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Title:      The Blue Castle (1926)
Author:     Lucy Maud Montgomery
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A Project Gutenberg of Australia eBook

Title:      The Blue Castle (1926)
Author:     Lucy Maud Montgomery




CHAPTER I


If it had not rained on a certain May morning Valancy Stirling's
whole life would have been entirely different.  She would have
gone, with the rest of her clan, to Aunt Wellington's engagement
picnic and Dr. Trent would have gone to Montreal.  But it did rain
and you shall hear what happened to her because of it.

Valancy wakened early, in the lifeless, hopeless hour just
preceding dawn.  She had not slept very well.  One does not sleep
well, sometimes, when one is twenty-nine on the morrow, and
unmarried, in a community and connection where the unmarried are
simply those who have failed to get a man.

Deerwood and the Stirlings had long since relegated Valancy to
hopeless old maidenhood.  But Valancy herself had never quite
relinquished a certain pitiful, shamed, little hope that Romance
would come her way yet--never, until this wet, horrible morning,
when she wakened to the fact that she was twenty-nine and unsought
by any man.

Ay, THERE lay the sting.  Valancy did not mind so much being an old
maid.  After all, she thought, being an old maid couldn't possibly
be as dreadful as being married to an Uncle Wellington or an Uncle
Benjamin, or even an Uncle Herbert.  What hurt her was that she had
never had a chance to be anything but an old maid.  No man had ever
desired her.

The tears came into her eyes as she lay there alone in the faintly
greying darkness.  She dared not let herself cry as hard as she
wanted to, for two reasons.  She was afraid that crying might bring
on another attack of that pain around the heart.  She had had a
spell of it after she had got into bed--rather worse than any she
had had yet.  And she was afraid her mother would notice her red
eyes at breakfast and keep at her with minute, persistent,
mosquito-like questions regarding the cause thereof.

"Suppose," thought Valancy with a ghastly grin, "I answered with
the plain truth, 'I am crying because I cannot get married.'  How
horrified Mother would be--though she is ashamed every day of her
life of her old maid daughter."

But of course appearances should be kept up.  "It is not," Valancy
could hear her mother's prim, dictatorial voice asserting, "it is
not MAIDENLY to think about MEN."

The thought of her mother's expression made Valancy laugh--for she
had a sense of humour nobody in her clan suspected.  For that
matter, there were a good many things about Valancy that nobody
suspected.  But her laughter was very superficial and presently she
lay there, a huddled, futile little figure, listening to the rain
pouring down outside and watching, with a sick distaste, the chill,
merciless light creeping into her ugly, sordid room.

She knew the ugliness of that room by heart--knew it and hated it.
The yellow-painted floor, with one hideous, "hooked" rug by the
bed, with a grotesque, "hooked" dog on it, always grinning at her
when she awoke; the faded, dark-red paper; the ceiling discoloured
by old leaks and crossed by cracks; the narrow, pinched little
washstand; the brown-paper lambrequin with purple roses on it; the
spotted old looking-glass with the crack across it, propped up on
the inadequate dressing-table; the jar of ancient potpourri made by
her mother in her mythical honeymoon; the shell-covered box, with
one burst corner, which Cousin Stickles had made in her equally
mythical girlhood; the beaded pincushion with half its bead fringe
gone; the one stiff, yellow chair; the faded old motto, "Gone but
not forgotten," worked in coloured yarns about Great-grandmother
Stirling's grim old face; the old photographs of ancient relatives
long banished from the rooms below.  There were only two pictures
that were not of relatives.  One, an old chromo of a puppy sitting
on a rainy doorstep.  That picture always made Valancy unhappy.
That forlorn little dog crouched on the doorstep in the driving
rain!  Why didn't SOME ONE open the door and let him in?  The other
picture was a faded, passe-partouted engraving of Queen Louise
coming down a stairway, which Aunt Wellington had lavishly given
her on her tenth birthday.  For nineteen years she had looked at it
and hated it, beautiful, smug, self-satisfied Queen Louise.  But
she never dared destroy it or remove it.  Mother and Cousin
Stickles would have been aghast, or, as Valancy irreverently
expressed it in her thoughts, would have had a fit.

Every room in the house was ugly, of course.  But downstairs
appearances were kept up somewhat.  There was no money for rooms
nobody ever saw.  Valancy sometimes felt that she could have done
something for her room herself, even without money, if she were
permitted.  But her mother had negatived every timid suggestion and
Valancy did not persist.  Valancy never persisted.  She was afraid
to.  Her mother could not brook opposition.  Mrs. Stirling would
sulk for days if offended, with the airs of an insulted duchess.

The only thing Valancy liked about her room was that she could be
alone there at night to cry if she wanted to.

But, after all, what did it matter if a room, which you used for
nothing except sleeping and dressing in, were ugly?  Valancy was
never permitted to stay alone in her room for any other purpose.
People who wanted to be alone, so Mrs. Frederick Stirling and
Cousin Stickles believed, could only want to be alone for some
sinister purpose.  But her room in the Blue Castle was everything a
room should be.

Valancy, so cowed and subdued and overridden and snubbed in real
life, was wont to let herself go rather splendidly in her day-
dreams.  Nobody in the Stirling clan, or its ramifications,
suspected this, least of all her mother and Cousin Stickles.  They
never knew that Valancy had two homes--the ugly red brick box of a
home, on Elm Street, and the Blue Castle in Spain.  Valancy had
lived spiritually in the Blue Castle ever since she could remember.
She had been a very tiny child when she found herself possessed of
it.  Always, when she shut her eyes, she could see it plainly, with
its turrets and banners on the pine-clad mountain height, wrapped
in its faint, blue loveliness, against the sunset skies of a fair
and unknown land.  Everything wonderful and beautiful was in that
castle.  Jewels that queens might have worn; robes of moonlight and
fire; couches of roses and gold; long flights of shallow marble
steps, with great, white urns, and with slender, mist-clad maidens
going up and down them; courts, marble-pillared, where shimmering
fountains fell and nightingales sang among the myrtles; halls of
mirrors that reflected only handsome knights and lovely women--
herself the loveliest of all, for whose glance men died.  All that
supported her through the boredom of her days was the hope of going
on a dream spree at night.  Most, if not all, of the Stirlings
would have died of horror if they had known half the things Valancy
did in her Blue Castle.

For one thing she had quite a few lovers in it.  Oh, only one at a
time.  One who wooed her with all the romantic ardour of the age of
chivalry and won her after long devotion and many deeds of derring-
do, and was wedded to her with pomp and circumstance in the great,
banner-hung chapel of the Blue Castle.

At twelve, this lover was a fair lad with golden curls and heavenly
blue eyes.  At fifteen, he was tall and dark and pale, but still
necessarily handsome.  At twenty, he was ascetic, dreamy,
spiritual.  At twenty-five, he had a clean-cut jaw, slightly grim,
and a face strong and rugged rather than handsome.  Valancy never
grew older than twenty-five in her Blue Castle, but recently--very
recently--her hero had had reddish, tawny hair, a twisted smile and
a mysterious past.

I don't say Valancy deliberately murdered these lovers as she
outgrew them.  One simply faded away as another came.  Things are
very convenient in this respect in Blue Castles.

But, on this morning of her day of fate, Valancy could not find the
key of her Blue Castle.  Reality pressed on her too hardly, barking
at her heels like a maddening little dog.  She was twenty-nine,
lonely, undesired, ill-favoured--the only homely girl in a handsome
clan, with no past and no future.  As far as she could look back,
life was drab and colourless, with not one single crimson or purple
spot anywhere.  As far as she could look forward it seemed certain
to be just the same until she was nothing but a solitary, little
withered leaf clinging to a wintry bough.  The moment when a woman
realises that she has nothing to live for--neither love, duty,
purpose nor hope--holds for her the bitterness of death.

"And I just have to go on living because I can't stop.  I may have
to live eighty years," thought Valancy, in a kind of panic.  "We're
all horribly long-lived.  It sickens me to think of it."

She was glad it was raining--or rather, she was drearily satisfied
that it was raining.  There would be no picnic that day.  This
annual picnic, whereby Aunt and Uncle Wellington--one always
thought of them in that succession--inevitably celebrated their
engagement at a picnic thirty years before, had been, of late
years, a veritable nightmare to Valancy.  By an impish coincidence
it was the same day as her birthday and, after she had passed
twenty-five, nobody let her forget it.

Much as she hated going to the picnic, it would never have occurred
to her to rebel against it.  There seemed to be nothing of the
revolutionary in her nature.  And she knew exactly what every one
would say to her at the picnic.  Uncle Wellington, whom she
disliked and despised even though he had fulfilled the highest
Stirling aspiration, "marrying money," would say to her in a pig's
whisper, "Not thinking of getting married yet, my dear?" and then
go off into the bellow of laughter with which he invariably
concluded his dull remarks.  Aunt Wellington, of whom Valancy stood
in abject awe, would tell her about Olive's new chiffon dress and
Cecil's last devoted letter.  Valancy would have to look as pleased
and interested as if the dress and letter had been hers or else
Aunt Wellington would be offended.  And Valancy had long ago
decided that she would rather offend God than Aunt Wellington,
because God might forgive her but Aunt Wellington never would.

Aunt Alberta, enormously fat, with an amiable habit of always
referring to her husband as "he," as if he were the only male
creature in the world, who could never forget that she had been a
great beauty in her youth, would condole with Valancy on her sallow
skin--

"I don't know why all the girls of today are so sunburned.  When I
was a girl my skin was roses and cream.  I was counted the
prettiest girl in Canada, my dear."

Perhaps Uncle Herbert wouldn't say anything--or perhaps he would
remark jocularly, "How fat you're getting, Doss!"  And then
everybody would laugh over the excessively humorous idea of poor,
scrawny little Doss getting fat.

Handsome, solemn Uncle James, whom Valancy disliked but respected
because he was reputed to be very clever and was therefore the clan
oracle--brains being none too plentiful in the Stirling connection--
would probably remark with the owl-like sarcasm that had won him
his reputation, "I suppose you're busy with your hope-chest these
days?"

And Uncle Benjamin would ask some of his abominable conundrums,
between wheezy chuckles, and answer them himself.

"What is the difference between Doss and a mouse?

"The mouse wishes to harm the cheese and Doss wishes to charm the
he's."

Valancy had heard him ask that riddle fifty times and every time
she wanted to throw something at him.  But she never did.  In the
first place, the Stirlings simply did not throw things; in the
second place, Uncle Benjamin was a wealthy and childless old
widower and Valancy had been brought up in the fear and admonition
of his money.  If she offended him he would cut her out of his
will--supposing she were in it.  Valancy did not want to be cut out
of Uncle Benjamin's will.  She had been poor all her life and knew
the galling bitterness of it.  So she endured his riddles and even
smiled tortured little smiles over him.

Aunt Isabel, downright and disagreeable as an east wind, would
criticise her in some way--Valancy could not predict just how, for
Aunt Isabell never repeated a criticism--she found something new
with which to jab you every time.  Aunt Isabel prided herself on
saying what she thought, but didn't like it so well when other
people said what THEY thought to HER.  Valancy never said what SHE
thought.

Cousin Georgiana--named after her great-great-grandmother, who had
been named after George the Fourth--would recount dolorously the
names of all relatives and friends who had died since the last
picnic and wonder "which of us will be the first to go next."

Oppressively competent, Aunt Mildred would talk endlessly of her
husband and her odious prodigies of babies to Valancy, because
Valancy would be the only one she could find to put up with it.
For the same reason, Cousin Gladys--really First Cousin Gladys once
removed, according to the strict way in which the Stirlings
tabulated relationship--a tall, thin lady who admitted she had a
sensitive disposition, would describe minutely the tortures of her
neuritis.  And Olive, the wonder girl of the whole Stirling clan,
who had everything Valancy had not--beauty, popularity, love--would
show off her beauty and presume on her popularity and flaunt her
diamond insignia of love in Valancy's dazzled, envious eyes.

There would be none of all this today.  And there would be no
packing up of teaspoons.  The packing up was always left for
Valancy and Cousin Stickles.  And once, six years ago, a silver
teaspoon from Aunt Wellington's wedding set had been lost.  Valancy
never heard the last of that silver teaspoon.  Its ghost appeared
Banquo-like at every subsequent family feast.

Oh, yes, Valancy knew exactly what the picnic would be like and she
blessed the rain that had saved her from it.  There would be no
picnic this year.  If Aunt Wellington could not celebrate on the
sacred day itself she would have no celebration at all.  Thank
whatever gods there were for that.

Since there would be no picnic, Valancy made up her mind that, if
the rain held up in the afternoon, she would go up to the library
and get another of John Foster's books.  Valancy was never allowed
to read novels, but John Foster's books were not novels.  They were
"nature books"--so the librarian told Mrs. Frederick Stirling--"all
about the woods and birds and bugs and things like that, you know."
So Valancy was allowed to read them--under protest, for it was only
too evident that she enjoyed them too much.  It was permissible,
even laudable, to read to improve your mind and your religion, but
a book that was enjoyable was dangerous.  Valancy did not know
whether her mind was being improved or not; but she felt vaguely
that if she had come across John Foster's books years ago life
might have been a different thing for her.  They seemed to her to
yield glimpses of a world into which she might once have entered,
though the door was forever barred to her now.  It was only within
the last year that John Foster's books had been in the Deerwood
library, though the librarian told Valancy that he had been a well-
known writer for several years.

"Where does he live?" Valancy had asked.

"Nobody knows.  From his books he must be a Canadian, but no more
information can be had.  His publishers won't say a word.  Quite
likely John Foster is a nom de plume.  His books are so popular we
can't keep them in at all, though I really can't see what people
find in them to rave over."

"I think they're wonderful," said Valancy, timidly.

"Oh--well--"  Miss Clarkson smiled in a patronising fashion that
relegated Valancy's opinions to limbo, "I can't say I care much for
bugs myself.  But certainly Foster seems to know all there is to
know about them."

Valancy didn't know whether she cared much for bugs either.  It was
not John Foster's uncanny knowledge of wild creatures and insect
life that enthralled her.  She could hardly say what it was--some
tantalising lure of a mystery never revealed--some hint of a great
secret just a little further on--some faint, elusive echo of
lovely, forgotten things--John Foster's magic was indefinable.

Yes, she would get a new Foster book.  It was a month since she had
Thistle Harvest, so surely Mother could not object.  Valancy had
read it four times--she knew whole passages off by heart.

And--she almost thought she would go and see Dr. Trent about that
queer pain around the heart.  It had come rather often lately, and
the palpitations were becoming annoying, not to speak of an
occassional dizzy moment and a queer shortness of breath.  But
could she go to him without telling any one?  It was a most daring
thought.  None of the Stirlings ever consulted a doctor without
holding a family council and getting Uncle James' approval.  THEN,
they went to Dr. Ambrose Marsh of Port Lawrence, who had married
Second Cousin Adelaide Stirling.

But Valancy disliked Dr. Ambrose Marsh.  And, besides, she could
not get to Port Lawrence, fifteen miles away, without being taken
there.  She did not want any one to know about her heart.  There
would be such a fuss made and every member of the family would come
down and talk it over and advise her and caution her and warn her
and tell her horrible tales of great-aunts and cousins forty times
removed who had been "just like that and dropped dead without a
moment's warning, my dear."

Aunt Isabel would remember that she had always said Doss looked
like a girl who would have heart trouble--"so pinched and peaked
always"; and Uncle Wellington would take it as a personal insult,
when "no Stirling ever had heart disease before"; and Georgiana
would forebode in perfectly audible asides that "poor, dear little
Doss isn't long for this world, I'm afraid"; and Cousin Gladys
would say, "Why, MY heart has been like that for YEARS," in a tone
that implied no one else had any business even to have a heart; and
Olive--Olive would merely look beautiful and superior and
disgustingly healthy, as if to say, "Why all this fuss over a faded
superfluity like Doss when you have ME?"

Valancy felt that she couldn't tell anybody unless she had to.  She
felt quite sure there was nothing at all seriously wrong with her
heart and no need of all the pother that would ensue if she
mentioned it.  She would just slip up quietly and see Dr. Trent
that very day.  As for his bill, she had the two hundred dollars
that her father had put in the bank for her the day she was born,
but she would secretly take out enough to pay Dr. Trent.  She was
never allowed to use even the interest of this.

Dr. Trent was a gruff, outspoken, absent-minded old fellow, but he
was a recognised authority on heart-disease, even if he were only a
general practitioner in out-of-the-world Deerwood.  Dr. Trent was
over seventy and there had been rumours that he meant to retire
soon.  None of the Stirling clan had ever gone to him since he had
told Cousin Gladys, ten years before, that her neuritis was all
imaginary and that she enjoyed it.  You couldn't patronise a doctor
who insulted your first-cousin-once-removed like that--not to
mention that he was a Presbyterian when all the Stirlings went to
the Anglican church.  But Valancy, between the devil of disloyalty
to clan and the deep sea of fuss and clatter and advice, thought
she would take a chance with the devil.



CHAPTER II


When cousin Stickles knocked at her door, Valancy knew it was half-
past seven and she must get up.  As long as she could remember,
Cousin Stickles had knocked at her door at half-past seven.  Cousin
Stickles and Mrs. Frederick Stirling had been up since seven, but
Valancy was allowed to lie abed half an hour longer because of a
family tradition that she was delicate.  Valancy got up, though she
hated getting up more this morning than ever she had before.  What
was there to get up for?  Another dreary day like all the days that
had preceded it, full of meaningless little tasks, joyless and
unimportant, that benefited nobody.  But if she did not get up at
once she would not be ready for breakfast at eight o'clock.  Hard
and fast times for meals were the rule in Mrs. Stirling's
household.  Breakfast at eight, dinner at one, supper at six, year
in and year out.  No excuses for being late were ever tolerated.
So up Valancy got, shivering.

The room was bitterly cold with the raw, penetrating chill of a wet
May morning.  The house would be cold all day.  It was one of Mrs.
Frederick's rules that no fires were necessary after the twenty-
fourth of May.  Meals were cooked on the little oil-stove in the
back porch.  And though May might be icy and October frost-bitten,
no fires were lighted until the twenty-first of October by the
calendar.  On the twenty-first of October Mrs. Frederick began
cooking over the kitchen range and lighted a fire in the sitting-
room stove in the evenings.  It was whispered about in the
connection that the late Frederick Stirling had caught the cold
which resulted in his death during Valancy's first year of life
because Mrs. Frederick would not have a fire on the twentieth of
October.  She lighted it the next day--but that was a day too late
for Frederick Stirling.

Valancy took off and hung up in the closet her nightdress of
coarse, unbleached cotton, with high neck and long, tight sleeves.
She put on undergarments of a similar nature, a dress of brown
gingham, thick, black stockings and rubber-heeled boots.  Of late
years she had fallen into the habit of doing her hair with the
shade of the window by the looking-glass pulled down.  The lines on
her face did not show so plainly then.  But this morning she jerked
the shade to the very top and looked at herself in the leprous
mirror with a passionate determination to see herself as the world
saw her.

The result was rather dreadful.  Even a beauty would have found
that harsh, unsoftened side-light trying.  Valancy saw straight
black hair, short and thin, always lustreless despite the fact that
she gave it one hundred strokes of the brush, neither more nor
less, every night of her life and faithfully rubbed Redfern's Hair
Vigor into the roots, more lustreless than ever in its morning
roughness; fine, straight, black brows; a nose she had always felt
was much too small even for her small, three-cornered, white face;
a small, pale mouth that always fell open a trifle over little,
pointed white teeth; a figure thin and flat-breasted, rather below
the average height.  She had somehow escaped the family high cheek-
bones, and her dark-brown eyes, too soft and shadowy to be black,
had a slant that was almost Oriental.  Apart from her eyes she was
neither pretty nor ugly--just insignificant-looking, she concluded
bitterly.  How plain the lines around her eyes and mouth were in
that merciless light!  And never had her narrow, white face looked
so narrow and so white.

She did her hair in a pompadour.  Pompadours had long gone out of
fashion, but they had been in when Valancy first put her hair up
and Aunt Wellington had decided that she must always wear her hair
so.

"It is the ONLY way that becomes you.  Your face is so small that
you MUST add height to it by a pompadour effect," said Aunt
Wellington, who always enunciated commonplaces as if uttering
profound and important truths.

Valancy had hankered to do her hair pulled low on her forehead,
with puffs above the ears, as Olive was wearing hers.  But Aunt
Wellington's dictum had such an effect on her that she never dared
change her style of hairdressing again.  But then, there were so
many things Valancy never dared do.

All her life she had been afraid of something, she thought
bitterly.  From the very dawn of recollection, when she had been so
horribly afraid of the big black bear that lived, so Cousin
Stickles told her, in the closet under the stairs.

"And I always will be--I know it--I can't help it.  I don't know
what it would be like not to be afraid of something."

Afraid of her mother's sulky fits--afraid of offending Uncle
Benjamin--afraid of becoming a target for Aunt Wellington's
contempt--afraid of Aunt Isabel's biting comments--afraid of Uncle
James' disapproval--afraid of offending the whole clan's opinions
and prejudices--afraid of not keeping up appearances--afraid to say
what she really thought of anything--afraid of poverty in her old
age.  Fear--fear--fear--she could never escape from it.  It bound
her and enmeshed her like a spider's web of steel.  Only in her
Blue Castle could she find temporary release.  And this morning
Valancy could not believe she had a Blue Castle.  She would never
be able to find it again.  Twenty-nine, unmarried, undesired--what
had she to do with the fairy-like chatelaine of the Blue Castle?
She would cut such childish nonsense out of her life forever and
face reality unflinchingly.

She turned from her unfriendly mirror and looked out.  The ugliness
of the view always struck her like a blow; the ragged fence, the
tumble-down old carriage-shop in the next lot, plastered with
crude, violently coloured advertisements; the grimy railway station
beyond, with the awful derelicts that were always hanging around it
even at this early hour.  In the pouring rain everything looked
worse than usual, especially the beastly advertisement, "Keep that
schoolgirl complexion."  Valancy HAD kept her schoolgirl
complexion.  That was just the trouble.  There was not a gleam of
beauty anywhere--"exactly like my life," thought Valancy drearily.
Her brief bitterness had passed.  She accepted facts as resignedly
as she had always accepted them.  She was one of the people whom
life always passes by.  There was no altering that fact.

In this mood Valancy went down to breakfast.



CHAPTER III


Breakfast was always the same.  Oatmeal porridge, which Valancy
loathed, toast and tea, and one teaspoonful of marmalade.  Mrs.
Frederick thought two teaspoonfuls extravagant--but that did not
matter to Valancy, who hated marmalade, too.  The chilly, gloomy
little dining-room was chillier and gloomier than usual; the rain
streamed down outside the window; departed Stirlings, in atrocious,
gilt frames, wider than the pictures, glowered down from the walls.
And yet Cousin Stickles wished Valancy many happy returns of the
day!

"Sit up straight, Doss," was all her mother said.

Valancy sat up straight.  She talked to her mother and Cousin
Stickles of the things they always talked of.  She never wondered
what would happen if she tried to talk of something else.  She
knew.  Therefore she never did it.

Mrs. Frederick was offended with Providence for sending a rainy day
when she wanted to go to a picnic, so she ate her breakfast in a
sulky silence for which Valancy was rather grateful.  But Christine
Stickles whined endlessly on as usual, complaining about
everything--the weather, the leak in the pantry, the price of
oatmeal and butter--Valancy felt at once she had buttered her toast
too lavishly--the epidemic of mumps in Deerwood.

"Doss will be sure to ketch them," she foreboded.

"Doss must not go where she is likely to catch mumps," said Mrs.
Frederick shortly.

Valancy had never had mumps--or whooping cough--or chicken-pox--or
measles--or anything she should have had--nothing but horrible
colds every winter.  Doss' winter colds were a sort of tradition in
the family.  Nothing, it seemed, could prevent her from catching
them.  Mrs. Frederick and Cousin Stickles did their heroic best.
One winter they kept Valancy housed up from November to May, in the
warm sitting-room.  She was not even allowed to go to church.  And
Valancy took cold after cold and ended up with bronchitis in June.

"None of MY family were ever like that," said Mrs. Frederick,
implying that it must be a Stirling tendency.

"The Stirling's seldom take cold," said Cousin Stickles
resentfully.  SHE had been a Stirling.

"I think," said Mrs. Frederick, "that if a person makes up her mind
NOT to have colds she will not HAVE colds."

So that was the trouble.  It was all Valancy's own fault.

But on this particular morning Valancy's unbearable grievance was
that she was called Doss.  She had endured it for twenty-nine
years, and all at once she felt she could not endure it any longer.
Her full name was Valancy Jane.  Valancy Jane was rather terrible,
but she liked Valancy, with its odd, out-land tang.  It was always
a wonder to Valancy that the Stirlings had allowed her to be so
christened.  She had been told that her maternal grandfather, old
Amos Wansbarra, had chosen the name for her.  Her father had tacked
on the Jane by way of civilising it, and the whole connection got
out of the difficulty by nicknaming her Doss.  She never got
Valancy from any one but outsiders.

"Mother," she said timidly, "would you mind calling me Valancy
after this?  Doss seems so--so--I don't like it."

Mrs. Frederick looked at her daughter in astonishment.  She wore
glasses with enormously strong lenses that gave her eyes a
peculiarly disagreeable appearance.

"What is the matter with Doss?"

"It--seems so childish," faltered Valancy.

"Oh!"  Mrs. Frederick had been a Wansbarra and the Wansbarra smile
was not an asset.  "I see.  Well, it should suit YOU then.  You are
childish enough in all conscience, my dear child."

"I am twenty-nine," said the dear child desperately.

"I wouldn't proclaim it from the house-tops if I were you, dear,"
said Mrs. Frederick.  "Twenty-nine!  _I_ had been married nine
years when I was twenty-nine."

"_I_ was married at seventeen," said Cousin Stickles proudly.

Valancy looked at them furtively.  Mrs. Frederick, except for those
terrible glasses and the hooked nose that made her look, more like
a parrot than a parrot itself could look, was not ill-looking.  At
twenty she might have been quite pretty.  But Cousin Stickles!  And
yet Christine Stickles had once been desirable in some man's eyes.
Valancy felt that Cousin Stickles, with her broad, flat, wrinkled
face, a mole right on the end of her dumpy nose, bristling hairs on
her chin, wrinkled yellow neck, pale, protruding eyes, and thin,
puckered mouth, had yet this advantage over her--this right to look
down on her.  And even yet Cousin Stickles was necessary to Mrs.
Frederick.  Valancy wondered pitifully what it would be like to be
wanted by some one--needed by some one.  No one in the whole world
needed her, or would miss anything from life if she dropped
suddenly out of it.  She was a disappointment to her mother.  No
one loved her.  She had never so much as had a girl friend.

"I haven't even a gift for friendship," she had once admitted to
herself pitifully.

"Doss, you haven't eaten your crusts," said Mrs. Frederick
rebukingly.

It rained all the forenoon without cessation.  Valancy pieced a
quilt.  Valancy hated piecing quilts.  And there was no need of it.
The house was full of quilts.  There were three big chests, packed
with quilts, in the attic.  Mrs. Frederick had begun storing away
quilts when Valancy was seventeen and she kept on storing them,
though it did not seem likely that Valancy would ever need them.
But Valancy must be at work and fancy work materials were too
expensive.  Idleness was a cardinal sin in the Stirling household.
When Valancy had been a child she had been made to write down every
night, in a small, hated, black notebook, all the minutes she had
spent in idleness that day.  On Sundays her mother made her tot
them up and pray over them.

On this particular forenoon of this day of destiny Valancy spent
only ten minutes in idleness.  At least, Mrs. Frederick and Cousin
Stickles would have called it idleness.  She went to her room to
get a better thimble and she opened Thistle Harvest guiltily at
random.

"The woods are so human," wrote John Foster, "that to know them one
must live with them.  An occasional saunter through them, keeping
to the well-trodden paths, will never admit us to their intimacy.
If we wish to be friends we must seek them out and win them by
frequent, reverent visits at all hours; by morning, by noon, and by
night; and at all seasons, in spring, in summer, in autumn, in
winter.  Otherwise we can never really know them and any pretence
we may make to the contrary will never impose on them.  They have
their own effective way of keeping aliens at a distance and
shutting their hearts to mere casual sightseers.  It is of no use
to seek the woods from any motive except sheer love of them; they
will find us out at once and hide all their sweet, old-world
secrets from us.  But if they know we come to them because we love
them they will be very kind to us and give us such treasures of
beauty and delight as are not bought or sold in any market-place.
For the woods, when they give at all, give unstintedly and hold
nothing back from their true worshippers.  We must go to them
lovingly, humbly, patiently, watchfully, and we shall learn what
poignant loveliness lurks in the wild places and silent intervales,
lying under starshine and sunset, what cadences of unearthly music
are harped on aged pine boughs or crooned in copses of fir, what
delicate savours exhale from mosses and ferns in sunny corners or
on damp brooklands, what dreams and myths and legends of an older
time haunt them.  Then the immortal heart of the woods will beat
against ours and its subtle life will steal into our veins and make
us its own forever, so that no matter where we go or how widely we
wander we shall yet be drawn back to the forest to find our most
enduring kinship."

"Doss," called her mother from the hall below, "what are you doing
all by yourself in that room?"

Valancy dropped Thistle Harvest like a hot coal and fled downstairs
to her patches; but she felt the strange exhilaration of spirit
that always came momentarily to her when she dipped into one of
John Foster's books.  Valancy did not know much about woods--except
the haunted groves of oak and pine around her Blue Castle.  But she
had always secretly hankered after them and a Foster book about
woods was the next best thing to the woods themselves.

At noon it stopped raining, but the sun did not come out until
three.  Then Valancy timidly said she thought she would go uptown.

"What do you want to go uptown for?" demanded her mother.

"I want to get a book from the library."

"You got a book from the library only last week."

"No, it was four weeks."

"Four weeks.  Nonsense!"

"Really it was, Mother."

"You are mistaken.  It cannot possibly have been more than two
weeks.  I dislike contradiction.  And I do not see what you want to
get a book for, anyhow.  You waste too much time reading."

"Of what value is my time?" asked Valancy bitterly.

"Doss!  Don't speak in that tone to ME."

"We need some tea," said Cousin Stickles.  "She might go and get
that if she wants a walk--though this damp weather is bad for
colds."

They argued the matter for ten minutes longer and finally Mrs.
Frederick agreed rather grudgingly that Valancy might go.



CHAPTER IV


"Got your rubbers on?" called Cousin Stickles, as Valancy left the
house.

Christine Stickles had never once forgotten to ask that question
when Valancy went out on a damp day.

"Yes."

"Have you got your flannel petticoat on?" asked Mrs. Frederick.

"No."

"Doss, I really do not understand you.  Do you want to catch your
death of cold AGAIN?"  Her voice implied that Valancy had died of a
cold several times already.  "Go upstairs this minute and put it
on!"

"Mother, I don't NEED a flannel petticoat.  My sateen one is warm
enough."

"Doss, remember you had bronchitis two years ago.  Go and do as you
are told!"

Valancy went, though nobody will ever know just how near she came
to hurling the rubber-plant into the street before she went.  She
hated that grey flannel petticoat more than any other garment she
owned.  Olive never had to wear flannel petticoats.  Olive wore
ruffled silk and sheer lawn and filmy laced flounces.  But Olive's
father had "married money" and Olive never had bronchitis.  So
there you were.

