<h2><SPAN name="chap09"></SPAN>CHAPTER IX.<br/> UNA INTERVENES</h2>
<p>Miss Cornelia had an interview with Mr. Meredith which proved something of a
shock to that abstracted gentleman. She pointed out to him, none too
respectfully, his dereliction of duty in allowing a waif like Mary Vance to
come into his family and associate with his children without knowing or
learning anything about her.</p>
<p>“I don’t say there is much harm done, of course,” she
concluded. “This Mary-creature isn’t what you might call bad, when
all is said and done. I’ve been questioning your children and the
Blythes, and from what I can make out there’s nothing much to be said
against the child except that she’s slangy and doesn’t use very
refined language. But think what might have happened if she’d been like
some of those home children we know of. You know yourself what that poor little
creature the Jim Flaggs’ had, taught and told the Flagg children.”</p>
<p>Mr. Meredith did know and was honestly shocked over his own carelessness in the
matter.</p>
<p>“But what is to be done, Mrs. Elliott?” he asked helplessly.
“We can’t turn the poor child out. She must be cared for.”</p>
<p>“Of course. We’d better write to the Hopetown authorities at once.
Meanwhile, I suppose she might as well stay here for a few more days till we
hear from them. But keep your eyes and ears open, Mr. Meredith.”</p>
<p>Susan would have died of horror on the spot if she had heard Miss Cornelia so
admonishing a minister. But Miss Cornelia departed in a warm glow of
satisfaction over duty done, and that night Mr. Meredith asked Mary to come
into his study with him. Mary obeyed, looking literally ghastly with fright.
But she got the surprise of her poor, battered little life. This man, of whom
she had stood so terribly in awe, was the kindest, gentlest soul she had ever
met. Before she knew what happened Mary found herself pouring all her troubles
into his ear and receiving in return such sympathy and tender understanding as
it had never occurred to her to imagine. Mary left the study with her face and
eyes so softened that Una hardly knew her.</p>
<p>“Your father’s all right, when he does wake up,” she said
with a sniff that just escaped being a sob. “It’s a pity he
doesn’t wake up oftener. He said I wasn’t to blame for Mrs. Wiley
dying, but that I must try to think of her good points and not of her bad ones.
I dunno what good points she had, unless it was keeping her house clean and
making first-class butter. I know I ‘most wore my arms out scrubbing her
old kitchen floor with the knots in it. But anything your father says goes with
me after this.”</p>
<p>Mary proved a rather dull companion in the following days, however. She
confided to Una that the more she thought of going back to the asylum the more
she hated it. Una racked her small brains for some way of averting it, but it
was Nan Blythe who came to the rescue with a somewhat startling suggestion.</p>
<p>“Mrs. Elliott might take Mary herself. She has a great big house and Mr.
Elliott is always wanting her to have help. It would be just a splendid place
for Mary. Only she’d have to behave herself.”</p>
<p>“Oh, Nan, do you think Mrs. Elliott would take her?”</p>
<p>“It wouldn’t do any harm if you asked her,” said Nan. At
first Una did not think she could. She was so shy that to ask a favour of
anybody was agony to her. And she was very much in awe of the bustling,
energetic Mrs. Elliott. She liked her very much and always enjoyed a visit to
her house; but to go and ask her to adopt Mary Vance seemed such a height of
presumption that Una’s timid spirit quailed.</p>
<p>When the Hopetown authorities wrote to Mr. Meredith to send Mary to them
without delay Mary cried herself to sleep in the manse attic that night and Una
found a desperate courage. The next evening she slipped away from the manse to
the harbour road. Far down in Rainbow Valley she heard joyous laughter but her
way lay not there. She was terribly pale and terribly in earnest—so much
so that she took no notice of the people she met—and old Mrs. Stanley
Flagg was quite huffed and said Una Meredith would be as absentminded as her
father when she grew up.</p>
<p>Miss Cornelia lived half way between the Glen and Four Winds Point, in a house
whose original glaring green hue had mellowed down to an agreeable greenish
gray. Marshall Elliott had planted trees about it and set out a rose garden and
a spruce hedge. It was quite a different place from what it had been in years
agone. The manse children and the Ingleside children liked to go there. It was
a beautiful walk down the old harbour road, and there was always a well-filled
cooky jar at the end.</p>
<p>The misty sea was lapping softly far down on the sands. Three big boats were
skimming down the harbour like great white sea-birds. A schooner was coming up
the channel. The world of Four Winds was steeped in glowing colour, and subtle
music, and strange glamour, and everybody should have been happy in it. But
when Una turned in at Miss Cornelia’s gate her very legs had almost
refused to carry her.</p>
<p>Miss Cornelia was alone on the veranda. Una had hoped Mr. Elliott would be
there. He was so big and hearty and twinkly that there would be encouragement
in his presence. She sat on the little stool Miss Cornelia brought out and
tried to eat the doughnut Miss Cornelia gave her. It stuck in her throat, but
she swallowed desperately lest Miss Cornelia be offended. She could not talk;
she was still pale; and her big, dark-blue eyes looked so piteous that Miss
Cornelia concluded the child was in some trouble.</p>
<p>“What’s on your mind, dearie?” she asked.
