<h2><SPAN name="chap08"></SPAN>CHAPTER VIII.<br/> MISS CORNELIA INTERVENES</h2>
<p>Miss Cornelia descended upon the manse the next day and cross-questioned Mary,
who, being a young person of considerable discernment and astuteness, told her
story simple and truthfully, with an entire absence of complaint or bravado.
Miss Cornelia was more favourably impressed than she had expected to be, but
deemed it her duty to be severe.</p>
<p>“Do you think,” she said sternly, “that you showed your
gratitude to this family, who have been far too kind to you, by insulting and
chasing one of their little friends as you did yesterday?”</p>
<p>“Say, it was rotten mean of me,” admitted Mary easily. “I
dunno what possessed me. That old codfish seemed to come in so blamed handy.
But I was awful sorry—I cried last night after I went to bed about it,
honest I did. You ask Una if I didn’t. I wouldn’t tell her what for
‘cause I was ashamed of it, and then she cried, too, because she was
afraid someone had hurt my feelings. Laws, <i>I</i> ain’t got any
feelings to hurt worth speaking of. What worries me is why Mrs. Wiley
hain’t been hunting for me. It ain’t like her.”</p>
<p>Miss Cornelia herself thought it rather peculiar, but she merely admonished
Mary sharply not to take any further liberties with the minister’s
codfish, and went to report progress at Ingleside.</p>
<p>“If the child’s story is true the matter ought to be looked
into,” she said. “I know something about that Wiley woman, believe
<i>me</i>. Marshall used to be well acquainted with her when he lived over-harbour. I
heard him say something last summer about her and a home child she
had—likely this very Mary-creature. He said some one told him she was
working the child to death and not half feeding and clothing it. You know, Anne
dearie, it has always been my habit neither to make nor meddle with those
over-harbour folks. But I shall send Marshall over to-morrow to find out the
rights of this if he can. And <i>then</i> I’ll speak to the minister. Mind you,
Anne dearie, the Merediths found this girl literally starving in James
Taylor’s old hay barn. She had been there all night, cold and hungry and
alone. And us sleeping warm in our beds after good suppers.”</p>
<p>“The poor little thing,” said Anne, picturing one of her own dear
babies, cold and hungry and alone in such circumstances. “If she has been
ill-used, Miss Cornelia, she mustn’t be taken back to such a place.
<i>I</i> was an orphan once in a very similar situation.”</p>
<p>“We’ll have to consult the Hopetown asylum folks,” said Miss
Cornelia. “Anyway, she can’t be left at the manse. Dear knows what
those poor children might learn from her. I understand that she has been known
to swear. But just think of her being there two whole weeks and Mr Meredith
never waking up to it! What business has a man like that to have a family? Why,
Anne dearie, he ought to be a monk.”</p>
<p>Two evenings later Miss Cornelia was back at Ingleside.</p>
<p>“It’s the most amazing thing!” she said. “Mrs. Wiley
was found dead in her bed the very morning after this Mary-creature ran away.
She has had a bad heart for years and the doctor had warned her it might happen
at any time. She had sent away her hired man and there was nobody in the house.
Some neighbours found her the next day. They missed the child, it seems, but
supposed Mrs. Wiley had sent her to her cousin near Charlottetown as she had
said she was going to do. The cousin didn’t come to the funeral and so
nobody ever knew that Mary wasn’t with her. The people Marshall talked to
told him some things about the way Mrs. Wiley used this Mary that made his
blood boil, so he declares. You know, it puts Marshall in a regular fury to
hear of a child being ill-used. They said she whipped her mercilessly for every
little fault or mistake. Some folks talked of writing to the asylum authorities
but everybody’s business is nobody’s business and it was never
done.”</p>
<p>“I am sorry that Wiley person is dead,” said Susan fiercely.
“I should like to go over-harbour and give her a piece of my mind.
Starving and beating a child, Mrs. Dr. dear! As you know, I hold with lawful
spanking, but I go no further. And what is to become of this poor child now,
Mrs. Marshall Elliott?”</p>
<p>“I suppose she must be sent back to Hopetown,” said Miss Cornelia.