"Are you sure you didn't leave the soap in the water?" demanded
Mrs. Frederick.  But Valancy was gone.  She turned at the corner
and looked back down the ugly, prim, respectable street where she
lived.  The Stirling house was the ugliest on it--more like a red
brick box than anything else.  Too high for its breadth, and made
still higher by a bulbous glass cupola on top.  About it was the
desolate, barren peace of an old house whose life is lived.

There was a very pretty house, with leaded casements and dubbed
gables, just around the corner--a new house, one of those houses
you love the minute you see them.  Clayton Markley had built it for
his bride.  He was to be married to Jennie Lloyd in June.  The
little house, it was said, was furnished from attic to cellar, in
complete readiness for its mistress.

"I don't envy Jennie the man," thought Valancy sincerely--Clayton
Markley was not one of her many ideals--"but I DO envy her the
house.  It's such a nice young house.  Oh, if I could only have a
house of my own--ever so poor, so tiny--but my own!  But then," she
added bitterly, "there is no use in yowling for the moon when you
can't even get a tallow candle."

In dreamland nothing would do Valancy but a castle of pale
sapphire.  In real life she would have been fully satisfied with a
little house of her own.  She envied Jennie Lloyd more fiercely
than ever today.  Jennie was not so much better looking than she
was, and not so very much younger.  Yet she was to have this
delightful house.  And the nicest little Wedgwood teacups--Valancy
had seen them; an open fireplace, and monogrammed linen;
hemstitched tablecloths, and china-closets.  Why did EVERYTHING
come to some girls and NOTHING to others?  It wasn't fair.

Valancy was once more seething with rebellion as she walked along,
a prim, dowdy little figure in her shabby raincoat and three-year-
old hat, splashed occasionally by the mud of a passing motor with
its insulting shrieks.  Motors were still rather a novelty in
Deerwood, though they were common in Port Lawrence, and most of the
summer residents up at Muskoka had them.  In Deerwood only some of
the smart set had them; for even Deerwood was divided into sets.
There was the smart set--the intellectual set--the old-family set--
of which the Stirlings were members--the common run, and a few
pariahs.  Not one of the Stirling clan had as yet condescended to a
motor, though Olive was teasing her father to have one.  Valancy
had never even been in a motorcar.  But she did not hanker after
this.  In truth, she felt rather afraid of motorcars, especially at
night.  They seemed to be too much like big purring beasts that
might turn and crush you--or make some terrible savage leap
somewhere.  On the steep mountain trails around her Blue Castle
only gaily caparisoned steeds might proudly pace; in real life
Valancy would have been quite contented to drive in a buggy behind
a nice horse.  She got a buggy drive only when some uncle or cousin
remembered to fling her "a chance," like a bone to a dog.



CHAPTER V


Of course she must buy the tea in Uncle Benjamin's grocery-store.
To buy it anywhere else was unthinkable.  Yet Valancy hated to go
to Uncle Benjamin's store on her twenty-ninth birthday.  There was
no hope that he would not remember it.

"Why," demanded Uncle Benjamin, leeringly, as he tied up her tea,
"are young ladies like bad grammarians?"

Valancy, with Uncle Benjamin's will in the background of her mind,
said meekly, "I don't know.  Why?"

"Because," chuckled Uncle Benjamin, "they can't decline matrimony."

The two clerks, Joe Hammond and Claude Bertram, chuckled also, and
Valancy disliked them a little more than ever.  On the first day
Claude Bertram had seen her in the store she had heard him whisper
to Joe, "Who is that?"  And Joe had said, "Valancy Stirling--one of
the Deerwood old maids."  "Curable or incurable?" Claude had asked
with a snicker, evidently thinking the question very clever.
Valancy smarted anew with the sting of that old recollection.

"Twenty-nine," Uncle Benjamin was saying.  "Dear me, Doss, you're
dangerously near the second corner and not even thinking of getting
married yet.  Twenty-nine.  It seems impossible."

Then Uncle Benjamin said an original thing.  Uncle Benjamin said,
"How time does fly!"

"_I_ think it CRAWLS," said Valancy passionately.  Passion was so
alien to Uncle Benjamin's conception of Valancy that he didn't know
what to make of her.  To cover his confusion, he asked another
conundrum as he tied up her beans--Cousin Stickles had remembered
at the last moment that they must have beans.  Beans were cheap and
filling.

"What two ages are apt to prove illusory?" asked Uncle Benjamin;
and, not waiting for Valancy to "give it up," he added, "Mir-age
and marri-age."

"M-i-r-a-g-e is pronounced MIRAZH," said Valancy shortly, picking
up her tea and her beans.  For the moment she did not care whether
Uncle Benjamin cut her out of his will or not.  She walked out of
the store while Uncle Benjamin stared after her with his mouth
open.  Then he shook his head.

"Poor Doss is taking it hard," he said.

Valancy was sorry by the time she reached the next crossing.  Why
had she lost her patience like that?  Uncle Benjamin would be
annoyed and would likely tell her mother that Doss had been
impertinent--"to ME!"--and her mother would lecture her for a week.

"I've held my tongue for twenty years," thought Valancy.  "Why
couldn't I have held it once more?"

Yes, it was just twenty, Valancy reflected, since she had first
been twitted with her loverless condition.  She remembered the
bitter moment perfectly.  She was just nine years old and she was
standing alone on the school playground while the other little
girls of her class were playing a game in which you must be chosen
by a boy as his partner before you could play.  Nobody had chosen
Valancy--little, pale, black-haired Valancy, with her prim, long-
sleeved apron and odd, slanted eyes.

"Oh," said a pretty little girl to her, "I'm so sorry for you.  You
haven't got a beau."

Valancy had said defiantly, as she continued to say for twenty
years, "I don't WANT a beau."  But this afternoon Valancy once and
for all stopped saying that.

"I'm going to be honest with myself anyhow," she thought savagely.
"Uncle Benjamin's riddles hurt me because they are true.  I DO want
to be married.  I want a house of my own--I want a husband of my
own--I want sweet, little fat BABIES of my own--"  Valancy stopped
suddenly aghast at her own recklessness.  She felt sure that Rev.
Dr. Stalling, who passed her at this moment, read her thoughts and
disapproved of them thoroughly.  Valancy was afraid of Dr.
Stalling--had been afraid of him ever since the Sunday, twenty-
three years before, when he had first come to St. Albans'.  Valancy
had been too late for Sunday School that day and she had gone into
the church timidly and sat in their pew.  No one else was in the
church--nobody except the new rector, Dr. Stalling.  Dr. Stalling
stood up in front of the choir door, beckoned to her, and said
sternly, "Little boy, come up here."

Valancy had stared around her.  There was no little boy--there was
no one in all the huge church but herself.  This strange man with
the blue glasses couldn't mean her.  She was not a boy.

"Little boy," repeated Dr. Stalling, more sternly still, shaking
his forefinger fiercely at her, "come up here at once!"

Valancy arose as if hypnotised and walked up the aisle.  She was
too terrified to do anything else.  What dreadful thing was going
to happen to her?  What HAD happened to her?  Had she actually
turned into a boy?  She came to a stop in front of Dr. Stalling.
Dr. Stalling shook his forefinger--such a long, knuckly forefinger--
at her and said:

"Little boy, take off your hat."

Valancy took off her hat.  She had a scrawny little pigtail hanging
down her back, but Dr. Stalling was shortsighted and did not
perceive it.

"Little boy, go back to your seat and ALWAYS take off your hat in
church.  REMEMBER!"

Valancy went back to her seat carrying her hat like an automaton.
Presently her mother came in.

"Doss," said Mrs. Stirling, "what do you mean by taking off your
hat?  Put it on instantly!"

Valancy put it on instantly.  She was cold with fear lest Dr.
Stalling should immediately summon her up front again.  She would
have to go, of course--it never occurred to her that one could
disobey the rector--and the church was full of people now.  Oh,
what would she do if that horrible, stabbing forefinger were shaken
at her again before all those people?  Valancy sat through the
whole service in an agony of dread and was sick for a week
afterwards.  Nobody knew why--Mrs. Frederick again bemoaned herself
of her delicate child.

Dr. Stalling found out his mistake and laughed over it to Valancy--
who did not laugh.  She never got over her dread of Dr. Stalling.
And now to be caught by him on the street corner, thinking such
things!

Valancy got her John Foster book--Magic of Wings.  "His latest--all
about birds," said Miss Clarkson.  She had almost decided that she
would go home, instead of going to see Dr. Trent.  Her courage had
failed her.  She was afraid of offending Uncle James--afraid of
angering her mother--afraid of facing gruff, shaggy-browed old Dr.
Trent, who would probably tell her, as he had told Cousin Gladys,
that her trouble was entirely imaginary and that she only had it
because she liked to have it.  No, she would not go; she would get
a bottle of Redfern's Purple Pills instead.  Redfern's Purple Pills
were the standard medicine of the Stirling clan.  Had they not
cured Second Cousin Geraldine when five doctors had given her up?
Valancy always felt very sceptical concerning the virtues of the
Purple Pills; but there MIGHT be something in them; and it was
easier to take them than to face Dr. Trent alone.  She would glance
over the magazines in the reading-room a few minutes and then go
home.

Valancy tried to read a story, but it made her furious.  On every
page was a picture of the heroine surrounded by adoring men.  And
here was she, Valancy Stirling, who could not get a solitary beau!
Valancy slammed the magazine shut; she opened Magic of Wings.  Her
eyes fell on the paragraph that changed her life.

"Fear is the original sin," wrote John Foster.  "Almost all the
evil in the world has its origin in the fact that some one is
afraid of something.  It is a cold, slimy serpent coiling about
you.  It is horrible to live with fear; and it is of all things
degrading."

Valancy shut Magic of Wings and stood up.  She would go and see Dr.
Trent.



CHAPTER VI


The ordeal was not so dreadful, after all.  Dr. Trent was as gruff
and abrupt as usual, but he did not tell her her ailment was
imaginary.  After he had listened to her symptoms and asked a few
questions and made a quick examination, he sat for a moment looking
at her quite intently.  Valancy thought he looked as if he were
sorry for her.  She caught her breath for a moment.  Was the
trouble serious?  Oh, it couldn't be, surely--it really hadn't
bothered her MUCH--only lately it had got a little worse.

Dr. Trent opened his mouth--but before he could speak the telephone
at his elbow rang sharply.  He picked up the receiver.  Valancy,
watching him, saw his face change suddenly as he listened, "'Lo--
yes--yes--WHAT?--yes--yes"--a brief interval--"My God!"

Dr. Trent dropped the receiver, dashed out of the room and upstairs
without even a glance at Valancy.  She heard him rushing madly
about overhead, barking out a few remarks to somebody--presumably
his housekeeper.  Then he came tearing downstairs with a club bag
in his hand, snatched his hat and coat from the rack, jerked open
the street door and rushed down the street in the direction of the
station.

Valancy sat alone in the little office, feeling more absolutely
foolish than she had ever felt before in her life.  Foolish--and
humiliated.  So this was all that had come of her heroic
determination to live up to John Foster and cast fear aside.  Not
only was she a failure as a relative and non-existent as a
sweetheart or friend, but she was not even of any importance as a
patient.  Dr. Trent had forgotten her very presence in his
excitement over whatever message had come by the telephone.  She
had gained nothing by ignoring Uncle James and flying in the face
of family tradition.

For a moment she was afraid she was going to cry.  It WAS all so--
ridiculous.  Then she heard Dr. Trent's housekeeper coming down the
stairs.  Valancy rose and went to the office door.

"The doctor forgot all about me," she said with a twisted smile.

"Well, that's too bad," said Mrs. Patterson sympathetically.  "But
it wasn't much wonder, poor man.  That was a telegram they 'phoned
over from the Port.  His son has been terribly injured in an auto
accident in Montreal.  The doctor had just ten minutes to catch the
train.  I don't know what he'll do if anything happens to Ned--he's
just bound up in the boy.  You'll have to come again, Miss
Stirling.  I hope it's nothing serious."

"Oh, no, nothing serious," agreed Valancy.  She felt a little less
humiliated.  It was no wonder poor Dr. Trent had forgotten her at
such a moment.  Nevertheless, she felt very flat and discouraged as
she went down the street.

Valancy went home by the short-cut of Lover's Lane.  She did not
often go through Lover's Lane--but it was getting near supper-time
and it would never do to be late.  Lover's Lane wound back of the
village, under great elms and maples, and deserved its name.  It
was hard to go there at any time and not find some canoodling
couple--or young girls in pairs, arms intertwined, earnestly
talking over their secrets.  Valancy didn't know which made her
feel more self-conscious and uncomfortable.

This evening she encountered both.  She met Connie Hale and Kate
Bayley, in new pink organdy dresses with flowers stuck coquettishly
in their glossy, bare hair.  Valancy had never had a pink dress or
worn flowers in her hair.  Then she passed a young couple she
didn't know, dandering along, oblivious to everything but
themselves.  The young man's arm was around the girl's waist quite
shamelessly.  Valancy had never walked with a man's arm about her.
She felt that she ought to be shocked--they might leave that sort
of thing for the screening twilight, at least--but she wasn't
shocked.  In another flash of desperate, stark honesty she owned to
herself that she was merely envious.  When she passed them she felt
quite sure they were laughing at her--pitying her--"there's that
queer little old maid, Valancy Stirling.  They say she never had a
beau in her whole life"--Valancy fairly ran to get out of Lover's
Lane.  Never had she felt so utterly colourless and skinny and
insignificant.

Just where Lover's Lane debouched on the street, an old car was
parked.  Valancy knew that car well--by sound, at least--and
everybody in Deerwood knew it.  This was before the phrase "tin
Lizzie" had come into circulation--in Deerwood, at least; but if it
had been known, this car was the tinniest of Lizzies--though it was
not a Ford but an old Grey Slosson.  Nothing more battered and
disreputable could be imagined.

It was Barney Snaith's car and Barney himself was just scrambling
up from under it, in overalls plastered with mud.  Valancy gave him
a swift, furtive look as she hurried by.  This was only the second
time she had ever seen the notorious Barney Snaith, though she had
heard enough about him in the five years that he had been living
"up back" in Muskoka.  The first time had been nearly a year ago,
on the Muskoka road.  He had been crawling out from under his car
then, too, and he had given her a cheerful grin as she went by--a
little, whimsical grin that gave him the look of an amused gnome.
He didn't look bad--she didn't believe he was bad, in spite of the
wild yarns that were always being told of him.  Of course he went
tearing in that terrible old Grey Slosson through Deerwood at hours
when all decent people were in bed--often with old "Roaring Abel,"
who made the night hideous with his howls--"both of them dead
drunk, my dear."  And every one knew that he was an escaped convict
and a defaulting bank clerk and a murderer in hiding and an infidel
and an illegitimate son of old Roaring Abel Gay and the father of
Roaring Abel's illegitimate grandchild and a counterfeiter and a
forger and a few other awful things.  But still Valancy didn't
believe he was bad.  Nobody with a smile like that could be bad, no
matter what he had done.

It was that night the Prince of the Blue Castle changed from a
being of grim jaw and hair with a dash of premature grey to a
rakish individual with overlong, tawny hair, dashed with red, dark-
brown eyes, and ears that stuck out just enough to give him an
alert look but not enough to be called flying jibs.  But he still
retained something a little grim about the jaw.

Barney Snaith looked even more disreputable than usual just now.
It was very evident that he hadn't shaved for days, and his hands
and arms, bare to the shoulders, were black with grease.  But he
was whistling gleefully to himself and he seemed so happy that
Valancy envied him.  She envied him his light-heartedness and his
irresponsibility and his mysterious little cabin up on an island in
Lake Mistawis--even his rackety old Grey Slosson.  Neither he nor
his car had to be respectable and live up to traditions.  When he
rattled past her a few minutes later, bareheaded, leaning back in
his Lizzie at a rakish angle, his longish hair blowing in the wind,
a villainous-looking old black pipe in his mouth, she envied him
again.  Men had the best of it, no doubt about that.  This outlaw
was happy, whatever he was or wasn't.  She, Valancy Stirling,
respectable, well-behaved to the last degree, was unhappy and had
always been unhappy.  So there you were.

Valancy was just in time for supper.  The sun had clouded over, and
a dismal, drizzling rain was falling again.  Cousin Stickles had
the neuralgia.  Valancy had to do the family darning and there was
no time for Magic of Wings.

"Can't the darning wait till tomorrow?" she pleaded.

"Tomorrow will bring its own duties," said Mrs. Frederick
inexorably.

Valancy darned all the evening and listened to Mrs. Frederick and
Cousin Stickles talking the eternal, niggling gossip of the clan,
as they knitted drearily at interminable black stockings.  They
discussed Second Cousin Lilian's approaching wedding in all its
bearings.  On the whole, they approved.  Second Cousin Lilian was
doing well for herself.

"Though she hasn't hurried," said Cousin Stickles.  "She must be
twenty-five."

"There have not--fortunately--been many old maids in our
connection," said Mrs. Frederick bitterly.

Valancy flinched.  She had run the darning needle into her finger.

Third Cousin Aaron Gray had been scratched by a cat and had blood-
poisoning in his finger.  "Cats are most dangerous animals," said
Mrs. Frederick.  "I would never have a cat about the house."

She glared significantly at Valancy through her terrible glasses.
Once, five years ago, Valancy had asked if she might have a cat.
She had never referred to it since, but Mrs. Frederick still
suspected her of harbouring the unlawful desire in her heart of
hearts.

Once Valancy sneezed.  Now, in the Stirling code, it was very bad
form to sneeze in public.

"You can always repress a sneeze by pressing your finger on your
upper lip" said Mrs. Frederick rebukingly.

Half-past nine o'clock and so, as Mr. Pepys would say, to bed.  But
First Cousin Stickles' neuralgic back must be rubbed with Redfern's
Liniment.  Valancy did that.  Valancy always had to do it.  She
hated the smell of Redfern's Liniment--she hated the smug, beaming,
portly, be-whiskered, be-spectacled picture of Dr. Redfern on the
bottle.  Her fingers smelled of the horrible stuff after she got
into bed, in spite of all the scrubbing she gave them.

Valancy's day of destiny had come and gone.  She ended it as she
had begun it, in tears.



CHAPTER VII


There was a rosebush on the little Stirling lawn, growing beside
the gate.  It was called "Doss's rosebush."  Cousin Georgiana had
given it to Valancy five years ago and Valancy had planted it
joyfully.  She loved roses.  But--of course--the rosebush never
bloomed.  That was her luck.  Valancy did everything she could
think of and took the advice of everybody in the clan, but still
the rosebush would not bloom.  It throve and grew luxuriantly, with
great leafy branches untouched of rust or spider; but not even a
bud had ever appeared on it.  Valancy, looking at it two days after
her birthday, was filled with a sudden, overwhelming hatred for it.
The thing wouldn't bloom: very well, then, she would cut it down.
She marched to the tool-room in the barn for her garden knife and
she went at the rosebush viciously.  A few minutes later horrified
Mrs. Frederick came out to the verandah and beheld her daughter
slashing insanely among the rosebush boughs.  Half of them were
already strewn on the walk.  The bush looked sadly dismantled.

"Doss, what on earth are you doing?  Have you gone crazy?"

"No," said Valancy.  She meant to say it defiantly, but habit was
too strong for her.  She said it deprecatingly.  "I--I just made up
my mind to cut this bush down.  It is no good.  It never blooms--
never will bloom."

"That is no reason for destroying it," said Mrs. Frederick sternly.
"It was a beautiful bush and quite ornamental.  You have made a
sorry-looking thing of it."

"Rose trees should BLOOM," said Valancy a little obstinately.

"Don't argue with ME, Doss.  Clear up that mess and leave the bush
alone.  I don't know what Georgiana will say when she sees how you
have hacked it to pieces.  Really, I'm surprised at you.  And to do
it without consulting ME!"

"The bush is mine," muttered Valancy.

"What's that?  What did you say, Doss?"

"I only said the bush was mine," repeated Valancy humbly.

Mrs. Frederick turned without a word and marched back into the
house.  The mischief was done now.  Valancy knew she had offended
her mother deeply and would not be spoken to or noticed in any way
for two or three days.  Cousin Stickles would see to Valancy's
bringing-up but Mrs. Frederick would preserve the stony silence of
outraged majesty.

Valancy sighed and put away her garden knife, hanging it precisely
on its precise nail in the tool-shop.  She cleared away the several
branches and swept up the leaves.  Her lips twitched as she looked
at the straggling bush.  It had an odd resemblance to its shaken,
scrawny donor, little Cousin Georgiana herself.

"I certainly have made an awful-looking thing of it," thought
Valancy.

But she did not feel repentant--only sorry she had offended her
mother.  Things would be so uncomfortable until she was forgiven.
Mrs. Frederick was one of those women who can make their anger felt
all over a house.  Walls and doors are no protection from it.

"You'd better go uptown and git the mail," said Cousin Stickles,
when Valancy went in.  "_I_ can't go--I feel all sorter peaky and
piny this spring.  I want you to stop at the drugstore and git me a
bottle of Redfern's Blood Bitters.  There's nothing like Redfern's
Bitters for building a body up.  Cousin James says the Purple Pills
are the best, but I know better.  My poor dear husband took
Redfern's Bitters right up to the day he died.  Don't let them
charge you more'n ninety cents.  I kin git it for that at the Port.
And what HAVE you been saying to your poor mother?  Do you ever
stop to think, Doss, that you kin only have one mother?"

"One is enough for me," thought Valancy undutifully, as she went
uptown.

She got Cousin Stickles' bottle of bitters and then she went to the
post-office and asked for her mail at the General Delivery.  Her
mother did not have a box.  They got too little mail to bother with
it.  Valancy did not expect any mail, except the Christian Times,
which was the only paper they took.  They hardly ever got any
letters.  But Valancy rather liked to stand in the office and watch
Mr. Carewe, the grey-bearded, Santa-Clausy old clerk, handing out
letters to the lucky people who did get them.  He did it with such
a detached, impersonal, Jove-like air, as if it did not matter in
the least to him what supernal joys or shattering horrors might be
in those letters for the people to whom they were addressed.
Letters had a fascination for Valancy, perhaps because she so
seldom got any.  In her Blue Castle exciting epistles, bound with
silk and sealed with crimson, were always being brought to her by
pages in livery of gold and blue, but in real life her only letters
were occasional perfunctory notes from relatives or an advertising
circular.

Consequently she was immensely surprised when Mr. Carewe, looking
even more Jovian than usual, poked a letter out to her.  Yes, it
was addressed to her plainly, in a fierce, black hand:  "Miss
Valancy Stirling, Elm Street, Deerwood"--and the postmark was
Montreal.  Valancy picked it up with a little quickening of her
breath.  Montreal!  It must be from Doctor Trent.  He had
remembered her, after all.

Valancy met Uncle Benjamin coming in as she was going out and was
glad the letter was safely in her bag.

"What," said Uncle Benjamin, "is the difference between a donkey
and a postage-stamp?"

"I don't know.  What?" answered Valancy dutifully.

"One you lick with a stick and the other you stick with a lick.
Ha, ha!"

Uncle Benjamin passed in, tremendously pleased with himself.

Cousin Stickles pounced on the Times when Valancy got home, but it
did not occur to her to ask if there were any letters.  Mrs.
Frederick would have asked it, but Mrs. Frederick's lips at present
were sealed.  Valancy was glad of this.  If her mother had asked if
there were any letters Valancy would have had to admit there was.
Then she would have had to let her mother and Cousin Stickles read
the letter and all would be discovered.

Her heart acted strangely on the way upstairs, and she sat down by
her window for a few minutes before opening her letter.  She felt
very guilty and deceitful.  She had never before kept a letter
secret from her mother.  Every letter she had ever written or
received had been read by Mrs. Frederick.  That had never mattered.
Valancy had never had anything to hide.  But this DID matter.  She
could not have any one see this letter.  But her fingers trembled
with a consciousness of wickedness and unfilial conduct as she
opened it--trembled a little, too, perhaps, with apprehension.  She
felt quite sure there was nothing seriously wrong with her heart
but--one never knew.

Dr. Trent's letter was like himself--blunt, abrupt, concise,
wasting no words.  Dr. Trent never beat about the bush.  "Dear Miss
Sterling"--and then a page of black, positive writing.  Valancy
seemed to read it at a glance; she dropped it on her lap, her face
ghost-white.

Dr. Trent told her that she had a very dangerous and fatal form of
heart disease--angina pectoris--evidently complicated with an
aneurism--whatever that was--and in the last stages.  He said,
without mincing matters, that nothing could be done for her.  If
she took great care of herself she might live a year--but she might
also die at any moment--Dr. Trent never troubled himself about
euphemisms.  She must be careful to avoid all excitement and all
severe muscular efforts.  She must eat and drink moderately, she
must never run, she must go upstairs and uphill with great care.
Any sudden jolt or shock might be fatal.  She was to get the
prescription he enclosed filled and carry it with her always,
taking a dose whenever her attacks came on.  And he was hers truly,
H. B. Trent.

Valancy sat for a long while by her window.  Outside was a world
drowned in the light of a spring afternoon--skies entrancingly
blue, winds perfumed and free, lovely, soft, blue hazes at the end
of every street.  Over at the railway station a group of young
girls was waiting for a train; she heard their gay laughter as they
chattered and joked.  The train roared in and roared out again.
But none of these things had any reality.  Nothing had any reality
except the fact that she had only another year to live.

When she was tired of sitting at the window she went over and lay
down on her bed, staring at the cracked, discoloured ceiling.  The
curious numbness that follows on a staggering blow possessed her.
She did not feel anything except a boundless surprise and
incredulity--behind which was the conviction that Dr. Trent knew
his business and that she, Valancy Stirling, who had never lived,
was about to die.

When the gong rang for supper Valancy got up and went downstairs
mechanically, from force of habit.  She wondered that she had been
let alone so long.  But of course her mother would not pay any
attention to her just now.  Valancy was thankful for this.  She
thought the quarrel over the rose-bush had been really, as Mrs.
Frederick herself might have said, Providential.  She could not eat
anything, but both Mrs. Frederick and Cousin Stickles thought this
was because she was deservedly unhappy over her mother's attitude,
and her lack of appetite was not commented on.  Valancy forced
herself to swallow a cup of tea and then sat and watched the others
eat, with an odd feeling that years had passed since she had sat
with them at the dinner-table.  She found herself smiling inwardly
to think what a commotion she could make if she chose.  Let her
merely tell them what was in Dr. Trent's letter and there would be
as much fuss made as if--Valancy thought bitterly--they really
cared two straws about her.

"Dr. Trent's housekeeper got word from him today," said Cousin
Stickles, so suddenly that Valancy jumped guiltily.  Was there
anything in thought waves?  "Mrs. Judd was talking to her uptown.
They think his son will recover, but Dr. Trent wrote that if he did
he was going to take him abroad as soon as he was able to travel
and wouldn't be back here for a year at least."

"That will not matter much to US," said Mrs. Frederick
majestically.  "He is not OUR doctor.  I would not"--here she
looked or seemed to look accusingly right through Valancy--"have
HIM to doctor a sick cat."

"May I go upstairs and lie down?" said Valancy faintly.  "I--I have
a headache."

"What has given you a headache?" asked Cousin Stickles, since Mrs.
Frederick would not.  The question has to be asked.  Valancy could
not be allowed to have headaches without interference.

"You ain't in the habit of having headaches.  I hope you're not
taking the mumps.  Here, try a spoonful of vinegar."

"Piffle!" said Valancy rudely, getting up from the table.  She did
not care just then if she were rude.  She had had to be so polite
all her life.

If it had been possible for Cousin Stickles to turn pale she would
have.  As it was not, she turned yellower.

"Are you sure you ain't feverish, Doss?  You sound like it.  You go
and get right into bed," said Cousin Stickles, thoroughly alarmed,
"and I'll come up and rub your forehead and the back of your neck
with Redfern's Liniment."

Valancy had reached the door, but she turned.  "I won't be rubbed
with Redfern's Liniment!" she said.

Cousin Stickles stared and gasped.  "What--what do you mean?"

"I said I wouldn't be rubbed with Redfern's Liniment," repeated
Valancy.  "Horrid, sticky stuff!  And it has the vilest smell of
any liniment I ever saw.  It's no good.  I want to be left alone,
that's all."

Valancy went out, leaving Cousin Stickles aghast.

"She's feverish--she MUST be feverish," ejaculated Cousin Stickles.

Mrs. Frederick went on eating her supper.  It did not matter
whether Valancy was or was not feverish.  Valancy had been guilty
of impertinence to HER.



CHAPTER VIII


Valancy did not sleep that night.  She lay awake all through the
long dark, hours--thinking--thinking.  She made a discovery that
surprised her: she, who had been afraid of almost everything in
life, was not afraid of death.  It did not seem in the least
terrible to her.  And she need not now be afraid of anything else.
Why had she been afraid of things?  Because of life.  Afraid of
Uncle Benjamin because of the menace of poverty in old age.  But
now she would never be old--neglected--tolerated.  Afraid of being
an old maid all her life.  But now she would not be an old maid
very long.  Afraid of offending her mother and her clan because she
had to live with and among them and couldn't live peaceably if she
didn't give in to them.  But now she hadn't.  Valancy felt a
curious freedom.

But she was still horribly afraid of one thing--the fuss the whole
jamfry of them would make when she told them.  Valancy shuddered at
the thought of it.  She couldn't endure it.  Oh, she knew so well
how it would be.  First there would be indignation--yes,
indignation on the part of Uncle James because she had gone to a
doctor--any doctor--without consulting HIM.  Indignation on the
part of her mother for being so sly and deceitful--"to your own
mother, Doss."  Indignation on the part of the whole clan because
she had not gone to Dr. Marsh.

Then would come the solicitude.  She would be taken to Dr. Marsh,
and when Dr. Marsh confirmed Dr. Trent's diagnosis she would be
taken to specialists in Toronto and Montreal.  Uncle Benjamin would
foot the bill with a splendid gesture of munificence in thus
assisting the widow and orphan, and talk forever after of the
shocking fees specialists charged for looking wise and saying they
couldn't do anything.  And when the specialists could do nothing
for her Uncle James would insist on her taking Purple Pills--"I've
known them to effect a cure when ALL the doctors had given up"--and
her mother would insist on Redfern's Blood Bitters, and Cousin
Stickles would insist on rubbing her over the heart every night
with Redfern's Liniment on the grounds that it MIGHT do good and
COULDN'T do harm; and everybody else would have some pet dope for
her to take.  Dr. Stalling would come to her and say solemnly, "You
are very ill.  Are you prepared for what may be before you?"--
almost as if he were going to shake his forefinger at her, the
forefinger that had not grown any shorter or less knobbly with age.
And she would be watched and checked like a baby and never let do
anything or go anywhere alone.  Perhaps she would not even be
allowed to sleep alone lest she die in her sleep.  Cousin Stickles
or her mother would insist on sharing her room and bed.  Yes,
undoubtedly they would.

It was this last thought that really decided Valancy.  She could
not put up with it and she wouldn't.  As the clock in the hall
below struck twelve Valancy suddenly and definitely made up her
mind that she would not tell anybody.  She had always been told,
ever since she could remember, that she must hide her feelings.
"It is not ladylike to have feelings," Cousin Stickles had once
told her disapprovingly.  Well, she would hide them with a
vengeance.