“There’s something, that’s plain to be seen.”</p>
<p>Una swallowed the last twist of doughnut with a desperate gulp.</p>
<p>“Mrs. Elliott, won’t you take Mary Vance?” she said
beseechingly.</p>
<p>Miss Cornelia stared blankly.</p>
<p>“Me! Take Mary Vance! Do you mean keep her?”</p>
<p>“Yes—keep her—adopt her,” said Una eagerly, gaining
courage now that the ice was broken. “Oh, Mrs. Elliott, <i>please</i> do. She
doesn’t want to go back to the asylum—she cries every night about
it. She’s so afraid of being sent to another hard place. And she’s
<i>so</i> smart—there isn’t anything she can’t do. I know you
wouldn’t be sorry if you took her.”</p>
<p>“I never thought of such a thing,” said Miss Cornelia rather
helplessly.</p>
<p>“<i>Won’t</i> you think of it?” implored Una.</p>
<p>“But, dearie, I don’t want help. I’m quite able to do all the
work here. And I never thought I’d like to have a home girl if I did need
help.”</p>
<p>The light went out of Una’s eyes. Her lips trembled. She sat down on her
stool again, a pathetic little figure of disappointment, and began to cry.</p>
<p>“Don’t—dearie—don’t,” exclaimed Miss
Cornelia in distress. She could never bear to hurt a child. “I
don’t say I <i>won’t</i> take her—but the idea is so new it has just
kerflummuxed me. I must think it over.”</p>
<p>“Mary is <i>so</i> smart,” said Una again.</p>
<p>“Humph! So I’ve heard. I’ve heard she swears, too. Is that
true?”</p>
<p>“I’ve never heard her swear <i>exactly</i>,” faltered Una
uncomfortably. “But I’m afraid she <i>could</i>.”</p>
<p>“I believe you! Does she always tell the truth?”</p>
<p>“I think she does, except when she’s afraid of a whipping.”</p>
<p>“And yet you want me to take her!”</p>
<p>“<i>Some one</i> has to take her,” sobbed Una. “<i>Some one</i> has to look
after her, Mrs. Elliott.”</p>
<p>“That’s true. Perhaps it <i>is</i> my duty to do it,” said Miss
Cornelia with a sigh. “Well, I’ll have to talk it over with Mr.
Elliott. So don’t say anything about it just yet. Take another doughnut,
dearie.”</p>
<p>Una took it and ate it with a better appetite.</p>
<p>“I’m very fond of doughnuts,” she confessed “Aunt
Martha never makes any. But Miss Susan at Ingleside does, and sometimes she
lets us have a plateful in Rainbow Valley. Do you know what I do when I’m
hungry for doughnuts and can’t get any, Mrs. Elliott?”</p>
<p>“No, dearie. What?”</p>
<p>“I get out mother’s old cook book and read the doughnut
recipe—and the other recipes. They sound <i>so</i> nice. I always do that when
I’m hungry—especially after we’ve had ditto for dinner. <i>Then</i>
I read the fried chicken and the roast goose recipes. Mother could make all
those nice things.”</p>
<p>“Those manse children will starve to death yet if Mr. Meredith
doesn’t get married,” Miss Cornelia told her husband indignantly
after Una had gone. “And he won’t—and what’s to be
done? And <i>shall</i> we take this Mary-creature, Marshall?”</p>
<p>“Yes, take her,” said Marshall laconically.</p>
<p>“Just like a man,” said his wife, despairingly. “‘Take
her’—as if that was all. There are a hundred things to be
considered, believe <i>me</i>.”</p>
<p>“Take her—and we’ll consider them afterwards,
Cornelia,” said her husband.</p>
<p>In the end Miss Cornelia did take her and went up to announce her decision to
the Ingleside people first.</p>
<p>“Splendid!” said Anne delightedly. “I’ve been hoping
you would do that very thing, Miss Cornelia. I want that poor child to get a
good home. I was a homeless little orphan just like her once.”</p>
<p>“I don’t think this Mary-creature is or ever will be much like
you,” retorted Miss Cornelia gloomily. “She’s a cat of
another colour. But she’s also a human being with an immortal soul to
save. I’ve got a shorter catechism and a small tooth comb and I’m
going to do my duty by her, now that I’ve set my hand to the plough,
believe me.”</p>
<p>Mary received the news with chastened satisfaction.</p>
<p>“It’s better luck than I expected,” she said.</p>
<p>“You’ll have to mind your p’s and q’s with Mrs.
