<h2><SPAN name="chap14"></SPAN>CHAPTER XIV.<br/> MRS. ALEC DAVIS MAKES A CALL</h2>
<p>John Meredith walked slowly home. At first he thought a little about Rosemary,
but by the time he reached Rainbow Valley he had forgotten all about her and
was meditating on a point regarding German theology which Ellen had raised. He
passed through Rainbow Valley and knew it not. The charm of Rainbow Valley had
no potency against German theology. When he reached the manse he went to his
study and took down a bulky volume in order to see which had been right, he or
Ellen. He remained immersed in its mazes until dawn, struck a new trail of
speculation and pursued it like a sleuth hound for the next week, utterly lost
to the world, his parish and his family. He read day and night; he forgot to go
to his meals when Una was not there to drag him to them; he never thought about
Rosemary or Ellen again. Old Mrs. Marshall, over-harbour, was very ill and sent
for him, but the message lay unheeded on his desk and gathered dust. Mrs.
Marshall recovered but never forgave him. A young couple came to the manse to
be married and Mr. Meredith, with unbrushed hair, in carpet slippers and faded
dressing gown, married them. To be sure, he began by reading the funeral
service to them and got along as far as “ashes to ashes and dust to
dust” before he vaguely suspected that something was wrong.</p>
<p>“Dear me,” he said absently, “that is strange—very
strange.”</p>
<p>The bride, who was very nervous, began to cry. The bridegroom, who was not in
the least nervous, giggled.</p>
<p>“Please, sir, I think you’re burying us instead of marrying
us,” he said.</p>
<p>“Excuse me,” said Mr. Meredith, as it it did not matter much. He
turned up the marriage service and got through with it, but the bride never
felt quite properly married for the rest of her life.</p>
<p>He forgot his prayer-meeting again—but that did not matter, for it was a
wet night and nobody came. He might even have forgotten his Sunday service if
it had not been for Mrs. Alec Davis. Aunt Martha came in on Saturday afternoon
and told him that Mrs. Davis was in the parlour and wanted to see him. Mr.
Meredith sighed. Mrs. Davis was the only woman in Glen St. Mary church whom he
positively detested. Unfortunately, she was also the richest, and his board of
managers had warned Mr. Meredith against offending her. Mr. Meredith seldom
thought of such a worldly matter as his stipend; but the managers were more
practical. Also, they were astute. Without mentioning money, they contrived to
instil into Mr. Meredith’s mind a conviction that he should not offend
Mrs. Davis. Otherwise, he would likely have forgotten all about her as soon as
Aunt Martha had gone out. As it was, he turned down his Ewald with a feeling of
annoyance and went across the hall to the parlour.</p>
<p>Mrs. Davis was sitting on the sofa, looking about her with an air of scornful
disapproval.</p>
<p>What a scandalous room! There were no curtains on the window. Mrs. Davis did
not know that Faith and Una had taken them down the day before to use as court
trains in one of their plays and had forgotten to put them up again, but she
could not have accused those windows more fiercely if she had known. The blinds
were cracked and torn. The pictures on the walls were crooked; the rugs were
awry; the vases were full of faded flowers; the dust lay in
heaps—literally in heaps.</p>
<p>“What are we coming to?” Mrs. Davis asked herself, and then primmed
up her unbeautiful mouth.</p>
<p>Jerry and Carl had been whooping and sliding down the banisters as she came
through the hall. They did not see her and continued whooping and sliding, and
Mrs. Davis was convinced they did it on purpose. Faith’s pet rooster
ambled through the hall, stood in the parlour doorway and looked at her. Not
liking her looks, he did not venture in. Mrs. Davis gave a scornful sniff. A
pretty manse, indeed, where roosters paraded the halls and stared people out of
countenance.</p>
<p>“Shoo, there,” commanded Mrs. Davis, poking her flounced,
changeable-silk parasol at him.</p>
<p>Adam shooed. He was a wise rooster and Mrs. Davis had wrung the necks of so
many roosters with her own fair hands in the course of her fifty years that an
air of the executioner seemed to hang around her. Adam scuttled through the
hall as the minister came in.</p>
<p>Mr. Meredith still wore slippers and dressing gown, and his dark hair still
fell in uncared-for locks over his high brow. But he looked the gentleman he
was; and Mrs. Alec Davis, in her silk dress and beplumed bonnet, and kid gloves
and gold chain looked the vulgar, coarse-souled woman she was. Each felt the
antagonisn of the other’s personality. Mr. Meredith shrank, but Mrs.
