am awful glad you are getting better. We all felt bad
+ when we thought you wouldn&rsquo;t, but I felt worse than the others because we
+ hadn&rsquo;t been on very good terms lately and I had said mean things about
+ you. I&rsquo;m sorry and, Peter, you can pray for anything you like and I won&rsquo;t
+ ever object again. I&rsquo;m glad Uncle Alec interfered and stopped the fight.
+ If I had licked you and you had died of the measles it would have been a
+ dreadful thing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We have all the apples in and haven&rsquo;t much to do just now and we are
+ having lots of fun but we wish you were here to join in. I&rsquo;m a lot thinner
+ than I was. I guess working so hard picking apples is a good thing to make
+ you thin. The girls are all well. Felicity puts on as many airs as ever,
+ but she makes great things to eat. I have had some splendid dreams since
+ we gave up writing them down. That is always the way. We ain&rsquo;t going to
+ school till we&rsquo;re sure we are not going to have the measles. This is all I
+ can think of, so I will draw to a close. Remember, you can pray for
+ anything you like. FELIX KING.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ SARA RAY&rsquo;S LETTER
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;DEAR PETER:&mdash;I never wrote to A BOY before, so PLEASE excuse ALL
+ mistakes. I am SO glad you are getting better. We were SO afraid you were
+ GOING TO DIE. I CRIED ALL NIGHT about it. But now that you are OUT OF
+ DANGER will you tell me WHAT IT REALLY FEELS LIKE to think you are going
+ to die? Does it FEEL QUEER? Were you VERY badly frightened?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ma won&rsquo;t let me go up the hill AT ALL now. I would DIE if it was not for
+ Judy Pinno. (The French names are SO HARD TO SPELL.) JUDY IS VERY OBLIGING
+ and I feel that she SIMPATHISES WITH ME. In my LONELY HOURS I read my
+ dream book and Cecily&rsquo;s old letters and they are SUCH A COMFORT to me. I
+ have been reading one of the school library books too. I is PRETTY GOOD
+ but I wish they had got more LOVE STORIES because they are so exciting.
+ But the master would not let them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If you had DIED, Peter, and YOUR FATHER had heard it wouldn&rsquo;t he have
+ FELT DREADFUL? We are having BEAUTIFUL WEATHER and the seenary is fine
+ since the leaves turned. I think there is nothing so pretty as Nature
+ after all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I hope ALL DANGER from the measles will soon be over and we can ALL MEET
+ AGAIN AT THE HOME ON THE HILL. Till then FAREWELL.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your true friend,
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ &ldquo;SARA RAY.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;P. S. Don&rsquo;t let Felicity see this letter. S. R.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ DAN&rsquo;S LETTER
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;DEAR OLD PETE:&mdash;Awful glad you cheated the doctor. I thought you
+ weren&rsquo;t the kind to turn up your toes so easy. You should of heard the
+ girls crying.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They&rsquo;re all getting their winter finery now and the talk about it would
+ make you sick. The Story Girl is getting hers from Paris and Felicity is
+ awful jealous though she pretends she isn&rsquo;t. I can see through her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Kitt Mar was up here Thursday to see the girls. She&rsquo;s had the measles so
+ she isn&rsquo;t scared. She&rsquo;s a great girl to laugh. I like a girl that laughs,
+ don&rsquo;t you?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We had a call from Peg Bowen yesterday. You should of seen the Story Girl
+ hustling Pat out of the way, for all she says she don&rsquo;t believe he was
+ bewitched. Peg had your rheumatism ring on and the Story Girl&rsquo;s blue beads
+ and Sara Ray&rsquo;s lace soed across the front of her dress. She wanted some
+ tobacco and some pickles. Ma gave her some pickles but said we didn&rsquo;t have
+ no tobacco and Peg went off mad but I guess she wouldn&rsquo;t bewitch anything
+ on account of the pickles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I ain&rsquo;t any hand to write letters so I guess I&rsquo;ll stop. Hope you&rsquo;ll be
+ out soon. DAN.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ THE STORY GIRL&rsquo;S LETTER
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;DEAR PETER:&mdash;Oh, how glad I am that you are getting better! Those
+ days when we thought you wouldn&rsquo;t were the hardest of my whole life. It
+ seemed too dreadful to be true that perhaps you would die. And then when
+ we heard you were going to get better that seemed too good to be true. Oh,
+ Peter, hurry up and get well, for we are having such good times and we
+ miss you so much. I have coaxed Uncle Alec not to burn his potato stalks
+ till you are well, because I remember how you always liked to see the
+ potato stalks burn. Uncle Alec consented, though Aunt Janet said it was
+ high time they were burned. Uncle Roger burned his last night and it was
+ such fun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pat is splendid. He has never had a sick spell since that bad one. I
+ would send him over to be company for you, but Aunt Janet says no, because
+ he might carry the measles back. I don&rsquo;t see how he could, but we must
+ obey Aunt Janet. She is very good to us all, but I know she does not
+ approve of me. She says I&rsquo;m my father&rsquo;s own child. I know that doesn&rsquo;t
+ mean anything complimentary because she looked so queer when she saw that
+ I had heard her, but I don&rsquo;t care. I&rsquo;m glad I&rsquo;m like father. I had a
+ splendid letter from him this week, with the darlingest pictures in it. He
+ is painting a new picture which is going to make him famous. I wonder what
+ Aunt Janet will say then.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you know, Peter, yesterday I thought I saw the Family Ghost at last. I
+ was coming through the gap in the hedge, and I saw somebody in blue
+ standing under Uncle Alec&rsquo;s tree. How my heart beat! My hair should have
+ stood up on end with terror but it didn&rsquo;t. I felt to see, and it was lying
+ down quite flat. But it was only a visitor after all. I don&rsquo;t know whether
+ I was glad or disappointed. I don&rsquo;t think it would be a pleasant
+ experience to see the ghost. But after I had seen it think what a heroine
+ I would be!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, Peter, what do you think? I have got acquainted with the Awkward Man
+ at last. I never thought it would be so easy. Yesterday Aunt Olivia wanted
+ some ferns, so I went back to the maple woods to get them for her, and I
+ found some lovely ones by the spring. And while I was sitting there,
+ looking into the spring who should come along but the Awkward Man himself.
+ He sat right down beside me and began to talk. I never was so surprised in
+ my life. We had a very interesting talk, and I told him two of my best
+ stories, and a great many of my secrets into the bargain. They may say
+ what they like, but he was not one bit shy or awkward, and he has
+ beautiful eyes. He did not tell me any of his secrets, but I believe he
+ will some day. Of course I never said a word about his Alice-room. But I
+ gave him a hint about his little brown book. I said I loved poetry and
+ often felt like writing it, and then I said, &lsquo;Do you ever feel like that,
+ Mr. Dale?&rsquo; He said, yes, he sometimes felt that way, but he did not
+ mention the brown book. I thought he might have. But after all I don&rsquo;t
+ like people who tell you everything the first time you meet them, like
+ Sara Ray. When he went away he said, &lsquo;I hope I shall have the pleasure of
+ meeting you again,&rsquo; just as seriously and politely as if I was a grown-up
+ young lady. I am sure he could never have said it if I had been really
+ grown up. I told him it was likely he would and that he wasn&rsquo;t to mind if
+ I had a longer skirt on next time, because I&rsquo;d be just the same person.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I told the children a beautiful new fairy story to-day. I made them go to
+ the spruce wood to hear it. A spruce wood is the proper place to tell
+ fairy stories in. Felicity says she can&rsquo;t see that it makes any difference
+ where you tell them, but oh, it does. I wish you had been there to hear it
+ too, but when you are well I will tell it over again for you.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am going to call the southernwood &lsquo;appleringie&rsquo; after this. Beverley
+ says that is what they call it in Scotland, and I think it sounds so much
+ more poetical than southernwood. Felicity says the right name is &lsquo;Boy&rsquo;s
+ Love,&rsquo; but I think that sounds silly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, Peter, shadows are such pretty things. The orchard is full of them
+ this very minute. Sometimes they are so still you would think them asleep.
+ Then they go laughing and skipping. Outside, in the oat field, they are
+ always chasing each other. They are the wild shadows. The shadows in the
+ orchard are the tame shadows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Everything seems to be rather tired growing except the spruces and
+ chrysanthemums in Aunt Olivia&rsquo;s garden. The sunshine is so thick and
+ yellow and lazy, and the crickets sing all day long. The birds are nearly
+ all gone and most of the maple leaves have fallen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Just to make you laugh I&rsquo;ll write you a little story I heard Uncle Alec
+ telling last night. It was about Elder Frewen&rsquo;s grandfather taking a pair
+ of rope reins to lead a piano home. Everybody laughed except Aunt Janet.
+ Old Mr. Frewen was HER grandfather too, and she wouldn&rsquo;t laugh. One day
+ when old Mr. Frewen was a young man of eighteen his father came home and
+ said, &lsquo;Sandy, I bought a piano at Simon Ward&rsquo;s sale to-day. You&rsquo;re to go
+ to-morrow and bring it home.&rsquo; So next day Sandy started off on horseback
+ with a pair of rope reins to lead the piano home. He thought it was some
+ kind of livestock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And then Uncle Roger told about old Mark Ward who got up to make a speech
+ at a church missionary social when he was drunk. (Of course he didn&rsquo;t get
+ drunk at the social. He went there that way.) And this was his speech.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Ladies and gentlemen, Mr. Chairman, I can&rsquo;t express my thoughts on this
+ grand subject of missions. It&rsquo;s in this poor human critter&rsquo;&mdash;patting
+ himself on the breast&mdash;&lsquo;but he can&rsquo;t git it out.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll tell you these stories when you get well. I can tell them ever so
+ much better than I can write them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know Felicity is wondering why I&rsquo;m writing such a long letter, so
+ perhaps I&rsquo;d better stop. If your mother reads it to you there is a good
+ deal of it she may not understand, but I think your Aunt Jane would.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I remain
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;your very affectionate friend,
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ &ldquo;SARA STANLEY.&rdquo;
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ I did not keep a copy of my own letter, and I have forgotten everything
+ that was in it, except the first sentence, in which I told Peter I was
+ awful glad he was getting better.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peter&rsquo;s delight on receiving our letters knew no bounds. He insisted on
+ answering them and his letter, painstakingly disinfected, was duly
+ delivered to us. Aunt Olivia had written it at his dictation, which was a
+ gain, as far as spelling and punctuation went. But Peter&rsquo;s individuality
+ seemed merged and lost in Aunt Olivia&rsquo;s big, dashing script. Not until the
+ Story Girl read the letter to us in the granary by jack-o-lantern light,
+ in a mimicry of Peter&rsquo;s very voice, did we savour the real bouquet of it.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ PETER&rsquo;S LETTER
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;DEAR EVERYBODY, BUT ESPECIALLY FELICITY:&mdash;I was awful glad to get
+ your letters. It makes you real important to be sick, but the time seems
+ awful long when you&rsquo;re getting better. Your letters were all great, but I
+ liked Felicity&rsquo;s best, and next to hers the Story Girl&rsquo;s. Felicity, it
+ will be awful good of you to send me things to eat and the rosebud plate.
+ I&rsquo;ll be awful careful of it. I hope you won&rsquo;t catch the measles, for they
+ are not nice, especially when they strike in, but you would look all
+ right, even if you did have red spots on your face. I would like to try
+ the Mexican Tea, because you want me to, but mother says no, she doesn&rsquo;t
+ believe in it, and Burtons Bitters are a great deal healthier. If I was
+ you I would get the velvet hood all right. The heathen live in warm
+ countries so they don&rsquo;t want hoods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m glad you are still praying for me, Cecily, for you can&rsquo;t trust the
+ measles. And I&rsquo;m glad you&rsquo;re keeping you know what for me. I don&rsquo;t believe
+ anything will happen to you if you do take the measles; but if anything
+ does I&rsquo;d like that little red book of yours, <i>The Safe Compass</i>, just
+ to remember you by. It&rsquo;s such a good book to read on Sundays. It is
+ interesting and religious, too. So is the Bible. I hadn&rsquo;t quite finished
+ the Bible before I took the measles, but ma is reading the last chapters
+ to me. There&rsquo;s an awful lot in that book. I can&rsquo;t understand the whole of
+ it, since I&rsquo;m only a hired boy, but some parts are real easy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m awful glad you have such a good opinion of me. I don&rsquo;t deserve it,
+ but after this I&rsquo;ll try to. I can&rsquo;t tell you how I feel about all your
+ kindness. I&rsquo;m like the fellow the Story Girl wrote about who couldn&rsquo;t get
+ it out. I have the picture the Story Girl gave me for my sermon on the
+ wall at the foot of my bed. I like to look at it, it looks so much like
+ Aunt Jane.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Felix, I&rsquo;ve given up praying that I&rsquo;d be the only one to eat the bitter
+ apples, and I&rsquo;ll never pray for anything like that again. It was a horrid
+ mean prayer. I didn&rsquo;t know it then, but after the measles struck in I
+ found out it was. Aunt Jane wouldn&rsquo;t have liked it. After this I&rsquo;m going
+ to pray prayers I needn&rsquo;t be ashamed of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sara Ray, I don&rsquo;t know what it feels like to be going to die because I
+ didn&rsquo;t know I was going to die till I got better. Mother says I was luny
+ most of the time after they struck in. It was just because they struck in
+ I was luny. I ain&rsquo;t luny naturally, Felicity. I will do what you asked in
+ your postscript, Sara, although it will be hard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m glad Peg Bowen didn&rsquo;t catch you, Dan. Maybe she bewitched me that
+ night we were at her place, and that is why the measles struck in. I&rsquo;m
+ awful glad Mr. King is going to leave the potato stalks until I get well,
+ and I&rsquo;m obliged to the Story Girl for coaxing him. I guess she will find
+ out about Alice yet. There were some parts of her letter I couldn&rsquo;t see
+ through, but when the measles strike in, they leave you stupid for a
+ spell. Anyhow, it was a fine letter, and they were all fine, and I&rsquo;m awful
+ glad I have so many nice friends, even if I am only a hired boy. Perhaps
+ I&rsquo;d never have found it out if the measles hadn&rsquo;t struck in. So I&rsquo;m glad
+ they did but I hope they never will again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your obedient servant,
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ &ldquo;PETER CRAIG.&rdquo;
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0031" id="link2HCH0031">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXI. ON THE EDGE OF LIGHT AND DARK
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ We celebrated the November day when Peter was permitted to rejoin us by a
+ picnic in the orchard. Sara Ray was also allowed to come, under protest;
+ and her joy over being among us once more was almost pathetic. She and
+ Cecily cried in one another&rsquo;s arms as if they had been parted for years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We had a beautiful day for our picnic. November dreamed that it was May.
+ The air was soft and mellow, with pale, aerial mists in the valleys and
+ over the leafless beeches on the western hill. The sere stubble fields
+ brooded in glamour, and the sky was pearly blue. The leaves were still
+ thick on the apple trees, though they were russet hued, and the
+ after-growth of grass was richly green, unharmed as yet by the nipping
+ frosts of previous nights. The wind made a sweet, drowsy murmur in the
+ boughs, as of bees among apple blossoms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It&rsquo;s just like spring, isn&rsquo;t it?&rdquo; asked Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl shook her head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, not quite. It looks like spring, but it isn&rsquo;t spring. It&rsquo;s as if
+ everything was resting&mdash;getting ready to sleep. In spring they&rsquo;re
+ getting ready to grow. Can&rsquo;t you FEEL the difference?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think it&rsquo;s just like spring,&rdquo; insisted Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the sun-sweet place before the Pulpit Stone we boys had put up a board
+ table. Aunt Janet allowed us to cover it with an old tablecloth, the worn
+ places in which the girls artfully concealed with frost-whitened ferns. We
+ had the kitchen dishes, and the table was gaily decorated with Cecily&rsquo;s
+ three scarlet geraniums and maple leaves in the cherry vase. As for the
+ viands, they were fit for the gods on high Olympus. Felicity had spent the
+ whole previous day and the forenoon of the picnic day in concocting them.
+ Her crowning achievement was a rich little plum cake, on the white
+ frosting of which the words &ldquo;Welcome Back&rdquo; were lettered in pink candies.
+ This was put before Peter&rsquo;s place, and almost overcame him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To think that you&rsquo;d go to so much trouble for me!&rdquo; he said, with a glance
+ of adoring gratitude at Felicity. Felicity got all the gratitude, although
+ the Story Girl had originated the idea and seeded the raisins and beaten
+ the eggs, while Cecily had trudged all the way to Mrs. Jameson&rsquo;s little
+ shop below the church to buy the pink candies. But that is the way of the
+ world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We ought to have grace,&rdquo; said Felicity, as we sat down at the festal
+ board. &ldquo;Will any one say it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She looked at me, but I blushed to the roots of my hair and shook my head
+ sheepishly. An awkward pause ensued; it looked as if we would have to
+ proceed without grace, when Felix suddenly shut his eyes, bent his head,
+ and said a very good grace without any appearance of embarrassment. We
+ looked at him when it was over with an increase of respect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where on earth did you learn that, Felix?&rdquo; I asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It&rsquo;s the grace Uncle Alec says at every meal,&rdquo; answered Felix.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We felt rather ashamed of ourselves. Was it possible that we had paid so
+ little attention to Uncle Alec&rsquo;s grace that we did not recognize it when
+ we heard it on other lips?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now,&rdquo; said Felicity jubilantly, &ldquo;let&rsquo;s eat everything up.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In truth, it was a merry little feast. We had gone without our dinners, in
+ order to &ldquo;save our appetites,&rdquo; and we did ample justice to Felicity&rsquo;s good
+ things. Paddy sat on the Pulpit Stone and watched us with great yellow
+ eyes, knowing that tidbits would come his way later on. Many witty things
+ were said&mdash;or at least we thought them witty&mdash;and uproarious was
+ the laughter. Never had the old King orchard known a blither merrymaking
+ or lighter hearts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The picnic over, we played games until the early falling dusk, and then we
+ went with Uncle Alec to the back field to burn the potato stalks&mdash;the
+ crowning delight of the day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stalks were in heaps all over the field, and we were allowed the
+ privilege of setting fire to them. &lsquo;Twas glorious! In a few minutes the
+ field was alight with blazing bonfires, over which rolled great, pungent
+ clouds of smoke. From pile to pile we ran, shrieking with delight, to poke
+ each up with a long stick and watch the gush of rose-red sparks stream off
+ into the night. In what a whirl of smoke and firelight and wild,
+ fantastic, hurtling shadows we were!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When we grew tired of our sport we went to the windward side of the field
+ and perched ourselves on the high pole fence that skirted a dark spruce
+ wood, full of strange, furtive sounds. Over us was a great, dark sky,
+ blossoming with silver stars, and all around lay dusky, mysterious reaches
+ of meadow and wood in the soft, empurpled night. Away to the east a
+ shimmering silveryness beneath a palace of aerial cloud foretokened
+ moonrise. But directly before us the potato field, with its wreathing
+ smoke and sullen flames, the gigantic shadow of Uncle Alec crossing and
+ recrossing it, reminded us of Peter&rsquo;s famous description of the bad place,
+ and probably suggested the Story Girl&rsquo;s remark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know a story,&rdquo; she said, infusing just the right shade of weirdness
+ into her voice, &ldquo;about a man who saw the devil. Now, what&rsquo;s the matter,
+ Felicity?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can never get used to the way you mention the&mdash;the&mdash;that
+ name,&rdquo; complained Felicity. &ldquo;To hear you speak of the Old Scratch any one
+ would think he was just a common person.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind. Tell us the story,&rdquo; I said curiously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is about Mrs. John Martin&rsquo;s uncle at Markdale,&rdquo; said the Story Girl.
+ &ldquo;I heard Uncle Roger telling it the other night. He didn&rsquo;t know I was
+ sitting on the cellar hatch outside the window, or I don&rsquo;t suppose he
+ would have told it. Mrs. Martin&rsquo;s uncle&rsquo;s name was William Cowan, and he
+ has been dead for twenty years; but sixty years ago he was a young man,
+ and a very wild, wicked young man. He did everything bad he could think
+ of, and never went to church, and he laughed at everything religious, even
+ the devil. He didn&rsquo;t believe there was a devil at all. One beautiful
+ summer Sunday evening his mother pleaded with him to go to church with
+ her, but he would not. He told her that he was going fishing instead, and
+ when church time came he swaggered past the church, with his fishing rod
+ over his shoulder, singing a godless song. Half way between the church and
+ the harbour there was a thick spruce wood, and the path ran through it.
+ When William Cowan was half way through it SOMETHING came out of the wood
+ and walked beside him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have never heard anything more horribly suggestive than that innocent
+ word &ldquo;something,&rdquo; as enunciated by the Story Girl. I felt Cecily&rsquo;s hand,
+ icy cold, clutching mine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What&mdash;what&mdash;was IT like?&rdquo; whispered Felix, curiosity getting
+ the better of his terror.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;IT was tall, and black, and hairy,&rdquo; said the Story Girl, her eyes glowing
+ with uncanny intensity in the red glare of the fires, &ldquo;and IT lifted one
+ great, hairy hand, with claws on the end of it, and clapped William Cowan,
+ first on one shoulder and then on the other, and said, &lsquo;Good sport to you,
+ brother.&rsquo; William Cowan gave a horrible scream and fell on his face right
+ there in the wood. Some of the men around the church door heard the
+ scream, and they rushed down to the wood. They saw nothing but William
+ Cowan, lying like a dead man on the path. They took him up and carried him
+ home; and when they undressed him to put him to bed, there, on each
+ shoulder, was the mark of a big hand, BURNED INTO THE FLESH. It was weeks
+ before the burns healed, and the scars never went away. Always, as long as
+ William Cowan lived, he carried on his shoulders the prints of the devil&rsquo;s
+ hand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I really do not know how we should ever have got home, had we been left to
+ our own devices. We were cold with fright. How could we turn our backs on
+ the eerie spruce wood, out of which SOMETHING might pop at any moment? How
+ cross those long, shadowy fields between us and our rooftree? How venture
+ through the darkly mysterious bracken hollow?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fortunately, Uncle Alec came along at this crisis and said he thought we&rsquo;d
+ better come home now, since the fires were nearly out. We slid down from
+ the fence and started, taking care to keep close together and in front of
+ Uncle Alec.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t believe a word of that yarn,&rdquo; said Dan, trying to speak with his
+ usual incredulity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see how you can help believing it,&rdquo; said Cecily. &ldquo;It isn&rsquo;t as if
+ it was something we&rsquo;d read of, or that happened far away. It happened just
+ down at Markdale, and I&rsquo;ve seen that very spruce wood myself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I suppose William Cowan got a fright of some kind,&rdquo; conceded Dan,
+ &ldquo;but I don&rsquo;t believe he saw the devil.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Old Mr. Morrison at Lower Markdale was one of the men who undressed him,
+ and he remembers seeing the marks,&rdquo; said the Story Girl triumphantly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How did William Cowan behave afterwards?&rdquo; I asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He was a changed man,&rdquo; said the Story Girl solemnly. &ldquo;Too much changed.
+ He never was known to laugh again, or even smile. He became a very
+ religious man, which was a good thing, but he was dreadfully gloomy and
+ thought everything pleasant sinful. He wouldn&rsquo;t even eat any more than was
+ actually necessary to keep him alive. Uncle Roger says that if he had been
+ a Roman Catholic he would have become a monk, but, as he was a
+ Presbyterian, all he could do was to turn into a crank.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, but your Uncle Roger was never clapped on the shoulder and called
+ brother by the devil,&rdquo; said Peter. &ldquo;If he had, he mightn&rsquo;t have been so
+ precious jolly afterwards himself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do wish to goodness,&rdquo; said Felicity in exasperation, &ldquo;that you&rsquo;d stop
+ talking of the&mdash;the&mdash;of such subjects in the dark. I&rsquo;m so scared
+ now that I keep thinking father&rsquo;s steps behind us are SOMETHING&rsquo;S. Just
+ think, my own father!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl slipped her arm through Felicity&rsquo;s.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind,&rdquo; she said soothingly. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll tell you another story&mdash;such
+ a beautiful story that you&rsquo;ll forget all about the devil.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She told us one of Hans Andersen&rsquo;s most exquisite tales; and the magic of
+ her voice charmed away all our fear, so that when we reached the bracken
+ hollow, a lake of shadow surrounded by the silver shore of moonlit fields,
+ we all went through it without a thought of His Satanic Majesty at all.
+ And beyond us, on the hill, the homelight was glowing from the farmhouse
+ window like a beacon of old loves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0032" id="link2HCH0032">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXII. THE OPENING OF THE BLUE CHEST
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ November wakened from her dream of May in a bad temper. The day after the
+ picnic a cold autumn rain set in, and we got up to find our world a
+ drenched, wind-writhen place, with sodden fields and dour skies. The rain
+ was weeping on the roof as if it were shedding the tears of old sorrows;
+ the willow by the gate tossed its gaunt branches wildly, as if it were
+ some passionate, spectral thing, wringing its fleshless hands in agony;
+ the orchard was haggard and uncomely; nothing seemed the same except the
+ staunch, trusty, old spruces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was Friday, but we were not to begin going to school again until
+ Monday, so we spent the day in the granary, sorting apples and hearing
+ tales. In the evening the rain ceased, the wind came around to the
+ northwest, freezing suddenly, and a chilly yellow sunset beyond the dark
+ hills seemed to herald a brighter morrow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Felicity and the Story Girl and I walked down to the post-office for the
+ mail, along a road where fallen leaves went eddying fitfully up and down
+ before us in weird, uncanny dances of their own. The evening was full of
+ eerie sounds&mdash;the creaking of fir boughs, the whistle of the wind in
+ the tree-tops, the vibrations of strips of dried bark on the rail fences.
+ But we carried summer and sunshine in our hearts, and the bleak
+ unloveliness of the outer world only intensified our inner radiance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Felicity wore her new velvet hood, with a coquettish little collar of
+ white fur about her neck. Her golden curls framed her lovely face, and the
+ wind stung the pink of her cheeks to crimson. On my left hand walked the
+ Story Girl, her red cap on her jaunty brown head. She scattered her words
+ along the path like the pearls and diamonds of the old fairy tale. I
+ remember that I strutted along quite insufferably, for we met several of
+ the Carlisle boys and I felt that I was an exceptionally lucky fellow to
+ have such beauty on one side and such charm on the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was one of father&rsquo;s thin letters for Felix, a fat, foreign letter
+ for the Story Girl, addressed in her father&rsquo;s minute handwriting, a drop
+ letter for Cecily from some school friend, with &ldquo;In Haste&rdquo; written across
+ the corner, and a letter for Aunt Janet, postmarked Montreal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can&rsquo;t think who that is from,&rdquo; said Felicity. &ldquo;Nobody in Montreal ever
+ writes to mother. Cecily&rsquo;s letter is from Em Frewen. She always puts &lsquo;In
+ Haste&rsquo; on her letters, no matter what is in them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When we reached home, Aunt Janet opened and read her Montreal letter. Then
+ she laid it down and looked about her in astonishment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, did ever any mortal!&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What in the world is the matter?&rdquo; said Uncle Alec.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This letter is from James Ward&rsquo;s wife in Montreal,&rdquo; said Aunt Janet
+ solemnly. &ldquo;Rachel Ward is dead. And she told James&rsquo; wife to write to me
+ and tell me to open the old blue chest.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hurrah!&rdquo; shouted Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Donald King,&rdquo; said his mother severely, &ldquo;Rachel Ward was your relation
+ and she is dead. What do you mean by such behaviour?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I never was acquainted with her,&rdquo; said Dan sulkily. &ldquo;And I wasn&rsquo;t
+ hurrahing because she is dead. I hurrahed because that blue chest is to be
+ opened at last.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So poor Rachel is gone,&rdquo; said Uncle Alec. &ldquo;She must have been an old
+ woman&mdash;seventy-five I suppose. I remember her as a fine, blooming
+ young woman. Well, well, and so the old chest is to be opened at last.
+ What is to be done with its contents?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rachel left instructions about them,&rdquo; answered Aunt Janet, referring to
+ the letter. &ldquo;The wedding dress and veil and letters are to be burned.
+ There are two jugs in it which are to be sent to James&rsquo; wife. The rest of
+ the things are to be given around among the connection. Each members is to
+ have one, &lsquo;to remember her by.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, can&rsquo;t we open it right away this very night?&rdquo; said Felicity eagerly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, indeed!&rdquo; Aunt Janet folded up the letter decidedly. &ldquo;That chest has
+ been locked up for fifty years, and it&rsquo;ll stand being locked up one more
+ night. You children wouldn&rsquo;t sleep a wink to-night if we opened it now.
+ You&rsquo;d go wild with excitement.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m sure I won&rsquo;t sleep anyhow,&rdquo; said Felicity. &ldquo;Well, at least you&rsquo;ll
+ open it the first thing in the morning, won&rsquo;t you, ma?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, I&rsquo;ll do nothing of the sort,&rdquo; was Aunt Janet&rsquo;s pitiless decree. &ldquo;I
+ want to get the work out of the way first&mdash;and Roger and Olivia will
+ want to be here, too. We&rsquo;ll say ten o&rsquo;clock to-morrow forenoon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That&rsquo;s sixteen whole hours yet,&rdquo; sighed Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m going right over to tell the Story Girl,&rdquo; said Cecily. &ldquo;Won&rsquo;t she be
+ excited!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were all excited. We spent the evening speculating on the possible
+ contents of the chest, and Cecily dreamed miserably that night that the
+ moths had eaten everything in it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The morning dawned on a beautiful world. A very slight fall of snow had
+ come in the night&mdash;just enough to look like a filmy veil of lace
+ flung over the dark evergreens, and the hard frozen ground. A new blossom
+ time seemed to have revisited the orchard. The spruce wood behind the
+ house appeared to be woven out of enchantment. There is nothing more
+ beautiful than a thickly growing wood of firs lightly powdered with
+ new-fallen snow. As the sun remained hidden by gray clouds, this
+ fairy-beauty lasted all day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Story Girl came over early in the morning, and Sara Ray, to whom
+ faithful Cecily had sent word, was also on hand. Felicity did not approve
+ of this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sara Ray isn&rsquo;t any relation to our family,&rdquo; she scolded to Cecily, &ldquo;and
+ she has no right to be present.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She&rsquo;s a particular friend of mine,&rdquo; said Cecily with dignity. &ldquo;We have
+ her in everything, and it would hurt her feelings dreadfully to be left
+ out of this. Peter is no relation either, but he is going to be here when
+ we open it, so why shouldn&rsquo;t Sara?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Peter ain&rsquo;t a member of the family YET, but maybe he will be some day.
+ Hey, Felicity?&rdquo; said Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You&rsquo;re awful smart, aren&rsquo;t you, Dan King?&rdquo; said Felicity, reddening.
+ &ldquo;Perhaps you&rsquo;d like to send for Kitty Marr, too&mdash;though she DOES
+ laugh at your big mouth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It seems as if ten o&rsquo;clock would never come,&rdquo; sighed the Story Girl. &ldquo;The
+ work is all done, and Aunt Olivia and Uncle Roger are here, and the chest
+ might just as well be opened right away.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mother SAID ten o&rsquo;clock and she&rsquo;ll stick to it,&rdquo; said Felicity crossly.
+ &ldquo;It&rsquo;s only nine now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let us put the clock on half an hour,&rdquo; said the Story Girl. &ldquo;The clock in
+ the hall isn&rsquo;t going, so no one will know the difference.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We all looked at each other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t dare,&rdquo; said Felicity irresolutely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, if that&rsquo;s all, I&rsquo;ll do it,&rdquo; said the Story Girl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When ten o&rsquo;clock struck Aunt Janet came into the kitchen, remarking
+ innocently that it hadn&rsquo;t seemed anytime since nine. We must have looked
+ horribly guilty, but none of the grown-ups suspected anything. Uncle Alec
+ brought in the axe, and pried off the cover of the old blue chest, while
+ everybody stood around in silence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then came the unpacking. It was certainly an interesting performance. Aunt
+ Janet and Aunt Olivia took everything out and laid it on the kitchen
+ table. We children were forbidden to touch anything, but fortunately we
+ were not forbidden the use of our eyes and tongues.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There are the pink and gold vases Grandmother King gave her,&rdquo; said
+ Felicity, as Aunt Olivia unwrapped from their tissue paper swathings a
+ pair of slender, old-fashioned, twisted vases of pink glass, over which
+ little gold leaves were scattered. &ldquo;Aren&rsquo;t they handsome?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And oh,&rdquo; exclaimed Cecily in delight, &ldquo;there&rsquo;s the china fruit basket
+ with the apple on the handle. Doesn&rsquo;t it look real? I&rsquo;ve thought so much
+ about it. Oh, mother, please let me hold it for a minute. I&rsquo;ll be as
+ careful as careful.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There comes the china set Grandfather King gave her,&rdquo; said the Story Girl
+ wistfully. &ldquo;Oh, it makes me feel sad. Think of all the hopes that Rachel
+ Ward must have put away in this chest with all her pretty things.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Following these, came a quaint little candlestick of blue china, and the
+ two jugs which were to be sent to James&rsquo; wife.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They ARE handsome,&rdquo; said Aunt Janet rather enviously. &ldquo;They must be a
+ hundred years old. Aunt Sara Ward gave them to Rachel, and she had them
+ for at least fifty years. I should have thought one would have been enough
+ for James&rsquo; wife. But of course we must do just as Rachel wished. I
+ declare, here&rsquo;s a dozen tin patty pans!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tin patty pans aren&rsquo;t very romantic,&rdquo; said the Story Girl discontentedly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I notice that you are as fond as any one of what is baked in them,&rdquo; said
+ Aunt Janet. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve heard of those patty pans. An old servant Grandmother
+ King had gave them to Rachel. Now we are coming to the linen. That was
+ Uncle Edward Ward&rsquo;s present. How yellow it has grown.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We children were not greatly interested in the sheets and tablecloths and
+ pillow-cases which now came out of the capacious depths of the old blue
+ chest. But Aunt Olivia was quite enraptured over them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What sewing!&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Look, Janet, you&rsquo;d almost need a magnifying
+ glass to see the stitches. And the dear, old-fashioned pillow-slips with
+ buttons on them!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here are a dozen handkerchiefs,&rdquo; said Aunt Janet. &ldquo;Look at the initial in
+ the corner of each. Rachel learned that stitch from a nun in Montreal. It
+ looks as if it was woven into the material.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here are her quilts,&rdquo; said Aunt Olivia. &ldquo;Yes, there is the blue and white
+ counterpane Grandmother Ward gave her&mdash;and the Rising Sun quilt her
+ Aunt Nancy made for her&mdash;and the braided rug. The colours are not
+ faded one bit. I want that rug, Janet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Underneath the linen were Rachel Ward&rsquo;s wedding clothes. The excitement of
+ the girls waxed red hot over these. There was a Paisley shawl in the
+ wrappings in which it had come from the store, and a wide scarf of some
+ yellowed lace. There was the embroidered petticoat which had cost Felicity
+ such painful blushes, and a dozen beautifully worked sets of the fine
+ muslin &ldquo;undersleeves&rdquo; which had been the fashion in Rachel Ward&rsquo;s youth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This was to have been her appearing out dress,&rdquo; said Aunt Olivia, lifting
+ out a shot green silk. &ldquo;It is all cut to pieces&mdash;but what a pretty
+ soft shade it was! Look at the skirt, Janet. How many yards must it
+ measure around?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hoopskirts were in then,&rdquo; said Aunt Janet. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see her wedding hat
+ here. I was always told that she packed it away, too.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So was I. But she couldn&rsquo;t have. It certainly isn&rsquo;t here. I have heard
+ that the white plume on it cost a small fortune. Here is her black silk
+ mantle. It seems like sacrilege to meddle with these clothes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t be foolish, Olivia. They must be unpacked at least. And they must
+ all be burned since they have cut so badly. This purple cloth dress is
+ quite good, however. It can be made over nicely, and it would become you
+ very well, Olivia.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, thank you,&rdquo; said Aunt Olivia, with a little shudder. &ldquo;I should feel
+ like a ghost. Make it over for yourself, Janet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I will, if you don&rsquo;t want it. I am not troubled with fancies. That
+ seems to be all except this box. I suppose the wedding dress is in it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; breathed the girls, crowding about Aunt Olivia, as she lifted out
+ the box and cut the cord around it. Inside was lying a dress of soft silk,
+ that had once been white but was now yellowed with age, and, enfolding it
+ like a mist, a long, white bridal veil, redolent with some strange,
+ old-time perfume that had kept its sweetness through all the years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Poor Rachel Ward,&rdquo; said Aunt Olivia softly. &ldquo;Here is her point lace
+ handkerchief. She made it herself. It is like a spider&rsquo;s web. Here are the
+ letters Will Montague wrote her. And here,&rdquo; she added, taking up a crimson
+ velvet case with a tarnished gilt clasp, &ldquo;are their photographs&mdash;his
+ and hers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We looked eagerly at the daguerreotypes in the old case.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, Rachel Ward wasn&rsquo;t a bit pretty!&rdquo; exclaimed the Story Girl in
+ poignant disappointment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No, Rachel Ward was not pretty, that had to be admitted. The picture
+ showed a fresh young face, with strongly marked, irregular features, large
+ black eyes, and black curls hanging around the shoulders in old-time
+ style.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rachel wasn&rsquo;t pretty,&rdquo; said Uncle Alec, &ldquo;but she had a lovely colour, and
+ a beautiful smile. She looks far too sober in that picture.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She has a beautiful neck and bust,&rdquo; said Aunt Olivia critically.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Anyhow, Will Montague was really handsome,&rdquo; said the Story Girl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A handsome rogue,&rdquo; growled Uncle Alec. &ldquo;I never liked him. I was only a
+ little chap of ten but I saw through him. Rachel Ward was far too good for
+ him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We would dearly have liked to get a peep into the letters, too. But Aunt
+ Olivia would not allow that. They must be burned unread, she declared. She
+ took the wedding dress and veil, the picture case, and the letters away
+ with her. The rest of the things were put back into the chest, pending
+ their ultimate distribution. Aunt Janet gave each of us boys a
+ handkerchief. The Story Girl got the blue candlestick, and Felicity and
+ Cecily each got a pink and gold vase. Even Sara Ray was made happy by the
+ gift of a little china plate, with a loudly coloured picture of Moses and
+ Aaron before Pharaoh in the middle of it. Moses wore a scarlet cloak,
+ while Aaron disported himself in bright blue. Pharaoh was arrayed in
+ yellow. The plate had a scalloped border with a wreath of green leaves
+ around it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shall never use it to eat off,&rdquo; said Sara rapturously. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll put it up
+ on the parlour mantelpiece.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see much use in having a plate just for ornament,&rdquo; said Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It&rsquo;s nice to have something interesting to look at,&rdquo; retorted Sara, who
+ felt that the soul must have food as well as the body.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m going to get a candle for my candlestick, and use it every night to
+ go to bed with,&rdquo; said the Story Girl. &ldquo;And I&rsquo;ll never light it without
+ thinking of poor Rachel Ward. But I DO wish she had been pretty.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Felicity, with a glance at the clock, &ldquo;it&rsquo;s all over, and it
+ has been very interesting. But that clock has got to be put back to the
+ right time some time through the day. I don&rsquo;t want bedtime coming a whole
+ half-hour before it ought to.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the afternoon, when Aunt Janet was over at Uncle Roger&rsquo;s, seeing him
+ and Aunt Olivia off to town, the clock was righted. The Story Girl and
+ Peter came over to stay all night with us, and we made taffy in the
+ kitchen, which the grown-ups kindly gave over to us for that purpose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course it was very interesting to see the old chest unpacked,&rdquo; said
+ the Story Girl as she stirred the contents of a saucepan vigorously. &ldquo;But
+ now that it is over I believe I am sorry that it is opened. It isn&rsquo;t
+ mysterious any longer. We know all about it now, and we can never imagine
+ what things are in it any more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It&rsquo;s better to know than to imagine,&rdquo; said Felicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, no, it isn&rsquo;t,&rdquo; said the Story Girl quickly. &ldquo;When you know things you
+ have to go by facts. But when you just dream about things there&rsquo;s nothing
+ to hold you down.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You&rsquo;re letting the taffy scorch, and THAT&rsquo;S a fact you&rsquo;d better go by,&rdquo;
+ said Felicity sniffing. &ldquo;Haven&rsquo;t you got a nose?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When we went to bed, that wonderful white enchantress, the moon, was
+ making an elf-land of the snow-misted world outside. From where I lay I
+ could see the sharp tops of the spruces against the silvery sky. The frost
+ was abroad, and the winds were still and the land lay in glamour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Across the hall, the Story Girl was telling Felicity and Cecily the old,
+ old tale of Argive Helen and &ldquo;evil-hearted Paris.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But that&rsquo;s a bad story,&rdquo; said Felicity when the tale was ended. &ldquo;She left
+ her husband and run away with another man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suppose it was bad four thousand years ago,&rdquo; admitted the Story Girl.
+ &ldquo;But by this time the bad must have all gone out of it. It&rsquo;s only the good
+ that could last so long.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our summer was over. It had been a beautiful one. We had known the
+ sweetness of common joys, the delight of dawns, the dream and glamour of
+ noontides, the long, purple peace of carefree nights. We had had the
+ pleasure of bird song, of silver rain on greening fields, of storm among
+ the trees, of blossoming meadows, and of the converse of whispering
+ leaves. We had had brotherhood with wind and star, with books and tales,
+ and hearth fires of autumn. Ours had been the little, loving tasks of
+ every day, blithe companionship, shared thoughts, and adventuring. Rich
+ were we in the memory of those opulent months that had gone from us&mdash;richer
+ than we then knew or suspected. And before us was the dream of spring. It
+ is always safe to dream of spring. For it is sure to come; and if it be
+ not just as we have pictured it, it will be infinitely sweeter.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ THE END.
+ </h3>
+ <div style="height: 6em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Story Girl, by Lucy Maud Montgomery
+
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Story Girl, by Lucy Maud Montgomery
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Story Girl
+
+Author: Lucy Maud Montgomery
+
+
+Release Date: March, 2004 [EBook #5342]
+[This file was first posted on July 2, 2002]
+Last Updated: April 16, 2013
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE STORY GIRL ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Leslee Suttie, Mary Mark Ockerbloom, and Ben Crowder
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE STORY GIRL
+
+By L. M. Montgomery
+
+
+Author of "Anne of Green Gables," "Anne of Avonlea," "Kilmeny of the
+Orchard," etc.
+
+
+With frontispiece and cover in colour by George Gibbs
+
+
+
+This book has been put on-line as part of the BUILD-A-BOOK Initiative
+at the Celebration of Women Writers through the combined work of Leslee
+Suttie and Mary Mark Ockerbloom.
+
+http://digital.library.upenn.edu/women/
+
+Reformatted by Ben Crowder
+
+
+
+ "She was a form of life and light
+ That seen, became a part of sight,
+ And rose, where'er I turn'd mine eye,
+ The morning-star of Memory!" --Byron.
+
+
+TO MY COUSIN
+
+Frederica E. Campbell
+
+IN REMEMBRANCE OF OLD DAYS, OLD DREAMS, AND OLD LAUGHTER
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ I. The Home of Our Fathers
+ II. A Queen of Hearts
+ III. Legends of the Old Orchard
+ IV. The Wedding Veil of the Proud Princess
+ V. Peter Goes to Church
+ VI. The Mystery of Golden Milestone
+ VII. How Betty Sherman Won a Husband
+ VIII. A Tragedy of Childhood
+ IX. Magic Seed
+ X. A Daughter of Eve
+ XI. The Story Girl Does Penance
+ XII. The Blue Chest of Rachel Ward
+ XIII. An Old Proverb With a New Meaning
+ XIV. Forbidden Fruit
+ XV. A Disobedient Brother
+ XVI. The Ghostly Bell
+ XVII. The Proof of the Pudding
+ XVIII. How Kissing Was Discovered
+ XIX. A Dread Prophecy
+ XX. The Judgment Sunday
+ XXI. Dreamers of Dreams
+ XXII. The Dream Books
+ XXIII. Such Stuff as Dreams Are Made On
+ XXIV. The Bewitchment of Pat
+ XXV. A Cup of Failure
+ XXVI. Peter Makes an Impression
+ XXVII. The Ordeal of Bitter Apples
+ XXVIII. The Tale of the Rainbow Bridge
+ XXIX. The Shadow Feared of Man
+ XXX. A Compound Letter
+ XXXI. On the Edge of Light and Dark
+ XXXII. The Opening of the Blue Chest
+
+
+
+
+THE STORY GIRL
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I. THE HOME OF OUR FATHERS
+
+"I do like a road, because you can be always wondering what is at the
+end of it."
+
+The Story Girl said that once upon a time. Felix and I, on the May
+morning when we left Toronto for Prince Edward Island, had not then
+heard her say it, and, indeed, were but barely aware of the existence of
+such a person as the Story Girl. We did not know her at all under that
+name. We knew only that a cousin, Sara Stanley, whose mother, our Aunt
+Felicity, was dead, was living down on the Island with Uncle Roger
+and Aunt Olivia King, on a farm adjoining the old King homestead in
+Carlisle. We supposed we should get acquainted with her when we reached
+there, and we had an idea, from Aunt Olivia's letters to father, that
+she would be quite a jolly creature. Further than that we did not think
+about her. We were more interested in Felicity and Cecily and Dan,
+who lived on the homestead and would therefore be our roofmates for a
+season.
+
+But the spirit of the Story Girl's yet unuttered remark was thrilling
+in our hearts that morning, as the train pulled out of Toronto. We were
+faring forth on a long road; and, though we had some idea what would be
+at the end of it, there was enough glamour of the unknown about it to
+lend a wonderful charm to our speculations concerning it.
+
+We were delighted at the thought of seeing father's old home, and living
+among the haunts of his boyhood. He had talked so much to us about it,
+and described its scenes so often and so minutely, that he had inspired
+us with some of his own deep-seated affection for it--an affection that
+had never waned in all his years of exile. We had a vague feeling that
+we, somehow, belonged there, in that cradle of our family, though we had
+never seen it. We had always looked forward eagerly to the promised day
+when father would take us "down home," to the old house with the spruces
+behind it and the famous "King orchard" before it--when we might ramble
+in "Uncle Stephen's Walk," drink from the deep well with the Chinese
+roof over it, stand on "the Pulpit Stone," and eat apples from our
+"birthday trees."
+
+The time had come sooner than we had dared to hope; but father could
+not take us after all. His firm asked him to go to Rio de Janeiro that
+spring to take charge of their new branch there. It was too good a
+chance to lose, for father was a poor man and it meant promotion and
+increase of salary; but it also meant the temporary breaking up of our
+home. Our mother had died before either of us was old enough to remember
+her; father could not take us to Rio de Janeiro. In the end he decided
+to send us to Uncle Alec and Aunt Janet down on the homestead; and our
+housekeeper, who belonged to the Island and was now returning to it,
+took charge of us on the journey. I fear she had an anxious trip of it,
+poor woman! She was constantly in a quite justifiable terror lest we
+should be lost or killed; she must have felt great relief when she
+reached Charlottetown and handed us over to the keeping of Uncle Alec.
+Indeed, she said as much.
+
+"The fat one isn't so bad. He isn't so quick to move and get out of your
+sight while you're winking as the thin one. But the only safe way to
+travel with those young ones would be to have 'em both tied to you with
+a short rope--a MIGHTY short rope."
+
+"The fat one" was Felix, who was very sensitive about his plumpness.
+He was always taking exercises to make him thin, with the dismal result
+that he became fatter all the time. He vowed that he didn't care; but he
+DID care terribly, and he glowered at Mrs. MacLaren in a most undutiful
+fashion. He had never liked her since the day she had told him he would
+soon be as broad as he was long.
+
+For my own part, I was rather sorry to see her going; and she cried over
+us and wished us well; but we had forgotten all about her by the time
+we reached the open country, driving along, one on either side of Uncle
+Alec, whom we loved from the moment we saw him. He was a small man, with
+thin, delicate features, close-clipped gray beard, and large, tired,
+blue eyes--father's eyes over again. We knew that Uncle Alec was fond
+of children and was heart-glad to welcome "Alan's boys." We felt at home
+with him, and were not afraid to ask him questions on any subject that
+came uppermost in our minds. We became very good friends with him on
+that twenty-four mile drive.
+
+Much to our disappointment it was dark when we reached Carlisle--too
+dark to see anything very distinctly, as we drove up the lane of the
+old King homestead on the hill. Behind us a young moon was hanging over
+southwestern meadows of spring-time peace, but all about us were the
+soft, moist shadows of a May night. We peered eagerly through the gloom.
+
+"There's the big willow, Bev," whispered Felix excitedly, as we turned
+in at the gate.
+
+There it was, in truth--the tree Grandfather King had planted when he
+returned one evening from ploughing in the brook field and stuck the
+willow switch he had used all day in the soft soil by the gate.
+
+It had taken root and grown; our father and our uncles and aunts had
+played in its shadow; and now it was a massive thing, with a huge girth
+of trunk and great spreading boughs, each of them as large as a tree in
+itself.
+
+"I'm going to climb it to-morrow," I said joyfully.
+
+Off to the right was a dim, branching place which we knew was the
+orchard; and on our left, among sibilant spruces and firs, was the old,
+whitewashed house--from which presently a light gleamed through an open
+door, and Aunt Janet, a big, bustling, sonsy woman, with full-blown
+peony cheeks, came to welcome us.
+
+Soon after we were at supper in the kitchen, with its low, dark,
+raftered ceiling from which substantial hams and flitches of bacon were
+hanging. Everything was just as father had described it. We felt that we
+had come home, leaving exile behind us.
+
+Felicity, Cecily, and Dan were sitting opposite us, staring at us when
+they thought we would be too busy eating to see them. We tried to stare
+at them when THEY were eating; and as a result we were always catching
+each other at it and feeling cheap and embarrassed.
+
+Dan was the oldest; he was my age--thirteen. He was a lean, freckled
+fellow with rather long, lank, brown hair and the shapely King nose. We
+recognized it at once. His mouth was his own, however, for it was like
+to no mouth on either the King or the Ward side; and nobody would have
+been anxious to claim it, for it was an undeniably ugly one--long and
+narrow and twisted. But it could grin in friendly fashion, and both
+Felix and I felt that we were going to like Dan.
+
+Felicity was twelve. She had been called after Aunt Felicity, who was
+the twin sister of Uncle Felix. Aunt Felicity and Uncle Felix, as father
+had often told us, had died on the same day, far apart, and were buried
+side by side in the old Carlisle graveyard.
+
+We had known from Aunt Olivia's letters, that Felicity was the beauty of
+the connection, and we had been curious to see her on that account. She
+fully justified our expectations. She was plump and dimpled, with big,
+dark-blue, heavy-lidded eyes, soft, feathery, golden curls, and a pink
+and white skin--"the King complexion." The Kings were noted for their
+noses and complexion. Felicity had also delightful hands and wrists. At
+every turn of them a dimple showed itself. It was a pleasure to wonder
+what her elbows must be like.
+
+She was very nicely dressed in a pink print and a frilled muslin apron;
+and we understood, from something Dan said, that she had "dressed up"
+in honour of our coming. This made us feel quite important. So far as we
+knew, no feminine creatures had ever gone to the pains of dressing up on
+our account before.
+
+Cecily, who was eleven, was pretty also--or would have been had Felicity
+not been there. Felicity rather took the colour from other girls. Cecily
+looked pale and thin beside her; but she had dainty little features,
+smooth brown hair of satin sheen, and mild brown eyes, with just a hint
+of demureness in them now and again. We remembered that Aunt Olivia
+had written to father that Cecily was a true Ward--she had no sense
+of humour. We did not know what this meant, but we thought it was not
+exactly complimentary.
+
+Still, we were both inclined to think we would like Cecily better than
+Felicity. To be sure, Felicity was a stunning beauty. But, with the
+swift and unerring intuition of childhood, which feels in a moment what
+it sometimes takes maturity much time to perceive, we realized that
+she was rather too well aware of her good looks. In brief, we saw that
+Felicity was vain.
+
+"It's a wonder the Story Girl isn't over to see you," said Uncle Alec.
+"She's been quite wild with excitement about your coming."
+
+"She hasn't been very well all day," explained Cecily, "and Aunt Olivia
+wouldn't let her come out in the night air. She made her go to bed
+instead. The Story Girl was awfully disappointed."
+
+"Who is the Story Girl?" asked Felix.
+
+"Oh, Sara--Sara Stanley. We call her the Story Girl partly because
+she's such a hand to tell stories--oh, I can't begin to describe it--and
+partly because Sara Ray, who lives at the foot of the hill, often comes
+up to play with us, and it is awkward to have two girls of the same name
+in the same crowd. Besides, Sara Stanley doesn't like her name and she'd
+rather be called the Story Girl."
+
+Dan speaking for the first time, rather sheepishly volunteered the
+information that Peter had also been intending to come over but had to
+go home to take some flour to his mother instead.
+
+"Peter?" I questioned. I had never heard of any Peter.
+
+"He is your Uncle Roger's handy boy," said Uncle Alec. "His name is
+Peter Craig, and he is a real smart little chap. But he's got his share
+of mischief, that same lad."
+
+"He wants to be Felicity's beau," said Dan slyly.
+
+"Don't talk silly nonsense, Dan," said Aunt Janet severely.
+
+Felicity tossed her golden head and shot an unsisterly glance at Dan.
+
+"I wouldn't be very likely to have a hired boy for a beau," she
+observed.
+
+We saw that her anger was real, not affected. Evidently Peter was not an
+admirer of whom Felicity was proud.
+
+We were very hungry boys; and when we had eaten all we could--and oh,
+what suppers Aunt Janet always spread!--we discovered that we were very
+tired also--too tired to go out and explore our ancestral domains, as we
+would have liked to do, despite the dark.
+
+We were quite willing to go to bed; and presently we found ourselves
+tucked away upstairs in the very room, looking out eastward into the
+spruce grove, which father had once occupied. Dan shared it with us,
+sleeping in a bed of his own in the opposite corner. The sheets and
+pillow-slips were fragrant with lavender, and one of Grandmother King's
+noted patchwork quilts was over us. The window was open and we heard the
+frogs singing down in the swamp of the brook meadow. We had heard frogs
+sing in Ontario, of course; but certainly Prince Edward Island frogs
+were more tuneful and mellow. Or was it simply the glamour of old family
+traditions and tales which was over us, lending its magic to all sights
+and sounds around us? This was home--father's home--OUR home! We
+had never lived long enough in any one house to develop a feeling
+of affection for it; but here, under the roof-tree built by
+Great-Grandfather King ninety years ago, that feeling swept into our
+boyish hearts and souls like a flood of living sweetness and tenderness.
+
+"Just think, those are the very frogs father listened to when he was a
+little boy," whispered Felix.
+
+"They can hardly be the SAME frogs," I objected doubtfully, not feeling
+very certain about the possible longevity of frogs. "It's twenty years
+since father left home."
+
+"Well, they're the descendants of the frogs he heard," said Felix, "and
+they're singing in the same swamp. That's near enough."
+
+Our door was open and in their room across the narrow hall the girls
+were preparing for bed, and talking rather more loudly than they might
+have done had they realized how far their sweet, shrill voices carried.
+
+"What do you think of the boys?" asked Cecily.
+
+"Beverley is handsome, but Felix is too fat," answered Felicity
+promptly.
+
+Felix twitched the quilt rather viciously and grunted. But I began to
+think I would like Felicity. It might not be altogether her fault that
+she was vain. How could she help it when she looked in the mirror?
+
+"I think they're both nice and nice looking," said Cecily.
+
+Dear little soul!
+
+"I wonder what the Story Girl will think of them," said Felicity, as if,
+after all, that was the main thing.
+
+Somehow, we, too, felt that it was. We felt that if the Story Girl did
+not approve of us it made little difference who else did or did not.
+
+"I wonder if the Story Girl is pretty," said Felix aloud.
+
+"No, she isn't," said Dan instantly, from across the room. "But you'll
+think she is while she's talking to you. Everybody does. It's only when
+you go away from her that you find out she isn't a bit pretty after
+all."
+
+The girls' door shut with a bang. Silence fell over the house. We
+drifted into the land of sleep, wondering if the Story Girl would like
+us.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II. A QUEEN OF HEARTS
+
+I wakened shortly after sunrise. The pale May sunshine was showering
+through the spruces, and a chill, inspiring wind was tossing the boughs
+about.
+
+"Felix, wake up," I whispered, shaking him.
+
+"What's the matter?" he murmured reluctantly.
+
+"It's morning. Let's get up and go down and out. I can't wait another
+minute to see the places father has told us of."
+
+We slipped out of bed and dressed, without arousing Dan, who was still
+slumbering soundly, his mouth wide open, and his bed-clothes kicked off
+on the floor. I had hard work to keep Felix from trying to see if he
+could "shy" a marble into that tempting open mouth. I told him it would
+waken Dan, who would then likely insist on getting up and accompanying
+us, and it would be so much nicer to go by ourselves for the first time.
+
+Everything was very still as we crept downstairs. Out in the kitchen we
+heard some one, presumably Uncle Alec, lighting the fire; but the heart
+of house had not yet begun to beat for the day.
+
+We paused a moment in the hall to look at the big "Grandfather" clock.
+It was not going, but it seemed like an old, familiar acquaintance to
+us, with the gilt balls on its three peaks; the little dial and pointer
+which would indicate the changes of the moon, and the very dent in its
+wooden door which father had made when he was a boy, by kicking it in a
+fit of naughtiness.
+
+Then we opened the front door and stepped out, rapture swelling in our
+bosoms. There was a rare breeze from the south blowing to meet us; the
+shadows of the spruces were long and clear-cut; the exquisite skies of
+early morning, blue and wind-winnowed, were over us; away to the west,
+beyond the brook field, was a long valley and a hill purple with firs
+and laced with still leafless beeches and maples.
+
+Behind the house was a grove of fir and spruce, a dim, cool place where
+the winds were fond of purring and where there was always a resinous,
+woodsy odour. On the further side of it was a thick plantation of
+slender silver birches and whispering poplars; and beyond it was Uncle
+Roger's house.
+
+Right before us, girt about with its trim spruce hedge, was the
+famous King orchard, the history of which was woven into our earliest
+recollections. We knew all about it, from father's descriptions, and in
+fancy we had roamed in it many a time and oft.
+
+It was now nearly sixty years since it had had its beginning, when
+Grandfather King brought his bride home. Before the wedding he had
+fenced off the big south meadow that sloped to the sun; it was the
+finest, most fertile field on the farm, and the neighbours told young
+Abraham King that he would raise many a fine crop of wheat in that
+meadow. Abraham King smiled and, being a man of few words, said nothing;
+but in his mind he had a vision of the years to be, and in that vision
+he saw, not rippling acres of harvest gold, but great, leafy avenues of
+wide-spreading trees laden with fruit to gladden the eyes of children
+and grandchildren yet unborn.
+
+It was a vision to develop slowly into fulfilment. Grandfather King was
+in no hurry. He did not set his whole orchard out at once, for he wished
+it to grow with his life and history, and be bound up with all of good
+and joy that should come to his household. So the morning after he had
+brought his young wife home they went together to the south meadow and
+planted their bridal trees. These trees were no longer living; but they
+had been when father was a boy, and every spring bedecked themselves in
+blossom as delicately tinted as Elizabeth King's face when she walked
+through the old south meadow in the morn of her life and love.
+
+When a son was born to Abraham and Elizabeth a tree was planted in the
+orchard for him. They had fourteen children in all, and each child
+had its "birth tree." Every family festival was commemorated in like
+fashion, and every beloved visitor who spent a night under their roof
+was expected to plant a tree in the orchard. So it came to pass that
+every tree in it was a fair green monument to some love or delight of
+the vanished years. And each grandchild had its tree, there, also, set
+out by grandfather when the tidings of its birth reached him; not always
+an apple tree--perhaps it was a plum, or cherry or pear. But it was
+always known by the name of the person for whom, or by whom, it was
+planted; and Felix and I knew as much about "Aunt Felicity's pears," and
+"Aunt Julia's cherries," and "Uncle Alec's apples," and the "Rev. Mr.
+Scott's plums," as if we had been born and bred among them.
+
+And now we had come to the orchard; it was before us; we had only
+to open that little whitewashed gate in the hedge and we might find
+ourselves in its storied domain. But before we reached the gate we
+glanced to our left, along the grassy, spruce-bordered lane which led
+over to Uncle Roger's; and at the entrance of that lane we saw a girl
+standing, with a gray cat at her feet. She lifted her hand and beckoned
+blithely to us; and, the orchard forgotten, we followed her summons. For
+we knew that this must be the Story Girl; and in that gay and graceful
+gesture was an allurement not to be gainsaid or denied.
