Mrs. McGuire did not look like Cupid’s
earthly representative as she sat in her chintz-covered
rocking-chair and bitterly complained of the weather.
The weather was damp and cloudy, and Mrs. McGuire said
her “jints were jumpin’.”
The little Watsons were behaving so
well that even with her rheumatism to help her vision
she could find no fault with them, “just now”;
but she reckoned the mischief “was hatchin’.”
A change was taking place in Mrs.
McGuire, although she was unconscious of it; Mary
Barner, who was a frequent and welcome visitor, was
having an influence even on the flinty heart of the
relict of the late McGuire. Mary “red up”
her house for her when her rheumatism was bad.
She cooked for her, she sang and read for her.
Above all things, Mary was her friend, and no one
who has a friend can be altogether at war with the
world.
One evening when Mary was reading
the “Pilgrim’s Progress” to her,
the Reverend Hugh Grantley came in and begged to be
let stay and enjoy the reading, too. He said
Miss Barner’s voice seemed to take the tangles
out of his brain, whereupon Mrs. McGuire winked at
herself.
That night she obligingly fell asleep
just where Christian resolved to press on to the Heavenly
City at all costs, and Mistrust and Timorous ran down
the hill.
After that the minister came regularly,
and Mrs. McGuire, though she complained to herself
that it was hard to lose so much of the reading, fell
asleep each night, and snored loudly. She said
she had been young herself once, and guessed she knew
how it was with young folks. Just hoped he was
good enough for Mary, that was all; men were such
deceivers-they were all smooth as silk,
until it came to livin’ with ’em, and
then she shook her head grimly, thinking no doubt of
the vagaries of the late McGuire.
The Reverend Hugh Grantley walked
up and down the floor of his study in deep meditation.
But his thoughts were not on his Sunday sermon nor
yet on the topic for the young people’s meeting,
though they were serious enough by the set of his
jaw.
His friend Clay had just left him.
Clay was in a radiant humour. Dr. Barner’s
friendly attitude toward him had apparently changed
the aspect of affairs, and now the old doctor had
suggested taking him into partnership.
“Think of it, Grantley,”
the young man had exclaimed, “what this will
mean to me. He is a great man in his profession,
so clever, so witty, so scholarly, everything.
He was the double gold medallist in his year at McGill,
and he has been keeping absolutely sober lately-thanks
to your good offices”-at which the
other made a gesture of dissent-“and
then I would be in a better position to look after
things. As it has been, any help I gave Mary
in keeping the old man from killing people had to
be done on the sly.”
The minister winced and went a shade
paler at the mention of her name, but the doctor did
not notice.
“Mary is anxious to have it
brought about, too,” he went on, “for it
has always been a worry to her when he was away, but
now he will do the office work, and I will do the
driving. It will be a distinct advantage to me,
though of course I would do it anyway for her sake.”
Then it was well for the minister
that he came of a race that can hold its features
in control. This easy naming of her name, the
apparent proprietorship, the radiant happiness in
Clay’s face, could mean but one thing.
He had been blind, blind, blind!
He heard himself saying mechanically.
“Yes, of course, I think it
is the only thing to do,” and Clay had gone
out whistling.
He sat for a few minutes perfectly
motionless. Then a shudder ran through him, and
the black Highland blood surged into his face, and
anger flamed in his eyes. He sprang to his feet
with his huge hands clenched.
“He shall not have her,”
he whispered to himself. “She is mine.
How dare he name her!”
Only for a moment did he give himself
to the ecstasy of rage. Then his arms fell and
he stood straight and calm and strong, master of himself
once more.
“What right have I?” he
groaned wearily pressing his hands to his head.
“Who am I that any woman should desire me.
Clay, with his easy grace, his wit, his manliness,
his handsome face, no wonder that she prefers him,
any woman would, and Clay is worthy, more worthy,”
he thought in an agony of renunciation. He thought
of Clay’s life as he had known it now for years.
So fair and open and clean. “Yes, Clay is
worthy of her.” He repeated it dully to
himself as he walked up and down.
Every incident of the past three months
came back to him now with cruel distinctness-the
sweetness of her voice, the glorious beauty of her
face, so full sometimes of life’s pain, so strong
too in the overcoming of it, and her little hands-oh
what pretty little hands they were-he had
held them once only for a moment, but she must have
felt the love that throbbed in his touch, and he had
thought that perhaps-perhaps Oh, unutterable
blind fool that he was!
