Rainbow Valley
eBook - ePub

Rainbow Valley

  1. 369 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

About this book

Now happily married with six children, Anne and Gilbert's family continues to thrive in the charming community of Glen St. Mary in this seventh instalment of Lucy Maud Montgomery's Anne of Green Gables series.

15 years after Anne Shirley's wedding to Gilbert Blythe, the story shifts focus to the arrival of the new minister. John Meredith is a widower who moves to Glen St. Mary with his four wild and mischievous children, who quickly form a close bond with Anne's youngsters. Together they embark on numerous adventures in the idyllic Rainbow Valley hollow.

In an attempt to help the Meredith children become more obedient and rule-abiding, the Blythe children create a 'Good-Conduct Club'. However, the well-intentioned club leads to unintended consequences, as the Meredith children impose harsh punishments on themselves for their misdeeds, causing scandal and almost fatal outcomes within the community.

Originally published in 1919, Rainbow Valley is a delightful exploration of childhood innocence, friendship, and the challenges of growing up. This edition is republished with a brand-new introductory biography of Lucy Maud Montgomery.

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Yes, you can access Rainbow Valley by L. M. Montgomery,Lucy Maud Montgomery in PDF and/or ePUB format. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

CHAPTER V

THE ADVENT OF MARY VANCE

“THIS is just the sort of day you feel as if things might happen,” said Faith, responsive to the lure of crystal air and blue hills. She hugged herself with delight and danced a hornpipe on old Hezekiah Pollock’s bench tombstone, much to the horror of two ancient maidens who happened to be driving past just as Faith hopped on one foot around the stone, waving the other and her arms in the air.
“And that,” groaned one ancient maiden, “is our minister’s daughter.”
“What else could you expect of a widower’s family?” groaned the other ancient maiden. And then they both shook their heads.
It was early on Saturday morning and the Merediths were out in the dew-drenched world with a delightful consciousness of the holiday. They had never had anything to do on a holiday. Even Nan and Di Blythe had certain household tasks for Saturday mornings, but the daughters of the manse were free to roam from blushing morn to dewy eve if so it pleased them. It did please Faith, but Una felt a secret, bitter humiliation because they never learned to do anything. The other girls in her class at school could cook and sew and knit; she only was a little ignoramus.
Jerry suggested that they go exploring; so they went lingeringly through the fir grove, picking up Carl on the way, who was on his knees in the dripping grass studying his darling ants. Beyond the grove they came out in Mr. Taylor’s pasture field, sprinkled over with the white ghosts of dandelions; in a remote corner was an old tumbledown barn, where Mr. Taylor sometimes stored his surplus hay crop but which was never used for any other purpose. Thither the Meredith children trooped, and prowled about the ground floor for several minutes.
“What was that?” whispered Una suddenly.
They all listened. There was a faint but distinct rustle in the hayloft above. The Merediths looked at each other.
“There’s something up there,” breathed Faith.
“I’m going up to see what it is,” said Jerry resolutely.
“Oh, don’t,” begged Una, catching his arm.
“I’m going.”
“We’ll all go, too, then,” said Faith.
The whole four climbed the shaky ladder, Jerry and Faith quite dauntless, Una pale from fright, and Carl rather absent-mindedly speculating on the possibility of finding a bat up in the loft. He longed to see a bat in daylight.
When they stepped off the ladder they saw what had made the rustle and the sight struck them dumb for a few moments.
In a little nest in the hay a girl was curled up, looking as if she had just awakened from sleep. When she saw them she stood up, rather shakily, as it seemed, and in the bright sunlight that streamed through the cobwebbed window behind her, they saw that her thin, sunburned face was very pale under its tan. She had two braids of lank, thick, tow-coloured hair and very odd eyes—“white eyes,” the manse children thought, as she stared at them half defiantly, half piteously. They were really of so pale a blue that they did seem almost white, especially when contrasted with the narrow black ring that circled the iris. She was barefooted and bareheaded, and was clad in a faded, ragged, old plaid dress, much too short and tight for her. As for years, she might have been almost any age, judging from her wizened little face, but her height seemed to be somewhere in the neighbourhood of twelve.