But though she was not afraid of death she was not indifferent to
it.  She found that she RESENTED it; it was not fair that she
should have to die when she had never lived.  Rebellion flamed up
in her soul as the dark hours passed by--not because she had no
future but because she had no past.

"I'm poor--I'm ugly--I'm a failure--and I'm near death," she
thought.  She could see her own obituary notice in the Deerwood
Weekly Times, copied into the Port Lawrence Journal.  "A deep gloom
was cast over Deerwood, etc., etc."--"leaves a large circle of
friends to mourn, etc., etc., etc."--lies, all lies.  Gloom,
forsooth!  Nobody would miss her.  Her death would not matter a
straw to anybody.  Not even her mother loved her--her mother who
had been so disappointed that she was not a boy--or at least, a
pretty girl.

Valancy reviewed her whole life between midnight and the early
spring dawn.  It was a very drab existence, but here and there an
incident loomed out with a significance out of all proportion to
its real importance.  These incidents were all unpleasant in one
way or another.  Nothing really pleasant had every happened to
Valancy.

"I've never had one wholly happy hour in my life--not one," she
thought.  "I've just been a colourless nonentity.  I remember
reading somewhere once that there is an hour in which a woman might
be happy all her life if she could but find it.  I've never found
my hour--never, never.  And I never will now.  If I could only have
had that hour I'd be willing to die."

Those significant incidents kept bobbing up in her mind like
unbidden ghosts, without any sequence of time or place.  For
instance, that time when, at sixteen, she had blued a tubful of
clothes too deeply.  And the time when, at eight, she had "stolen"
some raspberry jam from Aunt Wellington's pantry.  Valancy never
heard the last of those two misdemeanours.  At almost every clan
gathering they were raked up against her as jokes.  Uncle Benjamin
hardly ever missed re-telling the raspberry jam incident--he had
been the one to catch her, her face all stained and streaked.

"I have really done so few bad things that they have to keep
harping on the old ones," thought Valancy.  "Why, I've never even
had a quarrel with any one.  I haven't an enemy.  What a spineless
thing I must be not to have even one enemy!"

There was that incident of the dust-pile at school when she was
seven.  Valancy always recalled it when Dr. Stalling referred to
the text, "To him that hath shall be given and from him that hath
not shall be taken even that which he hath."  Other people might
puzzle over that text but it never puzzled Valancy.  The whole
relationship between herself and Olive, dating from the day of the
dust-pile, was a commentary on it.

She had been going to school a year, but Olive, who was a year
younger, had just begun and had about her all the glamour of "a new
girl" and an exceedingly pretty girl at that.  It was at recess and
all the girls, big and little, were out on the road in front of the
school making dust-piles.  The aim of each girl was to have the
biggest pile.  Valancy was good at making dust-piles--there was an
art in it--and she had secret hopes of leading.  But Olive, working
off by herself, was suddenly discovered to have a larger dust-pile
than anybody.  Valancy felt no jealousy.  Her dust-pile was quite
big enough to please her.  Then one of the older girls had an
inspiration.

"Let's put all our dust on Olive's pile and make a tremendous one,"
she exclaimed.

A frenzy seemed to seize the girls.  They swooped down on the dust-
piles with pails and shovels and in a few seconds Olive's pile was
a veritable pyramid.  In vain Valancy, with scrawny, outstretched
little arms, tried to protect hers.  She was ruthlessly swept
aside, her dust-pile scooped up and poured on Olive's.  Valancy
turned away resolutely and began building another dust-pile.  Again
a bigger girl pounced on it.  Valancy stood before it, flushed,
indignant, arms outspread.

"Don't take it," she pleaded.  "Please don't take it."

"But WHY?" demanded the older girl.  "Why won't you help to build
Olives bigger?"

"I want my own little dust-pile," said Valancy piteously.

Her plea went unheeded.  While she argued with one girl another
scraped up her dust-pile.  Valancy turned away, her heart swelling,
her eyes full of tears.

"Jealous--you're jealous!" said the girls mockingly.

"You were very selfish," said her mother coldly, when Valancy told
her about it at night.  That was the first and last time Valancy
had ever taken any of her troubles to her mother.

Valancy was neither jealous nor selfish.  It was only that she
wanted a dust-pile of her own--small or big mattered not.  A team
of horses came down the street--Olive's dust pile was scattered
over the roadway--the bell rang--the girls trooped into school and
had forgotten the whole affair before they reached their seats.
Valancy never forgot it.  To this day she resented it in her secret
soul.  But was it not symbolical of her life?

"I've never been able to have my own dust-pile," thought Valancy.

The enormous red moon she had seen rising right at the end of the
street one autumn evening of her sixth year.  She had been sick and
cold with the awful, uncanny horror of it.  So near to her.  So
big.  She had run in trembling to her mother and her mother had
laughed at her.  She had gone to bed and hidden her face under the
clothes in terror lest she might look at the window and see that
horrible moon glaring in at her through it.

The boy who had tried to kiss her at a party when she was fifteen.
She had not let him--she had evaded him and run.  He was the only
boy who had ever tried to kiss her.  Now, fourteen years later,
Valancy found herself wishing that she had let him.

The time she had been made to apologise to Olive for something she
hadn't done.  Olive had said that Valancy had pushed her into the
mud and spoiled her new shoes ON PURPOSE.  Valancy knew she hadn't.
It had been an accident--and even that wasn't her fault--but nobody
would believe her.  She had to apologise--and kiss Olive to "make
up."  The injustice of it burned in her soul tonight.

That summer when Olive had the most beautiful hat, trimmed with
creamy yellow net, with a wreath of red roses and little ribbon
bows under the chin.  Valancy had wanted a hat like that more than
she had ever wanted anything.  She pleaded for one and had been
laughed at--all summer she had to wear a horrid little brown sailor
with elastic that cut behind her ears.  None of the girls would go
around with her because she was so shabby--nobody but Olive.
People had thought Olive so sweet and unselfish.

"I was an excellent foil for her," thought Valancy.  "Even then she
knew that."

Valancy had tried to win a prize for attendance in Sunday School
once.  But Olive won it.  There were so many Sundays Valancy had to
stay home because she had colds.  She had once tried to "say a
piece" in school one Friday afternoon and had broken down in it.
Olive was a good reciter and never got stuck.

The night she had spent in Port Lawrence with Aunt Isabel when she
was ten.  Byron Stirling was there; from Montreal, twelve years
old, conceited, clever.  At family prayers in the morning Byron had
reached across and given Valancy's thin arm such a savage pinch
that she screamed out with pain.  After prayers were over she was
summoned to Aunt Isabel's bar of judgment.  But when she said Byron
had pinched her Byron denied it.  He said she cried out because the
kitten scratched her.  He said she had put the kitten up on her
chair and was playing with it when she should have been listening
to Uncle David's prayer.  He was BELIEVED.  In the Stirling clan
the boys were always believed before the girls.  Valancy was sent
home in disgrace because of her exceeding bad behavior during
family prayers and she was not asked to Aunt Isabel's again for
many moons.

The time Cousin Betty Stirling was married.  Somehow Valancy got
wind of the fact that Betty was going to ask her to be one of her
bridesmaids.  Valancy was secretly uplifted.  It would be a
delightful thing to be a bridesmaid.  And of course she would have
to have a new dress for it--a pretty new dress--a pink dress.
Betty wanted her bridesmaids to dress in pink.

But Betty had never asked her, after all.  Valancy couldn't guess
why, but long after her secret tears of disappointment had been
dried Olive told her.  Betty, after much consultation and
reflection, had decided that Valancy was too insignificant--she
would "spoil the effect."  That was nine years ago.  But tonight
Valancy caught her breath with the old pain and sting of it.

That day in her eleventh year when her mother had badgered her into
confessing something she had never done.  Valancy had denied it for
a long time but eventually for peace' sake she had given in and
pleaded guilty.  Mrs. Frederick was always making people lie by
pushing them into situations where they HAD to lie.  Then her
mother had made her kneel down on parlour floor, between herself
and Cousin Stickles, and say, "O God, please forgive me for not
speaking the truth."  Valancy had said it, but as she rose from her
knees she muttered, "But O God, YOU know I did speak the truth."
Valancy had not then heard of Galileo but her fate was similar to
his.  She was punished just as severely as if she hadn't confessed
and prayed.

The winter she went to dancing-school.  Uncle James had decreed she
should go and had paid for her lessons.  How she had looked forward
to it!  And how she had hated it!  She had never had a voluntary
partner.  The teacher always had to tell some boy to dance with
her, and generally he had been sulky about it.  Yet Valancy was a
good dancer, as light on her feet as thistledown.  Olive, who never
lacked eager partners, was heavy.

The affair of the button-string, when she was ten.  All the girls
in school had button-strings.  Olive had a very long one with a
great many beautiful buttons.  Valancy had one.  Most of the
buttons on it were very commonplace, but she had six beauties that
had come off Grandmother Stirling's wedding-gown--sparkling buttons
of gold and glass, much more beautiful than any Olive had.  Their
possession conferred a certain distinction on Valancy.  She knew
every little girl in school envied her the exclusive possession of
those beautiful buttons.  When Olive saw them on the button-string
she had looked at them narrowly but said nothing--then.  The next
day Aunt Wellington had come to Elm Street and told Mrs. Frederick
that she thought Olive should have some of those buttons--
Grandmother Stirling was just as much Wellington's mother as
Frederick's.  Mrs. Frederick had agreed amiably.  She could not
afford to fall out with Aunt Wellington.  Moreover, the matter was
of no importance whatever.  Aunt Wellington carried off four of the
buttons, generously leaving two for Valancy.  Valancy had torn
these from her string and flung them on the floor--she had not yet
learned that it was unladylike to have feelings--and had been sent
supperless to bed for the exhibition.

The night of Margaret Blunt's party.  She had made such pathetic
efforts to be pretty that night.  Rob Walker was to be there; and
two nights before, on the moonlit verandah of Uncle Herbert's
cottage at Mistawis, Rob had really seemed attracted to her.  At
Margaret's party Rob never even asked her to dance--did not notice
her at all.  She was a wallflower, as usual.  That, of course, was
years ago.  People in Deerwood had long since given up inviting
Valancy to dances.  But to Valancy its humiliation and disappointment
were of the other day.  Her face burned in the darkness as she
recalled herself, sitting there with her pitifully crimped, thin
hair and the cheeks she had pinched for an hour before coming, in an
effort to make them red.  All that came of it was a wild story that
Valancy Stirling was rouged at Margaret Blunt's party.  In those
days in Deerwood that was enough to wreck your character forever.
It did not wreck Valancy's, or even damage it.  People knew SHE
couldn't be fast if she tried.  They only laughed at her.

"I've had nothing but a second-hand existence," decided Valancy.
"All the great emotions of life have passed me by.  I've never even
had a grief.  And have I ever really loved anybody?  Do I really
love Mother?  No, I don't.  That's the truth, whether it is
disgraceful or not.  I don't love her--I've never loved her.
What's worse, I don't even like her.  So I don't know anything
about any kind of love.  My life has been empty--empty.  Nothing is
worse than emptiness.  Nothing!"  Valancy ejaculated the last
"nothing" aloud passionately.  Then she moaned and stopped thinking
about anything for a while.  One of her attacks of pain had come
on.

When it was over something had happened to Valancy--perhaps the
culmination of the process that had been going on in her mind ever
since she had read Dr. Trent's letter.  It was three o'clock in the
morning--the wisest and most accursed hour of the clock.  But
sometimes it sets us free.

"I've been trying to please other people all my life and failed,"
she said.  "After this I shall please myself.  I shall never
pretend anything again.  I've breathed an atmosphere of fibs and
pretences and evasions all my life.  What a luxury it will be to
tell the truth!  I may not be able to do much that I want to do but
I won't do another thing that I don't want to do.  Mother can pout
for weeks--I shan't worry over it.  'Despair is a free man--hope is
a slave.'"

Valancy got up and dressed, with a deepening of that curious sense
of freedom.  When she had finished with her hair she opened the
window and hurled the jar of potpourri over into the next lot.  It
smashed gloriously against the schoolgirl complexion on the old
carriage-shop.

"I'm sick of fragrance of dead things," said Valancy.



CHAPTER IX


Uncle Herbert and Aunt Alberta's silver wedding was delicately
referred to among the Stirlings during the following weeks as "the
time we first noticed poor Valancy was--a little--YOU understand?"

Not for words would any of the Stirlings have said out and out at
first that Valancy had gone mildly insane or even that her mind was
slightly deranged.  Uncle Benjamin was considered to have gone
entirely too far when he had ejaculated, "She's dippy--I tell you,
she's dippy," and was only excused because of the outrageousness of
Valancy's conduct at the aforsaid wedding dinner.

But Mrs. Frederick and Cousin Stickles had noticed a few things
that made them uneasy BEFORE the dinner.  It had begun with the
rosebush, of course; and Valancy never was really "quite right"
again.  She did not seem to worry in the least over the fact that
her mother was not speaking to her.  You would never suppose she
noticed it at all.  She had flatly refused to take either Purple
Pills or Redfern's Bitters.  She had announced coolly that she did
not intend to answer to the name of "Doss" any longer.  She had
told Cousin Stickles that she wished she would give up wearing that
brooch with Cousin Artemas Stickles' hair in it.  She had moved her
bed in her room to the opposite corner.  She had read Magic of
Wings Sunday afternoon.  When Cousin Stickles had rebuked her
Valancy had said indifferently, "Oh, I forgot it was Sunday"--and
HAD GONE ON READING IT.

Cousin Stickles had seen a terrible thing--she had caught Valancy
sliding down the bannister.  Cousin Stickles did not tell Mrs.
Frederick this--poor Amelia was worried enough as it was.  But it
was Valancy's announcement on Saturday night that she was not going
to go to the Anglican church any more that broke through Mrs.
Frederick's stony silence.

"Not going to church any more!  Doss, have you absolutely taken
leave--"

"Oh, I'm going to church," said Valancy airily.  "I'm going to the
Presbyterian church.  But to the Anglican church I will not go."

This was even worse.  Mrs. Frederick had recourse to tears, having
found outraged majesty had ceased to be effective.

"What have you got against the Anglican church?" she sobbed.

"Nothing--only just that you've always made me go there.  If you'd
made me go to the Presbyterian church I'd want to go to the
Anglican."

"Is that a nice thing to say to your mother?  Oh, how true it is
that it is sharper than a serpent's tooth to have a thankless
child."

"Is that a nice thing to say to your daughter?" said unrepentant
Valancy.

So Valancy's behaviour at the silver wedding was not quite the
surprise to Mrs. Frederick and Christine Stickles that it was to
the rest.  They were doubtful about the wisdom of taking her, but
concluded it would "make talk" if they didn't.  Perhaps she would
behave herself, and so far no outsider suspected there was anything
queer about her.  By a special mercy of Providence it had poured
torrents Sunday morning, so Valancy had not carried out her hideous
threat of going to the Presbyterian church.

Valancy would not have cared in the least if they had left her at
home.  These family celebrations were all hopelessly dull.  But the
Stirlings always celebrated everything.  It was a long-established
custom.  Even Mrs. Frederick gave a dinner party on her wedding
anniversary and Cousin Stickles had friends in to supper on her
birthday.  Valancy hated these entertainments because they had to
pinch and save and contrive for weeks afterwards to pay for them.
But she wanted to go to the silver wedding.  It would hurt Uncle
Herbert's feelings if she stayed away, and she rather liked Uncle
Herbert.  Besides, she wanted to look over all her relatives from
her new angle.  It would be an excellent place to make public her
declaration of independence if occasion offered.

"Put on your brown silk dress," said Mrs. Stirling.

As if there were anything else to put on!  Valancy had only the one
festive dress--that snuffy-brown silk Aunt Isabel had given her.
Aunt Isabel had decreed that Valancy should never wear colours.
They did not become her.  When she was young they allowed her to
wear white, but that had been tacitly dropped for some years.
Valancy put on the brown silk.  It had a high collar and long
sleeves.  She had never had a dress with low neck and elbow
sleeves, although they had been worn, even in Deerwood, for over a
year.  But she did not do her hair pompadour.  She knotted it on
her neck and pulled it out over her ears.  She thought it became
her--only the little knot was so absurdly small.  Mrs. Frederick
resented the hair but decided it was wisest to say nothing on the
eve of the party.  It was so important that Valancy should be kept
in good humour, if possible, until it was over.  Mrs. Frederick did
not reflect that this was the first time in her life that she had
thought it necessary to consider Valancy's humours.  But then
Valancy had never been "queer" before.

On their way to Uncle Herbert's--Mrs. Frederick and Cousin Stickles
walking in front, Valancy trotting meekly along behind--Roaring
Abel drove past them.  Drunk as usual but not in the roaring stage.
Just drunk enough to be excessively polite.  He raised his
disreputable old tartan cap with the air of a monarch saluting his
subjects and swept them a grand bow, Mrs. Frederick and Cousin
Stickles dared not cut Roaring Abel altogether.  He was the only
person in Deerwood who could be got to do odd jobs of carpentering
and repairing when they needed to be done, so it would not do to
offend him.  But they responded with only the stiffest, slightest
of bows.  Roaring Abel must be kept in his place.

Valancy, behind them, did a thing they were fortunately spared
seeing.  She smiled gaily and waved her hand to Roaring Abel.  Why
not?  She had always liked the old sinner.  He was such a jolly,
picturesque, unashamed reprobate and stood out against the drab
respectability of Deerwood and its customs like a flame-red flag of
revolt and protest.  Only a few nights ago Abel had gone through
Deerwood in the wee sma's, shouting oaths at the top of his
stentorian voice which could be heard for miles, and lashing his
horse into a furious gallop as he tore along prim, proper Elm
Street.

"Yelling and blaspheming like a fiend," shuddered Cousin Stickles
at the breakfast-table.

"I cannot understand why the judgment of the Lord has not fallen
upon that man long ere this," said Mrs. Frederick petulantly, as if
she thought Providence was very dilatory and ought to have a gentle
reminder.

"He'll be picked up dead some morning--he'll fall under his horse's
hoofs and be trampled to death," said Cousin Stickles reassuringly.

Valancy had said nothing, of course; but she wondered to herself if
Roaring Abel's periodical sprees were not his futile protest
against the poverty and drudgery and monotony of his existence.
SHE went on dream sprees in her Blue Castle.  Roaring Abel, having
no imagination, could not do that.  HIS escapes from reality had to
be concrete.  So she waved at him today with a sudden fellow
feeling, and Roaring Abel, not too drunk to be astonished, nearly
fell off his seat in his amazement.

By this time they had reached Maple Avenue and Uncle Herbert's
house, a large, pretentious structure peppered with meaningless bay
windows and excrescent porches.  A house that always looked like a
stupid, prosperous, self-satisfied man with warts on his face.

"A house like that," said Valancy solemnly, "is a blasphemy."

Mrs. Frederick was shaken to her soul.  What had Valancy said?  Was
it profane?  Or only just queer?  Mrs. Frederick took off her hat
in Aunt Alberta's spare-room with trembling hands.  She made one
more feeble attempt to avert disaster.  She held Valancy back on
the landing as Cousin Stickles went downstairs.

"Won't you try to remember you're a lady?" she pleaded.

"Oh, if there were only any hope of being able to forget it!" said
Valancy wearily.

Mrs. Frederick felt that she had not deserved this from Providence.



CHAPTER X


"Bless this food to our use and consecrate our lives to Thy
service," said Uncle Herbert briskly.

Aunt Wellington frowned.  She always considered Herbert's graces
entirely too short and "flippant."  A grace, to be a grace in Aunt
Wellington's eyes, had to be at least three minutes long and
uttered in an unearthly tone, between a groan and a chant.  As a
protest she kept her head bent a perceptible time after all the
rest had been lifted.  When she permitted herself to sit upright
she found Valancy looking at her.  Ever afterwards Aunt Wellington
averred that she had known from that moment that there was
something wrong with Valancy.  In those queer, slanted eyes of
hers--"we should always have known she was not entirely RIGHT with
eyes like that"--there was an odd gleam of mockery and amusement--
as if Valancy were laughing at HER.  Such a thing was unthinkable,
of course.  Aunt Wellington at once ceased to think it.

Valancy was enjoying herself.  She had never enjoyed herself at a
"family reunion" before.  In social functions, as in childish
games, she had only "filled in."  Her clan had always considered
her very dull.  She had no parlour tricks.  And she had been in the
habit of taking refuge from the boredom of family parties in her
Blue Castle, which resulted in an absent-mindedness that increased
her reputation for dullness and vacuity.

"She has no social presence whatever," Aunt Wellington had decreed
once and for all.  Nobody dreamed that Valancy was dumb in their
presence merely because she was afraid of them.  Now she was no
longer afraid of them.  The shackles had been stricken off her
soul.  She was quite prepared to talk if occasion offered.
Meanwhile she was giving herself such freedom of thought as she had
never dared to take before.  She let herself go with a wild, inner
exultation, as Uncle Herbert carved the turkey.  Uncle Herbert gave
Valancy a second look that day.  Being a man, he didn't know what
she had done to her hair, but he thought surprisedly that Doss was
not such a bad-looking girl, after all; and he put an extra piece
of white meat on her plate.

"What herb is most injurious to a young lady's beauty?" propounded
Uncle Benjamin by way of starting conversation--"loosening things
up a bit," as he would have said.

Valancy, whose duty it was to say, "What?" did not say it.  Nobody
else said it, so Uncle Benjamin, after an expectant pause, had to
answer, "Thyme," and felt that his riddle had fallen flat.  He
looked resentfully at Valancy, who had never failed him before, but
Valancy did not seem even to be aware of him.  She was gazing
around the table, examining relentlessly every one in this
depressing assembly of sensible people and watching their little
squirms with a detached, amused smile.

So these were the people she had always held in reverence and fear.
She seemed to see them with new eyes.

Big, capable, patronising, voluble Aunt Mildred, who thought
herself the cleverest woman in the clan, her husband a little lower
than the angels and her children wonders.  Had not her son, Howard,
been all through teething at eleven months?  And could she not tell
you the best way to do everything, from cooking mushrooms to
picking up a snake?  What a bore she was!  What ugly moles she had
on her face!

Cousin Gladys, who was always praising her son, who had died young,
and always fighting with her living one.  She had neuritis--or what
she called neuritis.  It jumped about from one part of her body to
another.  It was a convenient thing.  If anybody wanted her to go
somewhere she didn't want to go she had neuritis in her legs.  And
always if any mental effort was required she could have neuritis in
her head.  You can't THINK with neuritis in your head, my dear.

"What an old humbug you are!" thought Valancy impiously.

Aunt Isabel.  Valancy counted her chins.  Aunt Isabel was the
critic of the clan.  She had always gone about squashing people
flat.  More members of it than Valancy were afraid of her.  She
had, it was conceded, a biting tongue.

"I wonder what would happen to your face if you ever smiled,"
speculated Valancy, unblushingly.

Second Cousin Sarah Taylor, with her great, pale, expressionless
eyes, who was noted for the variety of her pickle recipes and for
nothing else.  So afraid of saying something indiscreet that she
never said anything worth listening to.  So proper that she blushed
when she saw the advertisement picture of a corset and had put a
dress on her Venus de Milo statuette which made it look "real
tasty."

Little Cousin Georgiana.  Not such a bad little soul.  But dreary--
very.  Always looking as if she had just been starched and ironed.
Always afraid to let herself go.  The only thing she really enjoyed
was a funeral.  You knew where you were with a corpse.  Nothing
more could happen to IT.  But while there was life there was fear.

Uncle James.  Handsome, black, with his sarcastic, trap-like mouth
and iron-grey side-burns, whose favourite amusement was to write
controversial letters to the Christian Times, attacking Modernism.
Valancy always wondered if he looked as solemn when he was asleep
as he did when awake.  No wonder his wife had died young.  Valancy
remembered her.  A pretty, sensitive thing.  Uncle James had denied
her everything she wanted and showered on her everything she didn't
want.  He had killed her--quite legally.  She had been smothered
and starved.

Uncle Benjamin, wheezy, pussy-mouthed.  With great pouches under
eyes that held nothing in reverence.

Uncle Wellington.  Long, pallid face, thin, pale-yellow hair--"one
of the fair Stirlings"--thin, stooping body, abominably high
forehead with such ugly wrinkles, and "eyes about as intelligent as
a fish's," thought Valancy.  "Looks like a cartoon of himself."

Aunt Wellington.  Named Mary but called by her husband's name to
distinguish her from Great-aunt Mary.  A massive, dignified,
permanent lady.  Splendidly arranged, iron-grey hair.  Rich,
fashionable beaded dress.  Had HER moles removed by electrolysis--
which Aunt Mildred thought was a wicked evasion of the purposes of
God.

Uncle Herbert, with his spiky grey hair.  Aunt Alberta, who twisted
her mouth so unpleasantly in talking and had a great reputation for
unselfishness because she was always giving up a lot of things she
didn't want.  Valancy let them off easily in her judgment because
she liked them, even if they were in Milton's expressive phrase,
"stupidly good."  But she wondered for what inscrutable reason Aunt
Alberta had seen fit to tie a black velvet ribbon around each of
her chubby arms above the elbow.

Then she looked across the table at Olive.  Olive, who had been
held up to her as a paragon of beauty, behaviour and success as
long as she could remember.  "Why can't you hold yourself like
Olive, Doss?  Why can't you stand correctly like Olive, Doss?  Why
can't you speak prettily like Olive, Doss?  Why can't you make an
effort, Doss?"

Valancy's elfin eyes lost their mocking glitter and became pensive
and sorrowful.  You could not ignore or disdain Olive.  It was
quite impossible to deny that she was beautiful and effective and
sometimes she was a little intelligent.  Her mouth might be a
trifle heavy--she might show her fine, white, regular teeth rather
too lavishly when she smiled.  But when all was said and done,
Olive justified Uncle Benjamin's summing up--"a stunning girl."
Yes, Valancy agreed in her heart, Olive was stunning.

Rich, golden-brown hair, elaborately dressed, with a sparkling
bandeau holding its glossy puffs in place; large, brilliant blue
eyes and thick silken lashes; face of rose and bare neck of snow,
rising above her gown; great pearl bubbles in her ears; the blue-
white diamond flame on her long, smooth, waxen finger with its
rosy, pointed nail.  Arms of marble, gleaming through green chiffon
and shadow lace.  Valancy felt suddenly thankful that her own
scrawny arms were decently swathed in brown silk.  Then she resumed
her tabulation of Olive's charms.

Tall.  Queenly.  Confident.  Everything that Valancy was NOT.
Dimples, too, in cheeks and chin.  "A woman with dimples always
gets her own way," thought Valancy, in a recurring spasm of
bitterness at the fate which had denied her even one dimple.

Olive was only a year younger than Valancy, though a stranger would
have thought that there was at least ten years between them.  But
nobody ever dreaded old maidenhood for her.  Olive had been
surrounded by a crowd of eager beaus since her early teens, just as
her mirror was always surrounded by a fringe of cards, photographs,
programmes and invitations.  At eighteen, when she had graduated
from Havergal College, Olive had been engaged to Will Desmond,
lawyer in embryo.  Will Desmond had died and Olive had mourned for
him properly for two years.  When she was twenty-three she had a
hectic affair with Donald Jackson.  But Aunt and Uncle Wellington
disapproved of that and in the end Olive dutifully gave him up.
Nobody in the Stirling clan--whatever outsiders might say--hinted
that she did so because Donald himself was cooling off.  However
that might be, Olive's third venture met with everybody's approval.
Cecil Price was clever and handsome and "one of the Port Lawrence
Prices."  Olive had been engaged to him for three years.  He had
just graduated in civil engineering and they were to be married as
soon as he landed a contract.  Olive's hope chest was full to
overflowing with exquisite things and Olive had already confided to
Valancy what her wedding-dress was to be.  Ivory silk draped with
lace, white satin court train, lined with pale green georgette,
heirloom veil of Brussels lace.  Valancy knew also--though Olive
had not told her--that the bridesmaids were selected and that she
was not among them.

Valancy had, after a fashion, always been Olive's confidante--
perhaps because she was the only girl in the connection who could
not bore Olive with return confidences.  Olive always told Valancy
all the details of her love affairs, from the days when the little
boys in school used to "persecute" her with love letters.  Valancy
could not comfort herself by thinking these affairs mythical.
Olive really had them.  Many men had gone mad over her besides the
three fortunate ones.

"I don't know what the poor idiots see in me, that drives them to
make such double idiots of themselves," Olive was wont to say.
Valancy would have liked to say, "I don't either," but truth and
diplomacy both restrained her.  She DID know, perfectly well.
Olive Stirling was one of the girls about whom men do go mad just
as indubitably as she, Valancy, was one of the girls at whom no man
ever looked twice.

"And yet," thought Valancy, summing her up with a new and merciless
conclusiveness, "she's like a dewless morning.  There's SOMETHING
lacking."



CHAPTER XI


Meanwhile the dinner in its earlier stages was dragging its slow
length along true to Stirling form.  The room was chilly, in spite
of the calendar, and Aunt Alberta had the gas-logs lighted.
Everybody in the clan envied her those gas-logs except Valancy.
Glorious open fires blazed in every room of her Blue Castle when
autumnal nights were cool, but she would have frozen to death in it
before she would have committed the sacrilege of a gas-log.  Uncle
Herbert made his hardy perennial joke when he helped Aunt
Wellington to the cold meat--"Mary, will you have a little lamb?"
Aunt Mildred told the same old story of once finding a lost ring in
a turkey's crop.  Uncle Benjamin told HIS favourite prosy tale of
how he had once chased and punished a now famous man for stealing
apples.  Second Cousin Jane described all her sufferings with an
ulcerating tooth.  Aunt Wellington admired the pattern of Aunt
Alberta's silver teaspoons and lamented the fact that one of her
own had been lost.

"It spoiled the set.  I could never get it matched.  And it was my
wedding-present from dear old Aunt Matilda."

Aunt Isabel thought the seasons were changing and couldn't imagine
what had become of our good, old-fashioned springs.  Cousin
Georgiana, as usual, discussed the last funeral and wondered,
audibly, "which of us will be the next to pass away."  Cousin
Georgiana could never say anything as blunt as "die."  Valancy
thought she could tell her, but didn't.  Cousin Gladys, likewise as
usual, had a grievance.  Her visiting nephews had nipped all the
buds off her house-plants and chivied her brood of fancy chickens--
"squeezed some of them actually to death, my dear."

"Boys will be boys," reminded Uncle Herbert tolerantly.

"But they needn't be ramping, rampageous animals," retorted Cousin
Gladys, looking round the table for appreciation of her wit.
Everybody smiled except Valancy.  Cousin Gladys remembered that.  A
few minutes later, when Ellen Hamilton was being discussed, Cousin
Gladys spoke of her as "one of those shy, plain girls who can't get
husbands," and glanced significantly at Valancy.

Uncle James thought the conversation was sagging to a rather low
plane of personal gossip.  He tried to elevate it by starting an
abstract discussion on "the greatest happiness."  Everybody was
asked to state his or her idea of "the greatest happiness."