He pressed his hands again to his
head and groaned aloud; and He who hears the cry of
the child or of the strong man in agony drew near and
laid His pierced hands upon him in healing and benediction.
The next Sunday the Reverend Hugh
Grantley was at his best, and his sermons had a new
quality that appealed to and comforted many a weary
one who, like himself, was traveling by the thorn-road.
In Mrs. McGuire’s little house
there was nothing to disturb the reading now, for
the minister came no more, but the joyousness had all
gone from Mary’s voice, and Mrs. McGuire found
herself losing all interest in Christian’s struggles
as she looked at Mary’s face.
Once she saw the minister pass and
she beat upon the window with her knitting needle,
but he hurried by without looking up. Then the
anger of Mrs. McGuire was kindled mightily, and she
sometimes woke up in the night to express her opinion
of him in the most lurid terms she could think of,
feeling meanwhile the futility of human speech.
It was a hard position for Mrs. McGuire, who had always
been able to settle her own affairs with ease and
grace.
One day when this had been going on
about a month, Mrs. McGuire sat in her chintz-covered
rocking-chair and thought hard, for something had to
be done. She narrowed her black eyes into slits
and thought and thought. Suddenly she started
as if she heard something, and perhaps she did-the
angel who brought the inspiration may have whirred
his wings a little.
Mary Barner was coming that afternoon
to “red up” a little for her, for her
rheumatism had been very bad. With wonderful agility
she rose and made ready for bed. First, however,
she carefully examined the latch on her kitchen door.
Now this latch had a bad habit of locking itself if
the door was closed quickly. Mrs. McGuire tried
it and found it would do this every time, and with
this she seemed quite satisfied.
About half after three o’clock
Mary came and began to set the little house in order.
When this was done Mrs. McGuire asked her if she would
make her a few buttermilk biscuits, she had been wishing
for them all day.
When she saw Mary safely in the kitchen
her heart began to beat. Now if the minister
was at home, the thing was as good as done.
She watched at the window until Jimmy
Watson came from school, and then, tapping on the
glass, beckoned him to come in, which he did with
great trepidation of spirit.
She told him to go at once and tell
Mr. Grantley to come, for she needed him very badly.
Then she got back into bed, and tried
to compose her features into some resemblance of invalidism.
When Mr. Grantley came she was resting
easier she said (which was true), but would he just
get her a drink of water from the kitchen, and would
he please shut the door quick after him and not let
the cat up.
Mr. Grantley went at once and she
heard the door shut with a snap.
Just to be sure that it was “snibbed,”
Mrs. McGuire tiptoed after him in her bare feet, a
very bad thing for a sick-a-bed lady to do, too, but
to her credit, be it written, she did not listen at
the keyhole.
She got back into bed, exclaiming
to herself with great emphasis:
“There, now, fight it out among yerselves.”
When the minister stepped quickly
inside the little kitchen, closing the door hurriedly
behind him to prevent the invasion of the cat (of
which there wasn’t one and never had been any),
he beheld a very busy and beautiful young woman sifting
flour into a baking-dish.
“Mary!” he almost shouted, hardly believing
his senses.
He recovered himself instantly, and
explained his errand, but the pallor of his face was
unmistakable.
When Mary handed him the cup of water
she saw that his hand was shaking; but she returned
to her baking with the greatest composure.
The minister attempted to lift the
latch, he rattled the door in vain.
“Come out this way,” Mary
said as sweetly as if she really wanted him to go.
She tried to open the outside door,
also in vain. Mrs. McGuire had secured it from
the outside with a clothes-line prop and a horse nail.
The minister came and tried it, but
Mrs. McGuire’s work held good. Then the
absurdity of the position struck them both, and the
little house rang with their laughter-laughter
that washed away the heartaches of the dreary days
before.
The minister’s reserve was breaking down.
“Mary,” he said, taking
her face between his hands, “are you going to
marry Horace Clay?”
“No,” she answered, meeting
his eyes with the sweetest light in hers that ever
comes into a woman’s face.
“Well, then,” he said,
as he drew her to him, “you are going to marry
me.”
The day had been dark and rainy, but
now the clouds rolled back and the sunshine, warm
and glorious, streamed into the kitchen. The teakettle,
too, on the stove behind them, threw up its lid and
burst into a thunder of bubbles.
The next time they tried the door
it yielded, Mrs. McGuire having made a second barefoot
journey.
When they came up from the little
kitchen, the light ineffable was shining in their
faces, but Mrs. McGuire called them back to earth by
remarking dryly:
“It’s just as well I wasn’t parchin’
for that drink.”