Rilla of Ingleside by Lucy Maud Montgomery (the top 100 crime novels of all time .txt) đ
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- Author: Lucy Maud Montgomery
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âMrs. Meredith didnât know what to say to the poor child. She just could not tell him that perhaps his sacrifice wouldnât bring Jem backâthat God didnât work that way. She told him that he mustnât expect it right awayâthat perhaps it would be quite a long time yet before Jem came back.
âBut Bruce said, âIt oughtnât to take longerân a week, mother. Oh, mother, Stripey was such a nice little cat. He purred so pretty. Donât you think God ought to like him enough to let us have Jem?â
âMr. Meredith is worried about the effect on Bruceâs faith in God, and Mrs. Meredith is worried about the effect on Bruce himself if his hope isnât fulfilled. And I feel as if I must cry every time I think of it. It was so splendidâand sadâand beautiful. The dear devoted little fellow! He worshipped that kitten. And if it all goes for nothingâas so many sacrifices seem to go for nothingâhe will be brokenhearted, for he isnât old enough to understand that God doesnât answer our prayers just as we hopeâand doesnât make bargains with us when we yield something we love up to Him.â
24th September 1918 âI have been kneeling at my window in the moonshine for a long time, just thanking God over and over again. The joy of last night and today has been so great that it seemed half painâas if our hearts werenât big enough to hold it.
âLast night I was sitting here in my room at eleven oâclock writing a letter to Shirley. Every one else was in bed, except father, who was out. I heard the telephone ring and I ran out to the hall to answer it, before it should waken mother. It was long-distance calling, and when I answered it said âThis is the telegraph Companyâs office in Charlottetown. There is an overseas cable for Dr. Blythe.â
âI thought of Shirleyâmy heart stood stillâand then I heard him saying, âItâs from Holland.â
âThe message was,
âJust arrived. Escaped from Germany. Quite well. Writing. James Blythe.â
âI didnât faint or fall or scream. I didnât feel glad or surprised. I didnât feel anything. I felt numb, just as I did when I heard Walter had enlisted. I hung up the receiver and turned round. Mother was standing in her doorway. She wore her old rose kimono, and her hair was hanging down her back in a long thick braid, and her eyes were shining. She looked just like a young girl.
ââThere is word from Jem?â she said.
âHow did she know? I hadnât said a word at the phone except âYesâyesâ yes.â She says she doesnât know how she knew, but she did know. She was awake and she heard the ring and she knew that there was word from Jem.
ââHeâs aliveâheâs wellâheâs in Holland,â I said.
âMother came out into the hall and said, âI must get your father on the âphone and tell him. He is in the Upper Glen.â
âShe was very calm and quietânot a bit like I would have expected her to be. But then I wasnât either. I went and woke up Gertrude and Susan and told them. Susan said âThank God,â firstly, and secondly she said âDid I not tell you Dog Monday knew?â and thirdly, âIâll go down and make a cup of teaââand she stalked down in her nightdress to make it. She did make itâand made mother and Gertrude drink itâbut I went back to my room and shut my door and locked it, and I knelt by my window and criedâjust as Gertrude did when her great news came.
âI think I know at last exactly what I shall feel like on the resurrection morning.â
4th October 1918 âToday Jemâs letter came. It has been in the house only six hours and it is almost read to pieces. The post-mistress told everybody in the Glen it had come, and everybody came up to hear the news.
âJem was badly wounded in the thighâand he was picked up and taken to prison, so delirious with fever that he didnât know what was happening to him or where he was. It was weeks before he came to his senses and was able to write. Then he did writeâbut it never came. He wasnât treated at all badly at his campâonly the food was poor. He had nothing to eat but a little black bread and boiled turnips and now and then a little soup with black peas in it. And we sat down every one of those days to three good square luxurious meals! He wrote us as often as he could but he was afraid we were not getting his letters because no reply came. As soon as he was strong enough he tried to escape, but was caught and brought back; a month later he and a comrade made another attempt and succeeded in reaching Holland.
âJem canât come home right away. He isnât quite so well as his cable said, for his wound has not healed properly and he has to go into a hospital in England for further treatment. But he says he will be all right eventually, and we know he is safe and will be back home sometime, and oh, the difference it makes in everything!
