Authors: Lucy Maud Montgomery
Tags: #Classics, #Young Adult, #Childrens, #Historical, #Romance
“Just don’t,” said Pat. “You’ll have me breaking down and howling. I’ve made up my mind I won’t spoil your wedding with tears.”
“And please, darling, don’t cry after I’m gone. I can’t bear to think of you here, in tears, after I’m gone.”
“I’ll likely have a little weep,” said Pat frankly. “I don’t think I can escape that. But I never give way to despair as I used to long ago. Rae, I’ve learned to accept change even though I can never help dreading it … never can understand people who actually seem to like it. There’s Lily calling you for your last fitting.”
The day before the wedding there was hope at Silver Bush that Mrs. Binnie wouldn’t be able to come after all. Her first cousin, old Samuel Cobbledick, had died and the funeral was to be an hour before the time fixed for the ceremony.
“It’s a real apostrophe to have him dying at this particular time,” Mrs. Binnie grumbled to May. “He’s been suffering from general ability for years but he needn’t of died till after the wedding. He was always a very tiresome man. It was an infernal hemmeridge finished him off. I’m awful disappointed. I’d set my heart on seeing darling Rae married.”
“Oh, oh, I do be hoping the funeral will go off more harmonious than his brother John’s did,” said Judy. “John did be wanting to make all the arrangements for the funeral himself before he died … wanting things done rale stylish and having no confidence in his wife, her being av the second skimmings brand. They did be fighting all their lives but the biggest row they iver had was over his funeral. She didn’t be spaking to him agin while he was alive and she wudn’t sit among the mourners at all, nor have innything to do wid the doings. It did be kind av spiling the occasion.”
“All fam’lies have their little differences,” said Mrs. Binnie stiffly. “Poor Sam’s widow is feeling blue enough. I’ve been there all the afternoon condoning with her.”
“Ye’ll be maning ‘condole,’” said Judy innocently. It was not often she bothered correcting Madam Binnie but there were times and seasons.
“I meant what I said,” returned Mrs. Binnie, “and I’ll thank you, Miss Plum, not to be putting words in my mouth.”
Pat and Rae found it hard to win sleep that last night together. Half a dozen times one of them would say, “Well, let’s turn over and go to sleep.” They would turn over but they wouldn’t go to sleep. Soon they would be talking again.
“I hope it will be fine tomorrow,” said Rae. “I want to leave Silver Bush with my last sight of it bathed in sunshine.”
“Tomorrow?” said Pat. “TODAY! The clock in the Little Parlour has just struck twelve. It’s your wedding day, Cuddles.”
“Time I was taking the bridal jitters,” laughed Rae. “I don’t believe I’ll have them at all. It all seems so—so NATURAL to be marrying Brook, you know.”
They must have slept a little for presently Pat was surprised to find herself sitting up in bed looking through the window at a world that lay in a clear, pale, thin dawnlight. It was Rae’s wedding day and hereafter when she wakened she must waken alone.
A beautiful sunshiny day as Rae had desired, with mad, happy crickets singing everywhere and sinuous winds making golden shivers in the wheat-fields.
“Really,” said Rae, “the weather at Silver Bush isn’t like the weather anywhere else, even over at Swallowfield. I’ve teased you so often, Pat, for thinking things here were different from anywhere else … but in my heart I’ve always known it, too.”
“Isn’t it a WONDERFUL day!” gushed May when they went down.
May rather spoiled the weather for Pat. But then with May everything was always either “wonderful” or “priceless.” Those were her pet adjectives. Pat felt that she didn’t want May to have anything to do with Rae’s wedding day, even to the extent of approving it.
It was a busy morning. Brook arrived at noon. Pat laid and decorated the wedding table. May, too, by way of asserting her rights, set a huge hodge-podge from her herbaceous border in the centre of it after Pat had gone up to dress. Judy carried it ostentatiously out to the kitchen.
“Always taking a bit too much on hersilf,” she muttered.
May got square by saying, when Judy appeared in her wine-coloured dress-up dress,
“How well that dress has kept its looks, Judy. It doesn’t really look very old-fashioned at all.”
Upstairs a bride was being dressed.
“Here’s a blue garter for luck,” whispered Pat.
Rae stood, looking rather wraith-like in her shimmer of satin and tulle. She wore mother’s old veil … a bit creamy and a bit old-fashioned … high on the head instead of the modern mob-cap … but Rae’s young beauty shone radiantly among its folds. She was so full of happiness that it seemed to spill over and make everything lovely.
“Doesn’t she look cute?” said May, who had pushed herself in.