+
+We looked at her as we drew near with such interest that we forgot to
+feel shy. No, she was not pretty. She was tall for her fourteen years,
+slim and straight; around her long, white face--rather too long and too
+white--fell sleek, dark-brown curls, tied above either ear with rosettes
+of scarlet ribbon. Her large, curving mouth was as red as a poppy, and
+she had brilliant, almond-shaped, hazel eyes; but we did not think her
+pretty.
+
+Then she spoke; she said,
+
+"Good morning."
+
+Never had we heard a voice like hers. Never, in all my life since, have
+I heard such a voice. I cannot describe it. I might say it was clear; I
+might say it was sweet; I might say it was vibrant and far-reaching and
+bell-like; all this would be true, but it would give you no real idea of
+the peculiar quality which made the Story Girl's voice what it was.
+
+If voices had colour, hers would have been like a rainbow. It made words
+LIVE. Whatever she said became a breathing entity, not a mere verbal
+statement or utterance. Felix and I were too young to understand or
+analyze the impression it made upon us; but we instantly felt at her
+greeting that it WAS a good morning--a surpassingly good morning--the
+very best morning that had ever happened in this most excellent of
+worlds.
+
+"You are Felix and Beverley," she went on, shaking our hands with an air
+of frank comradeship, which was very different from the shy, feminine
+advances of Felicity and Cecily. From that moment we were as good
+friends as if we had known each other for a hundred years. "I am glad to
+see you. I was so disappointed I couldn't go over last night. I got up
+early this morning, though, for I felt sure you would be up early, too,
+and that you'd like to have me tell you about things. I can tell things
+so much better than Felicity or Cecily. Do you think Felicity is VERY
+pretty?"
+
+"She's the prettiest girl I ever saw," I said enthusiastically,
+remembering that Felicity had called me handsome.
+
+"The boys all think so," said the Story Girl, not, I fancied, quite well
+pleased. "And I suppose she is. She is a splendid cook, too, though she
+is only twelve. I can't cook. I am trying to learn, but I don't make
+much progress. Aunt Olivia says I haven't enough natural gumption ever
+to be a cook; but I'd love to be able to make as good cakes and pies as
+Felicity can make. But then, Felicity is stupid. It's not ill-natured
+of me to say that. It's just the truth, and you'd soon find it out for
+yourselves. I like Felicity very well, but she IS stupid. Cecily is ever
+so much cleverer. Cecily's a dear. So is Uncle Alec; and Aunt Janet is
+pretty nice, too."
+
+"What is Aunt Olivia like?" asked Felix.
+
+"Aunt Olivia is very pretty. She is just like a pansy--all velvety and
+purply and goldy."
+
+Felix and I SAW, somewhere inside of our heads, a velvet and purple and
+gold pansy-woman, just as the Story Girl spoke.
+
+"But is she NICE?" I asked. That was the main question about grown-ups.
+Their looks mattered little to us.
+
+"She is lovely. But she is twenty-nine, you know. That's pretty old. She
+doesn't bother me much. Aunt Janet says that I'd have no bringing up at
+all, if it wasn't for her. Aunt Olivia says children should just be let
+COME up--that everything else is settled for them long before they are
+born. I don't understand that. Do you?"
+
+No, we did not. But it was our experience that grown-ups had a habit of
+saying things hard to understand.
+
+"What is Uncle Roger like?" was our next question.
+
+"Well, I like Uncle Roger," said the Story Girl meditatively. "He is big
+and jolly. But he teases people too much. You ask him a serious question
+and you get a ridiculous answer. He hardly ever scolds or gets cross,
+though, and THAT is something. He is an old bachelor."
+
+"Doesn't he ever mean to get married?" asked Felix.
+
+"I don't know. Aunt Olivia wishes he would, because she's tired keeping
+house for him, and she wants to go to Aunt Julia in California. But she
+says he'll never get married, because he is looking for perfection, and
+when he finds her she won't have HIM."
+
+By this time we were all sitting down on the gnarled roots of the
+spruces, and the big gray cat came over and made friends with us. He was
+a lordly animal, with a silver-gray coat beautifully marked with darker
+stripes. With such colouring most cats would have had white or silver
+feet; but he had four black paws and a black nose. Such points gave him
+an air of distinction, and marked him out as quite different from the
+common or garden variety of cats. He seemed to be a cat with a tolerably
+good opinion of himself, and his response to our advances was slightly
+tinged with condescension.
+
+"This isn't Topsy, is it?" I asked. I knew at once that the question was
+a foolish one. Topsy, the cat of which father had talked, had flourished
+thirty years before, and all her nine lives could scarcely have lasted
+so long.
+
+"No, but it is Topsy's great-great-great-great-grandson," said the Story
+Girl gravely. "His name is Paddy and he is my own particular cat. We
+have barn cats, but Paddy never associates with them. I am very good
+friends with all cats. They are so sleek and comfortable and dignified.
+And it is so easy to make them happy. Oh, I'm so glad you boys have come
+to live here. Nothing ever happens here, except days, so we have to make
+our own good times. We were short of boys before--only Dan and Peter to
+four girls."
+
+"FOUR girls? Oh, yes, Sara Ray. Felicity mentioned her. What is she
+like? Where does she live?"
+
+"Just down the hill. You can't see the house for the spruce bush. Sara
+is a nice girl. She's only eleven, and her mother is dreadfully strict.
+She never allows Sara to read a single story. JUST you fancy! Sara's
+conscience is always troubling her for doing things she's sure her
+mother won't approve, but it never prevents her from doing them. It
+only spoils her fun. Uncle Roger says that a mother who won't let you do
+anything, and a conscience that won't let you enjoy anything is an awful
+combination, and he doesn't wonder Sara is pale and thin and nervous.
+But, between you and me, I believe the real reason is that her mother
+doesn't give her half enough to eat. Not that she's mean, you know--but
+she thinks it isn't healthy for children to eat much, or anything but
+certain things. Isn't it fortunate we weren't born into that sort of a
+family?"
+
+"I think it's awfully lucky we were all born into the same family,"
+Felix remarked.
+
+"Isn't it? I've often thought so. And I've often thought what a dreadful
+thing it would have been if Grandfather and Grandmother King had never
+got married to each other. I don't suppose there would have been a
+single one of us children here at all; or if we were, we would be part
+somebody else and that would be almost as bad. When I think it all over
+I can't feel too thankful that Grandfather and Grandmother King happened
+to marry each other, when there were so many other people they might
+have married."
+
+Felix and I shivered. We felt suddenly that we had escaped a dreadful
+danger--the danger of having been born somebody else. But it took
+the Story Girl to make us realize just how dreadful it was and what a
+terrible risk we had run years before we, or our parents either, had
+existed.
+
+"Who lives over there?" I asked, pointing to a house across the fields.
+
+"Oh, that belongs to the Awkward Man. His name is Jasper Dale, but
+everybody calls him the Awkward Man. And they do say he writes poetry.
+He calls his place Golden Milestone. I know why, because I've read
+Longfellow's poems. He never goes into society because he is so awkward.
+The girls laugh at him and he doesn't like it. I know a story about him
+and I'll tell it to you sometime."
+
+"And who lives in that other house?" asked Felix, looking over the
+westering valley where a little gray roof was visible among the trees.
+
+"Old Peg Bowen. She's very queer. She lives there with a lot of pet
+animals in winter, and in summer she roams over the country and begs her
+meals. They say she is crazy. People have always tried to frighten us
+children into good behaviour by telling us that Peg Bowen would catch us
+if we didn't behave. I'm not so frightened of her as I once was, but
+I don't think I would like to be caught by her. Sara Ray is dreadfully
+scared of her. Peter Craig says she is a witch and that he bets she's at
+the bottom of it when the butter won't come. But I don't believe THAT.
+Witches are so scarce nowadays. There may be some somewhere in the
+world, but it's not likely there are any here right in Prince Edward
+Island. They used to be very plenty long ago. I know some splendid witch
+stories I'll tell you some day. They'll just make your blood freeze in
+your veins."
+
+We hadn't a doubt of it. If anybody could freeze the blood in our veins
+this girl with the wonderful voice could. But it was a May morning, and
+our young blood was running blithely in our veins. We suggested a visit
+to the orchard would be more agreeable.
+
+"All right. I know stories about it, too," she said, as we walked across
+the yard, followed by Paddy of the waving tail. "Oh, aren't you glad it
+is spring? The beauty of winter is that it makes you appreciate spring."
+
+The latch of the gate clicked under the Story Girl's hand, and the next
+moment we were in the King orchard.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III. LEGENDS OF THE OLD ORCHARD
+
+Outside of the orchard the grass was only beginning to grow green; but
+here, sheltered by the spruce hedges from uncertain winds and sloping to
+southern suns, it was already like a wonderful velvet carpet; the leaves
+on the trees were beginning to come out in woolly, grayish clusters;
+and there were purple-pencilled white violets at the base of the Pulpit
+Stone.
+
+"It's all just as father described it," said Felix with a blissful sigh,
+"and there's the well with the Chinese roof."
+
+We hurried over to it, treading on the spears of mint that were
+beginning to shoot up about it. It was a very deep well, and the curb
+was of rough, undressed stones. Over it, the queer, pagoda-like roof,
+built by Uncle Stephen on his return from a voyage to China, was covered
+with yet leafless vines.
+
+"It's so pretty, when the vines leaf out and hang down in long
+festoons," said the Story Girl. "The birds build their nests in it. A
+pair of wild canaries come here every summer. And ferns grow out between
+the stones of the well as far down as you can see. The water is lovely.
+Uncle Edward preached his finest sermon about the Bethlehem well
+where David's soldiers went to get him water, and he illustrated it by
+describing his old well at the homestead--this very well--and how in
+foreign lands he had longed for its sparkling water. So you see it is
+quite famous."
+
+"There's a cup just like the one that used to be here in father's time,"
+exclaimed Felix, pointing to an old-fashioned shallow cup of clouded
+blue ware on a little shelf inside the curb.
+
+"It is the very same cup," said the Story Girl impressively. "Isn't it
+an amazing thing? That cup has been here for forty years, and hundreds
+of people have drunk from it, and it has never been broken. Aunt Julia
+dropped it down the well once, but they fished it up, not hurt a bit
+except for that little nick in the rim. I think it is bound up with the
+fortunes of the King family, like the Luck of Edenhall in Longfellow's
+poem. It is the last cup of Grandmother King's second best set. Her best
+set is still complete. Aunt Olivia has it. You must get her to show it
+to you. It's so pretty, with red berries all over it, and the funniest
+little pot-bellied cream jug. Aunt Olivia never uses it except on a
+family anniversary."
+
+We took a drink from the blue cup and then went to find our birthday
+trees. We were rather disappointed to find them quite large, sturdy
+ones. It seemed to us that they should still be in the sapling stage
+corresponding to our boyhood.
+
+"Your apples are lovely to eat," the Story Girl said to me, "but Felix's
+are only good for pies. Those two big trees behind them are the twins'
+trees--my mother and Uncle Felix, you know. The apples are so dead sweet
+that nobody but us children and the French boys can eat them. And that
+tall, slender tree over there, with the branches all growing straight
+up, is a seedling that came up of itself, and NOBODY can eat its apples,
+they are so sour and bitter. Even the pigs won't eat them. Aunt Janet
+tried to make pies of them once, because she said she hated to see them
+going to waste. But she never tried again. She said it was better to
+waste apples alone than apples and sugar too. And then she tried giving
+them away to the French hired men, but they wouldn't even carry them
+home."
+
+The Story Girl's words fell on the morning air like pearls and diamonds.
+Even her prepositions and conjunctions had untold charm, hinting at
+mystery and laughter and magic bound up in everything she mentioned.
+Apple pies and sour seedlings and pigs became straightway invested with
+a glamour of romance.
+
+"I like to hear you talk," said Felix in his grave, stodgy way.
+
+"Everybody does," said the Story Girl coolly. "I'm glad you like the way
+I talk. But I want you to like ME, too--AS WELL as you like Felicity and
+Cecily. Not BETTER. I wanted that once but I've got over it. I found
+out in Sunday School, the day the minister taught our class, that it was
+selfish. But I want you to like me AS WELL."
+
+"Well, I will, for one," said Felix emphatically. I think he was
+remembering that Felicity had called him fat.
+
+Cecily now joined us. It appeared that it was Felicity's morning to help
+prepare breakfast, therefore she could not come. We all went to Uncle
+Stephen's Walk.
+
+This was a double row of apple trees, running down the western side of
+the orchard. Uncle Stephen was the first born of Abraham and Elizabeth
+King. He had none of grandfather's abiding love for woods and meadows
+and the kindly ways of the warm red earth. Grandmother King had been a
+Ward, and in Uncle Stephen the blood of the seafaring race claimed its
+own. To sea he must go, despite the pleadings and tears of a reluctant
+mother; and it was from the sea he came to set out his avenue in the
+orchard with trees brought from a foreign land.
+
+Then he sailed away again--and the ship was never heard of more. The
+gray first came in grandmother's brown hair in those months of waiting.
+The, for the first time, the orchard heard the sound of weeping and was
+consecrated by a sorrow.
+
+"When the blossoms come out it's wonderful to walk here," said the
+Story Girl. "It's like a dream of fairyland--as if you were walking in
+a king's palace. The apples are delicious, and in winter it's a splendid
+place for coasting."
+
+From the Walk we went to the Pulpit Stone--a huge gray boulder, as high
+as a man's head, in the southeastern corner. It was straight and smooth
+in front, but sloped down in natural steps behind, with a ledge midway
+on which one could stand. It had played an important part in the games
+of our uncles and aunts, being fortified castle, Indian ambush, throne,
+pulpit, or concert platform, as occasion required. Uncle Edward had
+preached his first sermon at the age of eight from that old gray
+boulder; and Aunt Julia, whose voice was to delight thousands, sang her
+earliest madrigals there.
+
+The Story Girl mounted to the ledge, sat on the rim, and looked at us.
+Pat sat gravely at its base and daintily washed his face with his black
+paws.
+
+"Now for your stories about the orchard," said I.
+
+"There are two important ones," said the Story Girl. "The story of the
+Poet Who Was Kissed, and the Tale of the Family Ghost. Which one shall I
+tell?"
+
+"Tell them both," said Felix greedily, "but tell the ghost one first."
+
+"I don't know." The Story Girl looked dubious. "That sort of story ought
+to be told in the twilight among the shadows. Then it would frighten the
+souls out of your bodies."
+
+We thought it might be more agreeable not to have the souls frightened
+out of our bodies, and we voted for the Family Ghost.
+
+"Ghost stories are more comfortable in daytime," said Felix.
+
+The Story Girl began it and we listened avidly. Cecily, who had heard it
+many times before, listened just as eagerly as we did. She declared to
+me afterwards that no matter how often the Story Girl told a story it
+always seemed as new and exciting as if you had just heard it for the
+first time.
+
+"Long, long ago," began the Story Girl, her voice giving us an
+impression of remote antiquity, "even before Grandfather King was born,
+an orphan cousin of his lived here with his parents. Her name was Emily
+King. She was very small and very sweet. She had soft brown eyes that
+were too timid to look straight at anybody--like Cecily's there--and
+long, sleek, brown curls--like mine; and she had a tiny birthmark like a
+pink butterfly on one cheek--right here.
+
+"Of course, there was no orchard here then. It was just a field;
+but there was a clump of white birches in it, right where that big,
+spreading tree of Uncle Alec's is now, and Emily liked to sit among the
+ferns under the birches and read or sew. She had a lover. His name was
+Malcolm Ward and he was as handsome as a prince. She loved him with all
+her heart and he loved her the same; but they had never spoken about
+it. They used to meet under the birches and talk about everything except
+love. One day he told her he was coming the next day to ask A VERY
+IMPORTANT QUESTION, and he wanted to find her under the birches when he
+came. Emily promised to meet him there. I am sure she stayed awake that
+night, thinking about it, and wondering what the important question
+would be, although she knew perfectly well. I would have. And the next
+day she dressed herself beautifully in her best pale blue muslin and
+sleeked her curls and went smiling to the birches. And while she was
+waiting there, thinking such lovely thoughts, a neighbour's boy came
+running up--a boy who didn't know about her romance--and cried out that
+Malcolm Ward had been killed by his gun going off accidentally. Emily
+just put her hands to her heart--so--and fell, all white and broken
+among the ferns. And when she came back to life she never cried or
+lamented. She was CHANGED. She was never, never like herself again; and
+she was never contented unless she was dressed in her blue muslin and
+waiting under the birches. She got paler and paler every day, but the
+pink butterfly grew redder, until it looked just like a stain of blood
+on her white cheek. When the winter came she died. But next spring"--the
+Story Girl dropped her voice to a whisper that was as audible and
+thrilling as her louder tones--"people began to tell that Emily was
+sometimes seen waiting under the birches still. Nobody knew just who
+told it first. But more than one person saw her. Grandfather saw her
+when he was a little boy. And my mother saw her once."
+
+"Did YOU ever see her?" asked Felix skeptically.
+
+"No, but I shall some day, if I keep on believing in her," said the
+Story Girl confidently.
+
+"I wouldn't like to see her. I'd be afraid," said Cecily with a shiver.
+
+"There wouldn't be anything to be afraid of," said the Story Girl
+reassuringly. "It's not as if it were a strange ghost. It's our own
+family ghost, so of course it wouldn't hurt us."
+
+We were not so sure of this. Ghosts were unchancy folk, even if they
+were our family ghosts. The Story Girl had made the tale very real to
+us. We were glad we had not heard it in the evening. How could we ever
+have got back to the house through the shadows and swaying branches of a
+darkening orchard? As it was, we were almost afraid to look up it, lest
+we should see the waiting, blue-clad Emily under Uncle Alec's tree.
+But all we saw was Felicity, tearing over the green sward, her curls
+streaming behind her in a golden cloud.
+
+"Felicity's afraid she's missed something," remarked the Story Girl in
+a tone of quiet amusement. "Is your breakfast ready, Felicity, or have I
+time to tell the boys the Story of the Poet Who Was Kissed?"
+
+"Breakfast is ready, but we can't have it till father is through
+attending to the sick cow, so you will likely have time," answered
+Felicity.
+
+Felix and I couldn't keep our eyes off her. Crimson-cheeked,
+shining-eyed from her haste, her face was like a rose of youth. But when
+the Story Girl spoke, we forgot to look at Felicity.
+
+"About ten years after Grandfather and Grandmother King were married, a
+young man came to visit them. He was a distant relative of grandmother's
+and he was a Poet. He was just beginning to be famous. He was VERY
+famous afterward. He came into the orchard to write a poem, and he fell
+asleep with his head on a bench that used to be under grandfather's
+tree. Then Great-Aunt Edith came into the orchard. She was not a
+Great-Aunt then, of course. She was only eighteen, with red lips and
+black, black hair and eyes. They say she was always full of mischief.
+She had been away and had just come home, and she didn't know about the
+Poet. But when she saw him, sleeping there, she thought he was a cousin
+they had been expecting from Scotland. And she tiptoed up--so--and bent
+over--so--and kissed his cheek. Then he opened his big blue eyes and
+looked up into Edith's face. She blushed as red as a rose, for she
+knew she had done a dreadful thing. This could not be her cousin from
+Scotland. She knew, for he had written so to her, that he had eyes as
+black as her own. Edith ran away and hid; and of course she felt still
+worse when she found out that he was a famous poet. But he wrote one of
+his most beautiful poems on it afterwards and sent it to her--and it was
+published in one of his books."
+
+We had SEEN it all--the sleeping genius--the roguish, red-lipped
+girl--the kiss dropped as lightly as a rose-petal on the sunburned
+cheek.
+
+"They should have got married," said Felix.
+
+"Well, in a book they would have, but you see this was in real life,"
+said the Story Girl. "We sometimes act the story out. I like it when
+Peter plays the poet. I don't like it when Dan is the poet because he
+is so freckled and screws his eyes up so tight. But you can hardly ever
+coax Peter to be the poet--except when Felicity is Edith--and Dan is so
+obliging that way."
+
+"What is Peter like?" I asked.
+
+"Peter is splendid. His mother lives on the Markdale road and washes
+for a living. Peter's father ran away and left them when Peter was only
+three years old. He has never come back, and they don't know whether he
+is alive or dead. Isn't that a nice way to behave to your family? Peter
+has worked for his board ever since he was six. Uncle Roger sends him
+to school, and pays him wages in summer. We all like Peter, except
+Felicity."
+
+"I like Peter well enough in his place," said Felicity primly, "but you
+make far too much of him, mother says. He is only a hired boy, and he
+hasn't been well brought up, and hasn't much education. I don't think
+you should make such an equal of him as you do."
+
+Laughter rippled over the Story Girl's face as shadow waves go over ripe
+wheat before a wind.
+
+"Peter is a real gentleman, and he is more interesting than YOU could
+ever be, if you were brought up and educated for a hundred years," she
+said.
+
+"He can hardly write," said Felicity.
+
+"William the Conqueror couldn't write at all," said the Story Girl
+crushingly.
+
+"He never goes to church, and he never says his prayers," retorted
+Felicity, uncrushed.
+
+"I do, too," said Peter himself, suddenly appearing through a little gap
+in the hedge. "I say my prayers sometimes."
+
+This Peter was a slim, shapely fellow, with laughing black eyes and
+thick black curls. Early in the season as it was, he was barefooted. His
+attire consisted of a faded, gingham shirt and a scanty pair of corduroy
+knickerbockers; but he wore it with such an unconscious air of purple
+and fine linen that he seemed to be much better dressed than he really
+was.
+
+"You don't pray very often," insisted Felicity.
+
+"Well, God will be all the more likely to listen to me if I don't pester
+Him all the time," argued Peter.
+
+This was rank heresy to Felicity, but the Story Girl looked as if she
+thought there might be something in it.
+
+"You NEVER go to church, anyhow," continued Felicity, determined not to
+be argued down.
+
+"Well, I ain't going to church till I've made up my mind whether I'm
+going to be a Methodist or a Presbyterian. Aunt Jane was a Methodist.
+My mother ain't much of anything but I mean to be something. It's more
+respectable to be a Methodist or a Presbyterian, or SOMETHING, than not
+to be anything. When I've settled what I'm to be I'm going to church
+same as you."
+
+"That's not the same as being BORN something," said Felicity loftily.
+
+"I think it's a good deal better to pick your own religion than have to
+take it just because it was what your folks had," retorted Peter.
+
+"Now, never mind quarrelling," said Cecily. "You leave Peter alone,
+Felicity. Peter, this is Beverley King, and this is Felix. And we're all
+going to be good friends and have a lovely summer together. Think of the
+games we can have! But if you go squabbling you'll spoil it all. Peter,
+what are you going to do to-day?"
+
+"Harrow the wood field and dig your Aunt Olivia's flower beds."
+
+"Aunt Olivia and I planted sweet peas yesterday," said the Story Girl,
+"and I planted a little bed of my own. I am NOT going to dig them up
+this year to see if they have sprouted. It is bad for them. I shall try
+to cultivate patience, no matter how long they are coming up."
+
+"I am going to help mother plant the vegetable garden to-day," said
+Felicity.
+
+"Oh, I never like the vegetable garden," said the Story Girl. "Except
+when I am hungry. Then I DO like to go and look at the nice little rows
+of onions and beets. But I love a flower garden. I think I could be
+always good if I lived in a garden all the time."
+
+"Adam and Eve lived in a garden all the time," said Felicity, "and THEY
+were far from being always good."
+
+"They mightn't have kept good as long as they did if they hadn't lived
+in a garden," said the Story Girl.
+
+We were now summoned to breakfast. Peter and the Story Girl slipped away
+through the gap, followed by Paddy, and the rest of us walked up the
+orchard to the house.
+
+"Well, what do you think of the Story Girl?" asked Felicity.
+
+"She's just fine," said Felix, enthusiastically. "I never heard anything
+like her to tell stories."
+
+"She can't cook," said Felicity, "and she hasn't a good complexion. Mind
+you, she says she's going to be an actress when she grows up. Isn't that
+dreadful?"
+
+We didn't exactly see why.
+
+"Oh, because actresses are always wicked people," said Felicity in a
+shocked tone. "But I daresay the Story Girl will go and be one just as
+soon as she can. Her father will back her up in it. He is an artist, you
+know."
+
+Evidently Felicity thought artists and actresses and all such poor trash
+were members one of another.
+
+"Aunt Olivia says the Story Girl is fascinating," said Cecily.
+
+The very adjective! Felix and I recognized its beautiful fitness at
+once. Yes, the Story Girl WAS fascinating and that was the final word to
+be said on the subject.
+
+Dan did not come down until breakfast was half over, and Aunt Janet
+talked to him after a fashion which made us realize that it would be
+well to keep, as the piquant country phrase went, from the rough side
+of her tongue. But all things considered, we liked the prospect of our
+summer very much. Felicity to look at--the Story Girl to tell us tales
+of wonder--Cecily to admire us--Dan and Peter to play with--what more
+could reasonable fellows want?
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV. THE WEDDING VEIL OF THE PROUD PRINCESS
+
+When we had lived for a fortnight in Carlisle we belonged there, and the
+freedom of all its small fry was conferred on us. With Peter and Dan,
+with Felicity and Cecily and the Story Girl, with pale, gray-eyed little
+Sara Ray, we were boon companions. We went to school, of course;
+and certain home chores were assigned to each of us for the faithful
+performance of which we were held responsible. But we had long hours for
+play. Even Peter had plenty of spare time when the planting was over.
+
+We got along very well with each other in the main, in spite of some
+minor differences of opinion. As for the grown-up denizens of our small
+world, they suited us also.
+
+We adored Aunt Olivia; she was pretty and merry and kind; and, above
+all, she had mastered to perfection the rare art of letting children
+alone. If we kept ourselves tolerably clean, and refrained from
+quarrelling or talking slang, Aunt Olivia did not worry us. Aunt Janet,
+on the contrary, gave us so much good advice and was so constantly
+telling us to do this or not to do the other thing, that we could not
+remember half her instructions, and did not try.
+
+Uncle Roger was, as we had been informed, quite jolly and fond of
+teasing. We liked him; but we had an uncomfortable feeling that the
+meaning of his remarks was not always that which met the ear. Sometimes
+we believed Uncle Roger was making fun of us, and the deadly seriousness
+of youth in us resented that.
+
+To Uncle Alec we gave our warmest love. We felt that we always had a
+friend at court in Uncle Alec, no matter what we did or left undone. And
+we never had to turn HIS speeches inside out to discover their meaning.
+
+The social life of juvenile Carlisle centred in the day and Sunday
+Schools. We were especially interested in our Sunday School, for we were
+fortunate enough to be assigned to a teacher who made our lessons so
+interesting that we no longer regarded Sunday School attendance as
+a disagreeable weekly duty; but instead looked forward to it with
+pleasure, and tried to carry out our teacher's gentle precepts--at least
+on Mondays and Tuesdays. I am afraid the remembrance grew a little dim
+the rest of the week.
+
+She was also deeply interested in missions; and one talk on this subject
+inspired the Story Girl to do a little home missionary work on her own
+account. The only thing she could think of, along this line, was to
+persuade Peter to go to church.
+
+Felicity did not approve of the design, and said so plainly.
+
+"He won't know how to behave, for he's never been inside a church door
+in his life," she warned the Story Girl. "He'll likely do something
+awful, and then you'll feel ashamed and wish you'd never asked him to
+go, and we'll all be disgraced. It's all right to have our mite boxes
+for the heathen, and send missionaries to them. They're far away and we
+don't have to associate with them. But I don't want to have to sit in a
+pew with a hired boy."
+
+But the Story Girl undauntedly continued to coax the reluctant Peter. It
+was not an easy matter. Peter did not come of a churchgoing stock; and
+besides, he alleged, he had not yet made up his mind whether to be a
+Presbyterian or a Methodist.
+
+"It isn't a bit of difference which you are," pleaded the Story Girl.
+"They both go to heaven."
+
+"But one way must be easier or better than the other, or else they'd all
+be one kind," argued Peter. "I want to find the easiest way. And I've
+got a hankering after the Methodists. My Aunt Jane was a Methodist."
+
+"Isn't she one still?" asked Felicity pertly.
+
+"Well, I don't know exactly. She's dead," said Peter rebukingly. "Do
+people go on being just the same after they're dead?"
+
+"No, of course not. They're angels then--not Methodists or anything, but
+just angels. That is, if they go to heaven."
+
+"S'posen they went to the other place?"
+
+But Felicity's theology broke down at this point. She turned her back on
+Peter and walked disdainfully away.
+
+The Story Girl returned to the main point with a new argument.
+
+"We have such a lovely minister, Peter. He looks just like the picture
+of St. John my father sent me, only he is old and his hair is white.
+I know you'd like him. And even if you are going to be a Methodist it
+won't hurt you to go to the Presbyterian church. The nearest Methodist
+church is six miles away, at Markdale, and you can't attend there just
+now. Go to the Presbyterian church until you're old enough to have a
+horse."
+
+"But s'posen I got too fond of being Presbyterian and couldn't change if
+I wanted to?" objected Peter.
+
+Altogether, the Story Girl had a hard time of it; but she persevered;
+and one day she came to us with the announcement that Peter had yielded.
+
+"He's going to church with us to-morrow," she said triumphantly.
+
+We were out in Uncle Roger's hill pasture, sitting on some smooth, round
+stones under a clump of birches. Behind us was an old gray fence, with
+violets and dandelions thick in its corners. Below us was the Carlisle
+valley, with its orchard-embowered homesteads, and fertile meadows. Its
+upper end was dim with a delicate spring mist. Winds blew up the field
+like wave upon wave of sweet savour--spice of bracken and balsam.
+
+We were eating little jam "turnovers," which Felicity had made for us.
+Felicity's turnovers were perfection. I looked at her and wondered why
+it was not enough that she should be so pretty and capable of making
+such turnovers. If she were only more interesting! Felicity had not a
+particle of the nameless charm and allurement which hung about every
+motion of the Story Girl, and made itself manifest in her lightest word
+and most careless glance. Ah well, one cannot have every good gift! The
+Story Girl had no dimples at her slim, brown wrists.
+
+We all enjoyed our turnovers except Sara Ray. She ate hers but she
+knew she should not have done so. Her mother did not approve of snacks
+between meals, or of jam turnovers at any time. Once, when Sara was in a
+brown study, I asked her what she was thinking of.
+
+"I'm trying to think of something ma hasn't forbid," she answered with a
+sigh.
+
+We were all glad to hear that Peter was going to church, except
+Felicity. She was full of gloomy forebodings and warnings.
+
+"I'm surprised at you, Felicity King," said Cecily severely. "You ought
+to be glad that poor boy is going to get started in the right way."
+
+"There's a great big patch on his best pair of trousers," protested
+Felicity.
+
+"Well, that's better than a hole," said the Story Girl, addressing
+herself daintily to her turnover. "God won't notice the patch."
+
+"No, but the Carlisle people will," retorted Felicity, in a tone which
+implied that what the Carlisle people thought was far more important.
+"And I don't believe that Peter has got a decent stocking to his name.
+What will you feel like if he goes to church with the skin of his legs
+showing through the holes, Miss Story Girl?"
+
+"I'm not a bit afraid," said the Story Girl staunchly. "Peter knows
+better than that."
+
+"Well, all I hope is that he'll wash behind his ears," said Felicity
+resignedly.
+
+"How is Pat to-day?" asked Cecily, by way of changing the conversation.
+
+"Pat isn't a bit better. He just mopes about the kitchen," said the
+Story Girl anxiously. "I went out to the barn and I saw a mouse. I had
+a stick in my hand and I fetched a swipe at it--so. I killed it stone
+dead. Then I took it in to Paddy. Will you believe it? He wouldn't even
+look at it. I'm so worried. Uncle Roger says he needs a dose of physic.
+But how is he to be made take it, that's the question. I mixed a powder
+in some milk and tried to pour it down his throat while Peter held him.
+Just look at the scratches I got! And the milk went everywhere except
+down Pat's throat."
+
+"Wouldn't it be awful if--if anything happened to Pat?" whispered
+Cecily.
+
+"Well, we could have a jolly funeral, you know," said Dan.
+
+We looked at him in such horror that Dan hastened to apologize.
+
+"I'd be awful sorry myself if Pat died. But if he DID, we'd have to give
+him the right kind of a funeral," he protested. "Why, Paddy just seems
+like one of the family."
+
+The Story Girl finished her turnover, and stretched herself out on the
+grasses, pillowing her chin in her hands and looking at the sky. She was
+bare headed, as usual, and her scarlet ribbon was bound filletwise about
+her head. She had twined freshly plucked dandelions around it and the
+effect was that of a crown of brilliant golden stars on her sleek, brown
+curls.
+
+"Look at that long, thin, lacy cloud up there," she said. "What does it
+make you think of, girls?"
+
+"A wedding veil," said Cecily.
+
+"That is just what it is--the Wedding Veil of the Proud Princess. I
+know a story about it. I read it in a book. Once upon a time"--the Story
+Girl's eyes grew dreamy, and her accents floated away on the summer
+air like wind-blown rose petals--"there was a princess who was the most
+beautiful princess in the world, and kings from all lands came to woo
+her for a bride. But she was as proud as she was beautiful. She laughed
+all her suitors to scorn. And when her father urged her to choose one of
+them as her husband she drew herself up haughtily--so--"
+
+The Story Girl sprang to her feet and for a moment we saw the proud
+princess of the old tale in all her scornful loveliness--
+
+"and she said,
+
+"'I will not wed until a king comes who can conquer all kings. Then I
+shall be the wife of the king of the world and no one can hold herself
+higher than I.'
+
+"So every king went to war to prove that he could conquer every one
+else, and there was a great deal of bloodshed and misery. But the proud
+princess laughed and sang, and she and her maidens worked at a wonderful
+lace veil which she meant to wear when the king of all kings came. It
+was a very beautiful veil; but her maidens whispered that a man had died
+and a woman's heart had broken for every stitch set in it.
+
+"Just when a king thought he had conquered everybody some other king
+would come and conquer HIM; and so it went on until it did not seem
+likely the proud princess would ever get a husband at all. But still
+her pride was so great that she would not yield, even though everybody
+except the kings who wanted to marry her, hated her for the suffering
+she had caused. One day a horn was blown at the palace gate; and there
+was one tall man in complete armor with his visor down, riding on a
+white horse. When he said he had come to marry the princess every one
+laughed, for he had no retinue and no beautiful apparel, and no golden
+crown.
+
+"'But I am the king who conquers all kings,' he said.
+
+"'You must prove it before I shall marry you,' said the proud princess.
+But she trembled and turned pale, for there was something in his voice
+that frightened her. And when he laughed, his laughter was still more
+dreadful.
+
+"'I can easily prove it, beautiful princess,' he said, 'but you must
+go with me to my kingdom for the proof. Marry me now, and you and I and
+your father and all your court will ride straightway to my kingdom; and
+if you are not satisfied then that I am the king who conquers all kings
+you may give me back my ring and return home free of me forever more.'
+
+"It was a strange wooing and the friends of the princess begged her to
+refuse. But her pride whispered that it would be such a wonderful thing
+to be the queen of the king of the world; so she consented; and her
+maidens dressed her, and put on the long lace veil that had been so many
+years a-making. Then they were married at once, but the bridegroom
+never lifted his visor and no one saw his face. The proud princess held
+herself more proudly than ever, but she was as white as her veil. And
+there was no laughter or merry-making, such as should be at a wedding,
+and every one looked at every one else with fear in his eyes.
+
+"After the wedding the bridegroom lifted his bride before him on his
+white horse, and her father and all the members of his court mounted,
+too, and rode after them. On and on they rode, and the skies grew darker
+and the wind blew and wailed, and the shades of evening came down. And
+just in the twilight they rode into a dark valley, filled with tombs and
+graves.
+
+"'Why have you brought me here?' cried the proud princess angrily.
+
+"'This is my kingdom,' he answered. 'These are the tombs of the kings I
+have conquered. Behold me, beautiful princess. I am Death!'
+
+"He lifted his visor. All saw his awful face. The proud princess
+shrieked.
+
+"'Come to my arms, my bride,' he cried. 'I have won you fairly. I am the
+king who conquers all kings!'
+
+"He clasped her fainting form to his breast and spurred his white horse
+to the tombs. A tempest of rain broke over the valley and blotted them
+from sight. Very sadly the old king and courtiers rode home, and never,
+never again did human eye behold the proud princess. But when those
+long, white clouds sweep across the sky, the country people in the land
+where she lived say, 'Look you, there is the Wedding Veil of the Proud
+Princess.'"
+
+The weird spell of the tale rested on us for some moments after the
+Story Girl had finished. We had walked with her in the place of death
+and grown cold with the horror that chilled the heart of the poor
+princess. Dan presently broke the spell.
+
+"You see it doesn't do to be too proud, Felicity," he remarked, giving
+her a poke. "You'd better not say too much about Peter's patches."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V. PETER GOES TO CHURCH
+
+There was no Sunday School the next afternoon, as superintendent and
+teachers wished to attend a communion service at Markdale. The Carlisle
+service was in the evening, and at sunset we were waiting at Uncle
+Alec's front door for Peter and the Story Girl.
+
+None of the grown-ups were going to church. Aunt Olivia had a sick
+headache and Uncle Roger stayed home with her. Aunt Janet and Uncle Alec
+had gone to the Markdale service and had not yet returned.
+
+Felicity and Cecily were wearing their new summer muslins for the first
+time--and were acutely conscious of the fact. Felicity, her pink and
+white face shadowed by her drooping, forget-me-not-wreathed, leghorn
+hat, was as beautiful as usual; but Cecily, having tortured her hair
+with curl papers all night, had a rampant bush of curls all about her
+head which quite destroyed the sweet, nun-like expression of her little
+features. Cecily cherished a grudge against fate because she had not
+been given naturally curly hair as had the other two girls. But she
+attained the desire of her heart on Sundays at least, and was quite
+well satisfied. It was impossible to convince her that the satin smooth
+lustre of her week-day tresses was much more becoming to her.
+
+Presently Peter and the Story Girl appeared, and we were all more or
+less relieved to see that Peter looked quite respectable, despite the
+indisputable patch on his trousers. His face was rosy, his thick black
+curls were smoothly combed, and his tie was neatly bowed; but it was his
+legs which we scrutinized most anxiously. At first glance they seemed
+well enough; but closer inspection revealed something not altogether
+customary.
+
+"What is the matter with your stockings, Peter?" asked Dan bluntly.
+
+"Oh, I hadn't a pair without holes in the legs," answered Peter easily,
+"because ma hadn't time to darn them this week. So I put on two pairs.
+The holes don't come in the same places, and you'd never notice them
+unless you looked right close."
+
+"Have you got a cent for collection?" demanded Felicity.
+
+"I've got a Yankee cent. I s'pose it will do, won't it?"
+
+Felicity shook her head vehemently.
+
+"Oh, no, no. It may be all right to pass a Yankee cent on a store keeper
+or an egg peddler, but it would never do for church."
+
+"I'll have to go without any, then," said Peter. "I haven't another
+cent. I only get fifty cents a week and I give it all to ma last night."
+
+But Peter must have a cent. Felicity would have given him one
+herself--and she was none too lavish of her coppers--rather than
+have him go without one. Dan, however, lent him one, on the distinct
+understanding that it was to be repaid the next week.
+
+Uncle Roger wandered by at this moment and, beholding Peter, said,
+
+"'Is Saul also among the prophets?' What can have induced you to turn
+church-goer, Peter, when all Olivia's gentle persuasions were of no
+avail? The old, old argument I suppose--'beauty draws us with a single
+hair.'"
+
+Uncle Roger looked quizzically at Felicity. We did not know what his
+quotations meant, but we understood he thought Peter was going to church
+because of Felicity. Felicity tossed her head.
+
+"It isn't my fault that he's going to church," she said snappishly.
+"It's the Story Girl's doings."
+
+Uncle Roger sat down on the doorstep, and gave himself over to one
+of the silent, inward paroxysms of laughter we all found so very
+aggravating. He shook his big, blond head, shut his eyes, and murmured,
+
+"Not her fault! Oh, Felicity, Felicity, you'll be the death of your dear
+Uncle yet if you don't watch out."
+
+Felicity started off indignantly, and we followed, picking up Sara Ray
+at the foot of the hill.
+
+The Carlisle church was a very old-fashioned one, with a square,
+ivy-hung tower. It was shaded by tall elms, and the graveyard surrounded
+it completely, many of the graves being directly under its windows. We
+always took the corner path through it, passing the King plot where our
+kindred of four generations slept in a green solitude of wavering light
+and shadow.
+
+There was Great-grandfather King's flat tombstone of rough Island
+sandstone, so overgrown with ivy that we could hardly read its lengthy
+inscription, recording his whole history in brief, and finishing with
+eight lines of original verse composed by his widow. I do not think that
+poetry was Great-grandmother King's strong point. When Felix read it, on
+our first Sunday in Carlisle, he remarked dubiously that it LOOKED like
+poetry but didn't SOUND like it.
+
+There, too, slept the Emily whose faithful spirit was supposed to haunt
+the orchard; but Edith who had kissed the poet lay not with her kindred.
+She had died in a far, foreign land, and the murmur of an alien sea
+sounded about her grave.
+
+White marble tablets, ornamented with weeping willow trees, marked where
+Grandfather and Grandmother King were buried, and a single shaft of
+red Scotch granite stood between the graves of Aunt Felicity and Uncle
+Felix. The Story Girl lingered to lay a bunch of wild violets, misty
+blue and faintly sweet, on her mother's grave; and then she read aloud
+the verse on the stone.
+
+"'They were lovely and pleasant in their lives and in their death they
+were not divided.'"
+
+The tones of her voice brought out the poignant and immortal beauty and
+pathos of that wonderful old lament. The girls wiped their eyes; and
+we boys felt as if we might have done so, too, had nobody been looking.
+What better epitaph could any one wish than to have it said that he was
+lovely and pleasant in his life? When I heard the Story Girl read it I
+made a secret compact with myself that I would try to deserve such an
+epitaph.
+
+"I wish I had a family plot," said Peter, rather wistfully. "I haven't
+ANYTHING you fellows have. The Craigs are just buried anywhere they
+happen to die."
+
+"I'd like to be buried here when I die," said Felix. "But I hope it
+won't be for a good while yet," he added in a livelier tone, as we moved
+onward to the church.
+
+The interior of the church was as old-fashioned as its exterior. It was
+furnished with square box pews; the pulpit was a "wine-glass" one, and
+was reached by a steep, narrow flight of steps. Uncle Alec's pew was at
+the top of the church, quite near the pulpit.
+
+Peter's appearance did not attract as much attention as we had fondly
+expected. Indeed, nobody seemed to notice him at all. The lamps were
+not yet lighted and the church was filled with a soft twilight and hush.
+Outside, the sky was purple and gold and silvery green, with a delicate
+tangle of rosy cloud above the elms.
+
+"Isn't it awful nice and holy in here?" whispered Peter reverently. "I
+didn't know church was like this. It's nice."
+
+Felicity frowned at him, and the Story Girl touched her with her
+slippered foot to remind him that he must not talk in church. Peter
+stiffened up and sat at attention during the service. Nobody could have
+behaved better. But when the sermon was over and the collection was
+being taken up, he made the sensation which his entrance had not
+produced.
+
+Elder Frewen, a tall, pale man, with long, sandy side-whiskers, appeared
+at the door of our pew with the collection plate. We knew Elder Frewen
+quite well and liked him; he was Aunt Janet's cousin and often visited
+her. The contrast between his week-day jollity and the unearthly
+solemnity of his countenance on Sundays always struck us as very funny.
+It seemed so to strike Peter; for as Peter dropped his cent into the
+plate he laughed aloud!
+
+Everybody looked at our pew. I have always wondered why Felicity did
+not die of mortification on the spot. The Story Girl turned white, and
+Cecily turned red. As for that poor, unlucky Peter, the shame of his
+countenance was pitiful to behold. He never lifted his head for the
+remainder of the service; and he followed us down the aisle and across
+the graveyard like a beaten dog. None of us uttered a word until we
+reached the road, lying in the white moonshine of the May night. Then
+Felicity broke the tense silence by remarking to the Story Girl,
+
+"I told you so!"
+
+The Story Girl made no response. Peter sidled up to her.
+
+"I'm awful sorry," he said contritely. "I never meant to laugh. It just
+happened before I could stop myself. It was this way--"
+
+"Don't you ever speak to me again," said the Story Girl, in a tone of
+cold concentrated fury. "Go and be a Methodist, or a Mohammedan, or
+ANYTHING! I don't care what you are! You have HUMILIATED me!"
+
+She marched off with Sara Ray, and Peter dropped back to us with a
+frightened face.
+
+"What is it I've done to her?" he whispered. "What does that big word
+mean?"
+
+"Oh, never mind," I said crossly--for I felt that Peter HAD disgraced
+us--"She's just mad--and no wonder. Whatever made you act so crazy,
+Peter?"
+
+"Well, I didn't mean to. And I wanted to laugh twice before that and
+DIDN'T. It was the Story Girl's stories made me want to laugh, so I
+don't think it's fair for her to be mad at me. She hadn't ought to tell
+me stories about people if she don't want me to laugh when I see them.
+When I looked at Samuel Ward I thought of him getting up in meeting
+one night, and praying that he might be guided in his upsetting and
+downrising. I remembered the way she took him off, and I wanted to
+laugh. And then I looked at the pulpit and thought of the story she told
+about the old Scotch minister who was too fat to get in at the door
+of it, and had to h'ist himself by his two hands over it, and then
+whispered to the other minister so that everybody heard him.
+
+"'_This pulpit door was made for speerits_'--and I wanted to laugh.
+And then Mr. Frewen come--and I thought of her story about his
+sidewhiskers--how when his first wife died of information of the lungs
+he went courting Celia Ward, and Celia told him she wouldn't marry
+him unless he shaved them whiskers off. And he wouldn't, just to be
+stubborn. And one day one of them caught fire, when he was burning
+brush, and burned off, and every one thought he'd HAVE to shave the
+other off then. But he didn't and just went round with one whisker till
+the burned one grew out. And then Celia gave in and took him, because
+she saw there wasn't no hope of HIM ever giving in. I just remembered
+that story, and I thought I could see him, taking up the cents so
+solemn, with one long whisker; and the laugh just laughed itself before
+I could help it."
+
+We all exploded with laughter on the spot, much to the horror of Mrs.
+Abraham Ward, who was just driving past, and who came up the next day
+and told Aunt Janet we had "acted scandalous" on the road home from
+church. We felt ashamed ourselves, because we knew people should conduct
+themselves decently and in order on Sunday farings-forth. But, as with
+Peter, it "had laughed itself."
+
+Even Felicity laughed. Felicity was not nearly so angry with Peter as
+might have been expected. She even walked beside him and let him carry
+her Bible. They talked quite confidentially. Perhaps she forgave him the
+more easily, because he had justified her in her predictions, and thus
+afforded her a decided triumph over the Story Girl.
+
+"I'm going to keep on going to church," Peter told her. "I like it.
+Sermons are more int'resting than I thought, and I like the singing.
+I wish I could make up my mind whether to be a Presbyterian or a
+Methodist. I s'pose I might ask the ministers about it."
+
+"Oh, no, no, don't do that," said Felicity in alarm. "Ministers wouldn't
+want to be bothered with such questions."
+
+"Why not? What are ministers for if they ain't to tell people how to get
+to heaven?"
+
+"Oh, well, it's all right for grown-ups to ask them things, of course.
+But it isn't respectful for little boys--especially hired boys."
+
+"I don't see why. But anyhow, I s'pose it wouldn't be much use, because
+if he was a Presbyterian minister he'd say I ought to be a Presbyterian,
+and if he was a Methodist he'd tell me to be one, too. Look here,
+Felicity, what IS the difference between them?"
+
+"I--I don't know," said Felicity reluctantly. "I s'pose children can't
+understand such things. There must be a great deal of difference, of
+course, if we only knew what it was. Anyhow, I am a Presbyterian, and
+I'm glad of it."
+
+We walked on in silence for a time, thinking our own young thoughts.
+Presently they were scattered by an abrupt and startling question from
+Peter.
+
+"What does God look like?" he said.
+
+It appeared that none of us had any idea.
+
+"The Story Girl would prob'ly know," said Cecily.
+
+"I wish I knew," said Peter gravely. "I wish I could see a picture of
+God. It would make Him seem lots more real."
+
+"I've often wondered myself what he looks like," said Felicity in a
+burst of confidence. Even in Felicity, so it would seem, there were
+depths of thought unplumbed.
+
+"I've seen pictures of Jesus," said Felix meditatively. "He looks just
+like a man, only better and kinder. But now that I come to think of it,
+I've never seen a picture of God."
+
+"Well, if there isn't one in Toronto it isn't likely there's one
+anywhere," said Peter disappointedly. "I saw a picture of the devil
+once," he added. "It was in a book my Aunt Jane had. She got it for a
+prize in school. My Aunt Jane was clever."
+
+"It couldn't have been a very good book if there was such a picture in
+it," said Felicity.
+
+"It was a real good book. My Aunt Jane wouldn't have a book that wasn't
+good," retorted Peter sulkily.
+
+He refused to discuss the subject further, somewhat to our
+disappointment. For we had never seen a picture of the person referred
+to, and we were rather curious regarding it.
+
+"We'll ask Peter to describe it sometime when he's in a better humour,"
+whispered Felix.
+
+Sara Ray having turned in at her own gate, I ran ahead to join the Story
+Girl, and we walked up the hill together. She had recovered her calmness
+of mind, but she made no reference to Peter. When we reached our lane
+and passed under Grandfather King's big willow the fragrance of the
+orchard struck us in the face like a wave. We could see the long rows of
+trees, a white gladness in the moonshine. It seemed to us that there
+was in the orchard something different from other orchards that we had
+known. We were too young to analyze the vague sensation. In later years
+we were to understand that it was because the orchard blossomed not only
+apple blossoms but all the love, faith, joy, pure happiness and pure
+sorrow of those who had made it and walked there.
+
+"The orchard doesn't seem the same place by moonlight at all," said the
+Story Girl dreamily. "It's lovely, but it's different. When I was very
+small I used to believe the fairies danced in it on moonlight nights. I
+would like to believe it now but I can't."
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"Oh, it's so hard to believe things you know are not true. It was Uncle
+Edward who told me there were no such things as fairies. I was just
+seven. He is a minister, so of course I knew he spoke the truth. It was
+his duty to tell me, and I do not blame him, but I have never felt quite
+the same to Uncle Edward since."
+
+Ah, do we ever "feel quite the same" towards people who destroy our
+illusions? Shall I ever be able to forgive the brutal creature who first
+told me there was no such person as Santa Claus? He was a boy, three
+years older than myself; and he may now, for aught I know, be a most
+useful and respectable member of society, beloved by his kind. But I
+know what he must ever seem to me!
+
+We waited at Uncle Alec's door for the others to come up. Peter was by
+way of skulking shamefacedly past into the shadows; but the Story Girl's
+brief, bitter anger had vanished.
+
+"Wait for me, Peter," she called.
+
+She went over to him and held out her hand.
+
+"I forgive you," she said graciously.
+
+Felix and I felt that it would really be worth while to offend her,
+just to be forgiven in such an adorable voice. Peter eagerly grasped her
+hand.
+
+"I tell you what, Story Girl, I'm awfully sorry I laughed in church,
+but you needn't be afraid I ever will again. No, sir! And I'm going to
+church and Sunday School regular, and I'll say my prayers every night. I
+want to be like the rest of you. And look here! I've thought of the way
+my Aunt Jane used to give medicine to a cat. You mix the powder in lard,
+and spread it on his paws and his sides and he'll lick it off, 'cause a
+cat can't stand being messy. If Paddy isn't any better to-morrow, we'll
+do that."
+
+They went away together hand in hand, children-wise, up the lane of
+spruces crossed with bars of moonlight. And there was peace over all
+that fresh and flowery land, and peace in our little hearts.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI. THE MYSTERY OF GOLDEN MILESTONE
+
+Paddy was smeared with medicated lard the next day, all of us assisting
+at the rite, although the Story Girl was high priestess. Then, out of
+regard for mats and cushions, he was kept in durance vile in the granary
+until he had licked his fur clean. This treatment being repeated every
+day for a week, Pat recovered his usual health and spirits, and our
+minds were set at rest to enjoy the next excitement--collecting for a
+school library fund.
+
+Our teacher thought it would be an excellent thing to have a library
+in connection with the school; and he suggested that each of the pupils
+should try to see how much money he or she could raise for the project
+during the month of June. We might earn it by honest toil, or gather it
+in by contributions levied on our friends.
+
+The result was a determined rivalry as to which pupil should collect
+the largest sum; and this rivalry was especially intense in our home
+coterie.
+
+Our relatives started us with a quarter apiece. For the rest, we knew we
+must depend on our own exertions. Peter was handicapped at the beginning
+by the fact that he had no family friend to finance him.
+
+"If my Aunt Jane'd been living she'd have given me something," he
+remarked. "And if my father hadn't run away he might have given me
+something too. But I'm going to do the best I can anyhow. Your Aunt
+Olivia says I can have the job of gathering the eggs, and I'm to have
+one egg out of every dozen to sell for myself."
+
+Felicity made a similar bargain with her mother. The Story Girl and
+Cecily were each to be paid ten cents a week for washing dishes in their
+respective homes. Felix and Dan contracted to keep the gardens free from
+weeds. I caught brook trout in the westering valley of spruces and sold
+them for a cent apiece.
+
+Sara Ray was the only unhappy one among us. She could do nothing. She
+had no relatives in Carlisle except her mother, and her mother did not
+approve of the school library project, and would not give Sara a cent,
+or put her in any way of earning one. To Sara, this was humiliation
+indescribable. She felt herself an outcast and an alien to our busy
+little circle, where each member counted every day, with miserly
+delight, his slowly increasing hoard of small cash.
+
+"I'm just going to pray to God to send me some money," she announced
+desperately at last.
+
+"I don't believe that will do any good," said Dan. "He gives lots of
+things, but he doesn't give money, because people can earn that for
+themselves."
+
+"I can't," said Sara, with passionate defiance. "I think He ought to
+take that into account."
+
+"Don't worry, dear," said Cecily, who always poured balm. "If you can't
+collect any money everybody will know it isn't your fault."
+
+"I won't ever feel like reading a single book in the library if I can't
+give something to it," mourned Sara.
+
+Dan and the girls and I were sitting in a row on Aunt Olivia's garden
+fence, watching Felix weed. Felix worked well, although he did not like
+weeding--"fat boys never do," Felicity informed him. Felix pretended not
+to hear her, but I knew he did, because his ears grew red. Felix's face
+never blushed, but his ears always gave him away. As for Felicity, she
+did not say things like that out of malice prepense. It never occurred
+to her that Felix did not like to be called fat.
+
+"I always feel so sorry for the poor weeds," said the Story Girl
+dreamily. "It must be very hard to be rooted up."
+
+"They shouldn't grow in the wrong place," said Felicity mercilessly.
+
+"When weeds go to heaven I suppose they will be flowers," continued the
+Story Girl.
+
+"You do think such queer things," said Felicity.
+
+"A rich man in Toronto has a floral clock in his garden," I said. "It
+looks just like the face of a clock, and there are flowers in it that
+open at every hour, so that you can always tell the time."
+
+"Oh, I wish we had one here," exclaimed Cecily.
+
+"What would be the use of it?" asked the Story Girl a little
+disdainfully. "Nobody ever wants to know the time in a garden."
+
+I slipped away at this point, suddenly remembering that it was time to
+take a dose of magic seed. I had bought it from Billy Robinson three
+days before in school. Billy had assured me that it would make me grow
+fast.
+
+I was beginning to feel secretly worried because I did not grow. I had
+overheard Aunt Janet say I was going to be short, like Uncle Alec. Now,
+I loved Uncle Alec, but I wanted to be taller than he was. So when Billy
+confided to me, under solemn promise of secrecy, that he had some "magic
+seed," which would make boys grow, and would sell me a box of it for ten
+cents, I jumped at the offer. Billy was taller than any boy of his age
+in Carlisle, and he assured me it all came from taking magic seed.
+
+"I was a regular runt before I begun," he said, "and look at me now. I
+got it from Peg Bowen. She's a witch, you know. I wouldn't go near her
+again for a bushel of magic seed. It was an awful experience. I haven't
+much left, but I guess I've enough to do me till I'm as tall as I want
+to be. You must take a pinch of the seed every three hours, walking
+backward, and you must never tell a soul you're taking it, or it won't
+work. I wouldn't spare any of it to any one but you."
+
+I felt deeply grateful to Billy, and sorry that I had not liked him
+better. Somehow, nobody did like Billy Robinson over and above. But I
+vowed I WOULD like him in future. I paid him the ten cents cheerfully
+and took the magic seed as directed, measuring myself carefully every
+day by a mark on the hall door. I could not see any advance in growth
+yet, but then I had been taking it only three days.
+
+One day the Story Girl had an inspiration.
+
+"Let us go and ask the Awkward Man and Mr. Campbell for a contribution
+to the library fund," she said. "I am sure no one else has asked them,
+because nobody in Carlisle is related to them. Let us all go, and if
+they give us anything we'll divide it equally among us."
+
+It was a daring proposition, for both Mr. Campbell and the Awkward Man
+were regarded as eccentric personages; and Mr. Campbell was supposed
+to detest children. But where the Story Girl led we would follow to the
+death. The next day being Saturday, we started out in the afternoon.
+
+We took a short cut to Golden Milestone, over a long, green, dewy land
+full of placid meadows, where sunshine had fallen asleep. At first all
+was not harmonious. Felicity was in an ill humour; she had wanted to
+wear her second best dress, but Aunt Janet had decreed that her school
+clothes were good enough to go "traipsing about in the dust." Then the
+Story Girl arrived, arrayed not in any second best but in her very best
+dress and hat, which her father had sent her from Paris--a dress of
+soft, crimson silk, and a white leghorn hat encircled by flame-red
+poppies. Neither Felicity nor Cecily could have worn it; but it became
+the Story Girl perfectly. In it she was a thing of fire and laughter
+and glow, as if the singular charm of her temperament were visible and
+tangible in its vivid colouring and silken texture.
+
+"I shouldn't think you'd put on your best clothes to go begging for the
+library in," said Felicity cuttingly.
+
+"Aunt Olivia says that when you are going to have an important interview
+with a man you ought to look your very best," said the Story Girl,
+giving her skirt a lustrous swirl and enjoying the effect.
+
+"Aunt Olivia spoils you," said Felicity.
+
+"She doesn't either, Felicity King! Aunt Olivia is just sweet. She
+kisses me good-night every night, and your mother NEVER kisses you."
+
+"My mother doesn't make kisses so common," retorted Felicity. "But she
+gives us pie for dinner every day."
+
+"So does Aunt Olivia."
+
+"Yes, but look at the difference in the size of the pieces! And Aunt
+Olivia only gives you skim milk. My mother gives us cream."
+
+"Aunt Olivia's skim milk is as good as your mother's cream," cried the
+Story Girl hotly.
+
+"Oh, girls, don't fight," said Cecily, the peacemaker. "It's such a nice
+day, and we'll have a nice time if you don't spoil it by fighting."
+
+"We're NOT fighting," said Felicity. "And I like Aunt Olivia. But my
+mother is just as good as Aunt Olivia, there now!"
+
+"Of course she is. Aunt Janet is splendid," agreed the Story Girl.
+
+They smiled at each other amicably. Felicity and the Story Girl were
+really quite fond of each other, under the queer surface friction that
+commonly resulted from their intercourse.
+
+"You said once you knew a story about the Awkward Man," said Felix. "You
+might tell it to us."
+
+"All right," agreed the Story Girl. "The only trouble is, I don't know
+the whole story. But I'll tell you all I do know. I call it 'The Mystery
+of the Golden Milestone.'"
+
+"Oh, I don't believe that story is true," said Felicity. "I believe Mrs.
+Griggs was just romancing. She DOES romance, mother says."
+
+"Yes; but I don't believe she could ever have thought of such a thing
+as this herself, so I believe it must be true," said the Story Girl.