Aunt Mildred thought the greatest happiness--for a woman--was to be
"a loving and beloved wife and mother."  Aunt Wellington thought it
would be to travel in Europe.  Olive thought it would be to be a
great singer like Tetrazzini.  Cousin Gladys remarked mournfully
that HER greatest happiness would be to be free--absolutely free--
from neuritis.  Cousin Georgiana's greatest happiness would be "to
have her dear, dead brother Richard back."  Aunt Alberta remarked
vaguely that the greatest happiness was to be found in "the poetry
of life" and hastily gave some directions to her maid to prevent
any one asking her what she meant.  Mrs. Frederick said the
greatest happiness was to spend your life in loving service for
others, and Cousin Stickles and Aunt Isabel agreed with her--Aunt
Isabel with a resentful air, as if she thought Mrs. Frederick had
taken the wind out of her sails by saying it first.  "We are all
too prone," continued Mrs. Frederick, determined not to lose so
good an opportunity, "to live in selfishness, worldliness and sin."
The other women all felt rebuked for their low ideals, and Uncle
James had a conviction that the conversation had been uplifted with
a vengeance.

"The greatest happiness," said Valancy suddenly and distinctly, "is
to sneeze when you want to."

Everybody stared.  Nobody felt it safe to say anything.  Was
Valancy trying to be funny?  It was incredible.  Mrs. Frederick,
who had been breathing easier since the dinner had progressed so
far without any outbreak on the part of Valancy began to tremble
again.  But she deemed it the part of prudence to say nothing.
Uncle Benjamin was not so prudent.  He rashly rushed in where Mrs.
Frederick feared to tread.

"Doss," he chuckled, "what is the difference between a young girl
and an old maid?"

"One is happy and careless and the other is cappy and hairless,"
said Valancy.  "You have asked that riddle at least fifty times in
my recollection, Uncle Ben.  Why don't you hunt up some new riddles
if riddle you MUST?  It is such a fatal mistake to try to be funny
if you don't succeed."

Uncle Benjamin stared foolishly.  Never in his life had he,
Benjamin Stirling, of Stirling and Frost, been spoken to so.  And
by Valancy of all people!  He looked feebly around the table to see
what the others thought of it.  Everybody was looking rather blank.
Poor Mrs. Frederick had shut her eyes.  And her lips moved
tremblingly--as if she were praying.  Perhaps she was.  The
situation was so unprecedented that nobody knew how to meet it.
Valancy went on calmly eating her salad as if nothing out of the
usual had occurred.

Aunt Alberta, to save her dinner, plunged into an account of how a
dog had bitten her recently.  Uncle James, to back her up, asked
where the dog had bitten her.

"Just a little below the Catholic church," said Aunt Alberta.

At that point Valancy laughed.  Nobody else laughed.  What was
there to laugh at?

"Is that a vital part?" asked Valancy.

"What do you mean?" said bewildered Aunt Alberta, and Mrs.
Frederick was almost driven to believe that she had served God all
her years for naught.

Aunt Isabel concluded that it was up to her to suppress Valancy.

"Doss, you are horribly thin," she said.  "You are ALL corners.  Do
you EVER try to fatten up a little?"

"No."  Valancy was not asking quarter or giving it.  "But I can
tell you where you'll find a beauty parlour in Port Lawrence where
they can reduce the number of your chins."

"Val-an-cy!"  The protest was wrung from Mrs. Frederick.  She meant
her tone to be stately and majestic, as usual, but it sounded more
like an imploring whine.  And she did not say "Doss."

"She's feverish," said Cousin Stickles to Uncle Benjamin in an
agonised whisper.  "We've thought she's seemed feverish for several
days."

"She's gone dippy, in my opinion," growled Uncle Benjamin.  "If
not, she ought to be spanked.  Yes, spanked."

"You can't spank her."  Cousin Stickles was much agitated.  "She's
twenty-nine years old."

"So there is that advantage, at least, in being twenty-nine," said
Valancy, whose ears had caught this aside.

"Doss," said Uncle Benjamin, "when I am dead you may say what you
please.  As long as I am alive I demand to be treated with
respect."

"Oh, but you know we're all dead," said Valancy, "the whole
Stirling clan.  Some of us are buried and some aren't--yet.  That
is the only difference."

"Doss," said Uncle Benjamin, thinking it might cow Valancy, "do you
remember the time you stole the raspberry jam?"

Valancy flushed scarlet--with suppressed laughter, not shame.  She
had been sure Uncle Benjamin would drag that jam in somehow.

"Of course I do," she said.  "It was good jam.  I've always been
sorry I hadn't time to eat more of it before you found me.  Oh,
LOOK at Aunt Isabel's profile on the wall.  Did you ever see
anything so funny?"

Everybody looked, including Aunt Isabel herself which of course,
destroyed it.  But Uncle Herbert said kindly, "I--I wouldn't eat
any more if I were you, Doss.  It isn't that I grudge it--but don't
you think it would be better for yourself?  Your--your stomach
seems a little out of order."

"Don't worry about my stomach, old dear," said Valancy.  "It is all
right.  I'm going to keep right on eating.  It's so seldom I get
the chance of a satisfying meal."

It was the first time any one had been called "old dear" in
Deerwood.  The Stirlings thought Valancy had invented the phrase
and they were afraid of her from that moment.  There was something
so uncanny about such an expression.  But in poor Mrs. Frederick's
opinion the reference to a satisfying meal was the worst thing
Valancy had said yet.  Valancy had always been a disappointment to
her.  Now she was a disgrace.  She thought she would have to get up
and go away from the table.  Yet she dared not leave Valancy there.

Aunt Alberta's maid came in to remove the salad plates and bring in
the dessert.  It was a welcome diversion.  Everybody brightened up
with a determination to ignore Valancy and talk as if she wasn't
there.  Uncle Wellington mentioned Barney Snaith.  Eventually
somebody did mention Barney Snaith at every Stirling function,
Valancy reflected.  Whatever he was, he was an individual that
could not be ignored.  She resigned herself to listen.  There was a
subtle fascination in the subject for her, though she had not yet
faced this fact.  She could feel her pulses beating to her finger-
tips.

Of course they abused him.  Nobody ever had a good word to say of
Barney Snaith.  All the old, wild tales were canvassed--the
defaulting cashier-counterfeiter-infidel-murderer-in-hiding legends
were thrashed out.  Uncle Wellington was very indignant that such a
creature should be allowed to exist at all in the neighbourhood of
Deerwood.  He didn't know what the police at Port Lawrence were
thinking of.  Everybody would be murdered in their beds some night.
It was a shame that he should be allowed to be at large after all
that he had done.

"What HAS he done?" asked Valancy suddenly.

Uncle Wellington stared at her, forgetting that she was to be
ignored.

"Done!  Done!  He's done EVERYTHING."

"WHAT has he done?" repeated Valancy inexorably.  "What do you KNOW
that he has done?  You're always running him down.  And what has
ever been proved against him?"

"I don't argue with women," said Uncle Wellington.  "And I don't
need proof.  When a man hides himself up there on an island in
Muskoka, year in and year out, and nobody can find out where he
came from or how he lives, or what he does there, THAT'S proof
enough.  Find a mystery and you find a crime."

"The very idea of a man named Snaith!" said Second Cousin Sarah.
"Why, the name itself is enough to condemn him!"

"I wouldn't like to meet him in a dark lane," shivered Cousin
Georgiana.

"What do you suppose he would do to you?" asked Valancy.

"Murder me," said Cousin Georgiana solemnly.

"Just for the fun of it?" suggested Valancy.

"Exactly," said Cousin Georgiana unsuspiciously.  "When there is so
much smoke there must be some fire.  I was afraid he was a criminal
when he came here first.  I FELT he had something to hide.  I am
not often mistaken in my intuitions."

"Criminal!  Oh course he's a criminal," said Uncle Wellington.
"Nobody doubts it"--glaring at Valancy.  "Why, they say he served a
term in the penitentiary for embezzlement.  I don't doubt it.  And
they say he's in with that gang that are perpetrating all those
bank robberies round the country."

"WHO say?" asked Valancy.

Uncle Wellington knotted his ugly forehead at her.  What had got
into this confounded girl, anyway?  He ignored the question.

"He has the identical look of a jail-bird," snapped Uncle Benjamin.
"I noticed it the first time I saw him."



     "'A fellow by the hand of nature marked,
       Quoted and sighed to do a deed of shame',"


declaimed Uncle James.  He looked enormously pleased over the
managing to work that quotation in at last.  He had been waiting
all his life for the chance.

"One of his eyebrows is an arch and the other is a triangle," said
Valancy.  "Is THAT why you think him so villainous?"

Uncle James lifted HIS eyebrows.  Generally when Uncle James lifted
his eyebrows the world came to an end.  This time it continued to
function.

"How do YOU know his eyebrows so well, Doss?" asked Olive, a trifle
maliciously.  Such a remark would have covered Valancy with
confusion two weeks ago, and Olive knew it.

"Yes, how?" demanded Aunt Wellington.

"I've seen him twice and I looked at him closely," said Valancy
composedly.  "I thought his face the most interesting one I ever
saw."

"There is no doubt there is something fishy in the creature's past
life," said Olive, who began to think she was decidedly out of the
conversation, which had centred so amazingly around Valancy.  "But
he can hardly be guilty of EVERYTHING he's accused of, you know."

Valancy felt annoyed with Olive.  Why should SHE speak up in even
this qualified defence of Barney Snaith?  What had she to do with
him?  For that matter, what had Valancy?  But Valancy did not ask
herself this question.

"They say he keeps dozens of cats in that hut up back on Mistawis,"
said Second Cousin Sarah Taylor, by way of appearing not entirely
ignorant of him.

Cats.  It sounded quite alluring to Valancy, in the plural.  She
pictured an island in Muskoka haunted by pussies.

"That alone shows there is something wrong with him," decreed Aunt
Isabel.

"People who don't like cats," said Valancy, attacking her dessert
with a relish, "always seem to think that there is some peculiar
virtue in not liking them."

"The man hasn't a friend except Roaring Abel," said Uncle
Wellington.  "And if Roaring Abel had kept away from him, as
everybody else did, it would have been better for--for some members
of his family."

Uncle Wellington's rather lame conclusion was due to a marital
glance from Aunt Wellington reminding him of what he had almost
forgotten--that there were girls at the table.

"If you mean," said Valancy passionately, "that Barney Snaith is
the father of Cecily Gay's child, he ISN'T.  It's a wicked lie."

In spite of her indignation Valancy was hugely amused at the
expression of the faces around that festal table.  She had not seen
anything like it since the day, seventeen years ago, when at Cousin
Gladys' thimble party, they discovered that she had got--SOMETHING--
in her head at school.  LICE in her head!  Valancy was done with
euphemisms.

Poor Mrs. Frederick was almost in a state of collapse.  She had
believed--or pretended to believe--the Valancy still supposed that
children were found in parsley beds.

"Hush--hush!" implored Cousin Stickles.

"I don't mean to hush," said Valancy perversely.  "I've hush-hushed
all my life.  I'll scream if I want to.  Don't make me want to.
And stop talking nonsense about Barney Snaith."

Valancy didn't exactly understand her own indignation.  What did
Barney Snaith's imputed crimes and misdemeanours matter to her?
And why, out of them all, did it seem most intolerable that he
should have been poor, pitiful little Cecily Gay's false lover?
For it DID seem intolerable to her.  She did not mind when they
called him a thief and a counterfeiter and jail-bird; but she could
not endure to think that he had loved and ruined Cecily Gay.  She
recalled his face on the two occasions of their chance meetings--
his twisted, enigmatic, engaging smile, his twinkle, his thin,
sensitive, almost ascetic lips, his general air of frank
daredeviltry.  A man with such a smile and lips might have murdered
or stolen but he could not have betrayed.  She suddenly hated every
one who said it or believed it of him.

"When _I_ was a young girl I never thought or spoke about such
matters, Doss," said Aunt Wellington, crushingly.

"But I'm not a young girl," retorted Valancy, uncrushed.  "Aren't
you always rubbing that into me?  And you are all evil-minded,
senseless gossips.  Can't you leave poor Cissy Gay alone?  She's
dying.  Whatever she did, God or the Devil has punished her enough
for it.  You needn't take a hand, too.  As for Barney Snaith, the
only crime he has been guilty of is living to himself and minding
his own business.  He can, it seems, get along without you.  Which
IS an unpardonable sin, of course, in your little snobocracy."
Valancy coined that concluding word suddenly and felt that it was
an inspiration.  That was exactly what they were and not one of
them was fit to mend another.

"Valancy, your poor father would turn over in his grave if he could
hear you," said Mrs. Frederick.

"I dare say he would like that for a change," said Valancy
brazenly.

"Doss," said Uncle James heavily, "the Ten Commandments are fairly
up to date still--especially the fifth.  Have you forgotten that?"

"No," said Valancy, "but I thought YOU had--especially the ninth.
Have you ever thought, Uncle James, how dull life would be without
the Ten Commandments?  It is only when things are forbidden that
they become fascinating."

But her excitement had been too much for her.  She knew, by certain
unmistakable warnings, that one of her attacks of pain was coming
on.  It must not find her there.  She rose from her chair.

"I am going home now.  I only came for the dinner.  It was very
good, Aunt Alberta, although your salad-dressing is not salt enough
and a dash of cayenne would improve it."

None of the flabbergasted silver wedding guests could think of
anything to say until the lawn gate clanged behind Valancy in the
dusk.  Then--

"She's feverish--I've said right along she was feverish," moaned
Cousin Stickles.

Uncle Benjamin punished his pudgy left hand fiercely with his pudgy
right.

"She's dippy--I tell you she's gone dippy," he snorted angrily.
"That's all there is about it.  Clean dippy."

"Oh, Benjamin," said Cousin Georgiana soothingly, "don't condemn
her too rashly.  We MUST remember what dear old Shakespeare says--
that charity thinketh no evil."

"Charity!  Poppy-cock!" snorted Uncle Benjamin.  "I never heard a
young woman talk such stuff in my life as she just did.  Talking
about things she ought to be ashamed to think of, much less
mention.  Blaspheming!  Insulting US!  What she wants is a generous
dose of spank-weed and I'd like to be the one to administer it.  H-
uh-h-h-h!"  Uncle Benjamin gulped down the half of a scalding cup
of coffee.

"Do you suppose that the mumps could work on a person that way?"
wailed Cousin Stickles.

"I opened an umbrella in the house yesterday," sniffed Cousin
Georgiana.  "I KNEW it betokened some misfortune."

"Have you tried to find out if she has a temperature?" asked Cousin
Mildred.

"She wouldn't let Amelia put the thermometer under her tongue,"
whimpered Cousin Stickles.

Mrs. Frederick was openly in tears.  All her defences were down.

"I must tell you," she sobbed, "that Valancy has been acting very
strangely for over two weeks now.  She hasn't been a bit like
herself--Christine could tell you.  I have hoped against hope that
it was only one of her colds coming on.  But it is--it must be
something worse."

"This is bringing on my neuritis again," said Cousin Gladys,
putting her hand to her head.

"Don't cry, Amelia," said Herbert kindly, pulling nervously at his
spiky grey hair.  He hated "family ructions."  Very inconsiderate
of Doss to start one at HIS silver wedding.  Who could have
supposed she had it in her?  "You'll have to take her to a doctor.
This may be only a--er--a brainstorm.  There are such things as
brainstorms nowadays, aren't there?"

"I--I suggested consulting a doctor to her yesterday," moaned Mrs.
Frederick.  "And she said she wouldn't go to a doctor--wouldn't.
Oh, surely I have had trouble enough!"

"And she WON'T take Redfern's Bitters," said Cousin Stickles.

"Or ANYTHING,' said Mrs. Frederick.  "And she's determined to go to
the Presbyterian church," said Cousin Stickles--repressing,
however, to her credit be it said, the story of the bannister.

"That proves she's dippy," growled Uncle Benjamin.  "I noticed
something strange about her the minute she came in today.  I
noticed it BEFORE today."  (Uncle Benjamin was thinking of "m-i-r-
a-z-h.")  "Everything she said today showed an unbalanced mind.
That question--'Was it a vital part?'  Was there any sense at all
in that remark?  None whatever!  There never was anything like that
in the Stirlings.  It must be from the Wansbarras."

Poor Mrs. Frederick was too crushed to be indignant.  "I never
heard of anything like that in the Wansbarras," she sobbed,

"Your father was odd enough," said Uncle Benjamin.

"Poor Pa was--peculiar," admitted Mrs. Frederick tearfully, "but
his mind was never affected."

"He talked all his life exactly as Valancy did today," retorted
Uncle Benjamin.  "And he believed he was his own great-great
grandfather born over again.  I've heard him say it.  Don't tell ME
that a man who believed a thing like THAT was ever in his right
senses.  Come, come, Amelia, stop sniffling.  Of course Doss has
made a terrible exhibition of herself today, but she's not
responsible.  Old maids are apt to fly off at a tangent like that.
If she had been married when she should have been she wouldn't have
got like this."

"Nobody wanted to marry her," said Mrs. Frederick, who felt that,
somehow, Uncle Benjamin was blaming her.

"Well, fortunately there's no outsider here," snapped Uncle
Benjamin.  "We may keep it in the family yet.  I'll take her over
to see Dr. Marsh tomorrow.  _I_ know how to deal with pig-headed
people.  Won't that be best, James?"

"We must have medical advice certainly," agreed Uncle James.

"Well, that's settled.  In the meantime, Amelia, act as if nothing
had happened and keep an eye on her.  Don't let her be alone.
Above all, don't let her sleep alone."

Renewed whimpers from Mrs. Frederick.

"I can't help it.  Night before last I suggested she'd better have
Christine sleep with her.  She positively refused--AND LOCKED HER
DOOR.  Oh, you don't know how she's changed.  She won't work.  At
least, she won't sew.  She does her usual housework, of course.
But she wouldn't sweep the parlour yesterday morning, though we
ALWAYS sweep it on Thursdays.  She said she'd wait till it was
dirty.  'Would you rather sweep a dirty room than a clean one?' I
asked her.  She said, 'Of course.  I'd see something for my labour
then.'  Think of it!"

Uncle Benjamin thought of it.

"The jar of potpourri"--Cousin Stickles pronounced it as spelled--
"has disappeared from her room.  I found the pieces in the next
lot.  She won't tell us what happened to it."

"I should never have dreamed it of Doss," said Uncle Herbert.  "She
has always seemed such a quiet, sensible girl.  A bit backward--but
sensible."

"The only thing you can be sure of in this world is the
multiplication table," said Uncle James, feeling cleverer than
ever.

"Well, let's cheer up," suggested Uncle Benjamin.  "Why are chorus
girls like fine stock raisers?"

"Why?" asked Cousin Stickles, since it had to be asked and Valancy
wasn't there to ask it.

"Like to exhibit calves," chuckled Uncle Benjamin.

Cousin Stickles thought Uncle Benjamin a little indelicate.  Before
Olive, too.  But then, he was a man.

Uncle Herbert was thinking that things were rather dull now that
Doss had gone.



CHAPTER XII


Valancy hurried home through the faint blue twilight--hurried too
fast perhaps.  The attack she had when she thankfully reached the
shelter of her own room was the worst yet.  It was really very bad.
She might die in one of those spells.  It would be dreadful to die
in such pain.  Perhaps--perhaps this was death.  Valancy felt
pitifully alone.  When she could think at all she wondered what it
would be like to have someone with her who could sympathise--
someone who really cared--just to hold her hand tight, if nothing
else--some one just to say, "Yes, I know.  It's dreadful--be brave--
you'll soon be better;" not some one merely fussy and alarmed.
Not her mother or Cousin Stickles.  Why did the thought of Barney
Snaith come into her mind?  Why did she suddenly feel, in the midst
of this hideous loneliness of pain, that HE would be sympathetic--
sorry for any one that was suffering?  Why did he seem to her like
an old, well-known friend?  Was it because she had been defending
him--standing up to her family for him?

She was so bad at first that she could not even get herself a dose
of Dr. Trent's prescription.  But eventually she managed it, and
soon after relief came.  The pain left her and she lay on her bed,
spent, exhausted, in a cold perspiration.  Oh, that had been
horrible!  She could not endure many more attacks like that.  One
didn't mind dying if death could be instant and painless.  But to
be hurt so in dying!

Suddenly she found herself laughing.  That dinner HAD been fun.
And it had all been so simple.  She had merely SAID the things she
had always THOUGHT.  Their faces!  Uncle Benjamin--poor,
flabbergasted Uncle Benjamin!  Valancy felt quite sure he would
make a new will that very night.  Olive would get Valancy's share
of his fat hoard.  Olive had always got Valancy's share of
everything.  Remember the dust-pile.

To laugh at her clan as she had always wanted to laugh was all the
satisfaction she could get out of life now.  But she thought it was
rather pitiful that it should be so.  Might she not pity herself a
little when nobody else did?

Valancy got up and went to her window.  The moist, beautiful wind
blowing across groves of young-leafed wild trees touched her face
with the caress of a wise, tender, old friend.  The lombardies in
Mrs. Tredgold's lawn, off to the left--Valancy could just see them
between the stable and the old carriage-shop--were in dark purple
silhouette against a clear sky and there was a milk-white,
pulsating star just over one of them, like a living pearl on a
silver-green lake.  Far beyond the station were the shadowy,
purple-hooded woods around Lake Mistawis.  A white, filmy mist hung
over them and just above it was a faint, young crescent.  Valancy
looked at it over her thin left shoulder.

"I wish," she said whimsically, "that I may have ONE little dust-
pile before I die."



CHAPTER XIII


Uncle Benjamin found he had reckoned without his host when he
promised so airily to take Valancy to a doctor.  Valancy would not
go.  Valancy laughed in his face.

"Why on earth should I go to Dr. Marsh?  There's nothing the matter
with my mind.  Though you all think I've suddenly gone crazy.
Well, I haven't.  I've simply grown tired of living to please other
people and have decided to please myself.  It will give you
something to talk about besides my stealing the raspberry jam.  So
that's that."

"Doss," said Uncle Benjamin, solemnly and helplessly, "you are not--
like yourself."

"Who am I like, then?" asked Valancy.

Uncle Benjamin was rather posed.

"Your Grandfather Wansbarra," he answered desperately.

"Thanks."  Valancy looked pleased.  "That's a real compliment.  I
remember Grandfather Wansbarra.  He was one of the few human beings
I HAVE known--almost the only one.  Now, it is of no use to scold
or entreat or command, Uncle Benjamin--or exchange anguished
glances with Mother and Cousin Stickles.  I am not going to any
doctor.  And if you bring any doctor here I won't see him.  So what
are you going to do about it?"

What indeed!  It was not seemly--or even possible--to hale Valancy
doctorwards by physical force.  And in no other way could it be
done, seemingly.  Her mother's tears and imploring entreaties
availed not.

"Don't worry, Mother," said Valancy, lightly but quite
respectfully.  "It isn't likely I'll do anything very terrible.
But I mean to have a little fun."

"Fun!"  Mrs. Frederick uttered the word as if Valancy had said she
was going to have a little tuberculosis.

Olive, sent by her mother to see if SHE had any influence over
Valancy, came away with flushed cheeks and angry eyes.  She told
her mother that nothing could be done with Valancy.  After SHE,
Olive, had talked to her just like a sister, tenderly and wisely,
all Valancy had said, narrowing her funny eyes to mere slips, was,
"_I_ don't show my gums when I laugh."

"More as if she were talking to herself than to me.  Indeed,
Mother, all the time I was talking to her she gave me the
impression of not really listening.  And that wasn't all.  When I
finally decided that what I was saying had no influence over her I
begged her, when Cecil came next week, not to say anything queer
before him, at least.  Mother, what do you think she said?"

"I'm sure I can't imagine," groaned Aunt Wellington, prepared for
anything.

"She said, 'I'd rather like to shock Cecil.  His mouth is too red
for a man's.'  Mother, I can never feel the same to Valancy again."

"Her mind is affected, Olive," said Aunt Wellington solemnly.  "You
must not hold her responsibile for what she says."

When Aunt Wellington told Mrs. Frederick what Valancy had said to
Olive, Mrs. Frederick wanted Valancy to apoligise.

"You made me apologise to Olive fifteen years ago for something I
didn't do," said Valancy.  "That old apology will do for now."

Another solemn family conclave was held.  They were all there
except Cousin Gladys, who had been suffering such tortures of
neuritis in her head "ever since poor Doss went queer" that she
couldn't undertake any responsibility.  They decided--that is, they
accepted a fact that was thrust in their faces--that the wisest
thing was to leave Valancy alone for a while--"give her her head"
as Uncle Benjamin expressed it--"keep a careful eye on her but let
her pretty much alone."  The term of "watchful waiting" had not
been invented then, but that was practically the policy Valancy's
distracted relatives decided to follow.

"We must be guided by developments," said Uncle Benjamin.  "It is"--
solemnly--"easier to scramble eggs that unscramble them.  Of
course--if she becomes violent--"

Uncle James consulted Dr. Ambrose Marsh.  Dr. Ambrose Marsh
approved their decision.  He pointed out to irate Uncle James--who
would have liked to lock Valancy up somewhere, out of hand--that
Valancy had not, as yet, really done or said anything that could be
constructed as proof of lunacy--and without proof you cannot lock
people up in this degenerate age.  Nothing that Uncle James had
reported seemed very alarming to Dr. Marsh, who put up his hand to
conceal a smile several times.  But then he himself was not a
Stirling.  And he knew very little about the old Valancy.  Uncle
James stalked out and drove back to Deerwood, thinking that Ambrose
Marsh wasn't much of a doctor, after all, and that Adelaide
Stirling might have done better for herself.



CHAPTER XIV


Life cannot stop because tragedy enters it.  Meals must be made
ready though a son dies and porches must be repaired even if your
only daughter is going out of her mind.  Mrs. Frederick, in her
systematic way, had long ago appointed the second week in June for
the repairing of the front porch, the roof of which was sagging
dangerously.  Roaring Abel had been engaged to do it many moons
before and Roaring Abel promptly appeared on the morning of the
first day of the second week, and fell to work.  Of course he was
drunk.  Roaring Abel was never anything but drunk.  But he was only
in the first stage, which made him talkative and genial.  The odour
of whisky on his breath nearly drove Mrs. Frederick and Cousin
Stickles wild at dinner.  Even Valancy, with all her emancipation,
did not like it.  But she liked Abel and she liked his vivid,
eloquent talk, and after she washed the dinner dishes she went out
and sat on the steps and talked to him.

Mrs. Frederick and Cousin Stickles thought it a terrible
proceeding, but what could they do?  Valancy only smiled mockingly
at them when they called her in, and did not go.  It was so easy to
defy once you got started.  The first step was the only one that
really counted.  They were both afraid to say anything more to her
lest she might make a scene before Roaring Abel, who would spread
it all over the country with his own characteristic comments and
exaggerations.  It was too cold a day, in spite of the June
sunshine, for Mrs. Frederick to sit at the dining-room window and
listen to what was said.  She had to shut the window and Valancy
and Roaring Abel had their talk to themselves.  But if Mrs.
Frederick had known what the outcome of that talk was to be she
would have prevented it, if the porch was never repaired.

Valancy sat on the steps, defiant of the chill breeze of this cold
June which had made Aunt Isabel aver the seasons were changing.
She did not care whether she caught a cold or not.  It was
delightful to sit there in that cold, beautiful, fragrant world and
feel free.  She filled her lungs with the clean, lovely wind and
held out her arms to it and let it tear her hair to pieces while
she listening to Roaring Abel, who told her his troubles between
intervals of hammering gaily in time to his Scotch songs.  Valancy
liked to hear him.  Every stroke of his hammer fell true to the
note.

Old Abel Gay, in spite of his seventy years, was handsome still, in
a stately, patriarchal manner.  His tremendous beard, falling down
over his blue flannel shirt, was still a flaming, untouched red,
though his shock of hair was white as snow, and his eyes were a
fiery, youthful blue.  His enormous, reddish-white eyebrows were
more like moustaches than eyebrows.  Perhaps this was why he always
kept his upper lip scrupulously shaved.  His cheeks were red and
his nose ought to have been, but wasn't.  It was a fine,
upstanding, aquiline nose, such as the noblest Roman of them all
might have rejoiced in.  Abel was six feet two in his stockings,
broad-shouldered, lean-hipped.  In his youth he had been a famous
lover, finding all women too charming to bind himself to one.  His
years had been a wild, colourful panorama of follies and
adventures, gallantries, fortunes and misfortunes.  He had been
forty-five before he married--a pretty slip of a girl whom his
goings-on killed in a few years.  Abel was piously drunk at her
funeral and insisted on repeating the fifty-fifth chapter of
Isaiah--Abel knew most of the Bible and all the Psalms by heart--
while the minister, whom he disliked, prayed or tried to pray.
Thereafter his house was run by an untidy old cousin who cooked his
meals and kept things going after a fashion.  In this unpromising
environment little Cecilia Gay had grown up.

Valancy had known "Cissy Gay" fairly well in the democracy of the
public school, though Cissy had been three years younger than she.
After they left school their paths diverged and she had seen
nothing of her.  Old Abel was a Presbyterian.  That is, he got a
Presbyterian preacher to marry him, baptise his child and bury his
wife; and he knew more about Presbyterian theology than most
ministers, which made him a terror to them in arguments.  But
Roaring Abel never went to church.  Every Presbyterian minister who
had been in Deerwood had tried his hand--once--at reforming Roaring
Abel.  But he had not been pestered of late.  Rev. Mr. Bently had
been in Deerwood for eight years, but he had not sought out Roaring
Abel since the first three months of his pastorate.  He had called
on Roaring Abel then and found him in the theological stage of
drunkenness--which always followed the sentimental maudlin one, and
preceded the roaring, blasphemous one.  The eloquently prayerful
one, in which he realised himself temporarily and intensely as a
sinner in the hands of an angry God, was the final one.  Abel never
went beyond it.  He generally fell asleep on his knees and awakened
sober, but he had never been "dead drunk" in his life.  He told Mr.
Bently that he was a sound Presbyterian and sure of his election.
He had no sins--that he knew of--to repent of.

"Have you never done anything in your life that you are sorry for?"
asked Mr. Bently.

Roaring Abel scratched his bushy white head and pretended to
reflect.

"Well, yes," he said finally.  "There were some women I might have
kissed and didn't.  I've always been sorry for THAT."

Mr. Bently went out and went home.

Abel had seen that Cissy was properly baptised--jovially drunk at
the same time himself.  He made her go to church and Sunday School
regularly.  The church people took her up and she was in turn a
member of the Mission Band, the Girls' Guild and the Young Women's
Missionary Society.  She was a faithful, unobtrusive, sincere,
little worker.  Everybody liked Cissy Gay and was sorry for her.
She was so modest and sensitive and pretty in that delicate,
elusive fashion of beauty which fades so quickly if life is not
kept in it by love and tenderness.  But then liking and pity did
not prevent them from tearing her in pieces like hungry cats when
the catastrophe came.  Four years previously Cissy Gay had gone up
to a Muskoka hotel as a summer waitress.  And when she had come
back in the fall she was a changed creature.  She hid herself away
and went nowhere.  The reason soon leaked out and scandal raged.
That winter Cissy's baby was born.  Nobody ever knew who the father
was.  Cecily kept her poor pale lips tightly locked on her sorry
secret.  Nobody dared ask Roaring Abel any questions about it.
Rumour and surmise laid the guilt at Barney Snaith's door because
diligent inquiry among the other maids at the hotel revealed the
fact that nobody there had ever seen Cissy Gay "with a fellow."
She had "kept herself to herself" they said, rather resentfully.
"Too good for OUR dances.  And now look!"

