VICTORY!
“A day ‘of chilling winds
and gloomy skies,’” Rilla quoted one Sunday
afternoon the 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.
“It’s more like November than October November
is such an ugly month.”
Cousin Sophia was there, having again
forgiven Susan, and Mrs. Martin Clow, who was not
visiting on Sunday but had dropped in to borrow Susan’s
cure for rheumatism that being cheaper than
getting one from the doctor. “I’m
afeared we’re going to have an airly winter,”
foreboded Cousin Sophia. “The muskrats are
building awful big houses round the pond, and that’s
a sign that never fails. Dear me, how that child
has grown!” Cousin Sophia sighed again, as if
it were an unhappy circumstance that a child should
grow. “When do you expect his father?”
“Next week,” said Rilla.
“Well, I hope the stepmother
won’t abuse the pore child,” sighed Cousin
Sophia, “but I have my doubts I have
my doubts. Anyhow, he’ll be sure to feel
the difference between his usage here and what he’ll
get anywhere else. You’ve spoiled him so,
Rilla, waiting on him hand and foot the way you’ve
always done.”
Rilla smiled and pressed her cheek
to Jims’ 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.
“I can’t give Jims up
to a woman who won’t love him,” she thought
rebelliously.
“I b’lieve it’s
going to rain,” said Cousin Sophia. “We
have had an awful lot of rain this fall already.
It’s going to make it awful hard for people
to get their roots in. It wasn’t so in my
young days. We gin’rally had beautiful
Octobers then. But the seasons is altogether
different now from what they used to be.”
Clear across Cousin Sophia’s doleful voice cut
the telephone bell. Gertrude Oliver answered it.
“Yes what? What? Is it true is
it official? Thank you thank you.”
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.
“Germany and Austria are suing for peace,”
she said.
Rilla went crazy for a few minutes.
She sprang up and danced around the room, clapping
her hands, laughing, crying.
“Sit down, child,” 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.
“Oh,” cried Rilla, “I
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, let’s run up the flag and
we must phone the news to every one in the Glen.”
“Can we have as much sugar as
we want to now?” 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.
“This Sunday makes up for that
one in March,” said Susan.
“I wonder,” said Gertrude
dreamily, apart to Rilla, “if things won’t
seem rather flat and insipid when peace really comes.
After being fed for four years on horrors and fears,
terrible reverses, amazing victories, won’t
anything less be tame and uninteresting? How
strange and blessed and dull
it will be not to dread the coming of the mail every
day.”
“We must dread it for a little
while yet, I suppose,” said Rilla. “Peace
won’t come can’t come for
some weeks yet. And in those weeks dreadful things
may happen. My excitement is over. We have
won the victory but oh, what a price we
have paid!”
“Not too high a price for freedom,”
said Gertrude softly. “Do you think it
was, Rilla?”
“No,” said Rilla, under
her breath. She was seeing a little white cross
on a battlefield of France. “No not
if those of us who live will show ourselves worthy
of it if we ‘keep faith.’”
“We will keep faith,”
said Gertrude. She rose suddenly. A silence
fell around the table, and in the silence Gertrude
repeated Walter’s famous poem “The Piper.”
When she finished Mr. Meredith stood up and held up
his glass. “Let us drink,” he said,
“to the silent army to the boys who
followed when the Piper summoned. ’For our
tomorrow they gave their today’ theirs
is the victory!”