+"Anyway, this is the story, boys. You know the Awkward Man has lived
+alone ever since his mother died, ten years ago. Abel Griggs is his
+hired man, and he and his wife live in a little house down the Awkward
+Man's lane. Mrs. Griggs makes his bread for him, and she cleans up his
+house now and then. She says he keeps it very neat. But till last fall
+there was one room she never saw. It was always locked--the west one,
+looking out over his garden. One day last fall the Awkward Man went to
+Summerside, and Mrs. Griggs scrubbed his kitchen. Then she went over the
+whole house and she tried the door of the west room. Mrs. Griggs is a
+VERY curious woman. Uncle Roger says all women have as much curiosity
+as is good for them, but Mrs. Griggs has more. She expected to find the
+door locked as usual. It was NOT locked. She opened it and went in. What
+do you suppose she found?"
+
+"Something like--like Bluebeard's chamber?" suggested Felix in a scared
+tone.
+
+"Oh, no, NO! Nothing like THAT could happen in Prince Edward Island. But
+if there HAD been beautiful wives hanging up by their hair all round the
+walls I don't believe Mrs. Griggs could have been much more astonished.
+The room had never been furnished in his mother's time, but now it was
+ELEGANTLY furnished, though Mrs. Griggs says SHE doesn't know when or
+how that furniture was brought there. She says she never saw a room
+like it in a country farmhouse. It was like a bed-room and sitting-room
+combined. The floor was covered with a carpet like green velvet. There
+were fine lace curtains at the windows and beautiful pictures on the
+walls. There was a little white bed, and a dressing-table, a bookcase
+full of books, a stand with a work basket on it, and a rocking-chair.
+There was a woman's picture above the bookcase. Mrs. Griggs says she
+thinks it was a coloured photograph, but she didn't know who it was.
+Anyway, it was a very pretty girl. But the most amazing thing of all was
+that A WOMAN'S DRESS was hanging over a chair by the table. Mrs. Griggs
+says it NEVER belonged to Jasper Dale's mother, for she thought it a sin
+to wear anything but print and drugget; and this dress was of PALE BLUE
+silk. Besides that, there was a pair of blue satin slippers on the floor
+beside it--HIGH-HEELED slippers. And on the fly-leaves of the books
+the name 'Alice' was written. Now, there never was an Alice in the Dale
+connection and nobody ever heard of the Awkward Man having a sweetheart.
+There, isn't that a lovely mystery?"
+
+"It's a pretty queer yarn," said Felix. "I wonder if it is true--and
+what it means."
+
+"I intend to find out what it means," said the Story Girl. "I am going
+to get acquainted with the Awkward Man sometime, and then I'll find out
+his Alice-secret."
+
+"I don't see how you'll ever get acquainted with him," said Felicity.
+"He never goes anywhere except to church. He just stays home and reads
+books when he isn't working. Mother says he is a perfect hermit."
+
+"I'll manage it somehow," said the Story Girl--and we had no doubt that
+she would. "But I must wait until I'm a little older, for he wouldn't
+tell the secret of the west room to a little girl. And I mustn't wait
+till I'm TOO old, for he is frightened of grown-up girls, because he
+thinks they laugh at his awkwardness. I know I will like him. He has
+such a nice face, even if he is awkward. He looks like a man you could
+tell things to."
+
+"Well, I'd like a man who could move around without falling over his own
+feet," said Felicity. "And then the look of him! Uncle Roger says he is
+long, lank, lean, narrow, and contracted."
+
+"Things always sound worse than they are when Uncle Roger says them,"
+said the Story Girl. "Uncle Edward says Jasper Dale is a very clever man
+and it's a great pity he wasn't able to finish his college course. He
+went to college two years, you know. Then his father died, and he stayed
+home with his mother because she was very delicate. I call him a hero. I
+wonder if it is true that he writes poetry. Mrs. Griggs says it is. She
+says she has seen him writing it in a brown book. She said she couldn't
+get near enough to read it, but she knew it was poetry by the shape of
+it."
+
+"Very likely. If that blue silk dress story is true, I'd believe
+ANYTHING of him," said Felicity.
+
+We were near Golden Milestone now. The house was a big, weather-gray
+structure, overgrown with vines and climbing roses. Something about
+the three square windows in the second story gave it an appearance of
+winking at us in a friendly fashion through its vines--at least, so the
+Story Girl said; and, indeed, we could see it for ourselves after she
+had once pointed it out to us.
+
+We did not get into the house, however. We met the Awkward man in his
+yard, and he gave us a quarter apiece for our library. He did not seem
+awkward or shy; but then we were only children, and his foot was on his
+native heath.
+
+He was a tall, slender man, who did not look his forty years, so
+unwrinkled was his high, white forehead, so clear and lustrous his
+large, dark-blue eyes, so free from silver threads his rather long black
+hair. He had large hands and feet, and walked with a slight stoop. I
+am afraid we stared at him rather rudely while the Story Girl talked
+to him. But was not an Awkward Man, who was also a hermit and kept blue
+silk dresses in a locked room, and possibly wrote poetry, a legitimate
+object of curiosity? I leave it to you.
+
+When we got away we compared notes, and found that we all liked him--and
+this, although he had said little and had appeared somewhat glad to get
+rid of us.
+
+"He gave us the money like a gentleman," said the Story Girl. "I felt he
+didn't grudge it. And now for Mr. Campbell. It was on HIS account I put
+on my red silk. I don't suppose the Awkward Man noticed it at all, but
+Mr. Campbell will, or I'm much mistaken."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII. HOW BETTY SHERMAN WON A HUSBAND
+
+The rest of us did not share the Story Girl's enthusiasm regarding
+our call on Mr. Campbell. We secretly dreaded it. If, as was said, he
+detested children, who knew what sort of a reception we might meet?
+
+Mr. Campbell was a rich, retired farmer, who took life easily. He had
+visited New York and Boston, Toronto and Montreal; he had even been as
+far as the Pacific coast. Therefore he was regarded in Carlisle as a
+much travelled man; and he was known to be "well read" and intelligent.
+But it was also known that Mr. Campbell was not always in a good
+humour. If he liked you there was nothing he would not do for you; if he
+disliked you--well, you were not left in ignorance of it. In short, we
+had the impression that Mr. Campbell resembled the famous little girl
+with the curl in the middle of her forehead. "When he was good, he was
+very, very good, and when he was bad he was horrid." What if this were
+one of his horrid days?
+
+"He can't DO anything to us, you know," said the Story Girl. "He may be
+rude, but that won't hurt any one but himself."
+
+"Hard words break no bones," observed Felicity philosophically.
+
+"But they hurt your feelings. I am afraid of Mr. Campbell," said Cecily
+candidly.
+
+"Perhaps we'd better give up and go home," suggested Dan.
+
+"You can go home if you like," said the Story Girl scornfully. "But I am
+going to see Mr. Campbell. I know I can manage him. But if I have to go
+alone, and he gives me anything, I'll keep it all for my own collection,
+mind you."
+
+That settled it. We were not going to let the Story Girl get ahead of us
+in the manner of collecting.
+
+Mr. Campbell's housekeeper ushered us into his parlour and left us.
+Presently Mr. Campbell himself was standing in the doorway, looking us
+over. We took heart of grace. It seemed to be one of his good days,
+for there was a quizzical smile on his broad, clean-shaven,
+strongly-featured face. Mr. Campbell was a tall man, with a massive
+head, well thatched with thick, black hair, gray-streaked. He had
+big, black eyes, with many wrinkles around them, and a thin, firm,
+long-lipped mouth. We thought him handsome, for an old man.
+
+His gaze wandered over us with uncomplimentary indifference until it
+fell on the Story Girl, leaning back in an arm-chair. She looked like a
+slender red lily in the unstudied grace of her attitude. A spark flashed
+into Mr. Campbell's black eyes.
+
+"Is this a Sunday School deputation?" he inquired rather ironically.
+
+"No. We have come to ask a favour of you," said the Story Girl.
+
+The magic of her voice worked its will on Mr. Campbell, as on all
+others. He came in, sat down, hooked his thumb into his vest pocket, and
+smiled at her.
+
+"What is it?" he asked.
+
+"We are collecting for our school library, and we have called to ask you
+for a contribution," she replied.
+
+"Why should I contribute to your school library?" demanded Mr. Campbell.
+
+This was a poser for us. Why should he, indeed? But the Story Girl
+was quite equal to it. Leaning forward, and throwing an indescribable
+witchery into tone and eyes and smile, she said,
+
+"Because a lady asks you."
+
+Mr. Campbell chuckled.
+
+"The best of all reasons," he said. "But see here, my dear young lady,
+I'm an old miser and curmudgeon, as you may have heard. I HATE to part
+with my money, even for a good reason. And I NEVER part with any of
+it, unless I am to receive some benefit from the expenditure. Now, what
+earthly good could I get from your three by six school library? None
+whatever. But I shall make you a fair offer. I have heard from my
+housekeeper's urchin of a son that you are a 'master hand' to tell
+stories. Tell me one, here and now. I shall pay you in proportion to the
+entertainment you afford me. Come now, and do your prettiest."
+
+There was a fine mockery in his tone that put the Story Girl on her
+mettle instantly. She sprang to her feet, an amazing change coming over
+her. Her eyes flashed and burned; crimson spots glowed in her cheeks.
+
+"I shall tell you the story of the Sherman girls, and how Betty Sherman
+won a husband," she said.
+
+We gasped. Was the Story Girl crazy? Or had she forgotten that Betty
+Sherman was Mr. Campbell's own great-grandmother, and that her method
+of winning a husband was not exactly in accordance with maidenly
+traditions.
+
+But Mr. Campbell chuckled again.
+
+"An excellent test," he said. "If you can amuse ME with that story you
+must be a wonder. I've heard it so often that it has no more interest
+for me than the alphabet."
+
+"One cold winter day, eighty years ago," began the Story Girl without
+further parley, "Donald Fraser was sitting by the window of his new
+house, playing his fiddle for company, and looking out over the white,
+frozen bay before his door. It was bitter, bitter cold, and a storm was
+brewing. But, storm, or no storm, Donald meant to go over the bay that
+evening to see Nancy Sherman. He was thinking of her as he played 'Annie
+Laurie,' for Nancy was more beautiful than the lady of the song. 'Her
+face, it is the fairest that e'er the sun shone on,' hummed Donald--and
+oh, he thought so, too! He did not know whether Nancy cared for him or
+not. He had many rivals. But he knew that if she would not come to be
+the mistress of his new house no one else ever should. So he sat there
+that afternoon and dreamed of her, as he played sweet old songs and
+rollicking jigs on his fiddle.
+
+"While he was playing a sleigh drove up to the door, and Neil Campbell
+came in. Donald was not overly glad to see him, for he suspected where
+he was going. Neil Campbell, who was Highland Scotch and lived down
+at Berwick, was courting Nancy Sherman, too; and, what was far worse,
+Nancy's father favoured him, because he was a richer man than Donald
+Fraser. But Donald was not going to show all he thought--Scotch people
+never do--and he pretended to be very glad to see Neil and made him
+heartily welcome.
+
+"Neil sat down by the roaring fire, looking quite well satisfied with
+himself. It was ten miles from Berwick to the bay shore, and a call at
+a half way house was just the thing. Then Donald brought out the whisky.
+They always did that eighty years ago, you know. If you were a woman,
+you could give your visitors a dish of tea; but if you were a man and
+did not offer them a 'taste' of whisky, you were thought either very
+mean or very ignorant.
+
+"'You look cold,' said Donald, in his great, hearty voice. 'Sit nearer
+the fire, man, and put a bit of warmth in your veins. It's bitter cold
+the day. And now tell me the Berwick news. Has Jean McLean made up
+with her man yet? And is it true that Sandy McQuarrie is to marry Kate
+Ferguson? 'Twill be a match now! Sure, with her red hair, Sandy will not
+be like to lose his bride past finding.'
+
+"Neil had plenty of news to tell. And the more whisky he drank the more
+he told. He didn't notice that Donald was not taking much. Neil talked
+on and on, and of course he soon began to tell things it would have been
+much wiser not to tell. Finally he told Donald that he was going over
+the bay to ask Nancy Sherman that very night to marry him. And if she
+would have him, then Donald and all the folks should see a wedding that
+WAS a wedding.
+
+"Oh, wasn't Donald taken aback! This was more than he had expected. Neil
+hadn't been courting Nancy very long, and Donald never dreamed he would
+propose to her QUITE so soon.
+
+"At first Donald didn't know what to do. He felt sure deep down in his
+heart, that Nancy liked HIM. She was very shy and modest, but you know
+a girl can let a man see she likes him without going out of her way. But
+Donald knew that if Neil proposed first he would have the best chance.
+Neil was rich and the Shermans were poor, and old Elias Sherman would
+have the most to say in the matter. If he told Nancy she must take Neil
+Campbell she would never dream of disobeying him. Old Elias Sherman was
+a man who had to be obeyed. But if Nancy had only promised some one else
+first her father would not make her break her word.
+
+"Wasn't it a hard plight for poor Donald? But he was a Scotchman,
+you know, and it's pretty hard to stick a Scotchman long. Presently a
+twinkle came into his eyes, for he remembered that all was fair in love
+and war. So he said to Neil, oh, so persuasively,
+
+"'Have some more, man, have some more. 'Twill keep the heart in you in
+the teeth of that wind. Help yourself. There's plenty more where that
+came from.'
+
+"Neil didn't want MUCH persuasion. He took some more, and said slyly,
+
+"'Is it going over the bay the night that yourself will be doing?'
+
+"Donald shook his head.
+
+"'I had thought of it,' he owned, 'but it looks a wee like a storm, and
+my sleigh is at the blacksmith's to be shod. If I went it must be on
+Black Dan's back, and he likes a canter over the ice in a snow-storm
+as little as I. His own fireside is the best place for a man to-night,
+Campbell. Have another taste, man, have another taste.'
+
+"Neil went on 'tasting,' and that sly Donald sat there with a sober
+face, but laughing eyes, and coaxed him on. At last Neil's head fell
+forward on his breast, and he was sound asleep. Donald got up, put on
+his overcoat and cap, and went to the door.
+
+"'May your sleep be long and sweet, man,' he said, laughing softly, 'and
+as for the waking, 'twill be betwixt you and me.'
+
+"With that he untied Neil's horse, climbed into Neil's sleigh, and
+tucked Neil's buffalo robe about him.
+
+"'Now, Bess, old girl, do your bonniest,' he said. 'There's more than
+you know hangs on your speed. If the Campbell wakes too soon Black Dan
+could show you a pair of clean heels for all your good start. On, my
+girl.'
+
+"Brown Bess went over the ice like a deer, and Donald kept thinking of
+what he should say to Nancy--and more still of what she would say to
+him. SUPPOSE he was mistaken. SUPPOSE she said 'no!'
+
+"'Neil would have the laugh on me then. Sure he's sleeping well. And the
+snow is coming soon. There'll be a bonny swirl on the bay ere long. I
+hope no harm will come to the lad if he starts to cross. When he wakes
+he'll be in such a fine Highland temper that he'll never stop to think
+of danger. Well, Bess, old girl, here we are. Now, Donald Fraser, pluck
+up heart and play the man. Never flinch because a slip of a lass looks
+scornful at you out of the bonniest dark-blue eyes on earth.'
+
+"But in spite of his bold words Donald's heart was thumping as he drove
+into the Sherman yard. Nancy was there milking a cow by the stable door,
+but she stood up when she saw Donald coming. Oh, she was very beautiful!
+Her hair was like a skein of golden silk, and her eyes were as blue as
+the gulf water when the sun breaks out after a storm. Donald felt more
+nervous than ever. But he knew he must make the most of his chance. He
+might not see Nancy alone again before Neil came. He caught her hand and
+stammered out,
+
+"'Nan, lass, I love you. You may think 'tis a hasty wooing, but that's a
+story I can tell you later maybe. I know well I'm not worthy of you, but
+if true love could make a man worthy there'd be none before me. Will you
+have me, Nan?'
+
+"Nancy didn't SAY she would have him. She just LOOKED it, and Donald
+kissed her right there in the snow.
+
+"The next morning the storm was over. Donald knew Neil must be soon
+on his track. He did not want to make the Sherman house the scene of
+a quarrel, so he resolved to get away before the Campbell came.
+He persuaded Nancy to go with him to visit some friends in another
+settlement. As he brought Neil's sleigh up to the door he saw a black
+speck far out on the bay and laughed.
+
+"'Black Dan goes well, but he'll not be quick enough,' he said.
+
+"Half an hour later Neil Campbell rushed into the Sherman kitchen and
+oh, how angry he was! There was nobody there but Betty Sherman, and
+Betty was not afraid of him. She was never afraid of anybody. She was
+very handsome, with hair as brown as October nuts and black eyes and
+crimson cheeks; and she had always been in love with Neil Campbell
+herself.
+
+"'Good morning, Mr. Campbell,' she said, with a toss of her head. 'It's
+early abroad you are. And on Black Dan, no less! Was I mistaken in
+thinking that Donald Fraser said once that his favourite horse should
+never be backed by any man but him? But doubtless a fair exchange is no
+robbery, and Brown Bess is a good mare in her way.'
+
+"'Where is Donald Fraser?' said Neil, shaking his fist. 'It's him I'm
+seeking, and it's him I will be finding. Where is he, Betty Sherman?'
+
+"'Donald Fraser is far enough away by this time,' mocked Betty. 'He is a
+prudent fellow, and has some quickness of wit under that sandy thatch of
+his. He came here last night at sunset, with a horse and sleigh not his
+own, or lately gotten, and he asked Nan in the stable yard to marry him.
+Did a man ask ME to marry him at the cow's side with a milking pail
+in my hand, it's a cold answer he'd get for his pains. But Nan thought
+differently, and they sat late together last night, and 'twas a bonny
+story Nan wakened me to hear when she came to bed--the story of a braw
+lover who let his secret out when the whisky was above the wit, and then
+fell asleep while his rival was away to woo and win his lass. Did you
+ever hear a like story, Mr. Campbell?'
+
+"'Oh, yes,' said Neil fiercely. 'It is laughing at me over the country
+side and telling that story that Donald Fraser will be doing, is it? But
+when I meet him it is not laughing he will be doing. Oh, no. There will
+be another story to tell!'
+
+"'Now, don't meddle with the man,' cried Betty. 'What a state to be in
+because one good-looking lass likes sandy hair and gray eyes better
+than Highland black and blue! You have not the spirit of a wren, Neil
+Campbell. Were I you, I would show Donald Fraser that I could woo and
+win a lass as speedily as any Lowlander of them all; that I would!
+There's many a girl would gladly say 'yes' for your asking. And here
+stands one! Why not marry ME, Neil Campbell? Folks say I'm as bonny as
+Nan--and I could love you as well as Nan loves her Donald--ay, and ten
+times better!'
+
+"What do you suppose the Campbell did? Why, just the thing he ought to
+have done. He took Betty at her word on the spot; and there was a double
+wedding soon after. And it is said that Neil and Betty were the happiest
+couple in the world--happier even than Donald and Nancy. So all was well
+because it ended well!"
+
+The Story Girl curtsied until her silken skirts swept the floor. Then
+she flung herself in her chair and looked at Mr. Campbell, flushed,
+triumphant, daring.
+
+The story was old to us. It had once been published in a Charlottetown
+paper, and we had read in Aunt Olivia's scrapbook, where the Story Girl
+had learned it. But we had listened entranced. I have written down the
+bare words of the story, as she told it; but I can never reproduce the
+charm and colour and spirit she infused into it. It LIVED for us. Donald
+and Neil, Nancy and Betty, were there in that room with us. We saw the
+flashes of expression on their faces, we heard their voices, angry or
+tender, mocking or merry, in Lowland and Highland accent. We realized
+all the mingled coquetry and feeling and defiance and archness in Betty
+Sherman's daring speech. We had even forgotten all about Mr. Campbell.
+
+That gentleman, in silence, took out his wallet, extracted a note
+therefrom, and handed it gravely to the Story Girl.
+
+"There are five dollars for you," he said, "and your story was well
+worth it. You ARE a wonder. Some day you will make the world realize
+it. I've been about a bit, and heard some good things, but I've never
+enjoyed anything more than that threadbare old story I heard in my
+cradle. And now, will you do me a favour?"
+
+"Of course," said the delighted Story Girl.
+
+"Recite the multiplication table for me," said Mr. Campbell.
+
+We stared. Well might Mr. Campbell be called eccentric. What on earth
+did he want the multiplication table recited for? Even the Story Girl
+was surprised. But she began promptly, with twice one and went through
+it to twelve times twelve. She repeated it simply, but her voice changed
+from one tone to another as each in succession grew tired. We had never
+dreamed that there was so much in the multiplication table. As she
+announced it, the fact that three times three was nine was exquisitely
+ridiculous, five times six almost brought tears to our eyes, eight times
+seven was the most tragic and frightful thing ever heard of, and twelve
+times twelve rang like a trumpet call to victory.
+
+Mr. Campbell nodded his satisfaction.
+
+"I thought you could do it," he said. "The other day I found this
+statement in a book. 'Her voice would have made the multiplication
+table charming!' I thought of it when I heard yours. I didn't believe it
+before, but I do now."
+
+Then he let us go.
+
+"You see," said the Story Girl as we went home, "you need never be
+afraid of people."
+
+"But we are not all Story Girls," said Cecily.
+
+That night we heard Felicity talking to Cecily in their room.
+
+"Mr. Campbell never noticed one of us except the Story Girl," she said,
+"but if I had put on MY best dress as she did maybe she wouldn't have
+taken all the attention."
+
+"Could you ever do what Betty Sherman did, do you suppose?" asked Cecily
+absently.
+
+"No; but I believe the Story Girl could," answered Felicity rather
+snappishly.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII. A TRAGEDY OF CHILDHOOD
+
+The Story Girl went to Charlottetown for a week in June to visit Aunt
+Louisa. Life seemed very colourless without her, and even Felicity
+admitted that it was lonesome. But three days after her departure Felix
+told us something on the way home from school which lent some spice to
+existence immediately.
+
+"What do you think?" he said in a very solemn, yet excited, tone. "Jerry
+Cowan told me at recess this afternoon that he HAD SEEN A PICTURE OF
+GOD--that he has it at home in an old, red-covered history of the world,
+and has looked at it OFTEN."
+
+To think that Jerry Cowan should have seen such a picture often! We were
+as deeply impressed as Felix had meant us to be.
+
+"Did he say what it was like?" asked Peter.
+
+"No--only that it was a picture of God, walking in the garden of Eden."
+
+"Oh," whispered Felicity--we all spoke in low tones on the subject, for,
+by instinct and training, we thought and uttered the Great Name with
+reverence, in spite of our devouring curiosity--"oh, WOULD Jerry Cowan
+bring it to school and let us see it?"
+
+"I asked him that, soon as ever he told me," said Felix. "He said he
+might, but he couldn't promise, for he'd have to ask his mother if
+he could bring the book to school. If she'll let him he'll bring it
+to-morrow."
+
+"Oh, I'll be almost afraid to look at it," said Sara Ray tremulously.
+
+I think we all shared her fear to some extent. Nevertheless, we went to
+school the next day burning with curiosity. And we were disappointed.
+Possibly night had brought counsel to Jerry Cowan; or perhaps his mother
+had put him up to it. At all events, he announced to us that he couldn't
+bring the red-covered history to school, but if we wanted to buy the
+picture outright he would tear it out of the book and sell it to us for
+fifty cents.
+
+We talked the matter over in serious conclave in the orchard that
+evening. We were all rather short of hard cash, having devoted most of
+our spare means to the school library fund. But the general consensus
+of opinion was that we must have the picture, no matter what pecuniary
+sacrifices were involved. If we could each give about seven cents we
+would have the amount. Peter could only give four, but Dan gave eleven,
+which squared matters.
+
+"Fifty cents would be pretty dear for any other picture, but of course
+this is different," said Dan.
+
+"And there's a picture of Eden thrown in, too, you know," added
+Felicity.
+
+"Fancy selling God's picture," said Cecily in a shocked, awed tone.
+
+"Nobody but a Cowan would do it, and that's a fact," said Dan.
+
+"When we get it we'll keep it in the family Bible," said Felicity.
+"That's the only proper place."
+
+"Oh, I wonder what it will be like," breathed Cecily.
+
+We all wondered. Next day in school we agreed to Jerry Cowan's terms,
+and Jerry promised to bring the picture up to Uncle Alec's the following
+afternoon.
+
+We were all intensely excited Saturday morning. To our dismay, it began
+to rain just before dinner.
+
+"What if Jerry doesn't bring the picture to-day because of the rain?" I
+suggested.
+
+"Never you fear," answered Felicity decidedly. "A Cowan would come
+through ANYTHING for fifty cents."
+
+After dinner we all, without any verbal decision about it, washed our
+faces and combed our hair. The girls put on their second best dresses,
+and we boys donned white collars. We all had the unuttered feeling that
+we must do such honour to that Picture as we could. Felicity and Dan
+began a small spat over something, but stopped at once when Cecily said
+severely,
+
+"How DARE you quarrel when you are going to look at a picture of God
+to-day?"
+
+Owing to the rain we could not foregather in the orchard, where we had
+meant to transact the business with Jerry. We did not wish our grown-ups
+around at our great moment, so we betook ourselves to the loft of the
+granary in the spruce wood, from whose window we could see the main road
+and hail Jerry. Sara Ray had joined us, very pale and nervous, having
+had, so it appeared, a difference of opinion with her mother about
+coming up the hill in the rain.
+
+"I'm afraid I did very wrong to come against ma's will," she said
+miserably, "but I COULDN'T wait. I wanted to see the picture as soon as
+you did."
+
+We waited and watched at the window. The valley was full of mist, and
+the rain was coming down in slanting lines over the tops of the spruces.
+But as we waited the clouds broke away and the sun came out flashingly;
+the drops on the spruce boughs glittered like diamonds.
+
+"I don't believe Jerry can be coming," said Cecily in despair. "I
+suppose his mother must have thought it was dreadful, after all, to sell
+such a picture."
+
+"There he is now!" cried Dan, waving excitedly from the window.
+
+"He's carrying a fish-basket," said Felicity. "You surely don't suppose
+he would bring THAT picture in a fish-basket!"
+
+Jerry HAD brought it in a fish-basket, as appeared when he mounted
+the granary stairs shortly afterwards. It was folded up in a newspaper
+packet on top of the dried herring with which the basket was filled. We
+paid him his money, but we would not open the packet until he had gone.
+
+"Cecily," said Felicity in a hushed tone. "You are the best of us all.
+YOU open the parcel."
+
+"Oh, I'm no gooder than the rest of you," breathed Cecily, "but I'll
+open it if you like."
+
+With trembling fingers Cecily opened the parcel. We stood around, hardly
+breathing. She unfolded it and held it up. We saw it.
+
+Suddenly Sara began to cry.
+
+"Oh, oh, oh, does God look like THAT?" she wailed.
+
+Felix and I spoke not. Disappointment, and something worse, sealed our
+speech. DID God look like that--like that stern, angrily frowning old
+man with the tossing hair and beard of the wood-cut Cecily held.
+
+"I suppose He must, since that is His picture," said Dan miserably.
+
+"He looks awful cross," said Peter simply.
+
+"Oh, I wish we'd never, never seen it," cried Cecily.
+
+We all wished that--too late. Our curiosity had led us into some Holy of
+Holies, not to be profaned by human eyes, and this was our punishment.
+
+"I've always had a feeling right along," wept Sara, "that it wasn't
+RIGHT to buy--or LOOK AT--God's picture."
+
+As we stood there wretchedly we heard flying feet below and a blithe
+voice calling,
+
+"Where are you, children?"
+
+The Story Girl had returned! At any other moment we would have rushed to
+meet her in wild joy. But now we were too crushed and miserable to move.
+
+"Whatever is the matter with you all?" demanded the Story Girl,
+appearing at the top of the stairs. "What is Sara crying about? What
+have you got there?"
+
+"A picture of God," said Cecily with a sob in her voice, "and oh, it is
+so dreadful and ugly. Look!"
+
+The Story Girl looked. An expression of scorn came over her face.
+
+"Surely you don't believe God looks like that," she said impatiently,
+while her fine eyes flashed. "He doesn't--He couldn't. He is wonderful
+and beautiful. I'm surprised at you. THAT is nothing but the picture of
+a cross old man."
+
+Hope sprang up in our hearts, although we were not wholly convinced.
+
+"I don't know," said Dan dubiously. "It says under the picture 'God in
+the Garden of Eden.' It's PRINTED."
+
+"Well, I suppose that's what the man who drew it thought God was like,"
+answered the Story Girl carelessly. "But HE couldn't have known any more
+than you do. HE had never seen Him."
+
+"It's all very well for you to say so," said Felicity, "but YOU don't
+know either. I wish I could believe that isn't like God--but I don't
+know what to believe."
+
+"Well, if you won't believe me, I suppose you'll believe the minister,"
+said the Story Girl. "Go and ask him. He's in the house this very
+minute. He came up with us in the buggy."
+
+At any other time we would never have dared catechize the minister
+about anything. But desperate cases call for desperate measures. We
+drew straws to see who should go and do the asking, and the lot fell to
+Felix.
+
+"Better wait until Mr. Marwood leaves, and catch him in the lane,"
+advised the Story Girl. "You'll have a lot of grown-ups around you in
+the house."
+
+Felix took her advice. Mr. Marwood, presently walking benignantly
+along the lane, was confronted by a fat, small boy with a pale face but
+resolute eyes.
+
+The rest of us remained in the background but within hearing.
+
+"Well, Felix, what is it?" asked Mr. Marwood kindly.
+
+"Please, sir, does God really look like this?" asked Felix, holding out
+the picture. "We hope He doesn't--but we want to know the truth, and
+that is why I'm bothering you. Please excuse us and tell me."
+
+The minister looked at the picture. A stern expression came into his
+gentle blue eyes and he got as near to frowning as it was possible for
+him to get.
+
+"Where did you get that thing?" he asked.
+
+THING! We began to breathe easier.
+
+"We bought it from Jerry Cowan. He found it in a red-covered history of
+the world. It SAYS it's God's picture," said Felix.
+
+"It is nothing of the sort," said Mr. Marwood indignantly. "There is
+no such thing as a picture of God, Felix. No human being knows what he
+looks like--no human being CAN know. We should not even try to think
+what He looks like. But, Felix, you may be sure that God is infinitely
+more beautiful and loving and tender and kind than anything we can
+imagine of Him. Never believe anything else, my boy. As for this--this
+SACRILEGE--take it and burn it."
+
+We did not know what a sacrilege meant, but we knew that Mr. Marwood had
+declared that the picture was not like God. That was enough for us. We
+felt as if a terrible weight had been lifted from our minds.
+
+"I could hardly believe the Story Girl, but of course the minister
+KNOWS," said Dan happily.
+
+"We've lost fifty cents because of it," said Felicity gloomily.
+
+We had lost something of infinitely more value than fifty cents,
+although we did not realize it just then. The minister's words had
+removed from our minds the bitter belief that God was like that picture;
+but on something deeper and more enduring than mind an impression had
+been made that was never to be removed. The mischief was done. From
+that day to this the thought or the mention of God brings up before us
+involuntarily the vision of a stern, angry, old man. Such was the price
+we were to pay for the indulgence of a curiosity which each of us, deep
+in our hearts, had, like Sara Ray, felt ought not to be gratified.
+
+"Mr. Marwood told me to burn it," said Felix.
+
+"It doesn't seem reverent to do that," said Cecily. "Even if it isn't
+God's picture, it has His name on it."
+
+"Bury it," said the Story Girl.
+
+We did bury it after tea, in the depths of the spruce grove; and then we
+went into the orchard. It was so nice to have the Story Girl back again.
+She had wreathed her hair with Canterbury Bells, and looked like the
+incarnation of rhyme and story and dream.
+
+"Canterbury Bells is a lovely name for a flower, isn't it?" she said.
+"It makes you think of cathedrals and chimes, doesn't it? Let's go over
+to Uncle Stephen's Walk, and sit on the branches of the big tree. It's
+too wet on the grass, and I know a story--a TRUE story, about an old
+lady I saw in town at Aunt Louisa's. Such a dear old lady, with lovely
+silvery curls."
+
+After the rain the air seemed dripping with odours in the warm west
+wind--the tang of fir balsam, the spice of mint, the wild woodsiness of
+ferns, the aroma of grasses steeping in the sunshine,--and with it all a
+breath of wild sweetness from far hill pastures.
+
+Scattered through the grass in Uncle Stephen's Walk, were blossoming
+pale, aerial flowers which had no name that we could ever discover.
+Nobody seemed to know anything about them. They had been there when
+Great-grandfather King bought the place. I have never seen them
+elsewhere, or found them described in any floral catalogue. We called
+them the White Ladies. The Story Girl gave them the name. She said they
+looked like the souls of good women who had had to suffer much and had
+been very patient. They were wonderfully dainty, with a strange, faint,
+aromatic perfume which was only to be detected at a little distance and
+vanished if you bent over them. They faded soon after they were plucked;
+and, although strangers, greatly admiring them, often carried away roots
+and seeds, they could never be coaxed to grow elsewhere.
+
+"My story is about Mrs. Dunbar and the Captain of the FANNY," said the
+Story Girl, settling herself comfortably on a bough, with her brown head
+against a gnarled trunk. "It's sad and beautiful--and true. I do love to
+tell stories that I know really happened. Mrs. Dunbar lives next door to
+Aunt Louisa in town. She is so sweet. You wouldn't think to look at her
+that she had a tragedy in her life, but she has. Aunt Louisa told me the
+tale. It all happened long, long ago. Interesting things like this all
+did happen long ago, it seems to me. They never seem to happen now. This
+was in '49, when people were rushing to the gold fields in California.
+It was just like a fever, Aunt Louisa says. People took it, right here
+on the Island; and a number of young men determined they would go to
+California.
+
+"It is easy to go to California now; but it was a very different matter
+then. There were no railroads across the land, as there are now, and if
+you wanted to go to California you had to go in a sailing vessel, all
+the way around Cape Horn. It was a long and dangerous journey; and
+sometimes it took over six months. When you got there you had no way of
+sending word home again except by the same plan. It might be over a year
+before your people at home heard a word about you--and fancy what their
+feelings would be!
+
+"But these young men didn't think of these things; they were led on by a
+golden vision. They made all their arrangements, and they chartered the
+brig _Fanny_ to take them to California.
+
+"The captain of the _Fanny_ is the hero of my story. His name was Alan
+Dunbar, and he was young and handsome. Heroes always are, you know,
+but Aunt Louisa says he really was. And he was in love--wildly in
+love,--with Margaret Grant. Margaret was as beautiful as a dream, with
+soft blue eyes and clouds of golden hair; and she loved Alan Dunbar just
+as much as he loved her. But her parents were bitterly opposed to him,
+and they had forbidden Margaret to see him or speak to him. They hadn't
+anything against him as a MAN, but they didn't want her to throw herself
+away on a sailor.
+
+"Well, when Alan Dunbar knew that he must go to California in the
+_Fanny_ he was in despair. He felt that he could NEVER go so far away
+for so long and leave his Margaret behind. And Margaret felt that she
+could never let him go. I know EXACTLY how she felt."
+
+"How can you know?" interrupted Peter suddenly. "You ain't old enough to
+have a beau. How can you know?"
+
+The Story Girl looked at Peter with a frown. She did not like to be
+interrupted when telling a story.
+
+"Those are not things one KNOWS about," she said with dignity. "One
+FEELS about them."
+
+Peter, crushed but not convinced, subsided, and the Story Girl went on.
+
+"Finally, Margaret ran away with Alan, and they were married in
+Charlottetown. Alan intended to take his wife with him to California in
+the _Fanny_. If it was a hard journey for a man it was harder still for
+a woman, but Margaret would have dared anything for Alan's sake. They
+had three days--ONLY three days--of happiness, and then the blow fell.
+The crew and the passengers of the _Fanny_ refused to let Captain Dunbar
+take his wife with him. They told him he must leave her behind. And
+all his prayers were of no avail. They say he stood on the deck of the
+_Fanny_ and pleaded with the men while the tears ran down his face; but
+they would not yield, and he had to leave Margaret behind. Oh, what a
+parting it was!"
+
+There was heartbreak in the Story Girl's voice and tears came into our
+eyes. There, in the green bower of Uncle Stephen's Walk, we cried over
+the pathos of a parting whose anguish had been stilled for many years.
+
+"When it was all over, Margaret's father and mother forgave her, and she
+went back home to wait--to WAIT. Oh, it is so dreadful just to WAIT,
+and do nothing else. Margaret waited for nearly a year. How long it must
+have seemed to her! And at last there came a letter--but not from Alan.
+Alan was DEAD. He had died in California and had been buried there.
+While Margaret had been thinking of him and longing for him and praying
+for him he had been lying in his lonely, faraway grave."
+
+Cecily sprang up, shaking with sobs.
+
+"Oh, don't--don't go on," she implored. "I CAN'T bear any more."
+
+"There is no more," said the Story Girl. "That was the end of it--the
+end of everything for Margaret. It didn't kill HER, but her heart died."
+
+"I just wish I'd hold of those fellows who wouldn't let the Captain take
+his wife," said Peter savagely.
+
+"Well, it was awful said," said Felicity, wiping her eyes. "But it was
+long ago and we can't do any good by crying over it now. Let us go
+and get something to eat. I made some nice little rhubarb tarts this
+morning."
+
+We went. In spite of new disappointments and old heartbreaks we had
+appetites. And Felicity did make scrumptious rhubarb tarts!
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX. MAGIC SEED
+
+When the time came to hand in our collections for the library fund Peter
+had the largest--three dollars. Felicity was a good second with two and
+a half. This was simply because the hens had laid so well.
+
+"If you'd had to pay father for all the extra handfuls of wheat you've
+fed to those hens, Miss Felicity, you wouldn't have so much," said Dan
+spitefully.
+
+"I didn't," said Felicity indignantly. "Look how Aunt Olivia's hens
+laid, too, and she fed them herself just the same as usual."
+
+"Never mind," said Cecily, "we have all got something to give. If you
+were like poor Sara Ray, and hadn't been able to collect anything, you
+might feel bad."
+
+But Sara Ray HAD something to give. She came up the hill after tea, all
+radiant. When Sara Ray smiled--and she did not waste her smiles--she was
+rather pretty in a plaintive, apologetic way. A dimple or two came
+into sight, and she had very nice teeth--small and white, like the
+traditional row of pearls.
+
+"Oh, just look," she said. "Here are three dollars--and I'm going to
+give it all to the library fund. I had a letter to-day from Uncle Arthur
+in Winnipeg, and he sent me three dollars. He said I was to use it ANY
+way I liked, so ma couldn't refuse to let me give it to the fund. She
+thinks it's an awful waste, but she always goes by what Uncle Arthur
+says. Oh, I've prayed so hard that some money might come some way, and
+now it has. See what praying does!"
+
+I was very much afraid that we did not rejoice quite as unselfishly
+in Sara's good fortune as we should have done. WE had earned our
+contributions by the sweat of our brow, or by the scarcely less
+disagreeable method of "begging." And Sara's had as good as descended
+upon her out of the skies, as much like a miracle as anything you could
+imagine.
+
+"She prayed for it, you know," said Felix, after Sara had gone home.
+
+"That's too easy a way of earning money," grumbled Peter resentfully.
+"If the rest of us had just set down and done nothing, only prayed, how
+much do you s'pose we'd have? It don't seem fair to me."
+
+"Oh, well, it's different with Sara," said Dan. "We COULD earn money and
+she COULDN'T. You see? But come on down to the orchard. The Story Girl
+had a letter from her father to-day and she's going to read it to us."
+
+We went promptly. A letter from the Story Girl's father was always an
+event; and to hear her read it was almost as good as hearing her tell a
+story.
+
+Before coming to Carlisle, Uncle Blair Stanley had been a mere name
+to us. Now he was a personality. His letters to the Story Girl, the
+pictures and sketches he sent her, her adoring and frequent mention of
+him, all combined to make him very real to us.
+
+We FELT then, what we did not understand till later years, that our
+grown-up relatives did not altogether admire or approve of Uncle Blair.
+He belonged to a different world from theirs. They had never known him
+very intimately or understood him. I realize now that Uncle Blair was a
+bit of a Bohemian--a respectable sort of tramp. Had he been a poor man
+he might have been a more successful artist. But he had a small fortune
+of his own and, lacking the spur of necessity, or of disquieting
+ambition, he remained little more than a clever amateur. Once in a while
+he painted a picture which showed what he could do; but for the rest,
+he was satisfied to wander over the world, light-hearted and content.
+We knew that the Story Girl was thought to resemble him strongly in
+appearance and temperament, but she had far more fire and intensity and
+strength of will--her inheritance from King and Ward. She would never
+be satisfied as a dabbler; whatever her future career should be, into it
+she would throw all her powers of mind and heart and soul.
+
+But Uncle Blair could do at least one thing surpassingly well. He could
+write letters. Such letters! By contrast, Felix and I were secretly
+ashamed of father's epistles. Father could talk well but, as Felix said,
+he couldn't write worth a cent. The letters we had received from him
+since his arrival in Rio de Janeiro were mere scrawls, telling us to be
+good boys and not trouble Aunt Janet, incidentally adding that he was
+well and lonesome. Felix and I were always glad to get his letters, but
+we never read them aloud to an admiring circle in the orchard.
+
+Uncle Blair was spending the summer in Switzerland; and the letter the
+Story Girl read to us, among the fair, frail White Ladies of the Walk,
+where the west wind came now with a sigh, and again with a rush, and
+then brushed our faces as softly as the down of a thistle, was full of
+the glamour of mountain-rimmed lakes, and purple chalets, and "snowy
+summits old in story." We climbed Mount Blanc, saw the Jungfrau soaring
+into cloudland, and walked among the gloomy pillars of Bonnivard's
+prison. Finally, the Story Girl told us the tale of the Prisoner of
+Chillon, in words that were Byron's, but in a voice that was all her
+own.
+
+"It must be splendid to go to Europe," sighed Cecily longingly.
+
+"I am going some day," said the Story Girl airily.
+
+We looked at her with a slightly incredulous awe. To us, in those years,
+Europe seemed almost as remote and unreachable as the moon. It was
+hard to believe that one of US should ever go there. But Aunt Julia had
+gone--and SHE had been brought up in Carlisle on this very farm. So it
+was possible that the Story Girl might go too.
+
+"What will you do there?" asked Peter practically.
+
+"I shall learn how to tell stories to all the world," said the Story
+Girl dreamily.
+
+It was a lovely, golden-brown evening; the orchard, and the farm-lands
+beyond, were full of ruby lights and kissing shadows. Over in the east,
+above the Awkward Man's house, the Wedding Veil of the Proud Princess
+floated across the sky, presently turning as rosy as if bedewed with her
+heart's blood. We sat there and talked until the first star lighted a
+white taper over the beech hill.
+
+Then I remembered that I had forgotten to take my dose of magic seed,
+and I hastened to do it, although I was beginning to lose faith in it. I
+had not grown a single bit, by the merciless testimony of the hall door.
+
+I took the box of seed out of my trunk in the twilit room and swallowed
+the decreed pinch. As I did so, Dan's voice rang out behind me.
+
+"Beverley King, what have you got there?"
+
+I thrust the box hastily into my trunk and confronted Dan.
+
+"None of your business," I said defiantly.
+
+"Yes, 'tis." Dan was too much in earnest to resent my blunt speech.
+"Look here, Bev, is that magic seed? And did you get it from Billy
+Robinson?"
+
+Dan and I looked at each other, suspicion dawning in our eyes.
+
+"What do you know about Billy Robinson and his magic seed?" I demanded.
+
+"Just this. I bought a box from him for--for--something. He said he
+wasn't going to sell any of it to anybody else. Did he sell any to you?"
+
+"Yes, he did," I said in disgust--for I was beginning to understand that
+Billy and his magic seed were arrant frauds.
+
+"What for? YOUR mouth is a decent size," said Dan.
+
+"Mouth? It had nothing to do with my mouth! He said it would make me
+grow tall. And it hasn't--not an inch! I don't see what you wanted it
+for! You are tall enough."
+
+"I got it for my mouth," said Dan with a shame-faced grin. "The girls in
+school laugh at it so. Kate Marr says it's like a gash in a pie. Billy
+said that seed would shrink it for sure."
+
+Well, there it was! Billy had deceived us both. Nor were we the only
+victims. We did not find the whole story out at once. Indeed, the summer
+was almost over before, in one way or another, the full measure of that
+shameless Billy Robinson's iniquity was revealed to us. But I shall
+anticipate the successive relations in this chapter. Every pupil of
+Carlisle school, so it eventually appeared, had bought magic seed, under
+solemn promise of secrecy. Felix had believed blissfully that it would
+make him thin. Cecily's hair was to become naturally curly, and Sara Ray
+was not to be afraid of Peg Bowen any more. It was to make Felicity as
+clever as the Story Girl and it was to make the Story Girl as good a
+cook as Felicity. What Peter had bought magic seed for remained a secret
+longer than any of the others. Finally--it was the night before what we
+expected would be the Judgment Day--he confessed to me that he had taken
+it to make Felicity fond of him. Skilfully indeed had that astute Billy
+played on our respective weaknesses.
+
+The keenest edge to our humiliation was given by the discovery that
+the magic seed was nothing more or less than caraway, which grew in
+abundance at Billy Robinson's uncle's in Markdale. Peg Bowen had had
+nothing to do with it.
+
+Well, we had all been badly hoaxed. But we did not trumpet our wrongs
+abroad. We did not even call Billy to account. We thought that least
+said was soonest mended in such a matter. We went very softly indeed,
+lest the grown-ups, especially that terrible Uncle Roger, should hear of
+it.
+
+"We should have known better than to trust Billy Robinson," said
+Felicity, summing up the case one evening when all had been made known.
+"After all, what could you expect from a pig but a grunt?"
+
+We were not surprised to find that Billy Robinson's contribution to the
+library fund was the largest handed in by any of the scholars. Cecily
+said she didn't envy him his conscience. But I am afraid she measured
+his conscience by her own. I doubt very much if Billy's troubled him at
+all.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X. A DAUGHTER OF EVE
+
+"I hate the thought of growing up," said the Story Girl reflectively,
+"because I can never go barefooted then, and nobody will ever see what
+beautiful feet I have."
+
+She was sitting, the July sunlight, on the ledge of the open hayloft
+window in Uncle Roger's big barn; and the bare feet below her print
+skirt WERE beautiful. They were slender and shapely and satin smooth
+with arched insteps, the daintiest of toes, and nails like pink shells.
+
+We were all in the hayloft. The Story Girl had been telling us a tale
+
+ "Of old, unhappy, far-off things,
+ And battles long ago."
+
+Felicity and Cecily were curled up in a corner, and we boys sprawled
+idly on the fragrant, sun-warm heaps. We had "stowed" the hay in the
+loft that morning for Uncle Roger, so we felt that we had earned the
+right to loll on our sweet-smelling couch. Haylofts are delicious
+places, with just enough of shadow and soft, uncertain noises to give
+an agreeable tang of mystery. The swallows flew in and out of their nest
+above our heads, and whenever a sunbeam fell through a chink the air
+swarmed with golden dust. Outside of the loft was a vast, sunshiny gulf
+of blue sky and mellow air, wherein floated argosies of fluffy cloud,
+and airy tops of maple and spruce.
+
+Pat was with us, of course, prowling about stealthily, or making
+frantic, bootless leaps at the swallows. A cat in a hayloft is a
+beautiful example of the eternal fitness of things. We had not heard of
+this fitness then, but we all felt that Paddy was in his own place in a
+hayloft.
+
+"I think it is very vain to talk about anything you have yourself being
+beautiful," said Felicity.
+
+"I am not a bit vain," said the Story Girl, with entire truthfulness.
+"It is not vanity to know your own good points. It would just be
+stupidity if you didn't. It's only vanity when you get puffed up about
+them. I am not a bit pretty. My only good points are my hair and eyes
+and feet. So I think it's real mean that one of them has to be covered
+up the most of the time. I'm always glad when it gets warm enough to go
+barefooted. But, when I grow up they'll have to covered all the time. It
+IS mean."
+
+"You'll have to put your shoes and stockings on when you go to the magic
+lantern show to-night," said Felicity in a tone of satisfaction.
+
+"I don't know that. I'm thinking of going barefooted."
+
+"Oh, you wouldn't! Sara Stanley, you're not in earnest!" exclaimed
+Felicity, her blue eyes filling with horror.
+
+The Story Girl winked with the side of her face next to Felix and me,
+but the side next the girls changed not a muscle. She dearly loved to
+"take a rise" out of Felicity now and then.
+
+"Indeed, I would if I just made up my mind to. Why not? Why not bare
+feet--if they're clean--as well as bare hands and face?"
+
+"Oh, you wouldn't! It would be such a disgrace!" said poor Felicity in
+real distress.
+
+"We went to school barefooted all June," argued that wicked Story Girl.
+"What is the difference between going to the schoolhouse barefooted in
+the daytime and going in the evening?"
+
+"Oh, there's EVERY difference. I can't just explain it--but every one
+KNOWS there is a difference. You know it yourself. Oh, PLEASE, don't do
+such a thing, Sara."
+
+"Well, I won't, just to oblige you," said the Story Girl, who would
+have died the death before she would have gone to a "public meeting"
+barefooted.
+
+We were all rather excited over the magic lantern show which an
+itinerant lecturer was to give in the schoolhouse that evening. Even
+Felix and I, who had seen such shows galore, were interested, and the
+rest were quite wild. There had never been such a thing in Carlisle
+before. We were all going, Peter included. Peter went everywhere with us
+now. He was a regular attendant at church and Sunday School, where his
+behaviour was as irreproachable as if he had been "raised" in the caste
+of Vere de Vere. It was a feather in the Story Girl's cap, for she took
+all the credit of having started Peter on the right road. Felicity was
+resigned, although the fatal patch on Peter's best trousers was still
+an eyesore to her. She declared she never got any good of the singing,
+because Peter stood up then and every one could see the patch. Mrs.
+James Clark, whose pew was behind ours, never took her eye off it--or so
+Felicity averred.
+
+But Peter's stockings were always darned. Aunt Olivia had seen to that,
+ever since she heard of Peter's singular device regarding them on his
+first Sunday. She had also given Peter a Bible, of which he was so proud
+that he hated to use it lest he should soil it.
+
+"I think I'll wrap it up and keep it in my box," he said. "I've an old
+Bible of Aunt Jane's at home that I can use. I s'pose it's just the
+same, even if it is old, isn't it?"
+
+"Oh, yes," Cecily had assured him. "The Bible is always the same."
+
+"I thought maybe they'd got some new improvements on it since Aunt
+Jane's day," said Peter, relieved.
+
+"Sara Ray is coming along the lane, and she's crying," announced Dan,
+who was peering out of a knot-hole on the opposite side of the loft.
+
+"Sara Ray is crying half her time," said Cecily impatiently. "I'm sure
+she cries a quartful of tears a month. There are times when you can't
+help crying. But I hide then. Sara just goes and cries in public."
+
+The lachrymose Sara presently joined us and we discovered the cause of
+her tears to be the doleful fact that her mother had forbidden her to
+go to the magic lantern show that night. We all showed the sympathy we
+felt.
+
+"She SAID yesterday you could go," said the Story Girl indignantly. "Why
+has she changed her mind?"
+
+"Because of the measles in Markdale," sobbed Sara. "She says Markdale is
+full of them, and there'll be sure to be some of the Markdale people at
+the show. So I'm not to go. And I've never seen a magic lantern--I've
+never seen ANYTHING."
+
+"I don't believe there's any danger of catching measles," said Felicity.
+"If there was we wouldn't be allowed to go."
+
+"I wish I COULD get the measles," said Sara defiantly. "Maybe I'd be of
+some importance to ma then."
+
+"Suppose Cecily goes down with you and coaxes your mother," suggested
+the Story Girl. "Perhaps she'd let you go then. She likes Cecily. She
+doesn't like either Felicity or me, so it would only make matters worse
+for us to try."
+
+"Ma's gone to town--pa and her went this afternoon--and they're not
+coming back till to-morrow. There's nobody home but Judy Pineau and me."
+
+"Then," said the Story Girl, "why don't you just go to the show anyhow?
+Your mother won't ever know, if you coax Judy to hold her tongue."
+
+"Oh, but that's wrong," said Felicity. "You shouldn't put Sara up to
+disobeying her mother."
+
+Now, Felicity for once was undoubtedly right. The Story Girl's
+suggestion WAS wrong; and if it had been Cecily who protested, the Story
+Girl would probably have listened to her, and proceeded no further
+in the matter. But Felicity was one of those unfortunate people whose
+protests against wrong-doing serve only to drive the wrong-doer further
+on her sinful way.
+
+The Story Girl resented Felicity's superior tone, and proceeded to tempt
+Sara in right good earnest. The rest of us held our tongues. It was, we
+told ourselves, Sara's own lookout.
+
+"I have a good mind to do it," said Sara, "but I can't get my good
+clothes; they're in the spare room, and ma locked the door, for fear
+somebody would get at the fruit cake. I haven't a single thing to wear,
+except my school gingham."
+
+"Well, that's new and pretty," said the Story Girl. "We'll lend you
+some things. You can have my lace collar. That'll make the gingham quite
+elegant. And Cecily will lend you her second best hat."
+
+"But I've no shoes or stockings. They're locked up too."
+
+"You can have a pair of mine," said Felicity, who probably thought that
+since Sara was certain to yield to temptation, she might as well be
+garbed decently for her transgression.
+
+Sara did yield. When the Story Girl's voice entreated it was not easy
+to resist its temptation, even if you wanted to. That evening, when
+we started for the schoolhouse, Sara Ray was among us, decked out in
+borrowed plumes.
+
+"Suppose she DOES catch the measles?" Felicity said aside.
+
+"I don't believe there'll be anybody there from Markdale. The lecturer
+is going to Markdale next week. They'll wait for that," said the Story
+Girl airily.
+
+It was a cool, dewy evening, and we walked down the long, red hill in
+the highest of spirits. Over a valley filled with beech and spruce was
+a sunset afterglow--creamy yellow and a hue that was not so much red as
+the dream of red, with a young moon swung low in it. The air was sweet
+with the breath of mown hayfields where swaths of clover had been
+steeping in the sun. Wild roses grew pinkly along the fences, and the
+roadsides were star-dusted with buttercups.
+
+Those of us who had nothing the matter with our consciences enjoyed our
+walk to the little whitewashed schoolhouse in the valley. Felicity
+and Cecily were void of offence towards all men. The Story Girl walked
+uprightly like an incarnate flame in her crimson silk. Her pretty feet
+were hidden in the tan-coloured, buttoned Paris boots which were the
+secret envy of every school girl in Carlisle.
+
+But Sara Ray was not happy. Her face was so melancholy that the Story
+Girl lost patience with her. The Story Girl herself was not altogether
+at ease. Probably her own conscience was troubling her. But admit it she
+would not.
+
+"Now, Sara," she said, "you just take my advice and go into this with
+all your heart if you go at all. Never mind if it is bad. There's no
+use being naughty if you spoil your fun by wishing all the time you were
+good. You can repent afterwards, but there is no use in mixing the two
+things together."
+
+"I'm not repenting," protested Sara. "I'm only scared of ma finding it
+out."
+
+"Oh!" The Story Girl's voice expressed her scorn. For remorse she
+had understanding and sympathy; but fear of her fellow creatures was
+something unknown to her. "Didn't Judy Pineau promise you solemnly she
+wouldn't tell?"
+
+"Yes; but maybe some one who sees me there will mention it to ma."
+
+"Well, if you're so scared you'd better not go. It isn't too late.
+Here's your own gate," said Cecily.
+
+But Sara could not give up the delights of the show. So she walked on,
+a small, miserable testimony that the way of the transgressor is never
+easy, even when said transgressor is only a damsel of eleven.
+
+The magic lantern show was a splendid one. The views were good and the
+lecturer witty. We repeated his jokes to each other all the way home.
+Sara, who had not enjoyed the exhibition at all, seemed to feel more
+cheerful when it was over and she was going home. The Story Girl on the
+contrary was gloomy.
+
+"There WERE Markdale people there," she confided to me, "and the
+Williamsons live next door to the Cowans, who have measles. I wish I'd
+never egged Sara on to going--but don't tell Felicity I said so. If Sara
+Ray had really enjoyed the show I wouldn't mind. But she didn't. I could
+see that. So I've done wrong and made her do wrong--and there's nothing
+to show for it."
+
+The night was scented and mysterious. The wind was playing an eerie
+fleshless melody in the reeds of the brook hollow. The sky was dark and
+starry, and across it the Milky Way flung its shimmering misty ribbons.
+
+"There's four hundred million stars in the Milky Way," quoth Peter, who
+frequently astonished us by knowing more than any hired boy could be
+expected to. He had a retentive memory, and never forgot anything he
+heard or read. The few books left to him by his oft-referred-to Aunt
+Jane had stocked his mind with a miscellaneous information which
+sometimes made Felix and me doubt if we knew as much as Peter after all.
+Felicity was so impressed by his knowledge of astronomy that she dropped
+back from the other girls and walked beside him. She had not done so
+before because he was barefooted. It was permissible for hired boys to
+go to public meetings--when not held in the church--with bare feet, and
+no particular disgrace attached to it. But Felicity would not walk with
+a barefooted companion. It was dark now, so nobody would notice his
+feet.
+
+"I know a story about the Milky Way," said the Story Girl, brightening
+up. "I read it in a book of Aunt Louisa's in town, and I learned it
+off by heart. Once there were two archangels in heaven, named Zerah and
+Zulamith--"
+
+"Have angels names--same as people?" interrupted Peter.
+
+"Yes, of course. They MUST have. They'd be all mixed up if they hadn't."
+
+"And when I'm an angel--if I ever get to be one--will my name still be
+Peter?"
+
+"No. You'll have a new name up there," said Cecily gently. "It says so
+in the Bible."
+
+"Well, I'm glad of that. Peter would be such a funny name for an angel.
+And what is the difference between angels and archangels?"
+
+"Oh, archangels are angels that have been angels so long that they've
+had time to grow better and brighter and more beautiful than newer
+angels," said the Story Girl, who probably made that explanation up on
+the spur of the moment, just to pacify Peter.
+
+"How long does it take for an angel to grow into an archangel?" pursued
+Peter.
+
+"Oh, I don't know. Millions of years likely. And even then I don't
+suppose ALL the angels do. A good many of them must just stay plain
+angels, I expect."
+
+"I shall be satisfied just to be a plain angel," said Felicity modestly.
+
+"Oh, see here, if you're going to interrupt and argue over everything,
+we'll never get the story told," said Felix. "Dry up, all of you, and
+let the Story Girl go on."
+
+We dried up, and the Story Girl went on.
+
+"Zerah and Zulamith loved each other, just as mortals love, and this is
+forbidden by the laws of the Almighty. And because Zerah and Zulamith
+had so broken God's law they were banished from His presence to the
+uttermost bounds of the universe. If they had been banished TOGETHER it
+would have been no punishment; so Zerah was exiled to a star on one side
+of the universe, and Zulamith was sent to a star on the other side of
+the universe; and between them was a fathomless abyss which thought
+itself could not cross. Only one thing could cross it--and that was
+love. Zulamith yearned for Zerah with such fidelity and longing that
+he began to build up a bridge of light from his star; and Zerah, not
+knowing this, but loving and longing for him, began to build a similar
+bridge of light from her star. For a thousand thousand years they both
+built the bridge of light, and at last they met and sprang into each
+other's arms. Their toil and loneliness and suffering were all over and
+forgotten, and the bridge they had built spanned the gulf between their
+stars of exile.
+
+"Now, when the other archangels saw what had been done they flew in fear
+and anger to God's white throne, and cried to Him,
+
+"'See what these rebellious ones have done! They have built them a
+bridge of light across the universe, and set Thy decree of separation at
+naught. Do Thou, then, stretch forth Thine arm and destroy their impious
+work.'
+
+"They ceased--and all heaven was hushed. Through the silence sounded the
+voice of the Almighty.
+
+"'Nay,' He said, 'whatsoever in my universe true love hath builded not
+even the Almighty can destroy. The bridge must stand forever.'
+
+"And," concluded the Story Girl, her face upturned to the sky and her
+big eyes filled with starlight, "it stands still. That bridge is the
+Milky Way."
+
+"What a lovely story," sighed Sara Ray, who had been wooed to a
+temporary forgetfulness of her woes by its charm.
