<h2><SPAN name="chap24"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXIV.<br/> A CHARITABLE IMPULSE</h2>
<p>For a fortnight things ran smoothly in the Good-Conduct Club. It seemed to work
admirably. Not once was Jem Blythe called in as umpire. Not once did any of the
manse children set the Glen gossips by the ears. As for their minor
peccadilloes at home, they kept sharp tabs on each other and gamely underwent
their self-imposed punishment—generally a voluntary absence from some gay
Friday night frolic in Rainbow Valley, or a sojourn in bed on some spring
evening when all young bones ached to be out and away. Faith, for whispering in
Sunday School, condemned herself to pass a whole day without speaking a single
word, unless it was absolutely necessary, and accomplished it. It was rather
unfortunate that Mr. Baker from over-harbour should have chosen that evening
for calling at the manse, and that Faith should have happened to go to the
door. Not one word did she reply to his genial greeting, but went silently away
to call her father briefly. Mr. Baker was slightly offended and told his wife
when he went home that that the biggest Meredith girl seemed a very shy, sulky
little thing, without manners enough to speak when she was spoken to. But
nothing worse came of it, and generally their penances did no harm to
themselves or anybody else. All of them were beginning to feel quite cocksure
that after all, it was a very easy matter to bring yourself up.</p>
<p>“I guess people will soon see that we can behave ourselves properly as
well as anybody,” said Faith jubilantly. “It isn’t hard when
we put our minds to it.”</p>
<p>She and Una were sitting on the Pollock tombstone. It had been a cold, raw, wet
day of spring storm and Rainbow Valley was out of the question for girls,
though the manse and the Ingleside boys were down there fishing. The rain had
held up, but the east wind blew mercilessly in from the sea, cutting to bone
and marrow. Spring was late in spite of its early promise, and there was even
yet a hard drift of old snow and ice in the northern corner of the graveyard.
Lida Marsh, who had come up to bring the manse a mess of herring, slipped in
through the gate shivering. She belonged to the fishing village at the harbour
mouth and her father had, for thirty years, made a practice of sending a mess
from his first spring catch to the manse. He never darkened a church door; he
was a hard drinker and a reckless man, but as long as he sent those herring up
to the manse every spring, as his father had done before him, he felt
comfortably sure that his account with the Powers That Govern was squared for
the year. He would not have expected a good mackerel catch if he had not so
sent the first fruits of the season.</p>
<p>Lida was a mite of ten and looked younger, because she was such a small,
wizened little creature. To-night, as she sidled boldly enough up to the manse
girls, she looked as if she had never been warm since she was born. Her face
was purple and her pale-blue, bold little eyes were red and watery. She wore a
tattered print dress and a ragged woollen comforter, tied across her thin
shoulders and under her arms. She had walked the three miles from the harbour
mouth barefooted, over a road where there was still snow and slush and mud. Her
feet and legs were as purple as her face. But Lida did not mind this much. She
was used to being cold, and she had been going barefooted for a month already,
like all the other swarming young fry of the fishing village. There was no
self-pity in her heart as she sat down on the tombstone and grinned cheerfully
at Faith and Una. Faith and Una grinned cheerfully back. They knew Lida
slightly, having met her once or twice the preceding summer when they had gone
down the harbour with the Blythes.</p>
<p>“Hello!” said Lida, “ain’t this a fierce kind of a
night? ‘T’ain’t fit for a dog to be out, is it?”</p>
<p>“Then why are you out?” asked Faith.</p>
<p>“Pa made me bring you up some herring,” returned Lida. She
shivered, coughed, and stuck out her bare feet. Lida was not thinking about
herself or her feet, and was making no bid for sympathy. She held her feet out
instinctively to keep them from the wet grass around the tombstone. But Faith
and Una were instantly swamped with a wave of pity for her. She looked so
cold—so miserable.</p>
<p>“Oh, why are you barefooted on such a cold night?” cried Faith.