Pat and Rae’s eyes met in the last of their many amused, secret exchanges of looks. Pat knew it would be the last … at least for many years.
“I won’t … I WON’T cry,” she said grimly to herself. “At least not now.”
As Rae gathered up her dress to go downstairs Bold-and-Bad saw his opportunity. He had been sitting at the head of the stairs, very sulky and offended because he had been shut out of Pat’s room. He pounced and bit … bit Rae right in the fleshy part of her slender leg. Rae gave a little squeal … Bold-and-Bad fled … and Pat examined the damage.
“He hasn’t broken the skin … but, darling, the beast has started a run in your stocking. What on earth got into him?”
“It can’t be helped now,” said Rae, stifling a laugh. “Thank heaven skirts are long. I deserve it … it was I who shut the door in his face. I was afraid he’d get tangled up in my veil. It was no way to treat an old family cat. He did perfectly right to bite me.”
The rest all seemed rather dream-like to Pat. The ceremony went off beautifully … though Rae afterwards said she could think of nothing but that run in her stocking the whole time. It would be so awful if Mrs. Binnie caught a glimpse of it somehow in spite of long skirts … for Mrs. Binnie was there after all, having rushed madly away as soon as dear Samuel’s funeral was over. She reached Silver Bush just as the bride came down the stairs.
Mother was pale and sweet and composed and dad, dreaming of youth and his own bridal day, looked very tenderly at this baby of his who had so swiftly and unaccountably grown up and was being married before he had realised that she was out of her cradle.
Just as Brook took his bride in his arms to kiss her Bold-and-Bad stalked in … a repentant Bold-and-Bad, carrying a large and juicy rat in his mouth which he laid down at Rae’s feet, with an air of atonement. A moment before everybody had been on the point of tears … but the tension dissolved in a burst of laughter and Rae’s wedding feast was as jolly as she had wanted it to be.
Nevertheless she found it hard to keep back her own tears when she turned at the door of her room for a farewell look. She recalled all the times she had left home before … but always to come back. Now she was going, never to come back … at least as Rae Gardiner. She would go out and shut the door and never open it again. She had finished with it and the happy, laughter-filled past that was linked with it. She clung to Pat.
“Darling, you’ll write me every week, won’t you? And I’m sure we’ll be home for a visit in three years at the latest.”
They were gone.
“I never saw Rae look so sweet and lovely,” sobbed Mrs. Binnie, her fat figure shaking. May was trying to squeeze out a few tears but Pat did not feel in the least like crying, though she thought her face would crack if she went on smiling any longer. She and Judy cleared up the rooms and washed the dishes and put things away. When Pat crept into the kitchen at dusk she found Judy sitting by a fire she had kindled.
“Oh, oh, I thought a bit av a fire wudn’t be amiss a could avening like this. The cats do be liking it. Ye know, Patsy, I’ve just been wishing poor ould Tillytuck was here, there in his corner, smoking his pipe. It … it wudn’t same so lonesome-like.”
It was odd to hear Judy talking of being lonesome. Pat sat down beside her on the floor, resting her head in Judy’s lap and pulling Judy’s arm around her. They sat so in silence for a long time, listening to the pleasant snap of the starting fire and the vociferous purring of the kitten Judy had snuggled at her side. Judy had always known how to make little creatures happy.
“Judy, this is the third time we’ve kept vigil in this old kitchen after we’ve seen a bride drive away. Do you remember Aunt Hazel’s … and Winnie’s? … how we sat here and you told me stories to cheer me up? I don’t want stories tonight, Judy. I just want to be quiet … and have you baby me a bit. I’m … tired.”
When Pat had risen and gone to the porch door to let in a pleading Popka Judy signed and whispered to herself.
“Oh, oh, I’m thinking all me stories do be told. Sure and I’m nothing but a guttering candle now.” But she did not let Pat hear her. And before long, when she had been thinking of Mrs. Binnie tearing in red-faced from the funeral, she began to chuckle.
“What is it, Judy?”
“Oh, oh, I didn’t mane to be laughing, Patsy, but it did be just coming inty me head what they did be telling once av ould Sam Cobbledick. He was fond av a drop whin he was younger but what wid his wife watching him he niver got much ava chanct to one. He was rale sick wid the flu one time and the doctor lift a liddle whiskey in a bottle for him. Mrs. Cobbledick thought it was only midicine and wint out to church. Thin in drops a neighbour man, ould Lem Morrison, and HE brings a liddle drop in a bottle, too, sly-like. But ould Sam looks at it in dape disappointment. ‘There isn’t enough to make us both drunk,’ sez he. ‘Let’s put it together and make one av us drunk,’ sez he. ‘And let’s draw lots to see which’ll it be,’ sez he. So the lot fell to ould Sam. But ye did be saying ye weren’t wanting inny stories tonight.”