+
+The rest of us came back to earth, feeling that we had been wandering
+among the hosts of heaven. We were not old enough to appreciate fully
+the wonderful meaning of the legend; but we felt its beauty and
+its appeal. To us forevermore the Milky Way would be, not Peter's
+overwhelming garland of suns, but the lucent bridge, love-created, on
+which the banished archangels crossed from star to star.
+
+We had to go up Sara Ray's lane with her to her very door, for she was
+afraid Peg Bowen would catch her if she went alone. Then the Story Girl
+and I walked up the hill together. Peter and Felicity lagged behind.
+Cecily and Dan and Felix were walking before us, hand in hand, singing a
+hymn. Cecily had a very sweet voice, and I listened in delight. But the
+Story Girl sighed.
+
+"What if Sara does take the measles?" she asked miserably.
+
+"Everyone has to have the measles sometime," I said comfortingly, "and
+the younger you are the better."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI. THE STORY GIRL DOES PENANCE
+
+Ten days later, Aunt Olivia and Uncle Roger went to town one evening,
+to remain over night, and the next day. Peter and the Story Girl were to
+stay at Uncle Alec's during their absence.
+
+We were in the orchard at sunset, listening to the story of King
+Cophetua and the beggar maid--all of us, except Peter, who was hoeing
+turnips, and Felicity, who had gone down the hill on an errand to Mrs.
+Ray.
+
+The Story Girl impersonated the beggar maid so vividly, and with such
+an illusion of beauty, that we did not wonder in the least at the king's
+love for her. I had read the story before, and it had been my opinion
+that it was "rot." No king, I felt certain, would ever marry a beggar
+maid when he had princesses galore from whom to choose. But now I
+understood it all.
+
+When Felicity returned we concluded from her expression that she had
+news. And she had.
+
+"Sara is real sick," she said, with regret, and something that was not
+regret mingled in her voice. "She has a cold and sore throat, and she is
+feverish. Mrs. Ray says if she isn't better by the morning she's going
+to send for the doctor. AND SHE IS AFRAID IT'S THE MEASLES."
+
+Felicity flung the last sentence at the Story Girl, who turned very
+pale.
+
+"Oh, do you suppose she caught them at the magic lantern show?" she said
+miserably.
+
+"Where else could she have caught them?" said Felicity mercilessly. "I
+didn't see her, of course--Mrs. Ray met me at the door and told me not
+to come in. But Mrs. Ray says the measles always go awful hard with the
+Rays--if they don't die completely of them it leaves them deaf or half
+blind, or something like that. Of course," added Felicity, her heart
+melting at sight of the misery in the Story Girl's piteous eyes, "Mrs.
+Ray always looks on the dark side, and it may not be the measles Sara
+has after all."
+
+But Felicity had done her work too thoroughly. The Story Girl was not to
+be comforted.
+
+"I'd give anything if I'd never put Sara up to going to that show," she
+said. "It's all my fault--but the punishment falls on Sara, and that
+isn't fair. I'd go this minute and confess the whole thing to Mrs. Ray;
+but if I did it might get Sara into more trouble, and I mustn't do that.
+I sha'n't sleep a wink to-night."
+
+I don't think she did. She looked very pale and woebegone when she came
+down to breakfast. But, for all that, there was a certain exhilaration
+about her.
+
+"I'm going to do penance all day for coaxing Sara to disobey her
+mother," she announced with chastened triumph.
+
+"Penance?" we murmured in bewilderment.
+
+"Yes. I'm going to deny myself everything I like, and do everything
+I can think of that I don't like, just to punish myself for being so
+wicked. And if any of you think of anything I don't, just mention it to
+me. I thought it out last night. Maybe Sara won't be so very sick if God
+sees I'm truly sorry."
+
+"He can see it anyhow, without your doing anything," said Cecily.
+
+"Well, my conscience will feel better."
+
+"I don't believe Presbyterians ever do penance," said Felicity
+dubiously. "I never heard of one doing it."
+
+But the rest of us rather looked with favour on the Story Girl's idea.
+We felt sure that she would do penance as picturesquely and thoroughly
+as she did everything else.
+
+"You might put peas in your shoes, you know," suggested Peter.
+
+"The very thing! I never thought of that. I'll get some after breakfast.
+I'm not going to eat a single thing all day, except bread and water--and
+not much of that!"
+
+This, we felt, was a heroic measure indeed. To sit down to one of Aunt
+Janet's meals, in ordinary health and appetite, and eat nothing but
+bread and water--that would be penance with a vengeance! We felt WE
+could never do it. But the Story Girl did it. We admired and pitied her.
+But now I do not think that she either needed our pity or deserved our
+admiration. Her ascetic fare was really sweeter to her than honey
+of Hymettus. She was, though quite unconsciously, acting a part,
+and tasting all the subtle joy of the artist, which is so much more
+exquisite than any material pleasure.
+
+Aunt Janet, of course, noticed the Story Girl's abstinence and asked if
+she was sick.
+
+"No. I am just doing penance, Aunt Janet, for a sin I committed. I can't
+confess it, because that would bring trouble on another person. So I'm
+going to do penance all day. You don't mind, do you?"
+
+Aunt Janet was in a very good humour that morning, so she merely
+laughed.
+
+"Not if you don't go too far with your nonsense," she said tolerantly.
+
+"Thank you. And will you give me a handful of hard peas after breakfast,
+Aunt Janet? I want to put them in my shoes."
+
+"There isn't any; I used the last in the soup yesterday."
+
+"Oh!" The Story Girl was much disappointed. "Then I suppose I'll have
+to do without. The new peas wouldn't hurt enough. They're so soft they'd
+just squash flat."
+
+"I'll tell you," said Peter, "I'll pick up a lot of those little round
+pebbles on Mr. King's front walk. They'll be just as good as peas."
+
+"You'll do nothing of the sort," said Aunt Janet. "Sara must not do
+penance in that way. She would wear holes in her stockings, and might
+seriously bruise her feet."
+
+"What would you say if I took a whip and whipped my bare shoulders till
+the blood came?" demanded the Story Girl aggrieved.
+
+"I wouldn't SAY anything," retorted Aunt Janet. "I'd simply turn you
+over my knee and give you a sound, solid spanking, Miss Sara. You'd find
+that penance enough."
+
+The Story Girl was crimson with indignation. To have such a remark made
+to you--when you were fourteen and a half--and before the boys, too!
+Really, Aunt Janet could be very dreadful.
+
+It was vacation, and there was not much to do that day; we were soon
+free to seek the orchard. But the Story Girl would not come. She had
+seated herself in the darkest, hottest corner of the kitchen, with a
+piece of old cotton in her hand.
+
+"I am not going to play to-day," she said, "and I'm not going to tell a
+single story. Aunt Janet won't let me put pebbles in my shoes, but I've
+put a thistle next my skin on my back and it sticks into me if I lean
+back the least bit. And I'm going to work buttonholes all over this
+cotton. I hate working buttonholes worse than anything in the world, so
+I'm going to work them all day."
+
+"What's the good of working buttonholes on an old rag?" asked Felicity.
+
+"It isn't any good. The beauty of penance is that it makes you feel
+uncomfortable. So it doesn't matter what you do, whether it's useful or
+not, so long as it's nasty. Oh, I wonder how Sara is this morning."
+
+"Mother's going down this afternoon," said Felicity. "She says none
+of us must go near the place till we know whether it is the measles or
+not."
+
+"I've thought of a great penance," said Cecily eagerly. "Don't go to the
+missionary meeting to-night."
+
+The Story Girl looked piteous.
+
+"I thought of that myself--but I CAN'T stay home, Cecily. It would be
+more than flesh and blood could endure. I MUST hear that missionary
+speak. They say he was all but eaten by cannibals once. Just think how
+many new stories I'd have to tell after I'd heard him! No, I must go,
+but I'll tell you what I'll do. I'll wear my school dress and hat. THAT
+will be penance. Felicity, when you set the table for dinner, put the
+broken-handled knife for me. I hate it so. And I'm going to take a dose
+of Mexican Tea every two hours. It's such dreadful tasting stuff--but
+it's a good blood purifier, so Aunt Janet can't object to it."
+
+The Story Girl carried out her self-imposed penance fully. All day she
+sat in the kitchen and worked buttonholes, subsisting on bread and water
+and Mexican Tea.
+
+Felicity did a mean thing. She went to work and made little raisin pies,
+right there in the kitchen before the Story Girl. The smell of raisin
+pies is something to tempt an anchorite; and the Story Girl was
+exceedingly fond of them. Felicity ate two in her very presence, and
+then brought the rest out to us in the orchard. The Story Girl could see
+us through the window, carousing without stint on raisin pies and Uncle
+Edward's cherries. But she worked on at her buttonholes. She would not
+look at the exciting serial in the new magazine Dan brought home from
+the post-office, neither would she open a letter from her father. Pat
+came over, but his most seductive purrs won no notice from his mistress,
+who refused herself the pleasure of even patting him.
+
+Aunt Janet could not go down the hill in the afternoon to find out how
+Sara was because company came to tea--the Millwards from Markdale. Mr.
+Millward was a doctor, and Mrs. Millward was a B.A. Aunt Janet was very
+desirous that everything should be as nice as possible, and we were
+all sent to our rooms before tea to wash and dress up. The Story Girl
+slipped over home, and when she came back we gasped. She had combed her
+hair out straight, and braided it in a tight, kinky, pudgy braid; and
+she wore an old dress of faded print, with holes in the elbows and
+ragged flounces, which was much too short for her.
+
+"Sara Stanley, have you taken leave of your senses?" demanded Aunt
+Janet. "What do you mean by putting on such a rig! Don't you know I have
+company to tea?"
+
+"Yes, and that is just why I put it on, Aunt Janet. I want to mortify
+the flesh--"
+
+"I'll 'mortify' you, if I catch you showing yourself to the Millwards
+like that, my girl! Go right home and dress yourself decently--or eat
+your supper in the kitchen."
+
+The Story Girl chose the latter alternative. She was highly indignant.
+I verily believe that to sit at the dining-room table, in that shabby,
+outgrown dress, conscious of looking her ugliest, and eating only bread
+and water before the critical Millwards would have been positive bliss
+to her.
+
+When we went to the missionary meeting that evening, the Story Girl wore
+her school dress and hat, while Felicity and Cecily were in their pretty
+muslins. And she had tied her hair with a snuff-brown ribbon which was
+very unbecoming to her.
+
+The first person we saw in the church porch was Mrs. Ray. She told us
+that Sara had nothing worse than a feverish cold.
+
+The missionary had at least seven happy listeners that night. We were
+all glad that Sara did not have measles, and the Story Girl was radiant.
+
+"Now you see all your penance was wasted," said Felicity, as we walked
+home, keeping close together because of the rumour that Peg Bowen was
+abroad.
+
+"Oh, I don't know. I feel better since I punished myself. But I'm going
+to make up for it to-morrow," said the Story Girl energetically. "In
+fact, I'll begin to-night. I'm going to the pantry as soon as I get
+home, and I'll read father's letter before I go to bed. Wasn't the
+missionary splendid? That cannibal story was simply grand. I tried
+to remember every word, so that I can tell it just as he told it.
+Missionaries are such noble people."
+
+"I'd like to be a missionary and have adventures like that," said Felix.
+
+"It would be all right if you could be sure the cannibals would be
+interrupted in the nick of time as his were," said Dan. "But sposen they
+weren't?"
+
+"Nothing would prevent cannibals from eating Felix if they once caught
+him," giggled Felicity. "He's so nice and fat."
+
+I am sure Felix felt very unlike a missionary at that precise moment.
+
+"I'm going to put two cents more a week in my missionary box than I've
+been doing," said Cecily determinedly.
+
+Two cents more a week out of Cecily's egg money, meant something of a
+sacrifice. It inspired the rest of us. We all decided to increase
+our weekly contribution by a cent or so. And Peter, who had had no
+missionary box at all, up to this time, determined to start one.
+
+"I don't seem to be able to feel as int'rested in missionaries as you
+folks do," he said, "but maybe if I begin to give something I'll get
+int'rested. I'll want to know how my money's being spent. I won't be
+able to give much. When your father's run away, and your mother goes out
+washing, and you're only old enough to get fifty cents a week, you can't
+give much to the heathen. But I'll do the best I can. My Aunt Jane was
+fond of missions. Are there any Methodist heathen? I s'pose I ought to
+give my box to them, rather than to Presbyterian heathen."
+
+"No, it's only after they're converted that they're anything in
+particular," said Felicity. "Before that, they're just plain heathen.
+But if you want your money to go to a Methodist missionary you can give
+it to the Methodist minister at Markdale. I guess the Presbyterians can
+get along without it, and look after their own heathen."
+
+"Just smell Mrs. Sampson's flowers," said Cecily, as we passed a trim
+white paling close to the road, over which blew odours sweeter than the
+perfume of Araby's shore. "Her roses are all out and that bed of Sweet
+William is a sight by daylight."
+
+"Sweet William is a dreadful name for a flower," said the Story Girl.
+"William is a man's name, and men are NEVER sweet. They are a great many
+nice things, but they are NOT sweet and shouldn't be. That is for women.
+Oh, look at the moonshine on the road in that gap between the spruces!
+I'd like a dress of moonshine, with stars for buttons."
+
+"It wouldn't do," said Felicity decidedly. "You could see through it."
+
+Which seemed to settle the question of moonshine dresses effectually.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII. THE BLUE CHEST OF RACHEL WARD
+
+"It's utterly out of the question," said Aunt Janet seriously. When Aunt
+Janet said seriously that anything was out of the question it meant that
+she was thinking about it, and would probably end up by doing it. If a
+thing really was out of the question she merely laughed and refused to
+discuss it at all.
+
+The particular matter in or out of the question that opening day of
+August was a project which Uncle Edward had recently mooted. Uncle
+Edward's youngest daughter was to be married; and Uncle Edward had
+written over, urging Uncle Alec, Aunt Janet and Aunt Olivia to go down
+to Halifax for the wedding and spend a week there.
+
+Uncle Alec and Aunt Olivia were eager to go; but Aunt Janet at first
+declared it was impossible.
+
+"How could we go away and leave the place to the mercy of all those
+young ones?" she demanded. "We'd come home and find them all sick, and
+the house burned down."
+
+"Not a bit of fear of it," scoffed Uncle Roger. "Felicity is as good a
+housekeeper as you are; and I shall be here to look after them all, and
+keep them from burning the house down. You've been promising Edward for
+years to visit him, and you'll never have a better chance. The haying
+is over and harvest isn't on, and Alec needs a change. He isn't looking
+well at all."
+
+I think it was Uncle Roger's last argument which convinced Aunt Janet.
+In the end she decided to go. Uncle Roger's house was to be closed, and
+he and Peter and the Story Girl were to take up their abode with us.
+
+We were all delighted. Felicity, in especial, seemed to be in seventh
+heaven. To be left in sole charge of a big house, with three meals a
+day to plan and prepare, with poultry and cows and dairy and garden
+to superintend, apparently furnished forth Felicity's conception of
+Paradise. Of course, we were all to help; but Felicity was to "run
+things," and she gloried in it.
+
+The Story Girl was pleased, too.
+
+"Felicity is going to give me cooking lessons," she confided to me, as
+we walked in the orchard. "Isn't that fine? It will be easier when
+there are no grown-ups around to make me nervous, and laugh if I make
+mistakes."
+
+Uncle Alec and aunts left on Monday morning. Poor Aunt Janet was full of
+dismal forebodings, and gave us so many charges and warnings that we did
+not try to remember any of them; Uncle Alec merely told us to be good
+and mind what Uncle Roger said. Aunt Olivia laughed at us out of her
+pansy-blue eyes, and told us she knew exactly what we felt like and
+hoped we'd have a gorgeous time.
+
+"Mind they go to bed at a decent hour," Aunt Janet called back to Uncle
+Roger as she drove out of the gate. "And if anything dreadful happens
+telegraph us."
+
+Then they were really gone and we were all left "to keep house."
+
+Uncle Roger and Peter went away to their work. Felicity at once set the
+preparations for dinner a-going, and allotted to each of us his portion
+of service. The Story Girl was to prepare the potatoes; Felix and Dan
+were to pick and shell the peas; Cecily was to attend the fire; I was to
+peel the turnips. Felicity made our mouths water by announcing that she
+was going to make a roly-poly jam pudding for dinner.
+
+I peeled my turnips on the back porch, put them in their pot, and set
+them on the stove. Then I was at liberty to watch the others, who had
+longer jobs. The kitchen was a scene of happy activity. The Story Girl
+peeled her potatoes, somewhat slowly and awkwardly--for she was not
+deft at household tasks; Dan and Felix shelled peas and tormented Pat
+by attaching pods to his ears and tail; Felicity, flushed and serious,
+measured and stirred skilfully.
+
+"I am sitting on a tragedy," said the Story Girl suddenly.
+
+Felix and I stared. We were not quite sure what a "tragedy" was, but we
+did not think it was an old blue wooden chest, such as the Story Girl
+was undoubtedly sitting on, if eyesight counted for anything.
+
+The old chest filled up the corner between the table and the wall.
+Neither Felix nor I had ever thought about it particularly. It was very
+large and heavy, and Felicity generally said hard things of it when she
+swept the kitchen.
+
+"This old blue chest holds a tragedy," explained the Story Girl. "I know
+a story about it."
+
+"Cousin Rachel Ward's wedding things are all in that old chest," said
+Felicity.
+
+Who was Cousin Rachel Ward? And why were her wedding things shut up
+in an old blue chest in Uncle Alec's kitchen? We demanded the tale
+instantly. The Story Girl told it to us as she peeled her potatoes.
+Perhaps the potatoes suffered--Felicity declared the eyes were not
+properly done at all--but the story did not.
+
+"It is a sad story," said the Story Girl, "and it happened fifty
+years ago, when Grandfather and Grandmother King were quite young.
+Grandmother's cousin Rachel Ward came to spend a winter with them. She
+belonged to Montreal and she was an orphan too, just like the Family
+Ghost. I have never heard what she looked like, but she MUST have been
+beautiful, of course."
+
+"Mother says she was awful sentimental and romantic," interjected
+Felicity.
+
+"Well, anyway, she met Will Montague that winter. He was
+handsome--everybody says so"--
+
+"And an awful flirt," said Felicity.
+
+"Felicity, I WISH you wouldn't interrupt. It spoils the effect. What
+would you feel like if I went and kept stirring things that didn't
+belong to it into that pudding? I feel just the same way. Well, Will
+Montague fell in love with Rachel Ward, and she with him, and it was
+all arranged that they were to be married from here in the spring. Poor
+Rachel was so happy that winter; she made all her wedding things with
+her own hands. Girls did, then, you know, for there was no such thing as
+a sewing-machine. Well, at last in April the wedding day came, and
+all the guests were here, and Rachel was dressed in her wedding robes,
+waiting for her bridegroom. And"--the Story Girl laid down her knife and
+potato and clasped her wet hands--"WILL MONTAGUE NEVER CAME!"
+
+We felt as much of a shock as if we had been one of the expectant guests
+ourselves.
+
+"What happened to him? Was HE killed too?" asked Felix.
+
+The Story Girl sighed and resumed her work.
+
+"No, indeed. I wish he had been. THAT would have been suitable and
+romantic. No, it was just something horrid. He had to run away for debt!
+Fancy! He acted mean right through, Aunt Janet says. He never sent even
+a word to Rachel, and she never heard from him again."
+
+"Pig!" said Felix forcibly.
+
+"She was broken-hearted of course. When she found out what had happened,
+she took all her wedding things, and her supply of linen, and some
+presents that had been given her, and packed them all away in this old
+blue chest. Then she went away back to Montreal, and took the key with
+her. She never came back to the Island again--I suppose she couldn't
+bear to. And she has lived in Montreal ever since and never married. She
+is an old woman now--nearly seventy-five. And this chest has never been
+opened since."
+
+"Mother wrote to Cousin Rachel ten years ago," said Cecily, "and asked
+her if she might open the chest to see if the moths had got into it.
+There's a crack in the back as big as your finger. Cousin Rachel wrote
+back that if it wasn't for one thing that was in the trunk she would ask
+mother to open the chest and dispose of the things as she liked. But
+she could not bear that any one but herself should see or touch that one
+thing. So she wanted it left as it was. Ma said she washed her hands of
+it, moths or no moths. She said if Cousin Rachel had to move that
+chest every time the floor had to be scrubbed it would cure her of her
+sentimental nonsense. But I think," concluded Cecily, "that I would feel
+just like Cousin Rachel in her place."
+
+"What was the thing she couldn't bear any one to see?" I asked.
+
+"Ma thinks it was her wedding dress. But father says he believes it was
+Will Montague's picture," said Felicity. "He saw her put it in. Father
+knows some of the things that are in the chest. He was ten years old,
+and he saw her pack it. There's a white muslin wedding dress and a
+veil--and--and--a--a"--Felicity dropped her eyes and blushed painfully.
+
+"A petticoat, embroidered by hand from hem to belt," said the Story Girl
+calmly.
+
+"And a china fruit basket with an apple on the handle," went on
+Felicity, much relieved. "And a tea set, and a blue candle-stick."
+
+"I'd dearly love to see all the things that are in it," said the Story
+Girl.
+
+"Pa says it must never be opened without Cousin Rachel's permission,"
+said Cecily.
+
+Felix and I looked at the chest reverently. It had taken on a new
+significance in our eyes, and seemed like a tomb wherein lay buried some
+dead romance of the vanished years.
+
+"What happened to Will Montague?" I asked.
+
+"Nothing!" said the Story Girl viciously. "He just went on living and
+flourishing. He patched up matters with his creditors after awhile, and
+came back to the Island; and in the end he married a real nice girl,
+with money, and was very happy. Did you ever HEAR of anything so
+unjust?"
+
+"Beverley King," suddenly cried Felicity, who had been peering into
+a pot, "YOU'VE GONE AND PUT THE TURNIPS ON TO BOIL WHOLE JUST LIKE
+POTATOES!"
+
+"Wasn't that right?" I cried, in an agony of shame.
+
+"Right!" but Felicity had already whisked the turnips out, and was
+slicing them, while all the others were laughing at me. I had added a
+tradition on my own account to the family archives.
+
+Uncle Roger roared when he heard it; and he roared again at night over
+Peter's account of Felix attempting to milk a cow. Felix had previously
+acquired the knack of extracting milk from the udder. But he had never
+before tried to "milk a whole cow." He did not get on well; the cow
+tramped on his foot, and finally upset the bucket.
+
+"What are you to do when a cow won't stand straight?" spluttered Felix
+angrily.
+
+"That's the question," said Uncle Roger, shaking his head gravely.
+
+Uncle Roger's laughter was hard to bear, but his gravity was harder.
+
+Meanwhile, in the pantry the Story Girl, apron-enshrouded, was being
+initiated into the mysteries of bread-making. Under Felicity's eyes she
+set the bread, and on the morrow she was to bake it.
+
+"The first thing you must do in the morning is knead it well," said
+Felicity, "and the earlier it's done the better--because it's such a
+warm night."
+
+With that we went to bed, and slept as soundly as if tragedies of blue
+chests and turnips and crooked cows had no place in the scheme of things
+at all.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII. AN OLD PROVERB WITH A NEW MEANING
+
+It was half-past five when we boys got up the next morning. We were
+joined on the stairs by Felicity, yawning and rosy.
+
+"Oh, dear me, I overslept myself. Uncle Roger wanted breakfast at six.
+Well, I suppose the fire is on anyhow, for the Story Girl is up. I guess
+she got up early to knead the bread. She couldn't sleep all night for
+worrying over it."
+
+The fire was on, and a flushed and triumphant Story Girl was taking a
+loaf of bread from the oven.
+
+"Just look," she said proudly. "I have every bit of the bread baked. I
+got up at three, and it was lovely and light, so I just gave it a right
+good kneading and popped it into the oven. And it's all done and out of
+the way. But the loaves don't seem quite as big as they should be," she
+added doubtfully.
+
+"Sara Stanley!" Felicity flew across the kitchen. "Do you mean that you
+put the bread right into the oven after you kneaded it without leaving
+it to rise a second time?"
+
+The Story Girl turned quite pale.
+
+"Yes, I did," she faltered. "Oh, Felicity, wasn't it right?"
+
+"You've ruined the bread," said Felicity flatly. "It's as heavy as a
+stone. I declare, Sara Stanley, I'd rather have a little common sense
+than be a great story teller."
+
+Bitter indeed was the poor Story Girl's mortification.
+
+"Don't tell Uncle Roger," she implored humbly.
+
+"Oh, I won't tell him," promised Felicity amiably. "It's lucky there's
+enough old bread to do to-day. This will go to the hens. But it's an
+awful waste of good flour."
+
+The Story Girl crept out with Felix and me to the morning orchard, while
+Dan and Peter went to do the barn work.
+
+"It isn't ANY use for me to try to learn to cook," she said.
+
+"Never mind," I said consolingly. "You can tell splendid stories."
+
+"But what good would that do a hungry boy?" wailed the Story Girl.
+
+"Boys ain't ALWAYS hungry," said Felix gravely. "There's times when they
+ain't."
+
+"I don't believe it," said the Story Girl drearily.
+
+"Besides," added Felix in the tone of one who says while there is life
+there is yet hope, "you may learn to cook yet if you keep on trying."
+
+"But Aunt Olivia won't let me waste the stuff. My only hope was to learn
+this week. But I suppose Felicity is so disgusted with me now that she
+won't give me any more lessons."
+
+"I don't care," said Felix. "I like you better than Felicity, even if
+you can't cook. There's lots of folks can make bread. But there isn't
+many who can tell a story like you."
+
+"But it's better to be useful than just interesting," sighed the Story
+Girl bitterly.
+
+And Felicity, who was useful, would, in her secret soul, have given
+anything to be interesting. Which is the way of human nature.
+
+Company descended on us that afternoon. First came Aunt Janet's sister,
+Mrs. Patterson, with a daughter of sixteen years and a son of two. They
+were followed by a buggy-load of Markdale people; and finally, Mrs.
+Elder Frewen and her sister from Vancouver, with two small daughters of
+the latter, arrived.
+
+"It never rains but it pours," said Uncle Roger, as he went out to take
+their horse. But Felicity's foot was on her native heath. She had been
+baking all the afternoon, and, with a pantry well stocked with biscuits,
+cookies, cakes, and pies, she cared not if all Carlisle came to tea.
+Cecily set the table, and the Story Girl waited on it and washed all the
+dishes afterwards. But all the blushing honours fell to Felicity, who
+received so many compliments that her airs were quite unbearable for
+the rest of the week. She presided at the head of the table with as much
+grace and dignity as if she had been five times twelve years old, and
+seemed to know by instinct just who took sugar and who took it not. She
+was flushed with excitement and pleasure, and was so pretty that I could
+hardly eat for looking at her--which is the highest compliment in a
+boy's power to pay.
+
+The Story Girl, on the contrary, was under eclipse. She was pale and
+lustreless from her disturbed night and early rising; and no opportunity
+offered to tell a melting tale. Nobody took any notice of her. It was
+Felicity's day.
+
+After tea Mrs. Frewen and her sister wished to visit their father's
+grave in the Carlisle churchyard. It appeared that everybody wanted to
+go with them; but it was evident that somebody must stay home with Jimmy
+Patterson, who had just fallen sound asleep on the kitchen sofa. Dan
+finally volunteered to look after him. He had a new Henty book which he
+wanted to finish, and that, he said, was better fun than a walk to the
+graveyard.
+
+"I think we'll be back before he wakes," said Mrs. Patterson, "and
+anyhow he is very good and won't be any trouble. Don't let him go
+outside, though. He has a cold now."
+
+We went away, leaving Dan sitting on the door-sill reading his book, and
+Jimmy P. snoozing blissfully on the sofa. When we returned--Felix and
+the girls and I were ahead of the others--Dan was still sitting in
+precisely the same place and attitude; but there was no Jimmy in sight.
+
+"Dan, where's the baby?" cried Felicity.
+
+Dan looked around. His jaw fell in blank amazement. I never saw any one
+look as foolish as Dan at that moment.
+
+"Good gracious, I don't know," he said helplessly.
+
+"You've been so deep in that wretched book that he's got out, and dear
+knows where he is," cried Felicity distractedly.
+
+"I wasn't," cried Dan. "He MUST be in the house. I've been sitting right
+across the door ever since you left, and he couldn't have got out unless
+he crawled right over me. He must be in the house."
+
+"He isn't in the kitchen," said Felicity rushing about wildly, "and he
+couldn't get into the other part of the house, for I shut the hall door
+tight, and no baby could open it--and it's shut tight yet. So are all
+the windows. He MUST have gone out of that door, Dan King, and it's your
+fault."
+
+"He DIDN'T go out of this door," reiterated Dan stubbornly. "I know
+that."
+
+"Well, where is he, then? He isn't here. Did he melt into air?" demanded
+Felicity. "Oh, come and look for him, all of you. Don't stand round like
+ninnies. We MUST find him before his mother gets here. Dan King, you're
+an idiot!"
+
+Dan was too frightened to resent this, at the time. However and wherever
+Jimmy had gone, he WAS gone, so much was certain. We tore about the
+house and yard like maniacs; we looked into every likely and unlikely
+place. But Jimmy we could not find, anymore than if he had indeed melted
+into air. Mrs. Patterson came, and we had not found him. Things were
+getting serious. Uncle Roger and Peter were summoned from the field.
+Mrs. Patterson became hysterical, and was taken into the spare room with
+such remedies as could be suggested. Everybody blamed poor Dan. Cecily
+asked him what he would feel like if Jimmy was never, never found. The
+Story Girl had a gruesome recollection of some baby at Markdale who had
+wandered away like that--
+
+"And they never found him till the next spring, and all they found
+was--HIS SKELETON, with the grass growing through it," she whispered.
+
+"This beats me," said Uncle Roger, when a fruitless hour had elapsed. "I
+do hope that baby hasn't wandered down to the swamp. It seems impossible
+he could walk so far; but I must go and see. Felicity, hand me my high
+boots out from under the sofa, there's a girl."
+
+Felicity, pale and tearful, dropped on her knees and lifted the cretonne
+frill of the sofa. There, his head pillowed hardly on Uncle Roger's
+boots, lay Jimmy Patterson, still sound asleep!
+
+"Well, I'll be--jiggered!" said Uncle Roger.
+
+"I KNEW he never went out of the door," cried Dan triumphantly.
+
+When the last buggy had driven away, Felicity set a batch of bread, and
+the rest of us sat around the back porch steps in the cat's light and
+ate cherries, shooting the stones at each other. Cecily was in quest of
+information.
+
+"What does 'it never rains but it pours' mean?"
+
+"Oh, it means if anything happens something else is sure to happen,"
+said the Story Girl. "I'll illustrate. There's Mrs. Murphy. She never
+had a proposal in her life till she was forty, and then she had three
+in the one week, and she was so flustered she took the wrong one and has
+been sorry ever since. Do you see what it means now?"
+
+"Yes, I guess so," said Cecily somewhat doubtfully. Later on we heard
+her imparting her newly acquired knowledge to Felicity in the pantry.
+
+"'It never rains but it pours' means that nobody wants to marry you for
+ever so long, and then lots of people do."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV. FORBIDDEN FRUIT
+
+We were all, with the exception of Uncle Roger, more or less grumpy in
+the household of King next day. Perhaps our nerves had been upset by the
+excitement attendant on Jimmy Patterson's disappearance. But it is more
+likely that our crankiness was the result of the supper we had eaten the
+previous night. Even children cannot devour mince pie, and cold fried
+pork ham, and fruit cake before going to bed with entire impunity. Aunt
+Janet had forgotten to warn Uncle Roger to keep an eye on our bedtime
+snacks, and we ate what seemed good unto us.
+
+Some of us had frightful dreams, and all of us carried chips on our
+shoulders at breakfast. Felicity and Dan began a bickering which they
+kept up the entire day. Felicity had a natural aptitude for what we
+called "bossing," and in her mother's absence she deemed that she had
+a right to rule supreme. She knew better than to make any attempt to
+assert authority over the Story Girl, and Felix and I were allowed some
+length of tether; but Cecily, Dan, and Peter were expected to submit
+dutifully to her decrees. In the main they did; but on this particular
+morning Dan was plainly inclined to rebel. He had had time to grow sore
+over the things that Felicity had said to him when Jimmy Patterson was
+thought lost, and he began the day with a flatly expressed determination
+that he was not going to let Felicity rule the roost.
+
+It was not a pleasant day, and to make matters worse it rained until
+late in the afternoon. The Story Girl had not recovered from the
+mortifications of the previous day; she would not talk, and she would
+not tell a single story; she sat on Rachel Ward's chest and ate her
+breakfast with the air of a martyr. After breakfast she washed the
+dishes and did the bed-room work in grim silence; then, with a book
+under one arm and Pat under the other, she betook herself to the
+window-seat in the upstairs hall, and would not be lured from that
+retreat, charmed we never so wisely. She stroked the purring Paddy, and
+read steadily on, with maddening indifference to all our pleadings.
+
+Even Cecily, the meek and mild, was snappish, and complained of
+headache. Peter had gone home to see his mother, and Uncle Roger had
+gone to Markdale on business. Sara Ray came up, but was so snubbed by
+Felicity that she went home, crying. Felicity got the dinner by herself,
+disdaining to ask or command assistance. She banged things about and
+rattled the stove covers until even Cecily protested from her sofa. Dan
+sat on the floor and whittled, his sole aim and object being to make a
+mess and annoy Felicity, in which noble ambition he succeeded perfectly.
+
+"I wish Aunt Janet and Uncle Alec were home," said Felix. "It's not half
+so much fun having the grown-ups away as I thought it would be."
+
+"I wish I was back in Toronto," I said sulkily. The mince pie was to
+blame for THAT wish.
+
+"I wish you were, I'm sure," said Felicity, riddling the fire noisily.
+
+"Any one who lives with you, Felicity King, will always be wishing he
+was somewhere else," said Dan.
+
+"I wasn't talking to you, Dan King," retorted Felicity, "'Speak when
+you're spoken to, come when you're called.'"
+
+"Oh, oh, oh," wailed Cecily on the sofa. "I WISH it would stop raining.
+I WISH my head would stop aching. I WISH ma had never gone away. I WISH
+you'd leave Felicity alone, Dan."
+
+"I wish girls had some sense," said Dan--which brought the orgy of
+wishing to an end for the time. A wishing fairy might have had the time
+of her life in the King kitchen that morning--particularly if she were a
+cynically inclined fairy.
+
+But even the effects of unholy snacks wear away at length. By tea-time
+things had brightened up. The rain had ceased, and the old, low-raftered
+room was full of sunshine which danced on the shining dishes of the
+dresser, made mosaics on the floor, and flickered over the table whereon
+a delicious meal was spread. Felicity had put on her blue muslin, and
+looked so beautiful in it that her good humour was quite restored.
+Cecily's headache was better, and the Story Girl, refreshed by an
+afternoon siesta, came down with smiles and sparkling eyes. Dan alone
+continued to nurse his grievances, and would not even laugh when the
+Story Girl told us a tale brought to mind by some of the "Rev. Mr.
+Scott's plums" which were on the table.
+
+"The Rev. Mr. Scott was the man who thought the pulpit door must be made
+for speerits, you know," she said. "I heard Uncle Edward telling ever
+so many stories about him. He was called to this congregation, and he
+laboured here long and faithfully, and was much beloved, though he was
+very eccentric."
+
+"What does that mean?" asked Peter.
+
+"Hush! It just means queer," said Cecily, nudging him with her elbow. "A
+common man would be queer, but when it's a minister, it's eccentric."
+
+"When he gets very old," continued the Story Girl, "the Presbytery
+thought it was time he was retired. HE didn't think so; but the
+Presbytery had their way, because there were so many of them to one of
+him. He was retired, and a young man was called to Carlisle. Mr. Scott
+went to live in town, but he came out to Carlisle very often, and
+visited all the people regularly, just the same as when he was their
+minister. The young minister was a very good young man, and tried to do
+his duty; but he was dreadfully afraid of meeting old Mr. Scott, because
+he had been told that the old minister was very angry at being set
+aside, and would likely give him a sound drubbing, if he ever met him.
+One day the young minister was visiting the Crawfords in Markdale, when
+they suddenly heard old Mr. Scott's voice in the kitchen. The young
+minister turned pale as the dead, and implored Mrs. Crawford to hid him.
+But she couldn't get him out of the room, and all she could do was to
+hide him in the china closet. The young minister slipped into the china
+closet, and old Mr. Scott came into the room. He talked very nicely, and
+read, and prayed. They made very long prayers in those days, you know;
+and at the end of his prayer he said, 'Oh Lord, bless the poor young man
+hiding in the closet. Give him courage not to fear the face of man. Make
+him a burning and a shining light to this sadly abused congregation.'
+Just imagine the feelings of the young minister in the china closet! But
+he came right out like a man, though his face was very red, as soon as
+Mr. Scott had done praying. And Mr. Scott was lovely to him, and shook
+hands, and never mentioned the china closet. And they were the best of
+friends ever afterwards."
+
+"How did old Mr. Scott find out the young minister was in the closet?"
+asked Felix.
+
+"Nobody ever knew. They supposed he had seen him through the
+window before he came into the house, and guessed he must be in the
+closet--because there was no way for him to get out of the room."
+
+"Mr. Scott planted the yellow plum tree in Grandfather's time," said
+Cecily, peeling one of the plums, "and when he did it he said it was
+as Christian an act as he ever did. I wonder what he meant. I don't see
+anything very Christian about planting a tree."
+
+"I do," said the Story Girl sagely.
+
+When next we assembled ourselves together, it was after milking, and the
+cares of the day were done with. We foregathered in the balsam-fragrant
+aisles of the fir wood, and ate early August apples to such an extent
+that the Story Girl said we made her think of the Irishman's pig.
+
+"An Irishman who lived at Markdale had a little pig," she said, "and he
+gave it a pailful of mush. The pig ate the whole pailful, and then the
+Irishman put the pig IN the pail, and it didn't fill more than half the
+pail. Now, how was that, when it held a whole pailful of mush?"
+
+This seemed to be a rather unanswerable kind of conundrum. We discussed
+the problem as we roamed the wood, and Dan and Peter almost quarrelled
+over it, Dan maintaining that the thing was impossible, and Peter being
+of the opinion that the mush was somehow "made thicker" in the process
+of being eaten, and so took up less room. During the discussion we came
+out to the fence of the hill pasture where grew the "bad berry" bushes.
+
+Just what these "bad berries" were I cannot tell. We never knew their
+real name. They were small, red-clustered berries of a glossy, seductive
+appearance, and we were forbidden to eat them, because it was thought
+they might be poisonous. Dan picked a cluster and held it up.
+
+"Dan King, don't you DARE eat those berries," said Felicity in her
+"bossiest" tone. "They're poison. Drop them right away."
+
+Now, Dan had not had the slightest intention of eating the berries. But
+at Felicity's prohibition the rebellion which had smouldered in him all
+day broke into sudden flame. He would show her!
+
+"I'll eat them if I please, Felicity King," he said in a fury: "I don't
+believe they're poison. Look here!"
+
+Dan crammed the whole bunch into his capacious mouth and chewed it up.
+
+"They taste great," he said, smacking; and he ate two more clusters,
+regardless of our horror-stricken protestations and Felicity's
+pleadings.
+
+We feared that Dan would drop dead on the spot. But nothing occurred
+immediately. When an hour had passed we concluded that the bad berries
+were not poison after all, and we looked upon Dan as quite a hero for
+daring to eat them.
+
+"I knew they wouldn't hurt me," he said loftily. "Felicity's so fond of
+making a fuss over everything."
+
+Nevertheless, when it grew dark and we returned to the house, I noticed
+that Dan was rather pale and quiet. He lay down on the kitchen sofa.
+
+"Don't you feel all right, Dan?" I whispered anxiously.
+
+"Shut up," he said.
+
+I shut up.
+
+Felicity and Cecily were setting out a lunch in the pantry when we were
+all startled by a loud groan from the sofa.
+
+"Oh, I'm sick--I'm awful sick," said Dan abjectly, all the defiance and
+bravado gone out of him.
+
+We all went to pieces, except Cecily, who alone retained her presence of
+mind.
+
+"Have you got a pain in your stomach?" she demanded.
+
+"I've got an awful pain here, if that's where my stomach is," moaned
+Dan, putting his hand on a portion of his anatomy considerably below his
+stomach. "Oh--oh--oh!"
+
+"Go for Uncle Roger," commanded Cecily, pale but composed. "Felicity,
+put on the kettle. Dan, I'm going to give you mustard and warm water."
+
+The mustard and warm water produced its proper effect promptly, but gave
+Dan no relief. He continued to writhe and groan. Uncle Roger, who had
+been summoned from his own place, went at once for the doctor, telling
+Peter to go down the hill for Mrs. Ray. Peter went, but returned
+accompanied by Sara only. Mrs. Ray and Judy Pineau were both away. Sara
+might better have stayed home; she was of no use, and could only add to
+the general confusion, wandering aimlessly about, crying and asking if
+Dan was going to die.
+
+Cecily took charge of things. Felicity might charm the palate, and the
+Story Girl bind captive the soul; but when pain and sickness wrung the
+brow it was Cecily who was the ministering angel. She made the writhing
+Dan go to bed. She made him swallow every available antidote which was
+recommended in "the doctor's book;" and she applied hot cloths to him
+until her faithful little hands were half scalded off.
+
+There was no doubt Dan was suffering intense pain. He moaned and
+writhed, and cried for his mother.
+
+"Oh, isn't it dreadful!" said Felicity, wringing her hands as she walked
+the kitchen floor. "Oh, why doesn't the doctor come? I TOLD Dan the bad
+berries were poison. But surely they can't kill people ALTOGETHER."
+
+"Pa's cousin died of eating something forty years ago," sobbed Sara Ray.
+
+"Hold your tongue," said Peter in a fierce whisper. "You oughter have
+more sense than to say such things to the girls. They don't want to be
+any worse scared than they are."
+
+"But Pa's cousin DID die," reiterated Sara.
+
+"My Aunt Jane used to rub whisky on for a pain," suggested Peter.
+
+"We haven't any whisky," said Felicity disapprovingly. "This is a
+temperance house."
+
+"But rubbing whisky on the OUTSIDE isn't any harm," argued Peter. "It's
+only when you take it inside it is bad for you."
+
+"Well, we haven't any, anyhow," said Felicity. "I suppose blueberry wine
+wouldn't do in its place?"
+
+Peter did not think blueberry wine would be any good.
+
+It was ten o'clock before Dan began to get better; but from that time
+he improved rapidly. When the doctor, who had been away from home
+when Uncle Roger reached Markdale, came at half past ten, he found his
+patient very weak and white, but free from pain.
+
+Dr. Grier patted Cecily on the head, told her she was a little brick,
+and had done just the right thing, examined some of the fatal
+berries and gave it as his opinion that they were probably poisonous,
+administered some powders to Dan and advised him not to tamper with
+forbidden fruit in future, and went away.
+
+Mrs. Ray now appeared, looking for Sara, and said she would stay all
+night with us.
+
+"I'll be much obliged to you if you will," said Uncle Roger. "I feel
+a bit shook. I urged Janet and Alec to go to Halifax, and took the
+responsibility of the children while they were away, but I didn't know
+what I was letting myself in for. If anything had happened I could never
+have forgiven myself--though I believe it's beyond the power of mortal
+man to keep watch over the things children WILL eat. Now, you young fry,
+get straight off to your beds. Dan is out of danger, and you can't do
+any more good. Not that any of you have done much, except Cecily. She's
+got a head of her shoulders."
+
+"It's been a horrid day all through," said Felicity drearily, as we
+climbed the stairs.
+
+"I suppose we made it horrid ourselves," said the Story Girl candidly.
+"But it'll be a good story to tell sometime," she added.
+
+"I'm awful tired and thankful," sighed Cecily.
+
+We all felt that way.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV. A DISOBEDIENT BROTHER
+
+Dan was his own man again in the morning, though rather pale and weak;
+he wanted to get up, but Cecily ordered him to stay in bed. Fortunately
+Felicity forgot to repeat the command, so Dan did stay in bed. Cecily
+carried his meals to him, and read a Henty book to him all her spare
+time. The Story Girl went up and told him wondrous tales; and Sara Ray
+brought him a pudding she had made herself. Sara's intentions were
+good, but the pudding--well, Dan fed most of it to Paddy, who had curled
+himself up at the foot of the bed, giving the world assurance of a cat
+by his mellifluous purring.
+
+"Ain't he just a great old fellow?" said Dan. "He knows I'm kind of
+sick, just as well as a human. He never pays no attention to me when I'm
+well."
+
+Felix and Peter and I were required to help Uncle Roger in some
+carpentering work that day, and Felicity indulged in one of the
+house-cleaning orgies so dear to her soul; so that it was evening before
+we were all free to meet in the orchard and loll on the grasses of Uncle
+Stephen's Walk. In August it was a place of shady sweetness, fragrant
+with the odour of ripening apples, full of dear, delicate shadows.
+Through its openings we looked afar to the blue rims of the hills and
+over green, old, tranquil fields, lying the sunset glow. Overhead the
+lacing leaves made a green, murmurous roof. There was no such thing as
+hurry in the world, while we lingered there and talked of "cabbages and
+kings." A tale of the Story Girl's, wherein princes were thicker than
+blackberries, and queens as common as buttercups, led to our discussion
+of kings. We wondered what it would be like to be a king. Peter thought
+it would be fine, only kind of inconvenient, wearing a crown all the
+time.
+
+"Oh, but they don't," said the Story Girl. "Maybe they used to once, but
+now they wear hats. The crowns are just for special occasions. They look
+very much like other people, if you can go by their photographs."
+
+"I don't believe it would be much fun as a steady thing," said Cecily.
+"I'd like to SEE a queen though. That is one thing I have against the
+Island--you never have a chance to see things like that here."
+
+"The Prince of Wales was in Charlottetown once," said Peter. "My Aunt
+Jane saw him quite close by."
+
+"That was before we were born, and such a thing won't happen again until
+after we're dead," said Cecily, with very unusual pessimism.
+
+"I think queens and kings were thicker long ago," said the Story Girl.
+"They do seem dreadfully scarce now. There isn't one in this country
+anywhere. Perhaps I'll get a glimpse of some when I go to Europe."
+
+Well, the Story Girl was destined to stand before kings herself, and she
+was to be one whom they delighted to honour. But we did not know
+that, as we sat in the old orchard. We thought it quite sufficiently
+marvellous that she should expect to have the chance of just seeing
+them.
+
+"Can a queen do exactly as she pleases?" Sara Ray wanted to know.
+
+"Not nowadays," explained the Story Girl.
+
+"Then I don't see any use in being one," Sara decided.
+
+"A king can't do as he pleases now, either," said Felix. "If he tries
+to, and if it isn't what pleases other people, the Parliament or
+something squelches him."
+
+"Isn't 'squelch' a lovely word?" said the Story Girl irrelevantly. "It's
+so expressive. Squ-u-e-l-ch!"
+
+Certainly it was a lovely word, as the Story Girl said it. Even a king
+would not have minded being squelched, if it were done to music like
+that.
+
+"Uncle Roger says that Martin Forbes' wife has squelched HIM," said
+Felicity. "He says Martin can't call his soul his own since he was
+married."
+
+"I'm glad of it," said Cecily vindictively.
+
+We all stared. This was so very unlike Cecily.
+
+"Martin Forbes is the brother of a horrid man in Summerside who called
+me Johnny, that's why," she explained. "He was visiting here with his
+wife two years ago, and he called me Johnny every time he spoke to me.
+Just you fancy! I'll NEVER forgive him."
+
+"That isn't a Christian spirit," said Felicity rebukingly.
+
+"I don't care. Would YOU forgive James Forbes if he had called YOU
+Johnny?" demanded Cecily.
+
+"I know a story about Martin Forbes' grandfather," said the Story Girl.
+"Long ago they didn't have any choir in the Carlisle church--just a
+precentor you know. But at last they got a choir, and Andrew McPherson
+was to sing bass in it. Old Mr. Forbes hadn't gone to church for years,
+because he was so rheumatic, but he went the first Sunday the choir
+sang, because he had never heard any one sing bass, and wanted to hear
+what it was like. Grandfather King asked him what he thought of the
+choir. Mr. Forbes said it was 'verra guid,' but as for Andrew's bass,
+'there was nae bass aboot it--it was just a bur-r-r-r the hale time.'"
+
+If you could have heard the Story Girl's "bur-r-r-r!" Not old Mr. Forbes
+himself could have invested it with more of Doric scorn. We rolled over
+in the cool grass and screamed with laughter.
+
+"Poor Dan," said Cecily compassionately. "He's up there all alone in his
+room, missing all the fun. I suppose it's mean of us to be having such a
+good time here, when he has to stay in bed."
+
+"If Dan hadn't done wrong eating the bad berries when he was told not
+to, he wouldn't be sick," said Felicity. "You're bound to catch it when
+you do wrong. It was just a Providence he didn't die."
+
+"That makes me think of another story about old Mr. Scott," said
+the Story Girl. "You know, I told you he was very angry because the
+Presbytery made him retire. There were two ministers in particular
+he blamed for being at the bottom of it. One time a friend of his was
+trying to console him, and said to him,
+
+"'You should be resigned to the will of Providence.'
+
+"'Providence had nothing to do with it,' said old Mr. Scott. ''Twas the
+McCloskeys and the devil.'"
+
+"You shouldn't speak of the--the--DEVIL," said Felicity, rather shocked.
+
+"Well, that's just what Mr. Scott said."
+
+"Oh, it's all right for a MINISTER to speak of him. But it isn't nice
+for little girls. If you HAVE to speak of--of--him--you might say the
+Old Scratch. That is what mother calls him."
+
+"''Twas the McCloskeys and the Old Scratch,'" said the Story Girl
+reflectively, as if she were trying to see which version was the more
+effective. "It wouldn't do," she decided.
+
+"I don't think it's any harm to mention the--the--that person, when
+you're telling a story," said Cecily. "It's only in plain talking it
+doesn't do. It sounds too much like swearing then."
+
+"I know another story about Mr. Scott," said the Story Girl. "Not long
+after he was married his wife wasn't quite ready for church one morning
+when it was time to go. So, just to teach her a lesson, he drove off
+alone, and left her to walk all the way--it was nearly two miles--in
+the heat and dust. She took it very quietly. It's the best way, I guess,
+when you're married to a man like old Mr. Scott. But just a few Sundays
+after wasn't he late himself! I suppose Mrs. Scott thought that what was
+sauce for the goose was sauce for the gander, for she slipped out and
+drove off to church as he had done. Old Mr. Scott finally arrived at
+the church, pretty hot and dusty, and in none too good a temper. He went
+into the pulpit, leaned over it and looked at his wife, sitting calmly
+in her pew at the side.
+
+"'It was cleverly done,' he said, right out loud, 'BUT DINNA TRY IT
+AGAIN!'"
+
+In the midst of our laughter Pat came down the Walk, his stately tail
+waving over the grasses. He proved to be the precursor of Dan, clothed
+and in his right mind.
+
+"Do you think you should have got up, Dan?" said Cecily anxiously.
+
+"I had to," said Dan. "The window was open, and it was more'n I could
+stand to hear you fellows laughing down here and me missing it all.
+'Sides, I'm all right again. I feel fine."
+
+"I guess this will be a lesson to you, Dan King," said Felicity, in her
+most maddening tone. "I guess you won't forget it in a hurry. You won't
+go eating the bad berries another time when you're told not to."
+
+Dan had picked out a soft spot in the grass for himself, and was in the
+act of sitting down, when Felicity's tactful speech arrested him midway.
+He straightened up and turned a wrathful face on his provoking sister.
+Then, red with indignation, but without a word, he stalked up the walk.
+
+"Now he's gone off mad," said Cecily reproachfully. "Oh, Felicity, why
+couldn't you have held your tongue?"
+
+"Why, what did I say to make him mad?" asked Felicity in honest
+perplexity.
+
+"I think it's awful for brothers and sisters to be always quarrelling,"
+sighed Cecily. "The Cowans fight all the time; and you and Dan will soon
+be as bad."
+
+"Oh, talk sense," said Felicity. "Dan's got so touchy it isn't safe to
+speak to him. I should think he'd be sorry for all the trouble he made
+last night. But you just back him up in everything, Cecily."
+
+"I don't!"
+
+"You do! And you've no business to, specially when mother's away. She
+left ME in charge."
+
+"You didn't take much charge last night when Dan got sick," said Felix
+maliciously. Felicity had told him at tea that night he was getting
+fatter than ever. This was his tit-for-tat. "You were pretty glad to
+leave it all to Cecily then."
+
+"Who's talking to you?" said Felicity.
+
+"Now, look here," said the Story Girl, "the first thing we know we'll
+all be quarrelling, and then some of us will sulk all day to-morrow.
+It's dreadful to spoil a whole day. Just let's all sit still and count a
+hundred before we say another word."
+
+We sat still and counted the hundred. When Cecily finished she got up
+and went in search of Dan, resolved to soothe his wounded feelings.
+Felicity called after her to tell Dan there was a jam turnover she had
+put away in the pantry specially for him. Felix held out to Felicity a
+remarkably fine apple which he had been saving for his own consumption;
+and the Story Girl began a tale of an enchanted maiden in a castle by
+the sea; but we never heard the end of it. For, just as the evening star
+was looking whitely through the rosy window of the west, Cecily came
+flying through the orchard, wringing her hands.
+
+"Oh, come, come quick," she gasped. "Dan's eating the bad berries
+again--he's et a whole bunch of them--he says he'll show Felicity. I
+can't stop him. Come you and try."
+
+We rose in a body and rushed towards the house. In the yard we
+encountered Dan, emerging from the fir wood and champing the fatal
+berries with unrepentant relish.
+
+"Dan King, do you want to commit suicide?" demanded the Story Girl.
+
+"Look here, Dan," I expostulated. "You shouldn't do this. Think how sick
+you were last night and all the trouble you made for everybody. Don't
+eat any more, there's a good chap."
+
+"All right," said Dan. "I've et all I want. They taste fine. I don't
+believe it was them made me sick."
+
+But now that his anger was over he looked a little frightened. Felicity
+was not there. We found her in the kitchen, lighting up the fire.
+
+"Bev, fill the kettle with water and put it on to heat," she said in a
+resigned tone. "If Dan's going to be sick again we've got to be ready
+for it. I wish mother was home, that's all. I hope she'll never go away
+again. Dan King, you just wait till I tell her of the way you've acted."
+
+"Fudge! I ain't going to be sick," said Dan. "And if YOU begin telling
+tales, Felicity King, I'LL tell some too. I know how many eggs mother
+said you could use while she was away--and I know how many you HAVE
+used. I counted. So you'd better mind your own business, Miss."
+
+"A nice way to talk to your sister when you may be dead in an hour's
+time!" retorted Felicity, in tears between her anger and her real alarm
+about Dan.
+
+But in an hour's time Dan was still in good health, and announced his
+intention of going to bed. He went, and was soon sleeping as peacefully
+as if he had nothing on either conscience or stomach. But Felicity
+declared she meant to keep the water hot until all danger was past; and
+we sat up to keep her company. We were sitting there when Uncle Roger
+walked in at eleven o'clock.
+
+"What on earth are you young fry doing up at this time of night?" he
+asked angrily. "You should have been in your beds two hours ago. And
+with a roaring fire on a night that's hot enough to melt a brass monkey!
+Have you taken leave of your senses?"
+
+"It's because of Dan," explained Felicity wearily. "He went and et more
+of the bad berries--a whole lot of them--and we were sure he'd be sick
+again. But he hasn't been yet, and now he's asleep."
+
+"Is that boy stark, staring mad?" said Uncle Roger.
+
+"It was Felicity's fault," cried Cecily, who always took Dan's part
+through evil report and good report. "She told him she guessed he'd
+learned a lesson and wouldn't do what she'd told him not to again. So he
+went and et them because she vexed him so."
+
+"Felicity King, if you don't watch out you'll grow up into the sort of
+woman who drives her husband to drink," said Uncle Roger gravely.
+
+"How could I tell Dan would act so like a mule!" cried Felicity.
+
+"Get off to bed, every one of you. It's a thankful man I'll be when your
+father and mother come home. The wretched bachelor who undertakes to
+look after a houseful of children like you is to be pitied. Nobody will
+ever catch me doing it again. Felicity, is there anything fit to eat in
+the pantry?"
+
+That last question was the most unkindest cut of all. Felicity could
+have forgiven Uncle Roger anything but that. It really was unpardonable.
+She confided to me as we climbed the stairs that she hated Uncle Roger.
+Her red lips quivered and the tears of wounded pride brimmed over in
+her beautiful blue eyes. In the dim candle-light she looked unbelievably
+pretty and appealing. I put my arm about her and gave her a cousinly
+salute.
+
+"Never you mind him, Felicity," I said. "He's only a grown-up."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI. THE GHOSTLY BELL
+
+Friday was a comfortable day in the household of King. Everybody was in
+good humour. The Story Girl sparkled through several tales that ranged
+from the afrites and jinns of Eastern myth, through the piping days of
+chivalry, down to the homely anecdotes of Carlisle workaday folks. She
+was in turn an Oriental princess behind a silken veil, the bride who
+followed her bridegroom to the wars of Palestine disguised as a page,
+the gallant lady who ransomed her diamond necklace by dancing a coranto
+with a highwayman on a moonlit heath, and "Buskirk's girl" who joined
+the Sons and Daughters of Temperance "just to see what was into it;" and
+in each impersonation she was so thoroughly the thing impersonated that
+it was a matter of surprise to us when she emerged from each our own
+familiar Story Girl again.
+
+Cecily and Sara Ray found a "sweet" new knitted lace pattern in an old
+magazine and spent a happy afternoon learning it and "talking secrets."
+Chancing--accidentally, I vow--to overhear certain of these secrets, I
+learned that Sara Ray had named an apple for Johnny Price--"and, Cecily,
+true's you live, there was eight seeds in it, and you know eight means
+'they both love' "--while Cecily admitted that Willy Fraser had written
+on his slate and showed it to her,
+
+ "If you love me as I love you,
+ No knife can cut our love in two"--
+
+"but, Sara Ray, NEVER you breathe this to a living soul."
+
+Felix also averred that he heard Sara ask Cecily very seriously,
+
+"Cecily, how old must we be before we can have a REAL beau?"
+
+But Sara always denied it; so I am inclined to believe Felix simply made
+it up himself.
+
+Paddy distinguished himself by catching a rat, and being intolerably
+conceited about it--until Sara Ray cured him by calling him a "dear,
+sweet cat," and kissing him between the ears. Then Pat sneaked abjectly
+off, his tail drooping. He resented being called a sweet cat. He had a
+sense of humour, had Pat. Very few cats have; and most of them have such
+an inordinate appetite for flattery that they will swallow any amount
+of it and thrive thereon. Paddy had a finer taste. The Story Girl and
+I were the only ones who could pay him compliments to his liking. The
+Story Girl would box his ears with her fist and say, "Bless your gray
+heart, Paddy, you're a good sort of old rascal," and Pat would purr his
+satisfaction; I used to take a handful of the skin on his back, shake
+him gently and say, "Pat, you've forgotten more than any human being
+ever knew," and I vow Paddy would lick his chops with delight. But to be
+called "a sweet cat!" Oh, Sara, Sara!
+
+Felicity tried--and had the most gratifying luck with--a new and
+complicated cake recipe--a gorgeous compound of a plumminess to make
+your mouth water. The number of eggs she used in it would have shocked
+Aunt Janet's thrifty soul, but that cake, like beauty, was its own
+excuse. Uncle Roger ate three slices of it at tea-time and told Felicity
+she was an artist. The poor man meant it as a compliment; but Felicity,
+who knew Uncle Blair was an artist and had a poor opinion of such fry,
+looked indignant and retorted, indeed she wasn't!
+
+"Peter says there's any amount of raspberries back in the maple
+clearing," said Dan. "S'posen we all go after tea and pick some?"
+
+"I'd like to," sighed Felicity, "but we'd come home tired and with all
+the milking to do. You boys better go alone."
+
+"Peter and I will attend to the milking for one evening," said Uncle
+Roger. "You can all go. I have an idea that a raspberry pie for
+to-morrow night, when the folks come home, would hit the right spot."
+
+Accordingly, after tea we all set off, armed with jugs and cups.
+Felicity, thoughtful creature, also took a small basketful of jelly
+cookies along with her. We had to go back through the maple woods to
+the extreme end of Uncle Roger's farm--a pretty walk, through a world of
+green, whispering boughs and spice-sweet ferns, and shifting patches
+of sunlight. The raspberries were plentiful, and we were not long in
+filling our receptacles. Then we foregathered around a tiny wood spring,
+cold and pellucid under its young maples, and ate the jelly cookies;
+and the Story Girl told us a tale of a haunted spring in a mountain glen
+where a fair white lady dwelt, who pledged all comers in a golden cup
+with jewels bright.