The baby had lived for a year.  After its death Cissy faded away.
Two years ago Dr. Marsh had given her only six months to live--her
lungs were hopelessly diseased.  But she was still alive.  Nobody
went to see her.  Women would not go to Roaring Abel's house.  Mr.
Bently had gone once, when he knew Abel was away, but the dreadful
old creature who was scrubbing the kitchen floor told him Cissy
wouldn't see any one.  The old cousin had died and Roaring Abel had
had two or three disreputable housekeepers--the only kind who could
be prevailed on to go to a house where a girl was dying of
consumption.  But the last one had left and Roaring Abel had now no
one to wait on Cissy and "do" for him.  This was the burden of his
plaint to Valancy and he condemned the "hypocrites" of Deerwood and
its surrounding communities with some rich, meaty oaths that
happened to reach Cousin Stickles' ears as she passed through the
hall and nearly finished the poor lady.  Was Valancy listening to
THAT?

Valancy hardly noticed the profanity.  Her attention was focussed
on the horrible thought of poor, unhappy, disgraced little Cissy
Gay, ill and helpless in that forlorn old house out on the Mistawis
road, without a soul to help or comfort her.  And this in a
nominally Christian community in the year of grace nineteen and
some odd!

"Do you mean to say that Cissy is all alone there now, with nobody
to do anything for her--NOBODY?"

"Oh, she can move about a bit and get a bite and sup when she wants
it.  But she can't work.  It's d----d hard for a man to work hard
all day and go home at night tired and hungry and cook his own
meals.  Sometimes I'm sorry I kicked old Rachel Edwards out."  Abel
described Rachel picturesquely.

"Her face looked as if it had wore out a hundred bodies.  And she
moped.  Talk about temper!  Temper's nothing to moping.  She was
too slow to catch worms, and dirty--d----d dirty.  I ain't
unreasonable--I know a man has to eat his peck before he dies--but
she went over the limit.  What d'ye sp'ose I saw that lady do?
She'd made some punkin jam--had it on the table in glass jars with
the tops off.  The dawg got up on the table and stuck his paw into
one of them.  What did she do?  She jest took holt of the dawg and
wrung the syrup off his paw back into the jar!  Then screwed the
top on and set it in the pantry.  I sets open the door and says to
her, 'Go!'  The dame went, and I fired the jars of punkin after
her, two at a time.  Thought I'd die laughing to see old Rachel
run--with them punkin jars raining after her.  She's told
everywhere I'm crazy, so nobody'll come for love or money."

"But Cissy MUST have some one to look after her," insisted Valancy,
whose mind was centred on this aspect of the case.  She did not
care whether Roaring Abel had any one to cook for him or not.  But
her heart was wrung for Cecilia Gay.

"Oh, she gits on.  Barney Snaith always drops in when he's passing
and does anything she wants done.  Brings her oranges and flowers
and things.  There's a Christian for you.  Yet that sanctimonious,
snivelling parcel of St. Andrew's people wouldn't be seen on the
same side of the road with him.  Their dogs'll go to heaven before
they do.  And their minister--slick as if the cat had licked him!"

"There are plenty of good people, both in St. Andrew's and St.
George's, who would be kind to Cissy if YOU would behave yourself,"
said Valancy severely.  "They're afraid to go near your place."

"Because I'm such a sad old dog?  But I don't bite--never bit any
one in my life.  A few loose words spilled around don't hurt any
one.  And I'm not asking people to come.  Don't want 'em poking and
prying about.  What I want is a housekeeper.  If I shaved every
Sunday and went to church I'd get all the housekeepers I'd want.
I'd be respectable then.  But what's the use of going to church
when it's all settled by predestination?  Tell me that, Miss."

"Is it?" said Valancy.

"Yes.  Can't git around it nohow.  Wish I could.  I don't want
either heaven or hell for steady.  Wish a man could have 'em mixed
in equal proportions."

"Isn't that the way it is in this world?" said Valancy
thoughtfully--but rather as if her thought was concerned with
something else than theology.

"No, no," boomed Abel, striking a tremendous blow on a stubborn
nail.  "There's too much hell here--entirely too much hell.  That's
why I get drunk so often.  It sets you free for a little while--
free from yourself--yes, by God, free from predestination.  Ever
try it?"

"No, I've another way of getting free," said Valancy absently.
"But about Cissy now.  She MUST have some one to look after her--"

"What are you harping on Sis for?  Seems to me you ain't bothered
much about her up to now.  You never even come to see her.  And she
used to like you so well."

"I should have," said Valancy.  "But never mind.  You couldn't
understand.  The point is--you must have a housekeeper."

"Where am I to get one?  I can pay decent wages if I could get a
decent woman.  D'ye think I like old hags?"

"Will I do?" said Valancy.



CHAPTER XV


Let us be calm," said Uncle Benjamin.  "Let us be perfectly calm."

"Calm!"  Mrs. Frederick wrung her hands.  "How can I be calm--how
could anybody be calm under such a disgrace as this?"

"Why in the world did you let her go?" asked Uncle James.

"LET her!  How could I stop her, James?  It seems she packed the
big valise and sent it away with Roaring Abel when he went home
after supper, while Christine and I were out in the kitchen.  Then
Doss herself came down with her little satchel, dressed in her
green serge suit.  I felt a terrible premonition.  I can't tell you
how it was, but I seemed to KNOW that Doss was going to do
something dreadful."

"It's a pity you couldn't have had your premonition a little
sooner," said Uncle Benjamin drily.

"I said, 'Doss, WHERE ARE YOU GOING?" and SHE said, I am going to
look for my Blue Castle.'"

"Wouldn't you think THAT would convince Marsh that her mind is
affected?" interjected Uncle James.

"And _I_ said, 'Valancy, what DO you mean?'  And SHE said, 'I am
going to keep house for Roaring Abel and nurse Cissy.  He will pay
me thirty dollars a month.'  I wonder I didn't drop dead on the
spot."

"You shouldn't have let her go--you shouldn't have let her out of
the house," said Uncle James.  "You should have locked the door--
anything--"

"She was between me and the front door.  And you can't realise how
determined she was.  She was like a rock.  That's the strangest
thing of all about her.  She used to be so good and obedient, and
now she's neither to hold nor bind.  But I said EVERYTHING I could
think of to bring her to her senses.  I asked her if she had no
regard for her reputation.  I said to her solemnly, 'Doss, when a
woman's reputation is once smirched nothing can ever make it
spotless again.  Your character will be gone for ever if you go to
Roaring Abel's to wait on a bad girl like Sis Gay.  And she said,
'I don't believe Cissy was a bad girl, but I don't care if she
was.'  Those were her very words, 'I don't care if she was.'"

"She has lost all sense of decency," exploded Uncle Benjamin.

"'Cissy Gay is dying,' she said, 'and it's a shame and disgrace
that she is dying in a Christian community with no one to do
anything for her.  Whatever she's been or done, she's a human
being.'"

"Well, you know, when it comes to that, I suppose she is," said
Uncle James with the air of one making a splendid concession.

"I asked Doss if she had no regard for appearances.  She said,
'I've been keeping up appearances all my life.  Now I'm going in
for realities.  Appearances can go hang!'  GO HANG!"

"An outrageous thing!" said Uncle Benjamin violently.  "An
outrageous thing!"

Which relieved his feelings, but didn't help any one else.

Mrs. Frederick wept.  Cousin Stickles took up the refrain between
her moans of despair.

"I told her--we BOTH told her--that Roaring Abel had certainly
killed his wife in one of his drunken rages and would kill her.
She laughed and said, 'I'm not afraid of Roaring Abel.  He won't
kill ME, and he's too old for me to be afraid of his gallantries.'
What did she mean?  What ARE gallantries?"

Mrs. Frederick saw that she must stop crying if she wanted to
regain control of the conversation.

"_I_ said to her, 'Valancy, if you have no regard for your own
reputation and your family's standing, have you none for MY
feelings?'  She said, 'None.'  Just like that, 'NONE!'"

"Insane people never DO have any regard for other people's
feelings," said Uncle Benjamin.  "That's one of the symptoms."

"I broke out into tears then, and she said, 'Come now, Mother, be a
good sport.  I'm going to do an act of Christian charity, and as
for the damage it will do my reputation, why, you know I haven't
any matrimonial chances anyhow, so what does it matter?'  And with
that she turned and went out."

"The last words I said to her," said Cousin Stickles pathetically,
"were, 'Who will rub my back at nights now?'  And she said--she
said--but no, I cannot repeat it."

"Nonsense," said Uncle Benjamin.  "Out with it.  This is no time to
be squeamish."

"She said"--Cousin Stickles' voice was little more than a whisper--
"she said--'OH, DARN!'"

"To think I should have lived to hear my daughter swearing!" sobbed
Mrs. Frederick,

"It--it was only imitation swearing," faltered Cousin Stickles,
desirous of smoothing things over now that the worst was out.  But
she had NEVER told about the bannister.

"It will be only a step from that to real swearing," said Uncle
James sternly.

"The worst of this"--Mrs. Frederick hunted for a dry spot on her
handkerchief--"is that every one will know now that she is
deranged.  We can't keep it a secret any longer.  Oh, I cannot bear
it!"

"You should have been stricter with her when she was young," said
Uncle Benjamin.

"I don't see how I could have been," said Mrs. Frederick--
truthfully enough.

"The worst feature of the case is that that Snaith scoundrel is
always hanging around Roaring Abel's, said Uncle James.  "I shall
be thankful if nothing worse comes of this mad freak than a few
weeks at Roaring Abel's.  Cissy Gay CAN'T live much longer."

"And she didn't even take her flannel petticoat!" lamented Cousin
Stickles.

"I'll see Ambrose Marsh again about this," said Uncle Benjamin--
meaning Valancy, not the flannel petticoat.

"I'll see Lawyer Ferguson," said Uncle James.

"Meanwhile," added Uncle Benjamin, "let us be calm."



CHAPTER XVI


Valancy had walked out to Roaring Abel's house on the Mistawis road
under a sky of purple and amber, with a queer exhilaration and
expectancy in her heart.  Back there, behind her, her mother and
Cousin Stickles were crying--over themselves, not over her.  But
here the wind was in her face, soft, dew-wet, cool, blowing along
the grassy roads.  Oh, she loved the wind!  The robins were
whistling sleepily in the firs along the way and the moist air was
fragrant with the tang of balsam.  Big cars went purring past in
the violet dusk--the stream of summer tourists to Muskoka had
already begun--but Valancy did not envy any of their occupants.
Muskoka cottages might be charming, but beyond, in the sunset
skies, among the spires of the firs, her Blue Castle towered.  She
brushed the old years and habits and inhibitions away from her like
dead leaves.  She would NOT be littered with them.

Roaring Abel's rambling, tumble-down old house was situated about
three miles from the village, on the very edge of "up back," as the
sparsely settled, hilly, wooded country around Mistawis was called
vernacularly.  It did not, it must be confessed, look much like a
Blue Castle.

It had once been a snug place enough in the days when Abel Gay had
been young and prosperous, and the punning, arched sign over the
gate--"A. Gay, Carpenter," had been fine and freshly painted.  Now
it was a faded, dreary old place, with a leprous, patched roof and
shutters hanging askew.  Abel never seemed to do any carpenter jobs
about his own house.  It had a listless air, as if tired of life.
There was a dwindling grove of ragged, crone-like old spruces
behind it.  The garden, which Cissy used to keep neat and pretty,
had run wild.  On two sides of the house were fields full of
nothing but mulleins.  Behind the house was a long stretch of
useless barrens, full of scrub pines and spruces, with here and
there a blossoming bit of wild cherry, running back to a belt of
timber on the shores of Lake Mistawis, two miles away.  A rough,
rocky, boulder-strewn lane ran through it to the woods--a lane
white with pestiferous, beautiful daisies.

Roaring Abel met Valancy at the door.

"So you've come," he said incredulously.  "I never s'posed that
ruck of Stirlings would let you."

Valancy showed all her pointed teeth in a grin.

"They couldn't stop me."

"I didn't think you'd so much spunk," said Roaring Abel admiringly.
"And look at the nice ankles of her," he added, as he stepped aside
to let her in.

If Cousin Stickles had heard this she would have been certain that
Valancy's doom, earthly and unearthly, was sealed.  But Abel's
superannuated gallantry did not worry Valancy.  Besides, this was
the first compliment she had ever received in her life and she
found herself liking it.  She sometimes suspected she had nice
ankles, but nobody had ever mentioned it before.  In the Stirling
clan ankles were among the unmentionables.

Roaring Abel took her into the kitchen, where Cissy Gay was lying
on the sofa, breathing quickly, with little scarlet spots on her
hollow cheeks.  Valancy had not seen Cecilia Gay for years.  Then
she had been such a pretty creature, a slight blossom-like girl,
with soft, golden hair, clear-cut, almost waxen features, and
large, beautiful blue eyes.  She was shocked at the change in her.
Could this be sweet Cissy--this pitiful little thing that looked
like a tired broken flower?  She had wept all the beauty out of her
eyes; they looked too big--enormous--in her wasted face.  The last
time Valancy had seen Cecilia Gay those faded, piteous eyes had
been limpid, shadowy blue pools aglow with mirth.  The contrast was
so terrible that Valancy's own eyes filled with tears.  She knelt
down by Cissy and put her arms about her.

"Cissy dear, I've come to look after you.  I'll stay with you till--
till--as long as you want me."

"Oh!"  Cissy put her thin arms about Valancy's neck.  "Oh--WILL
you?  It's been so--lonely.  I can wait on myself--but it's been so
LONELY.  It--would just be like--heaven--to have some one here--
like you.  You were always--so sweet to me--long ago."

Valancy held Cissy close.  She was suddenly happy.  Here was some
one who needed her--some one she could help.  She was no longer a
superfluity.  Old things had passed away; everything had become
new.

"Most things are predestinated, but some are just darn sheer luck,"
said Roaring Abel, complacently smoking his pipe in the corner.



CHAPTER XVII


When Valancy had lived for a week at Roaring Abel's she felt as if
years had separated her from her old life and all the people she
had known in it.  They were beginning to seem remote--dream-like--
far-away--and as the days went on they seemed still more so, until
they ceased to matter altogether.

She was happy.  Nobody ever bothered her with conundrums or
insisted on giving her Purple Pills.  Nobody called her Doss or
worried her about catching cold.  There were no quilts to piece, no
abominable rubber-plant to water, no ice-cold maternal tantrums to
endure.  She could be alone whenever she liked, go to bed when she
liked, sneeze when she liked.  In the long, wondrous, northern
twilights, when Cissy was asleep and Roaring Abel away, she could
sit for hours on the shaky back verandah steps, looking out over
the barrens to the hills beyond, covered with their fine, purple
bloom, listening to the friendly wind singing wild, sweet melodies
in the little spruces, and drinking in the aroma of the sunned
grasses, until darkness flowed over the landscape like a cool,
welcome wave.

Sometimes of an afternoon, when Cissy was strong enough, the two
girls went into the barrens and looked at the wood-flowers.  But
they did not pick any.  Valancy had read to Cissy the gospel
thereof according to John Foster:  "It is a pity to gather wood-
flowers.  They lose half their witchery away from the green and the
flicker.  The way to enjoy wood-flowers is to track them down to
their remote haunts--gloat over them--and then leave them with
backward glances, taking with us only the beguiling memory of their
grace and fragrance."

Valancy was in the midst of realities after a lifetime of
unrealities.  And busy--very busy.  The house had to be cleaned.
Not for nothing had Valancy been brought up in the Stirling habits
of neatness and cleanliness.  If she found satisfaction in cleaning
dirty rooms she got her fill of it there.  Roaring Abel thought she
was foolish to bother doing so much more than she was asked to do,
but he did not interfere with her.  He was very well satisfied with
his bargain.  Valancy was a good cook.  Abel said she got a flavour
into things.  The only fault he found with her was that she did not
sing at her work.

"Folk should always sing at their work," he insisted.  "Sounds
cheerful-like."

"Not always," retorted Valancy.  "Fancy a butcher singing at his
work.  Or an undertaker."

Abel burst into his great broad laugh.

"There's no getting the better of you.  You've got an answer every
time.  I should think the Stirlings would be glad to be rid of you.
THEY don't like being sassed back."

During the day Abel was generally away from home--if not working,
then shooting or fishing with Barney Snaith.  He generally came
home at nights--always very late and often very drunk.  The first
night they heard him come howling into the yard, Cissy had told
Valancy not to be afraid.

"Father never does anything--he just makes a noise."

Valancy, lying on the sofa in Cissy's room, where she had elected
to sleep, lest Cissy should need attention in the night--Cissy
would never have called her--was not at all afraid, and said so.
By the time Abel had got his horses put away, the roaring stage had
passed and he was in his room at the end of the hall crying and
praying.  Valancy could still hear his dismal moans when she went
calmly to sleep.  For the most part, Abel was a good-natured
creature, but occasionally he had a temper.  Once Valancy asked him
coolly:

"What is the use of getting in a rage?"

"It's such a d----d relief," said Abel.

They both burst out laughing together.

"You're a great little sport," said Abel admiringly.  "Don't mind
my bad French.  I don't mean a thing by it.  Jest habit.  Say, I
like a woman that ain't afraid to speak to me.  Sis there was
always too meek--too meek.  That's why she got adrift.  I like
you."

"All the same," said Valancy determinedly, "there is no use in
sending things to hell as you're always doing.  And I'm NOT going
to have you tracking mud all over a floor I've just scrubbed.  You
MUST use the scraper whether you consign it to perdition or not."

Cissy loved the cleanness and neatness.  She had kept it so, too,
until her strength failed.  She was very pitifully happy because
she had Valancy with her.  It had been so terrible--the long,
lonely days and nights with no companionship save those dreadful
old women who came to work.  Cissy had hated and feared them.  She
clung to Valancy like a child.

There was no doubt that Cissy was dying.  Yet at no time did she
seem alarmingly ill.  She did not even cough a great deal.  Most
days she was able to get up and dress--sometimes even to work about
in the garden or the barrens for an hour or two.  For a few weeks
after Valancy's coming she seemed so much better that Valancy began
to hope she might get well.  But Cissy shook her head.

"No, I can't get well.  My lungs are almost gone.  And I--don't
want to.  I'm so tired, Valancy.  Only dying can rest me.  But it's
lovely to have you here--you'll never know how much it means to me.
But Valancy--you work too hard.  You don't need to--Father only
wants his meals cooked.  I don't think you are strong yourself.
You turn so pale sometimes.  And those drops you take.  ARE you
well, dear?"

"I'm all right," said Valancy lightly.  She would not have Cissy
worried.  "And I'm not working hard.  I'm glad to have some work to
do--something that really wants to be done."

"Then"--Cissy slipped her hand wistfully into Valancy's--"don't
let's talk any more about my being sick.  Let's just forget it.
Let's pretend I'm a little girl again--and you have come here to
play with me.  I used to wish that long ago--wish that you could
come.  I knew you couldn't, of course.  But how I did wish it!  You
always seemed so different from the other girls--so kind and sweet--
and as if you had something in yourself nobody knew about--some
dear, pretty secret.  HAD you, Valancy?"

"I had my Blue Castle," said Valancy, laughing a little.  She was
pleased that Cissy had thought of her like this.  She had never
suspected that anybody liked or admired or wondered about her.  She
told Cissy all about her Blue Castle.  She had never told any one
about it before.

"Every one has a Blue Castle, I think," said Cissy softly.  "Only
every one has a different name for it.  _I_ had mine--once."

She put her two thin little hands over her face.  She did not tell
Valancy--then--who had destroyed her Blue Castle.  But Valancy knew
that, whoever it was, it was not Barney Snaith.



CHAPTER XVIII


Valancy was acquainted with Barney by now--well acquainted, it
seemed, though she had spoken to him only a few times.  But then
she had felt just as well acquainted with him the first time they
had met.  She had been in the garden at twilight, hunting for a few
stalks of white narcissus for Cissy's room when she heard that
terrible old Grey Slosson coming down through the woods from
Mistawis--one could hear it miles away.  Valancy did not look up as
it drew near, thumping over the rocks in that crazy lane.  She had
never looked up, though Barney had gone racketting past every
evening since she had been at Roaring Abel's.  This time he did not
racket past.  The old Grey Slosson stopped with even more terrible
noises than it made going.  Valancy was conscious that Barney had
sprung from it and was leaning over the ramshackle gate.  She
suddenly straightened up and looked into his face.  Their eyes met--
Valancy was suddenly conscious of a delicious weakness.  Was one
of her heart attacks coming on?--But this was a new symptom.

His eyes, which she had always thought brown, now seen close, were
deep violet--translucent and intense.  Neither of his eyebrows
looked like the other.  He was thin--too thin--she wished she could
feed him up a bit--she wished she could sew the buttons on his
coat--and make him cut his hair--and shave every day.  There was
SOMETHING in his face--one hardly knew what it was.  Tiredness?
Sadness?  Disillusionment?  He had dimples in his thin cheeks when
he smiled.  All these thoughts flashed through Valancy's mind in
that one moment while his eyes looked into hers.

"Good-evening, Miss Stirling."

Nothing could be more commonplace and conventional.  Any one might
have said it.  But Barney Snaith had a way of saying things that
gave them poignancy.  When he said good-evening you felt that it
WAS a good evening and that it was partly his doing that it was.
Also, you felt that some of the credit was yours.  Valancy felt all
this vaguely, but she couldn't imagine why she was trembling from
head to foot--it MUST be her heart.  If only he didn't notice it!

"I'm going over to the Port," Barney was saying.  "Can I acquire
merit by getting or doing anything there for you or Cissy?"

"Will you get some salt codfish for us?" said Valancy.  It was the
only thing she could think of.  Roaring Abel had expressed a desire
that day for a dinner of boiled salt codfish.  When her knights
came riding to the Blue Castle, Valancy had sent them on many a
quest, but she had never asked any of them to get her salt codfish.

"Certainly.  You're sure there's nothing else?  Lots of room in
Lady Jane Grey Slosson.  And she always gets back SOME time, does
Lady Jane."

"I don't think there's anything more," said Valancy.  She knew he
would bring oranges for Cissy anyhow--he always did.

Barney did not turn away at once.  He was silent for a little.
Then he said, slowly and whimsically:

"Miss Stirling, you're a brick!  You're a whole cartload of bricks.
To come here and look after Cissy--under the circumstances."

"There's nothing so bricky about that," said Valancy.  "I'd nothing
else to do.  And--I like it here.  I don't feel as if I'd done
anything specially meritorious.  Mr. Gay is paying me fair wages.
I never earned any money before--and I like it."  It seemed so easy
to talk to Barney Snaith, someway--this terrible Barney Snaith of
the lurid tales and mysterious past--as easy and natural as if
talking to herself.

"All the money in the world couldn't buy what you're doing for
Cissy Gay," said Barney.  "It's splendid and fine of you.  And if
there's anything I can do to help you in any way, you have only to
let me know.  If Roaring Abel ever tries to annoy you--"

"He doesn't.  He's lovely to me.  I like Roaring Abel," said
Valancy frankly.

"So do I.  But there's one stage of his drunkenness--perhaps you
haven't encountered it yet--when he sings ribald songs--"

"Oh, yes.  He came home last night like that.  Cissy and I just
went to our room and shut ourselves in where we couldn't hear him.
He apologised this morning.  I'm not afraid of any of Roaring
Abel's stages."

"Well, I'm sure he'll be decent to you, apart from his inebriated
yowls," said Barney.  "And I've told him he's got to stop damning
things when you're around."

"Why?" asked Valancy slyly, with one of her odd, slanted glances
and a sudden flake of pink on each cheek, born of the thought that
Barney Snaith had actually done so much for HER.  "I often feel
like damning things myself."

For a moment Barney stared.  Was this elfin girl the little, old-
maidish creature who had stood there two minutes ago?  Surely there
was magic and devilry going on in that shabby, weedy old garden.

Then he laughed.

"It will be relief to have some one to do it for you, then.  So you
don't want anything but salt codfish?"

"Not tonight.  But I dare say I'll have some errands for you very
often when you go to Port Lawrence.  I can't trust Mr. Gay to
remember to bring all the things I want."

Barney had gone away, then, in his Lady Jane, and Valancy stood in
the garden for a long time.

Since then he had called several times, walking down through the
barrens, whistling.  How that whistle of his echoed through the
spruces on those June twilights!  Valancy caught herself listening
for it every evening--rebuked herself--then let herself go.  Why
shouldn't she listen for it?

He always brought Cissy fruit and flowers.  Once he brought Valancy
a box of candy--the first box of candy she had ever been given.  It
seemed sacrilege to eat it.

She found herself thinking of him in season and out of season.  She
wanted to know if he ever thought about her when she wasn't before
his eyes, and, if so, what.  She wanted to see that mysterious
house of his back on the Mistawis island.  Cissy had never seen it.
Cissy, though she talked freely of Barney and had known him for
five years, really knew little more of him than Valancy herself.

"But he isn't bad," said Cissy.  "Nobody need ever tell me he is.
He CAN'T have done a thing to be ashamed of."

"Then why does he live as he does?" asked Valancy--to hear somebody
defend him.

"I don't know.  He's a mystery.  And of course there's something
behind it, but I KNOW it isn't disgrace.  Barney Snaith simply
couldn't do anything disgraceful, Valancy."

Valancy was not so sure.  Barney must have done SOMETHING--
sometime.  He was a man of education and intelligence.  She had
soon discovered that, in listening to his conversations and
wrangles with Roaring Abel--who was surprisingly well read and
could discuss any subject under the sun when sober.  Such a man
wouldn't bury himself for five years in Muskoka and live and look
like a tramp if there were not too good--or bad--a reason for it.
But it didn't matter.  All that mattered was that she was sure now
that he had never been Cissy Gay's lover.  There was nothing like
THAT between them.  Though he was very fond of Cissy and she of
him, as any one could see.  But it was a fondness that didn't worry
Valancy.

"You don't know what Barney has been to me, these past two years,"
Cissy had said simply.  "EVERYTHING would have been unbearable
without him."

"Cissy Gay is the sweetest girl I ever knew--and there's a man
somewhere I'd like to shoot if I could find him," Barney had said
savagely.

Barney was an interesting talker, with a knack of telling a great
deal about his adventures and nothing at all about himself.  There
was one glorious rainy day when Barney and Abel swapped yarns all
the afternoon while Valancy mended tablecloths and listened.
Barney told weird tales of his adventures with "shacks" on trains
while hoboing it across the continent.  Valancy thought she ought
to think his stealing rides quite dreadful, but didn't.  The story
of his working his way to England on a cattle-ship sounded more
legitimate.  And his yarns of the Yukon enthralled her--especially
the one of the night he was lost on the divide between the Gold Run
and Sulphur Valley.  He had spent two years out there.  Where in
all this was there room for the penitentiary and the other things?

If he were telling the truth.  But Valancy knew he was.

"Found no gold," he said.  "Came away poorer than when I went.  But
such a place to live!  Those silences at the back of the north wind
GOT me.  I've never belonged to myself since."

Yet he was not a great talker.  He told a great deal in a few well-
chosen words--how well-chosen Valancy did not realise.  And he had
a knack of saying things without opening his mouth at all.

"I like a man whose eyes say more than his lips," thought Valancy.

But then she liked everything about him--his tawny hair--his
whimsical smiles--the little glints of fun in his eyes--his loyal
affection for that unspeakable Lady Jane--his habit of sitting with
his hands in his pockets, his chin sunk on his breast, looking up
from under his mismated eyebrows.  She liked his nice voice which
sounded as if it might become caressing or wooing with very little
provocation.  She was at times almost afraid to let herself think
these thoughts.  They were so vivid that she felt as if the others
MUST know what she was thinking.

"I've been watching a woodpecker all day," he said one evening on
the shaky old back verandah.  His account of the woodpecker's
doings was satisfying.  He had often some gay or cunning little
anecdote of the wood folk to tell them.  And sometimes he and
Roaring Abel smoked fiercely the whole evening and never said a
word, while Cissy lay in the hammock swung between the verandah
posts and Valancy sat idly on the steps, her hands clasped over her
knees, and wondered dreamily if she were really Valancy Stirling
and if it were only three weeks since she had left the ugly old
house on Elm Street.

The barrens lay before her in a white moon splendour, where dozens
of little rabbits frisked.  Barney, when he liked, could sit down
on the edge of the barrens and lure those rabbits right to him by
some mysterious sorcery he possessed.  Valancy had once seen a
squirrel leap from a scrub pine to his shoulder and sit there
chattering to him.  It reminded her of John Foster.

It was one of the delights of Valancy's new life that she could
read John Foster's books as often and as long as she wanted to.
She read them all to Cissy, who loved them.  She also tried to read
them to Abel and Barney, who did not love them.  Abel was bored and
Barney politely refused to listen at all.

"Piffle," said Barney.



CHAPTER XIX


Of course, the Stirlings had not left the poor maniac alone all
this time or refrained from heroic efforts to rescue her perishing
soul and reputation.  Uncle James, whose lawyer had helped him as
little as his doctor, came one day and, finding Valancy alone in
the kitchen, as he supposed, gave her a terrible talking to--told
her she was breaking her mother's heart and disgracing her family.

"But WHY?" said Valancy, not ceasing to scour her porridge pot
decently.  "I'm doing honest work for honest pay.  What is there in
that that is disgraceful?"

"Don't quibble, Valancy," said Uncle James solemnly.  "This is no
fit place for you to be, and you know it.  Why, I'm told that that
jail-bird, Snaith, is hanging around here every evening."

"Not EVERY evening," said Valancy reflectively.  "No, not quite
every evening."

"It's--it's insufferable!" said Uncle James violently.  "Valancy,
you MUST come home.  We won't judge you harshly.  I assure you we
won't.  We will overlook all this."

"Thank you," said Valancy.

"Have you no sense of shame?" demanded Uncle James.

"Oh, yes.  But the things _I_ am ashamed of are not the things YOU
are ashamed of."  Valancy proceeded to rinse her dishcloth
meticulously.

Still was Uncle James patient.  He gripped the sides of his chair
and ground his teeth.

"We know your mind isn't just right.  We'll make allowances.  But
you MUST come home.  You shall not stay here with that drunken,
blasphemous old scoundrel--"

"Were you by any chance referring to ME, MISTER Stirling?" demanded
Roaring Abel, suddenly appearing in the doorway of the back
verandah where he had been smoking a peaceful pipe and listening to
"old Jim Stirling's" tirade with huge enjoyment.  His red beard
fairly bristled with indignation and his huge eyebrows quivered.
But cowardice was not among James Stirling's shortcomings.

"I was.  And, furthermore, I want to tell you that you have acted
an iniquitous part in luring this weak and unfortunate girl away
from her home and friends, and I will have you punished yet for it--"

James Stirling got no further.  Roaring Abel crossed the kitchen at
a bound, caught him by his collar and his trousers, and hurled him
through the doorway and over the garden paling with as little
apparent effort as he might have employed in whisking a troublesome
kitten out of the way.

"The next time you come back here," he bellowed, "I'll throw you
through the window--and all the better if the window is shut!
Coming here, thinking yourself God to put the world to rights!"

Valancy candidly and unashamedly owned to herself that she had seen
few more satisfying sights than Uncle James' coat-tails flying out
into the asparagus bed.  She had once been afraid of this man's
judgment.  Now she saw clearly that he was nothing but a rather
stupid little village tin-god.

