A Cry in the Wilderness Part 13
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"Yes, it's lovely; those are the Laurentians I see, are n't they?"
"You 're right. The cut is Cale's doing. He said the first thing necessary was to let in light and air, and provide drainage. But he won't do much more till Ewart comes--he does n't want to."
"When is Mr. Ewart coming?"
"We expect him sometime the last of November. He was in England when we last heard from him--here's Marie; breakfast is ready." He opened the door to the dining-room and Mrs. Macleod greeted me from the head of the table.
I loved the dining-room; the side windows looked into a thicket of spruce and hemlock, and from the front ones I could see under the great-branched lindens to the St. Lawrence.
After breakfast Mrs. Macleod showed me what she called the "offices", also the large winter kitchen at the end of the central pa.s.sageway, and the method by which both are heated: a range of curious make is set into the wall in such a way that the iron back forms a portion of the wall of the pa.s.sageway.
"We came out here early in the spring and found this arrangement perfect for heating the pa.s.sageway. Angelique has moved in this morning from the summer kitchen; she says the first snowfall is her warning. I have yet to experience a Canadian winter."
She showed me all over the house. It was simple in arrangement and lacked many things to make it comfortable. Above, in the main house, there were four large bedrooms with dormer windows and wide shallow fireplaces. The walls were whitewashed and sloping as in my room. The furniture was spa.r.s.e but old and substantial. There were no bed furnis.h.i.+ngs or hangings of any kind. All the rooms were laid with rag carpets of beautiful coloring and unique design.
"Jamie and I have rooms in the long corridor where yours is," said Mrs.
Macleod; "it's much cosier there; we actually have curtains to our beds, which seems a bit like home."
I was looking out of one of the dormer windows as she spoke, and saw little Pete on the white Percheron, galloping clumsily up the driveway.
He saw me and waved a yellow envelope. I knew that little yellow flag to be a telegram. A sudden heart-throb warned me that it might bring some word that would shorten my stay in this old manor, and banish all three to Doctor Rugvie's farm.
A few minutes afterwards, we heard Jamie's voice calling from the lower pa.s.sageway:
"Mother, where are you?--Oh, you 're there, Marcia!" he said, as I leaned over the stair rail. "Here 's a telegram from Ewart, and news by letter--no end of it. Come on down."
"Come away," said Mrs. Macleod quickly. I saw her cheeks flush with excitement. On entering the living-room we found Jamie in high feather. He flourished the telegram joyously.
"Oh, I say, mother, it's great! Ewart telegraphs he will be here by the fifteenth of November and that Doctor Rugvie will come with him.
And here 's a letter from him, written two weeks ago, and he says that by now all the cases of books should be in Montreal, plus two French coach horses at the Royal Stables. He says Cale is to go up for them.
He tells me to open the cases, and gives you free hand to furbish up in any way you see fit, to make things comfortable for the winter."
"My dear boy, what an avalanche of responsibility! I don't know that I feel competent to carry out his wishes." She looked so hopelessly helpless that her son laughed outright.
"And when and where do I come in?" I asked merrily; "am I to continue to be the cipher I 've been since my arrival?"
"You forgot Marcia, now did n't you, mother?"
"I think I did, dear. Do you really think you can attempt all this?"
she asked rather anxiously.
"Do it! Of course I can--every bit, if only you will let me."
"Hurrah for the States!" Jamie cried triumphantly; "Marcia, you're a trump," he added emphatically.
Mrs. Macleod turned to me, saying half in apology:
"I really have no initiative, my dear; and when so many demands are made upon me unexpectedly, I simply can do nothing--just turn on a pivot, Jamie says; and the very fact that I am a beneficiary here would be an obstacle in carrying out these plans. It is so different in my own home in Crieff."
I heard the note of homesickness in her voice, and it dawned upon me that there are others in the world who may feel themselves strangers in it. My heart went out to her for her loneliness in this far away land of French Canada.
"Well, so am I a beneficiary; so is Cale and the whole household; and if only you will let me, I 'll make Mr. Ewart himself feel he is a beneficiary in his own house," I retorted gayly. "And as for Doctor Rugvie, we 'll see whether his farm will have such attractions for him after he has been our guest."
Mrs. Macleod laid her hand on my shoulder and smiled, saying with a sigh of relief:
"If you will only take the generals.h.i.+p, Marcia, you will find in me a good aide-de-camp."
Jamie said nothing, but he gave me a look that was with me all that day and many following. It spurred me to do my best.