+
+"And if you drank of the cup with her," said the Story Girl, her eyes
+glowing through the emerald dusk about us, "you were never seen in the
+world again; you were whisked straightway to fairyland, and lived there
+with a fairy bride. And you never WANTED to come back to earth, because
+when you drank of the magic cup you forgot all your past life, except
+for one day in every year when you were allowed to remember it."
+
+"I wish there was such a place as fairyland--and a way to get to it,"
+said Cecily.
+
+"I think there IS such a place--in spite of Uncle Edward," said the
+Story Girl dreamily, "and I think there is a way of getting there too,
+if we could only find it."
+
+Well, the Story Girl was right. There is such a place as fairyland--but
+only children can find the way to it. And they do not know that it is
+fairyland until they have grown so old that they forget the way. One
+bitter day, when they seek it and cannot find it, they realize what they
+have lost; and that is the tragedy of life. On that day the gates of
+Eden are shut behind them and the age of gold is over. Henceforth they
+must dwell in the common light of common day. Only a few, who remain
+children at heart, can ever find that fair, lost path again; and blessed
+are they above mortals. They, and only they, can bring us tidings
+from that dear country where we once sojourned and from which we must
+evermore be exiles. The world calls them its singers and poets and
+artists and story-tellers; but they are just people who have never
+forgotten the way to fairyland.
+
+As we sat there the Awkward Man passed by, with his gun over his
+shoulder and his dog at his side. He did not look like an awkward man,
+there in the heart of the maple woods. He strode along right masterfully
+and lifted his head with the air of one who was monarch of all he
+surveyed.
+
+The Story Girl kissed her fingertips to him with the delightful audacity
+which was a part of her; and the Awkward Man plucked off his hat and
+swept her a stately and graceful bow.
+
+"I don't understand why they call him the awkward man," said Cecily,
+when he was out of earshot.
+
+"You'd understand why if you ever saw him at a party or a picnic," said
+Felicity, "trying to pass plates and dropping them whenever a woman
+looked at him. They say it's pitiful to see him."
+
+"I must get well acquainted with that man next summer," said the Story
+Girl. "If I put it off any longer it will be too late. I'm growing so
+fast, Aunt Olivia says I'll have to wear ankle skirts next summer. If I
+begin to look grown-up he'll get frightened of me, and then I'll never
+find out the Golden Milestone mystery."
+
+"Do you think he'll ever tell you who Alice is?" I asked.
+
+"I have a notion who Alice is already," said the mysterious creature.
+But she would tell us nothing more.
+
+When the jelly cookies were all eaten it was high time to be moving
+homeward, for when the dark comes down there are more comfortable places
+than a rustling maple wood and the precincts of a possibly enchanted
+spring. When we reached the foot of the orchard and entered it through a
+gap in the hedge it was the magical, mystical time of "between lights."
+Off to the west was a daffodil glow hanging over the valley of lost
+sunsets, and Grandfather King's huge willow rose up against it like a
+rounded mountain of foliage. In the east, above the maple woods, was a
+silvery sheen that hinted the moonrise. But the orchard was a place of
+shadows and mysterious sounds. Midway up the open space in its heart we
+met Peter; and if ever a boy was given over to sheer terror that boy was
+Peter. His face was as white as a sunburned face could be, and his eyes
+were brimmed with panic.
+
+"Peter, what is the matter?" cried Cecily.
+
+"There's--SOMETHING--in the house, RINGING A BELL," said Peter, in
+a shaking voice. Not the Story Girl herself could have invested that
+"something" with more of creepy horror. We all drew close together. I
+felt a crinkly feeling along my back which I had never known before. If
+Peter had not been so manifestly frightened we might have thought he was
+trying to "pass a joke" on us. But such abject terror as his could not
+be counterfeited.
+
+"Nonsense!" said Felicity, but her voice shook. "There isn't a bell in
+the house to ring. You must have imagined it, Peter. Or else Uncle Roger
+is trying to fool us."
+
+"Your Uncle Roger went to Markdale right after milking," said Peter. "He
+locked up the house and gave me the key. There wasn't a soul in it then,
+that I'm sure of. I druv the cows to the pasture, and I got back about
+fifteen minutes ago. I set down on the front door steps for a moment,
+and all at once I heard a bell ring in the house eight times. I tell
+you I was skeered. I made a bolt for the orchard--and you won't catch me
+going near that house till your Uncle Roger comes home."
+
+You wouldn't catch any of us doing it. We were almost as badly scared as
+Peter. There we stood in a huddled demoralized group. Oh, what an eerie
+place that orchard was! What shadows! What noises! What spooky swooping
+of bats! You COULDN'T look every way at once, and goodness only knew
+what might be behind you!
+
+"There CAN'T be anybody in the house," said Felicity.
+
+"Well, here's the key--go and see for yourself," said Peter.
+
+Felicity had no intention of going and seeing.
+
+"I think you boys ought to go," she said, retreating behind the defence
+of sex. "You ought to be braver than girls."
+
+"But we ain't," said Felix candidly. "I wouldn't be much scared of
+anything REAL. But a haunted house is a different thing."
+
+"I always thought something had to be done in a place before it could
+be haunted," said Cecily. "Somebody killed or something like that, you
+know. Nothing like that ever happened in our family. The Kings have
+always been respectable."
+
+"Perhaps it is Emily King's ghost," whispered Felix.
+
+"She never appeared anywhere but in the orchard," said the Story Girl.
+"Oh, oh, children, isn't there something under Uncle Alec's tree?"
+
+We peered fearfully through the gloom. There WAS something--something
+that wavered and fluttered--advanced--retreated--
+
+"That's only my old apron," said Felicity. "I hung it there to-day when
+I was looking for the white hen's nest. Oh, what shall we do? Uncle
+Roger may not be back for hours. I CAN'T believe there's anything in the
+house."
+
+"Maybe it's only Peg Bowen," suggested Dan.
+
+There was not a great deal of comfort in this. We were almost as much
+afraid of Peg Bowen as we would be of any spectral visitant.
+
+Peter scoffed at the idea.
+
+"Peg Bowen wasn't in the house before your Uncle Roger locked it up, and
+how could she get in afterwards?" he said. "No, it isn't Peg Bowen. It's
+SOMETHING that WALKS."
+
+"I know a story about a ghost," said the Story Girl, the ruling passion
+strong even in extremity. "It is about a ghost with eyeholes but no
+eyes--"
+
+"Don't," cried Cecily hysterically. "Don't you go on! Don't you say
+another word! I can't bear it! Don't you!"
+
+The Story Girl didn't. But she had said enough. There was something in
+the quality of a ghost with eyeholes but no eyes that froze our young
+blood.
+
+There never were in all the world six more badly scared children than
+those who huddled in the old King orchard that August night.
+
+All at once--something--leaped from the bough of a tree and alighted
+before us. We split the air with a simultaneous shriek. We would have
+run, one and all, if there had been anywhere to run to. But there
+wasn't--all around us were only those shadowy arcades. Then we saw with
+shame that it was only our Paddy.
+
+"Pat, Pat," I said, picking him up, feeling a certain comfort in his
+soft, solid body. "Stay with us, old fellow."
+
+But Pat would none of us. He struggled out of my clasp and disappeared
+over the long grasses with soundless leaps. He was no longer our tame,
+domestic, well acquainted Paddy. He was a strange, furtive animal--a
+"questing beast."
+
+Presently the moon rose; but this only made matters worse. The shadows
+had been still before; now they moved and danced, as the night wind
+tossed the boughs. The old house, with its dreadful secret, was white
+and clear against the dark background of spruces. We were woefully
+tired, but we could not sit down because the grass was reeking with dew.
+
+"The Family Ghost only appears in daylight," said the Story Girl. "I
+wouldn't mind seeing a ghost in daylight. But after dark is another
+thing."
+
+"There's no such thing as a ghost," I said contemptuously. Oh, how I
+wished I could believe it!
+
+"Then what rung that bell?" said Peter. "Bells don't ring of themselves,
+I s'pose, specially when there ain't any in the house to ring."
+
+"Oh, will Uncle Roger never come home!" sobbed Felicity. "I know he'll
+laugh at us awful, but it's better to be laughed at than scared like
+this."
+
+Uncle Roger did not come until nearly ten. Never was there a more
+welcome sound than the rumble of his wheels in the lane. We ran to the
+orchard gate and swarmed across the yard, just as Uncle Roger alighted
+at the front door. He stared at us in the moonlight.
+
+"Have you tormented any one into eating more bad berries, Felicity?" he
+demanded.
+
+"Oh, Uncle Roger, don't go in," implored Felicity seriously. "There's
+something dreadful in there--something that rings a bell. Peter heard
+it. Don't go in."
+
+"There's no use asking the meaning of this, I suppose," said Uncle Roger
+with the calm of despair. "I've gave up trying to fathom you young ones.
+Peter, where's the key? What yarn have you been telling?"
+
+"I DID hear a bell ring," said Peter stubbornly.
+
+Uncle Roger unlocked and flung open the front door. As he did so, clear
+and sweet, rang out ten bell-like chimes.
+
+"That's what I heard," cried Peter. "There's the bell!"
+
+We had to wait until Uncle Roger stopped laughing before we heard the
+explanation. We thought he never WOULD stop.
+
+"That's Grandfather King's old clock striking," he said, as soon as he
+was able to speak. "Sammy Prott came along after tea, when you were away
+to the forge, Peter, and I gave him permission to clean the old clock.
+He had it going merrily in no time. And now it has almost frightened you
+poor little monkeys to death."
+
+We heard Uncle Roger chuckling all the way to the barn.
+
+"Uncle Roger can laugh," said Cecily, with a quiver in her voice, "but
+it's no laughing matter to be so scared. I just feel sick, I was so
+frightened."
+
+"I wouldn't mind if he'd laugh once and have it done with it," said
+Felicity bitterly. "But he'll laugh at us for a year, and tell the story
+to every soul that comes to the place."
+
+"You can't blame him for that," said the Story Girl. "I shall tell it,
+too. I don't care if the joke is as much on myself as any one. A story
+is a story, no matter who it's on. But it IS hateful to be laughed
+at--and grown-ups always do it. I never will when I'm grown up. I'll
+remember better."
+
+"It's all Peter's fault," said Felicity. "I do think he might have had
+more sense than to take a clock striking for a bell ringing."
+
+"I never heard that kind of a strike before," protested Peter. "It don't
+sound a bit like other clocks. And the door was shut and the sound kind
+o' muffled. It's all very fine to say you would have known what it was,
+but I don't believe you would."
+
+"I wouldn't have," said the Story Girl honestly. "I thought it WAS a
+bell when I heard it, and the door open, too. Let us be fair, Felicity."
+
+"I'm dreadful tired," sighed Cecily.
+
+We were all "dreadful tired," for this was the third night of late hours
+and nerve racking strain. But it was over two hours since we had
+eaten the cookies, and Felicity suggested that a saucerful apiece of
+raspberries and cream would not be hard to take. It was not, for any one
+but Cecily, who couldn't swallow a mouthful.
+
+"I'm glad father and mother will be back to-morrow night," she said.
+"It's too exciting when they're away. That's my opinion."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII. THE PROOF OF THE PUDDING
+
+Felicity was cumbered with many cares the next morning. For one thing,
+the whole house must be put in apple pie order; and for another,
+an elaborate supper must be prepared for the expected return of the
+travellers that night. Felicity devoted her whole attention to this, and
+left the secondary preparation of the regular meals to Cecily and the
+Story Girl. It was agreed that the latter was to make a cornmeal pudding
+for dinner.
+
+In spite of her disaster with the bread, the Story Girl had been taking
+cooking lessons from Felicity all the week, and getting on tolerably
+well, although, mindful of her former mistake, she never ventured
+on anything without Felicity's approval. But Felicity had no time to
+oversee her this morning.
+
+"You must attend to the pudding yourself," she said. "The recipe's so
+plain and simple even you can't go astray, and if there's anything you
+don't understand you can ask me. But don't bother me if you can help
+it."
+
+The Story Girl did not bother her once. The pudding was concocted
+and baked, as the Story Girl proudly informed us when we came to
+the dinner-table, all on her own hook. She was very proud of it; and
+certainly as far as appearance went it justified her triumph. The slices
+were smooth and golden; and, smothered in the luscious maple sugar
+sauce which Cecily had compounded, were very fair to view. Nevertheless,
+although none of us, not even Uncle Roger or Felicity, said a word at
+the time, for fear of hurting the Story Girl's feelings, the pudding
+did not taste exactly as it should. It was tough--decidedly tough--and
+lacked the richness of flavour which was customary in Aunt Janet's
+cornmeal puddings. If it had not been for the abundant supply of sauce
+it would have been very dry eating indeed. Eaten it was, however, to the
+last crumb. If it were not just what a cornmeal pudding might be, the
+rest of the bill of fare had been extra good and our appetites matched
+it.
+
+"I wish I was twins so's I could eat more," said Dan, when he simply had
+to stop.
+
+"What good would being twins do you?" asked Peter. "People who squint
+can't eat any more than people who don't squint, can they?"
+
+We could not see any connection between Peter's two questions.
+
+"What has squinting got to do with twins?" asked Dan.
+
+"Why, twins are just people that squint, aren't they?" said Peter.
+
+We thought he was trying to be funny, until we found out that he was
+quite in earnest. Then we laughed until Peter got sulky.
+
+"I don't care," he said. "How's a fellow to know? Tommy and Adam Cowan,
+over at Markdale, are twins; and they're both cross-eyed. So I s'posed
+that was what being twins meant. It's all very fine for you fellows
+to laugh. I never went to school half as much as you did; and you was
+brought up in Toronto, too. If you'd worked out ever since you was
+seven, and just got to school in the winter, there'd be lots of things
+you wouldn't know, either."
+
+"Never mind, Peter," said Cecily. "You know lots of things they don't."
+
+But Peter was not to be conciliated, and took himself off in high
+dudgeon. To be laughed at before Felicity--to be laughed at BY
+Felicity--was something he could not endure. Let Cecily and the Story
+Girl cackle all they wanted to, and let those stuck-up Toronto boys grin
+like chessy-cats; but when Felicity laughed at him the iron entered into
+Peter's soul.
+
+If the Story Girl laughed at Peter the mills of the gods ground out
+his revenge for him in mid-afternoon. Felicity, having used up all the
+available cooking materials in the house, had to stop perforce; and she
+now determined to stuff two new pincushions she had been making for
+her room. We heard her rummaging in the pantry as we sat on the cool,
+spruce-shadowed cellar door outside, where Uncle Roger was showing us
+how to make elderberry pop-guns. Presently she came out, frowning.
+
+"Cecily, do you know where mother put the sawdust she emptied out of
+that old beaded pincushion of Grandmother King's, after she had sifted
+the needles out of it? I thought it was in the tin box."
+
+"So it is," said Cecily.
+
+"It isn't. There isn't a speck of sawdust in that box."
+
+The Story Girl's face wore a quite indescribable expression, compound of
+horror and shame. She need not have confessed. If she had but held her
+tongue the mystery of the sawdust's disappearance might have forever
+remained a mystery. She WOULD have held her tongue, as she afterwards
+confided to me, if it had not been for a horrible fear which flashed
+into her mind that possibly sawdust puddings were not healthy for people
+to eat--especially if there might be needles in them--and that if any
+mischief had been done in that direction it was her duty to undo it if
+possible at any cost of ridicule to herself.
+
+"Oh, Felicity," she said, her voice expressing a very anguish of
+humiliation, "I--I--thought that stuff in the box was cornmeal and used
+it to make the pudding."
+
+Felicity and Cecily stared blankly at the Story Girl. We boys began to
+laugh, but were checked midway by Uncle Roger. He was rocking himself
+back and forth, with his hand pressed against his stomach.
+
+"Oh," he groaned, "I've been wondering what these sharp pains I've been
+feeling ever since dinner meant. I know now. I must have swallowed a
+needle--several needles, perhaps. I'm done for!"
+
+The poor Story Girl went very white.
+
+"Oh, Uncle Roger, could it be possible? You COULDN'T have swallowed a
+needle without knowing it. It would have stuck in your tongue or teeth."
+
+"I didn't chew the pudding," groaned Uncle Roger. "It was too tough--I
+just swallowed the chunks whole."
+
+He groaned and twisted and doubled himself up. But he overdid it. He was
+not as good an actor as the Story Girl. Felicity looked scornfully at
+him.
+
+"Uncle Roger, you are not one bit sick," she said deliberately. "You are
+just putting on."
+
+"Felicity, if I die from the effects of eating sawdust pudding,
+flavoured with needles, you'll be sorry you ever said such a thing to
+your poor old uncle," said Uncle Roger reproachfully. "Even if there
+were no needles in it, sixty-year-old sawdust can't be good for my
+tummy. I daresay it wasn't even clean."
+
+"Well, you know every one has to eat a peck of dirt in his life,"
+giggled Felicity.
+
+"But nobody has to eat it all at once," retorted Uncle Roger, with
+another groan. "Oh, Sara Stanley, it's a thankful man I am that your
+Aunt Olivia is to be home to-night. You'd have me kilt entirely by
+another day. I believe you did it on purpose to have a story to tell."
+
+Uncle Roger hobbled off to the barn, still holding on to his stomach.
+
+"Do you think he really feels sick?" asked the Story Girl anxiously.
+
+"No, I don't," said Felicity. "You needn't worry over him. There's
+nothing the matter with him. I don't believe there were any needles in
+that sawdust. Mother sifted it very carefully."
+
+"I know a story about a man whose son swallowed a mouse," said the Story
+Girl, who would probably have known a story and tried to tell it if she
+were being led to the stake. "And he ran and wakened up a very tired
+doctor just as he had got to sleep.
+
+"'Oh, doctor, my son has swallowed a mouse,' he cried. 'What shall I
+do?'
+
+"'Tell him to swallow a cat,' roared the poor doctor, and slammed his
+door.
+
+"Now, if Uncle Roger has swallowed any needles, maybe it would make it
+all right if he swallowed a pincushion."
+
+We all laughed. But Felicity soon grew sober.
+
+"It seems awful to think of eating a sawdust pudding. How on earth did
+you make such a mistake?"
+
+"It looked just like cornmeal," said the Story Girl, going from white to
+red in her shame. "Well, I'm going to give up trying to cook, and stick
+to things I can do. And if ever one of you mentions sawdust pudding to
+me I'll never tell you another story as long as I live."
+
+The threat was effectual. Never did we mention that unholy pudding. But
+the Story Girl could not so impose silence on the grown-ups, especially
+Uncle Roger. He tormented her for the rest of the summer. Never a
+breakfast did he sit down to, without gravely inquiring if they were
+sure there was no sawdust in the porridge. Not a tweak of rheumatism did
+he feel but he vowed it was due to a needle, travelling about his body.
+And Aunt Olivia was warned to label all the pincushions in the house.
+"Contents, sawdust; not intended for puddings."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII. HOW KISSING WAS DISCOVERED
+
+An August evening, calm, golden, dewless, can be very lovely. At sunset,
+Felicity, Cecily, and Sara Ray, Dan, Felix, and I were in the orchard,
+sitting on the cool grasses at the base of the Pulpit Stone. In the west
+was a field of crocus sky over which pale cloud blossoms were scattered.
+
+Uncle Roger had gone to the station to meet the travellers, and the
+dining-room table was spread with a feast of fat things.
+
+"It's been a jolly week, take it all round," said Felix, "but I'm glad
+the grown-ups are coming back to-night, especially Uncle Alec."
+
+"I wonder if they'll bring us anything," said Dan.
+
+"I'm thinking long to hear all about the wedding," said Felicity, who
+was braiding timothy stalks into a collar for Pat.
+
+"You girls are always thinking about weddings and getting married," said
+Dan contemptuously.
+
+"We ain't," said Felicity indignantly. "I am NEVER going to get married.
+I think it is just horrid, so there!"
+
+"I guess you think it would be a good deal horrider not to be," said
+Dan.
+
+"It depends on who you're married to," said Cecily gravely, seeing that
+Felicity disdained reply. "If you got a man like father it would be all
+right. But S'POSEN you got one like Andrew Ward? He's so mean and cross
+to his wife that she tells him every day she wishes she'd never set eyes
+on him."
+
+"Perhaps that's WHY he's mean and cross," said Felix.
+
+"I tell you it isn't always the man's fault," said Dan darkly. "When I
+get married I'll be good to my wife, but I mean to be boss. When I open
+my mouth my word will be law."
+
+"If your word is as big as your mouth I guess it will be," said Felicity
+cruelly.
+
+"I pity the man who gets you, Felicity King, that's all," retorted Dan.
+
+"Now, don't fight," implored Cecily.
+
+"Who's fighting?" demanded Dan. "Felicity thinks she can say anything
+she likes to me, but I'll show her different."
+
+Probably, in spite of Cecily's efforts, a bitter spat would have
+resulted between Dan and Felicity, had not a diversion been effected
+at that moment by the Story Girl, who came slowly down Uncle Stephen's
+Walk.
+
+"Just look how the Story Girl has got herself up!" said Felicity. "Why,
+she's no more than decent!"
+
+The Story Girl was barefooted and barearmed, having rolled the sleeves
+of her pink gingham up to her shoulders. Around her waist was twisted a
+girdle of the blood-red roses that bloomed in Aunt Olivia's garden; on
+her sleek curls she wore a chaplet of them; and her hands were full of
+them.
+
+She paused under the outmost tree, in a golden-green gloom, and laughed
+at us over a big branch. Her wild, subtle, nameless charm clothed her as
+with a garment. We always remembered the picture she made there; and
+in later days when we read Tennyson's poems at a college desk, we knew
+exactly how an oread, peering through the green leaves on some haunted
+knoll of many fountained Ida, must look.
+
+"Felicity," said the Story Girl reproachfully, "what have you been doing
+to Peter? He's up there sulking in the granary, and he won't come
+down, and he says it's your fault. You must have hurt his feelings
+dreadfully."
+
+"I don't know about his feelings," said Felicity, with an angry toss of
+her shining head, "but I guess I made his ears tingle all right. I boxed
+them both good and hard."
+
+"Oh, Felicity! What for?"
+
+"Well, he tried to kiss me, that's what for!" said Felicity, turning
+very red. "As if I would let a hired boy kiss me! I guess Master Peter
+won't try anything like that again in a hurry."
+
+The Story Girl came out of her shadows and sat down beside us on the
+grass.
+
+"Well, in that case," she said gravely, "I think you did right to
+slap his ears--not because he is a hired boy, but because it would be
+impertinent in ANY boy. But talking of kissing makes me think of a story
+I found in Aunt Olivia's scrapbook the other day. Wouldn't you like to
+hear it? It is called, 'How Kissing Was Discovered.'"
+
+"Wasn't kissing always discovered?" asked Dan.
+
+"Not according to this story. It was just discovered accidentally."
+
+"Well, let's hear about it," said Felix, "although I think kissing's
+awful silly, and it wouldn't have mattered much if it hadn't ever been
+discovered."
+
+The Story Girl scattered her roses around her on the grass, and clasped
+her slim hands over her knees. Gazing dreamily afar at the tinted sky
+between the apple trees, as if she were looking back to the merry days
+of the world's gay youth, she began, her voice giving to the words
+and fancies of the old tale the delicacy of hoar frost and the crystal
+sparkle of dew.
+
+"It happened long, long ago in Greece--where so many other beautiful
+things happened. Before that, nobody had ever heard of kissing. And then
+it was just discovered in the twinkling of an eye. And a man wrote it
+down and the account has been preserved ever since.
+
+"There was a young shepherd named Glaucon--a very handsome young
+shepherd--who lived in a little village called Thebes. It became a very
+great and famous city afterwards, but at this time it was only a little
+village, very quiet and simple. Too quiet for Glaucon's liking. He grew
+tired of it, and he thought he would like to go away from home and
+see something of the world. So he took his knapsack and his shepherd's
+crook, and wandered away until he came to Thessaly. That is the land of
+the gods' hill, you know. The name of the hill was Olympus. But it has
+nothing to do with this story. This happened on another mountain--Mount
+Pelion.
+
+"Glaucon hired himself to a wealthy man who had a great many sheep. And
+every day Glaucon had to lead the sheep up to pasture on Mount Pelion,
+and watch them while they ate. There was nothing else to do, and he
+would have found the time very long, if he had not been able to play on
+a flute. So he played very often and very beautifully, as he sat under
+the trees and watched the wonderful blue sea afar off, and thought about
+Aglaia.
+
+"Aglaia was his master's daughter. She was so sweet and beautiful that
+Glaucon fell in love with her the very moment he first saw her; and
+when he was not playing his flute on the mountain he was thinking about
+Aglaia, and dreaming that some day he might have flocks of his own, and
+a dear little cottage down in the valley where he and Aglaia might live.
+
+"Aglaia had fallen in love with Glaucon just as he had with her. But she
+never let him suspect it for ever so long. He did not know how often
+she would steal up the mountain and hide behind the rocks near where
+the sheep pastured, to listen to Glaucon's beautiful music. It was very
+lovely music, because he was always thinking of Aglaia while he played,
+though he little dreamed how near him she often was.
+
+"But after awhile Glaucon found out that Aglaia loved him, and
+everything was well. Nowadays I suppose a wealthy man like Aglaia's
+father wouldn't be willing to let his daughter marry a hired man; but
+this was in the Golden Age, you know, when nothing like that mattered at
+all.
+
+"After that, almost every day Aglaia would go up the mountain and sit
+beside Glaucon, as he watched the flocks and played on his flute. But he
+did not play as much as he used to, because he liked better to talk with
+Aglaia. And in the evening they would lead the sheep home together.
+
+"One day Aglaia went up the mountain by a new way, and she came to a
+little brook. Something was sparkling very brightly among its pebbles.
+Aglaia picked it up, and it was the most beautiful little stone that
+she had ever seen. It was only as large as a pea, but it glittered and
+flashed in the sunlight with every colour of the rainbow. Aglaia was so
+delighted with it that she resolved to take it as a present to Glaucon.
+
+"But all at once she heard a stamping of hoofs behind her, and when she
+turned she almost died from fright. For there was the great god, Pan,
+and he was a very terrible object, looking quite as much like a goat as
+a man. The gods were not all beautiful, you know. And, beautiful or not,
+nobody ever wanted to meet them face to face.
+
+"'Give that stone to me,' said Pan, holding out his hand.
+
+"But Aglaia, though she was frightened, would not give him the stone.
+
+"'I want it for Glaucon,' she said.
+
+"'I want it for one of my wood nymphs,' said Pan, 'and I must have it.'
+
+"He advanced threateningly, but Aglaia ran as hard as she could up the
+mountain. If she could only reach Glaucon he would protect her. Pan
+followed her, clattering and bellowing terribly, but in a few minutes
+she rushed into Glaucon's arms.
+
+"The dreadful sight of Pan and the still more dreadful noise he made, so
+frightened the sheep that they fled in all directions. But Glaucon was
+not afraid at all, because Pan was the god of shepherds, and was bound
+to grant any prayer a good shepherd, who always did his duty, might
+make. If Glaucon had NOT been a good shepherd dear knows what would have
+happened to him and Aglaia. But he was; and when he begged Pan to go
+away and not frighten Aglaia any more, Pan had to go, grumbling a good
+deal--and Pan's grumblings had a very ugly sound. But still he WENT, and
+that was the main thing.
+
+"'Now, dearest, what is all this trouble about?' asked Glaucon; and
+Aglaia told him the story.
+
+"'But where is the beautiful stone?' he asked, when she had finished.
+'Didst thou drop it in thy alarm?'
+
+"No, indeed! Aglaia had done nothing of the sort. When she began to run,
+she had popped it into her mouth, and there it was still, quite safe.
+Now she poked it out between her red lips, where it glittered in the
+sunlight.
+
+"'Take it,' she whispered.
+
+"The question was--how was he to take it? Both of Aglaia's arms were
+held fast to her sides by Glaucon's arms; and if he loosened his clasp
+ever so little he was afraid she would fall, so weak and trembling was
+she from her dreadful fright. Then Glaucon had a brilliant idea. He
+would take the beautiful stone from Aglaia's lips with his own lips.
+
+"He bent over until his lips touched hers--and THEN, he forgot all about
+the beautiful pebble and so did Aglaia. Kissing was discovered!
+
+"What a yarn!" said Dan, drawing a long breath, when we had come to
+ourselves and discovered that we were really sitting in a dewy Prince
+Edward Island orchard instead of watching two lovers on a mountain in
+Thessaly in the Golden Age. "I don't believe a word of it."
+
+"Of course, we know it wasn't really true," said Felicity.
+
+"Well, I don't know," said the Story Girl thoughtfully. "I think there
+are two kinds of true things--true things that ARE, and true things that
+are NOT, but MIGHT be."
+
+"I don't believe there's any but the one kind of trueness," said
+Felicity. "And anyway, this story couldn't be true. You know there was
+no such thing as a god Pan."
+
+"How do you know what there might have been in the Golden Age?" asked
+the Story Girl.
+
+Which was, indeed, an unanswerable question for Felicity.
+
+"I wonder what became of the beautiful stone?" said Cecily.
+
+"Likely Aglaia swallowed it," said Felix practically.
+
+"Did Glaucon and Aglaia ever get married?" asked Sara Ray.
+
+"The story doesn't say. It stops just there," said the Story Girl. "But
+of course they did. I will tell you what I think. I don't think Aglaia
+swallowed the stone. I think it just fell to the ground; and after
+awhile they found it, and it turned out to be of such value that Glaucon
+could buy all the flocks and herds in the valley, and the sweetest
+cottage; and he and Aglaia were married right away."
+
+"But you only THINK that," said Sara Ray. "I'd like to be really sure
+that was what happened."
+
+"Oh, bother, none of it happened," said Dan. "I believed it while the
+Story Girl was telling it, but I don't now. Isn't that wheels?"
+
+Wheels it was. Two wagons were driving up the lane. We rushed to the
+house--and there were Uncle Alec and Aunt Janet and Aunt Olivia! The
+excitement was quite tremendous. Every body talked and laughed at once,
+and it was not until we were all seated around the supper table that
+conversation grew coherent. What laughter and questioning and telling of
+tales followed, what smiles and bright eyes and glad voices. And through
+it all, the blissful purrs of Paddy, who sat on the window sill behind
+the Story Girl, resounded through the din like Andrew McPherson's
+bass--"just a bur-r-r-r the hale time."
+
+"Well, I'm thankful to be home again," said Aunt Janet, beaming on us.
+"We had a real nice time, and Edward's folks were as kind as could be.
+But give me home for a steady thing. How has everything gone? How did
+the children behave, Roger?"
+
+"Like models," said Uncle Roger. "They were as good as gold most of the
+days."
+
+There were times when one couldn't help liking Uncle Roger.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX. A DREAD PROPHECY
+
+"I've got to go and begin stumping out the elderberry pasture this
+afternoon," said Peter dolefully. "I tell you it's a tough job. Mr.
+Roger might wait for cool weather before he sets people to stumping out
+elderberries, and that's a fact."
+
+"Why don't you tell him so?" asked Dan.
+
+"It ain't my business to tell him things," retorted Peter. "I'm hired
+to do what I'm told, and I do it. But I can have my own opinion all the
+same. It's going to be a broiling hot day."
+
+We were all in the orchard, except Felix, who had gone to the
+post-office. It was the forenoon of an August Saturday. Cecily and Sara
+Ray, who had come up to spend the day with us--her mother having gone to
+town--were eating timothy roots. Bertha Lawrence, a Charlottetown girl,
+who had visited Kitty Marr in June, and had gone to school one day
+with her, had eaten timothy roots, affecting to consider them great
+delicacies. The fad was at once taken up by the Carlisle schoolgirls.
+Timothy roots quite ousted "sours" and young raspberry sprouts, both of
+which had the real merit of being quite toothsome, while timothy roots
+were tough and tasteless. But timothy roots were fashionable, therefore
+timothy roots must be eaten. Pecks of them must have been devoured in
+Carlisle that summer.
+
+Pat was there also, padding about from one to the other on his black
+paws, giving us friendly pokes and rubs. We all made much of him except
+Felicity, who would not take any notice of him because he was the Story
+Girl's cat.
+
+We boys were sprawling on the grass. Our morning chores were done and
+the day was before us. We should have been feeling very comfortable and
+happy, but, as a matter of fact, we were not particularly so.
+
+The Story Girl was sitting on the mint beside the well-house, weaving
+herself a wreath of buttercups. Felicity was sipping from the cup of
+clouded blue with an overdone air of unconcern. Each was acutely and
+miserably conscious of the other's presence, and each was desirous of
+convincing the rest of us that the other was less than nothing to her.
+Felicity could not succeed. The Story Girl managed it better. If it had
+not been for the fact that in all our foregatherings she was careful to
+sit as far from Felicity as possible, we might have been deceived.
+
+We had not passed a very pleasant week. Felicity and the Story Girl
+had not been "speaking" to each other, and consequently there had been
+something rotten in the state of Denmark. An air of restraint was over
+all our games and conversations.
+
+On the preceding Monday Felicity and the Story Girl had quarrelled over
+something. What the cause of the quarrel was I cannot tell because I
+never knew. It remained a "dead secret" between the parties of the first
+and second part forever. But it was more bitter than the general run
+of their tiffs, and the consequences were apparent to all. They had not
+spoken to each other since.
+
+This was not because the rancour of either lasted so long. On the
+contrary it passed speedily away, not even one low descending sun going
+down on their wrath. But dignity remained to be considered. Neither
+would "speak first," and each obstinately declared that she would not
+speak first, no, not in a hundred years. Neither argument, entreaty, nor
+expostulation had any effect on those two stubborn girls, nor yet the
+tears of sweet Cecily, who cried every night about it, and mingled in
+her pure little prayers fervent petitions that Felicity and the Story
+Girl might make up.
+
+"I don't know where you expect to go when you die, Felicity," she said
+tearfully, "if you don't forgive people."
+
+"I have forgiven her," was Felicity's answer, "but I am not going to
+speak first for all that."
+
+"It's very wrong, and, more than that, it's so uncomfortable,"
+complained Cecily. "It spoils everything."
+
+"Were they ever like this before?" I asked Cecily, as we talked the
+matter over privately in Uncle Stephen's Walk.
+
+"Never for so long," said Cecily. "They had a spell like this last
+summer, and one the summer before, but they only lasted a couple of
+days."
+
+"And who spoke first?"
+
+"Oh, the Story Girl. She got excited about something and spoke to
+Felicity before she thought, and then it was all right. But I'm afraid
+it isn't going to be like that this time. Don't you notice how careful
+the Story Girl is not to get excited? That is such a bad sign."
+
+"We've just got to think up something that will excite her, that's all,"
+I said.
+
+"I'm--I'm praying about it," said Cecily in a low voice, her tear-wet
+lashes trembling against her pale, round cheeks. "Do you suppose it will
+do any good, Bev?"
+
+"Very likely," I assured her. "Remember Sara Ray and the money. That
+came from praying."
+
+"I'm glad you think so," said Cecily tremulously. "Dan said it was no
+use for me to bother praying about it. He said if they COULDN'T speak
+God might do something, but when they just WOULDN'T it wasn't likely
+He would interfere. Dan does say such queer things. I'm so afraid he's
+going to grow up just like Uncle Robert Ward, who never goes to church,
+and doesn't believe more than half the Bible is true."
+
+"Which half does he believe is true?" I inquired with unholy curiosity.
+
+"Oh, just the nice parts. He says there's a heaven all right,
+but no--no--HELL. I don't want Dan to grow up like that. It isn't
+respectable. And you wouldn't want all kinds of people crowding heaven,
+now, would you?"
+
+"Well, no, I suppose not," I agreed, thinking of Billy Robinson.
+
+"Of course, I can't help feeling sorry for those who have to go to THE
+OTHER PLACE," said Cecily compassionately. "But I suppose they wouldn't
+be very comfortable in heaven either. They wouldn't feel at home. Andrew
+Marr said a simply dreadful thing about THE OTHER PLACE one night last
+fall, when Felicity and I were down to see Kitty, and they were burning
+the potato stalks. He said he believed THE OTHER PLACE must be lots more
+interesting than heaven because fires were such jolly things. Now, did
+you ever hear the like?"
+
+"I guess it depends a good deal on whether you're inside or outside the
+fires," I said.
+
+"Oh, Andrew didn't really mean it, of course. He just said it to sound
+smart and make us stare. The Marrs are all like that. But anyhow, I'm
+going to keep on praying that something will happen to excite the Story
+Girl. I don't believe there is any use in praying that Felicity will
+speak first, because I am sure she won't."
+
+"But don't you suppose God could make her?" I said, feeling that it
+wasn't quite fair that the Story Girl should always have to speak first.
+If she had spoken first the other times it was surely Felicity's turn
+this time.
+
+"Well, I believe it would puzzle Him," said Cecily, out of the depths of
+her experience with Felicity.
+
+Peter, as was to be expected, took Felicity's part, and said the Story
+Girl ought to speak first because she was the oldest. That, he said, had
+always been his Aunt Jane's rule.
+
+Sara Ray thought Felicity should speak first, because the Story Girl was
+half an orphan.
+
+Felix tried to make peace between them, and met the usual fate of all
+peacemakers. The Story Girl loftily told him that he was too young
+to understand, and Felicity said that fat boys should mind their own
+business. After that, Felix declared it would serve Felicity right if
+the Story Girl never spoke to her again.
+
+Dan had no patience with either of the girls, especially Felicity.
+
+"What they both want is a right good spanking," he said.
+
+If only a spanking would mend the matter it was not likely it would ever
+be mended. Both Felicity and the Story Girl were rather too old to be
+spanked, and, if they had not been, none of the grown-ups would have
+thought it worth while to administer so desperate a remedy for what
+they considered so insignificant a trouble. With the usual levity of
+grown-ups, they regarded the coldness between the girls as a subject of
+mirth and jest, and recked not that it was freezing the genial current
+of our youthful souls, and blighting hours that should have been fair
+pages in our book of days.
+
+The Story Girl finished her wreath and put it on. The buttercups drooped
+over her high, white brow and played peep with her glowing eyes. A
+dreamy smile hovered around her poppy-red mouth--a significant smile
+which, to those of us skilled in its interpretation, betokened the
+sentence which soon came.
+
+"I know a story about a man who always had his own opinion--"
+
+The Story Girl got no further. We never heard the story of the man
+who always had his own opinion. Felix came tearing up the lane, with a
+newspaper in his hand. When a boy as fat as Felix runs at full speed
+on a broiling August forenoon, he has something to run for--as Felicity
+remarked.
+
+"He must have got some bad news at the office," said Sara Ray.
+
+"Oh, I hope nothing has happened to father," I exclaimed, springing
+anxiously to my feet, a sick, horrible feeling of fear running over me
+like a cool, rippling wave.
+
+"It's just as likely to be good news he is running for as bad," said the
+Story Girl, who was no believer in meeting trouble half way.
+
+"He wouldn't be running so fast for good news," said Dan cynically.
+
+We were not left long in doubt. The orchard gate flew open and Felix was
+among us. One glimpse of his face told us that he was no bearer of
+glad tidings. He had been running hard and should have been rubicund.
+Instead, he was "as pale as are the dead." I could not have asked him
+what was the matter had my life depended on it. It was Felicity who
+demanded impatiently of my shaking, voiceless brother:
+
+"Felix King, what has scared you?"
+
+Felix held out the newspaper--it was the Charlottetown _Daily
+Enterprise_.
+
+"It's there," he gasped. "Look--read--oh, do you--think it's--true?
+The--end of--the world--is coming to-morrow--at two--o'clock--in the
+afternoon!"
+
+Crash! Felicity had dropped the cup of clouded blue, which had passed
+unscathed through so many changing years, and now at last lay shattered
+on the stone of the well curb. At any other time we should all have
+been aghast over such a catastrophe, but it passed unnoticed now. What
+mattered it that all the cups in the world be broken to-day if the crack
+o' doom must sound to-morrow?
+
+"Oh, Sara Stanley, do you believe it? DO you?" gasped Felicity,
+clutching the Story Girl's hand. Cecily's prayer had been answered.
+Excitement had come with a vengeance, and under its stress Felicity
+had spoken first. But this, like the breaking of the cup, had no
+significance for us at the moment.
+
+The Story Girl snatched the paper and read the announcement to a group
+on which sudden, tense silence had fallen. Under a sensational headline,
+"The Last Trump will sound at Two O'clock To-morrow," was a paragraph to
+the effect that the leader of a certain noted sect in the United States
+had predicted that August twelfth would be the Judgment Day, and that
+all his numerous followers were preparing for the dread event by prayer,
+fasting, and the making of appropriate white garments for ascension
+robes.
+
+I laugh at the remembrance now--until I recall the real horror of fear
+that enwrapped us in that sunny orchard that August morning of long ago;
+and then I laugh no more. We were only children, be it remembered, with
+a very firm and simple faith that grown people knew much more than we
+did, and a rooted conviction that whatever you read in a newspaper must
+be true. If the _Daily Enterprise_ said that August twelfth was to be
+the Judgment Day how were you going to get around it?
+
+"Do you believe it, Sara Stanley?" persisted Felicity. "DO you?"
+
+"No--no, I don't believe a word of it," said the Story Girl.
+
+But for once her voice failed to carry conviction--or, rather, it
+carried conviction of the very opposite kind. It was borne in upon our
+miserable minds that if the Story Girl did not altogether believe it was
+true she believed it might be true; and the possibility was almost as
+dreadful as the certainty.
+
+"It CAN'T be true," said Sara Ray, seeking refuge, as usual, in tears.
+"Why, everything looks just the same. Things COULDN'T look the same if
+the Judgment Day was going to be to-morrow."
+
+"But that's just the way it's to come," I said uncomfortably. "It tells
+you in the Bible. It's to come just like a thief in the night."
+
+"But it tells you another thing in the Bible, too," said Cecily eagerly.
+"It says nobody knows when the Judgment Day is to come--not even the
+angels in heaven. Now, if the angels in heaven don't know it, do you
+suppose the editor of the _Enterprise_ can know it--and him a Grit,
+too?"
+
+"I guess he knows as much about it as a Tory would," retorted the Story
+Girl. Uncle Roger was a Liberal and Uncle Alec a Conservative, and
+the girls held fast to the political traditions of their respective
+households. "But it isn't really the _Enterprise_ editor at all who is
+saying it--it's a man in the States who claims to be a prophet. If he IS
+a prophet perhaps he has found out somehow."
+
+"And it's in the paper, too, and that's printed as well as the Bible,"
+said Dan.
+
+"Well, I'm going to depend on the Bible," said Cecily. "I don't believe
+it's the Judgment Day to-morrow--but I'm scared, for all that," she
+added piteously.
+
+That was exactly the position of us all. As in the case of the
+bell-ringing ghost, we did not believe but we trembled.
+
+"Nobody might have known when the Bible was written," said Dan, "but
+maybe somebody knows now. Why, the Bible was written thousands of years
+ago, and that paper was printed this very morning. There's been time to
+find out ever so much more."
+
+"I want to do so many things," said the Story Girl, plucking off her
+crown of buttercup gold with a tragic gesture, "but if it's the Judgment
+Day to-morrow I won't have time to do any of them."
+
+"It can't be much worse than dying, I s'pose," said Felix, grasping at
+any straw of comfort.
+
+"I'm awful glad I've got into the habit of going to church and Sunday
+School this summer," said Peter very soberly. "I wish I'd made up my
+mind before this whether to be a Presbyterian or a Methodist. Do you
+s'pose it's too late now?"
+
+"Oh, that doesn't matter," said Cecily earnestly. "If--if you're a
+Christian, Peter, that is all that's necessary."
+
+"But it's too late for that," said Peter miserably. "I can't turn into
+a Christian between this and two o'clock to-morrow. I'll just have to be
+satisfied with making up my mind to be a Presbyterian or a Methodist. I
+wanted to wait till I got old enough to make out what was the difference
+between them, but I'll have to chance it now. I guess I'll be a
+Presbyterian, 'cause I want to be like the rest of you. Yes, I'll be a
+Presbyterian."
+
+"I know a story about Judy Pineau and the word Presbyterian," said the
+Story Girl, "but I can't tell it now. If to-morrow isn't the Judgment
+Day I'll tell it Monday."
+
+"If I had known that to-morrow might be the Judgment Day I wouldn't have
+quarrelled with you last Monday, Sara Stanley, or been so horrid and
+sulky all the week. Indeed I wouldn't," said Felicity, with very unusual
+humility.
+
+Ah, Felicity! We were all, in the depths of our pitiful little souls,
+reviewing the innumerable things we would or would not have done "if
+we had known." What a black and endless list they made--those sins
+of omission and commission that rushed accusingly across our young
+memories! For us the leaves of the Book of Judgment were already opened;
+and we stood at the bar of our own consciences, than which for youth
+or eld, there can be no more dread tribunal. I thought of all the evil
+deeds of my short life--of pinching Felix to make him cry out at family
+prayers, of playing truant from Sunday School and going fishing one
+day, of a certain fib--no, no away from this awful hour with all such
+euphonious evasions--of a LIE I had once told, of many a selfish and
+unkind word and thought and action. And to-morrow might be the great
+and terrible day of the last accounting! Oh, if I had only been a better
+boy!
+
+"The quarrel was as much my fault as yours, Felicity," said the Story
+Girl, putting her arm around Felicity. "We can't undo it now. But if
+to-morrow isn't the Judgment Day we must be careful never to quarrel
+again. Oh, I wish father was here."
+
+"He will be," said Cecily. "If it's the Judgment Day for Prince Edward
+Island it will be for Europe, too."
+
+"I wish we could just KNOW whether what the paper says is true or not,"
+said Felix desperately. "It seems to me I could brace up if I just
+KNEW."
+
+But to whom could we appeal? Uncle Alec was away and would not be back
+until late that night. Neither Aunt Janet nor Uncle Roger were people to
+whom we cared to apply in such a crisis. We were afraid of the Judgment
+Day; but we were almost equally afraid of being laughed at. How about
+Aunt Olivia?
+
+"No, Aunt Olivia has gone to bed with a sick headache and mustn't be
+disturbed," said the Story Girl. "She said I must get dinner ready,
+because there was plenty of cold meat, and nothing to do but boil the
+potatoes and peas, and set the table. I don't know how I can put my
+thoughts into it when the Judgment Day may be to-morrow. Besides, what
+is the good of asking the grown-ups? They don't know anything more about
+this than we do."
+
+"But if they'd just SAY they didn't believe it, it would be a sort of
+comfort," said Cecily.
+
+"I suppose the minister would know, but he's away on his vacation" said
+Felicity. "Anyhow, I'll go and ask mother what she thinks of it."
+
+Felicity picked up the _Enterprise_ and betook herself to the house. We
+awaited her return in dire suspense.
+
+"Well, what does she say?" asked Cecily tremulously.
+
+"She said, 'Run away and don't bother me. I haven't any time for your
+nonsense.'" responded Felicity in an injured tone. "And I said, 'But,
+ma, the paper SAYS to-morrow is the Judgment Day,' and ma just said
+'Judgment Fiddlesticks!'"
+
+"Well, that's kind of comforting," said Peter. "She can't put any faith
+in it, or she'd be more worked up."
+
+"If it only wasn't PRINTED!" said Dan gloomily.
+
+"Let's all go over and ask Uncle Roger," said Felix desperately.
+
+That we should make Uncle Roger a court of last resort indicated all
+too clearly the state of our minds. But we went. Uncle Roger was in
+his barn-yard, hitching his black mare into the buggy. His copy of the
+_Enterprise_ was sticking out of his pocket. He looked, as we saw with
+sinking hearts, unusually grave and preoccupied. There was not a glimmer
+of a smile about his face.
+
+"You ask him," said Felicity, nudging the Story Girl.
+
+"Uncle Roger," said the Story Girl, the golden notes of her voice
+threaded with fear and appeal, "the _Enterprise_ says that to-morrow is
+the Judgment Day? IS it? Do YOU think it is?"
+
+"I'm afraid so," said Uncle Roger gravely. "The _Enterprise_ is always
+very careful to print only reliable news."
+
+"But mother doesn't believe it," cried Felicity.
+
+Uncle Roger shook his head.
+
+"That is just the trouble," he said. "People won't believe it till it's
+too late. I'm going straight to Markdale to pay a man there some money I
+owe him, and after dinner I'm going to Summerside to buy me a new suit.
+My old one is too shabby for the Judgment Day."
+
+He got into his buggy and drove away, leaving eight distracted mortals
+behind him.
+
+"Well, I suppose that settles it," said Peter, in despairing tone.
+
+"Is there anything we can do to PREPARE?" asked Cecily.
+
+"I wish I had a white dress like you girls," sobbed Sara Ray. "But I
+haven't, and it's too late to get one. Oh, I wish I had minded what ma
+said better. I wouldn't have disobeyed her so often if I'd thought the
+Judgment Day was so near. When I go home I'm going to tell her about
+going to the magic lantern show."
+
+"I'm not sure that Uncle Roger meant what he said," remarked the Story
+Girl. "I couldn't get a look into his eyes. If he was trying to hoax
+us there would have been a twinkle in them. He can never help that.
+You know he would think it a great joke to frighten us like this. It's
+really dreadful to have no grown-ups you can depend on."
+
+"We could depend on father if he was here," said Dan stoutly. "HE'D tell
+us the truth."
+
+"He would tell us what he THOUGHT was true, Dan, but he couldn't KNOW.
+He's not such a well-educated man as the editor of the _Enterprise_. No,
+there's nothing to do but wait and see."
+
+"Let us go into the house and read just what the Bible does say about
+it," suggested Cecily.
+
+We crept in carefully, lest we disturb Aunt Olivia, and Cecily found and
+read the significant portion of Holy Writ. There was little comfort for
+us in that vivid and terrible picture.
+
+"Well," said the Story Girl finally. "I must go and get the potatoes
+ready. I suppose they must be boiled even if it is the Judgment Day
+to-morrow. But I don't believe it is."
+
+"And I've got to go and stump elderberries," said Peter. "I don't see
+how I can do it--go away back there alone. I'll feel scared to death the
+whole time."
+
+"Tell Uncle Roger that, and say if to-morrow is the end of the world
+that there is no good in stumping any more fields," I suggested.
+
+"Yes, and if he lets you off then we'll know he was in earnest," chimed
+in Cecily. "But if he still says you must go that'll be a sign he
+doesn't believe it."
+
+Leaving the Story Girl and Peter to peel their potatoes, the rest of
+us went home, where Aunt Janet, who had gone to the well and found the
+fragments of the old blue cup, gave poor Felicity a bitter scolding
+about it. But Felicity bore it very patiently--nay, more, she seemed to
+delight in it.
+
+"Ma can't believe to-morrow is the last day, or she wouldn't scold like
+that," she told us; and this comforted us until after dinner, when the
+Story Girl and Peter came over and told us that Uncle Roger had really
+gone to Summerside. Then we plunged down into fear and wretchedness
+again.
+
+"But he said I must go and stump elderberries just the same" said Peter.
+"He said it might NOT be the Judgment Day to-morrow, though he believed
+it was, and it would keep me out of mischief. But I just can't stand it
+back there alone. Some of you fellows must come with me. I don't want
+you to work, but just for company."
+
+It was finally decided that Dan and Felix should go. I wanted to go
+also, but the girls protested.
+
+"YOU must stay and keep us cheered up," implored Felicity. "I just don't
+know how I'm ever going to put in the afternoon. I promised Kitty Marr
+that I'd go down and spend it with her, but I can't now. And I can't
+knit any at my lace. I'd just keep thinking, 'What is the use? Perhaps
+it'll all be burned up to-morrow.'"
+
+So I stayed with the girls, and a miserable afternoon we had of it. The
+Story Girl again and again declared that she "didn't believe it," but
+when we asked her to tell a story, she evaded it with a flimsy excuse.
+Cecily pestered Aunt Janet's life out, asking repeatedly, "Ma, will you
+be washing Monday?" "Ma, will you be going to prayer meeting Tuesday
+night?" "Ma, will you be preserving raspberries next week?" and various
+similar questions. It was a huge comfort to her that Aunt Janet always
+said, "Yes," or "Of course," as if there could be no question about it.
+
+Sara Ray cried until I wondered how one small head could contain all the
+tears she shed. But I do not believe she was half as much frightened as
+disappointed that she had no white dress. In mid-afternoon Cecily came
+downstairs with her forget-me-not jug in her hand--a dainty bit of
+china, wreathed with dark blue forget-me-nots, which Cecily prized
+highly, and in which she always kept her toothbrush.
+
+"Sara, I am going to give you this jug," she said solemnly.
+
+Now, Sara had always coveted this particular jug. She stopped crying
+long enough to clutch it delightedly.
+
+"Oh, Cecily, thank you. But are you sure you won't want it back if
+to-morrow isn't the Judgment Day?"
+
+"No, it's yours for good," said Cecily, with the high, remote air of one
+to whom forget-me-not jugs and all such pomps and vanities of the world
+were as a tale that is told.
+
+"Are you going to give any one your cherry vase?" asked Felicity, trying
+to speak indifferently. Felicity had never admired the forget-me-not
+jug, but she had always hankered after the cherry vase--an affair of
+white glass, with a cluster of red glass cherries and golden-green glass
+leaves on its side, which Aunt Olivia had given Cecily one Christmas.
+
+"No, I'm not," answered Cecily, with a change of tone.
+
+"Oh, well, I don't care," said Felicity quickly. "Only, if to-morrow is
+the last day, the cherry vase won't be much use to you."
+
+"I guess it will be as much use to me as to any one else," said Cecily
+indignantly. She had sacrificed her dear forget-me-not jug to satisfy
+some pang of conscience, or propitiate some threatening fate, but
+surrender her precious cherry vase she could not and would not. Felicity
+needn't be giving any hints!
+
+With the gathering shades of night our plight became pitiful. In the
+daylight, surrounded by homely, familiar sights and sounds, it was not
+so difficult to fortify our souls with a cheering incredulity. But now,
+in this time of shadows, dread belief clutched us and wrung us with
+terror. If there had been one wise older friend to tell us, in serious
+fashion, that we need not be afraid, that the _Enterprise_ paragraph
+was naught save the idle report of a deluded fanatic, it would have been
+well for us. But there was not. Our grown-ups, instead, considered our
+terror an exquisite jest. At that very moment, Aunt Olivia, who had
+recovered from her headache, and Aunt Janet were laughing in the kitchen
+over the state the children were in because they were afraid the end
+of the world was close at hand. Aunt Janet's throaty gurgle and Aunt
+Olivia's trilling mirth floated out through the open window.
+
+"Perhaps they'll laugh on the other side of their faces to-morrow," said
+Dan, with gloomy satisfaction.
+
+We were sitting on the cellar hatch, watching what might be our last
+sunset o'er the dark hills of time. Peter was with us. It was his last
+Sunday to go home, but he had elected to remain.
+
+"If to-morrow is the Judgment Day I want to be with you fellows," he
+said.
+
+Sara Ray had also yearned to stay, but could not because her mother had
+told her she must be home before dark.
+
+"Never mind, Sara," comforted Cecily. "It's not to be till two o'clock
+to-morrow, so you'll have plenty of time to get up here before anything
+happens."
+
+"But there might be a mistake," sobbed Sara. "It might be two o'clock
+to-night instead of to-morrow."
+
+It might, indeed. This was a new horror, which had not occurred to us.
+
+"I'm sure I won't sleep a wink to-night," said Felix.
+
+"The paper SAYS two o'clock to-morrow," said Dan. "You needn't worry,
+Sara."
+
+But Sara departed, weeping. She did not, however, forget to carry the
+forget-me-not jug with her. All things considered, her departure was a
+relief. Such a constantly tearful damsel was not a pleasant companion.
+Cecily and Felicity and the Story Girl did not cry. They were made of
+finer, firmer stuff. Dry-eyed, with such courage as they might, they
+faced whatever might be in store for them.
+
+"I wonder where we'll all be this time to-morrow night," said Felix
+mournfully, as we watched the sunset between the dark fir boughs. It was
+an ominous sunset. The sun dropped down amid dark, livid clouds, that
+turned sullen shades of purple and fiery red behind him.
+
+"I hope we'll be all together, wherever we are," said Cecily gently.
+"Nothing can be so very bad then."
+
+"I'm going to read the Bible all to-morrow forenoon," said Peter.
+
+When Aunt Olivia came out to go home the Story Girl asked her permission
+to stay all night with Felicity and Cecily. Aunt Olivia assented
+lightly, swinging her hat on her arm and including us all in a friendly
+smile. She looked very pretty, with her big blue eyes and warm-hued
+golden hair. We loved Aunt Olivia; but just now we resented her having
+laughed at us with Aunt Janet, and we refused to smile back.
+
+"What a sulky, sulky lot of little people," said Aunt Olivia, going away
+across the yard, holding her pretty dress up from the dewy grass.
+
+Peter resolved to stay all night with us, too, not troubling himself
+about anybody's permission. When we went to bed it was settling down for
+a stormy night, and the rain was streaming wetly on the roof, as if the
+world, like Sara Ray, were weeping because its end was so near. Nobody
+forgot or hurried over his prayers that night. We would dearly have
+loved to leave the candle burning, but Aunt Janet's decree regarding
+this was as inexorable as any of Mede and Persia. Out the candle must
+go; and we lay there, quaking, with the wild rain streaming down on the
+roof above us, and the voices of the storm wailing through the writhing
+spruce trees.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX. THE JUDGMENT SUNDAY
+
+Sunday morning broke, dull and gray. The rain had ceased, but the
+clouds hung dark and brooding above a world which, in its windless
+calm, following the spent storm-throe, seemed to us to be waiting "till
+judgment spoke the doom of fate." We were all up early. None of us, it
+appeared, had slept well, and some of us not at all. The Story Girl
+had been among the latter, and she looked very pale and wan, with black
+shadows under her deep-set eyes. Peter, however, had slept soundly
+enough after twelve o'clock.
+
+"When you've been stumping out elderberries all the afternoon it'll take
+more than the Judgment Day to keep you awake all night," he said. "But
+when I woke up this morning it was just awful. I'd forgot it for a
+moment, and then it all came back with a rush, and I was worse scared
+than before."
+
+Cecily was pale but brave. For the first time in years she had not put
+her hair up in curlers on Saturday night. It was brushed and braided
+with Puritan simplicity.
+
+"If it's the Judgment Day I don't care whether my hair is curly or not,"
+she said.
+
+"Well," said Aunt Janet, when we all descended to the kitchen, "this is
+the first time you young ones have ever all got up without being called,
+and that's a fact."
+
+At breakfast our appetites were poor. How could the grown-ups eat
+as they did? After breakfast and the necessary chores there was the
+forenoon to be lived through. Peter, true to his word, got out his Bible
+and began to read from the first chapter in Genesis.
+
+"I won't have time to read it all through, I s'pose," he said, "but I'll
+get along as far as I can."
+
+There was no preaching in Carlisle that day, and Sunday School was not
+till the evening. Cecily got out her Lesson Slip and studied the lesson
+conscientiously. The rest of us did not see how she could do it. We
+could not, that was very certain.
+
+"If it isn't the Judgment Day, I want to have the lesson learned," she
+said, "and if it is I'll feel I've done what was right. But I never
+found it so hard to remember the Golden Text before."
+
+The long dragging hours were hard to endure. We roamed restlessly about,
+and went to and fro--all save Peter, who still steadily read away at his
+Bible. He was through Genesis by eleven and beginning on Exodus.
+
+"There's a good deal of it I don't understand," he said, "but I read
+every word, and that's the main thing. That story about Joseph and his
+brother was so int'resting I almost forgot about the Judgment Day."
+
+But the long drawn out dread was beginning to get on Dan's nerves.
+
+"If it is the Judgment Day," he growled, as we went in to dinner, "I
+wish it'd hurry up and have it over."
+
+"Oh, Dan!" cried Felicity and Cecily together, in a chorus of horror.
+But the Story Girl looked as if she rather sympathized with Dan.
+
+If we had eaten little at breakfast we could eat still less at dinner.
+After dinner the clouds rolled away, and the sun came joyously and
+gloriously out. This, we thought, was a good omen. Felicity opined that
+it wouldn't have cleared up if it was the Judgment Day. Nevertheless, we
+dressed ourselves carefully, and the girls put on their white dresses.