“Your feet must be almost frozen.”</p>
<p>“Pretty near,” said Lida proudly. “I tell you it was fierce
walking up that harbour road.”</p>
<p>“Why didn’t you put on your shoes and stockings?” asked Una.</p>
<p>“Hain’t none to put on. All I had was wore out by the time winter
was over,” said Lida indifferently.</p>
<p>For a moment Faith stated in horror. This was terrible. Here was a little girl,
almost a neighbour, half frozen because she had no shoes or stockings in this
cruel spring weather. Impulsive Faith thought of nothing but the dreadfulness
of it. In a moment she was pulling off her own shoes and stockings.</p>
<p>“Here, take these and put them right on,” she said, forcing them
into the hands of the astonished Lida. “Quick now. You’ll catch
your death of cold. I’ve got others. Put them right on.”</p>
<p>Lida, recovering her wits, snatched at the offered gift, with a sparkle in her
dull eyes. Sure she would put them on, and that mighty quick, before any one
appeared with authority to recall them. In a minute she had pulled the
stockings over her scrawny little legs and slipped Faith’s shoes over her
thick little ankles.</p>
<p>“I’m obliged to you,” she said, “but won’t your
folks be cross?”</p>
<p>“No—and I don’t care if they are,” said Faith.
“Do you think I could see any one freezing to death without helping them
if I could? It wouldn’t be right, especially when my father’s a
minister.”</p>
<p>“Will you want them back? It’s awful cold down at the harbour
mouth—long after it’s warm up here,” said Lida slyly.</p>
<p>“No, you’re to keep them, of course. That is what I meant when I
gave them. I have another pair of shoes and plenty of stockings.”</p>
<p>Lida had meant to stay awhile and talk to the girls about many things. But now
she thought she had better get away before somebody came and made her yield up
her booty. So she shuffled off through the bitter twilight, in the noiseless,
shadowy way she had slipped in. As soon as she was out of sight of the manse
she sat down, took off the shoes and stockings, and put them in her herring
basket. She had no intention of keeping them on down that dirty harbour road.
They were to be kept good for gala occasions. Not another little girl down at
the harbour mouth had such fine black cashmere stockings and such smart, almost
new shoes. Lida was furnished forth for the summer. She had no qualms in the
matter. In her eyes the manse people were quite fabulously rich, and no doubt
those girls had slathers of shoes and stockings. Then Lida ran down to the Glen
village and played for an hour with the boys before Mr. Flagg’s store,
splashing about in a pool of slush with the maddest of them, until Mrs. Elliott
came along and bade her begone home.</p>
<p>“I don’t think, Faith, that you should have done that,” said
Una, a little reproachfully, after Lida had gone. “You’ll have to
wear your good boots every day now and they’ll soon scuff out.”</p>
<p>“I don’t care,” cried Faith, still in the fine glow of having
done a kindness to a fellow creature. “It isn’t fair that I should
have two pairs of shoes and poor little Lida Marsh not have any. <i>Now</i> we both
have a pair. You know perfectly well, Una, that father said in his sermon last
Sunday that there was no real happiness in getting or having—only in
giving. And it’s true. I feel <i>far</i> happier now than I ever did in my whole
life before. Just think of Lida walking home this very minute with her poor
little feet all nice and warm and comfy.”</p>
<p>“You know you haven’t another pair of black cashmere
stockings,” said Una. “Your other pair were so full of holes that
Aunt Martha said she couldn’t darn them any more and she cut the legs up
for stove dusters. You’ve nothing but those two pairs of striped
stockings you hate so.”</p>
<p>All the glow and uplift went out of Faith. Her gladness collapsed like a
pricked balloon. She sat for a few dismal minutes in silence, facing the
consequences of her rash act.</p>
<p>“Oh, Una, I never thought of that,” she said dolefully. “I
didn’t stop to think at all.”</p>
<p>The striped stockings were thick, heavy, coarse, ribbed stockings of blue and
red which Aunt Martha had knit for Faith in the winter. They were undoubtedly
hideous. Faith loathed them as she had never loathed anything before. Wear them
she certainly would not. They were still unworn in her bureau drawer.</p>
<p>“You’ll have to wear the striped stockings after this,” said
Una. “Just think how the boys in school will laugh at you. You know how
they laugh at Mamie Warren for her striped stockings and call her barber pole
and yours are far worse.”</p>
<p>“I won’t wear them,” said Faith. “I’ll go
barefooted first, cold as it is.”</p>
<p>“You can’t go barefooted to church to-morrow. Think what people
would say.”</p>
<p>“Then I’ll stay home.”</p>
<p>“You can’t. You know very well Aunt Martha will make you go.”</p>
<p>Faith did know this. The one thing on which Aunt Martha troubled herself to
insist was that they must all go to church, rain or shine. How they were
dressed, or if they were dressed at all, never concerned her. But go they must.
