Rilla of Ingleside by Lucy Maud Montgomery (the top 100 crime novels of all time .txt) š
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- Author: Lucy Maud Montgomery
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āI seeāshiftlessācanāt make or keep. Well, Iāll seeāIāll see. I have an idea. Itās a good idea, and besides it will make Robert and Amelia squirm. Thatās its main merit in my eyes, though I like that child, mind you, because he aināt skeered of me. Heās worth some bother. Now, you get dressed, as I said before, and come down when youāre good and ready.ā
Rilla was stiff and sore after her tumble and walk of the night before but she was not long in dressing herself and Jims. When she went down to the kitchen she found a smoking hot breakfast on the table. Mr. Chapley was nowhere in sight and Mrs. Chapley was cutting bread with a sulky air. Mrs. Matilda Pitman was sitting in an armchair, knitting a grey army sock. She still wore her bonnet and her triumphant expression.
āSet right in, dears, and make a good breakfast,ā she said.
āI am not hungry,ā said Rilla almost pleadingly. āI donāt think I can eat anything. And it is time I was starting for the station. The morning train will soon be along. Please excuse me and let us goāIāll take a piece of bread and butter for Jims.ā
Mrs. Matilda Pitman shook a knitting-needle playfully at Rilla.
āSit down and take your breakfast,ā she said. āMrs. Matilda Pitman commands you. Everybody obeys Mrs. Matilda Pitmanāeven Robert and Amelia. You must obey her too.ā
Rilla did obey her. She sat down and, such was the influence of Mrs. Matilda Pitmanās mesmeric eye, she ate a tolerable breakfast. The obedient Amelia never spoke; Mrs. Matilda Pitman did not speak either; but she knitted furiously and chuckled. When Rilla had finished, Mrs. Matilda Pitman rolled up her sock.
āNow you can go if you want to,ā she said, ābut you donāt have to go. You can stay here as long as you want to and Iāll make Amelia cook your meals for you.ā
The independent Miss Blythe, whom a certain clique of Junior Red Cross girls accused of being domineering and ābossy,ā was thoroughly cowed.
āThank you,ā she said meekly, ābut we must really go.ā
āWell, then,ā said Mrs. Matilda Pitman, throwing open the door, āyour conveyance is ready for you. I told Robert he must hitch up and drive you to the station. I enjoy making Robert do things. Itās almost the only sport I have left. Iām over eighty and most things have lost their flavour except bossing Robert.ā
Robert sat before the door on the front seat of a trim, double-seated, rubber-tired buggy. He must have heard every word his motherin-law said but he gave no sign.
āI do wish,ā said Rilla, plucking up what little spirit she had left, āthat you would let meāohāahāā then she quailed again before Mrs. Matilda Pitmanās eyeāārecompense you forāforāā
āMrs. Matilda Pitman said beforeāand meant itāthat she doesnāt take pay for entertaining strangers, nor let other people where she lives do it, much as their natural meanness would like to do it. You go along to town and donāt forget to call the next time you come this way. Donāt be scared. Not that you are scared of much, I reckon, considering the way you sassed Robert back this morning. I like your spunk. Most girls nowadays are such timid, skeery creeturs. When I was a girl I wasnāt afraid of nothing nor nobody. Mind you take good care of that boy. He aināt any common child. And make Robert drive round all the puddles in the road. I wonāt have that new buggy splashed.ā
As they drove away Jims threw kisses at Mrs. Matilda Pitman as long as he could see her, and Mrs. Matilda Pitman waved her sock back at him. Robert spoke no word, either good or bad, all the way to the station, but he remembered the puddles. When Rilla got out at the siding she thanked him courteously. The only response she got was a grunt as Robert turned his horse and started for home.
āWellāāRilla drew a long breathāāI must try to get back into Rilla Blythe again. Iāve been somebody else these past few hoursāI donāt know just whoāsome creation of that extraordinary old personās. I believe she hypnotized me. What an adventure this will be to write the boys.ā
And then she sighed. Bitter remembrance came that there were only Jerry, Ken, Carl and Shirley to write it to now. Jemāwho would have appreciated Mrs. Matilda Pitman keenlyāwhere was Jem?
4th August 1918 āIt is four years tonight since the dance at the lighthouseāfour years of war. It seems like three times four. I was fifteen then. I am nineteen now. I expected that these past four years would be the most delightful years of my life and they have been years of warāyears of fear and grief and worryābut I humbly hope, of a little growth in strength and character as well.
āToday I was going through the hall and I heard mother saying something to father about me. I didnāt mean to listenāI couldnāt help hearing her as I went along the hall and upstairsāso perhaps that is why I heard what listeners are said never to hearāsomething good of myself. And because it was mother who said it Iām going to write it here in my journal, for my comforting when days of discouragement come upon me, in which I feel that I am vain and selfish and weak and that there is no good thing in me.