Roaring Abel turned with his great broad laugh.

"He'll think of that for years when he wakes up in the night.  The
Almighty made a mistake in making so many Stirlings.  But since
they are made, we've got to reckon with them.  Too many to kill
out.  But if they come here bothering you I'll shoo 'em off before
a cat could lick its ear."

The next time they sent Dr. Stalling.  Surely Roaring Abel would
not throw him into asparagus beds.  Dr. Stalling was not so sure of
this and had no great liking for the task.  He did not believe
Valancy Stirling was out of her mind.  She had always been queer.
He, Dr. Stalling, had never been able to understand her.
Therefore, beyond doubt, she was queer.  She was only just a little
queerer than usual now.  And Dr. Stalling had his own reasons for
disliking Roaring Abel.  When Dr. Stalling had first come to
Deerwood he had had a liking for long hikes around Mistawis and
Muskoka.  On one of these occasions he had got lost and after much
wandering had fallen in with Roaring Abel with his gun over his
shoulder.

Dr. Stalling had contrived to ask his question in about the most
idiotic manner possible.  He said, "Can you tell me where I'm
going?"

"How the devil should I know where you're going, gosling?" retorted
Abel contemptuously.

Dr. Stalling was so enraged that he could not speak for a moment or
two and in that moment Abel had disappeared in the woods.  Dr.
Stalling had eventually found his way home, but he had never
hankered to encounter Abel Gay again.

Nevertheless he came now to do his duty.  Valancy greeted him with
a sinking heart.  She had to own to herself that she was terribly
afraid of Dr. Stalling still.  She had a miserable conviction that
if he shook his long, bony finger at her and told her to go home,
she dared not disobey.

"Mr. Gay," said Dr. Stalling politely and condescendingly, "may I
see Miss Stirling alone for a few minutes?"  Roaring Abel was a
little drunk--just drunk enough to be excessively polite and very
cunning.  He had been on the point of going away when Dr. Stalling
arrived, but now he sat down in a corner of the parlour and folded
his arms.

"No, no, mister," he said solemnly.  "That wouldn't do--wouldn't do
at all.  I've got the reputation of my household to keep up.  I've
got to chaperone this young lady.  Can't have any sparkin' going on
here behind my back."

Outraged Dr. Stalling looked so terrible that Valancy wondered how
Abel could endure his aspect.  But Abel was not worried at all.

"D'ye know anything about it, anyway?" he asked genially.

"About WHAT?"

"Sparking," said Abel coolly.

Poor Dr. Stalling, who had never married because he believed in a
celibate clergy, would not notice this ribald remark.  He turned
his back on Abel and addressed himself to Valancy.

"Miss Stirling, I am here in response to your mother's wishes.  She
begged me to come.  I am charged with some messages from her.  Will
you"--he wagged his forefinger--"will you hear them?"

"Yes," said Valancy faintly, eyeing the forefinger.  It had a
hypnotic effect on her.

"The first is this.  If you will leave this--this--"

"House," interjected Roaring Abel.  "H-o-u-s-e.  Troubled with an
impediment in your speech, ain't you, Mister?"

"--this PLACE and return to your home, Mr. James Stirling will
himself pay for a good nurse to come here and wait on Miss Gay."

Back of her terror Valancy smiled in secret.  Uncle James must
indeed regard the matter as desperate when he would loosen his
purse-strings like that.  At any rate, her clan no longer despised
her or ignored her.  She had become important to them.

"That's MY business, Mister," said Abel.  "Miss Stirling can go if
she pleases, or stay if she pleases.  I made a fair bargain with
her, and she's free to conclude it when she likes.  She gives me
meals that stick to my ribs.  She don't forget to put salt in the
porridge.  She never slams doors, and when she has nothing to say
she don't talk.  That's uncanny in a woman, you know, Mister.  I'm
satisfied.  If she isn't, she's free to go.  But no woman comes
here in Jim Stirling's pay.  If any one does"--Abel's voice was
uncannily bland and polite--"I'll spatter the road with her brains.
Tell him that with A. Gay's compliments."

"Dr. Stalling, a nurse is not what Cissy needs," said Valancy
earnestly.  "She isn't so ill as that, yet.  What she wants is
companionship--somebody she knows and likes just to live with her.
You can understand that, I'm sure."

"I understand that your motive is quite--ahem--commendable."  Dr.
Stalling felt that he was very broad-minded indeed--especially as
in his secret soul he did not believe Valancy's motive WAS
commendable.  He hadn't the least idea what she was up to, but he
was sure her motive was not commendable.  When he could not
understand a thing he straightway condemned it.  Simplicity itself!
"But your first duty is to your mother.  SHE needs you.  She
implores you to come home--she will forgive everything if you will
only come home."

"That's a pretty little thought," remarked Abel meditatively, as he
ground some tobacco up in his hand.

Dr. Stalling ignored him.

"She entreats, but I, Miss Stirling,"--Dr. Stalling remembered that
he was an ambassador of Jehovah--"I COMMAND.  As your pastor and
spiritual guide, I command you to come home with me--this very day.
Get your hat and coat and come NOW."

Dr. Stalling shook his finger at Valancy.  Before that pitiless
finger she drooped and wilted visibly.

"She's giving in," thought Roaring Abel.  "She'll go with him.
Beats all, the power these preacher fellows have over women."

Valancy WAS on the point of obeying Dr. Stalling.  She must go home
with him--and give up.  She would lapse back to Doss Stirling again
and for her few remaining days or weeks be the cowed, futile
creature she had always been.  It was her fate--typified by that
relentless, uplifted forefinger.  She could no more escape from it
than Roaring Abel from his predestination.  She eyed it as the
fascinated bird eyes the snake.  Another moment--

"Fear is the original sin," suddenly said a still, small voice away
back--back--back of Valancy's consciousness.  "Almost all the evil
in the world has its origin in the fact that some one is afraid of
something."

Valancy stood up.  She was still in the clutches of fear, but her
soul was her own again.  She would not be false to that inner
voice.

"Dr. Stalling," she said slowly, "I do not at present owe ANY duty
to my mother.  She is quite well; she has all the assistance and
companionship she requires; she does not need me at all.  I AM
needed here.  I am going to stay here."

"There's spunk for you," said Roaring Abel admiringly.

Dr. Stalling dropped his forefinger.  One could not keep on shaking
a finger forever.

"Miss Stirling, is there NOTHING that can influence you?  Do you
remember your childhood days--"

"Perfectly.  And hate them."

"Do you realise what people will say?  What they ARE saying?"

"I can imagine it," said Valancy, with a shrug of her shoulders.
She was suddenly free of fear again.  "I haven't listened to the
gossip of Deerwood teaparties and sewing circles twenty years for
nothing.  But, Dr. Stalling, it doesn't matter in the least to me
what they say--not in the least."

Dr. Stalling went away then.  A girl who cared nothing for public
opinion!  Over whom sacred family ties had no restraining
influence!  Who hated her childhood memories!

Then Cousin Georgiana came--on her own initiative, for nobody would
have thought it worth while to send her.  She found Valancy alone,
weeding the little vegetable garden she had planted, and she made
all the platitudinous pleas she could think of.  Valancy heard her
patiently.  Cousin Georgiana wasn't such a bad old soul.  Then she
said:

"And now that you have got all that out of your system, Cousin
Georgiana, can you tell me how to make creamed codfish so that it
will not be as thick as porridge and as salt as the Dead Sea?"

           *     *     *     *     *     *     *     *

"We'll just have to WAIT," said Uncle Benjamin.  "After all, Cissy
Gay can't live long.  Dr. Marsh tells me she may drop off any day."

Mrs. Frederick wept.  It would really have been so much easier to
bear if Valancy had died.  She could have worn mourning then.



CHAPTER XX


When Abel gay paid Valancy her first month's wages--which he did
promptly, in bills reeking with the odour of tobacco and whiskey--
Valancy went into Deerwood and spent every cent of it.  She got a
pretty green cr�pe dress with a girdle of crimson beads, at a
bargain sale, a pair of silk stockings, to match, and a little
crinkled green hat with a crimson rose in it.  She even bought a
foolish little beribboned and belaced nightgown.

She passed the house on Elm Street twice--Valancy never even
thought about it as "home"--but saw no one.  No doubt her mother
was sitting in the room this lovely June evening playing solitaire--
and cheating.  Valancy knew that Mrs. Frederick always cheated.
She never lost a game.  Most of the people Valancy met looked at
her seriously and passed her with a cool nod.  Nobody stopped to
speak to her.

Valancy put on her green dress when she got home.  Then she took it
off again.  She felt so miserably undressed in its low neck and
short sleeves.  And that low, crimson girdle around the hips seemed
positively indecent.  She hung it up in the closet, feeling flatly
that she had wasted her money.  She would never have the courage to
wear that dress.  John Foster's arraignment of fear had no power to
stiffen her against this.  In this one thing habit and custom were
still all-powerful.  Yet she sighed as she went down to meet Barney
Snaith in her old snuff-brown silk.  That green thing had been very
becoming--she had seen so much in her one ashamed glance.  Above it
her eyes had looked like odd brown jewels and the girdle had given
her flat figure and entirely different appearance.  She wished she
could have left it on.  But there were some things John Foster did
not know.

Every Sunday evening Valancy went to the little Free Methodist
church in a valley on the edge of "up back"--a spireless little
grey building among the pines, with a few sunken graves and mossy
gravestones in the small, paling-encircled, grass-grown square
beside it.  She liked the minister who preached there.  He was so
simple and sincere.  An old man, who lived in Port Lawrence and
came out by the lake in a little disappearing propeller boat to
give a free service to the people of the small, stony farms back of
the hills, who would otherwise never have heard any gospel message.
She liked the simple service and the fervent singing.  She liked to
sit by the open window and look out into the pine woods.  The
congregation was always small.  The Free Methodists were few in
number, poor and generally illiterate.  But Valancy loved those
Sunday evenings.  For the first time in her life she liked going to
church.  The rumour reached Deerwood that she had "turned Free
Methodist" and sent Mrs. Frederick to bed for a day.  But Valancy
had not turned anything.  She went to the church because she liked
it and because in some inexplicable way it did her good.  Old Mr.
Towers believed exactly what he preached and somehow it made a
tremendous difference.

Oddly enough, Roaring Abel disapproved of her going to the hill
church as strongly as Mrs. Frederick herself could have done.  He
had "no use for Free Methodists.  He was a Presbyterian."  But
Valancy went in spite of him.

"We'll hear something worse than THAT about her soon," Uncle
Benjamin predicted gloomily.

They did.

Valancy could not quite explain, even to herself, just why she
wanted to go to that party.  It was a dance "up back" at Chidley
Corners; and dances at Chidley Corners were not, as a rule, the
sort of assemblies where well-brought-up young ladies were found.
Valancy knew it was coming off, for Roaring Abel had been engaged
as one of the fiddlers.

But the idea of going had never occurred to her until Roaring Abel
himself broached it at supper.

"You come with me to the dance," he ordered.  "It'll do you good--
put some colour in your face.  You look peaked--you want something
to liven you up."

Valancy found herself suddenly wanting to go.  She knew nothing at
all of what dances at Chidley Corners were apt to be like.  Her
idea of dances had been fashioned on the correct affairs that went
by that name in Deerwood and Port Lawrence.  Of course she knew the
Corners' dance wouldn't be just like them.  Much more informal, of
course.  But so much the more interesting.  Why shouldn't she go?
Cissy was in a week of apparent health and improvement.  She
wouldn't mind staying alone in the least.  She entreated Valancy to
go if she wanted to.  And Valancy DID want to go.

She went to her room to dress.  A rage against the snuff-brown silk
seized her.  Wear THAT to a party!  Never.  She pulled her green
cr�pe from its hanger and put in on feverishly.  It was nonsense to
feel so--so--naked--just because her neck and arms were bare.  That
was just her old maidishness.  She would not be ridden by it.  On
went the dress--the slippers.

It was the first time she had worn a pretty dress since the
organdies of her early teens.  And THEY had never made her look
like this.

If she only had a necklace or something.  She wouldn't feel so bare
then.  She ran down to the garden.  There were clovers there--great
crimson things growing in the long grass.  Valancy gathered
handfuls of them and strung them on a cord.  Fastened above her
neck they gave her the comfortable sensation of a collar and were
oddly becoming.  Another circlet of them went round her hair,
dressed in the low puffs that became her.  Excitement brought those
faint pink stains to her face.  She flung on her coat and pulled
the little, twisty hat over her hair.

"You look so nice and--and--different, dear," said Cissy.  "Like a
green moonbeam with a gleam of red in it, if there could be such a
thing."

Valancy stooped to kiss her.

"I don't feel right about leaving you alone, Cissy."

"Oh, I'll be all right.  I feel better tonight than I have for a
long while.  I've been feeling badly to see you sticking here so
closely on my account.  I hope you'll have a nice time.  I never
was at a party at the Corners, but I used to go sometimes, long
ago, to dances up back.  We always had good times.  And you needn't
be afraid of Father being drunk tonight.  He never drinks when he
engages to play for a party.  But--there may be--liquor.  What will
you do if it gets rough?"

"Nobody would molest me."

"Not seriously, I suppose.  Father would see to that.  But it MIGHT
be noisy and--and unpleasant."

"I won't mind.  I'm only going as a looker-on.  I don't expect to
dance.  I just want to SEE what a party up back is like.  I've
never seen anything except decorous Deerwood."

Cissy smiled rather dubiously.  She knew much better than Valancy
what a party "up back" might be like if there should be liquor.
But again there mightn't be.

"I hope you'll enjoy it," she repeated.

Valancy enjoyed the drive there.  They went early, for it was
twelve miles to Chidley Corners, and they had to go in Abel's old,
ragged top-buggy.  The road was rough and rocky, like most Muskoka
roads, but full of the austere charm of northern woods.  It wound
through beautiful, purring pines that were ranks of enchantment in
the June sunset, and over the curious jade-green rivers of Muskoka,
fringed by aspens that were always quivering with some supernal
joy.

Roaring Abel was excellent company, too.  He knew all the stories
and legends of the wild, beautiful "up back," and he told them to
Valancy as they drove along.  Valancy had several fits of inward
laughter over what Uncle Benjamin and Aunt Wellington, et al.,
would feel and think and say if they saw her driving with Roaring
Abel in that terrible buggy to a dance at Chidley Corners.

At first the dance was quiet enough, and Valancy was amused and
entertained.  She even danced twice herself, with a couple of nice
"up back" boys who danced beautifully and told her she did, too.

Another compliment came her way--not a very subtle one, perhaps,
but Valancy had had too few compliments in her life to be over-nice
on that point.  She overheard two of the "up back" young men
talking about her in the dark "lean-to" behind her.

"Know who that girl in green is?"

"Nope.  Guess she's from out front.  The Port, maybe.  Got a
stylish look to her."

"No beaut but cute-looking, I'll say.  'Jever see such eyes?"

The big room was decorated with pine and fir boughs, and lighted by
Chinese lanterns.  The floor was waxed, and Roaring Abel's fiddle,
purring under his skilled touch, worked magic.  The "up back" girls
were pretty and prettily dressed.  Valancy thought it the nicest
party she had ever attended.

By eleven o'clock she had changed her mind.  A new crowd had
arrived--a crowd unmistakably drunk.  Whiskey began to circulate
freely.  Very soon almost all the men were partly drunk.  Those in
the porch and outside around the door began howling "come-all-ye's"
and continued to howl them.  The room grew noisy and reeking.
Quarrels started up here and there.  Bad language and obscene songs
were heard.  The girls, swung rudely in the dances, became
dishevelled and tawdry.  Valancy, alone in her corner, was feeling
disgusted and repentant.  Why had she ever come to such a place?
Freedom and independence were all very well, but one should not be
a little fool.  She might have known what it would be like--she
might have taken warning from Cissy's guarded sentences.  Her head
was aching--she was sick of the whole thing.  But what could she
do?  She must stay to the end.  Abel could not leave till then.
And that would probably be not till three or four in the morning.

The new influx of boys had left the girls far in the minority and
partners were scarce.  Valancy was pestered with invitations to
dance.  She refused them all shortly, and some of her refusals were
not well taken.  There were muttered oaths and sullen looks.
Across the room she saw a group of the strangers talking together
and glancing meaningly at her.  What were they plotting?

It was at this moment that she saw Barney Snaith looking in over
the heads of the crowds at the doorway.  Valancy had two distinct
convictions--one was that she was quite safe now; the other was
that THIS was why she had wanted to come to the dance.  It had been
such an absurd hope that she had not recognised it before, but now
she knew she had come because of the possibility that Barney might
be there, too.  She thought that perhaps she ought to be ashamed
for this, but she wasn't.  After her feeling of relief her next
feeling was one of annoyance with Barney for coming there unshaved.
Surely he might have enough self-respect to groom himself up
decently when he went to a party.  There he was, bareheaded,
bristly-chinned, in his old trousers and his blue homespun shirt.
Not even a coat.  Valancy could have shaken him in her anger.  No
wonder people believed everything bad of him.

But she was not afraid any longer.  One of the whispering group
left his comrades and came across the room to her, through the
whirling couples that now filled it uncomfortably.  He was a tall,
broad-shouldered fellow, not ill-dressed or ill-looking but
unmistakably half drunk.  He asked Valancy to dance.  Valancy
declined civilly.  His face turned livid.  He threw his arm about
her and pulled her to him.  His hot, whiskied breath burned her
face.

"We won't have fine-lady airs here, my girl.  If you ain't too good
to come here you ain't too good to dance with us.  Me and my pals
have been watching you.  You're got to give us each a turn and a
kiss to boot."

Valancy tried desperately and vainly to free herself.  She was
being dragged out into the maze of shouting, stamping, yelling
dancers.  The next moment the man who held her went staggering
across the room from a neatly planted blow on the jaw, knocking
down whirling couples as he went.  Valancy felt her arm grasped.

"This way--quick," said Barney Snaith.  He swung her out through
the open window behind him, vaulted lightly over the sill and
caught her hand.

"Quick--we must run for it--they'll be after us."

Valancy ran as she had never run before, clinging tight to Barney's
hand, wondering why she did not drop dead in such a mad scamper.
Suppose she did!  What a scandal it would make for her poor people.
For the first time Valancy felt a little sorry for them.  Also, she
felt glad that she had escaped from that horrible row.  Also, glad
that she was holding tight to Barney's hand.  Her feelings were
badly mixed and she had never had so many in such a brief time in
her life.

They finally reached a quiet corner in the pine woods.  The pursuit
had taken a different direction and the whoops and yells behind
them were growing faint.  Valancy, out of breath, with a crazily
beating heart, collapsed on the trunk of a fallen pine.

"Thanks," she gasped.

"What a goose you were to come to such a place!" said Barney.

"I--didn't--know--it--would--be like this," protested Valancy.

"You SHOULD have known.  Chidley Corners!"

"It--was--just--a name--to me."

Valancy knew Barney could not realise how ignorant she was of the
regions "up back."  She had lived in Deerwood all her life and of
course he supposed she knew.  He didn't know how she had been
brought up.  There was no use trying to explain.

"When I drifted in at Abel's this evening and Cissy told me you'd
come here I was amazed.  And downright scared.  Cissy told me she
was worried about you but hadn't liked to say anything to dissuade
you for fear you'd think she was thinking selfishly about herself.
So I came on up here instead of going to Deerwood."

Valancy felt a sudden delightful glow irradiating soul and body
under the dark pines.  So he had actually come up to look after
her.

"As soon as they stop hunting for us we'll sneak around to the
Muskoka road.  I left Lady Jane down there.  I'll take you home.
I suppose you've had enough of your party."

"Quite," said Valancy meekly.  The first half of the way home
neither of them said anything.  It would not have been much use.
Lady Jane made so much noise they could not have heard each other.
Anyway, Valancy did not feel conversationally inclined.  She was
ashamed of the whole affair--ashamed of her folly in going--ashamed
of being found in such a place by Barney Snaith.  By Barney Snaith,
reputed jail-breaker, infidel, forger and defaulter.  Valancy's
lips twitched in the darkness as she thought of it.  But she WAS
ashamed.

And yet she was enjoying herself--was full of a strange exultation--
bumping over that rough road beside Barney Snaith.  The big trees
shot by them.  The tall mulleins stood up along the road in stiff,
orderly ranks like companies of soldiers.  The thistles looked like
drunken fairies or tipsy elves as their car-lights passed over
them.  This was the first time she had even been in a car.  After
all, she liked it.  She was not in the least afraid, with Barney at
the wheel.  Her spirits rose rapidly as they tore along.  She
ceased to feel ashamed.  She ceased to feel anything except that
she was part of a comet rushing gloriously through the night of
space.

All at once, just where the pine woods frayed out to the scrub
barrens, Lady Jane became quiet--too quiet.  Lady Jane slowed down
quietly--and stopped.

Barney uttered an aghast exclamation.  Got out.  Investigated.
Came apologetically back.

"I'm a doddering idiot.  Out of gas.  I knew I was short when I
left home, but I meant to fill up in Deerwood.  Then I forgot all
about it in my hurry to get to the Corners."

"What can we do?" asked Valancy coolly.

"I don't know.  There's no gas nearer than Deerwood, nine miles
away.  And I don't dare leave you here alone.  There are always
tramps on this road--and some of those crazy fools back at the
Corners may come straggling along presently.  There were boys there
from the Port.  As far as I can see, the best thing to do is for us
just to sit patiently here until some car comes along and lends us
enough gas to get to Roaring Abel's with."

"Well, what's the matter with that?" said Valancy.

"We may have to sit here all night," said Barney.

"I don't mind," said Valancy.

Barney gave a short laugh.  "If you don't, I needn't.  I haven't
any reputation to lose."

"Nor I," said Valancy comfortably.



CHAPTER XXI


We'll just sit here," said Barney, "and if we think of anything
worth while saying we'll say it.  Otherwise, not.  Don't imagine
you're bound to talk to me."

"John Foster says," quoted Valancy, "'If you can sit in silence
with a person for half an hour and yet be entirely comfortable, you
and that person can be friends.  If you cannot, friends you'll
never be and you need not waste time in trying.'"

"Evidently John Foster says a sensible thing once in a while,"
conceded Barney.

They sat in silence for a long while.  Little rabbits hopped across
the road.  Once or twice an owl laughed out delightfully.  The road
beyond them was fringed with the woven shadow lace of trees.  Away
off to the southwest the sky was full of silvery little cirrus
clouds above the spot where Barney's island must be.

Valancy was perfectly happy.  Some things dawn on you slowly.  Some
things come by lightning flashes.  Valancy had had a lightning
flash.

She knew quite well now that she loved Barney.  Yesterday she had
been all her own.  Now she was this man's.  Yet he had done
nothing--said nothing.  He had not even looked at her as a woman.
But that didn't matter.  Nor did it matter what he was or what he
had done.  She loved him without any reservations.  Everything in
her went out wholly to him.  She had no wish to stifle or disown
her love.  She seemed to be his so absolutely that thought apart
from him--thought in which he did not predominate--was an
impossibility.

She had realised, quite simply and fully, that she loved him, in
the moment when he was leaning on the car door, explaining that
Lady Jane had no gas.  She had looked deep into his eyes in the
moonlight and had known.  In just that infinitesimal space of time
everything was changed.  Old things passed away and all things
became new.

She was no longer unimportant, little old maid Valancy Stirling.
She was a woman, full of love and therefore rich and significant--
justified to herself.  Life was no longer empty and futile, and
death could cheat her of nothing.  Love had cast out her last fear.

Love!  What a searing, torturing, intolerably sweet thing it was--
this possession of body, soul and mind!  With something at its core
as fine and remote and purely spiritual as the tiny blue spark in
the heart of the unbreakable diamond.  No dream had ever been like
this.  She was no longer solitary.  She was one of a vast
sisterhood--all the women who had ever loved in the world.

Barney need never know it--though she would not in the least have
minded his knowing.  But SHE knew it and it made a tremendous
difference to her.  Just to love!  She did not ask to be loved.  It
was rapture enough just to sit there beside him in silence, alone
in the summer night in the white splendour of moonshine, with the
wind blowing down on them out of the pine woods.  She had always
envied the wind.  So free.  Blowing where it listed.  Through the
hills.  Over the lakes.  What a tang, what a zip it had!  What a
magic of adventure!  Valancy felt as if she had exchanged her shop-
worn soul for a fresh one, fire-new from the workshop of the gods.
As far back as she could look, life had been dull--colourless--
savourless.  Now she had come to a little patch of violets, purple
and fragrant--hers for the plucking.  No matter who or what had
been in Barney's past--no matter who or what might be in his
future--no one else could ever have this perfect hour.  She
surrendered herself utterly to the charm of the moment.

"Ever dream of ballooning?' said Barney suddenly.

"No," said Valancy.

"I do--often.  Dream of sailing through the clouds--seeing the
glories of sunset--spending hours in the midst of a terrific storm
with lightning playing above and below you--skimming above a silver
cloud floor under a full moon--wonderful!"

"It does sound so," said Valancy.  "I've stayed on earth in my
dreams."

She told him about her Blue Castle.  It was so easy to tell Barney
things.  One felt he understood everything--even the things you
didn't tell him.  And then she told him a little of her existence
before she came to Roaring Abel's.  She wanted him to see why she
had gone to the dance "up back."

"You see--I've never had any real life," she said.  "I've just--
breathed.  Every door has always been shut to me."

"But you're still young," said Barney.

"Oh, I know.  Yes, I'm 'still young'--but that's so different from
YOUNG," said Valancy bitterly.  For a moment she was tempted to
tell Barney why her years had nothing to do with her future; but
she did not.  She was not going to think of death tonight.

"Though I never was really young," she went on--"until tonight,"
she added in her heart.  "I never had a life like other girls.  You
couldn't understand.  Why,"--she had a desperate desire that Barney
should know the worst about her--"I didn't even love my mother.
Isn't it awful that I don't love my mother?"

"Rather awful--for her," said Barney drily.

"Oh, she didn't know it.  She took my love for granted.  And I
wasn't any use or comfort to her or anybody.  I was just a--a--
vegetable.  And I got tired of it.  That's why I came to keep house
for Mr. Gay and look after Cissy."

"And I suppose your people thought you'd gone mad."

"They did--and do--literally," said Valancy.  "But it's a comfort
to them.  They'd rather believe me mad than bad.  There's no other
alternative.  But I've been LIVING since I came to Mr. Gay's.  It's
been a delightful experience.  I suppose I'll pay for it when I
have to go back--but I'll have HAD it."

"That's true," said Barney.  "If you buy your experience it's your
own.  So it's no matter how much you pay for it.  Somebody else's
experience can never be yours.  Well, it's a funny old world."

"Do you think it really is old?" asked Valancy dreamily.  "I never
believe THAT in June.  It seems so young tonight--somehow.  In that
quivering moonlight--like a young, white girl--waiting."

"Moonlight here on the verge of up back is different from moonlight
anywhere else," agreed Barney.  "It always makes me feel so clean,
somehow--body and soul.  And of course the age of gold always comes
back in spring."

It was ten o'clock now.  A dragon of black cloud ate up the moon.
The spring air grew chill--Valancy shivered.  Barney reached back
into the innards of Lady Jane and clawed up an old, tobacco-scented
overcoat.

"Put that on," he ordered.

"Don't you want it yourself?" protested Valancy.

"No.  I'm not going to have you catching cold on my hands."

"Oh, I won't catch cold.  I haven't had a cold since I came to Mr.
Gay's--though I've done the foolishest things.  It's funny, too--I
used to have them all the time.  I feel so selfish taking your
coat."

"You've sneezed three times.  No use winding up your 'experience'
up back with grippe or pneumonia."

He pulled it up tight about her throat and buttoned it on her.
Valancy submitted with secret delight.  How nice it was to have
some one look after you so!  She snuggled down into the tobaccoey
folds and wished the night could last forever.

Ten minutes later a car swooped down on them from "up back."
Barney sprang from Lady Jane and waved his hand.  The car came to a
stop beside them.  Valancy saw Uncle Wellington and Olive gazing at
her in horror from it.

So Uncle Wellington had got a car!  And he must have been spending
the evening up at Mistawis with Cousin Herbert.  Valancy almost
laughed aloud at the expression on his face as he recognised her.
The pompous, be-hiskered old humbug!

"Can you let me have enough gas to take me to Deerwood?" Barney was
asking politely.  But Uncle Wellington was not attending to him.

"Valancy, how came you HERE!" he said sternly.

"By chance or God's grace," said Valancy.

"With this jail-bird--at ten o'clock at night!" said Uncle
Wellington.

Valancy turned to Barney.  The moon had escaped from its dragon and
in its light her eyes were full of deviltry.

"ARE you a jail-bird?"

"Does it matter?" said Barney, gleams of fun in HIS eyes.

"Not to me.  I only asked out of curiosity," continued Valancy.

"Then I won't tell you.  I never satisfy curiosity."  He turned to
Uncle Wellington and his voice changed subtly.

"Mr. Stirling, I asked you if you could let me have some gas.  If
you can, well and good.  If not, we are only delaying you
unnecessarily."

Uncle Wellington was in a horrible dilemma.  To give gas to this
shameless pair!  But not to give it to them!  To go away and leave
them there in the Mistawis woods--until daylight, likely.  It was
better to give it to them and let them get out of sight before any
one else saw them.

"Got anything to get gas in?" he grunted surlily.

Barney produced a two-gallon measure from Lady Jane.  The two men
went to the rear of the Stirling car and began manipulating the
tap.  Valancy stole sly glances at Olive over the collar of
Barney's coat.  Olive was sitting grimly staring straight ahead
with an outraged expression.  She did not mean to take any notice
of Valancy.  Olive had her own secret reasons for feeling outraged.
Cecil had been in Deerwood lately and of course had heard all about
Valancy.  He agreed that her mind was changed and was exceedingly
anxious to find out whence the derangement had been inherited.  It
was a serious thing to have in the family--a very serious thing.
One had to think of one's--descendants.

"She got it from the Wansbarras," said Olive positively.  "There's
nothing like that in the Stirlings--nothing!"

"I hope not--I certainly hope not," Cecil had responded dubiously.
"But then--to go out as a servant--for that is what it practically
amounts to.  Your cousin!"

Poor Olive felt the implication.  The Port Lawrence Prices were not
accustomed to ally themselves with families whose members "worked
out."

Valancy could not resist temptation.  She leaned forward.

"Olive, does it hurt?"

Olive bit--stiffly.

"Does WHAT hurt?"

"Looking like that."

For a moment Olive resolved she would take no further notice of
Valancy.  Then duty came uppermost.  She must not miss the
opportunity.

"Doss," she implored, leaning forward also, "won't you come home--
come home tonight?"

Valancy yawned.

"You sound like a revival meeting," she said.  "You really do."

"If you will come back--"

"All will be forgiven."

"Yes," said Olive eagerly.  Wouldn't it be splendid if SHE could
induce the prodigal daughter to return?  "We'll never cast it up to
you.  Doss, there are nights when I cannot sleep for thinking of
you."

"And me having the time of my life," said Valancy, laughing.

"Doss, I can't believe you're bad.  I've always said you couldn't
be bad--"

"I don't believe I can be," said Valancy.  "I'm afraid I'm
hopelessly proper.  I've been sitting here for three hours with
Barney Snaith and he hasn't even tried to kiss me.  I wouldn't have
minded if he had, Olive."