“Who are you?” asked Jerry.
The girl looked about her as if seeking a way of escape. Then she seemed to give in with a little shiver of despair.
“I’m Mary Vance,” she said.
“Where’d you come from?” pursued Jerry.
Mary, instead of replying, suddenly sat, or fell, down on the hay and began to cry. Instantly Faith had flung herself down beside her and put her arm about the thin, shaking shoulders.
“You stop bothering her,” she commanded Jerry. Then she hugged the waif. “Don’t cry, dear. Just tell us what’s the matter. We’re friends.”
“I’m so—so—hungry,” wailed Mary. “I—I haint had a thing to eat since Thursday morning, ’cept a little water from the brook out there.”
The manse children gazed at each other in horror. Faith sprang up.
“You come right up to the manse and get something to eat before you say another word.”
Mary shrank.
“Oh,—I can’t. What will your pa and ma say? Besides, they’d send me back.”
“We’ve no mother, and father won’t bother about you. Neither will Aunt Martha. Come, I say.” Faith stamped her foot impatiently. Was this queer girl going to insist on starving to death almost at their very door?
Mary yielded. She was so weak that she could hardly climb down the ladder, but somehow they got her down and over the field and into the manse kitchen. Aunt Martha, muddling through her Saturday cooking, took no notice of her. Faith and Una flew to the pantry and ransacked it for such eatables as it contained—some “ditto,” bread, butter, milk and a doubtful pie. Mary Vance attacked the food ravenously and uncritically, while the manse children stood around and watched her. Jerry noticed that she had a pretty mouth and very nice, even, white teeth. Faith decided, with secret horror, that Mary had not one stitch on her except that ragged, faded dress. Una was full of pure pity, Carl of amused wonder, and all of them of curiosity.
“Now come out to the graveyard and tell us about yourself,” ordered Faith, when Mary’s appetite showed signs of failing her. Mary was now nothing loth. Food had restored her natural vivacity and unloosed her by no means reluctant tongue.
“You won’t tell your pa or anybody if I tell you?” she stipulated, when she was enthroned on Mr. Pollock’s tombstone. Opposite her the manse children lined up on another. Here was spice and mystery and adventure. Something had happened.
“No, we won’t.”
“Cross your hearts?”
“Cross our hearts.”
“Well, I’ve run away. I was living with Mrs. Wiley over-harbour. Do you know Mrs. Wiley?”
“No.”
“Well, you don’t want to know her. She’s an awful woman. My, how I hate her! She worked me to death and wouldn’t give me half enough to eat, and she used to larrup me ’most every day. Look a-here.”
Mary rolled up her ragged sleeves and held up her scrawny arms and thin hands, chapped almost to rawness. They were black with bruises. The manse children shivered. Faith flushed crimson with indignation. Una’s blue eyes filled with tears.
“She licked me Wednesday night with a stick,” said Mary, indifferently. “It was ’cause I let the cow kick over a pail of milk. How’d I know the darn old cow was going to kick?”
A not unpleasant thrill ran over her listeners. They would never dream of using such dubious words, but it was rather titivating to hear some one else use them—and a girl, at that. Certainly this Mary Vance was an interesting creature.
“I don’t blame you for running away,” said Faith.
“Oh, I didn’t run away ’cause she licked me. A licking was all in the day’s work with me. I was darn well used to it. Nope, I’d meant to run away for a week ’cause I’d found out that Mrs. Wiley was going to rent her farm and go to Lowbridge to live and give me to a cousin of hers up Charlottetown way. I wasn’t going to stand for that. She was a worse sort than Mrs. Wiley even. Mrs. Wiley lent me to her for a month last summer and I’d rather live with the devil himself.”
Sensation number two. But Una looked doubtful.
“So I made up my mind I’d beat it. I had seventy cents saved up that Mrs. John Crawford give me in the spring for planting potatoes for her. Mrs. Wiley didn’t know about it. She was away visiting her cousin when I planted them. I thought I’d sneak up here to the Glen and buy a ticket to Charlottetown and try to get work there. I’m a hustler, let me tell you. There ain’t a lazy bone in my body. So I lit out Thursday morning ’fore Mrs. Wiley was up and walked to the Glen—six miles. And when I got to the station I found I’d lost my money. Dunno how—dunno where. Anyhow, it was gone. I didn’t know what to do. If I went back to old Lady Wiley she’d take the hide off me. So I went and hid in that old barn.”
“And what will you do now?” asked Jerry.
“Dunno. I s’pose I’ll have to go back and take my medicine. Now that I’ve got some grub in my stomach I guess I can stand it.”
But there was fear behind the bravado in Mary’s eyes. Una suddenly slipped from the one tombstone to the other and put her arm about Mary.
“Don’t go back. Just stay here with us.”
“Oh, Mrs. Wiley’ll hunt me up,” said Mary. “It’s likely she’s on my trail before this. I might stay here till she finds me, I s’pose, if your folks don’t mind. I was a darn fool ever to think of skipping out. She’d run a weasel to earth. But I was so misrebul.”
Mary’s voice quivered, but she was ashamed of showing her weakness.
“I hain’t had the life of a dog for these four years,” she explained defiantly.
“You’ve been four years with Mrs. Wiley?”
“Yip. She took me out of the asylum over in Hopetown when I was eight.”
“That’s the same place Mrs. Blythe came from,” exclaimed Faith.
“I was two years in the asylum. I was put there when I was six. My ma had hung herself and my pa had cut his throat.”
“Holy cats! Why?” said Jerry.
“Booze,” said Mary laconically.
“And you’ve no relations?”
“Not a darn one that I know of. Must have had some once, though. I was called after half a dozen of them. My full name is Mary Martha Lucilla Moore Ball Vance. Can you beat that? My grandfather was a rich man. I’ll bet he was richer than your grandfather. But pa drunk it all up and ma, she did her part. They used to beat me, too. Laws, I’ve been licked so much I kind of like it.”
Mary tossed her head. She divined that the manse children were pitying her for her many stripes and she did not want pity. She wanted to be envied. She looked gaily about her. Her strange eyes, now that the dullness of famine was removed from them, were brilliant. She would show these youngsters what a personage she was.
“I’ve been sick an awful lot,” she said proudly. “There’s not many kids could have come through what I have. I’ve had scarlet fever and measles and ersipelas and mumps and whooping cough and pewmonia.”
“Were you ever fatally sick?” asked Una.
“I don’t know,” said Mary doubtfully.
“Of course she wasn’t.” scoffed Jerry. “If you’re fatally sick you die.”
“Oh, well, I never died exactly,” said Mary, “but I come blamed near it once. They thought I was dead and they were getting ready to lay me out when I up and come to.”
“What is it like to be half dead?” asked Jerry curiously.
“Like nothing. I didn’t know it for days afterwards. It was when I had the pewmonia. Mrs. Wiley wouldn’t have the doctor—said she wasn’t going to no such expense for a home girl. Old Aunt Christina McAllister nursed me with poultices. She brung me round. But sometimes I wish I’d just died the other half and done with it. I’d been better off.”
“If you went to heaven I s’pose you would,” said Faith rather dubiously.
“Well, what other place is there to go to?” demanded Mary in a puzzled tone.
“There’s hell, you know,” said Una, dropping her voice and hugging Mary to le...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Title
  3. Dedication
  4. Contents
  5. I. Home Again
  6. II. Sheer Gossip
  7. III. The Ingleside Children
  8. IV. The Manse Children
  9. V. The Advent of Mary Vance
  10. VI. Mary Stays at the Manse
  11. VII. A Fishy Episode
  12. VIII. Miss Cornelia Intervenes
  13. IX. Una Intervenes
  14. X. The Manse Girls Clean House
  15. XI. A Dreadful Discovery
  16. XII. An Explanation and a Dare
  17. XIII. The House on the Hill
  18. XIV. Mrs. Alec Davis Makes a Call
  19. XV. More Gossip
  20. XVI. Tit for Tat
  21. XVII. A Double Victory
  22. XVIII. Mary Brings Evil Tidings
  23. XIX. Poor Adam!
  24. XX. Faith Makes a Friend
  25. XXI. The Impossible Word
  26. XXII. St. George Knows All About It
  27. XXIII. The Good-Conduct Club
  28. XXIV. A Charitable Impulse
  29. XXV. Another Scandal and Another “Explanation”
  30. XXVI. Miss Cornelia Gets a New Point of View
  31. XXVII. A Sacred Concert
  32. XXVIII. A Fast Day
  33. XXIX. A Weird Tale
  34. XXX. The Ghost on the Dyke
  35. XXXI. Carl Does Penance
  36. XXXII. Two Stubborn People
  37. XXXIII. Carl Is—Not—Whipped
  38. XXXIV. Una Visits the Hill
  39. XXXV. “Let the Piper Come”