One morning when Tom came into the
kitchen Pearl looked up with a worried look on her
usually bright little face.
“What’s up, kid?”
he asked kindly. He did not like to see Pearl
looking troubled.
“Arthur’s sick,” she said gravely.
“Go on!” he answered,
“he’s not sick. I know he’s
been feeling kind of used up for about a week, but
he worked as well as ever yesterday. What makes
you think he is sick?”
“I went out last night to be
sure I had shut the henhouse door, and I heard him
groanin’, and I said, knockin’ on the door,
’What’s wrong, Arthur?’ and he said,
’Oh, I beg your pardon, Pearl, did I frighten
you?’ and I said, ‘No, but what’s
wrong?’ and he said, ’Nothing at all,
Pearl, thank you’; but I know there is.
You know how polite he is-wouldn’t
trouble anybody. Wouldn’t ask ye to slap
’im on the back if he was chokin’.
I went out two or three times and once I brought him
out some liniment, and he told me every time he would
be ’well directly,’ but I don’t
believe him. If Arthur groans there’s something
to groan for, you bet.”
“Maybe he’s in love,” Tom said sheepishly.
“But you don’t groan, Tom, do you?”
she asked seriously.
“Maybe I ain’t in love,
though, Pearl. Ask Jim Russell, he can tell you.”
“Jim ain’t in love, is
he?” Pearl asked anxiously. Her responsibilities
were growing too fast. One love affair and a sick
man she felt was all she could attend to.
“Well, why do you suppose Jim
comes over here every second day to get you to write
a note to that friend of yours?”
“Camilla?” Pearl asked open-mouthed.
Tom nodded.
“Camilla can’t leave Mrs. Francis,”
Pearl declared with conviction.
“Jim’s a dandy smart fellow.
He only stays on the farm in the summer. In the
winter he book-keeps for three or four of the stores
in Millford and earns lots of money,” Tom said,
admiringly.
After a pause Pearl said thoughtfully, “I love
Camilla!”
“That’s just the way Jim
feels, too, I guess,” Tom said laughing as he
went out to the stable.
When Tom went out to the granary he
found Arthur dressing, but flushed and looking rather
unsteady.
“What’s gone wrong with you, old man?”
he asked kindly.
“I feel a bit queer,”
Arthur replied, “that’s all. I shall
be well directly. Got a bit of a cold, I think.”
“Slept in a field with the gate
open like as not,” Tom laughed.
Arthur looked at him inquiringly.
“You’ll feel better when
you get your breakfast,” Tom went on. “I
don’t wonder you’re sick-you
haven’t been eatin’ enough to keep a canary
bird alive. Go on right into the house now.
I’ll feed your team.”
“It beats all what happens to
our help,” Mrs. Motherwell complained to Pearl,
as they washed the breakfast dishes. “It
looks very much as if Arthur is goin’ to be
laid up, too, and the busy time just on us.”
Pearl was troubled. Why should
Arthur be sick? He had plenty of fresh air; he
tubbed himself regularly. He never drank “alcoholic
beverages that act directly on the liver and stomach,
drying up the blood, and rendering every organ unfit
for work.” Pearl remembered the Band of
Hope manual. No, and it was not a cold. Colds
do not make people groan in the night-it
was something else. Pearl wished her friend, Dr.
Clay, would come along. He would soon spot the
trouble.
After dinner, of which Arthur ate
scarcely a mouthful, as Pearl was cleaning the knives,
Mrs. Motherwell came into the kitchen with a hard
look on her face. She had just missed a two-dollar
bill from her satchel.
“Pearl,” she said in a
strained voice, “did you see a two-dollar bill
any place?”
“Yes, ma’am,” Pearl
answered quickly, “Mrs Francis paid ma with one
once for the washing, but I don’t know where
it might be now.”
Mrs. Motherwell looked at Pearl keenly.
It was not easy to believe that that little girl would
steal. Her heart was still tender after Polly’s
death, she did not want to be hard on Pearl, but the
money must be some place.
“Pearl, I have lost a two-dollar
bill. If you know anything about it I want you
to tell me,” she said firmly.
“I don’t know anything
about it no more’n ye say ye had it and now
ye’ve lost it,” Pearl answered calmly.
“Go up to your room and think
about it,” she said, avoiding Pearl’s
gaze.
Pearl went up the narrow little steps
with a heart that swelled with indignation.
“Does she think I stole her
dirty money, me that has money o’ me own-a
thief is it she takes me for? Oh, wirra! wirra!
and her an’ me wuz gittin’ on so fine,
too; and like as not this’ll start the morgage
and the cancer on her again.”
Pearl threw herself on the hot little
bed, and sobbed out her indignation and her homesickness.
She could not put it off this time. Catching
sight of her grief-stricken face in the cracked looking
glass that hung at the head of the bed, she started
up suddenly.
“What am I bleatin’ for?”
she said to herself, wiping her eyes on her little
patched apron. “Ye’d think to look
at me that I’d been caught stealin’ the
cat’s milk”-she laughed through
her tears-“I haven’t stolen
anything and what for need I cry? The dear Lord
will get me out of this just as nate as He bruk the
windy for me!”
She took her knitting out of the bird-cage
and began to knit at full speed.
“Danny me man, it is a good
thing for ye that the shaddah of suspicion is on yer
sister Pearlie this day, for it gives her a good chance
to turn yer heel. ‘Sowin’ in the
sunshine, sowin’ in the shaddah,’ only
it’s knittin’ I am instead of sewin’,
but it’s all wan, I guess. I mind how Paul
and Silas were singin’ in the prison at midnight.
I know how they felt. ‘Do what Ye like,
Lord,’ they wur thinkin’. ’If
it’s in jail Ye want us to stay, we’re
Yer men.’”
Pearl knit a few minutes in silence.
Then she knelt beside the bed.
“Dear Lord,” she prayed,
clasping her work-worn hands, “help her to find
her money, but if anyone did steal it, give him the
strength to confess it, dear Lord. Amen.”
Mrs. Motherwell, downstairs, was having
a worse time than Pearl. She could not make herself
believe that Pearl had stolen the money, and yet no
one had had a chance to take it except Pearl, or Tom,
and that, of course, was absurd. She went again
to have a look in every drawer in her room, and as
she passed through the hall she detected a strange
odour. She soon traced it to Tom’s light
overcoat which hung there. What was the smell?
It was tobacco, and something more. It was the
smell of a bar-room!
She sat down upon the step with a
nameless dread in her heart. Tom had gone to
Millford several times since his father had gone to
Winnipeg, and he had stayed longer than was necessary,
too; but no, no. Tom would not spend good money
that way. The habit of years was on her.
It was the money she thought of first.
Then she thought of Pearl.
Going to the foot of the stairway she called:
“Pearl, you may come down now.”
“Did ye find it?” Pearl asked eagerly.
“No.”
“Do ye still think I took it?”
“No, I don’t, Pearl,” she answered.
“All right then, I’ll come right down,”
Pearl said gladly.