āāRilla has developed in a wonderful fashion these past four years. She used to be such an irresponsible young creature. She has changed into a capable, womanly girl and she is such a comfort to me. Nan and Di have grown a little away from meāthey have been so little at homeābut Rilla has grown closer and closer to me. We are chums. I donāt see how I could have got through these terrible years without her, Gilbert.ā
āThere, that is just what mother saidāand I feel gladāand sorryā and proudāand humble! Itās beautiful to have my mother think that about meābut I donāt deserve it quite. Iām not as good and strong as all that. There are heaps of times when I have felt cross and impatient and woeful and despairing. It is mother and Susan who have been this familyās backbone. But I have helped a little, I believe, and I am so glad and thankful.
āThe war news has been good right along. The French and Americans are pushing the Germans back and back and back. Sometimes I am afraid it is too good to lastāafter nearly four years of disasters one has a feeling that this constant success is unbelievable. We donāt rejoice noisily over it. Susan keeps the flag up but we go softly. The price paid has been too high for jubilation. We are just thankful that it has not been paid in vain.
āNo word has come from Jem. We hopeābecause we dare not do anything else. But there are hours when we all feelāthough we never say soā that such hoping is foolishness. These hours come more and more frequently as the weeks go by. And we may never know. That is the most terrible thought of all. I wonder how Faith is bearing it. To judge from her letters she has never for a moment given up hope, but she must have had her dark hours of doubt like the rest of us.ā
20th August 1918 āThe Canadians have been in action again and Mr. Meredith had a cable today saying that Carl had been slightly wounded and is in the hospital. It did not say where the wound was, which is unusual, and we all feel worried. There is news of a fresh victory every day now.ā
30th August 1918 āThe Merediths had a letter from Carl today. His wound was āonly a slight oneāābut it was in his right eye and the sight is gone for ever!
āāOne eye is enough to watch bugs with,ā Carl writes cheerfully. And we know it might have been oh so much worse! If it had been both eyes! But I cried all the afternoon after I saw Carlās letter. Those beautiful, fearless blue eyes of his!
āThere is one comfortāhe will not have to go back to the front. He is coming home as soon as he is out of the hospitalāthe first of our boys to return. When will the others come?
āAnd there is one who will never come. At least we will not see him if he does. But, oh, I think he will be thereāwhen our Canadian soldiers return there will be a shadow army with themāthe army of the fallen. We will not see themābut they will be there!ā
1st September 1918 āMother and I went into Charlottetown yesterday to see the moving picture, āHearts of the World.ā I made an awful goose of myselfāfather will never stop teasing me about it for the rest of my life. But it all seemed so horribly realāand I was so intensely interested that I forgot everything but the scenes I saw enacted before my eyes. And then, quite near the last came a terribly exciting one. The heroine was struggling with a horrible German soldier who was trying to drag her away. I knew she had a knifeāI had seen her hide it, to have it in readinessāand I couldnāt understand why she didnāt produce it and finish the brute. I thought she must have forgotten it, and just at the tensest moment of the scene I lost my head altogether. I just stood right up on my feet in that crowded house and shrieked at the top of my voiceāāThe knife is in your stockingāthe knife is in your stocking!ā
āI created a sensation!
āThe funny part was, that just as I said it, the girl did snatch out the knife and stab the soldier with it!
āEverybody in the house laughed. I came to my senses and fell back in my seat, overcome with mortification. Mother was shaking with laughter. I could have shaken her. Why hadnāt she pulled me down and choked me before I had made such an idiot of myself. She protests that there wasnāt time.
āFortunately the house was dark, and I donāt believe there was anybody there who knew me. And I thought I was becoming sensible and self-controlled and womanly! It is plain I have some distance to go yet before I attain that devoutly desired consummation.ā
20th September 1918 āIn the east Bulgaria has asked for peace, and in the west the British have smashed the Hindenburg line; and right here in Glen St. Mary little Bruce Meredith has done something that I think wonderfulāwonderful because of the love behind it. Mrs. Meredith was here tonight and told us about itāand mother and I cried, and Susan got up and clattered the things about the stove.
āBruce always loved Jem very devotedly, and the child has never forgotten him in all these years. He has been as faithful in his way as Dog Monday was in his. We have always told him that Jem would come back. But it seems that he was in Carter Flaggās store last night and he heard his Uncle Norman flatly declaring that Jem Blythe would never come back and that the Ingleside folk might as well give up hoping he would. Bruce went home and cried himself to sleep. This morning his mother saw him going out of the yard, with a very sorrowful and determined look, carrying his pet kitten. She didnāt think much more about it until later on he came in, with the most tragic little face, and told her, his little body shaking with sobs, that he had drowned Stripey.
āāWhy did you do that?ā Mrs. Meredith exclaimed.
āāTo
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