Valancy was still leaning forward.  Her little hat with its crimson
rose was tilted down over one eyes--Valancy's smile--what had
happened to Valancy!  She looked--not pretty--Doss couldn't be
pretty--but provocative, fascinating--yes, abominably so.  Olive
drew back.  It was beneath her dignity to say more.  After all,
Valancy must be both mad AND bad.

"Thanks--that's enough," said Barney behind the car.  "Much
obliged, Mr. Stirling.  Two gallons--seventy cents.  Thank you."

Uncle Wellington climbed foolishly and feebly into his car.  He
wanted to give Snaith a piece of his mind, but dared not.  Who knew
what the creature might do if provoked?  No doubt he carried
firearms.

Uncle Wellington looked indecisively at Valancy.  But Valancy had
turned her back on him and was watching Barney pour the gas into
Lady Jane's maw.

"Drive on," said Olive decisively.  "There's no use in waiting
here.  Let me tell you what she said to me."

"The little hussy!  The shameless little hussy!" said Uncle
Wellington.



CHAPTER XXII


The next thing the Stirlings heard was that Valancy had been seen
with Barney Snaith in a movie theatre in Port Lawrence and after it
at supper in a Chinese restaurant there.  This was quite true--and
no one was more surprised at it than Valancy herself.  Barney had
come along in Lady Jane one dim twilight and told Valancy
unceremoniously if she wanted a drive to hop in.

"I'm going to the Port.  Will you go there with me?"

His eyes were teasing and there was a bit of defiance in his voice.
Valancy, who did not conceal from herself that she would have gone
anywhere with him to any place, "hopped in" without more ado.  They
tore into and through Deerwood.  Mrs. Frederick and Cousin
Stickles, taking a little air on the verandah, saw them whirl by in
a cloud of dust and sought comfort in each other's eye.  Valancy,
who in some dim pre-existence had been afraid of a car, was hatless
and her hair was blowing wildly round her face.  She would
certainly come down with bronchitis--and die at Roaring Abel's.
She wore a low-neck dress and her arms were bare.  That Snaith
creature was in his shirt-sleeves, smoking a pipe.  They were going
at the rate of forty miles an hour--sixty, Cousin Stickles averred.
Lady Jane could hit the pike when she wanted to.  Valancy waved her
hand gaily to her relatives.  As for Mrs. Frederick, she was
wishing she knew how to go into hysterics.

"Was it for this,'' she demanded in hollow tones, that I suffered
the pangs of motherhood?"

"I will NOT believe," said Cousin Stickles solemnly, "that our
prayers will not yet be answered."

"Who--WHO will protect that unfortunate girl when I am gone?"
moaned Mrs. Frederick.

As for Valancy, she was wondering if it could really be only a few
weeks since she had sat there with them on that verandah.  Hating
the rubberplant.  Pestered with teasing questions like black flies.
Always thinking of appearances.  Cowed because of Aunt Wellington's
teaspoons and Uncle Benjamin's money.  Poverty-stricken.  Afraid of
everybody.  Envying Olive.  A slave to moth-eaten traditions.
Nothing to hope for or expect.

And now every day was a gay adventure.

Lady Jane flew over the fifteen miles between Deerwood and the
Port--through the Port.  The way Barney went past traffic policemen
was not holy.  The lights were beginning to twinkle out like stars
in the clear, lemon-hued twilight air.  This was the only time
Valancy ever really liked the town, and she was crazy with the
delight of speeding.  Was it possible she had ever been afraid of a
car?  She was perfectly happy, riding beside Barney.  Not that she
deluded herself into thinking it had any significance.  She knew
quite well that Barney had asked her to go on the impulse of the
moment--an impulse born of a feeling of pity for her and her
starved little dreams.  She was looking tired after a wakeful night
with a heart attack, followed by a busy day.  She had so little
fun.  He'd give her an outing for once.  Besides, Abel was in the
kitchen, at the point of drunkenness where he was declaring he did
not believe in God and beginning to sing ribald songs.  It was just
as well she should be out of the way for a while.  Barney knew
Roaring Abel's repertoire.

They went to the movie--Valancy had never been to a movie.  And
then, finding a nice hunger upon them, they went and had fried
chicken--unbelievable delicious--in the Chinese restaurant.  After
which they rattled home again, leaving a devastating trail of
scandal behind them.  Mrs. Frederick gave up going to church
altogether.  She could not endure her friends' pitying glances and
questions.  But Cousin Stickles went every Sunday.  She said they
had been given a cross to bear.



CHAPTER XXIII


On one of Cissy's wakeful nights, she told Valancy her poor little
story.  They were sitting by the open window.  Cissy could not get
her breath lying down that night.  An inglorious gibbous moon was
hanging over the wooded hills and in its spectral light Cissy
looked frail and lovely and incredibly young.  A child.  It did not
seem possible that she could have lived through all the passion and
pain and shame of her story.

"He was stopping at the hotel across the lake.  He used to come
over in his canoe at night--we met in the pines down the shore.  He
was a young college student--his father was a rich man in Toronto.
Oh, Valancy, I didn't mean to be bad--I didn't, indeed.  But I
loved him so--I love him yet--I'll always love him.  And I--didn't
know--some things.  I didn't understand.  Then his father came and
took him away.  And--after a little--I found out--oh, Valancy,--I
was so frightened.  I didn't know what to do.  I wrote him--and he
came.  He--he said he would marry me, Valancy."

"And why--and why?--"

"Oh, Valancy, he didn't love me any more.  I saw that at a glance.
He--he was just offering to marry me because he thought he ought
to--because he was sorry for me.  He wasn't bad--but he was so
young--and what was I that he should keep on loving me?"

"Never mind making excuses for him," said Valancy a bit shortly.
"So you wouldn't marry him?''

"I couldn't--not when he didn't love me any more.  Somehow--I can't
explain--it seemed a worse thing to do than--the other.  He--he
argued a little--but he went away.  Do you think I did right,
Valancy?"

"Yes, I do.  YOU did right.  But he--"

"Don't blame him, dear.  Please don't.  Let's not talk about him at
all.  There's no need.  I wanted to tell you how it was--I didn't
want you to think me bad--"

"I never did think so."

"Yes, I felt that--whenever you came.  Oh, Valancy, what you've
been to me!  I can never tell you--but God will bless you for it.
I know He will--'with what measure ye mete.'"

Cissy sobbed for a few minutes in Valancy's arms.  Then she wiped
her eyes.

"Well, that's almost all.  I came home.  I wasn't really so very
unhappy.  I suppose I should have been--but I wasn't.  Father
wasn't hard on me.  And my baby was so sweet, Valancy--with such
lovely blue eyes--and little rings of pale gold hair like silk
floss--and tiny dimpled hands.  I used to bite his satin-smooth
little face all over--softly, so as not to hurt him, you know--"

"I know," said Valancy, wincing.  "I know--a woman ALWAYS knows--
and dreams--"

"And he was ALL mine.  Nobody else had any claim on him.  When he
died, oh, Valancy, I thought I must die too--I didn't see how
anybody could endure such anguish and live.  To see his dear little
eyes and know he would never open them again--to miss his warm
little body nestled against mine at night and think of him sleeping
alone and cold, his wee face under the hard frozen earth.  It was
so awful for the first year--after that it was a little easier, one
didn't keep thinking 'this day last year'--but I was so glad when I
found out I was dying."

"'Who could endure life if it were not for the hope of death?'"
murmured Valancy softly--it was of course a quotation from some
book of John Foster's.

"I'm glad I've told you all about it," sighed Cissy.  "I wanted you
to know."

Cissy died a few nights after that.  Roaring Abel was away.  When
Valancy saw the change that had come over Cissy's face she wanted
to telephone for the doctor.  But Cissy wouldn't let her.

"Valancy, why should you?  He can do nothing for me.  I've known
for several days that--this--was near.  Let me die in peace, dear--
just holding your hand.  Oh, I'm so glad you're here.  Tell Father
good-bye for me.  He's always been as good to me as he knew how--
and Barney.  Somehow, I think that Barney--"

But a spasm of coughing interrupted and exhausted her.  She fell
asleep when it was over, still holding to Valancy's hand.  Valancy
sat there in the silence.  She was not frightened--or even sorry.
At sunrise Cissy died.  She opened her eyes and looked past Valancy
at something--something that made her smile suddenly and happily.
And, smiling, she died.

Valancy crossed Cissy's hands on her breast and went to the open
window.  In the eastern sky, amid the fires of sunrise, an old moon
was hanging--as slender and lovely as a new moon.  Valancy had
never seen an old, old moon before.  She watched it pale and fade
until it paled and faded out of sight in the living rose of day.  A
little pool in the barrens shone in the sunrise like a great golden
lily.

But the world suddenly seemed a colder place to Valancy.  Again
nobody needed her.  She was not in the least sorry Cecilia was
dead.  She was only sorry for all her suffering in life.  But
nobody could ever hurt her again.  Valancy had always thought death
dreadful.  But Cissy had died so quietly--so pleasantly.  And at
the very last--something--had made up to her for everything.  She
was lying there now, in her white sleep, looking like a child.
Beautiful!  All the lines of shame and pain gone.

Roaring Abel drove in, justifying his name.  Valancy went down and
told him.  The shock sobered him at once.  He slumped down on the
seat of his buggy, his great head hanging.

"Cissy dead--Cissy dead," he said vacantly.  "I didn't think it
would 'a' come so soon.  Dead.  She used to run down the lane to
meet me with a little white rose stuck in her hair.  Cissy used to
be a pretty little girl.  And a good little girl."

"She has always been a good little girl," said Valancy.



CHAPTER XXIV


Valancy herself made Cissy ready for burial.  No hands but hers
should touch that pitiful, wasted little body.  The old house was
spotless on the day of burial.  Barney Snaith was not there.  He
had done all he could to help Valancy before it--he had shrouded
the pale Cecilia in white roses from the garden--and then had gone
back to his island.  But everybody else was there.  All Deerwood
and "up back" came.  They forgave Cissy splendidly at last.  Mr.
Bradly gave a very beautiful funeral address.  Valancy had wanted
her old Free Methodist man, but Roaring Abel was obdurate.  He was
a Presbyterian and no one but a Presbyterian minister should bury
HIS daughter.  Mr. Bradly was very tactful.  He avoided all dubious
points and it was plain to be seen he hoped for the best.  Six
reputable citizens of Deerwood bore Cecilia Gay to her grave in
decorous Deerwood cemetery.  Among them was Uncle Wellington.

The Stirlings all came to the funeral, men and women.  They had had
a family conclave over it.  Surely now that Cissy Gay was dead
Valancy would come home.  She simply could not stay there with
Roaring Abel.  That being the case, the wisest course--decreed
Uncle James--was to attend the funeral--legitimise the whole thing,
so to speak--show Deerwood that Valancy had really done a most
creditable deed in going to nurse poor Cecilia Gay and that her
family backed her up in it.  Death, the miracle worker, suddenly
made the thing quite respectable.  If Valancy would return to home
and decency while public opinion was under its influence all might
yet be well.  Society was suddenly forgetting all Cecilia's wicked
doings and remembering what a pretty, modest little thing she had
been--"and motherless, you know--motherless!"  It was the
psychological moment--said Uncle James.

So the Stirlings went to the funeral.  Even Cousin Gladys' neuritis
allowed her to come.  Cousin Stickles was there, her bonnet
dripping all over her face, crying as woefully as if Cissy had been
her nearest and dearest.  Funerals always brought Cousin Stickles'
"own sad bereavement" back.

And Uncle Wellington was a pall-bearer.

Valancy, pale, subdued-looking, her slanted eyes smudged with
purple, in her snuff-brown dress, moving quietly about, finding
seats for people, consulting in undertones with minister and
undertaker, marshalling the "mourners" into the parlour, was so
decorous and proper and Stirlingish that her family took heart of
grace.  This was not--could not be--the girl who had sat all night
in the woods with Barney Snaith--who had gone tearing bareheaded
through Deerwood and Port Lawrence.  This was the Valancy they
knew.  Really, surprisingly capable and efficient.  Perhaps she had
always been kept down a bit too much--Amelia really was rather
strict--hadn't had a chance to show what was in her.  So thought
the Stirlings.  And Edward Beck, from the Port road, a widower with
a large family who was beginning to take notice, took notice of
Valancy and thought she might make a mighty fine second wife.  No
beauty--but a fifty-year-old widower, Mr. Beck told himself very
reasonably, couldn't expect everything.  Altogether, it seemed that
Valancy's matrimonial chances were never so bright as they were at
Cecilia Gay's funeral.

What the Stirlings and Edward Beck would have thought had they
known the back of Valancy's mind must be left to the imagination.
Valancy was hating the funeral--hating the people who came to stare
with curiosity at Cecilia's marble-white face--hating the smugness--
hating the dragging, melancholy singing--hating Mr. Bradly's
cautious platitudes.  If she could have had her absurd way, there
would have been no funeral at all.  She would have covered Cissy
over with flowers, shut her away from prying eyes, and buried her
beside her nameless little baby in the grassy burying-ground under
the pines of the "up back" church, with a bit of kindly prayer from
the old Free Methodist minister.  She remembered Cissy saying once,
"I wish I could be buried deep in the heart of the woods where
nobody would ever come to say, 'Cissy Gay is buried here.' and tell
over my miserable story."

But this!  However, it would soon be over.  Valancy knew, if the
Stirlings and Edward Beck didn't, exactly what she intended to do
then.  She had lain awake all the preceding night thinking about it
and finally deciding on it.

When the funeral procession had left the house, Mrs. Frederick
sought out Valancy in the kitchen.

"My child," she said tremulously, "you'll come home NOW?"

"Home," said Valancy absently.  She was getting on an apron and
calculating how much tea she must put to steep for supper.  There
would be several guests from "up back"--distant relatives of the
Gays' who had not remembered them for years.  And she was so tired
she wished she could borrow a pair of legs from the cat.

"Yes, home," said Mrs. Frederick, with a touch of asperity.  "I
suppose you won't dream of staying here now--alone with Roaring
Abel."

"Oh, no, I'm not going to stay HERE," said Valancy.  "Of course,
I'll have to stay for a day or two, to put the house in order
generally.  But that will be all.  Excuse me, Mother, won't you?
I've a frightful lot to do--all those "up back" people will be here
to supper."

Mrs. Frederick retreated in considerable relief, and the Stirlings
went home with lighter hearts.

"We will just treat her as if nothing had happened when she comes
back," decreed Uncle Benjamin.  "That will be the best plan.  Just
as if nothing had happened."



CHAPTER XXV


On the evening of the day after the funeral Roaring Abel went off
for a spree.  He had been sober for four whole days and could
endure it no longer.  Before he went, Valancy told him she would be
going away the next day.  Roaring Abel was sorry, and said so.  A
distant cousin from "up back" was coming to keep house for him--
quite willing to do so now since there was no sick girl to wait on--
but Abel was not under any delusions concerning her.

"She won't be like you, my girl.  Well, I'm obliged to you.  You
helped me out of a bad hole and I won't forget it.  And I won't
forget what you did for Cissy.  I'm your friend, and if you ever
want any of the Stirlings spanked and sot in a corner send for me.
I'm going to wet my whistle.  Lord, but I'm dry!  Don't reckon I'll
be back afore tomorrow night, so if you're going home tomorrow,
good-bye now."

"I MAY go home tomorrow," said Valancy, "but I'm not going back to
Deerwood."

"Not going--"

"You'll find the key on the woodshed nail," interrupted Valancy,
politely and unmistabably.  "The dog will be in the barn and the
cat in the cellar.  Don't forget to feed her till your cousin
comes.  The pantry is full and I made bread and pies today.  Good-
bye, Mr. Gay.  You have been very kind to me and I appreciate it."

"We've had a d----d decent time of it together, and that's a fact,"
said Roaring Abel.  "You're the best small sport in the world, and
your little finger is worth the whole Stirling clan tied together.
Good-bye and good-luck."

Valancy went out to the garden.  Her legs trembled a little, but
otherwise she felt and looked composed.  She held something tightly
in her hand.  The garden was lying in the magic of the warm,
odorous July twilight.  A few stars were out and the robins were
calling through the velvety silences of the barrens.  Valancy stood
by the gate expectantly.  Would he come?  If he did not--

He was coming.  Valancy heard Lady Jane Grey far back in the woods.
Her breath came a little more quickly.  Nearer--and nearer--she
could see Lady Jane now--bumping down the lane--nearer--nearer--he
was there--he had sprung from the car and leaning over the gate,
looking at her.

"Going home, Miss Stirling?"

"I don't know--yet," said Valancy slowly.  Her mind was made up,
with no shadow of turning, but the moment was very tremendous.

"I thought I'd run down and ask if there was anything I could do
for you," said Barney.

Valancy took it with a canter.

"Yes, there is something you can do for me," she said, evenly and
distinctly.  "Will you marry me?"

For a moment Barney was silent.  There was no particular expression
on his face.  Then he gave an odd laugh.

"Come, now!  I knew luck was just waiting around the corner for me.
All the signs have been pointing that way today."

"Wait."  Valancy lifted her hand.  "I'm in earnest--but I want to
get my breath after that question.  Of course, with my bringing up,
I realise perfectly well that this is one of the things 'a lady
should not do.'"

"But why--why?"

"For two reasons."  Valancy was still a little breathless, but she
looked Barney straight in the eyes while all the dead Stirlings
revolved rapidly in their graves and the living ones did nothing
because they did not know that Valancy was at that moment proposing
lawful marriage to the notorious Barney Snaith.  "The first reason
is, I--I--"  Valancy tried to say "I love you" but could not.  She
had to take refuge in a pretended flippancy.  "I'm crazy about you.
The second is--this."

She handed him Dr. Trent's letter.

Barney opened it with the air of a man thankful to find some safe,
sane thing to do.  As he read it his face changed.  He understood--
more perhaps than Valancy wanted him to.

"Are you sure nothing can be done for you?"

Valancy did not misunderstand the question.

"Yes.  You know Dr. Trent's reputation in regard to heart disease.
I haven't long to live--perhaps only a few months--a few weeks.  I
want to LIVE them.  I can't go back to Deerwood--you know what my
life was like there.  And"--she managed it this time--"I love you.
I want to spend the rest of my life with you.  That's all."

Barney folded his arms on the gate and looked gravely enough at a
white, saucy star that was winking at him just over Roaring Abel's
kitchen chimney.

"You don't know anything about me.  I may be a--murderer."

"No, I don't.  You MAY be something dreadful.  Everything they say
of you may be true.  But it doesn't matter to me."

"You care that much for me, Valancy?" said Barney incredulously,
looking away from the star and into her eyes--her strange,
mysterious eyes.

"I care--that much," said Valancy in a low voice.  She was
trembling.  He had called her by her name for the first time.  It
was sweeter than another man's caress could have been just to hear
him say her name like that.

"If we are going to get married," said Barney, speaking suddenly in
a casual, matter-of-fact voice, "some things must be understood."

"Everything must be understood," said Valancy.

"I have things I want to hide," said Barney coolly "You are not to
ask me about them."

"I won't," said Valancy.

"You must never ask to see my mail."

"Never."

"And we are never to pretend anything to each other."

"We won't," said Valancy.  "You won't even have to pretend you like
me.  If you marry me I know you're only doing it out of pity."

"And we'll never tell a lie to each other about anything--a big lie
or petty lie."

"Especially a petty lie," agreed Valancy.

"And you'll have to live back on my island.  I won't live anywhere
else."

"That's partly why I want to marry you," said Valancy.

Barney peered at her.

"I believe you mean it.  Well--let's get married, then."

"Thank you," said Valancy, with a sudden return of primness.  She
would have been much less embarrassed if he had refused her.

"I suppose I haven't any right to make conditions.  But I'm going
to make one.  You are never to refer to my heart or my liability to
sudden death.  You are never to urge me to be careful.  You are to
forget--absolutely forget--that I'm not perfectly healthy.  I have
written a letter to my mother--here it is--you are to keep it.  I
have explained everything in it.  If I drop dead suddenly--as I
likely will do--"

"It will exonerate me in the eyes of your kindred from the
suspicion of having poisoned you," said Barney with a grin.

"Exactly."  Valancy laughed gaily.  "Dear me, I'm glad this is
over.  It has been--a bit of an ordeal.  You see, I'm not in the
habit of going about asking men to marry me.  It is so nice of you
not to refuse me--or offer to be a brother!"

"I'll go to the Port tomorrow and get a license.  We can be married
tomorrow evening.  Dr. Stalling, I suppose?"

"Heavens, no."  Valancy shuddered.  "Besides, he wouldn't do it.
He'd shake his forefinger at me and I'd jilt you at the altar.  No,
I want my old Mr. Towers to marry me."

"Will you marry me as I stand?" demanded Barney.  A passing car,
full of tourists, honked loudly--it seemed derisively.  Valancy
looked at him.  Blue homespun shirt, nondescript hat, muddy
overalls.  Unshaved!

"Yes," she said.

Barney put his hands over the gate and took her little, cold ones
gently in his.

"Valancy," he said, trying to speak lightly, "of course I'm not in
love with you--never thought of such a thing as being in love.
But, do you know, I've always thought you were a bit of a dear."



CHAPTER XXVI


The next day passed for Valancy like a dream.  She could not make
herself or anything she did seem real.  She saw nothing of Barney,
though she expected he must go rattling past on his way to the Port
for a license.

Perhaps he had changed his mind.

But at dusk the lights of Lady Jane suddenly swooped over the crest
of the wooded hill beyond the lane.  Valancy was waiting at the
gate for her bridegroom.  She wore her green dress and her green
hat because she had nothing else to wear.  She did not look or feel
at all bride-like--she really looked like a wild elf strayed out of
the greenwood.  But that did not matter.  Nothing at all mattered
except that Barney was coming for her.

"Ready?" said Barney, stopping Lady Jane with some new, horrible
noises.

"Yes."  Valancy stepped in and sat down.  Barney was in his blue
shirt and overalls.  But they were clean overalls.  He was smoking
a villainous-looking pipe and he was bareheaded.  But he had a pair
of oddly smart boots on under his shabby overalls.  And he was
shaved.  They clattered into Deerwood and through Deerwood and hit
the long, wooded road to the Port.

"Haven't changed your mind?" said Barney.

"No.  Have you?"

"No."

That was their whole conversation on the fifteen miles.  Everything
was more dream-like than ever.  Valancy didn't know whether she
felt happy.  Or terrified.  Or just plain fool.

Then the lights of Port Lawrence were about them.  Valancy felt as
if she were surrounded by the gleaming, hungry eyes of hundreds of
great, stealthy panthers.  Barney briefly asked where Mr. Towers
lived, and Valancy as briefly told him.  They stopped before the
shabby little house in an unfashionable street.  They went in to
the small, shabby parlour.  Barney produced his license.  So he HAD
got it.  Also a ring.  This thing was real.  She, Valancy Stirling,
was actually on the point of being married.

They were standing up together before Mr. Towers.  Valancy heard
Mr. Towers and Barney saying things.  She heard some other person
saying things.  She herself was thinking of the way she had once
planned to be married--away back in her early teens when such a
thing had not seemed impossible.  White silk and tulle veil and
orange-blossoms; no bridesmaid.  But one flower girl, in a frock of
cream shadow lace over pale pink, with a wreath of flowers in her
hair, carrying a basket of roses and lilies-of-the-valley.  And the
groom, a noble-looking creature, irreproachably clad in whatever
the fashion of the day decreed.  Valancy lifted her eyes and saw
herself and Barney in the little slanting, distorting mirror over
the mantelpiece.  She in her odd, unbridal green hat and dress;
Barney in shirt and overalls.  But it was Barney.  That was all
that mattered.  No veil--no flowers--no guests--no presents--no
wedding-cake--but just Barney.  For all the rest of her life there
would be Barney.

"Mrs. Snaith, I hope you will be very happy," Mr. Towers was
saying.

He had not seemed surprised at their appearance--not even at
Barney's overalls.  He had seen plenty of queer weddings "up back."
He did not know Valancy was one of the Deerwood Stirlings--he did
not even know there WERE Deerwood Stirlings.  He did not know
Barney Snaith was a fugitive from justice.  Really, he was an
incredibly ignorant old man.  Therefore he married them and gave
them his blessing very gently and solemnly and prayed for them that
night after they had gone away.  His conscience did not trouble him
at all.

"What a nice way to get married!" Barney was saying as he put Lady
Jane in gear.  "No fuss and flub-dub.  I never supposed it was half
so easy."

"For heaven's sake," said Valancy suddenly, "let's forget we ARE
married and talk as if we weren't.  I can't stand another drive
like the one we had coming in."

Barney howled and threw Lady Jane into high with an infernal noise.

"And I thought I was making it easy for you," he said.  "You didn't
seem to want to talk."

"I didn't.  But I wanted you to talk.  I don't want you to make
love to me, but I want you to act like an ordinary human being.
Tell me about this island of yours.  What sort of a place is it?"

"The jolliest place in the world.  You're going to love it.  The
first time I saw it I loved it.  Old Tom MacMurray owned it then.
He built the little shack on it, lived there in winter and rented
it to Toronto people in summer.  I bought it from him--became by
that one simple transaction a landed proprietor owning a house and
an island.  There is something so satisfying in owning a whole
island.  And isn't an uninhabited island a charming idea?  I'd
wanted to own one ever since I'd read Robinson Crusoe.  It seemed
too good to be true.  And beauty!  Most of the scenery belongs to
the government, but they don't tax you for looking at it, and the
moon belongs to everybody.  You won't find my shack very tidy.  I
suppose you'll want to make it tidy."

"Yes," said Valancy honestly.  "I HAVE to be tidy.  I don't really
WANT to be.  But untidiness hurts me.  Yes, I'll have to tidy up
your shack."

"I was prepared for that," said Barney, with a hollow groan.

"But," continued Valancy relentingly, "I won't insist on your
wiping your feet when you come in."

"No, you'll only sweep up after me with the air of a martyr," said
Barney.  "Well, anyway, you can't tidy the lean-to.  You can't even
enter it.  The door will be locked and I shall keep the key."

"Bluebeard's chamber," said Valancy.  "I shan't even think of it.
I don't care how many wives you have hanging up in it.  So long as
they're really dead."

"Dead as door-nails.  You can do as you like in the rest of the
house.  There's not much of it--just one big living-room and one
small bedroom.  Well built, though.  Old Tom loved his job.  The
beams of our house are cedar and the rafters fir.  Our living-room
windows face west and east.  It's wonderful to have a room where
you can see both sunrise and sunset.  I have two cats there.  Banjo
and Good luck.  Adorable animals.  Banjo is a big, enchanting, grey
devil-cat.  Striped, of course.  I don't care a hang for any cat
that hasn't stripes.  I never knew a cat who could swear as
genteely and effectively as Banjo.  His only fault is that he
snores horribly when he is asleep.  Luck is a dainty little cat.
Always looking wistfully at you, as if he wanted to tell you
something.  Maybe he will pull it off sometime.  Once in a thousand
years, you know, one cat is allowed to speak.  My cats are
philosophers--neither of them ever cries over spilt milk.

"Two old crows live in a pine-tree on the point and are reasonably
neighbourly.  Call 'em Nip and Tuck.  And I have a demure little
tame owl.  Name, Leander.  I brought him up from a baby and he
lives over on the mainland and chuckles to himself o'nights.  And
bats--it's a great place for bats at night.  Scared of bats?"

"No; I like them."

"So do I.  Nice, queer, uncanny, mysterious creatures.  Coming from
nowhere--going nowhere.  Swoop!  Banjo likes 'em, too.  Eats 'em.
I have a canoe and a disappearing propeller boat.  Went to the Port
in it today to get my license.  Quieter than Lady Jane."

"I thought you hadn't gone at all--that you HAD changed your mind,"
admitted Valancy.

Barney laughed--the laugh Valancy did not like--the little, bitter,
cynical laugh.

"I never change my mind," he said shortly.  They went back through
Deerwood.  Up the Muskoka road.  Past Roaring Abel's.  Over the
rocky, daisied lane.  The dark pine woods swallowed them up.
Through the pine woods, where the air was sweet with the incense of
the unseen, fragile bells of the linnaeas that carpeted the banks
of the trail.  Out to the shore of Mistawis.  Lady Jane must be
left here.  They got out.  Barney led the way down a little path to
the edge of the lake.

"There's our island," he said gloatingly.

Valancy looked--and looked--and looked again.  There was a
diaphanous, lilac mist on the lake, shrouding the island.  Through
it the two enormous pine-trees that clasped hands over Barney's
shack loomed out like dark turrets.  Behind them was a sky still
rose-hued in the afterlight, and a pale young moon.

Valancy shivered like a tree the wind stirs suddenly.  Something
seemed to sweep over her soul.

"My Blue Castle!" she said.  "Oh, my Blue Castle!"

They got into the canoe and paddled out to it.  They left behind
the realm of everyday and things known and landed on a realm of
mystery and enchantment where anything might happen--anything might
be true.  Barney lifted Valancy out of the canoe and swung her to a
lichen-covered rock under a young pine-tree.  His arms were about
her and suddenly his lips were on hers.  Valancy found herself
shivering with the rapture of her first kiss.

"Welcome home, dear," Barney was saying.



CHAPTER XXVII


Cousin Georgiana came down the lane leading up to her little house.
She lived half a mile out of Deerwood and she wanted to go in to
Amelia's and find out if Doss had come home yet.  Cousin Georgiana
was anxious to see Doss.  She had something very important to tell
her.  Something, she was sure, Doss would be delighted to hear.
Poor Doss!  She HAD had rather a dull life of it.  Cousin Georgiana
owned to herself that SHE would not like to live under Amelia's
thumb.  But that would be all changed now.  Cousin Georgiana felt
tremendously important.  For the time being, she quite forgot to
wonder which of them would go next.

And here was Doss herself, coming along the road from Roaring
Abel's in such a queer green dress and hat.  Talk about luck.
Cousin Georgiana would have a chance to impart her wonderful secret
right away, with nobody else about to interrupt.  It was, you might
say, a Providence.

Valancy, who had been living for four days on her enchanted island,
had decided that she might as well go in to Deerwood and tell her
relatives that she was married.  Otherwise, finding that she had
disappeared from Roaring Abel's, they might get out a search
warrant for her.  Barney had offered to drive her in, but she had
preferred to go alone.  She smiled very radiantly at Cousin
Georgiana, who, she remembered, as of some one known a long time
ago, had really been not a bad little creature.  Valancy was so
happy that she could have smiled at anybody--even Uncle James.  She
was not averse to Cousin Georgiana's company.  Already, since the
houses along the road were becoming numerous, she was conscious
that curious eyes were looking at her from every window.

"I suppose you're going home, dear Doss?" said Cousin Georgiana as
she shook hands--furtively eyeing Valancy's dress and wondering if
she had ANY petticoat on at all.

"Sooner or later," said Valancy cryptically.

"Then I'll go along with you.  I've been wanting to see you VERY
especially, Doss dear.  I've something quite WONDERFUL to tell
you."

"Yes?" said Valancy absently.  What on earth was Cousin Georgiana
looking so mysterious and important about?  But did it matter?  No.
Nothing mattered but Barney and the Blue Castle up back in
Mistawis.

"Who do you suppose called to see me the other day?" asked Cousin
Georgiana archly.

Valancy couldn't guess.

"Edward Beck."  Cousin Georgiana lowered her voice almost to a
whisper.  "EDWARD BECK."