+
+Sara Ray came up, still crying, of course. She increased our uneasiness
+by saying that her mother believed the _Enterprise_ paragraph, and was
+afraid that the end of the world was really at hand.
+
+"That's why she let me come up," she sobbed. "If she hadn't been afraid
+I don't believe she would have let me come up. But I'd have died if I
+couldn't have come. And she wasn't a bit cross when I told her I had
+gone to the magic lantern show. That's an awful bad sign. I hadn't a
+white dress, but I put on my white muslin apron with the frills."
+
+"That seems kind of queer," said Felicity doubtfully. "You wouldn't put
+on an apron to go to church, and so it doesn't seem as if it was proper
+to put it on for Judgment Day either."
+
+"Well, it's the best I could do," said Sara disconsolately. "I wanted to
+have something white on. It's just like a dress only it hasn't sleeves."
+
+"Let's go into the orchard and wait," said the Story Girl. "It's one
+o'clock now, so in another hour we'll know the worst. We'll leave the
+front door open, and we'll hear the big clock when it strikes two."
+
+No better plan being suggested, we betook ourselves to the orchard, and
+sat on the boughs of Uncle Alec's tree because the grass was wet. The
+world was beautiful and peaceful and green. Overhead was a dazzling blue
+sky, spotted with heaps of white cloud.
+
+"Pshaw, I don't believe there's any fear of it being the last day," said
+Dan, beginning a whistle out of sheer bravado.
+
+"Well, don't whistle on Sunday anyhow," said Felicity severely.
+
+"I don't see a thing about Methodists or Presbyterians, as far as I've
+gone, and I'm most through Exodus," said Peter suddenly. "When does it
+begin to tell about them?"
+
+"There's nothing about Methodists or Presbyterians in the Bible," said
+Felicity scornfully.
+
+Peter looked amazed.
+
+"Well, how did they happen then?" he asked. "When did they begin to be?"
+
+"I've often thought it such a strange thing that there isn't a word
+about either of them in the Bible," said Cecily. "Especially when it
+mentions Baptists--or at least one Baptist."
+
+"Well, anyhow," said Peter, "even if it isn't the Judgment Day I'm
+going to keep on reading the Bible until I've got clean through. I never
+thought it was such an int'resting book."
+
+"It sounds simply dreadful to hear you call the Bible an interesting
+book," said Felicity, with a shudder at the sacrilege. "Why, you might
+be talking about ANY common book."
+
+"I didn't mean any harm," said Peter, crestfallen.
+
+"The Bible IS an interesting book," said the Story Girl, coming to
+Peter's rescue. "And there are magnificent stories in it--yes, Felicity,
+MAGNIFICENT. If the world doesn't come to an end I'll tell you the
+story of Ruth next Sunday--or look here! I'll tell it anyhow. That's a
+promise. Wherever we are next Sunday I'll tell you about Ruth."
+
+"Why, you wouldn't tell stories in heaven," said Cecily, in a very timid
+voice.
+
+"Why not?" said the Story Girl, with a flash of her eyes. "Indeed I
+shall. I'll tell stories as long as I've a tongue to talk with, or any
+one to listen."
+
+Ay, doubtless. That dauntless spirit would soar triumphantly above the
+wreck of matter and the crash of worlds, taking with it all its own wild
+sweetness and daring. Even the young-eyed cherubim, choiring on meadows
+of asphodel, might cease their harping for a time to listen to a tale
+of the vanished earth, told by that golden tongue. Some vague thought of
+this was in our minds as we looked at her; and somehow it comforted us.
+Not even the Judgment was so greatly to be feared if after it we were
+the SAME, our own precious little identities unchanged.
+
+"It must be getting handy two," said Cecily. "It seems as if we'd been
+waiting here for ever so much longer than an hour."
+
+Conversation languished. We watched and waited nervously. The moments
+dragged by, each seeming an hour. Would two o'clock never come and end
+the suspense? We all became very tense. Even Peter had to stop reading.
+Any unaccustomed sound or sight in the world about us struck on our taut
+senses like the trump of doom. A cloud passed over the sun and as the
+sudden shadow swept across the orchard we turned pale and trembled. A
+wagon rumbling over a plank bridge in the hollow made Sara Ray start up
+with a shriek. The slamming of a barn door over at Uncle Roger's caused
+the cold perspiration to break out on our faces.
+
+"I don't believe it's the Judgment Day," said Felix, "and I never have
+believed it. But oh, I wish that clock would strike two."
+
+"Can't you tell us a story to pass the time?" I entreated the Story
+Girl.
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"No, it would be no use to try. But if this isn't the Judgment Day I'll
+have a great one to tell of us being so scared."
+
+Pat presently came galloping up the orchard, carrying in his mouth a big
+field mouse, which, sitting down before us, he proceeded to devour, body
+and bones, afterwards licking his chops with great satisfaction.
+
+"It can't be the Judgment Day," said Sara Ray, brightening up. "Paddy
+would never be eating mice if it was."
+
+"If that clock doesn't soon strike two I shall go out of my seven
+senses," declared Cecily with unusual vehemence.
+
+"Time always seems long when you're waiting," said the Story Girl. "But
+it does seem as if we had been here more than an hour."
+
+"Maybe the clock struck and we didn't hear it," suggested Dan.
+"Somebody'd better go and see."
+
+"I'll go," said Cecily. "I suppose, even if anything happens, I'll have
+time to get back to you."
+
+We watched her white-clad figure pass through the gate and enter the
+front door. A few minutes passed--or a few years--we could not have told
+which. Then Cecily came running at full speed back to us. But when she
+reached us she trembled so much that at first she could not speak.
+
+"What is it? Is it past two?" implored the Story Girl.
+
+"It's--it's four," said Cecily with a gasp. "The old clock isn't going.
+Mother forgot to wind it up last night and it stopped. But it's four by
+the kitchen clock--so it isn't the Judgment Day--and tea is ready--and
+mother says to come in."
+
+We looked at each other, realizing what our dread had been, now that it
+was lifted. It was not the Judgment Day. The world and life were still
+before us, with all their potent lure of years unknown.
+
+"I'll never believe anything I read in the papers again," said Dan,
+rushing to the opposite extreme.
+
+"I told you the Bible was more to be depended on than the newspapers,"
+said Cecily triumphantly.
+
+Sara Ray and Peter and the Story Girl went home, and we went in to
+tea with royal appetites. Afterwards, as we dressed for Sunday School
+upstairs, our spirits carried us away to such an extent that Aunt
+Janet had to come twice to the foot of the stairs and inquire severely,
+"Children, have you forgotten what day this is?"
+
+"Isn't it nice that we're going to live a spell longer in this nice
+world?" said Felix, as we walked down the hill.
+
+"Yes, and Felicity and the Story Girl are speaking again," said Cecily
+happily.
+
+"And Felicity DID speak first," I said.
+
+"Yes, but it took the Judgment Day to make her. I wish," added Cecily
+with a sigh, "that I hadn't been in quite such a hurry giving away my
+forget-me-not jug."
+
+"And I wish I hadn't been in such a hurry deciding I'd be a
+Presbyterian," said Peter.
+
+"Well, it's not too late for that," said Dan. "You can change your mind
+now."
+
+"No, sir," said Peter with a flash of spirit, "I ain't one of the kind
+that says they'll be something just because they're scared, and when the
+scare is over go back on it. I said I'd be Presbyterian and I mean to
+stick to it."
+
+"You said you knew a story that had something to do with Presbyterians,"
+I said to the Story Girl. "Tell us it now."
+
+"Oh, no, it isn't the right kind of story to tell on Sunday," she
+replied. "But I'll tell it to-morrow morning."
+
+Accordingly, we heard it the next morning in the orchard.
+
+"Long ago, when Judy Pineau was young," said the Story Girl, "she was
+hired with Mrs. Elder Frewen--the first Mrs. Elder Frewen. Mrs. Frewen
+had been a school-teacher, and she was very particular as to how people
+talked, and the grammar they used. And she didn't like anything but
+refined words. One very hot day she heard Judy Pineau say she was 'all
+in a sweat.' Mrs. Frewen was greatly shocked, and said, 'Judy, you
+shouldn't say that. It's horses that sweat. You should say you are in
+a perspiration.' Well, Judy promised she'd remember, because she liked
+Mrs. Frewen and was anxious to please her. Not long afterwards Judy was
+scrubbing the kitchen floor one morning, and when Mrs. Frewen came in
+Judy looked up and said, quite proud over using the right word, 'Oh,
+Mees Frewen, ain't it awful hot? I declare I'm all in a Presbyterian.'"
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI. DREAMERS OF DREAMS
+
+August went out and September came in. Harvest was ended; and though
+summer was not yet gone, her face was turned westering. The asters
+lettered her retreating footsteps in a purple script, and over the hills
+and valleys hung a faint blue smoke, as if Nature were worshipping at
+her woodland altar. The apples began to burn red on the bending boughs;
+crickets sang day and night; squirrels chattered secrets of Polichinelle
+in the spruces; the sunshine was as thick and yellow as molten gold;
+school opened, and we small denizens of the hill farms lived happy days
+of harmless work and necessary play, closing in nights of peaceful,
+undisturbed slumber under a roof watched over by autumnal stars.
+
+At least, our slumbers were peaceful and undisturbed until our orgy of
+dreaming began.
+
+"I would really like to know what especial kind of deviltry you young
+fry are up to this time," said Uncle Roger one evening, as he passed
+through the orchard with his gun on his shoulder, bound for the swamp.
+
+We were sitting in a circle before the Pulpit Stone, each writing
+diligently in an exercise book, and eating the Rev. Mr. Scott's plums,
+which always reached their prime of juicy, golden-green flesh and bloomy
+blue skin in September. The Rev. Mr. Scott was dead and gone, but those
+plums certainly kept his memory green, as his forgotten sermons could
+never have done.
+
+"Oh," said Felicity in a shocked tone, when Uncle Roger had passed by,
+"Uncle Roger SWORE."
+
+"Oh, no, he didn't," said the Story Girl quickly. "'Deviltry' isn't
+swearing at all. It only means extra bad mischief."
+
+"Well, it's not a very nice word, anyhow," said Felicity.
+
+"No, it isn't," agreed the Story Girl with a regretful sigh. "It's
+very expressive, but it isn't nice. That is the way with so many words.
+They're expressive, but they're not nice, and so a girl can't use them."
+
+The Story Girl sighed again. She loved expressive words, and treasured
+them as some girls might have treasured jewels. To her, they were as
+lustrous pearls, threaded on the crimson cord of a vivid fancy. When she
+met with a new one she uttered it over and over to herself in solitude,
+weighing it, caressing it, infusing it with the radiance of her voice,
+making it her own in all its possibilities for ever.
+
+"Well, anyhow, it isn't a suitable word in this case," insisted
+Felicity. "We are not up to any dev--any extra bad mischief. Writing
+down one's dreams isn't mischief at all."
+
+Certainly it wasn't. Surely not even the straitest sect of the grown-ups
+could call it so. If writing down your dreams, with agonizing care as
+to composition and spelling--for who knew that the eyes of generations
+unborn might not read the record?--were not a harmless amusement, could
+anything be called so? I trow not.
+
+We had been at it for a fortnight, and during that time we only lived to
+have dreams and write them down. The Story Girl had originated the idea
+one evening in the rustling, rain-wet ways of the spruce wood, where we
+were picking gum after a day of showers. When we had picked enough, we
+sat down on the moss-grown stones at the end of a long arcade, where it
+opened out on the harvest-golden valley below us, our jaws exercising
+themselves vigorously on the spoil of our climbings. We were never
+allowed to chew gum in school or in company, but in wood and field,
+orchard and hayloft, such rules were in abeyance.
+
+"My Aunt Jane used to say it wasn't polite to chew gum anywhere," said
+Peter rather ruefully.
+
+"I don't suppose your Aunt Jane knew all the rules of etiquette," said
+Felicity, designing to crush Peter with a big word, borrowed from the
+_Family Guide_. But Peter was not to be so crushed. He had in him a
+certain toughness of fibre, that would have been proof against a whole
+dictionary.
+
+"She did, too," he retorted. "My Aunt Jane was a real lady, even if she
+was only a Craig. She knew all those rules and she kept them when there
+was nobody round to see her, just the same as when any one was. And she
+was smart. If father had had half her git-up-and-git I wouldn't be a
+hired boy to-day."
+
+"Have you any idea where your father is?" asked Dan.
+
+"No," said Peter indifferently. "The last we heard of him he was in the
+Maine lumber woods. But that was three years ago. I don't know where he
+is now, and," added Peter deliberately, taking his gum from his mouth to
+make his statement more impressive, "I don't care."
+
+"Oh, Peter, that sounds dreadful," said Cecily. "Your own father!"
+
+"Well," said Peter defiantly, "if your own father had run away when
+you was a baby, and left your mother to earn her living by washing and
+working out, I guess you wouldn't care much about him either."
+
+"Perhaps your father may come home some of these days with a huge
+fortune," suggested the Story Girl.
+
+"Perhaps pigs may whistle, but they've poor mouths for it," was all the
+answer Peter deigned to this charming suggestion.
+
+"There goes Mr. Campbell down the road," said Dan. "That's his new mare.
+Isn't she a dandy? She's got a skin like black satin. He calls her Betty
+Sherman."
+
+"I don't think it's very nice to call a horse after your own
+grandmother," said Felicity.
+
+"Betty Sherman would have thought it a compliment," said the Story Girl.
+
+"Maybe she would. She couldn't have been very nice herself, or she would
+never have gone and asked a man to marry her," said Felicity.
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"Goodness me, it was dreadful! Would YOU do such a thing yourself?"
+
+"Well, I don't know," said the Story Girl, her eyes gleaming with impish
+laughter. "If I wanted him DREADFULLY, and HE wouldn't do the asking,
+perhaps I would."
+
+"I'd rather die an old maid forty times over," exclaimed Felicity.
+
+"Nobody as pretty as you will ever be an old maid, Felicity," said
+Peter, who never put too fine an edge on his compliments.
+
+Felicity tossed her golden tressed head and tried to look angry, but
+made a dismal failure of it.
+
+"It wouldn't be ladylike to ask any one to marry you, you know," argued
+Cecily.
+
+"I don't suppose the _Family Guide_ would think so," agreed the Story
+Girl lazily, with some sarcasm in her voice. The Story Girl never held
+the _Family Guide_ in such reverence as did Felicity and Cecily. They
+pored over the "etiquette column" every week, and could have told you
+on demand, just exactly what kind of gloves should be worn at a wedding,
+what you should say when introducing or being introduced, and how you
+ought to look when your best young man came to see you.
+
+"They say Mrs. Richard Cook asked HER husband to marry her," said Dan.
+
+"Uncle Roger says she didn't exactly ask him, but she helped the lame
+dog over the stile so slick that Richard was engaged to her before he
+knew what had happened to him," said the Story Girl. "I know a story
+about Mrs. Richard Cook's grandmother. She was one of those women who
+are always saying 'I told you so--'"
+
+"Take notice, Felicity," said Dan aside.
+
+"--And she was very stubborn. Soon after she was married she and
+her husband quarrelled about an apple tree they had planted in their
+orchard. The label was lost. He said it was a Fameuse and she declared
+it was a Yellow Transparent. They fought over it till the neighbours
+came out to listen. Finally he got so angry that he told her to shut up.
+They didn't have any _Family Guide_ in those days, so he didn't know
+it wasn't polite to say shut up to your wife. I suppose she thought she
+would teach him manners, for would you believe it? That woman did shut
+up, and never spoke one single word to her husband for five years. And
+then, in five years' time, the tree bore apples, and they WERE Yellow
+Transparents. And then she spoke at last. She said, 'I told you so.'"
+
+"And did she talk to him after that as usual?" asked Sara Ray.
+
+"Oh, yes, she was just the same as she used to be," said the Story Girl
+wearily. "But that doesn't belong to the story. It stops when she spoke
+at last. You're never satisfied to leave a story where it should stop,
+Sara Ray."
+
+"Well, I always like to know what happens afterwards," said Sara Ray.
+
+"Uncle Roger says he wouldn't want a wife he could never quarrel with,"
+remarked Dan. "He says it would be too tame a life for him."
+
+"I wonder if Uncle Roger will always stay a bachelor," said Cecily.
+
+"He seems real happy," observed Peter.
+
+"Ma says that it's all right as long as he is a bachelor because he
+won't take any one," said Felicity, "but if he wakes up some day and
+finds he is an old bachelor because he can't get any one it'll have a
+very different flavour."
+
+"If your Aunt Olivia was to up and get married what would your Uncle
+Roger do for a housekeeper?" asked Peter.
+
+"Oh, but Aunt Olivia will never be married now," said Felicity. "Why,
+she'll be twenty-nine next January."
+
+"Well, o' course, that's pretty old," admitted Peter, "but she might
+find some one who wouldn't mind that, seeing she's so pretty."
+
+"It would be awful splendid and exciting to have a wedding in the
+family, wouldn't it?" said Cecily. "I've never seen any one married,
+and I'd just love to. I've been to four funerals, but not to one single
+wedding."
+
+"I've never even got to a funeral," said Sara Ray gloomily.
+
+"There's the wedding veil of the proud princess," said Cecily, pointing
+to a long drift of filmy vapour in the southwestern sky.
+
+"And look at that sweet pink cloud below it," added Felicity.
+
+"Maybe that little pink cloud is a dream, getting all ready to float
+down into somebody's sleep," suggested the Story Girl.
+
+"I had a perfectly awful dream last night," said Cecily, with a shudder
+of remembrance. "I dreamed I was on a desert island inhabited by tigers
+and natives with two heads."
+
+"Oh!" the Story Girl looked at Cecily half reproachfully. "Why couldn't
+you tell it better than that? If I had such a dream I could tell it so
+that everybody else would feel as if they had dreamed it, too."
+
+"Well, I'm not you," countered Cecily, "and I wouldn't want to frighten
+any one as I was frightened. It was an awful dream--but it was kind of
+interesting, too."
+
+"I've had some real int'resting dreams," said Peter, "but I can't
+remember them long. I wish I could."
+
+"Why don't you write them down?" suggested the Story Girl. "Oh--" she
+turned upon us a face illuminated with a sudden inspiration. "I've an
+idea. Let us each get an exercise book and write down all our dreams,
+just as we dream them. We'll see who'll have the most interesting
+collection. And we'll have them to read and laugh over when we're old
+and gray."
+
+Instantly we all saw ourselves and each other by inner vision, old and
+gray--all but the Story Girl. We could not picture her as old. Always,
+as long as she lived, so it seemed to us, must she have sleek brown
+curls, a voice like the sound of a harpstring in the wind, and eyes that
+were stars of eternal youth.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII. THE DREAM BOOKS
+
+The next day the Story Girl coaxed Uncle Roger to take her to Markdale,
+and there she bought our dream books. They were ten cents apiece, with
+ruled pages and mottled green covers. My own lies open beside me as I
+write, its yellowed pages inscribed with the visions that haunted my
+childish slumbers on those nights of long ago.
+
+On the cover is pasted a lady's visiting card, on which is written,
+"The Dream Book of Beverley King." Cecily had a packet of visiting cards
+which she was hoarding against the day when she would be grown up and
+could put the calling etiquette of the _Family Guide_ into practice; but
+she generously gave us all one apiece for the covers of our dream books.
+
+As I turn the pages and glance over the (----) records, each one
+beginning, "Last night I dreamed," the past comes very vividly back to
+me. I see that bowery orchard, shining in memory with a soft glow of
+beauty--"the light that never was on land or sea,"--where we sat on
+those September evenings and wrote down our dreams, when the cares of
+the day were over and there was nothing to interfere with the pleasing
+throes of composition. Peter--Dan--Felix--Cecily--Felicity--Sara
+Ray--the Story Girl--they are all around me once more, in the
+sweet-scented, fading grasses, each with open dream books and pencil in
+hand, now writing busily, now staring fixedly into space in search of
+some elusive word or phrase which might best describe the indescribable.
+I hear their laughing voices, I see their bright, unclouded eyes. In
+this little, old book, filled with cramped, boyish writing, there is a
+spell of white magic that sets the years at naught. Beverley King is a
+boy once more, writing down his dreams in the old King orchard on the
+homestead hill, blown over by musky winds.
+
+Opposite to him sits the Story Girl, with her scarlet rosetted head, her
+beautiful bare feet crossed before her, one slender hand propping her
+high, white brow, on either side of which fall her glossy curls.
+
+There, to the right, is sweet Cecily of the dear, brown eyes, with a
+little bloated dictionary beside her--for you dream of so many things
+you can't spell, or be expected to spell, when you are only eleven. Next
+to her sits Felicity, beautiful, and conscious that she is beautiful,
+with hair of spun sunshine, and sea-blue eyes, and all the roses of that
+vanished summer abloom in her cheeks.
+
+Peter is beside her, of course, sprawled flat on his stomach among the
+grasses, one hand clutching his black curls, with his dream book on a
+small, round stone before him--for only so can Peter compose at all, and
+even then he finds it hard work. He can handle a hoe more deftly than a
+pencil, and his spelling, even with all his frequent appeals to Cecily,
+is a fearful and wonderful thing. As for punctuation, he never attempts
+it, beyond an occasion period, jotted down whenever he happens to think
+of it, whether in the right place or not. The Story Girl goes over
+his dreams after he has written them out, and puts in the commas and
+semicolons, and straightens out the sentences.
+
+Felix sits on the right of the Story Girl, fat and stodgy, grimly in
+earnest even over dreams. He writes with his knees stuck up to form a
+writing-desk, and he always frowns fiercely the whole time.
+
+Dan, like Peter, writes lying down flat, but with his back towards us;
+and he has a dismal habit of groaning aloud, writhing his whole body,
+and digging his toes into the grass, when he cannot turn a sentence to
+suit him.
+
+Sara Ray is at his left. There is seldom anything to be said of Sara
+except to tell where she is. Like Tennyson's Maud, in one respect at
+least, Sara is splendidly null.
+
+Well, there we sit and write in our dream books, and Uncle Roger passes
+by and accuses us of being up to dev--to very bad mischief.
+
+Each of us was very anxious to possess the most exciting record; but
+we were an honourable little crew, and I do not think anything was ever
+written down in those dream books which had not really been dreamed. We
+had expected that the Story Girl would eclipse us all in the matter
+of dreams; but, at least in the beginning, her dreams were no more
+remarkable than those of the rest of us. In dreamland we were all equal.
+Cecily, indeed, seemed to have the most decided talent for dramatic
+dreams. That meekest and mildest of girls was in the habit of dreaming
+truly terrible things. Almost every night battle, murder, or sudden
+death played some part in her visions. On the other hand, Dan, who was a
+somewhat truculent fellow, addicted to the perusal of lurid dime novels
+which he borrowed from the other boys in school, dreamed dreams of such
+a peaceful and pastoral character that he was quite disgusted with the
+resulting tame pages of his dream book.
+
+But if the Story Girl could not dream anything more wonderful than the
+rest of us, she scored when it came to the telling. To hear her tell a
+dream was as good--or as bad--as dreaming it yourself.
+
+As far as writing them down was concerned, I believe that I, Beverley
+King, carried off the palm. I was considered to possess a pretty knack
+of composition. But the Story Girl went me one better even there,
+because, having inherited something of her father's talent for drawing,
+she illustrated her dreams with sketches that certainly caught the
+spirit of them, whatever might be said of their technical excellence.
+She had an especial knack for drawing monstrosities; and I vividly
+recall the picture of an enormous and hideous lizard, looking like a
+reptile of the pterodactyl period, which she had dreamed of seeing crawl
+across the roof of the house. On another occasion she had a frightful
+dream--at least, it seemed frightful while she told us and described the
+dreadful feeling it had given her--of being chased around the parlour
+by the ottoman, which made faces at her. She drew a picture of the
+grimacing ottoman on the margin of her dream book which so scared Sara
+Ray when she beheld it that she cried all the way home, and insisted on
+sleeping that night with Judy Pineau lest the furniture take to pursuing
+her also.
+
+Sara Ray's own dreams never amounted to much. She was always in trouble
+of some sort--couldn't get her hair braided, or her shoes on the right
+feet. Consequently, her dream book was very monotonous. The only thing
+worth mentioning in the way of dreams that Sara Ray ever achieved was
+when she dreamed that she went up in a balloon and fell out.
+
+"I expected to come down with an awful thud," she said shuddering, "but
+I lit as light as a feather and woke right up."
+
+"If you hadn't woke up you'd have died," said Peter with a dark
+significance. "If you dream of falling and DON'T wake you DO land with
+a thud and it kills you. That's what happens to people who die in their
+sleep."
+
+"How do you know?" asked Dan skeptically. "Nobody who died in his sleep
+could ever tell it."
+
+"My Aunt Jane told me so," said Peter.
+
+"I suppose that settles it," said Felicity disagreeably.
+
+"You always say something nasty when I mention my Aunt Jane," said Peter
+reproachfully.
+
+"What did I say that was nasty?" cried Felicity. "I didn't say a single
+thing."
+
+"Well, it sounded nasty," said Peter, who knew that it is the tone that
+makes the music.
+
+"What did your Aunt Jane look like?" asked Cecily sympathetically. "Was
+she pretty?"
+
+"No," conceded Peter reluctantly, "she wasn't pretty--but she looked
+like the woman in that picture the Story Girl's father sent her last
+week--the one with the shiny ring round her head and the baby in her
+lap. I've seen Aunt Jane look at me just like that woman looks at her
+baby. Ma never looks so. Poor ma is too busy washing. I wish I could
+dream of my Aunt Jane. I never do."
+
+"'Dream of the dead, you'll hear of the living,'" quoted Felix
+oracularly.
+
+"I dreamed last night that I threw a lighted match into that keg of
+gunpowder in Mr. Cook's store at Markdale," said Peter. "It blew up--and
+everything blew up--and they fished me out of the mess--but I woke up
+before I'd time to find out if I was killed or not."
+
+"One is so apt to wake up just as things get interesting," remarked the
+Story Girl discontentedly.
+
+"I dreamed last night that I had really truly curly hair," said Cecily
+mournfully. "And oh, I was so happy! It was dreadful to wake up and find
+it as straight as ever."
+
+Felix, that sober, solid fellow, dreamed constantly of flying through
+the air. His descriptions of his aerial flights over the tree-tops of
+dreamland always filled us with envy. None of the rest of us could
+ever compass such a dream, not even the Story Girl, who might have
+been expected to dream of flying if anybody did. Felix had a knack
+of dreaming anyhow, and his dream book, while suffering somewhat in
+comparison of literary style, was about the best of the lot when it came
+to subject matter. Cecily's might be more dramatic, but Felix's was more
+amusing. The dream which we all counted his masterpiece was the one in
+which a menagerie had camped in the orchard and the rhinoceros chased
+Aunt Janet around and around the Pulpit Stone, but turned into an
+inoffensive pig when it was on the point of catching her.
+
+Felix had a sick spell soon after we began our dream books, and Aunt
+Janet essayed to cure him by administering a dose of liver pills which
+Elder Frewen had assured her were a cure-all for every disease the flesh
+is heir to. But Felix flatly refused to take liver pills; Mexican Tea
+he would drink, but liver pills he would not take, in spite of his
+own suffering and Aunt Janet's commands and entreaties. I could not
+understand his antipathy to the insignificant little white pellets,
+which were so easy to swallow; but he explained the matter to us in the
+orchard when he had recovered his usual health and spirits.
+
+"I was afraid to take the liver pills for fear they'd prevent me from
+dreaming," he said. "Don't you remember old Miss Baxter in Toronto, Bev?
+And how she told Mrs. McLaren that she was subject to terrible dreams,
+and finally she took two liver pills and never had any more dreams after
+that. I'd rather have died than risk it," concluded Felix solemnly.
+
+"I'd an exciting dream last night for once," said Dan triumphantly. "I
+dreamt old Peg Bowen chased me. I thought I was up to her house and she
+took after me. You bet I scooted. And she caught me--yes, sir! I
+felt her skinny hand reach out and clutch my shoulder. I let out a
+screech--and woke up."
+
+"I should think you did screech," said Felicity. "We heard you clean
+over into our room."
+
+"I hate to dream of being chased because I can never run," said Sara
+Ray with a shiver. "I just stand rooted to the ground--and see it
+coming--and can't stir. It don't sound much written out, but it's awful
+to go through. I'm sure I hope I'll never dream Peg Bowen chases me.
+I'll die if I do."
+
+"I wonder what Peg Bowen would really do to a fellow if she caught him,"
+speculated Dan.
+
+"Peg Bowen doesn't need to catch you to do things to you," said Peter
+ominously. "She can put ill-luck on you just by looking at you--and she
+will if you offend her."
+
+"I don't believe that," said the Story Girl airily.
+
+"Don't you? All right, then! Last summer she called at Lem Hill's in
+Markdale, and he told her to clear out or he'd set the dog on her. Peg
+cleared out, and she went across his pasture, muttering to herself and
+throwing her arms round. And next day his very best cow took sick and
+died. How do you account for that?"
+
+"It might have happened anyhow," said the Story Girl--somewhat less
+assuredly, though.
+
+"It might. But I'd just as soon Peg Bowen didn't look at MY cows," said
+Peter.
+
+"As if you had any cows!" giggled Felicity.
+
+"I'm going to have cows some day," said Peter, flushing. "I don't mean
+to be a hired boy all my life. I'll have a farm of my own and cows and
+everything. You'll see if I won't."
+
+"I dreamed last night that we opened the blue chest," said the Story
+Girl, "and all the things were there--the blue china candlestick--only
+it was brass in the dream--and the fruit basket with the apple on
+it, and the wedding dress, and the embroidered petticoat. And we were
+laughing, and trying the things on, and having such fun. And Rachel Ward
+herself came and looked at us--so sad and reproachful--and we all felt
+ashamed, and I began to cry, and woke up crying."
+
+"I dreamed last night that Felix was thin," said Peter, laughing. "He
+did look so queer. His clothes just hung loose, and he was going round
+trying to hold them on."
+
+Everybody thought this was funny, except Felix. He would not speak to
+Peter for two days because of it. Felicity also got into trouble because
+of her dreams. One night she woke up, having just had a very exciting
+dream; but she went to sleep again, and in the morning she could not
+remember the dream at all. Felicity determined she would never let
+another dream get away from her in such a fashion; and the next time she
+wakened in the night--having dreamed that she was dead and buried--she
+promptly arose, lighted a candle, and proceeded to write the dream down
+then and there. While so employed she contrived to upset the candle and
+set fire to her nightgown--a brand-new one, trimmed with any quantity
+of crocheted lace. A huge hole was burned in it, and when Aunt Janet
+discovered it she lifted up her voice with no uncertain sound.
+Felicity had never received a sharper scolding. But she took it very
+philosophically. She was used to her mother's bitter tongue, and she was
+not unduly sensitive.
+
+"Anyhow, I saved my dream," she said placidly.
+
+And that, of course, was all that really mattered. Grown people were so
+strangely oblivious to the truly important things of life. Material
+for new garments, of night or day, could be bought in any shop for a
+trifling sum and made up out of hand. But if a dream escape you, in what
+market-place the wide world over can you hope to regain it? What coin of
+earthly minting will ever buy back for you that lost and lovely vision?
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII. SUCH STUFF AS DREAMS ARE MADE ON
+
+Peter took Dan and me aside one evening, as we were on our way to the
+orchard with our dream books, saying significantly that he wanted our
+advice. Accordingly, we went round to the spruce wood, where the girls
+would not see us to the rousing of their curiosity, and then Peter told
+us of his dilemma.
+
+"Last night I dreamed I was in church," he said. "I thought it was
+full of people, and I walked up the aisle to your pew and set down, as
+unconcerned as a pig on ice. And then I found that I hadn't a stitch of
+clothes on--NOT ONE BLESSED STITCH. Now"--Peter dropped his voice--"what
+is bothering me is this--would it be proper to tell a dream like that
+before the girls?"
+
+I was of the opinion that it would be rather questionable; but Dan vowed
+he didn't see why. HE'D tell it quick as any other dream. There was
+nothing bad in it.
+
+"But they're your own relations," said Peter. "They're no relation to
+me, and that makes a difference. Besides, they're all such ladylike
+girls. I guess I'd better not risk it. I'm pretty sure Aunt Jane
+wouldn't think it was proper to tell such a dream. And I don't want to
+offend Fel--any of them."
+
+So Peter never told that dream, nor did he write it down. Instead,
+I remember seeing in his dream book, under the date of September
+fifteenth, an entry to this effect:--
+
+"Last nite i dremed a drem. it wasent a polit drem so i won't rite it
+down."
+
+The girls saw this entry but, to their credit be it told, they never
+tried to find out what the "drem" was. As Peter said, they were "ladies"
+in the best and truest sense of that much abused appellation. Full of
+fun and frolic and mischief they were, with all the defects of their
+qualities and all the wayward faults of youth. But no indelicate thought
+or vulgar word could have been shaped or uttered in their presence. Had
+any of us boys ever been guilty of such, Cecily's pale face would have
+coloured with the blush of outraged purity, Felicity's golden head would
+have lifted itself in the haughty indignation of insulted womanhood, and
+the Story Girl's splendid eyes would have flashed with such anger and
+scorn as would have shrivelled the very soul of the wretched culprit.
+
+Dan was once guilty of swearing. Uncle Alec whipped him for it--the only
+time he ever so punished any of his children. But it was because Cecily
+cried all night that Dan was filled with saving remorse and repentance.
+He vowed next day to Cecily that he would never swear again, and he kept
+his word.
+
+All at once the Story Girl and Peter began to forge ahead in the matter
+of dreaming. Their dreams suddenly became so lurid and dreadful and
+picturesque that it was hard for the rest of us to believe that they
+were not painting the lily rather freely in their accounts of them. But
+the Story Girl was the soul of honour; and Peter, early in life, had had
+his feet set in the path of truthfulness by his Aunt Jane and had never
+been known to stray from it. When they assured us solemnly that their
+dreams all happened exactly as they described them we were compelled to
+believe them. But there was something up, we felt sure of that. Peter
+and the Story Girl certainly had a secret between them, which they kept
+for a whole fortnight. There was no finding it out from the Story Girl.
+She had a knack of keeping secrets, anyhow; and, moreover, all that
+fortnight she was strangely cranky and petulant, and we found it was not
+wise to tease her. She was not well, so Aunt Olivia told Aunt Janet.
+
+"I don't know what is the matter with the child," said the former
+anxiously. "She hasn't seemed like herself the past two weeks. She
+complains of headache, and she has no appetite, and she is a dreadful
+colour. I'll have to see a doctor about her if she doesn't get better
+soon."
+
+"Give her a good dose of Mexican Tea and try that first," said Aunt
+Janet. "I've saved many a doctor's bill in my family by using Mexican
+Tea."
+
+The Mexican Tea was duly administered, but produced no improvement in
+the condition of the Story Girl, who, however, went on dreaming after
+a fashion which soon made her dream book a veritable curiosity of
+literature.
+
+"If we can't soon find out what makes Peter and the Story Girl dream
+like that, the rest of us might as well give up trying to write dream
+books," said Felix discontentedly.
+
+Finally, we did find out. Felicity wormed the secret out of Peter by
+the employment of Delilah wiles, such as have been the undoing of many
+a miserable male creature since Samson's day. She first threatened that
+she would never speak to him again if he didn't tell her; and then she
+promised him that, if he did, she would let him walk beside her to and
+from Sunday School all the rest of the summer, and carry her books for
+her. Peter was not proof against this double attack. He yielded and told
+the secret.
+
+I expected the Story Girl would overwhelm him with scorn and
+indignation. But she took it very coolly.
+
+"I knew Felicity would get it out of him sometime," she said. "I think
+he has done well to hold out this long."
+
+Peter and the Story Girl, so it appeared, had wooed wild dreams to their
+pillows by the simple device of eating rich, indigestible things before
+they went to bed. Aunt Olivia knew nothing about it, of course. She
+permitted them only a plain, wholesome lunch at bed-time. But during
+the day the Story Girl would smuggle upstairs various tidbits from the
+pantry, putting half in Peter's room and half in her own; and the result
+was these visions which had been our despair.
+
+"Last night I ate a piece of mince pie," she said, "and a lot of
+pickles, and two grape jelly tarts. But I guess I overdid it, because I
+got real sick and couldn't sleep at all, so of course I didn't have
+any dreams. I should have stopped with the pie and pickles and left
+the tarts alone. Peter did, and he had an elegant dream that Peg Bowen
+caught him and put him on to boil alive in that big black pot that hangs
+outside her door. He woke up before the water got hot, though. Well,
+Miss Felicity, you're pretty smart. But how will you like to walk to
+Sunday School with a boy who wears patched trousers?"
+
+"I won't have to," said Felicity triumphantly. "Peter is having a new
+suit made. It's to be ready by Saturday. I knew that before I promised."
+
+Having discovered how to produce exciting dreams, we all promptly
+followed the example of Peter and the Story Girl.
+
+"There is no chance for me to have any horrid dreams," lamented Sara
+Ray, "because ma won't let me having anything at all to eat before I go
+to bed. I don't think it's fair."
+
+"Can't you hide something away through the day as we do?" asked
+Felicity.
+
+"No." Sara shook her fawn-coloured head mournfully. "Ma always keeps the
+pantry locked, for fear Judy Pineau will treat her friends."
+
+For a week we ate unlawful lunches and dreamed dreams after our own
+hearts--and, I regret to say, bickered and squabbled incessantly
+throughout the daytime, for our digestions went out of order and our
+tempers followed suit. Even the Story Girl and I had a fight--something
+that had never happened before. Peter was the only one who kept his
+normal poise. Nothing could upset that boy's stomach.
+
+One night Cecily came into the pantry with a large cucumber, and
+proceeded to devour the greater part of it. The grown-ups were away that
+evening, attending a lecture at Markdale, so we ate our snacks openly,
+without any recourse to ways that were dark. I remember I supped that
+night off a solid hunk of fat pork, topped off with a slab of cold plum
+pudding.
+
+"I thought you didn't like cucumber, Cecily," Dan remarked.
+
+"Neither I do," said Cecily with a grimace. "But Peter says they're
+splendid for dreaming. He et one that night he had the dream about being
+caught by cannibals. I'd eat three cucumbers if I could have a dream
+like that."
+
+Cecily finished her cucumber, and then drank a glass of milk, just as we
+heard the wheels of Uncle Alec's buggy rambling over the bridge in the
+hollow. Felicity quickly restored pork and pudding to their own places,
+and by the time Aunt Janet came in we were all in our respective beds.
+Soon the house was dark and silent. I was just dropping into an uneasy
+slumber when I heard a commotion in the girls' room across the hall.
+
+Their door opened and through our own open door I saw Felicity's
+white-clad figure flit down the stairs to Aunt Janet's room. From the
+room she had left came moans and cries.
+
+"Cecily's sick," said Dan, springing out of bed. "That cucumber must
+have disagreed with her."
+
+In a few minutes the whole house was astir. Cecily was sick--very, very
+sick, there was no doubt of that. She was even worse than Dan had been
+when he had eaten the bad berries. Uncle Alec, tired as he was from his
+hard day's work and evening outing, was despatched for the doctor. Aunt
+Janet and Felicity administered all the homely remedies they could think
+of, but to no effect. Felicity told Aunt Janet of the cucumber, but Aunt
+Janet did not think the cucumber alone could be responsible for Cecily's
+alarming condition.
+
+"Cucumbers are indigestible, but I never knew of them making any one as
+sick as this," she said anxiously. "What made the child eat a cucumber
+before going to bed? I didn't think she liked them."
+
+"It was that wretched Peter," sobbed Felicity indignantly. "He told her
+it would make her dream something extra."
+
+"What on earth did she want to dream for?" demanded Aunt Janet in
+bewilderment.
+
+"Oh, to have something worth while to write in her dream book, ma. We
+all have dream books, you know, and every one wants their own to be the
+most exciting--and we've been eating rich things to make us dream--and
+it does--but if Cecily--oh, I'll never forgive myself," said Felicity,
+incoherently, letting all kinds of cats out of the bag in her excitement
+and alarm.
+
+"Well, I wonder what on earth you young ones will do next," said Aunt
+Janet in the helpless tone of a woman who gives it up.
+
+Cecily was no better when the doctor came. Like Aunt Janet, he declared
+that cucumbers alone would not have made her so ill; but when he found
+out that she had drunk a glass of milk also the mystery was solved.
+
+"Why, milk and cucumbers together make a rank poison," he said. "No
+wonder the child is sick. There--there now--" seeing the alarmed faces
+around him, "don't be frightened. As old Mrs. Fraser says, 'It's no
+deidly.' It won't kill her, but she'll probably be a pretty miserable
+girl for two or three days."
+
+She was. And we were all miserable in company. Aunt Janet investigated
+the whole affair and the matter of our dream books was aired in family
+conclave. I do not know which hurt our feelings most--the scolding
+we got from Aunt Janet, or the ridicule which the other grown-ups,
+especially Uncle Roger, showered on us. Peter received an extra "setting
+down," which he considered rank injustice.
+
+"I didn't tell Cecily to drink the milk, and the cucumber alone wouldn't
+have hurt her," he grumbled. Cecily was able to be out with us again
+that day, so Peter felt that he might venture on a grumble. "'Sides, she
+coaxed me to tell her what would be good for dreams. I just told her as
+a favour. And now your Aunt Janet blames me for the whole trouble."
+
+"And Aunt Janet says we are never to have anything to eat before we go
+to bed after this except plain bread and milk," said Felix sadly.
+
+"They'd like to stop us from dreaming altogether if they could," said
+the Story Girl wrathfully.
+
+"Well, anyway, they can't prevent us from growing up," consoled Dan.
+
+"We needn't worry about the bread and milk rule," added Felicity. "Ma
+made a rule like that once before, and kept it for a week, and then we
+just slipped back to the old way. That will be what will happen this
+time, too. But of course we won't be able to get any more rich things
+for supper, and our dreams will be pretty flat after this."
+
+"Well, let's go down to the Pulpit Stone and I'll tell you a story I
+know," said the Story Girl.
+
+We went--and straightway drank of the waters of forgetfulness. In a
+brief space we were laughing right merrily, no longer remembering our
+wrongs at the hands of those cruel grown-ups. Our laughter echoed back
+from the barns and the spruce grove, as if elfin denizens of upper air
+were sharing in our mirth.
+
+Presently, also, the laughter of the grown-ups mingled with ours.
+Aunt Olivia and Uncle Roger, Aunt Janet and Uncle Alec, came strolling
+through the orchard and joined our circle, as they sometimes did when
+the toil of the day was over, and the magic time 'twixt light and dark
+brought truce of care and labour. 'Twas then we liked our grown-ups
+best, for then they seemed half children again. Uncle Roger and Uncle
+Alec lolled in the grass like boys; Aunt Olivia, looking more like a
+pansy than ever in the prettiest dress of pale purple print, with a knot
+of yellow ribbon at her throat, sat with her arm about Cecily and smiled
+on us all; and Aunt Janet's motherly face lost its every-day look of
+anxious care.
+
+The Story Girl was in great fettle that night. Never had her tales
+sparkled with such wit and archness.
+
+"Sara Stanley," said Aunt Olivia, shaking her finger at her after a
+side-splitting yarn, "if you don't watch out you'll be famous some day."
+
+"These funny stories are all right," said Uncle Roger, "but for real
+enjoyment give me something with a creep in it. Sara, tell us that story
+of the Serpent Woman I heard you tell one day last summer."
+
+The Story Girl began it glibly. But before she had gone far with it,
+I, who was sitting beside her, felt an unaccountable repulsion creeping
+over me. For the first time since I had known her I wanted to draw away
+from the Story Girl. Looking around on the faces of the group, I saw
+that they all shared my feeling. Cecily had put her hands over her eyes.
+Peter was staring at the Story Girl with a fascinated, horror-strickened
+gaze. Aunt Olivia was pale and troubled. All looked as if they were held
+prisoners in the bonds of a fearsome spell which they would gladly break
+but could not.
+
+It was not our Story Girl who sat there, telling that weird tale in
+a sibilant, curdling voice. She had put on a new personality like a
+garment, and that personality was a venomous, evil, loathly thing. I
+would rather have died than have touched the slim, brown wrist on which
+she supported herself. The light in her narrowed orbs was the cold,
+merciless gleam of the serpent's eye. I felt frightened of this unholy
+creature who had suddenly come in our dear Story Girl's place.
+
+When the tale ended there was a brief silence. Then Aunt Janet said
+severely, but with a sigh of relief,
+
+"Little girls shouldn't tell such horrible stories."
+
+This truly Aunt Janetian remark broke the spell. The grown-ups laughed,
+rather shakily, and the Story Girl--our own dear Story Girl once more,
+and no Serpent Woman--said protestingly,
+
+"Well, Uncle Roger asked me to tell it. I don't like telling such
+stories either. They make me feel dreadful. Do you know, for just a
+little while, I felt exactly like a snake."
+
+"You looked like one," said Uncle Roger. "How on earth do you do it?"
+
+"I can't explain how I do it," said the Story Girl perplexedly. "It just
+does itself."
+
+Genius can never explain how it does it. It would not be genius if it
+could. And the Story Girl had genius.
+
+As we left the orchard I walked along behind Uncle Roger and Aunt
+Olivia.
+
+"That was an uncanny exhibition for a girl of fourteen, you know,
+Roger," said Aunt Olivia musingly. "What is in store for that child?"
+
+"Fame," said Uncle Roger. "If she ever has a chance, that is, and I
+suppose her father will see to that. At least, I hope he will. You and
+I, Olivia, never had our chance. I hope Sara will have hers."
+
+This was my first inkling of what I was to understand more fully in
+later years. Uncle Roger and Aunt Olivia had both cherished certain
+dreams and ambitions in youth, but circumstances had denied them their
+"chance" and those dreams had never been fulfilled.
+
+"Some day, Olivia," went on Uncle Roger, "you and I may find ourselves
+the aunt and uncle of the foremost actress of her day. If a girl
+of fourteen can make a couple of practical farmers and a pair of
+matter-of-fact housewives half believe for ten minutes that she really
+is a snake, what won't she be able to do when she is thirty? Here, you,"
+added Uncle Roger, perceiving me, "cut along and get off to your bed.
+And mind you don't eat cucumbers and milk before you go."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV. THE BEWITCHMENT OF PAT
+
+We were all in the doleful dumps--at least, all we "young fry" were, and
+even the grown-ups were sorry and condescended to take an interest
+in our troubles. Pat, our own, dear, frolicsome Paddy, was sick
+again--very, very sick.
+
+On Friday he moped and refused his saucer of new milk at milking time.
+The next morning he stretched himself down on the platform by Uncle
+Roger's back door, laid his head on his black paws, and refused to take
+any notice of anything or anybody. In vain we stroked and entreated and
+brought him tidbits. Only when the Story Girl caressed him did he give
+one plaintive little mew, as if to ask piteously why she could not do
+something for him. At that Cecily and Felicity and Sara Ray all began
+crying, and we boys felt choky. Indeed, I caught Peter behind Aunt
+Olivia's dairy later in the day, and if ever a boy had been crying I vow
+that boy was Peter. Nor did he deny it when I taxed him with it, but he
+would not give in that he was crying about Paddy. Nonsense!
+
+"What were you crying for, then?" I said.
+
+"I'm crying because--because my Aunt Jane is dead," said Peter
+defiantly.
+
+"But your Aunt Jane died two years ago," I said skeptically.
+
+"Well, ain't that all the more reason for crying?" retorted Peter. "I've
+had to do without her for two years, and that's worse than if it had
+just been a few days."
+
+"I believe you were crying because Pat is so sick," I said firmly.
+
+"As if I'd cry about a cat!" scoffed Peter. And he marched off
+whistling.
+
+Of course we had tried the lard and powder treatment again, smearing
+Pat's paws and sides liberally. But to our dismay, Pat made no effort to
+lick it off.
+
+"I tell you he's a mighty sick cat," said Peter darkly. "When a cat
+don't care what he looks like he's pretty far gone."
+
+"If we only knew what was the matter with him we might do something,"
+sobbed the Story Girl, stroking her poor pet's unresponsive head.
+
+"I could tell you what's the matter with him, but you'd only laugh at
+me," said Peter.
+
+We all looked at him.
+
+"Peter Craig, what do you mean?" asked Felicity.
+
+"'Zackly what I say."
+
+"Then, if you know what is the matter with Paddy, tell us," commanded
+the Story Girl, standing up. She said it quietly; but Peter obeyed. I
+think he would have obeyed if she, in that tone and with those eyes, had
+ordered him to cast himself into the depths of the sea. I know I should.
+
+"He's BEWITCHED--that's what's the matter with him," said Peter, half
+defiantly, half shamefacedly.
+
+"Bewitched? Nonsense!"
+
+"There now, what did I tell you?" complained Peter.
+
+The Story Girl looked at Peter, at the rest of us, and then at poor Pat.
+
+"How could he be bewitched?" she asked irresolutely, "and who could
+bewitch him?"
+
+"I don't know HOW he was bewitched," said Peter. "I'd have to be a witch
+myself to know that. But Peg Bowen bewitched him."
+
+"Nonsense!" said the Story Girl again.
+
+"All right," said Peter. "You don't have to believe me."
+
+"If Peg Bowen could bewitch anything--and I don't believe she could--why
+should she bewitch Pat?" asked the Story Girl. "Everybody here and at
+Uncle Alec's is always kind to her."
+
+"I'll tell you why," said Peter. "Thursday afternoon, when you fellows
+were all in school, Peg Bowen came here. Your Aunt Olivia gave her a
+lunch--a good one. You may laugh at the notion of Peg being a witch,
+but I notice your folks are always awful good to her when she comes, and
+awful careful never to offend her."
+
+"Aunt Olivia would be good to any poor creature, and so would mother,"
+said Felicity. "And of course nobody wants to offend Peg, because she
+is spiteful, and she once set fire to a man's barn in Markdale when he
+offended her. But she isn't a witch--that's ridiculous."
+
+"All right. But wait till I tell you. When Peg Bowen was leaving Pat
+stretched out on the steps. She tramped on his tail. You know Pat
+doesn't like to have his tail meddled with. He slewed himself round and
+clawed her bare foot. If you'd just seen the look she gave him you'd
+know whether she was a witch or not. And she went off down the lane,
+muttering and throwing her hands round, just like she did in Lem Hill's
+cow pasture. She put a spell on Pat, that's what she did. He was sick
+the next morning."
+
+We looked at each other in miserable, perplexed silence. We were only
+children--and we believed that there had been such things as witches
+once upon a time--and Peg Bowen WAS an eerie creature.
+
+"If that's so--though I can't believe it--we can't do anything," said
+the Story Girl drearily. "Pat must die."
+
+Cecily began to weep afresh.
+
+"I'd do anything to save Pat's life," she said. "I'd BELIEVE anything."
+
+"There's nothing we can do," said Felicity impatiently.
+
+"I suppose," sobbed Cecily, "we might go to Peg Bowen and ask her to
+forgive Pat and take the spell off him. She might, if we apologized real
+humble."
+
+At first we were appalled by the suggestion. We didn't believe that Peg
+Bowen was a witch. But to go to her--to seek her out in that mysterious
+woodland retreat of hers which was invested with all the terrors of the
+unknown! And that this suggestion should come from timid Cecily, of all
+people! But then, there was poor Pat!
+
+"Would it do any good?" said the Story Girl desperately. "Even if she
+did make Pat sick I suppose it would only make her crosser if we went
+and accused her of bewitching him. Besides, she didn't do anything of
+the sort."
+
+But there was some uncertainty in the Story Girl's voice.
+
+"It wouldn't do any harm to try," said Cecily. "If she didn't make him
+sick it won't matter if she is cross."
+
+"It won't matter to Pat, but it might to the one who goes to her,"
+said Felicity. "She isn't a witch, but she's a spiteful old woman, and
+goodness knows what she'd do to us if she caught us. I'm scared of Peg
+Bowen, and I don't care who knows it. Ever since I can mind ma's been
+saying, 'If you're not good Peg Bowen will catch you.'"
+
+"If I thought she really made Pat sick and could make him better,
+I'd try to pacify her somehow," said the Story Girl decidedly. "I'm
+frightened of her, too--but just look at poor, darling Paddy."
+
+We looked at Paddy who continued to stare fixedly before him with
+unwinking eyes. Uncle Roger came out and looked at him also, with what
+seemed to us positively brutal unconcern.
+
+"I'm afraid it's all up with Pat," he said.
+
+"Uncle Roger," said Cecily imploringly, "Peter says Peg Bowen has
+bewitched Pat for scratching her. Do you think it can be so?"
+
+"Did Pat scratch Peg?" asked Uncle Roger, with a horror-stricken face.
+"Dear me! Dear me! That mystery is solved. Poor Pat!"
+
+Uncle Roger nodded his head, as if resigning himself and Pat to the
+worst.
+
+"Do you really think Peg Bowen is a witch, Uncle Roger?" demanded the
+Story Girl incredulously.
+
+"Do I think Peg Bowen is a witch? My dear Sara, what do YOU think of a
+woman who can turn herself into a black cat whenever she likes? Is she a
+witch? Or is she not? I leave it to you."
+
+"Can Peg Bowen turn herself into a black cat?" asked Felix, staring.
+
+"It's my belief that that is the least of Peg Bowen's accomplishments,"
+answered Uncle Roger. "It's the easiest thing in the world for a witch
+to turn herself into any animal you choose to mention. Yes, Pat is
+bewitched--no doubt of that--not the least in the world."
+
+"What are you telling those children such stuff for?" asked Aunt Olivia,
+passing on her way to the well.
+
+"It's an irresistible temptation," answered Uncle Roger, strolling over
+to carry her pail.
+
+"You can see your Uncle Roger believes Peg is a witch," said Peter.
+
+"And you can see Aunt Olivia doesn't," I said, "and I don't either."
+
+"See here," said the Story Girl resolutely, "I don't believe it, but
+there MAY be something in it. Suppose there is. The question is, what
+can we do?"
+
+"I'll tell you what I'D do," said Peter. "I'd take a present for Peg,
+and ask her to make Pat well. I wouldn't let on I thought she'd made
+him sick. Then she couldn't be offended--and maybe she'd take the spell
+off."
+
+"I think we'd better all give her something," said Felicity. "I'm
+willing to do that. But who's going to take the presents to her?"
+
+"We must all go together," said the Story Girl.
+
+"I won't," cried Sara Ray in terror. "I wouldn't go near Peg Bowen's
+house for the world, no matter who was with me."
+
+"I've thought of a plan," said the Story Girl. "Let's all give her
+something, as Felicity says. And let us all go up to her place this
+evening, and if we see her outside we'll just go quietly and set
+the things down before her with the letter, and say nothing but come
+respectfully away."
+
+"If she'll let us," said Dan significantly.
+
+"Can Peg read a letter?" I asked.
+
+"Oh, yes. Aunt Olivia says she is a good scholar. She went to school and
+was a smart girl until she became crazy. We'll write it very plain."
+
+"What if we don't see her?" asked Felicity.
+
+"We'll put the things on her doorstep then and leave them."
+
+"She may be miles away over the country by this time," sighed Cecily,
+"and never find them until it's too late for Pat. But it's the only
+thing to do. What can we give her?"
+
+"We mustn't offer her any money," said the Story Girl. "She's very
+indignant when any one does that. She says she isn't a beggar. But
+she'll take anything else. I shall give her my string of blue beads.
+She's fond of finery."
+
+"I'll give her that sponge cake I made this morning," said Felicity. "I
+guess she doesn't get sponge cake very often."
+
+"I've nothing but the rheumatism ring I got as a premium for selling
+needles last winter," said Peter. "I'll give her that. Even if she
+hasn't got rheumatism it's a real handsome ring. It looks like solid
+gold."
+
+"I'll give her a roll of peppermint candy," said Felix.
+
+"I'll give one of those little jars of cherry preserve I made," said
+Cecily.
+
+"I won't go near her," quavered Sara Ray, "but I want to do something
+for Pat, and I'll send that piece of apple leaf lace I knit last week."
+
+I decided to give the redoubtable Peg some apples from my birthday tree,
+and Dan declared he would give her a plug of tobacco.
+
+"Oh, won't she be insulted?" exclaimed Felix, rather horrified.
+
+"Naw," grinned Dan. "Peg chews tobacco like a man. She'd rather have
+it than your rubbishy peppermints, I can tell you. I'll run down to old
+Mrs. Sampson's and get a plug."
+
+"Now, we must write the letter and take it and the presents to her right
+away, before it gets dark," said the Story Girl.
+
+We adjourned to the granary to indite the important document, which the
+Story Girl was to compose.
+
+"How shall I begin it?" she asked in perplexity. "It would never do to
+say, 'Dear Peg,' and 'Dear Miss Bowen' sounds too ridiculous."
+
+"Besides, nobody knows whether she is Miss Bowen or not," said Felicity.
+"She went to Boston when she grew up, and some say she was married there
+and her husband deserted her, and that's why she went crazy. If she's
+married, she won't like being called Miss."
+
+"Well, how am I to address her?" asked the Story Girl in despair.
+
+Peter again came to the rescue with a practical suggestion.
+
+"Begin it, 'Respected Madam,'" he said. "Ma has a letter a school
+trustee once writ to my Aunt Jane and that's how it begins."
+
+"Respected Madam," wrote the Story Girl. "We want to ask a very great
+favour of you and we hope you will kindly grant it if you can. Our
+favourite cat, Paddy, is very sick, and we are afraid he is going to
+die. Do you think you could cure him? And will you please try? We are
+all so fond of him, and he is such a good cat, and has no bad habits. Of
+course, if any of us tramps on his tail he will scratch us, but you know
+a cat can't bear to have his tail tramped on. It's a very tender part
+of him, and it's his only way of preventing it, and he doesn't mean any
+harm. If you can cure Paddy for us we will always be very, very grateful
+to you. The accompanying small offerings are a testimonial of our
+respect and gratitude, and we entreat you to honour us by accepting
+them.
+
+"Very respectfully yours,
+
+"SARA STANLEY."
+
+"I tell you that last sentence has a fine sound," said Peter admiringly.
+
+"I didn't make that up," admitted the Story Girl honestly. "I read it
+somewhere and remembered it."
+
+"I think it's TOO fine," criticized Felicity. "Peg Bowen won't know the
+meaning of such big words."
+
+But it was decided to leave them in and we all signed the letter.
+
+Then we got our "testimonials," and started on our reluctant journey
+to the domains of the witch. Sara Ray would not go, of course, but she
+volunteered to stay with Pat while we were away. We did not think
+it necessary to inform the grown-ups of our errand, or its nature.
+Grown-ups had such peculiar views. They might forbid our going at
+all--and they would certainly laugh at us.
+
+Peg Bowen's house was nearly a mile away, even by the short cut past the
+swamp and up the wooded hill. We went down through the brook field and
+over the little plank bridge in the hollow, half lost in its surrounding
+sea of farewell summers. When we reached the green gloom of the woods
+beyond we began to feel frightened, but nobody would admit it. We
+walked very closely together, and we did not talk. When you are near the
+retreat of witches and folk of that ilk the less you say the better, for
+their feelings are so notoriously touchy. Of course, Peg wasn't a witch,
+but it was best to be on the safe side.
+
+Finally we came to the lane which led directly to her abode. We were all
+very pale now, and our hearts were beating. The red September sun hung
+low between the tall spruces to the west. It did not look to me just
+right for a sun. In fact, everything looked uncanny. I wished our errand
+were well over.
+
+A sudden bend in the lane brought us out to the little clearing where
+Peg's house was before we were half ready to see it. In spite of my fear
+I looked at it with some curiosity. It was a small, shaky building with
+a sagging roof, set amid a perfect jungle of weeds. To our eyes, the odd
+thing about it was that there was no entrance on the ground floor, as
+there should be in any respectable house. The only door was in the upper
+story, and was reached by a flight of rickety steps. There was no sign
+of life about the place except--sight of ill omen--a large black cat,
+sitting on the topmost step. We thought of Uncle Roger's gruesome hints.
+Could that black cat be Peg? Nonsense! But still--it didn't look like
+an ordinary cat. It was so large--and had such green, malicious eyes!
+Plainly, there was something out of the common about the beastie!
+
+In a tense, breathless silence the Story Girl placed our parcels on
+the lowest step, and laid her letter on the top of the pile. Her brown
+fingers trembled and her face was very pale.