Davis girded up her loins for the fray. She had come to the manse to propose a
certain thing to the minister and she meant to lose no time in proposing it.
She was going to do him a favour—a great favour—and the sooner he
was made aware of it the better. She had been thinking about it all summer and
had come to a decision at last. This was all that mattered, Mrs. Davis thought.
When she decided a thing it <i>was</i> decided. Nobody else had any say in the matter.
That had always been her attitude. When she had made her mind up to marry Alec
Davis she had married him and that was the end to it. Alec had never known how
it happened, but what odds? So in this case—Mrs. Davis had arranged
everything to her own satisfaction. Now it only remained to inform Mr.
Meredith.</p>
<p>“Will you please shut that door?” said Mrs. Davis, unprimming her
mouth slightly to say it, but speaking with asperity. “I have something
important to say, and I can’t say it with that racket in the hall.”</p>
<p>Mr. Meredith shut the door meekly. Then he sat down before Mrs. Davis. He was
not wholly aware of her yet. His mind was still wrestling with Ewald’s
arguments. Mrs. Davis sensed this detachment and it annoyed her.</p>
<p>“I have come to tell you, Mr. Meredith,” she said aggressively,
“that I have decided to adopt Una.”</p>
<p>“To—adopt—Una!” Mr. Meredith gazed at her blankly, not
understanding in the least.</p>
<p>“Yes. I’ve been thinking it over for some time. I have often
thought of adopting a child, since my husband’s death. But it seemed so
hard to get a suitable one. It is very few children I would want to take into
<i>my</i> home. I wouldn’t think of taking a home child—some outcast of
the slums in all probability. And there is hardly ever any other child to be
got. One of the fishermen down at the harbour died last fall and left six
youngsters. They tried to get me to take one, but I soon gave them to
understand that I had no idea of adopting trash like that. Their grandfather
stole a horse. Besides, they were all boys and I wanted a girl—a quiet,
obedient girl that I could train up to be a lady. Una will suit me exactly. She
would be a nice little thing if she was properly looked after—so
different from Faith. I would never dream of adopting Faith. But I’ll
take Una and I’ll give her a good home, and up-bringing, Mr. Meredith,
and if she behaves herself I’ll leave her all my money when I die. Not
one of my own relatives shall have a cent of it in any case, I’m
determined on that. It was the idea of aggravating them that set me to thinking
of adopting a child as much as anything in the first place. Una shall be well
dressed and educated and trained, Mr. Meredith, and I shall give her music and
painting lessons and treat her as if she was my own.”</p>
<p>Mr. Meredith was wide enough awake by this time. There was a faint flush in his
pale cheek and a dangerous light in his fine dark eyes. Was this woman, whose
vulgarity and consciousness of money oozed out of her at every pore, actually
asking him to give her Una—his dear little wistful Una with
Cecilia’s own dark-blue eyes—the child whom the dying mother had
clasped to her heart after the other children had been led weeping from the
room. Cecilia had clung to her baby until the gates of death had shut between
them. She had looked over the little dark head to her husband.</p>
<p>“Take good care of her, John,” she had entreated. “She is so
small—and sensitive. The others can fight their way—but the world
will hurt <i>her</i>. Oh, John, I don’t know what you and she are going to do.