V
How I enjoyed the next three weeks! Jamie said the household activity had been "switched off" until the arrival of the letter and telegram from Mr. Ewart; these, he declared, made the connection and started a current. Its energy made itself pleasurably felt in every member of the household. Cale was twice in Montreal, on a personally conducted tour, for the coach horses. Big Pete was putting on double windows all over the house, stuffing the cracks with moss, piling cords of winter wood, hauling grain and, during the long evenings, enjoying himself by cutting up the Canadian grown tobacco, mixing it with a little mola.s.ses, and storing it for his winter solace. Angelique was making the kitchen to s.h.i.+ne, and Marie was helping Mrs. Macleod.
For the first week Jamie and I lived, in part, on the road between Lamoral and Richelieu-en-Bas. With little Pete for driver, an old cart-horse and a long low-bodied wagon carried us, sometimes twice a day, to the village. We spent hours in the one "goods" shop of the place. It was a long, low, dark room stocked to the ceiling on both walls and on shelves down the middle, with all varieties of cotton, woolen and silk goods, some of modern manufacture but more of past decades. In the dim background, a broad flight of stairs, bisecting on a landing, led to the gallery where were piled higgledy-piggledy every Canadian want in the way of furnis.h.i.+ngs, from old-fas.h.i.+oned bellows and all wool blankets, to Englishware toilet sets that must have found storage there for a generation, and no customer till Jamie and I appeared to claim them. There, too, I unearthed a bolt of English chintz.
In a tiny front room of a tiny house on the marketplace, I found an old dealer in skins. He and his wife made some up for me into small foot-rugs for the bedrooms. Acting on Angelique's suggestion, I visited old Mere Guillardeau's daughter. I found her in her cabin at her rag carpet loom, and bought two rolls which she was just about to leave with the "goods" merchant to sell on commission. I wanted them to make the long pa.s.sageways more comfortable.
I revelled in each day's work which was as good as play to me. I gloried in being able to spend the money for what was needed to make the house comfortable, without the burden of having to earn it; just as I rejoiced in the abundant wholesome food that now nourished me, without impoveris.h.i.+ng my pocket. There were times when I found myself almost grateful for the discipline and denial of those years in the city; for, against that background, my present life seemed one of care-free luxury. I began to feel young; and it was a pleasure to know I was needed and helpful.
The shortening November days, the strengthening cold, that closed the creek and was beginning to bind the river, the gray unlifting skies, I welcomed as a foil to the cosy evenings in the dining-room where Mrs.
Macleod and I sewed and st.i.tched, and planned for the various rooms, Jamie smoked and jeered or encouraged, and the four dogs watched every movement on our part, with an ear c.o.c.ked for little Pete who was cracking b.u.t.ternuts in the kitchen.
The life in the manor was so peaceful, so sheltered, so normal. Every member of the household was busy with work during the day, and the night brought with it well-earned rest, and a sense of comfort and security in the flame-lighted rooms.
Often after going up to my bedroom, which Marie kept acceptably warm for me, I used to sit before the open grate stove for an hour before going to bed, just to enjoy the white-walled peace around me, the night silence without, the restful quiet of the old manor within. At such times I found myself dreading the "foreign invasion", as I termed in jest the coming of the owner of Lamoral and Doctor Rugvie. To the first I gave little thought; the second was rarely absent from my consciousness. "How will it all end?" I asked myself time and time again while counting off the days before his arrival. What should I find out? What would the knowledge lead to?
"Who am I? Who--who?" I said to myself over and over again during those three weeks of preparation. And at night, creeping into my bed--than which there could be none better, for it was in three layers: spring, feather bed and hair mattress--and drawing up the blankets and comforter preparatory for the sharp frost of the early morning, I cried out in revolt:
"I don't care a rap who I may prove to be! If only this peaceful sense of security will last, I want to remain Marcia Farrell to the end."
But I knew it could not last. I hinted as much to Jamie Macleod only three days before the fifteenth of November. We were making our last trip to the village for some extra supplies for Angelique. We were alone, and I was driving.
"Jamie," I said suddenly, after the old and trustworthy cart-horse, newly and sharply shod for the ice, had taken us safely over the frozen creek, "I wish this might last, don't you?"
He looked at me a little doubtfully.
"You mean the kind of life we 're living now? Yes,"--he hesitated,--"for some reasons I do; but there are others, and for those it is better that the change should come."
"What others?" I was at times boldly inquisitive of Jamie; I took liberties with his youth.
"You would n't understand them if I told you. Wait till the others come and you 'll see, in part, why."
"Do you know," I continued, my words following my thought, "that you 've never told me a thing about Doctor Rugvie and Mr. Ewart?"
"Not told you anything? Why, I thought I 'd said enough that first evening for you to know as much of them as you can without seeing them."
"No, you have n't; you 've been like a clam so far as telling me anything about their looks, or age, or--or anything--"
A Cry in the Wilderness Part 13
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A Cry in the Wilderness Part 13 summary
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