+
+Suddenly the door above us opened, and Peg Bowen herself appeared on the
+threshold. She was a tall, sinewy old woman, wearing a short, ragged,
+drugget skirt which reached scantly below her knees, a scarlet print
+blouse, and a man's hat. Her feet, arms, and neck were bare, and she had
+a battered old clay pipe in her mouth. Her brown face was seamed with a
+hundred wrinkles, and her tangled, grizzled hair fell unkemptly over
+her shoulders. She was scowling, and her flashing black eyes held no
+friendly light.
+
+We had borne up bravely enough hitherto, in spite of our inward,
+unconfessed quakings. But now our strained nerves gave way, and sheer
+panic seized us. Peter gave a little yelp of pure terror. We turned and
+fled across the clearing and into the woods. Down the long hill we tore,
+like mad, hunted creatures, firmly convinced that Peg Bowen was after
+us. Wild was that scamper, as nightmare-like as any recorded in our
+dream books. The Story Girl was in front of me, and I can recall the
+tremendous leaps she made over fallen logs and little spruce bushes,
+with her long brown curls streaming out behind her from their scarlet
+fillet. Cecily, behind me, kept gasping out the contradictory sentences,
+"Oh, Bev, wait for me," and "Oh, Bev, hurry, hurry!" More by blind
+instinct than anything else we kept together and found our way out of
+the woods. Presently we were in the field beyond the brook. Over us was
+a dainty sky of shell pink, placid cows were pasturing around us; the
+farewell summers nodded to us in the friendly breezes. We halted, with a
+glad realization that we were back in our own haunts and that Peg Bowen
+had not caught us.
+
+"Oh, wasn't that an awful experience?" gasped Cecily, shuddering. "I
+wouldn't go through it again--I couldn't, not even for Pat."
+
+"It come on a fellow so suddent," said Peter shamefacedly. "I think I
+could a-stood my ground if I'd known she was going to come out. But when
+she popped out like that I thought I was done for."
+
+"We shouldn't have run," said Felicity gloomily. "It showed we were
+afraid of her, and that always makes her awful cross. She won't do a
+thing for Pat now."
+
+"I don't believe she could do anything, anyway," said the Story Girl. "I
+think we've just been a lot of geese."
+
+We were all, except Peter, more or less inclined to agree with her. And
+the conviction of our folly deepened when we reached the granary and
+found that Pat, watched over by the faithful Sara Ray, was no better.
+The Story Girl announced that she would take him into the kitchen and
+sit up all night with him.
+
+"He sha'n't die alone, anyway," she said miserably, gathering his limp
+body up in her arms.
+
+We did not think Aunt Olivia would give her permission to stay up; but
+Aunt Olivia did. Aunt Olivia really was a duck. We wanted to stay with
+her also, but Aunt Janet wouldn't hear of such a thing. She ordered us
+off to bed, saying that it was positively sinful in us to be so worked
+up over a cat. Five heart-broken children, who knew that there are many
+worse friends than dumb, furry folk, climbed Uncle Alec's stairs to bed
+that night.
+
+"There's nothing we can do now, except pray God to make Pat better,"
+said Cecily.
+
+I must candidly say that her tone savoured strongly of a last resort;
+but this was owing more to early training than to any lack of faith on
+Cecily's part. She knew and we knew, that prayer was a solemn rite, not
+to be lightly held, nor degraded to common uses. Felicity voiced this
+conviction when she said,
+
+"I don't believe it would be right to pray about a cat."
+
+"I'd like to know why not," retorted Cecily, "God made Paddy just as
+much as He made you, Felicity King, though perhaps He didn't go to
+so much trouble. And I'm sure He's abler to help him than Peg Bowen.
+Anyhow, I'm going to pray for Pat with all my might and main, and I'd
+like to see you try to stop me. Of course I won't mix it up with more
+important things. I'll just tack it on after I've finished asking the
+blessings, but before I say amen."
+
+More petitions than Cecily's were offered up that night on behalf of
+Paddy. I distinctly heard Felix--who always said his prayers in a loud
+whisper, owing to some lasting conviction of early life that God could
+not hear him if he did not pray audibly--mutter pleadingly, after the
+"important" part of his devotions was over, "Oh, God, please make Pat
+better by the morning. PLEASE do."
+
+And I, even in these late years of irreverence for the dreams of youth,
+am not in the least ashamed to confess that when I knelt down to say my
+boyish prayer, I thought of our little furry comrade in his extremity,
+and prayed as reverently as I knew how for his healing. Then I went to
+sleep, comforted by the simple hope that the Great Father would, after
+"important things" were all attended to, remember poor Pat.
+
+As soon as we were up the next morning we rushed off to Uncle Roger's.
+But we met Peter and the Story Girl in the lane, and their faces were as
+the faces of those who bring glad tidings upon the mountains.
+
+"Pat's better," cried the Story Girl, blithe, triumphant. "Last night,
+just at twelve, he began to lick his paws. Then he licked himself all
+over and went to sleep, too, on the sofa. When I woke Pat was washing
+his face, and he has taken a whole saucerful of milk. Oh, isn't it
+splendid?"
+
+"You see Peg Bowen did put a spell on him," said Peter, "and then she
+took it off."
+
+"I guess Cecily's prayer had more to do with Pat's getting better than
+Peg Bowen," said Felicity. "She prayed for Pat over and over again. That
+is why he's better."
+
+"Oh, all right," said Peter, "but I'd advise Pat not to scratch Peg
+Bowen again, that's all."
+
+"I wish I knew whether it was the praying or Peg Bowen that cured Pat,"
+said Felix in perplexity.
+
+"I don't believe it was either of them," said Dan. "Pat just got sick
+and got better again of his own accord."
+
+"I'm going to believe that it was the praying," said Cecily decidedly.
+"It's so much nicer to believe that God cured Pat than that Peg Bowen
+did."
+
+"But you oughtn't to believe a thing just 'cause it would be more
+comfortable," objected Peter. "Mind you, I ain't saying God couldn't
+cure Pat. But nothing and nobody can't ever make me believe that Peg
+Bowen wasn't at the bottom of it all."
+
+Thus faith, superstition, and incredulity strove together amongst us, as
+in all history.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV. A CUP OF FAILURE
+
+One warm Sunday evening in the moon of golden-rod, we all, grown-ups and
+children, were sitting in the orchard by the Pulpit Stone singing sweet
+old gospel hymns. We could all sing more or less, except poor Sara Ray,
+who had once despairingly confided to me that she didn't know what she'd
+ever do when she went to heaven, because she couldn't sing a note.
+
+That whole scene comes out clearly for me in memory--the arc of primrose
+sky over the trees behind the old house, the fruit-laden boughs of the
+orchard, the bank of golden-rod, like a wave of sunshine, behind the
+Pulpit Stone, the nameless colour seen on a fir wood in a ruddy sunset.
+I can see Uncle Alec's tired, brilliant, blue eyes, Aunt Janet's
+wholesome, matronly face, Uncle Roger's sweeping blond beard and red
+cheeks, and Aunt Olivia's full-blown beauty. Two voices ring out for
+me above all others in the music that echoes through the halls of
+recollection. Cecily's sweet and silvery, and Uncle Alec's fine tenor.
+"If you're a King, you sing," was a Carlisle proverb in those days. Aunt
+Julia had been the flower of the flock in that respect and had become a
+noted concert singer. The world had never heard of the rest. Their music
+echoed only along the hidden ways of life, and served but to lighten the
+cares of the trivial round and common task.
+
+That evening, after they tired of singing, our grown-ups began talking
+of their youthful days and doings.
+
+This was always a keen delight to us small fry. We listened avidly to
+the tales of our uncles and aunts in the days when they, too--hard fact
+to realize--had been children. Good and proper as they were now, once,
+so it seemed, they had gotten into mischief and even had their quarrels
+and disagreements. On this particular evening Uncle Roger told many
+stories of Uncle Edward, and one in which the said Edward had preached
+sermons at the mature age of ten from the Pulpit Stone fired, as the
+sequel will show, the Story Girl's imagination.
+
+"Can't I just see him at it now," said Uncle Roger, "leaning over
+that old boulder, his cheeks red and his eyes burning with excitement,
+banging the top of it as he had seen the ministers do in church. It
+wasn't cushioned, however, and he always bruised his hands in his
+self-forgetful earnestness. We thought him a regular wonder. We loved to
+hear him preach, but we didn't like to hear him pray, because he
+always insisted on praying for each of us by name, and it made us feel
+wretchedly uncomfortable, somehow. Alec, do you remember how furious
+Julia was because Edward prayed one day that she might be preserved from
+vanity and conceit over her singing?"
+
+"I should think I do," laughed Uncle Alec. "She was sitting right there
+where Cecily is now, and she got up at once and marched right out of the
+orchard, but at the gate she turned to call back indignantly, 'I guess
+you'd better wait till you've prayed the conceit out of yourself before
+you begin on me, Ned King. I never heard such stuck-up sermons as you
+preach.' Ned went on praying and never let on he heard her, but at the
+end of his prayer he wound up with 'Oh, God, I pray you to keep an
+eye on us all, but I pray you to pay particular attention to my sister
+Julia, for I think she needs it even more than the rest of us, world
+without end, Amen.'"
+
+Our uncles roared with laughter over the recollection. We all laughed,
+indeed, especially over another tale in which Uncle Edward, leaning too
+far over the "pulpit" in his earnestness, lost his balance altogether
+and tumbled ingloriously into the grass below.
+
+"He lit on a big Scotch thistle," said Uncle Roger, chuckling, "and
+besides that, he skinned his forehead on a stone. But he was determined
+to finish his sermon, and finish it he did. He climbed back into the
+pulpit, with the tears rolling over his cheeks, and preached for
+ten minutes longer, with sobs in his voice and drops of blood on his
+forehead. He was a plucky little beggar. No wonder he succeeded in
+life."
+
+"And his sermons and prayers were always just about as outspoken as
+those Julia objected to," said Uncle Alec. "Well, we're all getting on
+in life and Edward is gray; but when I think of him I always see him
+a little, rosy, curly-headed chap, laying down the law to us from
+the Pulpit Stone. It seems like the other day that we were all
+here together, just as these children are, and now we are scattered
+everywhere. Julia in California, Edward in Halifax, Alan in South
+America, Felix and Felicity and Stephen gone to the land that is very
+far off."
+
+There was a little space of silence; and then Uncle Alec began, in a
+low, impressive voice, to repeat the wonderful verses of the ninetieth
+Psalm--verses which were thenceforth bound up for us with the beauty
+of that night and the memories of our kindred. Very reverently we all
+listened to the majestic words.
+
+"Lord, thou hast been our dwelling place in all generations. Before the
+mountains were brought forth, or ever thou hadst formed the earth and
+the world, even from everlasting to everlasting thou art God.... For a
+thousand years in thy sight are but as yesterday when it is past, and as
+a watch in the night.... For all our days are passed away in thy wrath;
+we spend our years as a tale that is told. The days of our years are
+threescore and ten; and if by reason of strength they be fourscore years
+yet is their strength, labour and sorrow; for it is soon cut off and we
+fly away.... So teach us to number our days that we may apply our hearts
+unto wisdom.... Oh, satisfy us early with thy mercy; that we may rejoice
+and be glad all our days.... And let the beauty of the Lord our God be
+upon us; and establish thou the work of our hands upon us; yea, the work
+of our hands establish thou it."
+
+The dusk crept into the orchard like a dim, bewitching personality. You
+could see her--feel her--hear her. She tiptoed softly from tree to
+tree, ever drawing nearer. Presently her filmy wings hovered over us and
+through them gleamed the early stars of the autumn night.
+
+The grown-ups rose reluctantly and strolled away; but we children
+lingered for a moment to talk over an idea the Story Girl broached--a
+good idea, we thought enthusiastically, and one that promised to add
+considerable spice to life.
+
+We were on the lookout for some new amusement. Dream books had begun to
+pall. We no longer wrote in them very regularly, and our dreams were not
+what they used to be before the mischance of the cucumber. So the Story
+Girl's suggestion came pat to the psychological moment.
+
+"I've thought of a splendid plan," she said. "It just flashed into my
+mind when the uncles were talking about Uncle Edward. And the beauty of
+it is we can play it on Sundays, and you know there are so few things it
+is proper to play on Sundays. But this is a Christian game, so it will
+be all right."
+
+"It isn't like the religious fruit basket game, is it?" asked Cecily
+anxiously.
+
+We had good reason to hope that it wasn't. One desperate Sunday
+afternoon, when we had nothing to read and the time seemed endless,
+Felix had suggested that we have a game of fruit-basket; only instead
+of taking the names of fruits, we were to take the names of Bible
+characters. This, he argued, would make it quite lawful and proper to
+play on Sunday. We, too desirous of being convinced, also thought so;
+and for a merry hour Lazarus and Martha and Moses and Aaron and sundry
+other worthies of Holy Writ had a lively time of it in the King orchard.
+Peter having a Scriptural name of his own, did not want to take another;
+but we would not allow this, because it would give him an unfair
+advantage over the rest of us. It would be so much easier to call
+out your own name than fit your tongue to an unfamiliar one. So Peter
+retaliated by choosing Nebuchadnezzar, which no one could ever utter
+three times before Peter shrieked it out once.
+
+In the midst of our hilarity, however, Uncle Alec and Aunt Janet came
+down upon us. It is best to draw a veil over what followed. Suffice it
+to say that the recollection gave point to Cecily's question.
+
+"No, it isn't that sort of game at all," said the Story Girl. "It is
+this; each of you boys must preach a sermon, as Uncle Edward used to
+do. One of you next Sunday, and another the next, and so on. And whoever
+preaches the best sermon is to get a prize."
+
+Dan promptly declared he wouldn't try to preach a sermon; but Peter,
+Felix and I thought the suggestion a very good one. Secretly, I believed
+I could cut quite a fine figure preaching a sermon.
+
+"Who'll give the prize?" asked Felix.
+
+"I will," said the Story Girl. "I'll give that picture father sent me
+last week."
+
+As the said picture was an excellent copy of one of Landseer's stags,
+Felix and I were well pleased; but Peter averred that he would rather
+have the Madonna that looked like his Aunt Jane, and the Story Girl
+agreed that if his sermon was the best she would give him that.
+
+"But who's to be the judge?" I said, "and what kind of a sermon would
+you call the best?"
+
+"The one that makes the most impression," answered the Story Girl
+promptly. "And we girls must be the judges, because there's nobody else.
+Now, who is to preach next Sunday?"
+
+It was decided that I should lead off, and I lay awake for an extra hour
+that night thinking what text I should take for the following Sunday.
+The next day I bought two sheets of foolscap from the schoolmaster, and
+after tea I betook myself to the granary, barred the door, and fell
+to writing my sermon. I did not find it as easy a task as I had
+anticipated; but I pegged grimly away at it, and by dint of severe
+labour for two evenings I eventually got my four pages of foolscap
+filled, although I had to pad the subject-matter not a little with
+verses of quotable hymns. I had decided to preach on missions, as being
+a topic more within my grasp than abstruse theological doctrines
+or evangelical discourses; and, mindful of the need of making an
+impression, I drew a harrowing picture of the miserable plight of the
+heathen who in their darkness bowed down to wood and stone. Then I urged
+our responsibility concerning them, and meant to wind up by reciting,
+in a very solemn and earnest voice, the verse beginning, "Can we whose
+souls are lighted." When I had completed my sermon I went over it very
+carefully again and wrote with red ink--Cecily made it for me out of an
+aniline dye--the word "thump" wherever I deemed it advisable to chastise
+the pulpit.
+
+I have that sermon still, all its red thumps unfaded, lying beside my
+dream book; but I am not going to inflict it on my readers. I am not so
+proud of it as I once was. I was really puffed up with earthly vanity
+over it at that time. Felix, I thought, would be hard put to it to beat
+it. As for Peter, I did not consider him a rival to be feared. It was
+unsupposable that a hired boy, with little education and less experience
+of church-going, should be able to preach better than could I, in whose
+family there was a real minister.
+
+The sermon written, the next thing was to learn it off by heart and then
+practise it, thumps included, until I was letter and gesture perfect. I
+preached it over several times in the granary with only Paddy, sitting
+immovably on a puncheon, for audience. Paddy stood the test fairly well.
+At least, he made an adorable listener, save at such times as imaginary
+rats distracted his attention.
+
+Mr. Marwood had at least three absorbed listeners the next Sunday
+morning. Felix, Peter and I were all among the chiels who were taking
+mental notes on the art of preaching a sermon. Not a motion, or glance,
+or intonation escaped us. To be sure, none of us could remember the text
+when we got home; but we knew just how you should throw back your head
+and clutch the edge of the pulpit with both hands when you announced it.
+
+In the afternoon we all repaired to the orchard, Bibles and hymn books
+in hand. We did not think it necessary to inform the grown-ups of what
+was in the wind. You could never tell what kink a grown-up would take.
+They might not think it proper to play any sort of a game on Sunday,
+not even a Christian game. Least said was soonest mended where grown-ups
+were concerned.
+
+I mounted the pulpit steps, feeling rather nervous, and my audience sat
+gravely down on the grass before me. Our opening exercises consisted
+solely of singing and reading. We had agreed to omit prayer. Neither
+Felix, Peter nor I felt equal to praying in public. But we took up
+a collection. The proceeds were to go to missions. Dan passed the
+plate--Felicity's rosebud plate--looking as preternaturally solemn as
+Elder Frewen himself. Every one put a cent on it.
+
+Well, I preached my sermon. And it fell horribly flat. I realized that,
+before I was half way through it. I think I preached it very well; and
+never a thump did I forget or misplace. But my audience was plainly
+bored. When I stepped down from the pulpit, after demanding passionately
+if we whose souls were lighted and so forth, I felt with secret
+humiliation that my sermon was a failure. It had made no impression at
+all. Felix would be sure to get the prize.
+
+"That was a very good sermon for a first attempt," said the Story Girl
+graciously. "It sounded just like real sermons I have heard."
+
+For a moment the charm of her voice made me feel that I had not done so
+badly after all; but the other girls, thinking it their duty to pay
+me some sort of a compliment also, quickly dispelled that pleasing
+delusion.
+
+"Every word of it was true," said Cecily, her tone unconsciously
+implying that this was its sole merit.
+
+"I often feel," said Felicity primly, "that we don't think enough about
+the heathens. We ought to think a great deal more."
+
+Sara Ray put the finishing touch to my mortification.
+
+"It was so nice and short," she said.
+
+"What was the matter with my sermon?" I asked Dan that night. Since he
+was neither judge nor competitor I could discuss the matter with him.
+
+"It was too much like a reg'lar sermon to be interesting," said Dan
+frankly.
+
+"I should think the more like a regular sermon it was, the better," I
+said.
+
+"Not if you want to make an impression," said Dan seriously. "You
+must have something sort of different for that. Peter, now, HE'LL have
+something different."
+
+"Oh, Peter! I don't believe he can preach a sermon," I said.
+
+"Maybe not, but you'll see he'll make an impression," said Dan.
+
+Dan was neither the prophet nor the son of a prophet, but he had the
+second sight for once; Peter DID make an impression.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI. PETER MAKES AN IMPRESSION
+
+Peter's turn came next. He did not write his sermon out. That, he
+averred, was too hard work. Nor did he mean to take a text.
+
+"Why, who ever heard of a sermon without a text?" asked Felix blankly.
+
+"I am going to take a SUBJECT instead of a text," said Peter loftily. "I
+ain't going to tie myself down to a text. And I'm going to have heads in
+it--three heads. You hadn't a single head in yours," he added to me.
+
+"Uncle Alec says that Uncle Edward says that heads are beginning to go
+out of fashion," I said defiantly--all the more defiantly that I felt I
+should have had heads in my sermon. It would doubtless have made a much
+deeper impression. But the truth was I had forgotten all about such
+things.
+
+"Well, I'm going to have them, and I don't care if they are
+unfashionable," said Peter. "They're good things. Aunt Jane used to say
+if a man didn't have heads and stick to them he'd go wandering all over
+the Bible and never get anywhere in particular."
+
+"What are you going to preach on?" asked Felix.
+
+"You'll find out next Sunday," said Peter significantly.
+
+The next Sunday was in October, and a lovely day it was, warm and bland
+as June. There was something in the fine, elusive air, that recalled
+beautiful, forgotten things and suggested delicate future hopes. The
+woods had wrapped fine-woven gossamers about them and the westering hill
+was crimson and gold.
+
+We sat around the Pulpit Stone and waited for Peter and Sara Ray. It was
+the former's Sunday off and he had gone home the night before, but he
+assured us he would be back in time to preach his sermon. Presently he
+arrived and mounted the granite boulder as if to the manor born. He was
+dressed in his new suit and I, perceiving this, felt that he had the
+advantage of me. When I preached I had to wear my second best suit, for
+it was one of Aunt Janet's laws that we should take our good suits off
+when we came home from church. There were, I saw, compensations for
+being a hired boy.
+
+Peter made quite a handsome little minister, in his navy blue coat,
+white collar, and neatly bowed tie. His black eyes shone, and his black
+curls were brushed up in quite a ministerial pompadour, but threatened
+to tumble over at the top in graceless ringlets.
+
+It was decided that there was no use in waiting for Sara Ray, who might
+or might not come, according to the humour in which her mother was.
+Therefore Peter proceeded with the service.
+
+He read the chapter and gave out the hymn with as much SANG FROID as if
+he had been doing it all his life. Mr. Marwood himself could not have
+bettered the way in which Peter said,
+
+"We will sing the whole hymn, omitting the fourth stanza."
+
+That was a fine touch which I had not thought of. I began to think that,
+after all, Peter might be a foeman worthy of my steel.
+
+When Peter was ready to begin he thrust his hands into his pockets--a
+totally unorthodox thing. Then he plunged in without further ado,
+speaking in his ordinary conversational tone--another unorthodox thing.
+There was no shorthand reporter present to take that sermon down; but,
+if necessary, I could preach it over verbatim, and so, I doubt not,
+could everyone that heard it. It was not a forgettable kind of sermon.
+
+"Dearly beloved," said Peter, "my sermon is about the bad place--in
+short, about hell."
+
+An electric shock seemed to run through the audience. Everybody looked
+suddenly alert. Peter had, in one sentence, done what my whole sermon
+had failed to do. He had made an impression.
+
+"I shall divide my sermon into three heads," pursued Peter. "The first
+head is, what you must not do if you don't want to go to the bad place.
+The second head is, what the bad place is like"--sensation in the
+audience--"and the third head is, how to escape going there.
+
+"Now, there's a great many things you must not do, and it's very
+important to know what they are. You ought not to lose no time in
+finding out. In the first place you mustn't ever forget to mind what
+grown-up people tell you--that is, GOOD grown-up people."
+
+"But how are you going to tell who are the good grown-up people?" asked
+Felix suddenly, forgetting that he was in church.
+
+"Oh, that is easy," said Peter. "You can always just FEEL who is good
+and who isn't. And you mustn't tell lies and you mustn't murder any
+one. You must be specially careful not to murder any one. You might be
+forgiven for telling lies, if you was real sorry for them, but if you
+murdered any one it would be pretty hard to get forgiven, so you'd
+better be on the safe side. And you mustn't commit suicide, because
+if you did that you wouldn't have any chance of repenting it; and you
+mustn't forget to say your prayers and you mustn't quarrel with your
+sister."
+
+At this point Felicity gave Dan a significant poke with her elbow, and
+Dan was up in arms at once.
+
+"Don't you be preaching at me, Peter Craig," he cried out. "I won't
+stand it. I don't quarrel with my sister any oftener than she quarrels
+with me. You can just leave me alone."
+
+"Who's touching you?" demanded Peter. "I didn't mention no names. A
+minister can say anything he likes in the pulpit, as long as he doesn't
+mention any names, and nobody can answer back."
+
+"All right, but just you wait till to-morrow," growled Dan, subsiding
+reluctantly into silence under the reproachful looks of the girls.
+
+"You must not play any games on Sunday," went on Peter, "that is, any
+week-day games--or whisper in church, or laugh in church--I did that
+once but I was awful sorry--and you mustn't take any notice of Paddy--I
+mean of the family cat at family prayers, not even if he climbs up on
+your back. And you mustn't call names or make faces."
+
+"Amen," cried Felix, who had suffered many things because Felicity so
+often made faces at him.
+
+Peter stopped and glared at him over the edge of the Pulpit Stone.
+
+"You haven't any business to call out a thing like that right in the
+middle of a sermon," he said.
+
+"They do it in the Methodist church at Markdale," protested Felix,
+somewhat abashed. "I heard them."
+
+"I know they do. That's the Methodist way and it is all right for them.
+I haven't a word to say against Methodists. My Aunt Jane was one, and
+I might have been one myself if I hadn't been so scared of the Judgment
+Day. But you ain't a Methodist. You're a Presbyterian, ain't you?"
+
+"Yes, of course. I was born that way."
+
+"Very well then, you've got to do things the Presbyterian way. Don't let
+me hear any more of your amens or I'll amen you."
+
+"Oh, don't anybody interrupt again," implored the Story Girl. "It
+isn't fair. How can any one preach a good sermon if he is always being
+interrupted? Nobody interrupted Beverley."
+
+"Bev didn't get up there and pitch into us like that," muttered Dan.
+
+"You mustn't fight," resumed Peter undauntedly. "That is, you mustn't
+fight for the fun of fighting, nor out of bad temper. You must not
+say bad words or swear. You mustn't get drunk--although of course you
+wouldn't be likely to do that before you grow up, and the girls never.
+There's prob'ly a good many other things you mustn't do, but these I've
+named are the most important. Of course, I'm not saying you'll go to the
+bad place for sure if you do them. I only say you're running a risk.
+The devil is looking out for the people who do these things and he'll
+be more likely to get after them than to waste time over the people who
+don't do them. And that's all about the first head of my sermon."
+
+At this point Sara Ray arrived, somewhat out of breath. Peter looked at
+her reproachfully.
+
+"You've missed my whole first head, Sara," he said, "that isn't fair,
+when you're to be one of the judges. I think I ought to preach it over
+again for you."
+
+"That was really done once. I know a story about it," said the Story
+Girl.
+
+"Who's interrupting now?" aid Dan slyly.
+
+"Never mind, tell us the story," said the preacher himself, eagerly
+leaning over the pulpit.
+
+"It was Mr. Scott who did it," said the Story Girl. "He was preaching
+somewhere in Nova Scotia, and when he was more than half way through his
+sermon--and you know sermons were VERY long in those days--a man walked
+in. Mr. Scott stopped until he had taken his seat. Then he said, 'My
+friend, you are very late for this service. I hope you won't be late for
+heaven. The congregation will excuse me if I recapitulate the sermon for
+our friend's benefit.' And then he just preached the sermon over again
+from the beginning. It is said that that particular man was never known
+to be late for church again."
+
+"It served him right," said Dan, "but it was pretty hard lines on the
+rest of the congregation."
+
+"Now, let's be quiet so Peter can go on with his sermon," said Cecily.
+
+Peter squared his shoulders and took hold of the edge of the pulpit.
+Never a thump had he thumped, but I realized that his way of leaning
+forward and fixing this one or that one of his hearers with his eye was
+much more effective.
+
+"I've come now to the second head of my sermon--what the bad place is
+like."
+
+He proceeded to describe the bad place. Later on we discovered that
+he had found his material in an illustrated translation of Dante's
+_Inferno_ which had once been given to his Aunt Jane as a school prize.
+But at the time we supposed he must be drawing from Biblical sources.
+Peter had been reading the Bible steadily ever since what we always
+referred to as "the Judgment Sunday," and he was by now almost through
+it. None of the rest of us had ever read the Bible completely through,
+and we thought Peter must have found his description of the world of the
+lost in some portion with which we were not acquainted. Therefore, his
+utterances carried all the weight of inspiration, and we sat appalled
+before his lurid phrases. He used his own words to clothe the ideas he
+had found, and the result was a force and simplicity that struck home to
+our imaginations.
+
+Suddenly Sara Ray sprang to her feet with a scream--a scream that
+changed into strange laughter. We all, preacher included, looked at her
+aghast. Cecily and Felicity sprang up and caught hold of her. Sara Ray
+was really in a bad fit of hysterics, but we knew nothing of such a
+thing in our experience, and we thought she had gone mad. She shrieked,
+cried, laughed, and flung herself about.
+
+"She's gone clean crazy," said Peter, coming down out of his pulpit with
+a very pale face.
+
+"You've frightened her crazy with your dreadful sermon," said Felicity
+indignantly.
+
+She and Cecily each took Sara by an arm and, half leading, half
+carrying, got her out of the orchard and up to the house. The rest of us
+looked at each other in terrified questioning.
+
+"You've made rather too much of an impression, Peter," said the Story
+Girl miserably.
+
+"She needn't have got so scared. If she'd only waited for the third head
+I'd have showed her how easy it was to get clear of going to the bad
+place and go to heaven instead. But you girls are always in such a
+hurry," said Peter bitterly.
+
+"Do you s'pose they'll have to take her to the asylum?" said Dan in a
+whisper.
+
+"Hush, here's your father," said Felix.
+
+Uncle Alec came striding down the orchard. We had never before seen
+Uncle Alec angry. But there was no doubt that he was very angry. His
+blue eyes fairly blazed at us as he said,
+
+"What have you been doing to frighten Sara Ray into such a condition?"
+
+"We--we were just having a sermon contest," explained the Story Girl
+tremulously. "And Peter preached about the bad place, and it frightened
+Sara. That is all, Uncle Alec."
+
+"All! I don't know what the result will be to that nervous delicate
+child. She is shrieking in there and nothing will quiet her. What do
+you mean by playing such a game on Sunday, and making a jest of sacred
+things? No, not a word--" for the Story Girl had attempted to speak.
+"You and Peter march off home. And the next time I find you up to such
+doings on Sunday or any other day I'll give you cause to remember it to
+your latest hour."
+
+The Story Girl and Peter went humbly home and we went with them.
+
+"I CAN'T understand grown-up people," said Felix despairingly. "When
+Uncle Edward preached sermons it was all right, but when we do it it is
+'making a jest of sacred things.' And I heard Uncle Alec tell a story
+once about being nearly frightened to death when he was a little boy,
+by a minister preaching on the end of the world; and he said, 'That was
+something like a sermon. You don't hear such sermons nowadays.' But when
+Peter preaches just such a sermon, it's a very different story."
+
+"It's no wonder we can't understand the grown-ups," said the Story Girl
+indignantly, "because we've never been grown-up ourselves. But THEY have
+been children, and I don't see why they can't understand us. Of course,
+perhaps we shouldn't have had the contest on Sundays. But all the same
+I think it's mean of Uncle Alec to be so cross. Oh, I do hope poor Sara
+won't have to be taken to the asylum."
+
+Poor Sara did not have to be. She was eventually quieted down, and was
+as well as usual the next day; and she humbly begged Peter's pardon for
+spoiling his sermon. Peter granted it rather grumpily, and I fear that
+he never really quite forgave Sara for her untimely outburst. Felix,
+too, felt resentment against her, because he had lost the chance of
+preaching his sermon.
+
+"Of course I know I wouldn't have got the prize, for I couldn't have
+made such an impression as Peter," he said to us mournfully, "but I'd
+like to have had a chance to show what I could do. That's what comes
+of having those cry-baby girls mixed up in things. Cecily was just as
+scared as Sara Ray, but she'd more sense than to show it like that."
+
+"Well, Sara couldn't help it," said the Story Girl charitably, "but it
+does seem as if we'd had dreadful luck in everything we've tried lately.
+I thought of a new game this morning, but I'm almost afraid to mention
+it, for I suppose something dreadful will come of it, too."
+
+"Oh, tell us, what is it?" everybody entreated.
+
+"Well, it's a trial by ordeal, and we're to see which of us can pass it.
+The ordeal is to eat one of the bitter apples in big mouthfuls without
+making a single face."
+
+Dan made a face to begin with.
+
+"I don't believe any of us can do that," he said.
+
+"YOU can't, if you take bites big enough to fill your mouth," giggled
+Felicity, with cruelty and without provocation.
+
+"Well, maybe you could," retorted Dan sarcastically. "You'd be so afraid
+of spoiling your looks that you'd rather die than make a face, I s'pose,
+no matter what you et."
+
+"Felicity makes enough faces when there's nothing to make faces at,"
+said Felix, who had been grimaced at over the breakfast table that
+morning and hadn't liked it.
+
+"I think the bitter apples would be real good for Felix," said Felicity.
+"They say sour things make people thin."
+
+"Let's go and get the bitter apples," said Cecily hastily, seeing that
+Felix, Felicity and Dan were on the verge of a quarrel more bitter than
+the apples.
+
+We went to the seedling tree and got an apple apiece. The game was that
+every one must take a bite in turn, chew it up, and swallow it, without
+making a face. Peter again distinguished himself. He, and he alone,
+passed the ordeal, munching those dreadful mouthfuls without so much as
+a change of expression on his countenance, while the facial contortions
+the rest of us went through baffled description. In every subsequent
+trial it was the same. Peter never made a face, and no one else
+could help making them. It sent him up fifty per cent in Felicity's
+estimation.
+
+"Peter is a real smart boy," she said to me. "It's such a pity he is a
+hired boy."
+
+But, if we could not pass the ordeal, we got any amount of fun out of
+it, at least. Evening after evening the orchard re-echoed to our peals
+of laughter.
+
+"Bless the children," said Uncle Alec, as he carried the milk pails
+across the yard. "Nothing can quench their spirits for long."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII. THE ORDEAL OF BITTER APPLES
+
+I could never understand why Felix took Peter's success in the Ordeal
+of Bitter Apples so much to heart. He had not felt very keenly over the
+matter of the sermons, and certainly the mere fact that Peter could
+eat sour apples without making faces did not cast any reflection on
+the honour or ability of the other competitors. But to Felix everything
+suddenly became flat, stale, and unprofitable, because Peter continued
+to hold the championship of bitter apples. It haunted his waking hours
+and obsessed his nights. I heard him talking in his sleep about it. If
+anything could have made him thin the way he worried over this matter
+would have done it.
+
+For myself, I cared not a groat. I had wished to be successful in the
+sermon contest, and felt sore whenever I thought of my failure. But I
+had no burning desire to eat sour apples without grimacing, and I did
+not sympathize over and above with my brother. When, however, he took
+to praying about it, I realized how deeply he felt on the subject, and
+hoped he would be successful.
+
+Felix prayed earnestly that he might be enabled to eat a bitter apple
+without making a face. And when he had prayed three nights after this
+manner, he contrived to eat a bitter apple without a grimace until he
+came to the last bite, which proved too much for him. But Felix was
+vastly encouraged.
+
+"Another prayer or two, and I'll be able to eat a whole one," he said
+jubilantly.
+
+But this devoutly desired consummation did not come to pass. In spite
+of prayers and heroic attempts, Felix could never get beyond that last
+bite. Not even faith and works in combination could avail. For a time
+he could not understand this. But he thought the mystery was solved when
+Cecily came to him one day and told him that Peter was praying against
+him.
+
+"He's praying that you'll never be able to eat a bitter apple without
+making a face," she said. "He told Felicity and Felicity told me. She
+said she thought it was real cute of him. I think that is a dreadful way
+to talk about praying and I told her so. She wanted me to promise not to
+tell you, but I wouldn't promise, because I think it's fair for you to
+know what is going on."
+
+Felix was very indignant--and aggrieved as well.
+
+"I don't see why God should answer Peter's prayers instead of mine," he
+said bitterly. "I've gone to church and Sunday School all my life, and
+Peter never went till this summer. It isn't fair."
+
+"Oh, Felix, don't talk like that," said Cecily, shocked. "God MUST be
+fair. I'll tell you what I believe is the reason. Peter prays three
+times a day regular--in the morning and at dinner time and at night--and
+besides that, any time through the day when he happens to think of it,
+he just prays, standing up. Did you ever hear of such goings-on?"
+
+"Well, he's got to stop praying against me, anyhow," said Felix
+resolutely. "I won't put up with it, and I'll go and tell him so right
+off."
+
+Felix marched over to Uncle Roger's, and we trailed after, scenting
+a scene. We found Peter shelling beans in the granary, and whistling
+cheerily, as with a conscience void of offence towards all men.
+
+"Look here, Peter," said Felix ominously, "they tell me that you've
+been praying right along that I couldn't eat a bitter apple. Now, I tell
+you--"
+
+"I never did!" exclaimed Peter indignantly. "I never mentioned your
+name. I never prayed that you couldn't eat a bitter apple. I just prayed
+that I'd be the only one that could."
+
+"Well, that's the same thing," cried Felix. "You've just been praying
+for the opposite to me out of spite. And you've got to stop it, Peter
+Craig."
+
+"Well, I just guess I won't," said Peter angrily. "I've just as good
+a right to pray for what I want as you, Felix King, even if you was
+brought up in Toronto. I s'pose you think a hired boy hasn't any
+business to pray for particular things, but I'll show you. I'll just
+pray for what I please, and I'd like to see you try and stop me."
+
+"You'll have to fight me, if you keep on praying against me," said
+Felix.
+
+The girls gasped; but Dan and I were jubilant, snuffing battle afar off.
+
+"All right. I can fight as well as pray."
+
+"Oh, don't fight," implored Cecily. "I think it would be dreadful.
+Surely you can arrange it some other way. Let's all give up the Ordeal,
+anyway. There isn't much fun in it. And then neither of you need pray
+about it."
+
+"I don't want to give up the Ordeal," said Felix, "and I won't."
+
+"Oh, well, surely you can settle it some way without fighting,"
+persisted Cecily.
+
+"I'm not wanting to fight," said Peter. "It's Felix. If he don't
+interfere with my prayers there's no need of fighting. But if he does
+there's no other way to settle it."
+
+"But how will that settle it?" asked Cecily.
+
+"Oh, whoever's licked will have to give in about the praying," said
+Peter. "That's fair enough. If I'm licked I won't pray for that
+particular thing any more."
+
+"It's dreadful to fight about anything so religious as praying," sighed
+poor Cecily.
+
+"Why, they were always fighting about religion in old times," said
+Felix. "The more religious anything was the more fighting there was
+about it."
+
+"A fellow's got a right to pray as he pleases," said Peter, "and if
+anybody tries to stop him he's bound to fight. That's my way of looking
+at it."
+
+"What would Miss Marwood say if she knew you were going to fight?" asked
+Felicity.
+
+Miss Marwood was Felix' Sunday School teacher and he was very fond of
+her. But by this time Felix was quite reckless.
+
+"I don't care what she would say," he retorted.
+
+Felicity tried another tack.
+
+"You'll be sure to get whipped if you fight with Peter," she said.
+"You're too fat to fight."
+
+After that, no moral force on earth could have prevented Felix from
+fighting. He would have faced an army with banners.
+
+"You might settle it by drawing lots," said Cecily desperately.
+
+"Drawing lots is wickeder that fighting," said Dan. "It's a kind of
+gambling."
+
+"What would Aunt Jane say if she knew you were going to fight?" Cecily
+demanded of Peter.
+
+"Don't you drag my Aunt Jane into this affair," said Peter darkly.
+
+"You said you were going to be a Presbyterian," persisted Cecily. "Good
+Presbyterians don't fight."
+
+"Oh, don't they! I heard your Uncle Roger say that Presbyterians were
+the best for fighting in the world--or the worst, I forget which he
+said, but it means the same thing."
+
+Cecily had but one more shot in her locker.
+
+"I thought you said in your sermon, Master Peter, that people shouldn't
+fight."
+
+"I said they oughtn't to fight for fun, or for bad temper," retorted
+Peter. "This is different. I know what I'm fighting for but I can't
+think of the word."
+
+"I guess you mean principle," I suggested.
+
+"Yes, that's it," agreed Peter. "It's all right to fight for principle.
+It's kind of praying with your fists."
+
+"Oh, can't you do something to prevent them from fighting, Sara?"
+pleaded Cecily, turning to the Story Girl, who was sitting on a bin,
+swinging her shapely bare feet to and fro.
+
+"It doesn't do to meddle in an affair of this kind between boys," said
+the Story Girl sagely.
+
+I may be mistaken, but I do not believe the Story Girl wanted that fight
+stopped. And I am far from being sure that Felicity did either.
+
+It was ultimately arranged that the combat should take place in the fir
+wood behind Uncle Roger's granary. It was a nice, remote, bosky place
+where no prowling grown-up would be likely to intrude. And thither we
+all resorted at sunset.
+
+"I hope Felix will beat," said the Story Girl to me, "not only for the
+family honour, but because that was a mean, mean prayer of Peter's. Do
+you think he will?"
+
+"I don't know," I confessed dubiously. "Felix is too fat. He'll get out
+of breath in no time. And Peter is such a cool customer, and he's a year
+older than Felix. But then Felix has had some practice. He has fought
+boys in Toronto. And this is Peter's first fight."
+
+"Did you ever fight?" asked the Story Girl.
+
+"Once," I said briefly, dreading the next question, which promptly came.
+
+"Who beat?"
+
+It is sometimes a bitter thing to tell the truth, especially to a
+young lady for whom you have a great admiration. I had a struggle with
+temptation in which I frankly confess I might have been worsted had it
+not been for a saving and timely remembrance of a certain resolution
+made on the day preceding Judgment Sunday.
+
+"The other fellow," I said with reluctant honesty.
+
+"Well," said the Story Girl, "I think it doesn't matter whether you get
+whipped or not so long as you fight a good, square fight."
+
+Her potent voice made me feel that I was quite a hero after all, and the
+sting went out of my recollection of that old fight.
+
+When we arrived behind the granary the others were all there. Cecily was
+very pale, and Felix and Peter were taking off their coats. There was
+a pure yellow sunset that evening, and the aisles of the fir wood were
+flooded with its radiance. A cool, autumnal wind was whistling among the
+dark boughs and scattering blood red leaves from the maple at the end of
+the granary.
+
+"Now," said Dan, "I'll count, and when I say three you pitch in, and
+hammer each other until one of you has had enough. Cecily, keep quiet.
+Now, one--two--three!"
+
+Peter and Felix "pitched in," with more zeal than discretion on both
+sides. As a result, Peter got what later developed into a black eye,
+and Felix's nose began to bleed. Cecily gave a shriek and ran out of the
+wood. We thought she had fled because she could not endure the sight of
+blood, and we were not sorry, for her manifest disapproval and anxiety
+were damping the excitement of the occasion.
+
+Felix and Peter drew apart after that first onset, and circled about one
+another warily. Then, just as they had come to grips again, Uncle Alec
+walked around the corner of the granary, with Cecily behind him.
+
+He was not angry. There was a quizzical look in his eyes. But he took
+the combatants by their shirt collars and dragged them apart.
+
+"This stops right here, boys," he said. "You know I don't allow
+fighting."
+
+"Oh, but Uncle Alec, it was this way," began Felix eagerly. "Peter--"
+
+"No, I don't want to hear about it," said Uncle Alec sternly. "I don't
+care what you were fighting about, but you must settle your quarrels
+in a different fashion. Remember my commands, Felix. Peter, Roger is
+looking for you to wash his buggy. Be off."
+
+Peter went off rather sullenly, and Felix, also sullenly, sat down and
+began to nurse his nose. He turned his back on Cecily.
+
+Cecily "caught it" after Uncle Alec had gone. Dan called her a tell-tale
+and a baby, and sneered at her until Cecily began to cry.
+
+"I couldn't stand by and watch Felix and Peter pound each other all to
+pieces," she sobbed. "They've been such friends, and it was dreadful to
+see them fighting."
+
+"Uncle Roger would have let them fight it out," said the Story Girl
+discontentedly. "Uncle Roger believes in boys fighting. He says it's as
+harmless a way as any of working off their original sin. Peter and Felix
+wouldn't have been any worse friends after it. They'd have been better
+friends because the praying question would have been settled. And now
+it can't be--unless Felicity can coax Peter to give up praying against
+Felix."
+
+For once in her life the Story Girl was not as tactful as her wont.
+Or--is it possible that she said it out of malice prepense? At all
+events, Felicity resented the imputation that she had more influence
+with Peter than any one else.
+
+"I don't meddle with hired boys' prayers," she said haughtily.
+
+"It was all nonsense fighting about such prayers, anyhow," said Dan, who
+probably thought that since all chance of a fight was over, he might as
+well avow his real sentiments as to its folly. "Just as much nonsense as
+praying about the bitter apples in the first place."
+
+"Oh, Dan, don't you believe there is some good in praying?" said Cecily
+reproachfully.
+
+"Yes, I believe there's some good in some kinds of praying, but not
+in that kind," said Dan sturdily. "I don't believe God cares whether
+anybody can eat an apple without making a face or not."
+
+"I don't believe it's right to talk of God as if you were well
+acquainted with Him," said Felicity, who felt that it was a good chance
+to snub Dan.
+
+"There's something wrong somewhere," said Cecily perplexedly. "We ought
+to pray for what we want, of that I'm sure--and Peter wanted to be the
+only one who could pass the Ordeal. It seems as if he must be right--and
+yet it doesn't seem so. I wish I could understand it."
+
+"Peter's prayer was wrong because it was a selfish prayer, I guess,"
+said the Story Girl thoughtfully. "Felix's prayer was all right, because
+it wouldn't have hurt any one else; but it was selfish of Peter to want
+to be the only one. We mustn't pray selfish prayers."
+
+"Oh, I see through it now," said Cecily joyfully.
+
+"Yes, but," said Dan triumphantly, "if you believe God answers prayers
+about particular things, it was Peter's prayer He answered. What do you
+make of that?"
+
+"Oh!" the Story Girl shook her head impatiently. "There's no use trying
+to make such things out. We only get more mixed up all the time. Let's
+leave it alone and I'll tell you a story. Aunt Olivia had a letter today
+from a friend in Nova Scotia, who lives in Shubenacadie. When I said I
+thought it a funny name, she told me to go and look in her scrap book,
+and I would find a story about the origin of the name. And I did. Don't
+you want to hear it?"
+
+Of course we did. We all sat down at the roots of the firs. Felix,
+having finally squared matters with his nose, turned around and listened
+also. He would not look at Cecily, but every one else had forgiven her.
+
+The Story Girl leaned that brown head of hers against the fir trunk
+behind her, and looked up at the apple-green sky through the dark boughs
+above us. She wore, I remember, a dress of warm crimson, and she had
+wound around her head a string of waxberries, that looked like a fillet
+of pearls. Her cheeks were still flushed with the excitement of the
+evening. In the dim light she was beautiful, with a wild, mystic
+loveliness, a compelling charm that would not be denied.
+
+"Many, many moons ago, an Indian tribe lived on the banks of a river
+in Nova Scotia. One of the young braves was named Accadee. He was the
+tallest and bravest and handsomest young man in the tribe--"
+
+"Why is it they're always so handsome in stories?" asked Dan. "Why are
+there never no stories about ugly people?"
+
+"Perhaps ugly people never have stories happen to them," suggested
+Felicity.
+
+"I think they're just as interesting as the handsome people," retorted
+Dan.
+
+"Well, maybe they are in real life," said Cecily, "but in stories it's
+just as easy to make them handsome as not. I like them best that way. I
+just love to read a story where the heroine is beautiful as a dream."
+
+"Pretty people are always conceited," said Felix, who was getting tired
+of holding his tongue.
+
+"The heroes in stories are always nice," said Felicity, with apparent
+irrelevance. "They're always so tall and slender. Wouldn't it be awful
+funny if any one wrote a story about a fat hero--or about one with too
+big a mouth?"
+
+"It doesn't matter what a man LOOKS like," I said, feeling that Felix
+and Dan were catching it rather too hotly. "He must be a good sort of
+chap and DO heaps of things. That's all that's necessary."
+
+"Do any of you happen to want to hear the rest of my story?" asked the
+Story Girl in an ominously polite voice that recalled us to a sense of
+our bad manners. We apologized and promised to behave better; she went
+on, appeased:
+
+"Accadee was all these things that I have mentioned, and he was the
+best hunter in the tribe besides. Never an arrow of his that did not go
+straight to the mark. Many and many a snow white moose he shot, and gave
+the beautiful skin to his sweetheart. Her name was Shuben and she was
+as lovely as the moon when it rises from the sea, and as pleasant as a
+summer twilight. Her eyes were dark and soft, her foot was as light as
+a breeze, and her voice sounded like a brook in the woods, or the wind
+that comes over the hills at night. She and Accadee were very much in
+love with each other, and often they hunted together, for Shuben was
+almost as skilful with her bow and arrow as Accadee himself. They had
+loved each other ever since they were small pappooses, and they had
+vowed to love each other as long as the river ran.
+
+"One twilight, when Accadee was out hunting in the woods, he shot a snow
+white moose; and he took off its skin and wrapped it around him. Then
+he went on through the woods in the starlight; and he felt so happy and
+light of heart that he sometimes frisked and capered about just as a
+real moose would do. And he was doing this when Shuben, who was also out
+hunting, saw him from afar and thought he was a real moose. She stole
+cautiously through the woods until she came to the brink of a little
+valley. Below her stood the snow white moose. She drew her arrow to her
+eye--alas, she knew the art only too well!--and took careful aim. The
+next moment Accadee fell dead with her arrow in his heart."
+
+The Story Girl paused--a dramatic pause. It was quite dark in the fir
+wood. We could see her face and eyes but dimly through the gloom. A
+silvery moon was looking down on us over the granary. The stars twinkled
+through the softly waving boughs. Beyond the wood we caught a glimpse of
+a moonlit world lying in the sharp frost of the October evening. The sky
+above it was chill and ethereal and mystical.
+
+But all about us were shadows; and the weird little tale, told in a
+voice fraught with mystery and pathos, had peopled them for us with
+furtive folk in belt and wampum, and dark-tressed Indian maidens.
+
+"What did Shuben do when she found out she had killed Accadee?" asked
+Felicity.
+
+"She died of a broken heart before the spring, and she and Accadee were
+buried side by side on the bank of the river which has ever since borne
+their names--the river Shubenacadie," said the Story Girl.
+
+The sharp wind blew around the granary and Cecily shivered. We heard
+Aunt Janet's voice calling "Children, children." Shaking off the spell
+of firs and moonlight and romantic tale, we scrambled to our feet and
+went homeward.
+
+"I kind of wish I'd been born an Injun," said Dan. "It must have been a
+jolly life--nothing to do but hunt and fight."
+
+"It wouldn't be so nice if they caught you and tortured you at the
+stake," said Felicity.
+
+"No," said Dan reluctantly. "I suppose there'd be some drawback to
+everything, even being an Injun."
+
+"Isn't it cold?" said Cecily, shivering again. "It will soon be winter.
+I wish summer could last forever. Felicity likes the winter, and so does
+the Story Girl, but I don't. It always seems so long till spring."
+
+"Never mind, we've had a splendid summer," I said, slipping my arm
+about her to comfort some childish sorrow that breathed in her plaintive
+voice.
+
+Truly, we had had a delectable summer; and, having had it, it was ours
+forever. "The gods themselves cannot recall their gifts." They may rob
+us of our future and embitter our present, but our past they may not
+touch. With all its laughter and delight and glamour it is our eternal
+possession.
+
+Nevertheless, we all felt a little of the sadness of the waning year.
+There was a distinct weight on our spirits until Felicity took us into
+the pantry and stayed us with apple tarts and comforted us with cream.
+Then we brightened up. It was really a very decent world after all.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII. THE TALE OF THE RAINBOW BRIDGE
+
+Felix, so far as my remembrance goes, never attained to success in the
+Ordeal of Bitter Apples. He gave up trying after awhile; and he also
+gave up praying about it, saying in bitterness of spirit that there was
+no use in praying when other fellows prayed against you out of spite. He
+and Peter remained on bad terms for some time, however.
+
+We were all of us too tired those nights to do any special praying.
+Sometimes I fear our "regular" prayers were slurred over, or mumbled in
+anything but reverent haste. October was a busy month on the hill farms.
+The apples had to be picked, and this work fell mainly to us children.
+We stayed home from school to do it. It was pleasant work and there was
+a great deal of fun in it; but it was hard, too, and our arms and backs
+ached roundly at night. In the mornings it was very delightful; in the
+afternoons tolerable; but in the evenings we lagged, and the laughter
+and zest of fresher hours were lacking.
+
+Some of the apples had to be picked very carefully. But with others it
+did not matter; we boys would climb the trees and shake the apples down
+until the girls shrieked for mercy. The days were crisp and mellow, with
+warm sunshine and a tang of frost in the air, mingled with the woodsy
+odours of the withering grasses. The hens and turkeys prowled about,
+pecking at windfalls, and Pat made mad rushes at them amid the fallen
+leaves. The world beyond the orchard was in a royal magnificence of
+colouring, under the vivid blue autumn sky. The big willow by the gate
+was a splendid golden dome, and the maples that were scattered through
+the spruce grove waved blood-red banners over the sombre cone-bearers.
+The Story Girl generally had her head garlanded with their leaves. They
+became her vastly. Neither Felicity nor Cecily could have worn them.
+Those two girls were of a domestic type that assorted ill with the
+wildfire in Nature's veins. But when the Story Girl wreathed her nut
+brown tresses with crimson leaves it seemed, as Peter said, that they
+grew on her--as if the gold and flame of her spirit had broken out in
+a coronal, as much a part of her as the pale halo seems a part of the
+Madonna it encircles.
+
+What tales she told us on those far-away autumn days, peopling the
+russet arcades with folk of an elder world. Many a princess rode by us
+on her palfrey, many a swaggering gallant ruffled it bravely in velvet
+and plume adown Uncle Stephen's Walk, many a stately lady, silken clad,
+walked in that opulent orchard!
+
+When we had filled our baskets they had to be carried to the granary
+loft, and the contents stored in bins or spread on the floor to ripen
+further. We ate a good many, of course, feeling that the labourer was
+worthy of his hire. The apples from our own birthday trees were stored
+in separate barrels inscribed with our names. We might dispose of them
+as we willed. Felicity sold hers to Uncle Alec's hired man--and was
+badly cheated to boot, for he levanted shortly afterwards, taking the
+apples with him, having paid her only half her rightful due. Felicity
+has not gotten over that to this day.
+
+Cecily, dear heart, sent most of hers to the hospital in town, and no
+doubt gathered in therefrom dividends of gratitude and satisfaction of
+soul, such as can never be purchased by any mere process of bargain and
+sale. The rest of us ate our apples, or carried them to school where
+we bartered them for such treasures as our schoolmates possessed and we
+coveted.
+
+There was a dusky, little, pear-shaped apple--from one of Uncle
+Stephen's trees--which was our favourite; and next to it a delicious,
+juicy yellow apple from Aunt Louisa's tree. We were also fond of the big
+sweet apples; we used to throw them up in the air and let them fall on
+the ground until they were bruised and battered to the bursting point.
+Then we sucked on the juice; sweeter was it than the nectar drunk by
+blissful gods on the Thessalian hill.
+
+Sometimes we worked until the cold yellow sunsets faded out over the
+darkening distances, and the hunter's moon looked down on us through the
+sparkling air. The constellations of autumn scintillated above us. Peter
+and the Story Girl knew all about them, and imparted their knowledge to
+us generously. I recall Peter standing on the Pulpit Stone, one night
+ere moonrise, and pointing them out to us, occasionally having a
+difference of opinion with the Story Girl over the name of some
+particular star. Job's Coffin and the Northern Cross were to the west of
+us; south of us flamed Fomalhaut. The Great Square of Pegasus was
+over our heads. Cassiopeia sat enthroned in her beautiful chair in the
+north-east; and north of us the Dippers swung untiringly around the
+Pole Star. Cecily and Felix were the only ones who could distinguish the
+double star in the handle of the Big Dipper, and greatly did they plume
+themselves thereon. The Story Girl told us the myths and legends woven
+around these immemorial clusters, her very voice taking on a clear,
+remote, starry sound as she talked of them. When she ceased, we came
+back to earth, feeling as if we had been millions of miles away in the
+blue ether, and that all our old familiar surroundings were momentarily
+forgotten and strange.
+
+That night when he pointed out the stars to us from the Pulpit Stone was
+the last time for several weeks that Peter shared our toil and pastime.
+The next day he complained of headache and sore throat, and seemed to
+prefer lying on Aunt Olivia's kitchen sofa to doing any work. As it was
+not in Peter to be a malingerer he was left in peace, while we picked
+apples. Felix alone, must unjustly and spitefully, declared that Peter
+was simply shirking.
+
+"He's just lazy, that's what's the matter with him," he said.
+
+"Why don't you talk sense, if you must talk?" said Felicity. "There's no
+sense in calling Peter lazy. You might as well say I had black hair. Of
+course, Peter, being a Craig, has his faults, but he's a smart boy. His
+father was lazy but his mother hasn't a lazy bone in her body, and Peter
+takes after her."
+
+"Uncle Roger says Peter's father wasn't exactly lazy," said the Story
+Girl. "The trouble was, there were so many other things he liked better
+than work."
+
+"I wonder if he'll ever come back to his family," said Cecily. "Just
+think how dreadful it would be if OUR father had left us like that!"
+
+"Our father is a King," said Felicity loftily, "and Peter's father was
+only a Craig. A member of our family COULDN'T behave like that."
+
+"They say there must be a black sheep in every family," said the Story
+Girl.
+
+"There isn't any in ours," said Cecily loyally.
+
+"Why do white sheep eat more than black?" asked Felix.
+
+"Is that a conundrum?" asked Cecily cautiously. "If it is I won't try to
+guess the reason. I never can guess conundrums."
+
+"It isn't a conundrum," said Felix. "It's a fact. They do--and there's a
+good reason for it."
+
+We stopped picking apples, sat down on the grass, and tried to reason
+it out--with the exception of Dan, who declared that he knew there was
+a catch somewhere and he wasn't going to be caught. The rest of us could
+not see where any catch could exist, since Felix solemnly vowed, 'cross
+his heart, white sheep did eat more than black. We argued over it
+seriously, but finally had to give it up.
+
+"Well, what is the reason?" asked Felicity.
+
+"Because there's more of them," said Felix, grinning.
+
+I forget what we did to Felix.
+
+A shower came up in the evening and we had to stop picking. After the
+shower there was a magnificent double rainbow. We watched it from the
+granary window, and the Story Girl told us an old legend, culled from
+one of Aunt Olivia's many scrapbooks.
+
+"Long, long ago, in the Golden Age, when the gods used to visit the
+earth so often that it was nothing uncommon to see them, Odin made a
+pilgrimage over the world. Odin was the great god of the northland,
+you know. And wherever he went among men he taught them love and
+brotherhood, and skilful arts; and great cities sprang up where he had
+trodden, and every land through which he passed was blessed because one
+of the gods had come down to men. But many men and women followed Odin
+himself, giving up all their worldly possessions and ambitions; and to
+these he promised the gift of eternal life. All these people were good
+and noble and unselfish and kind; but the best and noblest of them all
+was a youth named Ving; and this youth was beloved by Odin above all
+others, for his beauty and strength and goodness. Always he walked on
+Odin's right hand, and always the first light of Odin's smile fell on
+him. Tall and straight was he as a young pine, and his long hair was
+the colour of ripe wheat in the sun; and his blue eyes were like the
+northland heavens on a starry night.
+
+"In Odin's band was a beautiful maiden named Alin. She was as fair and
+delicate as a young birch tree in spring among the dark old pines and
+firs, and Ving loved her with all his heart. His soul thrilled with
+rapture at the thought that he and she together should drink from the
+fountain of immortality, as Odin had promised, and be one thereafter in
+eternal youth.
+
+"At last they came to the very place where the rainbow touched the
+earth. And the rainbow was a great bridge, built of living colours, so
+dazzling and wonderful that beyond it the eye could see nothing, only
+far away a great, blinding, sparkling glory, where the fountain of life
+sprang up in a shower of diamond fire. But under the Rainbow Bridge
+rolled a terrible flood, deep and wide and violent, full of rocks and
+rapids and whirlpools.
+
+"There was a Warder of the bridge, a god, dark and stern and sorrowful.
+And to him Odin gave command that he should open the gate and allow
+his followers to cross the Rainbow Bridge, that they might drink of the
+fountain of life beyond. And the Warder set open the gate.
+
+"'Pass on and drink of the fountain,' he said. 'To all who taste of it
+shall immortality be given. But only to that one who shall drink of it
+first shall be permitted to walk at Odin's right hand forever.'
+
+"Then the company passed through in great haste, all fired with a desire
+to be the first to drink of the fountain and win so marvellous a boon.
+Last of all came Ving. He had lingered behind to pluck a thorn from the
+foot of a beggar child he had met on the highway, and he had not heard
+the Warder's words. But when, eager, joyous, radiant, he set his foot
+on the rainbow, the stern, sorrowful Warder took him by the arm and drew
+him back.