Elliott,” said Nan.</p>
<p>“Well, I can do that,” flashed Mary. “I know how to behave
when I want to just as well as you, Nan Blythe.”</p>
<p>“You mustn’t use bad words, you know, Mary,” said Una
anxiously.</p>
<p>“I s’pose she’d die of horror if I did,” grinned Mary,
her white eyes shining with unholy glee over the idea. “But you
needn’t worry, Una. Butter won’t melt in my mouth after this.
I’ll be all prunes and prisms.”</p>
<p>“Nor tell lies,” added Faith.</p>
<p>“Not even to get off from a whipping?” pleaded Mary.</p>
<p>“Mrs. Elliott will <i>never</i> whip you—<i>never</i>,” exclaimed Di.</p>
<p>“Won’t she?” said Mary skeptically. “If I ever find
myself in a place where I ain’t licked I’ll think it’s heaven
all right. No fear of me telling lies then. I ain’t fond of telling
‘em—I’d ruther not, if it comes to that.”</p>
<p>The day before Mary’s departure from the manse they had a picnic in her
honour in Rainbow Valley, and that evening all the manse children gave her
something from their scanty store of treasured things for a keepsake. Carl gave
her his Noah’s ark and Jerry his second best jew’s-harp. Faith gave
her a little hairbrush with a mirror in the back of it, which Mary had always
considered very wonderful. Una hesitated between an old beaded purse and a gay
picture of Daniel in the lion’s den, and finally offered Mary her choice.
Mary really hankered after the beaded purse, but she knew Una loved it, so she
said,</p>
<p>“Give me Daniel. I’d rusher have it ‘cause I’m partial
to lions. Only I wish they’d et Daniel up. It would have been more
exciting.”</p>
<p>At bedtime Mary coaxed Una to sleep with her.</p>
<p>“It’s for the last time,” she said, “and it’s
raining tonight, and I hate sleeping up there alone when it’s raining on
account of that graveyard. I don’t mind it on fine nights, but a night
like this I can’t see anything but the rain pouring down on them old
white stones, and the wind round the window sounds as if them dead people were
trying to get in and crying ‘cause they couldn’t.”</p>
<p>“I like rainy nights,” said Una, when they were cuddled down
together in the little attic room, “and so do the Blythe girls.”</p>
<p>“I don’t mind ‘em when I’m not handy to
graveyards,” said Mary. “If I was alone here I’d cry my eyes
out I’d be so lonesome. I feel awful bad to be leaving you all.”</p>
<p>“Mrs. Elliott will let you come up and play in Rainbow Valley quite often
I’m sure,” said Una. “And you <i>will</i> be a good girl,
won’t you, Mary?”</p>
<p>“Oh, I’ll try,” sighed Mary. “But it won’t be as
easy for me to be good—inside, I mean, as well as outside—as it is
for you. You hadn’t such scalawags of relations as I had.”</p>
<p>“But your people must have had some good qualities as well as bad
ones,” argued Una. “You must live up to them and never mind their
bad ones.”</p>
<p>“I don’t believe they had any good qualities,” said Mary
gloomily. “I never heard of any. My grandfather had money, but they say
he was a rascal. No, I’ll just have to start out on my own hook and do
the best I can.”</p>
<p>“And God will help you, you know, Mary, if you ask Him.”</p>
<p>“I don’t know about that.”</p>
<p>“Oh, Mary. You know we asked God to get a home for you and He did.”</p>
<p>“I don’t see what He had to do with it,” retorted Mary.
“It was you put it into Mrs. Elliott’s head.”</p>
<p>“But God put it into her <i>heart</i> to take you. All my putting it into her
<i>head</i> wouldn’t have done any good if He hadn’t.”</p>
<p>“Well, there may be something in that,” admitted Mary. “Mind
you, I haven’t got anything against God, Una. I’m willing to give
Him a chance. But, honest, I think He’s an awful lot like your
father—just absent-minded and never taking any notice of a body most of
the time, but sometimes waking up all of a suddent and being awful good and
kind and sensible.”</p>
<p>“Oh, Mary, no!” exclaimed horrified Una. “God isn’t a
bit like father—I mean He’s a thousand times better and
kinder.”</p>
<p>“If He’s as good as your father He’ll do for me,” said
Mary. “When your father was talking to me I felt as if I never could be
bad any more.”</p>
<p>“I wish you’d talk to father about Him,” sighed Una.