“I think every one hereabouts who wants a home child has one. I’ll
see Mr. Meredith to-morrow and tell him my opinion of the whole affair.”</p>
<p>“And no doubt she will, Mrs. Dr. dear,” said Susan, after Miss
Cornelia had gone. “She would stick at nothing, not even at shingling the
church spire if she took it into her head. But I cannot understand how even
Cornelia Bryant can talk to a minister as she does. You would think he was just
any common person.”</p>
<p>When Miss Cornelia had gone, Nan Blythe uncurled herself from the hammock where
she had been studying her lessons and slipped away to Rainbow Valley. The
others were already there. Jem and Jerry were playing quoits with old
horseshoes borrowed from the Glen blacksmith. Carl was stalking ants on a sunny
hillock. Walter, lying on his stomach among the fern, was reading aloud to Mary
and Di and Faith and Una from a wonderful book of myths wherein were
fascinating accounts of Prester John and the Wandering Jew, divining rods and
tailed men, of Schamir, the worm that split rocks and opened the way to golden
treasure, of Fortunate Isles and swan-maidens. It was a great shock to Walter
to learn that William Tell and Gelert were myths also; and the story of Bishop
Hatto was to keep him awake all that night; but best of all he loved the
stories of the Pied Piper and the San Greal. He read them thrillingly, while
the bells on the Tree Lovers tinkled in the summer wind and the coolness of the
evening shadows crept across the valley.</p>
<p>“Say, ain’t them in’resting lies?” said Mary admiringly
when Walter had closed the book.</p>
<p>“They aren’t lies,” said Di indignantly.</p>
<p>“You don’t mean they’re true?” asked Mary
incredulously.</p>
<p>“No—not exactly. They’re like those ghost-stories of yours.
They weren’t true—but you didn’t expect us to believe them,
so they weren’t lies.”</p>
<p>“That yarn about the divining rod is no lie, anyhow,” said Mary.
“Old Jake Crawford over-harbour can work it. They send for him from
everywhere when they want to dig a well. And I believe I know the Wandering
Jew.”</p>
<p>“Oh, Mary,” said Una, awe-struck.</p>
<p>“I do—true’s you’re alive. There was an old man at Mrs.
Wiley’s one day last fall. He looked old enough to be <i>anything</i>. She was
asking him about cedar posts, if he thought they’d last well. And he
said, ‘Last well? They’ll last a thousand years. I know, for
I’ve tried them twice.’ Now, if he was two thousand years old who
was he but your Wandering Jew?”</p>
<p>“I don’t believe the Wandering Jew would associate with a person
like Mrs. Wiley,” said Faith decidedly.</p>
<p>“I love the Pied Piper story,” said Di, “and so does mother.
I always feel so sorry for the poor little lame boy who couldn’t keep up
with the others and got shut out of the mountain. He must have been so
disappointed. I think all the rest of his life he’d be wondering what
wonderful thing he had missed and wishing he could have got in with the
others.”</p>
<p>“But how glad his mother must have been,” said Una softly. “I
think she had been sorry all her life that he was lame. Perhaps she even used
to cry about it. But she would never be sorry again—never. She would be
glad he was lame because that was why she hadn’t lost him.”</p>
<p>“Some day,” said Walter dreamily, looking afar into the sky,
“the Pied Piper will come over the hill up there and down Rainbow Valley,
piping merrily and sweetly. And I will follow him—follow him down to the
shore—down to the sea—away from you all. I don’t think
I’ll want to go—Jem will want to go—it will be such an
adventure—but I won’t. Only I’ll <i>have</i> to—the music will
call and call and call me until I <i>must</i> follow.”</p>
<p>“We’ll all go,” cried Di, catching fire at the flame of
Walter’s fancy, and half-believing she could see the mocking, retreating
figure of the mystic piper in the far, dim end of the valley.</p>
<p>“No. You’ll sit here and wait,” said Walter, his great,
splendid eyes full of strange glamour. “You’ll wait for us to come
back. And we may not come—for we cannot come as long as the Piper plays.
He may pipe us round the world. And still you’ll sit here and
wait—and <i>wait</i>.”</p>
<p>“Oh, dry up,” said Mary, shivering. “Don’t look like
that, Walter Blythe. You give me the creeps. Do you want to set me bawling? I
could just see that horrid old Piper going away on, and you boys following him,
and us girls sitting here waiting all alone. I dunno why it is—I never
was one of the blubbering kind—but as soon as you start your spieling I
always want to cry.”</p>
<p>Walter smiled in triumph. He liked to exercise this power of his over his
companions—to play on their feelings, waken their fears, thrill their
souls. It satisfied some dramatic instinct in him. But under his triumph was a
queer little chill of some mysterious dread. The Pied Piper had seemed very
real to him—as if the fluttering veil that hid the future had for a
moment been blown aside in the starlit dusk of Rainbow Valley and some dim
glimpse of coming years granted to him.</p>
<p>Carl, coming up to their group with a report of the doings in ant-land, brought
them all back to the realm of facts.</p>
<p>“Ants <i>are</i> darned in’resting,” exclaimed Mary, glad to escape
the shadowy Piper’s thrall. “Carl and me watched that bed in the
graveyard all Saturday afternoon. I never thought there was so much in bugs.
