Lucy Maud Montgomery Short Stories, 1905 to 1906 Part 39
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Outside I came across Jill. She was sitting all alone in the dark, curled up on the edge of the verandah just where she could see into the parlour through the big gla.s.s door. I sat down beside her, for I wanted sympathy.
"d.i.c.k's in there talking to Aunt Tommy," I said. "I don't see what makes him want to talk to her."
"What a goose you are!" said Jill in that aggravatingly patronizing way of hers. "Why, d.i.c.k has fallen in love with Aunt Tommy!"
Honest, I jumped. I never was so surprised.
"How do you know?" I asked.
"Because I do," said Jill. "I knew it yesterday at church and I think it is so romantic."
"I don't see how you can tell," I said--and I didn't.
"You'll understand better when you get older," said Jill. Sometimes Jill talks as if she were a hundred years older than I am, instead of being a twin. And really, sometimes I think she _is_ older.
"I didn't think ministers ever fell in love," I protested.
"Some do," said Jill sagely. "Mr. Grinnell wouldn't ever, I suppose.
But d.i.c.k is different. I'd like him for a husband myself. But he'd be too old for me by the time I grew up, so I suppose I'll have to let Aunt Tommy have him. It will be all in the family anyhow--that is one comfort. I think Aunt Tommy ought to have me for a flower girl and I'll wear pink silk clouded over with white chiffon and carry a big bouquet of roses."
"Jill, you take my breath away," I said, and she did. My imagination couldn't travel as fast as that. But after I had thought the idea over a bit I liked it. It was a good deal like a book; and, besides, a minister is a respectable thing to have in a family.
"We must help them all we can," said Jill.
"What can we do?" I asked.
"We must praise d.i.c.k to Aunt Tommy and Aunt Tommy to d.i.c.k and we must keep out of the way--we mustn't ever hang around when they want to be alone," said Jill.
"I don't want to give up being chums with d.i.c.k," I grumbled.
"We must be self-sacrificing," said Jill. And that sounded so fine it reconciled me to the attempt.
We sat there and watched d.i.c.k and Aunt Tommy for an hour. I thought they were awfully prim and stiff. If I'd been d.i.c.k I'd have gone over and hugged her. I said so to Jill and Jill was shocked. She said it wouldn't be proper when they weren't even engaged.
When d.i.c.k went away Aunt Tommy came out to the verandah and discovered us. She sat down between us and put her arms about us. Aunt Tommy has such cute ways.
"I like your minister very much," she said.
"He's bully," I said.
"He's as handsome as a prince," Jill said.
"He preaches splendid sermons--he makes people sit up in church, I can tell you," I said.
"He has a heavenly tenor voice," Jill said.
"He's got a magnificent muscle," I said.
"He has the most poetical eyes," Jill said.
"He swims like a duck," I said.
"He looks just like a Greek G.o.d," Jill said.
I'm sure Jill couldn't have known what a Greek G.o.d looked like, but I suppose she got the comparison out of some novel. Jill is always reading novels. She borrows them from the cook.
Aunt Tommy laughed and said, "You darlings."
For the next three months Jill and I were wild. It was just like reading a serial story to watch d.i.c.k and Aunt Tommy. One day when d.i.c.k came Aunt Tommy wasn't quite ready to come down, so Jill and I went in to the parlour to help things along. We knew we hadn't much time, so we began right off.
"Aunt Tommy is the jolliest girl I know," I said.
"She is as beautiful as a dream," Jill said.
"She can play games as good as a boy," I said.
"She does the most elegant fancy work," Jill said.
"She never gets mad," I said.
"She plays and sings divinely," Jill said.
"She can cook awfully good things," I said, for I was beginning to run short of compliments. Jill was horrified; she said afterwards that it wasn't a bit romantic. But I don't care--I believe d.i.c.k liked it, for he smiled with his eyes I just as he always does when he's pleased.
Girls don't understand everything.
But at the end of three months we began to get anxious. Things were going so slow. d.i.c.k and Aunt Tommy didn't seem a bit further ahead than at first. Jill said it was because Aunt Tommy didn't encourage d.i.c.k enough.
"I do wish we could hurry them up a little," she said. "At this rate they will never be married this year and by next I'll be too big to be a flower girl. I'm stretching out horribly as it is. Mother has had to let down my frocks again."
"I wish they would get engaged and have done with it," I said. "My mind would be at rest then. It's all d.i.c.k's fault. Why doesn't he ask Aunt Tommy to marry him? What's making him so slow about it? If I wanted a girl to marry me--but I wouldn't ever--I'd tell her so right spang off."
"I suppose ministers have to be more dignified," said Jill, "but three months ought to be enough time for anyone. And Aunt Tommy is only going to be here another month. If d.i.c.k could be made a little jealous it would hurry him up. And he could be made jealous if you had any s.p.u.n.k about you."
"I guess I've got more s.p.u.n.k than you have," I said.
"The trouble with d.i.c.k is this," said Jill. "There is n.o.body else coming to see Aunt Tommy and he thinks he is sure of her. If you could tell him something different it would stir him up."
"Are you sure it would?" I asked.
"It always does in novels," said Jill. And that settled it, of course.
Jill and I fixed up what I was to say and Jill made me say it over and over again to be sure I had it right. I told her--sarcastically--that she'd better say it herself and then it would be done properly. Jill said she would if it were Aunt Tommy, but when it was d.i.c.k it was better for a man to do it. So of course I agreed.
I didn't know when I would have a chance to stir d.i.c.k up, but Providence--so Jill said--favoured us. Aunt Tommy didn't expect d.i.c.k down the next night, so she and Father and Mother all went away somewhere. d.i.c.k came after all, and Jill sent me into the parlour to tell him. He was standing before the mantel looking at Aunt Tommy's picture. There was such an adoring look in his eyes. I could see it quite plain in the mirror before him. I practised that look a lot before my own gla.s.s after that--because I thought it might come in handy some time, you know--but I guess I couldn't have got it just right because when I tried it on Jill she asked me if I had a pain.
"Well, Jack, old man," said d.i.c.k, sitting down on the sofa. I sat down before him.
Lucy Maud Montgomery Short Stories, 1905 to 1906 Part 39
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Lucy Maud Montgomery Short Stories, 1905 to 1906 Part 39 summary
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