“He can explain it all so much better than I can.”</p>
<p>“Why, so I will, next time he wakes up,” promised Mary. “That
night he talked to me in the study he showed me real clear that my praying
didn’t kill Mrs. Wiley. My mind’s been easy since, but I’m
real cautious about praying. I guess the old rhyme is the safest. Say, Una, it
seems to me if one has to pray to anybody it’d be better to pray to the
devil than to God. God’s good, anyhow so you say, so He won’t do
you any harm, but from all I can make out the devil needs to be pacified. I
think the sensible way would be to say to <i>him</i>, ‘Good devil, please
don’t tempt me. Just leave me alone, please.’ Now, don’t
you?”</p>
<p>“Oh, no, no, Mary. I’m sure it couldn’t be right to pray to
the devil. And it wouldn’t do any good because he’s bad. It might
aggravate him and he’d be worse than ever.”</p>
<p>“Well, as to this God-matter,” said Mary stubbornly, “since
you and I can’t settle it, there ain’t no use in talking more about
it until we’ve a chanct to find out the rights of it. I’ll do the
best I can alone till then.”</p>
<p>“If mother was alive she could tell us everything,” said Una with a
sigh.</p>
<p>“I wisht she was alive,” said Mary. “I don’t know
what’s going to become of you youngsters when I’m gone. Anyhow, <i>do</i>
try and keep the house a little tidy. The way people talks about it is
scandalous. And the first thing you know your father will be getting married
again and then your noses will be out of joint.”</p>
<p>Una was startled. The idea of her father marrying again had never presented
itself to her before. She did not like it and she lay silent under the chill of
it.</p>
<p>“Stepmothers are <i>awful</i> creatures,” Mary went on. “I could
make your blood run cold if I was to tell you all I know about ‘em. The
Wilson kids across the road from Wiley’s had a stepmother. She was just
as bad to ‘em as Mrs. Wiley was to me. It’ll be awful if you get a
stepmother.”</p>
<p>“I’m sure we won’t,” said Una tremulously.
“Father won’t marry anybody else.”</p>
<p>“He’ll be hounded into it, I expect,” said Mary darkly.
“All the old maids in the settlement are after him. There’s no
being up to them. And the worst of stepmothers is, they always set your father
against you. He’d never care anything about you again. He’d always
take her part and her children’s part. You see, she’d make him
believe you were all bad.”</p>
<p>“I wish you hadn’t told me this, Mary,” cried Una. “It
makes me feel so unhappy.”</p>
<p>“I only wanted to warn you,” said Mary, rather repentantly.
“Of course, your father’s so absent-minded he mightn’t happen
to think of getting married again. But it’s better to be prepared.”</p>
<p>Long after Mary slept serenely little Una lay awake, her eyes smarting with
tears. On, how dreadful it would be if her father should marry somebody who
would make him hate her and Jerry and Faith and Carl! She couldn’t bear
it—she couldn’t!</p>
<p>Mary had not instilled any poison of the kind Miss Cornelia had feared into the
manse children’s minds. Yet she had certainly contrived to do a little
mischief with the best of intentions. But she slept dreamlessly, while Una lay
awake and the rain fell and the wind wailed around the old gray manse. And the
Rev. John Meredith forgot to go to bed at all because he was absorbed in
reading a life of St. Augustine. It was gray dawn when he finished it and went
upstairs, wrestling with the problems of two thousand years ago. The door of
the girls’ room was open and he saw Faith lying asleep, rosy and
beautiful. He wondered where Una was. Perhaps she had gone over to “stay
all night” with the Blythe girls. She did this occasionally, deeming it a
great treat. John Meredith sighed. He felt that Una’s whereabouts ought
not to be a mystery to him. Cecelia would have looked after her better than
that.</p>
<p>If only Cecelia were still with him! How pretty and gay she had been! How the
old manse up at Maywater had echoed to her songs! And she had gone away so
suddenly, taking her laughter and music and leaving silence—so suddenly
that he had never quite got over his feeling of amazement. How could <i>she</i>, the
beautiful and vivid, have died?</p>
<p>The idea of a second marriage had never presented itself seriously to John
Meredith. He had loved his wife so deeply that he believed he could never care
for any woman again. He had a vague idea that before very long Faith would be
old enough to take her mother’s place. Until then, he must do the best he
could alone. He sighed and went to his room, where the bed was still unmade.
Aunt Martha had forgotten it, and Mary had not dared to make it because Aunt
Martha had forbidden her to meddle with anything in the minister’s room.
But Mr. Meredith did not notice that it was unmade. His last thoughts were of
St. Augustine.</p>
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