That was how Aunt Martha had been brought up seventy years ago, and that was
how she meant to bring them up.</p>
<p>“Haven’t you got a pair you can lend me, Una?” said poor
Faith piteously.</p>
<p>Una shook her head. “No, you know I only have the one black pair. And
they’re so tight I can hardly get them on. They wouldn’t go on you.
Neither would my gray ones. Besides, the legs of <i>them</i> are all darned <i>and</i>
darned.”</p>
<p>“I won’t wear those striped stockings,” said Faith
stubbornly. “The feel of them is even worse than the looks. They make me
feel as if my legs were as big as barrels and they’re so <i>scratchy</i>.”</p>
<p>“Well, I don’t know what you’re going to do.”</p>
<p>“If father was home I’d go and ask him to get me a new pair before
the store closes. But he won’t be home till too late. I’ll ask him
Monday—and I won’t go to church tomorrow. I’ll pretend
I’m sick and Aunt Martha’ll <i>have</i> to let me stay home.”</p>
<p>“That would be acting a lie, Faith,” cried Una. “You
<i>can’t</i> do that. You know it would be dreadful. What would father say if he
knew? Don’t you remember how he talked to us after mother died and told
us we must always be <i>true</i>, no matter what else we failed in. He said we must
never tell or act a lie—he said he’d <i>trust</i> us not to. You
<i>can’t</i> do it, Faith. Just wear the striped stockings. It’ll only be
for once. Nobody will notice them in church. It isn’t like school. And
your new brown dress is so long they won’t show much. Wasn’t it
lucky Aunt Martha made it big, so you’d have room to grow in it, for all
you hated it so when she finished it?”</p>
<p>“I won’t wear those stockings,” repeated Faith. She uncoiled
her bare, white legs from the tombstone and deliberately walked through the
wet, cold grass to the bank of snow. Setting her teeth, she stepped upon it and
stood there.</p>
<p>“What are you doing?” cried Una aghast. “You’ll catch
your death of cold, Faith Meredith.”</p>
<p>“I’m trying to,” answered Faith. “I hope I’ll
catch a fearful cold and be <i>awful</i> sick to-morrow. Then I won’t be acting
a lie. I’m going to stand here as long as I can bear it.”</p>
<p>“But, Faith, you might really die. You might get pneumonia. Please, Faith
don’t. Let’s go into the house and get <i>something</i> for your feet. Oh,
here’s Jerry. I’m so thankful. Jerry, <i>make</i> Faith get off that snow.
Look at her feet.”</p>
<p>“Holy cats! Faith, what <i>are</i> you doing?” demanded Jerry. “Are
you crazy?”</p>
<p>“No. Go away!” snapped Faith.</p>
<p>“Then are you punishing yourself for something? It isn’t right, if
you are. You’ll be sick.”</p>
<p>“I want to be sick. I’m not punishing myself. Go away.”</p>
<p>“Where’s her shoes and stockings?” asked Jerry of Una.</p>
<p>“She gave them to Lida Marsh.”</p>
<p>“Lida Marsh? What for?”</p>
<p>“Because Lida had none—and her feet were so cold. And now she wants
to be sick so that she won’t have to go to church to-morrow and wear her
striped stockings. But, Jerry, she may die.”</p>
<p>“Faith,” said Jerry, “get off that ice-bank or I’ll
pull you off.”</p>
<p>“Pull away,” dared Faith.</p>
<p>Jerry sprang at her and caught her arms. He pulled one way and Faith pulled
another. Una ran behind Faith and pushed. Faith stormed at Jerry to leave her
alone. Jerry stormed back at her not to be a dizzy idiot; and Una cried. They
made no end of noise and they were close to the road fence of the graveyard.
Henry Warren and his wife drove by and heard and saw them. Very soon the Glen
heard that the manse children had been having an awful fight in the graveyard
and using most improper language. Meanwhile, Faith had allowed herself to be
pulled off the ice because her feet were aching so sharply that she was ready
to get off any way. They all went in amiably and went to bed. Faith slept like
a cherub and woke in the morning without a trace of a cold. She felt that she
couldn’t feign sickness and act a lie, after remembering that long-ago
talk with her father. But she was still as fully determined as ever that she
would not wear those abominable stockings to church.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />