A WAR-WEDDING
“I can tell you this Dr. dear,”
said Susan, pale with wrath, “that Germany is
getting to be perfectly ridiculous.”
They were all in the big Ingleside
kitchen. Susan was mixing biscuits for supper.
Mrs. Blythe was making shortbread for Jem, and Rilla
was compounding candy for Ken and Walter it
had once been “Walter and Ken” in her
thoughts but somehow, quite unconsciously, this had
changed until Ken’s name came naturally first.
Cousin Sophia was also there, knitting. All the
boys were going to be killed in the long run, so Cousin
Sophia felt in her bones, but they might better die
with warm feet than cold ones, so Cousin Sophia knitted
faithfully and gloomily.
Into this peaceful scene erupted the
doctor, wrathful and excited over the burning of the
Parliament Buildings in Ottawa. And Susan became
automatically quite as wrathful and excited.
“What will those Huns do next?”
she demanded. “Coming over here and burning
our Parliament building! Did anyone ever hear
of such an outrage?”
“We don’t know that the
Germans are responsible for this,” said the
doctor much as if he felt quite sure they
were. “Fires do start without their agency
sometimes. And Uncle Mark MacAllister’s
barn was burnt last week. You can hardly accuse
the Germans of that, Susan.”
“Indeed, Dr. dear, I do not
know.” Susan nodded slowly and portentously.
“Whiskers-on-the-moon was there that very day.
The fire broke out half an hour after he was gone.
So much is a fact but I shall not accuse
a Presbyterian elder of burning anybody’s barn
until I have proof. However, everybody knows,
Dr. dear, that both Uncle Mark’s boys have enlisted,
and that Uncle Mark himself makes speeches at all
the recruiting meetings. So no doubt Germany is
anxious to get square with him.”
“I could never speak at a recruiting
meeting,” said Cousin Sophia solemnly.
“I could never reconcile it to my conscience
to ask another woman’s son to go, to murder
and be murdered.”
“Could you not?” said
Susan. “Well, Sophia Crawford, I felt as
if I could ask anyone to go when I read last night
that there were no children under eight years of age
left alive in Poland. Think of that, Sophia Crawford” Susan
shook a floury finger at Sophia “not one child under eight years of age!”
“I suppose the Germans has et
’em all,” sighed Cousin Sophia.
“Well, no-o-o,” said Susan
reluctantly, as if she hated to admit that there was
any crime the Huns couldn’t be accused of.
“The Germans have not turned cannibal yet as
far as I know. They have died of starvation and
exposure, the poor little creatures. There is
murdering for you, Cousin Sophia Crawford. The
thought of it poisons every bite and sup I take.”
“I see that Fred Carson of Lowbridge
has been awarded a Distinguished Conduct Medal,”
remarked the doctor, over his local paper.
“I heard that last week,”
said Susan. “He is a battalion runner and
he did something extra brave and daring. His
letter, telling his folks about it, came when his
old Grandmother Carson was on her dying-bed.
She had only a few minutes more to live and the Episcopal
minister, who was there, asked her if she would not
like him to pray. ’Oh yes, yes, you can
pray,’ she said impatient-like she
was a Dean, Dr. dear, and the Deans were always high-spirited ’you
can pray, but for pity’s sake pray low and don’t
disturb me. I want to think over this splendid
news and I have not much time left to do it.’
That was Almira Carson all over. Fred was the
apple of her eye. She was seventy-five years of
age and had not a grey hair in her head, they tell
me.”
“By the way, that reminds me I
found a grey hair this morning my very
first,” said Mrs. Blythe.
“I have noticed that grey hair
for some time, Mrs. Dr. dear, but I did not speak
of it. Thought I to myself, ‘She has enough
to bear.’ But now that you have discovered
it let me remind you that grey hairs are honourable.”
“I must be getting old, Gilbert.”
Mrs. Blythe laughed a trifle ruefully. “People
are beginning to tell me I look so young. They
never tell you that when you are young. But I
shall not worry over my silver thread. I never
liked red hair. Gilbert, did I ever tell you of
that time, years ago at Green Gables, when I dyed
my hair? Nobody but Marilla and I knew about
it.”
“Was that the reason you came
out once with your hair shingled to the bone?”
“Yes. I bought a bottle
of dye from a German Jew pedlar. I fondly expected
it would turn my hair black and it turned
it green. So it had to be cut off.”
“You had a narrow escape, Mrs.
Dr. dear,” exclaimed Susan. “Of course
you were too young then to know what a German was.
It was a special mercy of Providence that it was only
green dye and not poison.”
“It seems hundreds of years
since those Green Gables days,” sighed Mrs.
Blythe. “They belonged to another world
altogether. Life has been cut in two by the chasm
of war. What is ahead I don’t know but
it can’t be a bit like the past. I wonder
if those of us who have lived half our lives in the
old world will ever feel wholly at home in the new.”
“Have you noticed,” asked
Miss Oliver, glancing up from her book, “how
everything written before the war seems so far away
now, too? One feels as if one was reading something
as ancient as the Iliad. This poem of Wordsworth’s the
Senior class have it in their entrance work I’ve
been glancing over it. Its classic calm and repose
and the beauty of the lines seem to belong to another
planet, and to have as little to do with the present
world-welter as the evening star.”
“The only thing that I find
much comfort in reading nowadays is the Bible,”
remarked Susan, whisking her biscuits into the oven.
“There are so many passages in it that seem
to me exactly descriptive of the Huns. Old Highland
Sandy declares that there is no doubt that the Kaiser
is the Anti-Christ spoken of in Revelations, but I
do not go as far as that. It would, in my humble
opinion, Mrs. Dr. dear, be too great an honour for
him.”
Early one morning, several days later,
Miranda Pryor slipped up to Ingleside, ostensibly
to get some Red Cross sewing, but in reality to talk
over with sympathetic Rilla troubles that were past
bearing alone. She brought her dog with her an
over-fed, bandy-legged little animal very dear to
her heart because Joe Milgrave had given it to her
when it was a puppy. Mr. Pryor regarded all dogs
with disfavour; but in those days he had looked kindly
upon Joe as a suitor for Miranda’s hand and
so he had allowed her to keep the puppy. Miranda
was so grateful that she endeavoured to please her
father by naming her dog after his political idol,
the great Liberal chieftain, Sir Wilfrid Laurier though
his title was soon abbreviated to Wilfy. Sir Wilfrid
grew and flourished and waxed fat; but Miranda spoiled
him absurdly and nobody else liked him. Rilla
especially hated him because of his detestable trick
of lying flat on his back and entreating you with
waving paws to tickle his sleek stomach. When
she saw that Miranda’s pale eyes bore unmistakable
testimony of her having cried all night, Rilla asked
her to come up to her room, knowing Miranda had a tale
of woe to tell, but she ordered Sir Wilfrid to remain
below.
“Oh, can’t he come, too?”
said Miranda wistfully. “Poor Wilfy won’t
be any bother and I wiped his paws so carefully
before I brought him in. He is always so lonesome
in a strange place without me and very soon
he’ll be all I’ll
have left to remind me of Joe.”
Rilla yielded, and Sir Wilfrid, with
his tail curled at a saucy angle over his brindled
back, trotted triumphantly up the stairs before them.
“Oh, Rilla,” sobbed Miranda,
when they had reached sanctuary. “I’m
so unhappy. I can’t begin to tell you how
unhappy I am. Truly, my heart is breaking.”
Rilla sat down on the lounge beside
her. Sir Wilfrid squatted on his haunches before
them, with his impertinent pink tongue stuck out, and
listened. “What is the trouble, Miranda?”
“Joe is coming home tonight
on his last leave. I had a letter from him on
Saturday he sends my letters in care of
Bob Crawford, you know, because of father and,
oh, Rilla, he will only have four days he
has to go away Friday morning and I may
never see him again.”
“Does he still want you to marry him?”
asked Rilla.
“Oh, yes. He implored me
in his letter to run away and be married. But
I cannot do that, Rilla, not even for Joe. My
only comfort is that I will be able to see him for
a little while tomorrow afternoon. Father has
to go to Charlottetown on business. At least we
will have one good farewell talk. But oh afterwards why,
Rilla, I know father won’t even let me go to
the station Friday morning to see Joe off.”
“Why in the world don’t
you and Joe get married tomorrow afternoon at home?”
demanded Rilla.
Miranda swallowed a sob in such amazement
that she almost choked.
“Why why that is impossible,
Rilla.”
“Why?” briefly demanded
the organizer of the Junior Red Cross and the transporter
of babies in soup tureens.
“Why why we
never thought of such a thing Joe hasn’t
a license I have no dress I
couldn’t be married in black I I we you you ”
Miranda lost herself altogether and Sir Wilfrid, seeing
that she was in dire distress threw back his head
and emitted a melancholy yelp.
Rilla Blythe thought hard and rapidly
for a few minutes. Then she said, “Miranda,
if you will put yourself into my hands I’ll have
you married to Joe before four o’clock tomorrow
afternoon.”
“Oh, you couldn’t.”
“I can and I will. But you’ll have
to do exactly as I tell you.”
“Oh I don’t think oh,
father will kill me
“Nonsense. He’ll
be very angry I suppose. But are you more afraid
of your father’s anger than you are of Joe’s
never coming back to you?”
“No,” said Miranda, with sudden firmness,
“I’m not.”
“Will you do as I tell you then?”
“Yes, I will.”
“Then get Joe on the long-distance
at once and tell him to bring out a license and ring
tonight.”
“Oh, I couldn’t,”
wailed the aghast Miranda, “it it
would be so so indelicate.”
Rilla shut her little white teeth
together with a snap. “Heaven grant me
patience,” she said under her breath. “I’ll
do it then,” she said aloud, “and meanwhile,
you go home and make what preparations you can.
When I ’phone down to you to come up and help
me sew come at once.”
As soon as Miranda, pallid, scared,
but desperately resolved, had gone, Rilla flew to
the telephone and put in a long-distance call for
Charlottetown. She got through with such surprising
quickness that she was convinced Providence approved
of her undertaking, but it was a good hour before
she could get in touch with Joe Milgrave at his camp.
Meanwhile, she paced impatiently about, and prayed
that when she did get Joe there would be no listeners
on the line to carry news to Whiskers-on-the-moon.
“Is that you, Joe? Rilla
Blythe is speaking Rilla Rilla oh,
never mind. Listen to this. Before you come
home tonight get a marriage license a marriage
license yes, a marriage license and
a wedding-ring. Did you get that? And will
you do it? Very well, be sure you do it it
is your only chance.”
Flushed with triumph for
her only fear was that she might not be able to locate
Joe in time Rilla rang the Pryor ring.
This time she had not such good luck for she drew
Whiskers-on-the-moon.
“Is that Miranda? Oh Mr.
Pryor! Well, Mr. Pryor, will you kindly ask Miranda
if she can come up this afternoon and help me with
some sewing. It is very important, or I would
not trouble her. Oh thank you.”
Mr. Pryor had consented somewhat grumpily,
but he had consented he did not want to
offend Dr. Blythe, and he knew that if he refused to
allow Miranda to do any Red Cross work public opinion
would make the Glen too hot for comfort. Rilla
went out to the kitchen, shut all the doors with a
mysterious expression which alarmed Susan, and then
said solemnly, “Susan can you make a wedding-cake
this afternoon?”
“A wedding-cake!” Susan
stared. Rilla had, without any warning, brought
her a war-baby once upon a time. Was she now,
with equal suddenness, going to produce a husband?
“Yes, a wedding-cake a
scrumptious wedding-cake, Susan a beautiful,
plummy, eggy, citron-peely wedding-cake. And we
must make other things too. I’ll help you
in the morning. But I can’t help you in
the afternoon for I have to make a wedding-dress and
time is the essence of the contract, Susan.”
Susan felt that she was really too
old to be subjected to such shocks.
“Who are you going to marry, Rilla?” she
asked feebly.
“Susan, darling, I am not the
happy bride. Miranda Pryor is going to marry
Joe Milgrave tomorrow afternoon while her father is
away in town. A war-wedding, Susan isn’t
that thrilling and romantic? I never was so excited
in my life.”
The excitement soon spread over Ingleside,
infecting even Mrs. Blythe and Susan.
“I’ll go to work on that
cake at once,” vowed Susan, with a glance at
the clock. “Mrs. Dr. dear, will you pick
over the fruit and beat up the eggs? If you will
I can have that cake ready for the oven by the evening.
Tomorrow morning we can make salads and other things.
I will work all night if necessary to get the better
of Whiskers-on-the-moon.”
Miranda arrived, tearful and breathless.
“We must fix over my white dress
for you to wear,” said Rilla. “It
will fit you very nicely with a little alteration.”
To work went the two girls, ripping,
fitting, basting, sewing for dear life. By dint
of unceasing effort they got the dress done by seven
o’clock and Miranda tried it on in Rilla’s
room.
“It’s very pretty but
oh, if I could just have a veil,” sighed Miranda.
“I’ve always dreamed of being married in
a lovely white veil.”
Some good fairy evidently waits on
the wishes of war-brides. The door opened and
Mrs. Blythe came in, her arms full of a filmy burden.
“Miranda dear,” she said,
“I want you to wear my wedding-veil tomorrow.
It is twenty-four years since I was a bride at old
Green Gables the happiest bride that ever
was and the wedding-veil of a happy bride
brings good luck, they say.”