You both need me so much. But keep her close to you—keep her close to
you.”</p>
<p>These had been almost her last words except a few unforgettable ones for him
alone. And it was this child whom Mrs. Davis had coolly announced her intention
of taking from him. He sat up straight and looked at Mrs. Davis. In spite of
the worn dressing gown and the frayed slippers there was something about him
that made Mrs. Davis feel a little of the old reverence for “the
cloth” in which she had been brought up. After all, there <i>was</i> a certain
divinity hedging a minister, even a poor, unworldly, abstracted one.</p>
<p>“I thank you for your kind intentions, Mrs. Davis,” said Mr.
Meredith with a gentle, final, quite awful courtesy, “but I cannot give
you my child.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Davis looked blank. She had never dreamed of his refusing.</p>
<p>“Why, Mr. Meredith,” she said in astonishment. “You must be
cr—you can’t mean it. You must think it over—think of all the
advantages I can give her.”</p>
<p>“There is no need to think it over, Mrs. Davis. It is entirely out of the
question. All the worldly advantages it is in your power to bestow on her could
not compensate for the loss of a father’s love and care. I thank you
again—but it is not to be thought of.”</p>
<p>Disappointment angered Mrs. Davis beyond the power of old habit to control. Her
broad red face turned purple and her voice trembled.</p>
<p>“I thought you’d be only too glad to let me have her,” she
sneered.</p>
<p>“Why did you think that?” asked Mr. Meredith quietly.</p>
<p>“Because nobody ever supposed you cared anything about any of your
children,” retorted Mrs. Davis contemptuously. “You neglect them
scandalously. It is the talk of the place. They aren’t fed and dressed
properly, and they’re not trained at all. They have no more manners than
a pack of wild Indians. You never think of doing your duty as a father. You let
a stray child come here among them for a fortnight and never took any notice of
her—a child that swore like a trooper I’m told. <i>You</i> wouldn’t
have cared if they’d caught small-pox from her. And Faith made an
exhibition of herself getting up in preaching and making that speech! And she
rid a pig down the street—under your very eyes I understand. The way they
act is past belief and you never lift a finger to stop them or try to teach
them anything. And now when I offer one of them a good home and good prospects
you refuse it and insult me. A pretty father you, to talk of loving and caring
for your children!”</p>
<p>“That will do, woman!” said Mr. Meredith. He stood up and looked at
Mrs. Davis with eyes that made her quail. “That will do,” he
repeated. “I desire to hear no more, Mrs. Davis. You have said too much.
It may be that I have been remiss in some respects in my duty as a parent, but
it is not for you to remind me of it in such terms as you have used. Let us say
good afternoon.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Davis did not say anything half so amiable as good afternoon, but she took
her departure. As she swept past the minister a large, plump toad, which Carl
had secreted under the lounge, hopped out almost under her feet. Mrs. Davis
gave a shriek and in trying to avoid treading on the awful thing, lost her
balance and her parasol. She did not exactly fall, but she staggered and reeled
across the room in a very undignified fashion and brought up against the door
with a thud that jarred her from head to foot. Mr. Meredith, who had not seen
the toad, wondered if she had been attacked with some kind of apoplectic or
paralytic seizure, and ran in alarm to her assistance. But Mrs. Davis,
recovering her feet, waved him back furiously.</p>
<p>“Don’t you dare to touch me,” she almost shouted. “This
is some more of your children’s doings, I suppose. This is no fit place
for a decent woman. Give me my umbrella and let me go. I’ll never darken
the doors of your manse or your church again.”</p>
<p>Mr. Meredith picked up the gorgeous parasol meekly enough and gave it to her.
Mrs. Davis seized it and marched out. Jerry and Carl had given up banister
sliding and were sitting on the edge of the veranda with Faith. Unfortunately,
all three were singing at the tops of their healthy young voices
“There’ll be a hot time in the old town to-night.” Mrs. Davis
believed the song was meant for her and her only. She stopped and shook her
parasol at them.</p>
<p>“Your father is a fool,” she said, “and you are three young
varmints that ought to be whipped within an inch of your lives.”</p>
<p>“He isn’t,” cried Faith. “We’re not,” cried
the boys. But Mrs. Davis was gone.</p>
<p>“Goodness, isn’t she mad!” said Jerry. “And what is a
‘varmint’ anyhow?”</p>
<p>John Meredith paced up and down the parlour for a few minutes; then he went
back to his study and sat down. But he did not return to his German theology.
