Rilla of Ingleside by Lucy Maud Montgomery (13 ebook reader .txt) đ
- Author: Lucy Maud Montgomery
- Performer: 1594624275
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âSusanâdonât,â cried Anne.
âOh, Mrs. Dr. dear, I beg your pardon. I ought not to have said anything like that out loud. I sometimes forget that I resolved to be a heroine. Thisâthis has shaken me a little. But I will not forget myself again. Only if things do not go as smoothly in the kitchen for a few days I hope you will make due allowance for me. At least,â said poor Susan, forcing a grim smile in a desperate effort to recover lost standing, âat least flying is a clean job. He will not get so dirty and messed up as he would in the trenches, and that is well, for he has always been a tidy child.â
So Shirley wentânot radiantly, as to a high adventure, like Jem, not in a white flame of sacrifice, like Walter, but in a cool, businesslike mood, as of one doing something, rather dirty and disagreeable, that had just got to be done. He kissed Susan for the first time since he was five years old, and said, âGoodbye, Susanâmother Susan.â
âMy little brown boyâmy little brown boy,â said Susan. âI wonder,â she thought bitterly, as she looked at the doctorâs sorrowful face, âif you remember how you spanked him once when he was a baby. I am thankful I have nothing like that on my conscience now.â
The doctor did not remember the old discipline. But before he put on his hat to go out on his round of calls he stood for a moment in the great silent living-room that had once been full of childrenâs laughter.
âOur last sonâour last son,â he said aloud. âA good, sturdy, sensible lad, too. Always reminded me of my father. I suppose I ought to be proud that he wanted to goâI was proud when Jem wentâeven when Walter went âbut âour house is left us desolate.ââ
âI have been thinking, doctor,â old Sandy of the Upper Glen said to him that afternoon, âthat your house will be seeming very big the day.â
Highland Sandyâs quaint phrase struck the doctor as perfectly expressive. Ingleside did seem very big and empty that night. Yet Shirley had been away all winter except for week-ends, and had always been a quiet fellow even when home. Was it because he had been the only one left that his going seemed to leave such a huge blankâthat every room seemed vacant and desertedâthat the very trees on the lawn seemed to be trying to comfort each other with caresses of freshly-budding boughs for the loss of the last of the little lads who had romped under them in childhood?
Susan worked very hard all day and late into the night. When she had wound the kitchen clock and put Dr. Jekyll out, none too gently, she stood for a little while on the doorstep, looking down the Glen, which lay tranced in faint, silvery light from a sinking young moon. But Susan did not see the familiar hills and harbour. She was looking at the aviation camp in Kingsport where Shirley was that night.
âHe called me âMother Susan,ââ she was thinking. âWell, all our men folk have gone nowâJem and Walter and Shirley and Jerry and Carl. And none of them had to be driven to it. So we have a right to be proud. But prideââ Susan sighed bitterlyââpride is cold company and that there is no gainsaying.â
The moon sank lower into a black cloud in the west, the Glen went out in an eclipse of sudden shadowâand thousands of miles away the Canadian boys in khakiâthe living and the deadâwere in possession of Vimy Ridge.
Vimy Ridge is a name written in crimson and gold on the Canadian annals of the Great War. âThe British couldnât take it and the French couldnât take it,â said a German prisoner to his captors, âbut you Canadians are such fools that you donât know when a place canât be taken!â
So the âfoolsâ took itâand paid the price.
Jerry Meredith was seriously wounded at Vimy Ridgeâshot in the back, the telegram said.
âPoor Nan,â said Mrs. Blythe, when the news came. She thought of her own happy girlhood at old Green Gables. There had been no tragedy like this in it. How the girls of to-day had to suffer! When Nan came home from Redmond two weeks later her face showed what those weeks had meant to her. John Meredith, too, seemed to have grown old suddenly in them. Faith did not come home; she was on her way across the Atlantic as a V.A.D. Di had tried to wring from her father consent to her going also, but had been told that for her motherâs sake it could not be given. So Di, after a flying visit home, went back to her Red Cross work in Kingsport.
The mayflowers bloomed in the secret nooks of Rainbow Valley. Rilla was watching for them. Jem had once taken his mother the earliest mayflowers; Walter brought them to her when Jem was gone; last spring Shirley had sought them out for her; now, Rilla thought she must take the boysâ place in this. But before she had discovered any, Bruce Meredith came to Ingleside one twilight with his hands full of delicate pink sprays. He stalked up the steps of the veranda and laid them on Mrs. Blytheâs lap.
âBecause Shirley isnât here to bring them,â he said in his funny, shy, blunt way.
âAnd you thought of this, you darling,â said Anne, her lips quivering, as she looked at the stocky, black-browed little chap, standing before her, with his hands thrust into his pockets.