“Oh, how sweet of you, Mrs.
Blythe,” said Miranda, the ready tears starting
to her eyes.
The veil was tried on and draped.
Susan dropped in to approve but dared not linger.
“I’ve got that cake in
the oven,” she said, “and I am pursuing
a policy of watchful waiting. The evening news
is that the Grand Duke has captured Erzerum.
That is a pill for the Turks. I wish I had a chance
to tell the Czar just what a mistake he made when he
turned Nicholas down.”
Susan disappeared downstairs to the
kitchen, whence a dreadful thud and a piercing shriek
presently sounded. Everybody rushed to the kitchen the
doctor and Miss Oliver, Mrs. Blythe, Rilla, Miranda
in her wedding-veil. Susan was sitting flatly
in the middle of the kitchen floor with a dazed, bewildered
look on her face, while Doc, evidently in his Hyde
incarnation, was standing on the dresser, with his
back up, his eyes blazing, and his tail the size of
three tails.
“Susan, what has happened?”
cried Mrs. Blythe in alarm. “Did you fall?
Are you hurt?”
Susan picked herself up.
“No,” she said grimly,
“I am not hurt, though I am jarred all over.
Do not be alarmed. As for what has happened I
tried to kick that darned cat with both feet, that
is what happened.”
Everybody shrieked with laughter.
The doctor was quite helpless.
“Oh, Susan, Susan,” he
gasped. “That I should live to hear you
swear.”
“I am sorry,” said Susan
in real distress, “that I used such an expression
before two young girls. But I said that beast
was darned, and darned it is. It belongs to Old
Nick.”
“Do you expect it will vanish
some of these days with a bang and the odour of brimstone,
Susan?”
“It will go to its own place
in due time and that you may tie to,” said Susan
dourly, shaking out her raddled bones and going to
her oven. “I suppose my plunking down like
that has shaken my cake so that it will be as heavy
as lead.”
But the cake was not heavy. It
was all a bride’s cake should be, and Susan
iced it beautifully. Next day she and Rilla worked
all the forenoon, making delicacies for the wedding-feast,
and as soon as Miranda phoned up that her father was
safely off everything was packed in a big hamper and
taken down to the Pryor house. Joe soon arrived
in his uniform and a state of violent excitement,
accompanied by his best man, Sergeant Malcolm Crawford.
There were quite a few guests, for all the Manse and
Ingleside folk were there, and a dozen or so of Joe’s
relatives, including his mother, “Mrs. Dead Angus
Milgrave,” so called, cheerfully, to distinguish
her from another lady whose Angus was living.
Mrs. Dead Angus wore a rather disapproving expression,
not caring over-much for this alliance with the house
of Whiskers-on-the-moon.
So Miranda Pryor was married to Private
Joseph Milgrave on his last leave. It should
have been a romantic wedding but it was not. There
were too many factors working against romance, as even
Rilla had to admit. In the first place, Miranda,
in spite of her dress and veil, was such a flat-faced,
commonplace, uninteresting little bride. In the
second place, Joe cried bitterly all through the ceremony,
and this vexed Miranda unreasonably. Long afterwards
she told Rilla, “I just felt like saying to
him then and there, ’If you feel so bad over
having to marry me you don’t have to.’
But it was just because he was thinking all the time
of how soon he would have to leave me.”
In the third place, Jims, who was
usually so well-behaved in public, took a fit of shyness
and contrariness combined and began to cry at the
top of his voice for “Willa.” Nobody
wanted to take him out, because everybody wanted to
see the marriage, so Rilla who was a bridesmaid, had
to take him and hold him during the ceremony.
In the fourth place, Sir Wilfrid Laurier took a fit.
Sir Wilfrid was entrenched in a corner
of the room behind Miranda’s piano. During
his seizure he made the weirdest, most unearthly noises.
He would begin with a series of choking, spasmodic
sounds, continuing into a gruesome gurgle, and ending
up with a strangled howl. Nobody could hear a
word Mr. Meredith was saying, except now and then,
when Sir Wilfrid stopped for breath. Nobody looked
at the bride except Susan, who never dragged her fascinated
eyes from Miranda’s face all the
others were gazing at the dog. Miranda had been
trembling with nervousness but as soon as Sir Wilfrid
began his performance she forgot it. All that
she could think of was that her dear dog was dying
and she could not go to him. She never remembered
a word of the ceremony.
Rilla, who in spite of Jims, had been
trying her best to look rapt and romantic, as beseemed
a war bridesmaid, gave up the hopeless attempt, and
devoted her energies to choking down untimely merriment.