He was too grievously disturbed for that. Mrs. Davis had wakened him up with a
vengeance. <i>Was</i> he such a remiss, careless father as she had accused him of
being? <i>Had</i> he so scandalously neglected the bodily and spiritual welfare of the
four little motherless creatures dependent on him? <i>Were</i> his people talking of
it as harshly as Mrs. Davis had declared? It must be so, since Mrs. Davis had
come to ask for Una in the full and confident belief that he would hand the
child over to her as unconcernedly and gladly as one might hand over a strayed,
unwelcome kitten. And, if so, what then?</p>
<p>John Meredith groaned and resumed his pacing up and down the dusty, disordered
room. What could he do? He loved his children as deeply as any father could and
he knew, past the power of Mrs. Davis or any of her ilk, to disturb his
conviction, that they loved him devotedly. But <i>was</i> he fit to have charge of
them? He knew—none better—his weaknesses and limitations. What was
needed was a good woman’s presence and influence and common sense. But
how could that be arranged? Even were he able to get such a housekeeper it
would cut Aunt Martha to the quick. She believed she could still do all that
was meet and necessary. He could not so hurt and insult the poor old woman who
had been so kind to him and his. How devoted she had been to Cecilia! And
Cecilia had asked him to be very considerate of Aunt Martha. To be sure, he
suddenly remembered that Aunt Martha had once hinted that he ought to marry
again. He felt she would not resent a wife as she would a housekeeper. But that
was out of the question. He did not wish to marry—he did not and could
not care for anyone. Then what could he do? It suddenly occurred to him that he
would go over to Ingleside and talk over his difficulties with Mrs. Blythe.
Mrs. Blythe was one of the few women he never felt shy or tongue-tied with. She
was always so sympathetic and refreshing. It might be that she could suggest
some solution of his problems. And even if she could not Mr. Meredith felt that
he needed a little decent human companionship after his dose of Mrs.
Davis—something to take the taste of her out of his soul.</p>
<p>He dressed hurriedly and ate his supper less abstractedly than usual. It
occurred to him that it was a poor meal. He looked at his children; they were
rosy and healthy looking enough—except Una, and she had never been very
strong even when her mother was alive. They were all laughing and
talking—certainly they seemed happy. Carl was especially happy because he
had two most beautiful spiders crawling around his supper plate. Their voices
were pleasant, their manners did not seem bad, they were considerate of and
gentle to one another. Yet Mrs. Davis had said their behaviour was the talk of
the congregation.</p>
<p>As Mr. Meredith went through his gate Dr. Blythe and Mrs. Blythe drove past on
the road that led to Lowbridge. The minister’s face fell. Mrs. Blythe was
going away—there was no use in going to Ingleside. And he craved a little
companionship more than ever. As he gazed rather hopelessly over the landscape
the sunset light struck on a window of the old West homestead on the hill. It
flared out rosily like a beacon of good hope. He suddenly remembered Rosemary
and Ellen West. He thought that he would relish some of Ellen’s pungent
conversation. He thought it would be pleasant to see Rosemary’s slow,
sweet smile and calm, heavenly blue eyes again. What did that old poem of Sir
Philip Sidney’s say?—“continual comfort in a
face”—that just suited her. And he needed comfort. Why not go and
call? He remembered that Ellen had asked him to drop in sometimes and there was
Rosemary’s book to take back—he ought to take it back before he
forgot. He had an uneasy suspicion that there were a great many books in his
library which he had borrowed at sundry times and in divers places and had
forgotten to take back. It was surely his duty to guard against that in this
case. He went back into his study, got the book, and plunged downward into
Rainbow Valley.</p>
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