Say, but they’re quarrelsome little cusses—some of ‘em like
to start a fight ‘thout any reason, far’s we could see. And some of
‘em are cowards. They got so scared they just doubled theirselves up into
a ball and let the other fellows bang ‘em. They wouldn’t put up a
fight at all. Some of ‘em are lazy and won’t work. We watched
‘em shirking. And there was one ant died of grief ‘cause another
ant got killed—wouldn’t work—wouldn’t eat—just
died—it did, honest to Go—oodness.”</p>
<p>A shocked silence prevailed. Every one knew that Mary had not started out to
say “goodness.” Faith and Di exchanged glances that would have done
credit to Miss Cornelia herself. Walter and Carl looked uncomfortable and
Una’s lip trembled.</p>
<p>Mary squirmed uncomfortably.</p>
<p>“That slipped out ‘fore I thought—it did, honest to—I
mean, true’s you live, and I swallowed half of it. You folks over here
are mighty squeamish seems to me. Wish you could have heard the Wileys when
they had a fight.”</p>
<p>“Ladies don’t say such things,” said Faith, very primly for
her.</p>
<p>“It isn’t right,” whispered Una.</p>
<p>“I ain’t a lady,” said Mary. “What chance’ve I
ever had of being a lady? But I won’t say that again if I can help it. I
promise you.”</p>
<p>“Besides,” said Una, “you can’t expect God to answer
your prayers if you take His name in vain, Mary.”</p>
<p>“I don’t expect Him to answer ‘em anyhow,” said Mary of
little faith. “I’ve been asking Him for a week to clear up this
Wiley affair and He hasn’t done a thing. I’m going to give
up.”</p>
<p>At this juncture Nan arrived breathless.</p>
<p>“Oh, Mary, I’ve news for you. Mrs. Elliott has been over-harbour
and what do you think she found out? Mrs. Wiley is dead—she was found
dead in bed the morning after you ran away. So you’ll never have to go
back to her.”</p>
<p>“Dead!” said Mary stupefied. Then she shivered.</p>
<p>“Do you s’pose my praying had anything to do with that?” she
cried imploringly to Una. “If it had I’ll never pray again as long
as I live. Why, she may come back and ha’nt me.”</p>
<p>“No, no, Mary,” said Una comfortingly, “it hadn’t. Why,
Mrs. Wiley died long before you ever began to pray about it at all.”</p>
<p>“That’s so,” said Mary recovering from her panic. “But
I tell you it gave me a start. I wouldn’t like to think I’d prayed
anybody to death. I never thought of such a thing as her dying when I was
praying. She didn’t seem much like the dying kind. Did Mrs. Elliott say
anything about me?”</p>
<p>“She said you would likely have to go back to the asylum.”</p>
<p>“I thought as much,” said Mary drearily. “And then
they’ll give me out again—likely to some one just like Mrs. Wiley.
Well, I s’pose I can stand it. I’m tough.”</p>
<p>“I’m going to pray that you won’t have to go back,”
whispered Una, as she and Mary walked home to the manse.</p>
<p>“You can do as you like,” said Mary decidedly, “but I vow
<i>I</i> won’t. I’m good and scared of this praying business. See
what’s come of it. If Mrs. Wiley <i>had</i> died after I started praying it
would have been my doings.”</p>
<p>“Oh, no, it wouldn’t,” said Una. “I wish I could
explain things better—father could, I know, if you’d talk to him,
Mary.”</p>
<p>“Catch me! I don’t know what to make of your father, that’s
the long and short of it. He goes by me and never sees me in broad daylight. I
ain’t proud—but I ain’t a door-mat, neither!”</p>
<p>“Oh, Mary, it’s just father’s way. Most of the time he never
sees us, either. He is thinking deeply, that is all. And I <i>am</i> going to pray
that God will keep you in Four Winds—because I like you, Mary.”</p>
<p>“All right. Only don’t let me hear of any more people dying on
account of it,” said Mary. “I’d like to stay in Four Winds
fine. I like it and I like the harbour and the light house—and you and
the Blythes. You’re the only friends I ever had and I’d hate to
leave you.”</p>
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