“I want to hear this one. What happened to old Sam, Judy?”
“Oh, oh, whin Sarah Coddledick came home her sick man was dancing and singing in the middle av the floor and niver a bit av flu left in him. She didn’t be guessing inny av the truth but she tould the doctor his midicines were entirely too strong for a sick man, aven if it cured him that quick. And now, Pasty, darlint, we’ll be having a liddle bite. I was noticing ye didn’t be ating much supper.”
Pat found the night bitter. There seemed such an unearthly stillness over the whole house. She sat at her window for a long time in the darkness. Below in the garden the white phlox glimmered … one of the many flowers Bets had given her … that sweet-lipped friend of long ago. The pain of Bets’ passing had faded out with time as gently as an old, old moon fades out into the sunrise, but it always came back at moments like this. She remembered how she used to lie awake, especially on stormy nights, after Winnie and Joe had gone. She could not bear to look at Rae’s little white bed.
But there was a wonderful sunrise the next morning … crimson and warm gold flushing up into the blue. A bird was singing somewhere in the orchard and the borders of the hill field were aflame with golden rod. Dawn still came beautifully … and she still had Silver Bush. Little Mary would often come to occupy Rae’s bed. Her spun-gold hair would gleam on that lonely pillow.
And, of course, there was always David … dear old dependable David. She must not forget him.
The Tenth Year
It took Pat a long while to get used to Rae’s absence. Sometimes she thought she would never get used to it. The autumn weeks were very hard. Every place … every room … seemed so full of Rae … even more so than when she had been home. Pat was, somehow, always expecting to see her … glimmering through the birches on moonlit nights … lilting along the Whispering Lane … coming home from school laughing over some jest of the day … wearing her youth like a golden rose. And then the renewed sadness of the realisation that she would not come. For a time it really seemed that Rae had taken the laughter of Silver Bush with her. Then it crept back; again there were jokes and talks in the kitchen o’nights.
Two things helped Pat through the fall and winter … Silver Bush and her evenings with David and Suzanne. Her love for Silver Bush had suffered no abatement … nay, it had seemed to deepen and intensify with the years, as other loves passed out of her life, as other changes came … or threatened to come. For Uncle Tom’s big black beard was quite grey now and dad was getting bald and Winnie’s gold hair was fading to drab. And … though Pat put the thought fiercely away whenever it came to her … Judy was getting old. It was not all May’s malice.
But then mother was so much better … almost well … beginning to take her place in the family life again. It was like a miracle, everybody said. So Pat was happy and contented in spite of certain passing aches of loneliness which made themselves felt on wakeful nights when a grief-possessed wind wailed around the eaves.
Then it seemed that spring touched Silver Bush in the night and winter was over. Drifts of rain softened over the hills that were not yet green … it was more as if a faint green shadow had fallen over them. Warm, wet winds blew through the awakening silver bush. Faint mists curled and uncurled in the Field of the Pool. Then came the snow of cherry petals on the walks and the wind in the grasses at morning and the delight of seeing young shoots pop up in the garden.
“I have nothing to do with anything in the world today but spring,” vowed Pat, the morning after housecleaning was finished. She refused to be cast down even by the fact that the building of the new house on the other place had to be postponed again for financial reasons. She spent the whole day in the garden, planning, discovering, exulting. Judy’s clump of bleeding-heart was in bloom. Nothing could be so lovely. But then, to Pat, one flower from the garden of Silver Bush would always be sweeter than a whole florist’s window.
“Let’s have supper in the orchard tonight, Judy.”
They had it … just she and mother and Judy and Little Mary, for the men were all away and May had gone home to help her mother houseclean. The Binnies generally got around to housecleaning when every one else was finishing.
Supper under hanging white boughs … apple blossoms dropping into your cream-pitcher … a dear, gentle evening with the “ancient lyric madness” Carman speaks of loose in the air. A meal like this was a sacrament. Pat was happy … mother was happy … Little Mary was happy because she was always happy where Aunt Pat was … even though the sky was so terribly big. It was one of the secret fears of Little Mary’s life, which she had never yet whispered to any one, that the sky was too big. Even Judy, who had been mourning all day because a brood of young turkeys had got their feet wet and died, took heart of grace and thought maybe she was good for many a year yet.