âI had a letter from Jim Anderson today, too. He has married an English girl, got his discharge, and is coming right home to Canada with his bride. I donât know whether to be glad or sorry. It will depend on what kind of a woman she is. I had a second letter also of a somewhat mysterious tenor. It is from a Charlottetown lawyer, asking me to go in to see him at my earliest convenience in regard to a certain matter connected with the estate of the âlate Mrs. Matilda Pitman.â
âI read a notice of Mrs. Pitmanâs deathâfrom heart failureâin the Enterprise a few weeks ago. I wonder if this summons has anything to do with Jims.â
5th October 1918 âI went into town this morning and had an interview with Mrs. Pitmanâs lawyerâa little thin, wispy man, who spoke of his late client with such a profound respect that it is evident that he as was much under her thumb as Robert and Amelia were. He drew up a new will for her a short time before her death. She was worth thirty thousand dollars, the bulk of which was left to Amelia Chapley. But she left five thousand to me in trust for Jims. The interest is to be used as I see fit for his education, and the principal is to be paid over to him on his twentieth birthday. Certainly Jims was born lucky. I saved him from slow extinction at the hands of Mrs. ConoverâMary Vance saved him from death by diptheritic croupâhis star saved him when he fell off the train. And he tumbled not only into a clump of bracken, but right into this nice little legacy.
âEvidently, as Mrs. Matilda Pitman said, and as I have always believed, he is no common child and he has no common destiny in store for him.
âAt all events he is provided for, and in such a fashion that Jim Anderson canât squander his inheritance if he wanted to. Now, if the new English stepmother is only a good sort I shall feel quite easy about the future of my war-baby.
âI wonder what Robert and Amelia think of it. I fancy they will nail down their windows when they leave home after this!â
âA day âof chilling winds and gloomy skies,ââ Rilla quoted one Sunday afternoonâthe sixth of October to be exact. It was so cold that they had lighted a fire in the living-room and the merry little flames were doing their best to counteract the outside dourness. âItâs more like November than OctoberâNovember is such an ugly month.â
Cousin Sophia was there, having again forgiven Susan, and Mrs. Martin Clow, who was not visiting on Sunday but had dropped in to borrow Susanâs cure for rheumatismâthat being cheaper than getting one from the doctor. âIâm afeared weâre going to have an airly winter,â foreboded Cousin Sophia. âThe muskrats are building awful big houses round the pond, and thatâs a sign that never fails. Dear me, how that child has grown!â Cousin Sophia sighed again, as if it were an unhappy circumstance that a child should grow. âWhen do you expect his father?â
âNext week,â said Rilla.
âWell, I hope the stepmother wonât abuse the pore child,â sighed Cousin Sophia, âbut I have my doubtsâI have my doubts. Anyhow, heâll be sure to feel the difference between his usage here and what heâll get anywhere else. Youâve spoiled him so, Rilla, waiting on him hand and foot the way youâve always done.â
Rilla smiled and pressed her cheek to Jimsâ curls. She knew sweet-tempered, sunny, little Jims was not spoiled. Nevertheless her heart was anxious behind her smile. She, too, thought much about the new Mrs. Anderson and wondered uneasily what she would be like.
âI canât give Jims up to a woman who wonât love him,â she thought rebelliously.
âI bâlieve itâs going to rain,â said Cousin Sophia. âWe have had an awful lot of rain this fall already. Itâs going to make it awful hard for people to get their roots in. It wasnât so in my young days. We ginârally had beautiful Octobers then. But the seasons is altogether different now from what they used to be.â Clear across Cousin Sophiaâs doleful voice cut the telephone bell. Gertrude Oliver answered it. âYes âwhat? What? Is it trueâis it official? Thank youâthank you.â
Gertrude turned and faced the room dramatically, her dark eyes flashing, her dark face flushed with feeling. All at once the sun broke through the thick clouds and poured through the big crimson maple outside the window. Its reflected glow enveloped her in a weird immaterial flame. She looked like a priestess performing some mystic, splendid rite.
âGermany and Austria are suing for peace,â she said.
Rilla went crazy for a few minutes. She sprang up and danced around the room, clapping her hands, laughing, crying.
âSit down, child,â said Mrs. Clow, who never got excited over anything, and so had missed a tremendous amount of trouble and delight in her journey through life.
âOh,â cried Rilla, âI have walked the floor for hours in despair and anxiety in these past four years. Now let me walk in joy. It was worth living long dreary years for this minute, and it would be worth living them again just to look back to it. Susan, letâs run up the flagâand we must phone the news to every one in the Glen.â
âCan we have as much sugar as we want to now?â asked Jims eagerly.
It was a never-to-be-forgotten afternoon. As the news spread excited people ran about the village and dashed up to Ingleside. The Merediths came over and stayed to supper and everybody talked and nobody listened. Cousin Sophia tried to protest that Germany and Austria were not to be trusted and it was all part of a plot, but nobody paid the least attention to her.
âThis Sunday makes up for that one in March,â said Susan.
âI wonder,â said Gertrude dreamily, apart to Rilla, âif things wonât seem rather flat and insipid when peace really comes. After being fed for four years on horrors and fears, terrible reverses, amazing
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