+
+"'Ving, strong, noble, and valiant,' he said, 'Rainbow Bridge is not for
+thee.'
+
+"Very dark grew Ving's face. Hot rebellion rose in his heart and rushed
+over his pale lips.
+
+"'Why dost thou keep back the draught of immortality from me?' he
+demanded passionately.
+
+"The Warder pointed to the dark flood that rolled under the bridge.
+
+"'The path of the rainbow is not for thee,' he said, 'but yonder way is
+open. Ford that flood. On the furthest bank is the fountain of life.'
+
+"'Thou mockest me,' muttered Ving sullenly. 'No mortal could cross that
+flood. Oh, Master,' he prayed, turning beseechingly to Odin, 'thou didst
+promise to me eternal life as to the others. Wilt thou not keep that
+promise? Command the Warder to let me pass. He must obey thee.'
+
+"But Odin stood silent, with his face turned from his beloved, and
+Ving's heart was filled with unspeakable bitterness and despair.
+
+"'Thou mayest return to earth if thou fearest to essay the flood,' said
+the Warder.
+
+"'Nay,' said Ving wildly, 'earthly life without Alin is more dreadful
+than the death which awaits me in yon dark river.'
+
+"And he plunged fiercely in. He swam, and struggled, he buffetted the
+turmoil. The waves went over his head again and again, the whirlpools
+caught him and flung him on the cruel rocks. The wild, cold spray beat
+on his eyes and blinded him, so that he could see nothing, and the roar
+of the river deafened him so that he could hear nothing; but he felt
+keenly the wounds and bruises of the cruel rocks, and many a time he
+would have given up the struggle had not the thought of sweet Alin's
+loving eyes brought him the strength and desire to struggle as long
+as it was possible. Long, long, long, to him seemed that bitter and
+perilous passage; but at last he won through to the furthest side.
+Breathless and reeling, his vesture torn, his great wounds bleeding, he
+found himself on the shore where the fountain of immortality sprang up.
+He staggered to its brink and drank of its clear stream. Then all pain
+and weariness fell away from him, and he rose up, a god, beautiful with
+immortality. And as he did there came rushing over the Rainbow Bridge a
+great company--the band of fellow travellers. But all were too late to
+win the double boon. Ving had won to it through the danger and suffering
+of the dark river."
+
+The rainbow had faded out, and the darkness of the October dusk was
+falling.
+
+"I wonder," said Dan meditatively, as we went away from that redolent
+spot, "what it would be like to live for ever in this world."
+
+"I expect we'd get tired of it after awhile," said the Story Girl.
+"But," she added, "I think it would be a goodly while before I would."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX. THE SHADOW FEARED OF MAN
+
+We were all up early the next morning, dressing by candlelight. But
+early as it was we found the Story Girl in the kitchen when we went
+down, sitting on Rachel Ward's blue chest and looking important.
+
+"What do you think?" she exclaimed. "Peter has the measles! He was
+dreadfully sick all night, and Uncle Roger had to go for the doctor. He
+was quite light-headed, and didn't know any one. Of course he's far too
+sick to be taken home, so his mother has come up to wait on him, and I'm
+to live over here until he is better."
+
+This was mingled bitter and sweet. We were sorry to hear that Peter had
+the measles; but it would be jolly to have the Story Girl living with us
+all the time. What orgies of story telling we should have!
+
+"I suppose we'll all have the measles now," grumbled Felicity. "And
+October is such an inconvenient time for measles--there's so much to
+do."
+
+"I don't believe any time is very convenient to have the measles,"
+Cecily said.
+
+"Oh, perhaps we won't have them," said the Story Girl cheerfully. "Peter
+caught them at Markdale, the last time he was home, his mother says."
+
+"I don't want to catch the measles from Peter," said Felicity decidedly.
+"Fancy catching them from a hired boy!"
+
+"Oh, Felicity, don't call Peter a hired boy when he's sick," protested
+Cecily.
+
+During the next two days we were very busy--too busy to tell tales or
+listen to them. Only in the frosty dusk did we have time to wander afar
+in realms of gold with the Story Girl. She had recently been digging
+into a couple of old volumes of classic myths and northland folklore
+which she had found in Aunt Olivia's attic; and for us, god and goddess,
+laughing nymph and mocking satyr, norn and valkyrie, elf and troll, and
+"green folk" generally, were real creatures once again, inhabiting the
+orchards and woods and meadows around us, until it seemed as if the
+Golden Age had returned to earth.
+
+Then, on the third day, the Story Girl came to us with a very white
+face. She had been over to Uncle Roger's yard to hear the latest
+bulletin from the sick room. Hitherto they had been of a non-committal
+nature; but now it was only too evident that she had bad news.
+
+"Peter is very, very sick," she said miserably. "He has caught cold
+someway--and the measles have struck in--and--and--" the Story Girl
+wrung her brown hands together--"the doctor is afraid he--he--won't get
+better."
+
+We all stood around, stricken, incredulous.
+
+"Do you mean," said Felix, finding voice at length, "that Peter is going
+to die?"
+
+The Story Girl nodded miserably.
+
+"They're afraid so."
+
+Cecily sat down by her half filled basket and began to cry. Felicity
+said violently that she didn't believe it.
+
+"I can't pick another apple to-day and I ain't going to try," said Dan.
+
+None of us could. We went to the grown-ups and told them so; and the
+grown-ups, with unaccustomed understanding and sympathy, told us that we
+need not. Then we roamed about in our wretchedness and tried to comfort
+one another. We avoided the orchard; it was for us too full of happy
+memories to accord with our bitterness of soul. Instead, we resorted
+to the spruce wood, where the hush and the sombre shadows and the soft,
+melancholy sighing of the wind in the branches over us did not jar
+harshly on our new sorrow.
+
+We could not really believe that Peter was going to die--to DIE. Old
+people died. Grown-up people died. Even children of whom we had heard
+died. But that one of US--of our merry little band--should die was
+unbelievable. We could not believe it. And yet the possibility struck us
+in the face like a blow. We sat on the mossy stones under the dark old
+evergreens and gave ourselves up to wretchedness. We all, even Dan,
+cried, except the Story Girl.
+
+"I don't see how you can be so unfeeling, Sara Stanley," said Felicity
+reproachfully. "You've always been such friends with Peter--and made out
+you thought so much of him--and now you ain't shedding a tear for him."
+
+I looked at the Story Girl's dry, piteous eyes, and suddenly remembered
+that I had never seen her cry. When she told us sad tales, in a voice
+laden with all the tears that had ever been shed, she had never shed one
+of her own.
+
+"I can't cry," she said drearily. "I wish I could. I've a dreadful
+feeling here--" she touched her slender throat--"and if I could cry I
+think it would make it better. But I can't."
+
+"Maybe Peter will get better after all," said Dan, swallowing a sob.
+"I've heard of lots of people who went and got better after the doctor
+said they were going to die."
+
+"While there's life there's hope, you know," said Felix. "We shouldn't
+cross bridges till we come to them."
+
+"Those are only proverbs," said the Story Girl bitterly. "Proverbs are
+all very fine when there's nothing to worry you, but when you're in real
+trouble they're not a bit of help."
+
+"Oh, I wish I'd never said Peter wasn't fit to associate with,"
+moaned Felicity. "If he ever gets better I'll never say such a thing
+again--I'll never THINK it. He's just a lovely boy and twice as smart as
+lots that aren't hired out."
+
+"He was always so polite and good-natured and obliging," sighed Cecily.
+
+"He was just a real gentleman," said the Story Girl.
+
+"There ain't many fellows as fair and square as Peter," said Dan.
+
+"And such a worker," said Felix.
+
+"Uncle Roger says he never had a boy he could depend on like Peter," I
+said.
+
+"It's too late to be saying all these nice things about him now," said
+the Story Girl. "He won't ever know how much we thought of him. It's too
+late."
+
+"If he gets better I'll tell him," said Cecily resolutely.
+
+"I wish I hadn't boxed his ears that day he tried to kiss me," went on
+Felicity, who was evidently raking her conscience for past offences in
+regard to Peter. "Of course I couldn't be expected to let a hir--to let
+a boy kiss me. But I needn't have been so cross about it. I might have
+been more dignified. And I told him I just hated him. That wasn't true,
+but I s'pose he'll die thinking it is. Oh, dear me, what makes people
+say things they've got to be so sorry for afterwards?"
+
+"I suppose if Peter d-d-dies he'll go to heaven anyhow," sobbed Cecily.
+"He's been real good all this summer, but he isn't a church member."
+
+"He's a Presbyterian, you know," said Felicity reassuringly. Her tone
+expressed her conviction that that would carry Peter through if anything
+would. "We're none of us church members. But of course Peter couldn't be
+sent to the bad place. That would be ridiculous. What would they do with
+him there, when he's so good and polite and honest and kind?"
+
+"Oh, I think he'll be all right, too," sighed Cecily, "but you know he
+never did go to church and Sunday School before this summer."
+
+"Well, his father run away, and his mother was too busy earning a
+living to bring him up right," argued Felicity. "Don't you suppose that
+anybody, even God, would make allowances for that?"
+
+"Of course Peter will go to heaven," said the Story Girl. "He's not
+grown up enough to go anywhere else. Children always go to heaven. But
+I don't want him to go there or anywhere else. I want him to stay right
+here. I know heaven must be a splendid place, but I'm sure Peter would
+rather be here, having fun with us."
+
+"Sara Stanley," rebuked Felicity. "I should think you wouldn't say such
+things at such a solemn time. You're such a queer girl."
+
+"Wouldn't you rather be here yourself than in heaven?" said the Story
+Girl bluntly. "Wouldn't you now, Felicity King? Tell the truth, 'cross
+your heart."
+
+But Felicity took refuge from this inconvenient question in tears.
+
+"If we could only DO something to help Peter!" I said desperately. "It
+seems dreadful not to be able to do a single thing."
+
+"There's one thing we can do," said Cecily gently. "We can pray for
+him."
+
+"So we can," I agreed.
+
+"I'm going to pray like sixty," said Felix energetically.
+
+"We'll have to be awful good, you know," warned Cecily. "There's no use
+praying if you're not good."
+
+"That will be easy," sighed Felicity. "I don't feel a bit like being
+bad. If anything happens to Peter I feel sure I'll never be naughty
+again. I won't have the heart."
+
+We did, indeed, pray most sincerely for Peter's recovery. We did not, as
+in the case of Paddy, "tack it on after more important things," but put
+it in the very forefront of our petitions. Even skeptical Dan prayed,
+his skepticism falling away from him like a discarded garment in this
+valley of the shadow, which sifts out hearts and tries souls, until we
+all, grown-up or children, realize our weakness, and, finding that our
+own puny strength is as a reed shaken in the wind, creep back humbly to
+the God we have vainly dreamed we could do without.
+
+Peter was no better the next day. Aunt Olivia reported that his mother
+was broken-hearted. We did not again ask to be released from work.
+Instead, we went at it with feverish zeal. If we worked hard there was
+less time for grief and grievious thoughts. We picked apples and dragged
+them to the granary doggedly. In the afternoon Aunt Janet brought us a
+lunch of apple turnovers; but we could not eat them. Peter, as Felicity
+reminded us with a burst of tears, had been so fond of apple turnovers.
+
+And, oh, how good we were! How angelically and unnaturally good! Never
+was there such a band of kind, sweet-tempered, unselfish children in any
+orchard. Even Felicity and Dan, for once in their lives, got through the
+day without any exchange of left-handed compliments. Cecily confided to
+me that she never meant to put her hair up in curlers on Saturday
+nights again, because it was pretending. She was so anxious to repent of
+something, sweet girl, and this was all she could think of.
+
+During the afternoon Judy Pineau brought up a tear-blotted note from
+Sara Ray. Sara had not been allowed to visit the hill farm since Peter
+had developed measles. She was an unhappy little exile, and could
+only relieve her anguish of soul by daily letters to Cecily, which the
+faithful and obliging Judy Pineau brought up for her. These epistles
+were as gushingly underlined as if Sara had been a correspondent of
+early Victorian days.
+
+Cecily did not write back, because Mrs. Ray had decreed that no letters
+must be taken down from the hill farm lest they carry infection. Cecily
+had offered to bake every epistle thoroughly in the oven before sending
+it; but Mrs. Ray was inexorable, and Cecily had to content herself by
+sending long verbal messages with Judy Pineau.
+
+"My OWN DEAREST Cecily," ran Sara's letter. "I have just heard the
+sad news about POOR DEAR PETER. I can't describe MY FEELINGS. They are
+DREADFUL. I have been crying ALL THE AFTERNOON. I wish I could FLY to
+you, but ma will not let me. She is afraid I will catch the measles, but
+I would rather have the measles A DOZEN TIMES OVER than be sepparated
+from you all like this. But I have felt, ever since the Judgment Sunday
+that I MUST OBEY MA BETTER than I used to do. If ANYTHING HAPPENS to
+Peter and you are let see him BEFORE IT HAPPENS give him MY LOVE and
+tell him HOW SORRY I AM, and that I hope we will ALL meet in A BETTER
+WORLD Everything in school is about the same. The master is awful cross
+by spells. Jimmy Frewen walked home with Nellie Bowan last night
+from prayer-meeting and HER ONLY FOURTEEN. Don't you think it horrid
+BEGINNING SO YOUNG? YOU AND ME would NEVER do anything like that till we
+were GROWN UP, would we? Willy Fraser looks SO LONESOME in school these
+days. I must stop for ma says I waste FAR TOO MUCH TIME writing letters.
+Tell Judy ALL THE NEWS for me.
+
+"Your OWN TRUE FRIEND,
+
+"SARA RAY.
+
+"P.S. Oh I DO hope Peter will get better. Ma is going to get me a new
+brown dress for the winter.
+
+"S. R."
+
+When evening came we went to our seats under the whispering, sighing
+fir trees. It was a beautiful night--clear, windless, frosty. Some one
+galloped down the road on horseback, lustily singing a comic song. How
+dared he? We felt that it was an insult to our wretchedness. If Peter
+were going to--going to--well, if anything happened to Peter, we felt so
+miserably sure that the music of life would be stilled for us for ever.
+How could any one in the world be happy when we were so unhappy?
+
+Presently Aunt Olivia came down the long twilight arcade. Her bright
+hair was uncovered and she looked slim and queen-like in her light
+dress. We thought Aunt Olivia very pretty then. Looking back from
+a mature standpoint I realize that she must have been an unusually
+beautiful woman; and she looked her prettiest as she stood under the
+swaying boughs in the last faint light of the autumn dusk and smiled
+down at our woebegone faces.
+
+"Dear, sorrowful little people, I bring you glad tidings of great
+joy," she said. "The doctor has just been here, and he finds Peter much
+better, and thinks he will pull through after all."
+
+We gazed up at her in silence for a few moments. When we had heard the
+news of Paddy's recovery we had been noisy and jubilant; but we were
+very quiet now. We had been too near something dark and terrible and
+menacing; and though it was thus suddenly removed the chill and shadow
+of it were about us still. Presently the Story Girl, who had been
+standing up, leaning against a tall fir, slipped down to the ground in
+a huddled fashion and broke into a very passion of weeping. I had never
+heard any one cry so, with dreadful, rending sobs. I was used to hearing
+girls cry. It was as much Sara Ray's normal state as any other, and even
+Felicity and Cecily availed themselves occasionally of the privilege of
+sex. But I had never heard any girl cry like this. It gave me the same
+unpleasant sensation which I had felt one time when I had seen my father
+cry.
+
+"Oh, don't, Sara, don't," I said gently, patting her convulsed shoulder.
+
+"You ARE a queer girl," said Felicity--more tolerantly than usual
+however--"you never cried a speck when you thought Peter was going to
+die--and now when he is going to get better you cry like that."
+
+"Sara, child, come with me," said Aunt Olivia, bending over her. The
+Story Girl got up and went away, with Aunt Olivia's arms around her. The
+sound of her crying died away under the firs, and with it seemed to go
+the dread and grief that had been our portion for hours. In the reaction
+our spirits rose with a bound.
+
+"Oh, ain't it great that Peter's going to be all right?" said Dan,
+springing up.
+
+"I never was so glad of anything in my whole life," declared Felicity in
+shameless rapture.
+
+"Can't we send word somehow to Sara Ray to-night?" asked Cecily, the
+ever-thoughtful. "She's feeling so bad--and she'll have to feel that way
+till to-morrow if we can't."
+
+"Let's all go down to the Ray gate and holler to Judy Pineau till she
+comes out," suggested Felix.
+
+Accordingly, we went and "hollered," with a right good will. We were
+much taken aback to find that Mrs. Ray came to the gate instead of Judy,
+and rather sourly demanded what we were yelling about. When she heard
+our news, however, she had the decency to say she was glad, and to
+promise she would convey the good tidings to Sara--"who is already in
+bed, where all children of her age should be," added Mrs. Ray severely.
+
+WE had no intention of going to bed for a good two hours yet. Instead,
+after devoutly thanking goodness that our grown-ups, in spite of some
+imperfections, were not of the Mrs. Ray type, we betook ourselves to the
+granary, lighted a huge lantern which Dan had made out of a turnip, and
+proceeded to devour all the apples we might have eaten through the day
+but had not. We were a blithe little crew, sitting there in the light of
+our goblin lantern. We had in very truth been given beauty for ashes and
+the oil of joy for mourning. Life was as a red rose once more.
+
+"I'm going to make a big batch of patty-pans, first thing in the
+morning," said Felicity jubilantly. "Isn't it queer? Last night I felt
+just like praying, and tonight I feel just like cooking."
+
+"We mustn't forget to thank God for making Peter better," said Cecily,
+as we finally went to the house.
+
+"Do you s'pose Peter wouldn't have got better anyway?" said Dan.
+
+"Oh, Dan, what makes you ask such questions?" exclaimed Cecily in real
+distress.
+
+"I dunno," said Dan. "They just kind of come into my head, like. But of
+course I mean to thank God when I say my prayers to-night. That's only
+decent."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX. A COMPOUND LETTER
+
+Once Peter was out of danger he recovered rapidly, but he found his
+convalescence rather tedious; and Aunt Olivia suggested to us one day
+that we write a "compound letter" to amuse him, until he could come to
+the window and talk to us from a safe distance. The idea appealed to
+us; and, the day being Saturday and the apples all picked, we betook
+ourselves to the orchard to compose our epistles, Cecily having first
+sent word by a convenient caller to Sara Ray, that she, too, might have
+a letter ready. Later, I, having at that time a mania for preserving all
+documents relating to our life in Carlisle, copied those letters in the
+blank pages at the back of my dream book. Hence I can reproduce them
+verbatim, with the bouquet they have retained through all the long years
+since they were penned in that autumnal orchard on the hill, with
+its fading leaves and frosted grasses, and the "mild, delightsome
+melancholy" of the late October day enfolding.
+
+
+CECILY'S LETTER
+
+"DEAR PETER:--I am so very glad and thankful that you are going to
+get better. We were so afraid you would not last Tuesday, and we felt
+dreadful, even Felicity. We all prayed for you. I think the others have
+stopped now, but I keep it up every night still, for fear you might have
+a relaps. (I don't know if that is spelled right. I haven't the dixonary
+handy, and if I ask the others Felicity will laugh at me, though she
+cannot spell lots of words herself.) I am saving some of the Honourable
+Mr. Whalen's pears for you. I've got them hid where nobody can find
+them. There's only a dozen because Dan et all the rest, but I guess you
+will like them. We have got all the apples picked, and are all ready to
+take the measles now, if we have to, but I hope we won't. If we have to,
+though, I'd rather catch them from you than from any one else, because
+we are acquainted with you. If I do take the measles and anything
+happens to me Felicity is to have my cherry vase. I'd rather give it to
+the Story Girl, but Dan says it ought to be kept in the family, even if
+Felicity is a crank. I haven't anything else valuable, since I gave Sara
+Ray my forget-me-not jug, but if you would like anything I've got let me
+know and I'll leave instructions for you to have it. The Story Girl has
+told us some splendid stories lately. I wish I was clever like her. Ma
+says it doesn't matter if you're not clever as long as you are good, but
+I am not even very good.
+
+"I think this is all my news, except that I want to tell you how much
+we all think of you, Peter. When we heard you were sick we all said nice
+things about you, but we were afraid it was too late, and I said if you
+got better I'd tell you. It is easier to write it than to tell it out
+to your face. We think you are smart and polite and obliging and a great
+worker and a gentleman.
+
+"Your true friend,
+
+"CECILY KING.
+
+"P.S. If you answer my letter don't say anything about the pears,
+because I don't want Dan to find out there's any left. C. K."
+
+
+FELICITY'S LETTER
+
+"DEAR PETER:--Aunt Olivia says for us all to write a compound letter to
+cheer you up. We are all awful glad you are getting better. It gave us
+an awful scare when we heard you were going to die. But you will soon be
+all right and able to get out again. Be careful you don't catch cold. I
+am going to bake some nice things for you and send them over, now that
+the doctor says you can eat them. And I'll send you my rosebud plate to
+eat off of. I'm only lending it, you know, not giving it. I let very few
+people use it because it is my greatest treasure. Mind you don't break
+it. Aunt Olivia must always wash it, not your mother.
+
+"I do hope the rest of us won't catch the measles. It must look horrid
+to have red spots all over your face. We all feel pretty well yet. The
+Story Girl says as many queer things as ever. Felix thinks he is getting
+thin, but he is fatter than ever, and no wonder, with all the apples he
+eats. He has give up trying to eat the bitter apples at last. Beverley
+has grown half an inch since July, by the mark on the hall door, and
+he is awful pleased about it. I told him I guessed the magic seed was
+taking effect at last, and he got mad. He never gets mad at anything
+the Story Girl says, and yet she is so sarkastic by times. Dan is pretty
+hard to get along with as usul, but I try to bear pashently with him.
+Cecily is well and says she isn't going to curl her hair any more. She
+is so conscienshus. I am glad my hair curls of itself, ain't you?
+
+"We haven't seen Sara Ray since you got sick. She is awful lonesome,
+and Judy says she cries nearly all the time but that is nothing new. I'm
+awful sorry for Sara but I'm glad I'm not her. She is going to write you
+a letter too. You'll let me see what she puts in it, won't you? You'd
+better take some Mexican Tea now. It's a great blood purifyer.
+
+"I am going to get a lovely dark blue dress for the winter. It is ever
+so much prettier than Sara Ray's brown one. Sara Ray's mother has no
+taste. The Story Girl's father is sending her a new red dress, and a red
+velvet cap from Paris. She is so fond of red. I can't bear it, it looks
+so common. Mother says I can get a velvet hood too. Cecily says she
+doesn't believe it's right to wear velvet when it's so expensive and
+the heathen are crying for the gospel. She got that idea from a Sunday
+School paper but I am going to get my hood all the same.
+
+"Well, Peter, I have no more news so I will close for this time.
+
+"hoping you will soon be quite well, I remain
+
+"yours sincerely,
+
+"FELICITY KING.
+
+"P.S. The Story Girl peeked over my shoulder and says I ought to have
+signed it 'yours affeckshunately,' but I know better, because the
+_Family Guide_ has told lots of times how you should sign yourself when
+you are writing to a young man who is only a friend. F. K."
+
+
+FELIX' LETTER
+
+"DEAR PETER:--I am awful glad you are getting better. We all felt bad
+when we thought you wouldn't, but I felt worse than the others because
+we hadn't been on very good terms lately and I had said mean things
+about you. I'm sorry and, Peter, you can pray for anything you like and
+I won't ever object again. I'm glad Uncle Alec interfered and stopped
+the fight. If I had licked you and you had died of the measles it would
+have been a dreadful thing.
+
+"We have all the apples in and haven't much to do just now and we are
+having lots of fun but we wish you were here to join in. I'm a lot
+thinner than I was. I guess working so hard picking apples is a good
+thing to make you thin. The girls are all well. Felicity puts on as
+many airs as ever, but she makes great things to eat. I have had some
+splendid dreams since we gave up writing them down. That is always the
+way. We ain't going to school till we're sure we are not going to have
+the measles. This is all I can think of, so I will draw to a close.
+Remember, you can pray for anything you like. FELIX KING."
+
+
+SARA RAY'S LETTER
+
+"DEAR PETER:--I never wrote to A BOY before, so PLEASE excuse ALL
+mistakes. I am SO glad you are getting better. We were SO afraid you
+were GOING TO DIE. I CRIED ALL NIGHT about it. But now that you are OUT
+OF DANGER will you tell me WHAT IT REALLY FEELS LIKE to think you are
+going to die? Does it FEEL QUEER? Were you VERY badly frightened?
+
+"Ma won't let me go up the hill AT ALL now. I would DIE if it was not
+for Judy Pinno. (The French names are SO HARD TO SPELL.) JUDY IS VERY
+OBLIGING and I feel that she SIMPATHISES WITH ME. In my LONELY HOURS I
+read my dream book and Cecily's old letters and they are SUCH A COMFORT
+to me. I have been reading one of the school library books too. I is
+PRETTY GOOD but I wish they had got more LOVE STORIES because they are
+so exciting. But the master would not let them.
+
+"If you had DIED, Peter, and YOUR FATHER had heard it wouldn't he have
+FELT DREADFUL? We are having BEAUTIFUL WEATHER and the seenary is fine
+since the leaves turned. I think there is nothing so pretty as Nature
+after all.
+
+"I hope ALL DANGER from the measles will soon be over and we can ALL
+MEET AGAIN AT THE HOME ON THE HILL. Till then FAREWELL.
+
+"Your true friend,
+
+"SARA RAY.
+
+"P. S. Don't let Felicity see this letter. S. R."
+
+
+DAN'S LETTER
+
+"DEAR OLD PETE:--Awful glad you cheated the doctor. I thought you
+weren't the kind to turn up your toes so easy. You should of heard the
+girls crying.
+
+"They're all getting their winter finery now and the talk about it would
+make you sick. The Story Girl is getting hers from Paris and Felicity is
+awful jealous though she pretends she isn't. I can see through her.
+
+"Kitt Mar was up here Thursday to see the girls. She's had the measles
+so she isn't scared. She's a great girl to laugh. I like a girl that
+laughs, don't you?
+
+"We had a call from Peg Bowen yesterday. You should of seen the Story
+Girl hustling Pat out of the way, for all she says she don't believe he
+was bewitched. Peg had your rheumatism ring on and the Story Girl's blue
+beads and Sara Ray's lace soed across the front of her dress. She wanted
+some tobacco and some pickles. Ma gave her some pickles but said we
+didn't have no tobacco and Peg went off mad but I guess she wouldn't
+bewitch anything on account of the pickles.
+
+"I ain't any hand to write letters so I guess I'll stop. Hope you'll be
+out soon. DAN."
+
+
+THE STORY GIRL'S LETTER
+
+"DEAR PETER:--Oh, how glad I am that you are getting better! Those
+days when we thought you wouldn't were the hardest of my whole life. It
+seemed too dreadful to be true that perhaps you would die. And then when
+we heard you were going to get better that seemed too good to be true.
+Oh, Peter, hurry up and get well, for we are having such good times and
+we miss you so much. I have coaxed Uncle Alec not to burn his potato
+stalks till you are well, because I remember how you always liked to see
+the potato stalks burn. Uncle Alec consented, though Aunt Janet said it
+was high time they were burned. Uncle Roger burned his last night and it
+was such fun.
+
+"Pat is splendid. He has never had a sick spell since that bad one.
+I would send him over to be company for you, but Aunt Janet says no,
+because he might carry the measles back. I don't see how he could, but
+we must obey Aunt Janet. She is very good to us all, but I know she
+does not approve of me. She says I'm my father's own child. I know that
+doesn't mean anything complimentary because she looked so queer when she
+saw that I had heard her, but I don't care. I'm glad I'm like father. I
+had a splendid letter from him this week, with the darlingest pictures
+in it. He is painting a new picture which is going to make him famous. I
+wonder what Aunt Janet will say then.
+
+"Do you know, Peter, yesterday I thought I saw the Family Ghost at last.
+I was coming through the gap in the hedge, and I saw somebody in blue
+standing under Uncle Alec's tree. How my heart beat! My hair should have
+stood up on end with terror but it didn't. I felt to see, and it was
+lying down quite flat. But it was only a visitor after all. I don't know
+whether I was glad or disappointed. I don't think it would be a pleasant
+experience to see the ghost. But after I had seen it think what a
+heroine I would be!
+
+"Oh, Peter, what do you think? I have got acquainted with the Awkward
+Man at last. I never thought it would be so easy. Yesterday Aunt Olivia
+wanted some ferns, so I went back to the maple woods to get them for
+her, and I found some lovely ones by the spring. And while I was sitting
+there, looking into the spring who should come along but the Awkward Man
+himself. He sat right down beside me and began to talk. I never was so
+surprised in my life. We had a very interesting talk, and I told him
+two of my best stories, and a great many of my secrets into the bargain.
+They may say what they like, but he was not one bit shy or awkward,
+and he has beautiful eyes. He did not tell me any of his secrets, but
+I believe he will some day. Of course I never said a word about his
+Alice-room. But I gave him a hint about his little brown book. I said
+I loved poetry and often felt like writing it, and then I said, 'Do you
+ever feel like that, Mr. Dale?' He said, yes, he sometimes felt that
+way, but he did not mention the brown book. I thought he might have. But
+after all I don't like people who tell you everything the first time
+you meet them, like Sara Ray. When he went away he said, 'I hope I shall
+have the pleasure of meeting you again,' just as seriously and politely
+as if I was a grown-up young lady. I am sure he could never have said
+it if I had been really grown up. I told him it was likely he would and
+that he wasn't to mind if I had a longer skirt on next time, because I'd
+be just the same person.
+
+"I told the children a beautiful new fairy story to-day. I made them go
+to the spruce wood to hear it. A spruce wood is the proper place to
+tell fairy stories in. Felicity says she can't see that it makes any
+difference where you tell them, but oh, it does. I wish you had been
+there to hear it too, but when you are well I will tell it over again
+for you.
+
+"I am going to call the southernwood 'appleringie' after this. Beverley
+says that is what they call it in Scotland, and I think it sounds so
+much more poetical than southernwood. Felicity says the right name is
+'Boy's Love,' but I think that sounds silly.
+
+"Oh, Peter, shadows are such pretty things. The orchard is full of
+them this very minute. Sometimes they are so still you would think them
+asleep. Then they go laughing and skipping. Outside, in the oat field,
+they are always chasing each other. They are the wild shadows. The
+shadows in the orchard are the tame shadows.
+
+"Everything seems to be rather tired growing except the spruces and
+chrysanthemums in Aunt Olivia's garden. The sunshine is so thick and
+yellow and lazy, and the crickets sing all day long. The birds are
+nearly all gone and most of the maple leaves have fallen.
+
+"Just to make you laugh I'll write you a little story I heard Uncle Alec
+telling last night. It was about Elder Frewen's grandfather taking a
+pair of rope reins to lead a piano home. Everybody laughed except Aunt
+Janet. Old Mr. Frewen was HER grandfather too, and she wouldn't laugh.
+One day when old Mr. Frewen was a young man of eighteen his father came
+home and said, 'Sandy, I bought a piano at Simon Ward's sale to-day.
+You're to go to-morrow and bring it home.' So next day Sandy started
+off on horseback with a pair of rope reins to lead the piano home. He
+thought it was some kind of livestock.
+
+"And then Uncle Roger told about old Mark Ward who got up to make a
+speech at a church missionary social when he was drunk. (Of course he
+didn't get drunk at the social. He went there that way.) And this was
+his speech.
+
+"'Ladies and gentlemen, Mr. Chairman, I can't express my thoughts
+on this grand subject of missions. It's in this poor human
+critter'--patting himself on the breast--'but he can't git it out.'
+
+"I'll tell you these stories when you get well. I can tell them ever so
+much better than I can write them.
+
+"I know Felicity is wondering why I'm writing such a long letter, so
+perhaps I'd better stop. If your mother reads it to you there is a good
+deal of it she may not understand, but I think your Aunt Jane would.
+
+"I remain
+
+"your very affectionate friend,
+
+"SARA STANLEY."
+
+
+I did not keep a copy of my own letter, and I have forgotten everything
+that was in it, except the first sentence, in which I told Peter I was
+awful glad he was getting better.
+
+Peter's delight on receiving our letters knew no bounds. He insisted
+on answering them and his letter, painstakingly disinfected, was duly
+delivered to us. Aunt Olivia had written it at his dictation, which
+was a gain, as far as spelling and punctuation went. But Peter's
+individuality seemed merged and lost in Aunt Olivia's big, dashing
+script. Not until the Story Girl read the letter to us in the granary by
+jack-o-lantern light, in a mimicry of Peter's very voice, did we savour
+the real bouquet of it.
+
+
+PETER'S LETTER
+
+"DEAR EVERYBODY, BUT ESPECIALLY FELICITY:--I was awful glad to get your
+letters. It makes you real important to be sick, but the time seems
+awful long when you're getting better. Your letters were all great, but
+I liked Felicity's best, and next to hers the Story Girl's. Felicity,
+it will be awful good of you to send me things to eat and the rosebud
+plate. I'll be awful careful of it. I hope you won't catch the measles,
+for they are not nice, especially when they strike in, but you would
+look all right, even if you did have red spots on your face. I would
+like to try the Mexican Tea, because you want me to, but mother says
+no, she doesn't believe in it, and Burtons Bitters are a great deal
+healthier. If I was you I would get the velvet hood all right. The
+heathen live in warm countries so they don't want hoods.
+
+"I'm glad you are still praying for me, Cecily, for you can't trust
+the measles. And I'm glad you're keeping you know what for me. I don't
+believe anything will happen to you if you do take the measles; but
+if anything does I'd like that little red book of yours, _The Safe
+Compass_, just to remember you by. It's such a good book to read on
+Sundays. It is interesting and religious, too. So is the Bible. I hadn't
+quite finished the Bible before I took the measles, but ma is reading
+the last chapters to me. There's an awful lot in that book. I can't
+understand the whole of it, since I'm only a hired boy, but some parts
+are real easy.
+
+"I'm awful glad you have such a good opinion of me. I don't deserve it,
+but after this I'll try to. I can't tell you how I feel about all your
+kindness. I'm like the fellow the Story Girl wrote about who couldn't
+get it out. I have the picture the Story Girl gave me for my sermon on
+the wall at the foot of my bed. I like to look at it, it looks so much
+like Aunt Jane.
+
+"Felix, I've given up praying that I'd be the only one to eat the bitter
+apples, and I'll never pray for anything like that again. It was a
+horrid mean prayer. I didn't know it then, but after the measles struck
+in I found out it was. Aunt Jane wouldn't have liked it. After this I'm
+going to pray prayers I needn't be ashamed of.
+
+"Sara Ray, I don't know what it feels like to be going to die because I
+didn't know I was going to die till I got better. Mother says I was luny
+most of the time after they struck in. It was just because they struck
+in I was luny. I ain't luny naturally, Felicity. I will do what you
+asked in your postscript, Sara, although it will be hard.
+
+"I'm glad Peg Bowen didn't catch you, Dan. Maybe she bewitched me that
+night we were at her place, and that is why the measles struck in. I'm
+awful glad Mr. King is going to leave the potato stalks until I get
+well, and I'm obliged to the Story Girl for coaxing him. I guess she
+will find out about Alice yet. There were some parts of her letter I
+couldn't see through, but when the measles strike in, they leave you
+stupid for a spell. Anyhow, it was a fine letter, and they were all
+fine, and I'm awful glad I have so many nice friends, even if I am only
+a hired boy. Perhaps I'd never have found it out if the measles hadn't
+struck in. So I'm glad they did but I hope they never will again.
+
+"Your obedient servant,
+
+"PETER CRAIG."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI. ON THE EDGE OF LIGHT AND DARK
+
+We celebrated the November day when Peter was permitted to rejoin us
+by a picnic in the orchard. Sara Ray was also allowed to come, under
+protest; and her joy over being among us once more was almost pathetic.
+She and Cecily cried in one another's arms as if they had been parted
+for years.
+
+We had a beautiful day for our picnic. November dreamed that it was May.
+The air was soft and mellow, with pale, aerial mists in the valleys and
+over the leafless beeches on the western hill. The sere stubble fields
+brooded in glamour, and the sky was pearly blue. The leaves were
+still thick on the apple trees, though they were russet hued, and the
+after-growth of grass was richly green, unharmed as yet by the nipping
+frosts of previous nights. The wind made a sweet, drowsy murmur in the
+boughs, as of bees among apple blossoms.
+
+"It's just like spring, isn't it?" asked Felicity.
+
+The Story Girl shook her head.
+
+"No, not quite. It looks like spring, but it isn't spring. It's as
+if everything was resting--getting ready to sleep. In spring they're
+getting ready to grow. Can't you FEEL the difference?"
+
+"I think it's just like spring," insisted Felicity.
+
+In the sun-sweet place before the Pulpit Stone we boys had put up a
+board table. Aunt Janet allowed us to cover it with an old
+tablecloth, the worn places in which the girls artfully concealed with
+frost-whitened ferns. We had the kitchen dishes, and the table was gaily
+decorated with Cecily's three scarlet geraniums and maple leaves in
+the cherry vase. As for the viands, they were fit for the gods on high
+Olympus. Felicity had spent the whole previous day and the forenoon of
+the picnic day in concocting them. Her crowning achievement was a rich
+little plum cake, on the white frosting of which the words "Welcome
+Back" were lettered in pink candies. This was put before Peter's place,
+and almost overcame him.
+
+"To think that you'd go to so much trouble for me!" he said, with a
+glance of adoring gratitude at Felicity. Felicity got all the gratitude,
+although the Story Girl had originated the idea and seeded the raisins
+and beaten the eggs, while Cecily had trudged all the way to Mrs.
+Jameson's little shop below the church to buy the pink candies. But that
+is the way of the world.
+
+"We ought to have grace," said Felicity, as we sat down at the festal
+board. "Will any one say it?"
+
+She looked at me, but I blushed to the roots of my hair and shook my
+head sheepishly. An awkward pause ensued; it looked as if we would have
+to proceed without grace, when Felix suddenly shut his eyes, bent
+his head, and said a very good grace without any appearance of
+embarrassment. We looked at him when it was over with an increase of
+respect.
+
+"Where on earth did you learn that, Felix?" I asked.
+
+"It's the grace Uncle Alec says at every meal," answered Felix.
+
+We felt rather ashamed of ourselves. Was it possible that we had paid so
+little attention to Uncle Alec's grace that we did not recognize it when
+we heard it on other lips?
+
+"Now," said Felicity jubilantly, "let's eat everything up."
+
+In truth, it was a merry little feast. We had gone without our dinners,
+in order to "save our appetites," and we did ample justice to Felicity's
+good things. Paddy sat on the Pulpit Stone and watched us with great
+yellow eyes, knowing that tidbits would come his way later on.
+Many witty things were said--or at least we thought them witty--and
+uproarious was the laughter. Never had the old King orchard known a
+blither merrymaking or lighter hearts.
+
+The picnic over, we played games until the early falling dusk, and then
+we went with Uncle Alec to the back field to burn the potato stalks--the
+crowning delight of the day.
+
+The stalks were in heaps all over the field, and we were allowed the
+privilege of setting fire to them. 'Twas glorious! In a few minutes the
+field was alight with blazing bonfires, over which rolled great, pungent
+clouds of smoke. From pile to pile we ran, shrieking with delight, to
+poke each up with a long stick and watch the gush of rose-red sparks
+stream off into the night. In what a whirl of smoke and firelight and
+wild, fantastic, hurtling shadows we were!
+
+When we grew tired of our sport we went to the windward side of the
+field and perched ourselves on the high pole fence that skirted a dark
+spruce wood, full of strange, furtive sounds. Over us was a great, dark
+sky, blossoming with silver stars, and all around lay dusky, mysterious
+reaches of meadow and wood in the soft, empurpled night. Away to
+the east a shimmering silveryness beneath a palace of aerial cloud
+foretokened moonrise. But directly before us the potato field, with its
+wreathing smoke and sullen flames, the gigantic shadow of Uncle Alec
+crossing and recrossing it, reminded us of Peter's famous description of
+the bad place, and probably suggested the Story Girl's remark.
+
+"I know a story," she said, infusing just the right shade of weirdness
+into her voice, "about a man who saw the devil. Now, what's the matter,
+Felicity?"
+
+"I can never get used to the way you mention the--the--that name,"
+complained Felicity. "To hear you speak of the Old Scratch any one would
+think he was just a common person."
+
+"Never mind. Tell us the story," I said curiously.
+
+"It is about Mrs. John Martin's uncle at Markdale," said the Story Girl.
+"I heard Uncle Roger telling it the other night. He didn't know I was
+sitting on the cellar hatch outside the window, or I don't suppose he
+would have told it. Mrs. Martin's uncle's name was William Cowan, and he
+has been dead for twenty years; but sixty years ago he was a young man,
+and a very wild, wicked young man. He did everything bad he could think
+of, and never went to church, and he laughed at everything religious,
+even the devil. He didn't believe there was a devil at all. One
+beautiful summer Sunday evening his mother pleaded with him to go to
+church with her, but he would not. He told her that he was going fishing
+instead, and when church time came he swaggered past the church, with
+his fishing rod over his shoulder, singing a godless song. Half way
+between the church and the harbour there was a thick spruce wood, and
+the path ran through it. When William Cowan was half way through it
+SOMETHING came out of the wood and walked beside him."
+
+I have never heard anything more horribly suggestive than that innocent
+word "something," as enunciated by the Story Girl. I felt Cecily's hand,
+icy cold, clutching mine.
+
+"What--what--was IT like?" whispered Felix, curiosity getting the better
+of his terror.
+
+"IT was tall, and black, and hairy," said the Story Girl, her eyes
+glowing with uncanny intensity in the red glare of the fires, "and IT
+lifted one great, hairy hand, with claws on the end of it, and clapped
+William Cowan, first on one shoulder and then on the other, and said,
+'Good sport to you, brother.' William Cowan gave a horrible scream and
+fell on his face right there in the wood. Some of the men around the
+church door heard the scream, and they rushed down to the wood. They saw
+nothing but William Cowan, lying like a dead man on the path. They took
+him up and carried him home; and when they undressed him to put him to
+bed, there, on each shoulder, was the mark of a big hand, BURNED INTO
+THE FLESH. It was weeks before the burns healed, and the scars never
+went away. Always, as long as William Cowan lived, he carried on his
+shoulders the prints of the devil's hand."
+
+I really do not know how we should ever have got home, had we been left
+to our own devices. We were cold with fright. How could we turn our
+backs on the eerie spruce wood, out of which SOMETHING might pop at
+any moment? How cross those long, shadowy fields between us and our
+rooftree? How venture through the darkly mysterious bracken hollow?
+
+Fortunately, Uncle Alec came along at this crisis and said he thought
+we'd better come home now, since the fires were nearly out. We slid down
+from the fence and started, taking care to keep close together and in
+front of Uncle Alec.
+
+"I don't believe a word of that yarn," said Dan, trying to speak with
+his usual incredulity.
+
+"I don't see how you can help believing it," said Cecily. "It isn't as
+if it was something we'd read of, or that happened far away. It happened
+just down at Markdale, and I've seen that very spruce wood myself."
+
+"Oh, I suppose William Cowan got a fright of some kind," conceded Dan,
+"but I don't believe he saw the devil."
+
+"Old Mr. Morrison at Lower Markdale was one of the men who undressed
+him, and he remembers seeing the marks," said the Story Girl
+triumphantly.
+
+"How did William Cowan behave afterwards?" I asked.
+
+"He was a changed man," said the Story Girl solemnly. "Too much changed.
+He never was known to laugh again, or even smile. He became a very
+religious man, which was a good thing, but he was dreadfully gloomy and
+thought everything pleasant sinful. He wouldn't even eat any more than
+was actually necessary to keep him alive. Uncle Roger says that if he
+had been a Roman Catholic he would have become a monk, but, as he was a
+Presbyterian, all he could do was to turn into a crank."
+
+"Yes, but your Uncle Roger was never clapped on the shoulder and called
+brother by the devil," said Peter. "If he had, he mightn't have been so
+precious jolly afterwards himself."
+
+"I do wish to goodness," said Felicity in exasperation, "that you'd stop
+talking of the--the--of such subjects in the dark. I'm so scared now
+that I keep thinking father's steps behind us are SOMETHING'S. Just
+think, my own father!"
+
+The Story Girl slipped her arm through Felicity's.
+
+"Never mind," she said soothingly. "I'll tell you another story--such a
+beautiful story that you'll forget all about the devil."
+
+She told us one of Hans Andersen's most exquisite tales; and the magic
+of her voice charmed away all our fear, so that when we reached the
+bracken hollow, a lake of shadow surrounded by the silver shore of
+moonlit fields, we all went through it without a thought of His Satanic
+Majesty at all. And beyond us, on the hill, the homelight was glowing
+from the farmhouse window like a beacon of old loves.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII. THE OPENING OF THE BLUE CHEST
+
+November wakened from her dream of May in a bad temper. The day after
+the picnic a cold autumn rain set in, and we got up to find our world
+a drenched, wind-writhen place, with sodden fields and dour skies. The
+rain was weeping on the roof as if it were shedding the tears of old
+sorrows; the willow by the gate tossed its gaunt branches wildly, as if
+it were some passionate, spectral thing, wringing its fleshless hands
+in agony; the orchard was haggard and uncomely; nothing seemed the same
+except the staunch, trusty, old spruces.
+
+It was Friday, but we were not to begin going to school again until
+Monday, so we spent the day in the granary, sorting apples and hearing
+tales. In the evening the rain ceased, the wind came around to the
+northwest, freezing suddenly, and a chilly yellow sunset beyond the dark
+hills seemed to herald a brighter morrow.
+
+Felicity and the Story Girl and I walked down to the post-office for the
+mail, along a road where fallen leaves went eddying fitfully up and down
+before us in weird, uncanny dances of their own. The evening was full of
+eerie sounds--the creaking of fir boughs, the whistle of the wind in the
+tree-tops, the vibrations of strips of dried bark on the rail fences.
+But we carried summer and sunshine in our hearts, and the bleak
+unloveliness of the outer world only intensified our inner radiance.
+
+Felicity wore her new velvet hood, with a coquettish little collar of
+white fur about her neck. Her golden curls framed her lovely face, and
+the wind stung the pink of her cheeks to crimson. On my left hand walked
+the Story Girl, her red cap on her jaunty brown head. She scattered her
+words along the path like the pearls and diamonds of the old fairy tale.
+I remember that I strutted along quite insufferably, for we met several
+of the Carlisle boys and I felt that I was an exceptionally lucky fellow
+to have such beauty on one side and such charm on the other.
+
+There was one of father's thin letters for Felix, a fat, foreign letter
+for the Story Girl, addressed in her father's minute handwriting, a
+drop letter for Cecily from some school friend, with "In Haste" written
+across the corner, and a letter for Aunt Janet, postmarked Montreal.
+
+"I can't think who that is from," said Felicity. "Nobody in Montreal
+ever writes to mother. Cecily's letter is from Em Frewen. She always
+puts 'In Haste' on her letters, no matter what is in them."
+
+When we reached home, Aunt Janet opened and read her Montreal letter.
+Then she laid it down and looked about her in astonishment.
+
+"Well, did ever any mortal!" she said.
+
+"What in the world is the matter?" said Uncle Alec.
+
+"This letter is from James Ward's wife in Montreal," said Aunt Janet
+solemnly. "Rachel Ward is dead. And she told James' wife to write to me
+and tell me to open the old blue chest."
+
+"Hurrah!" shouted Dan.
+
+"Donald King," said his mother severely, "Rachel Ward was your relation
+and she is dead. What do you mean by such behaviour?"
+
+"I never was acquainted with her," said Dan sulkily. "And I wasn't
+hurrahing because she is dead. I hurrahed because that blue chest is to
+be opened at last."
+
+"So poor Rachel is gone," said Uncle Alec. "She must have been an old
+woman--seventy-five I suppose. I remember her as a fine, blooming young
+woman. Well, well, and so the old chest is to be opened at last. What is
+to be done with its contents?"
+
+"Rachel left instructions about them," answered Aunt Janet, referring
+to the letter. "The wedding dress and veil and letters are to be burned.
+There are two jugs in it which are to be sent to James' wife. The rest
+of the things are to be given around among the connection. Each members
+is to have one, 'to remember her by.'"
+
+"Oh, can't we open it right away this very night?" said Felicity
+eagerly.
+
+"No, indeed!" Aunt Janet folded up the letter decidedly. "That chest has
+been locked up for fifty years, and it'll stand being locked up one more
+night. You children wouldn't sleep a wink to-night if we opened it now.
+You'd go wild with excitement."
+
+"I'm sure I won't sleep anyhow," said Felicity. "Well, at least you'll
+open it the first thing in the morning, won't you, ma?"
+
+"No, I'll do nothing of the sort," was Aunt Janet's pitiless decree.
+"I want to get the work out of the way first--and Roger and Olivia will
+want to be here, too. We'll say ten o'clock to-morrow forenoon."
+
+"That's sixteen whole hours yet," sighed Felicity.
+
+"I'm going right over to tell the Story Girl," said Cecily. "Won't she
+be excited!"
+
+We were all excited. We spent the evening speculating on the possible
+contents of the chest, and Cecily dreamed miserably that night that the
+moths had eaten everything in it.
+
+The morning dawned on a beautiful world. A very slight fall of snow had
+come in the night--just enough to look like a filmy veil of lace flung
+over the dark evergreens, and the hard frozen ground. A new blossom time
+seemed to have revisited the orchard. The spruce wood behind the house
+appeared to be woven out of enchantment. There is nothing more beautiful
+than a thickly growing wood of firs lightly powdered with new-fallen
+snow. As the sun remained hidden by gray clouds, this fairy-beauty
+lasted all day.
+
+The Story Girl came over early in the morning, and Sara Ray, to whom
+faithful Cecily had sent word, was also on hand. Felicity did not
+approve of this.
+
+"Sara Ray isn't any relation to our family," she scolded to Cecily, "and
+she has no right to be present."
+
+"She's a particular friend of mine," said Cecily with dignity. "We have
+her in everything, and it would hurt her feelings dreadfully to be left
+out of this. Peter is no relation either, but he is going to be here
+when we open it, so why shouldn't Sara?"
+
+"Peter ain't a member of the family YET, but maybe he will be some day.
+Hey, Felicity?" said Dan.
+
+"You're awful smart, aren't you, Dan King?" said Felicity, reddening.
+"Perhaps you'd like to send for Kitty Marr, too--though she DOES laugh
+at your big mouth."
+
+"It seems as if ten o'clock would never come," sighed the Story Girl.
+"The work is all done, and Aunt Olivia and Uncle Roger are here, and the
+chest might just as well be opened right away."
+
+"Mother SAID ten o'clock and she'll stick to it," said Felicity crossly.
+"It's only nine now."
+
+"Let us put the clock on half an hour," said the Story Girl. "The clock
+in the hall isn't going, so no one will know the difference."
+
+We all looked at each other.
+
+"I wouldn't dare," said Felicity irresolutely.
+
+"Oh, if that's all, I'll do it," said the Story Girl.
+
+When ten o'clock struck Aunt Janet came into the kitchen, remarking
+innocently that it hadn't seemed anytime since nine. We must have looked
+horribly guilty, but none of the grown-ups suspected anything. Uncle
+Alec brought in the axe, and pried off the cover of the old blue chest,
+while everybody stood around in silence.
+
+Then came the unpacking. It was certainly an interesting performance.
+Aunt Janet and Aunt Olivia took everything out and laid it on the
+kitchen table. We children were forbidden to touch anything, but
+fortunately we were not forbidden the use of our eyes and tongues.
+
+"There are the pink and gold vases Grandmother King gave her," said
+Felicity, as Aunt Olivia unwrapped from their tissue paper swathings a
+pair of slender, old-fashioned, twisted vases of pink glass, over which
+little gold leaves were scattered. "Aren't they handsome?"
+
+"And oh," exclaimed Cecily in delight, "there's the china fruit basket
+with the apple on the handle. Doesn't it look real? I've thought so much
+about it. Oh, mother, please let me hold it for a minute. I'll be as
+careful as careful."
+
+"There comes the china set Grandfather King gave her," said the Story
+Girl wistfully. "Oh, it makes me feel sad. Think of all the hopes
+that Rachel Ward must have put away in this chest with all her pretty
+things."
+
+Following these, came a quaint little candlestick of blue china, and the
+two jugs which were to be sent to James' wife.
+
+"They ARE handsome," said Aunt Janet rather enviously. "They must be a
+hundred years old. Aunt Sara Ward gave them to Rachel, and she had them
+for at least fifty years. I should have thought one would have been
+enough for James' wife. But of course we must do just as Rachel wished.
+I declare, here's a dozen tin patty pans!"
+
+"Tin patty pans aren't very romantic," said the Story Girl
+discontentedly.
+
+"I notice that you are as fond as any one of what is baked in them,"
+said Aunt Janet. "I've heard of those patty pans. An old servant
+Grandmother King had gave them to Rachel. Now we are coming to the
+linen. That was Uncle Edward Ward's present. How yellow it has grown."
+
+We children were not greatly interested in the sheets and tablecloths
+and pillow-cases which now came out of the capacious depths of the old
+blue chest. But Aunt Olivia was quite enraptured over them.
+
+"What sewing!" she said. "Look, Janet, you'd almost need a magnifying
+glass to see the stitches. And the dear, old-fashioned pillow-slips with
+buttons on them!"
+
+"Here are a dozen handkerchiefs," said Aunt Janet. "Look at the
+initial in the corner of each. Rachel learned that stitch from a nun in
+Montreal. It looks as if it was woven into the material."
+
+"Here are her quilts," said Aunt Olivia. "Yes, there is the blue and
+white counterpane Grandmother Ward gave her--and the Rising Sun quilt
+her Aunt Nancy made for her--and the braided rug. The colours are not
+faded one bit. I want that rug, Janet."
+
+Underneath the linen were Rachel Ward's wedding clothes. The excitement
+of the girls waxed red hot over these. There was a Paisley shawl in the
+wrappings in which it had come from the store, and a wide scarf of
+some yellowed lace. There was the embroidered petticoat which had cost
+Felicity such painful blushes, and a dozen beautifully worked sets of
+the fine muslin "undersleeves" which had been the fashion in Rachel
+Ward's youth.
+
+"This was to have been her appearing out dress," said Aunt Olivia,
+lifting out a shot green silk. "It is all cut to pieces--but what a
+pretty soft shade it was! Look at the skirt, Janet. How many yards must
+it measure around?"
+
+"Hoopskirts were in then," said Aunt Janet. "I don't see her wedding hat
+here. I was always told that she packed it away, too."
+
+"So was I. But she couldn't have. It certainly isn't here. I have heard
+that the white plume on it cost a small fortune. Here is her black silk
+mantle. It seems like sacrilege to meddle with these clothes."
+
+"Don't be foolish, Olivia. They must be unpacked at least. And they must
+all be burned since they have cut so badly. This purple cloth dress is
+quite good, however. It can be made over nicely, and it would become you
+very well, Olivia."
+
+"No, thank you," said Aunt Olivia, with a little shudder. "I should feel
+like a ghost. Make it over for yourself, Janet."
+
+"Well, I will, if you don't want it. I am not troubled with fancies.
+That seems to be all except this box. I suppose the wedding dress is in
+it."
+
+"Oh," breathed the girls, crowding about Aunt Olivia, as she lifted out
+the box and cut the cord around it. Inside was lying a dress of soft
+silk, that had once been white but was now yellowed with age, and,
+enfolding it like a mist, a long, white bridal veil, redolent with some
+strange, old-time perfume that had kept its sweetness through all the
+years.
+
+"Poor Rachel Ward," said Aunt Olivia softly. "Here is her point lace
+handkerchief. She made it herself. It is like a spider's web. Here are
+the letters Will Montague wrote her. And here," she added, taking up
+a crimson velvet case with a tarnished gilt clasp, "are their
+photographs--his and hers."
+
+We looked eagerly at the daguerreotypes in the old case.
+
+"Why, Rachel Ward wasn't a bit pretty!" exclaimed the Story Girl in
+poignant disappointment.
+
+No, Rachel Ward was not pretty, that had to be admitted. The picture
+showed a fresh young face, with strongly marked, irregular features,
+large black eyes, and black curls hanging around the shoulders in
+old-time style.
+
+"Rachel wasn't pretty," said Uncle Alec, "but she had a lovely colour,
+and a beautiful smile. She looks far too sober in that picture."
+
+"She has a beautiful neck and bust," said Aunt Olivia critically.
+
+"Anyhow, Will Montague was really handsome," said the Story Girl.
+
+"A handsome rogue," growled Uncle Alec. "I never liked him. I was only
+a little chap of ten but I saw through him. Rachel Ward was far too good
+for him."
+
+We would dearly have liked to get a peep into the letters, too. But Aunt
+Olivia would not allow that. They must be burned unread, she declared.
+She took the wedding dress and veil, the picture case, and the letters
+away with her. The rest of the things were put back into the chest,
+pending their ultimate distribution. Aunt Janet gave each of us boys a
+handkerchief. The Story Girl got the blue candlestick, and Felicity and
+Cecily each got a pink and gold vase. Even Sara Ray was made happy by
+the gift of a little china plate, with a loudly coloured picture of
+Moses and Aaron before Pharaoh in the middle of it. Moses wore a scarlet
+cloak, while Aaron disported himself in bright blue. Pharaoh was arrayed
+in yellow. The plate had a scalloped border with a wreath of green
+leaves around it.
+
+"I shall never use it to eat off," said Sara rapturously. "I'll put it
+up on the parlour mantelpiece."
+
+"I don't see much use in having a plate just for ornament," said
+Felicity.
+
+"It's nice to have something interesting to look at," retorted Sara, who
+felt that the soul must have food as well as the body.
+
+"I'm going to get a candle for my candlestick, and use it every night to
+go to bed with," said the Story Girl. "And I'll never light it without
+thinking of poor Rachel Ward. But I DO wish she had been pretty."
+
+"Well," said Felicity, with a glance at the clock, "it's all over, and
+it has been very interesting. But that clock has got to be put back to
+the right time some time through the day. I don't want bedtime coming a
+whole half-hour before it ought to."
+
+In the afternoon, when Aunt Janet was over at Uncle Roger's, seeing him
+and Aunt Olivia off to town, the clock was righted. The Story Girl and
+Peter came over to stay all night with us, and we made taffy in the
+kitchen, which the grown-ups kindly gave over to us for that purpose.
+
+"Of course it was very interesting to see the old chest unpacked," said
+the Story Girl as she stirred the contents of a saucepan vigorously.
+"But now that it is over I believe I am sorry that it is opened. It
+isn't mysterious any longer. We know all about it now, and we can never
+imagine what things are in it any more."
+
+"It's better to know than to imagine," said Felicity.
+
+"Oh, no, it isn't," said the Story Girl quickly. "When you know things
+you have to go by facts. But when you just dream about things there's
+nothing to hold you down."
+
+"You're letting the taffy scorch, and THAT'S a fact you'd better go by,"
+said Felicity sniffing. "Haven't you got a nose?"
+
+When we went to bed, that wonderful white enchantress, the moon, was
+making an elf-land of the snow-misted world outside. From where I lay
+I could see the sharp tops of the spruces against the silvery sky. The
+frost was abroad, and the winds were still and the land lay in glamour.
+
+Across the hall, the Story Girl was telling Felicity and Cecily the old,
+old tale of Argive Helen and "evil-hearted Paris."
+
+"But that's a bad story," said Felicity when the tale was ended. "She
+left her husband and run away with another man."
+
+"I suppose it was bad four thousand years ago," admitted the Story Girl.
+"But by this time the bad must have all gone out of it. It's only the
+good that could last so long."
+
+
+Our summer was over. It had been a beautiful one. We had known the
+sweetness of common joys, the delight of dawns, the dream and glamour
+of noontides, the long, purple peace of carefree nights. We had had the
+pleasure of bird song, of silver rain on greening fields, of storm among
+the trees, of blossoming meadows, and of the converse of whispering
+leaves. We had had brotherhood with wind and star, with books and tales,
+and hearth fires of autumn. Ours had been the little, loving tasks of
+every day, blithe companionship, shared thoughts, and adventuring.
+Rich were we in the memory of those opulent months that had gone from
+us--richer than we then knew or suspected. And before us was the dream
+of spring. It is always safe to dream of spring. For it is sure to come;
+and if it be not just as we have pictured it, it will be infinitely
+sweeter.
+
+THE END.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Story Girl, by Lucy Maud Montgomery
+
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