âI wrote Jem to-day and told him not to worry âbout you not getting your mayflowers,â said Bruce seriously, ââcause Iâd see to that. And I told him I would be ten pretty soon now, so it wonât be very long before Iâll be eighteen, and then Iâll go to help him fight, and maybe let him come home for a rest while I took his place. I wrote Jerry, too. Jerryâs getting better, you know.â
âIs he? Have you had any good news about him?â
âYes. Mother had a letter to-day, and it said he was out of danger.â
âOh, thank God,â murmured Mrs. Blythe, in a half-whisper.
Bruce looked at her curiously.
âThat is what father said when mother told him. But when l said it the other day when I found out Mr. Meadâs dog hadnât hurt my kittenâI thought he had shooken it to death, you knowâfather looked awful solemn and said I must never say that again about a kitten. But I couldnât understand why, Mrs. Blythe. I felt awful thankful, and it must have been God that saved Stripey, because that Mead dog had ânormous jaws, and oh, how it shook poor Stripey. And so why couldnât I thank Him? âCourse,â added Bruce reminiscently, âmaybe I said it too loudâ âcause I was awful glad and excited when I found Stripey was all right. I âmost shouted it, Mrs. Blythe. Maybe if Iâd said it sort of whispery like you and father it would have been all right. Do you know, Mrs. BlytheââBruce dropped to a âwhisperyâ tone, edging a little nearer to Anneââwhat I would like to do to the Kaiser if I could?â
âWhat would you like to do, laddie?â
âNorman Reese said in school to-day that he would like to tie the Kaiser to a tree and set cross dogs to worrying him,â said Bruce gravely. âAnd Emily Flagg said she would like to put him in a cage and poke sharp things into him. And they all said things like that. But Mrs. Blytheââ Bruce took a little square paw out of his pocket and put it earnestly on Anneâs kneeââI would like to turn the Kaiser into a good manâa very good manâall at once if I could. That is what I would do. Donât you think, Mrs. Blythe, that would be the very worstest punishment of all?â
âBless the child,â said Susan, âhow do you make out that would be any kind of a punishment for that wicked fiend?â
âDonât you see,â said Bruce, looking levelly at Susan, out of his blackly blue eyes, âif he was turned into a good man he would understand how dreadful the things he has done are, and he would feel so terrible about it that he would be more unhappy and miserable than he could ever be in any other way. He would feel just awfulâand he would go on feeling like that forever. YesââBruce clenched his hands and nodded his head emphatically, âyes, I would make the Kaiser a good manâthat is what I would doâit would serve him âzackly right.â
An aeroplane was flying over Glen St. Mary, like a great bird poised against the western skyâa sky so clear and of such a pale, silvery yellow, that it gave an impression of a vast, wind-freshened space of freedom. The little group on the Ingleside lawn looked up at it with fascinated eyes, although it was by no means an unusual thing to see an occasional hovering plane that summer. Susan was always intensely excited. Who knew but that it might be Shirley away up there in the clouds, flying over to the Island from Kingsport? But Shirley had gone overseas now, so Susan was not so keenly interested in this particular aeroplane and its pilot. Nevertheless, she looked at it with awe.
âI wonder, Mrs. Dr. dear,â she said solemnly, âwhat the old folks down there in the graveyard would think if they could rise out of their graves for one moment and behold that sight. I am sure my father would disapprove of it, for he was a man who did not believe in new-fangled ideas of any sort. He always cut his grain with a reaping hook to the day of his death. A mower he would not have. What was good enough for his father was good enough for him, he used to say. I hope it is not unfilial to say that I think he was wrong in that point of view, but I am not sure I go so far as to approve of aeroplanes, though they may be a military necessity. If the Almighty had meant us to fly he would have provided us with wings. Since He did not it is plain He meant us to stick to the solid earth. At any rate, you will never see me, Mrs. Dr. dear, cavorting through the sky in an aeroplane.â
âBut you wonât refuse to cavort a bit in fatherâs new automobile when it comes, will you, Susan?â teased Rilla.
âI do not expect to trust my old bones in automobiles, either,â retorted Susan. âBut I do not look upon them as some narrow-minded people do. Whiskers-on-the-moon says the Government should be turned out of office for permitting them to run on the Island at all. He foams at the mouth, they tell me, when he sees one. The other day he saw one coming along that narrow side-road by his wheatfield, and Whiskers bounded over the fence and stood right in the middle of the road, with his pitchfork. The man in the machine was an agent of some kind, and Whiskers hates agents as much as he hates automobiles. He made the car come to a halt, because there was not room to pass him on either side, and the agent could not actually run over him. Then he raised his pitchfork and shouted, âGet out of this with your devil-machine or
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