She dared not look at anybody in the room, especially
Mrs. Dead Angus, for fear all her suppressed mirth
should suddenly explode in a most un-young-ladylike
yell of laughter.
But married they were, and then they
had a wedding-supper in the dining-room which was
so lavish and bountiful that you would have thought
it was the product of a month’s labour.
Everybody had brought something. Mrs. Dead Angus
had brought a large apple-pie, which she placed on
a chair in the dining-room and then absently sat down
on it. Neither her temper nor her black silk
wedding garment was improved thereby, but the pie
was never missed at the gay bridal feast. Mrs.
Dead Angus eventually took it home with her again.
Whiskers-on-the-moon’s pacifist pig should not
get it, anyhow.
That evening Mr. and Mrs. Joe, accompanied
by the recovered Sir Wilfrid, departed for the Four
Winds Lighthouse, which was kept by Joe’s uncle
and in which they meant to spend their brief honeymoon.
Una Meredith and Rilla and Susan washed the dishes,
tidied up, left a cold supper and Miranda’s
pitiful little note on the table for Mr. Pryor, and
walked home, while the mystic veil of dreamy, haunted
winter twilight wrapped itself over the Glen.
“I would really not have minded
being a war-bride myself,” remarked Susan sentimentally.
But Rilla felt rather flat perhaps
as a reaction to all the excitement and rush of the
past thirty-six hours. She was disappointed somehow the
whole affair had been so ludicrous, and Miranda and
Joe so lachrymose and commonplace.
“If Miranda hadn’t given
that wretched dog such an enormous dinner he wouldn’t
have had that fit,” she said crossly. “I
warned her but she said she couldn’t
starve the poor dog he would soon be all
she had left, etc. I could have shaken her.”
“The best man was more excited
than Joe was,” said Susan. “He wished
Miranda many happy returns of the day. She did
not look very happy, but perhaps you could not expect
that under the circumstances.”
“Anyhow,” thought Rilla,
“I can write a perfectly killing account of it
all to the boys. How Jem will howl over Sir Wilfrid’s
part in it!”
But if Rilla was rather disappointed
in the war wedding she found nothing lacking on Friday
morning when Miranda said good-bye to her bridegroom
at the Glen station. The dawn was white as a pearl,
clear as a diamond. Behind the station the balsamy
copse of young firs was frost-misted. The cold
moon of dawn hung over the westering snow fields but
the golden fleeces of sunrise shone above the maples
up at Ingleside. Joe took his pale little bride
in his arms and she lifted her face to his. Rilla
choked suddenly. It did not matter that Miranda
was insignificant and commonplace and flat-featured.
It did not matter that she was the daughter of Whiskers-on-the-moon.
All that mattered was that rapt, sacrificial look
in her eyes that ever-burning, sacred fire
of devotion and loyalty and fine courage that she was
mutely promising Joe she and thousands of other women
would keep alive at home while their men held the
Western front. Rilla walked away, realising that
she must not spy on such a moment. She went down
to the end of the platform where Sir Wilfrid and Dog
Monday were sitting, looking at each other.
Sir Wilfrid remarked condescendingly:
“Why do you haunt this old shed when you might
lie on the hearthrug at Ingleside and live on the fat
of the land? Is it a pose? Or a fixed idea?”
Whereat Dog Monday, laconically:
“I have a tryst to keep.”
When the train had gone Rilla rejoined
the little trembling Miranda. “Well, he’s
gone,” said Miranda, “and he may never
come back but I’m his wife, and I’m
going to be worthy of him. I’m going home.”
“Don’t you think you had
better come with me now?” asked Rilla doubtfully.
Nobody knew yet how Mr. Pryor had taken the matter.
“No. If Joe can face the
Huns I guess I can face father,” said Miranda
daringly. “A soldier’s wife can’t
be a coward. Come on, Wilfy. I’ll go
straight home and meet the worst.”
There was nothing very dreadful to
face, however. Perhaps Mr. Pryor had reflected
that housekeepers were hard to get and that there were
many Milgrave homes open to Miranda also,
that there was such a thing as a separation allowance.
At all events, though he told her grumpily that she
had made a nice fool of herself, and would live to
regret it, he said nothing worse, and Mrs. Joe put
on her apron and went to work as usual, while Sir
Wilfrid Laurier, who had a poor opinion of lighthouses
for winter residences, went to sleep in his pet nook
behind the woodbox, a thankful dog that he was done
with war-weddings.