Why the italics?  And WAS Cousin Georgiana blushing?

"Who on earth is Edward Beck?" asked Valancy indifferently.

Cousin Georgiana stared.

"Surely you remember Edward Beck," she said reproachfully.  "He
lives in that lovely house on the Port Lawrence road and he comes
to our church--regularly.  You MUST remember him."

"Oh, I think I do now," said Valancy, with an effort of memory.
"He's that old man with a wen on his forehead and dozens of
children, who always sits in the pew by the door, isn't he?"

"Not dozens of children, dear--oh, no, not dozens.  Not even ONE
dozen.  Only nine.  At least only nine that count.  The rest are
dead.  He ISN'T old--he's only about forty-eight--the prime of
life, Doss--and what does it matter about a wen?"

"Nothing, of course," agreed Valancy quite sincerely.  It certainly
did not matter to her whether Edward Beck had a wen or a dozen wens
or no wen at all.  But Valancy was getting vaguely suspicious.
There was certainly an air of suppressed triumph about Cousin
Georgiana.  Could it be possible that Cousin Georgiana was thinking
of marrying again?  Marrying Edward Beck?  Absurd.  Cousin
Georgiana was sixty-five if she were a day and her little anxious
face was as closely covered with fine wrinkles as if she had been a
hundred.  But still--

"My dear," said Cousin Georgiana, "Edward Beck wants to marry YOU."

Valancy stared at Cousin Georgiana for a moment.  Then she wanted
to go off into a peal of laughter.  But she only said:

"Me?"

"Yes, you.  He fell in love with you at the funeral.  And he came
to consult me about it.  I was such a friend of his first wife, you
know.  He is very much in earnest, Dossie.  And its a wonderful
chance for you.  He's very well off--and you know--you--you--"

"Am not so young as I once was," agreed Valancy.  "'To her that
hath shall be given.'  Do you really think I would make a good
stepmother, Cousin Georgiana?"

"I'm sure you would.  You were always so fond of children."

"But nine is such a family to start with," objected Valancy
gravely.

"The two oldest are grown up and the third almost.  That leaves
only six that really count.  And most of them are boys.  So much
easier to bring up than girls.  There's an excellent book--'Health
Care of the Growing Child'--Gladys has a copy, I think.  It would
be such a help to you.  And there are books about morals.  You'd
manage nicely.  Of course I told Mr. Beck that I thought you would--
would--"

"Jump at him," supplied Valancy.

"Oh, no, no, dear.  I wouldn't use such an indelicate expression.
I told him I thought you would consider his proposal favourably.
And you will, won't you, dearie?"

"There's only one obstacle," said Valancy dreamily.  "You see, I'm
married already."

"Married!"  Cousin Georgiana stopped stock-still and stared at
Valancy.  "Married!"

"Yes.  I was married to Barney Snaith last Tuesday evening in Port
Lawrence."

There was a convenient gate-post hard by.  Cousin Georgiana took
firm hold of it.

"Doss, dear--I'm an old woman--are you trying to make fun of me?"

"Not at all.  I'm only telling you the truth.  For heaven's sake,
Cousin Georgiana,"--Valancy was alarmed by certain symptoms--"don't
go crying here on the public road!"

Cousin Georgiana choked back the tears and gave a little moan of
despair instead.

"Oh, Doss, WHAT have you done?  What HAVE you done?"

"I've just been telling you.  I've got married," said Valancy,
calmly and patiently.

"To that--that--aw--that--BARNEY SNAITH.  Why, they say he's had a
dozen wives already."

"I'm the only one round at present," said Valancy.

"What will your poor mother say?" moaned Cousin Georgiana.

"Come along with me and hear, if you want to know," said Valancy.
"I'm on my way to tell her now."

Cousin Georgiana let go the gate-post cautiously and found that she
could stand alone.  She meekly trotted on beside Valancy--who
suddenly seemed quite a different person in her eyes.  Cousin
Georgiania had a tremendous respect for a married woman.  But it
was terrible to think of what the poor girl had done.  So rash.  So
reckless.  Of course Valancy must be stark mad.  But she seemed so
happy in her madness that Cousin Georgiana had a momentary
conviction that it would be a pity if the clan tried to scold her
back to sanity.  She had never seen that look in Valancy's eyes
before.  But what WOULD Amelia say?  And Ben?

"To marry a man you know nothing about," thought Cousin Georgiana
aloud.

"I know more about him than I know of Edward Beck," said Valancy.

"Edward Beck GOES TO CHURCH," said Cousin Georgiana.  "Does Bar--
does your husband?"

"He has promised that he will go with me on fine Sundays," said
Valancy.

When they turned in at the Stirling gate Valancy gave an
exclamation of surprise.

"Look at my rosebush!  Why, it's blooming!"

It was.  Covered with blossoms.  Great, crimson, velvety blossoms.
Fragrant.  Glowing.  Wonderful.

"My cutting it to pieces must have done it good," said Valancy,
laughing.  She gathered a handful of the blossoms--they would look
well on the supper-table of the verandah at Mistawis--and went,
still laughing, up the walk, conscious that Olive was standing on
the steps, Olive, goddess-like in loveliness, looking down with a
slight frown on her forehead.  Olive, beautiful, insolent.  Her
full form voluptuous in its swathings of rose silk and lace.  Her
golden-brown hair curling richly under her big, white-frilled hat.
Her colour ripe and melting.

"Beautiful," thought Valancy coolly, "but"--as if she suddenly saw
her cousin through new eyes--"without the slightest touch of
distinction."

So Valancy had come home, thank goodness, thought Olive.  But
Valancy was not looking like a repentant, returned prodigal.  This
was the cause of Olive's frown.  She was looking triumphant--
graceless!  That outlandish dress--that queer hat--those hands full
of blood-red roses.  Yet there was something about both dress and
hat, as Olive instantly felt, that was entirely lacking in her own
attire.  This deepened the frown.  She put out a condescending
hand.

"So you're back, Doss?  Very warm day, isn't it?  Did you walk in?"

"Yes.  Coming in?"

"Oh, no.  I've just been in.  I've come often to comfort poor
Aunty.  She's been so lonesome.  I'm going to Mrs. Bartlett's tea.
I have to help pour.  She's giving it for her cousin from Toronto.
Such a charming girl.  You'd have loved meeting her, Doss.  I think
Mrs. Bartlett did send you a card.  Perhaps you'll drop in later
on."

"No, I don't think so," said Valancy indifferently.  "I'll have to
be home to get Barney's supper.  We're going for a moonlit canoe
ride around Mistawa tonight."

"Barney?  Supper?" gasped Olive.  "What DO you mean, Valancy
Stirling?"

"Valancy Snaith, by the grace of God."

Valancy flaunted her wedding-ring in Olive's stricken face.  Then
she nimbly stepped past her and into the house.  Cousin Georgiana
followed.  She would not miss a moment of the great scene, even
though Olive did look as if she were going to faint.

Olive did not faint.  She went stupidly down the street to Mrs.
Bartlett's.  WHAT did Doss mean?  She couldn't have--that ring--oh,
what fresh scandal was that wretched girl bringing on her
defenceless family now?  She should have been--shut up--long ago.

Valancy opened the sitting-room door and stepped unexpectedly right
into grim assemblage of Stirlings.  They had not come together of
malice prepense.  Aunt Wellington and Cousin Gladys and Aunt
Mildred and Cousin Sarah had just called in on their way home from
a meeting of the missionary society.  Uncle James had dropped in to
give Amelia some information regarding a doubtful investment.
Uncle Benjamin had called, apparently, to tell them it was a hot
day and ask them what was the difference between a bee and a
donkey.  Cousin Stickles had been tactless enough to know the
answer--"one gets all the honey, the other all the whacks"--and
Uncle Benjamin was in a bad humour.  In all of their minds,
unexpressed, was the idea of finding out if Valancy had yet come
home, and, if not, what steps must be taken in the matter.

Well, here was Valancy at last, a poised, confident thing, not
humble and deprecating as she should have been.  And so oddly,
improperly young-looking.  She stood in the doorway and looked at
them, Cousin Georgiana timorous, expectant, behind her.  Valancy
was so happy she didn't hate her people any more.  She could even
see a number of good qualities in them that she had never seen
before.  And she was sorry for them.  Her pity made her quite
gentle.

"Well, Mother," she said pleasantly.

"So you've come home at last!" said Mrs. Frederick, getting out a
handkerchief.  She dared not be outraged, but she did not mean to
be cheated of her tears.

"Well, not exactly," said Valancy.  She threw her bomb.  "I thought
I ought to drop in and tell you I was married.  Last Tuesday night.
To Barney Snaith."

Uncle Benjamin bounced up and sat down again.

"God bless my soul," he said dully.  The rest seemed turned to
stone.  Except Cousin Gladys, who turned faint.  Aunt Mildred and
Uncle Wellington had to help her out to the kitchen.

"She would have to keep up the Victorian traditions," said Valancy,
with a grin.  She sat down, uninvited, on a chair.  Cousin Stickles
had begun to sob.

"Is there ONE day in your life that you haven't cried?" asked
Valancy curiously.

"Valancy," said Uncle James, being the first to recover the power
of utterance, "did you mean what you said just now?"

"I did."

"Do you mean to say that you have actually gone and married--
MARRIED--that notorious Barney Snaith--that--that--criminal--that--"

"I have."

"Then," said Uncle James violently, "you are a shameless creature,
lost to all sense of propriety and virtue, and I wash my hands
entirely of you.  I do not want ever to see your face again."

"What have you left to say when I commit murder?" asked Valancy.

Uncle Benjamin again appealed to God to bless his soul.

"That drunken outlaw--that--"

A dangerous spark appeared in Valancy's eyes.  They might say what
they liked to and of her but they should not abuse Barney.

"Say 'damn' and you'll feel better," she suggested.

"I can express my feelings without blasphemy.  And I tell you you
have covered yourself with eternal disgrace and infamy by marrying
that drunkard--"

"YOU would be more endurable if you got drunk occasionally.  Barney
is NOT a drunkard."

"He was seen drunk in Port Lawrence--pickled to the gills," said
Uncle Benjamin.

"If that is true--and I don't believe it--he had a good reason for
it.  Now I suggest that you all stop looking tragic and accept the
situation.  I'm married--you can't undo that.  And I'm perfectly
happy."

"I suppose we ought to be thankful he has really married her," said
Cousin Sarah, by way of trying to look on the bright side.

"If he really has," said Uncle James, who had just washed his hands
of Valancy.  "Who married you?"

"Mr. Towers, of Port Lawrence."

"By a Free Methodist!" groaned Mrs. Frederick--as if to have been
married by an imprisoned Methodist would have been a shade less
disgraceful.  It was the first thing she had said.  Mrs. Frederick
didn't know WHAT to say.  The whole thing was too horrible--too
horrible--too nightmarish.  She was sure she must wake up soon.
After all their bright hopes at the funeral!

"It makes me think of those what-d'ye-call-'ems," said Uncle
Benjamin helplessly.  "Those yarns--you know--of fairies taking
babies out of their cradles."

"Valancy could hardly be a changeling at twenty-nine," said Aunt
Wellington satirically.

"She was the oddest-looking baby I ever saw, anyway," averted Uncle
Benjamin.  "I said so at the time--you remember, Amelia?  I said I
had never seen such eyes in a human head."

"I'm glad _I_ never had any children," said Cousin Sarah.  "If they
don't break your heart in one way they do it in another."

"Isn't it better to have your heart broken than to have it wither
up?" queried Valancy.  "Before it could be broken it must have felt
something splendid.  THAT would be worth the pain."

"Dipp--clean dippy," muttered Uncle Benjamin, with a vague,
unsatisfactory feeling that somebody had said something like that
before.

"Valancy," said Mrs. Frederick solemnly, "do you ever pray to be
forgiven for disobeying your mother?"

"I SHOULD pray to be forgiven for obeying you so long," said
Valancy stubbornly.  "But I don't pray about that at all.  I just
thank God every day for my happiness."

"I would rather," said Mrs. Frederick, beginning to cry rather
belatedly, "see you dead before me than listen to what you have
told me today."

Valancy looked at her mother and aunts, and wondered if they could
ever have known anything of the real meaning of love.  She felt
sorrier for them than ever.  They were so very pitiable.  And they
never suspected it.

"Barney Snaith is a scoundrel to have deluded you into marrying
him," said Uncle James violently.

"Oh, _I_ did the deluding.  I asked HIM to marry me," said Valancy,
with a wicked smile.

"Have you NO pride?" demanded Aunt Wellington.

"Lots of it.  I am proud that I have achieved a husband by my own
unaided efforts.  Cousin Georgiana here wanted to help me to Edward
Beck."

"Edward Beck is worth twenty thousand dollars and has the finest
house between here and Port Lawrence," said Uncle Benjamin.

"That sounds very fine," said Valancy scornfully, "but it isn't
worth THAT"--she snapped her fingers--"compared to feeling Barney's
arms around me and his cheek against mine."

"OH, Doss!" said Cousin Stickles.  Cousin Sarah said, "Oh, DOSS!"
Aunt Wellington said, "Valancy, you need not be indecent."

"Why, it surely isn't indecent to like to have your husband put his
arm around you?  I should think it would be indecent if you
didn't."

"Why expect decency from her?" inquired Uncle James sarcastically.
"She has cut herself off from decency forevermore.  She has made
her bed.  Let her lie on it."

"Thanks," said Valancy very gratefully.  "How you would have
enjoyed being Torquemada!  Now, I must really be getting back.
Mother, may I have those three woollen cushions I worked last
winter?"

"Take them--take everything!" said Mrs. Frederick.

"Oh, I don't want everything--or much.  I don't want my Blue Castle
cluttered.  Just the cushions.  I'll call for them some day when we
motor in."

Valancy rose and went to the door.  There she turned.  She was
sorrier than ever for them all.  THEY had no Blue Castle in the
purple solitudes of Mistawis.

"The trouble with you people is that you don't laugh enough," she
said.

"Doss dear," said Cousin Georgiana mournfully, "some day you will
discover that blood is thicker than water."

"Of course it is.  But who wants water to be thick?" parried
Valancy.  "We want water to be thin--sparkling--crystal-clear."

Cousin Stickles groaned.

Valancy would not ask any of them to come and see her--she was
afraid they WOULD come out of curiosity.  But she said:

"Do you mind if I drop in and see you once in a while, Mother?"

"My house will always be open to you," said Mrs. Frederick, with a
mournful dignity.

"You should never recognise her again," said Uncle James sternly,
as the door closed behind Valancy.

"I cannot quite forget that I am a mother," said Mrs. Frederick.
"My poor, unfortunate girl!"

"I dare say the marriage isn't legal," said Uncle James
comfortingly.  "He has probably been married half a dozen times
before.  But _I_ am through with her.  I have done all I could,
Amelia.  I think you will admit that.  Henceforth"--Uncle James was
terribly solemn about it--"Valancy is to me as one dead."

"Mrs. Barney Snaith," said Cousin Georgiana, as if trying it out to
see how it would sound.

"He has a score of aliases, no doubt," said Uncle Benjamin.  "For
my part, I believe the man is half Indian.  I haven't a doubt
they're living in a wigwam."

"If he has married her under the name of Snaith and it isn't his
real name wouldn't that make the marriage null and void?" asked
Cousin Stickles hopefully.

Uncle James shook his head.

"No, it is the man who marries, not the name."

"You know," said Cousin Gladys, who had recovered and returned but
was still shaky, "I had a distinct premonition of this at Herbert's
silver dinner.  I remarked it at the time.  When she was defending
Snaith.  You remember, of course.  It came over me like a
revelation.  I spoke to David when I went home about it."

"What--WHAT," demanded Aunt Wellington of the universe, "has come
over Valancy?  VALANCY!"

The universe did not answer but Uncle James did.

"Isn't there something coming up of late about secondary
personalities cropping out?  I don't hold with many of those new-
fangled notions, but there may be something in this one.  It would
account for her incomprehensible conduct."

"Valancy is so fond of mushrooms," sighed Cousin Georgiana.  "I'm
afraid she'll get poisoned eating toadstools by mistake living up
back in the woods."

"There are worse things than death," said Uncle James, believing
that it was the first time in the world that such statement had
been made.

"Nothing can ever be the same again!" sobbed Cousin Stickles.

Valancy, hurrying along the dusty road, back to cool Mistawis and
her purple island, had forgotten all about them--just as she had
forgotten that she might drop dead at any moment if she hurried.



CHAPTER XXVIII


Summer passed by.  The Stirling clan--with the insignificant
exception of Cousin Georgiana--had tacitly agreed to follow Uncle
James' example and look upon Valancy as one dead.  To be sure,
Valancy had an unquiet, ghostly habit of recurring resurrections
when she and Barney clattered through Deerwood and out to the Port
in that unspeakable car.  Valancy bareheaded, with stars in her
eyes.  Barney, bareheaded, smoking his pipe.  But shaved.  Always
shaved now, if any of them had noticed it.  They even had the
audacity to go in to Uncle Benjamin's store to buy groceries.
Twice Uncle Benjamin ignored them.  Was not Valancy one of the
dead?  While Snaith had never existed.  But the third time he told
Barney he was a scroundrel who should be hung for luring an
unfortunate, weak-minded girl away from her home and friends.

Barney's one straight eyebrow went up.

"I have made her happy," he said coolly, "and she was miserable
with her friends.  So that's that."

Uncle Benjamin stared.  It had never occurred to him that women had
to be, or ought to be, "made happy."

"You--you pup!" he said.

"Why be so unoriginal?" queried Barney amiably.  "Anybody could
call me a pup.  Why not think of something worthy of the Stirlings?
Besides, I'm not a pup.  I'm really quite a middle-aged dog.
Thirty-five, if you're interested in knowing."

Uncle Benjamin remembered just in time that Valancy was dead.  He
turned his back on Barney.

Valancy WAS happy--gloriously and entirely so.  She seemed to be
living in a wonderful house of life and every day opened a new,
mysterious room.  It was in a world which had nothing in common
with the one she had left behind--a world where time was not--which
was young with immortal youth--where there was neither past nor
future but only the present.  She surrendered herself utterly to
the charm of it.

The absolute freedom of it all was unbelievable.  They could do
exactly as they liked.  No Mrs. Grundy.  No traditions.  No
relatives.  Or in-laws.  "Peace, perfect peace, with loved ones far
away," as Barney quoted shamelessly.

Valancy had gone home once and got her cushions.  And Cousin
Georgiana had given her one of her famous candlewick spreads of
most elaborate design.  "For your spare-room bed, dear," she said.

"But I haven't got any spare-room," said Valancy.

Cousin Georgiana looked horrified.  A house without a spare-room
was monstrous to her.

"But it's a lovely spread," said Valanacy, with a kiss, "and I'm so
glad to have it.  I'll put it on my own bed.  Barney's old patch-
work quilt is getting ragged."

"I don't see how you can be contented to live up back," sighed
Cousin Georgiana.  "It's so out of the world."

"Contented!"  Valancy laughed.  What was the use of trying to
explain to Cousin Georgiana.  "It is," she agreed, "most gloriously
and entirely out of the world."

"And you are really happy, dear?" asked Cousin Georgiana wistfully.

"I really am," said Valancy gravely, her eyes dancing.

"Marriage is such a serious thing," sighed Cousin Georgiana.

"When it's going to last long," agreed Valancy.

Cousin Georgiana did not understand this at all.  But it worried
her and she lay awake at nights wondering what Valancy meant by it.

Valancy loved her Blue Castle and was completely satisfied with it.
The big living-room had three windows, all commanding exquisite
views of exquisite Mistawis.  The one in the end of the room was an
oriel window--which Tom MacMurray, Barney explained, had got out of
some little, old "up back" church that had been sold.  It faced the
west and when the sunsets flooded it Valancy's whole being knelt in
prayer as if in some great cathedral.  The new moons always looked
down through it, the lower pine boughs swayed about the top of it,
and all through the nights the soft, dim silver of the lake dreamed
through it.

There was a stone fireplace on the other side.  No desecrating gas
imitation but a real fireplace where you could burn real logs.
With a big grizzly bearskin on the floor before it, and beside it a
hideous, red-plush sofa of Tom MacMurray's r�gime.  But its
ugliness was hidden by silver-grey timber wolf skins, and Valancy's
cushions made it gay and comfortable.  In a corner a nice, tall,
lazy old clock ticked--the right kind of a clock.  One that did not
hurry the hours away but ticked them off deliberately.  It was the
jolliest looking old clock.  A fat, corpulent clock with a great,
round, man's face painted on it, the hands stretching out of its
nose and the hours encircling it like a halo.

There was a big glass case of stuffed owls and several deer heads--
likewise of Tom MacMurray's vintage.  Some comfortable old chairs
that asked to be sat upon.  A squat little chair with a cushion was
prescriptively Banjo's.  If anybody else dared sit on it Banjo
glared him out of it with his topaz-hued, black-ringed eyes.  Banjo
had an adorable habit of hanging over the back of it, trying to
catch his own tail.  Losing his temper because he couldn't catch
it.  Giving it a fierce bite for spite when he DID catch it.
Yowling malignantly with pain.  Barney and Valancy laughed at him
until they ached.  But it was Good Luck they loved.  They were both
agreed that Good Luck was so lovable that he practically amounted
to an obsession.

One side of the wall was lined with rough, homemade book-shelves
filled with books, and between the two side windows hung an old
mirror in a faded gilt-frame, with fat cupids gamboling in the
panel over the glass.  A mirror, Valancy thought, that must be like
the fabled mirror into which Venus had once looked and which
thereafter reflected as beautiful every woman who looked into it.
Valancy thought she was almost pretty in that mirror.  But that may
have been because she had shingled her hair.

This was before the day of bobs and was regarded as a wild,
unheard-of proceeding--unless you had typhoid.  When Mrs. Frederick
heard of it she almost decided to erase Valancy's name from the
family Bible.  Barney cut the hair, square off at the back of
Valancy's neck, bringing it down in a short black fringe over her
forehead.  It gave a meaning and a purpose to her little, three-
cornered face that it never had possessed before.  Even her nose
ceased to irritate her.  Her eyes were bright, and her sallow skin
had cleared to the hue of creamy ivory.  The old family joke had
come true--she was really fat at last--anyway, no longer skinny.
Valancy might never be beautiful, but she was of the type that
looks its best in the woods--elfin--mocking--alluring.  Her heart
bothered her very little.  When an attack threatened she was
generally able to head it off with Dr. Trent's prescription.  The
only bad one she had was one night when she was temporarily out of
medicine.  And it WAS a bad one.  For the time being, Valancy
realised keenly that death was actually waiting to pounce on her
any moment.  But the rest of the time she would not--did not--let
herself remember it at all.



CHAPTER XXIX


Valancy toiled not, neither did she spin.  There was really very
little work to do.  She cooked their meals on a coal-oil stove,
performing all her little domestic rites carefully and exultingly,
and they ate out on the verandah that almost overhung the lake.
Before them lay Mistawis, like a scene out of some fairy tale of
old time.  And Barney smiling his twisted, enigmatical smile at her
across the table.

"What a view old Tom picked out when he built this shack!" Barney
would say exultantly.

Supper was the meal Valancy liked best.  The faint laughter of
winds was always about them and the colours of Mistawis, imperial
and spiritual, under the changing clouds were something that cannot
be expressed in mere words.  Shadows, too.  Clustering in the pines
until a wind shook them out and pursued them over Mistawis.  They
lay all day along the shores, threaded by ferns and wild blossoms.
They stole around the headlands in the glow of the sunset, until
twilight wove them all into one great web of dusk.

The cats, with their wise, innocent little faces, would sit on the
verandah railing and eat the tidbits Barney flung them.  And how
good everything tasted!  Valancy, amid all the romance of Mistawis,
never forgot that men had stomachs.  Barney paid her no end of
compliments on her cooking.

"After all," he admitted, "there's something to be said for square
meals.  I've mostly got along by boiling two or three dozen eggs
hard at once and eating a few when I got hungry, with a slice of
bacon once in a while and a jorum or tea."

Valancy poured tea out of Barney's little battered old pewter
teapot of incredible age.  She had not even a set of dishes--only
Barney's mismatched chipped bits--and a dear, big, pobby old jug of
robin's-egg blue.

After the meal was over they would sit there and talk for hours--or
sit and say nothing, in all the languages of the world, Barney
pulling away at his pipe, Valancy dreaming idly and deliciously,
gazing at the far-off hills beyond Mistawis where the spires of
firs came out against the sunset.  The moonlight would begin to
silver the Mistawis.  Bats would begin to swoop darkly against the
pale, western gold.  The little waterfall that came down on the
high bank not far away would, by some whim of the wildwood gods,
begin to look like a wonderful white woman beckoning through the
spicy, fragrant evergreens.  And Leander would begin to chuckle
diabolically on the mainland shore.  How sweet it was to sit there
and do nothing in the beautiful silence, with Barney at the other
side of the table, smoking!

There were plenty of other islands in sight, though none were near
enough to be troublesome as neighbours.  There was one little group
of islets far off to the west which they called the Fortunate
Isles.  At sunrise they looked like a cluster of emeralds, at
sunset like a cluster of amethysts.  They were too small for
houses; but the lights on the larger islands would bloom out all
over the lake, and bonfires would be lighted on their shores,
streaming up into the wood shadows and throwing great, blood-red
ribbons over the waters.  Music would drift to them alluringly from
boats here and there, or from the verandahs on the big house of the
millionaire on the biggest island.

"Would you like a house like that, Moonlight?" Barney asked once,
waving his hand at it.  He had taken to calling her Moonlight, and
Valancy loved it.

"No," said Valancy, who had once dreamed of a mountain castle ten
times the size of the rich man's "cottage" and now pitied the poor
inhabitants of palaces.  "No.  It's too elegant.  I would have to
carry it with me everywhere I went.  On my back like a snail.  It
would own me--possess me, body and soul.  I like a house I can love
and cuddle and boss.  Just like ours here.  I don't envy Hamilton
Gossard 'the finest summer residence in Canada.'  It is
magnificent, but it isn't my Blue Castle."

Away down at the far end of the lake they got every night a glimpse
of a big, continental train rushing through a clearing.  Valancy
liked to watch its lighted windows flash by and wonder who was on
it and what hopes and fears it carried.  She also amused herself by
picturing Barney and herself going to the dances and dinners in the
houses on the islands, but she did not want to go in reality.  Once
they did go to a masquerade dance in the pavilion at one of the
hotels up the lake, and had a glorious evening, but slipped away in
their canoe, before unmasking time, back to the Blue Castle.

"It was lovely--but I don't want to go again," said Valancy.

So many hours a day Barney shut himself up in Bluebeard's Chamber.
Valancy never saw the inside of it.  From the smells that filtered
through at times she concluded he must be conducting chemical
experiments--or counterfeiting money.  Valancy supposed there must
be smelly processes in making counterfeit money.  But she did not
trouble herself about it.  She had no desire to peer into the
locked chambers of Barney's house of life.  His past and his future
concerned her not.  Only this rapturous present.  Nothing else
mattered.

Once he went away and stayed away two days and nights.  He had
asked Valancy if she would be afraid to stay alone and she had said
she would not.  He never told her where he had been.  She was not
afraid to be alone, but she was horribly lonely.  The sweetest
sound she had ever heard was Lady Jane's clatter through the woods
when Barney returned.  And then his signal whistle from the shore.
She ran down to the landing rock to greet him--to nestle herself
into his eager arms--they DID seem eager.

"Have you missed me, Moonlight?" Barney was whispering.

"It seems a hundred years since you went away," said Valancy.

"I won't leave you again."

"You must," protested Valancy, "if you want to.  I'd be miserable
if I thought you wanted to go and didn't, because of me.  I want
you to feel perfectly free."

Barney laughed--a little cynically.

"There is no such thing as freedom on earth," he said.  "Only
different kinds of bondages.  And comparative bondages.  YOU think
you are free now because you've escaped from a peculiarly
unbearable kind of bondage.  But are you?  You love me--THAT'S a
bondage."

"Who said or wrote that 'the prison unto which we doom ourselves no
prison is'?" asked Valancy dreamily, clinging to his arm as they
climbed up the rock steps.

"Ah, now you have it," said Barney.  "That's all the freedom we can
hope for--the freedom to choose our prison.  But, Moonlight,"--he
stopped at the door of the Blue Castle and looked about him--at the
glorious lake, the great, shadowy woods, the bonfires, the
twinkling lights--"Moonlight, I'm glad to be home again.  When I
came down through the woods and saw my home lights--mine--gleaming
out under the old pines--something I'd never seen before--oh, girl,
I was glad--glad!"

But in spite of Barney's doctrine of bondage, Valancy thought they
were splendidly free.  It was amazing to be able to sit up half the
night and look at the moon if you wanted to.  To be late for meals
if you wanted to--she who had always been rebuked so sharply by her
mother and so reproachfully by Cousin Stickles if she were one
minute late.  Dawdle over meals as long as you wanted to.  Leave
your crusts if you wanted to.  Not come home at all for meals if
you wanted to.  Sit on a sun-warm rock and paddle your bare feet in
the hot sand if you wanted to.  Just sit and do nothing in the
beautiful silence if you wanted to.  In short, do any fool thing
you wanted to whenever the notion took you.  If THAT wasn't
freedom, what was?



CHAPTER XXX


They didn't spend all their days on the island.  They spent more
than half of them wandering at will through the enchanted Muskoka
country.  Barney knew the woods as a book and he taught their lore
and craft to Valancy.  He could always find trail and haunt of the
shy wood people.  Valancy learned the different fairy-likenesses of
the mosses--the charm and exquisiteness of woodland blossoms.  She
learned to know every bird at sight and mimic its call--though
never so perfectly as Barney.  She made friends with every kind of
tree.  She learned to paddle a canoe as well as Barney himself.
She liked to be out in the rain and she never caught cold.

Sometimes they took a lunch with them and went berrying--
strawberries and blueberries.  How pretty blueberries were--the
dainty green of the unripe berries, the glossy pinks and scarlets
of the half ripes, the misty blue of the fully matured!  And
Valancy learned the real flavour of the strawberry in its highest
perfection.  There was a certain sunlit dell on the banks of
Mistawis along which white birches grew on one side and on the
other still, changeless ranks of young spruces.  There were long
grasses at the roots of the birches, combed down by the winds and
wet with morning dew late into the afternoons.  Here they found
berries that might have graced the banquets of Lucullus, great
ambrosial sweetnesses hanging like rubies to long, rosy stalks.
They lifted them by the stalk and ate them from it, uncrushed and
virgin, tasting each berry by itself with all its wild fragrance
ensphered therein.  When Valancy carried any of these berries home
that elusive essence escaped and they became nothing more than the
common berries of the market-place--very kitchenly good indeed, but
not as they would have been, eaten in their birch dell until her
fingers were stained as pink as Aurora's eyelids.

Or they went after water-lilies.  Barney knew where to find them in
the creeks and bays of Mistawis.  Then the Blue Castle was glorious
with them, every receptacle that Valancy could contrive filled with
the exquisite things.  If not water lilies then cardinal flowers,
fresh and vivid from the swamps of Mistawis, where they burned like
ribbons of flame.

Sometimes they went trouting on little nameless rivers or hidden
brooks on whose banks Naiads might have sunned their white, wet
limbs.  Then all they took with them were some raw potatoes and
salt.  They roasted the potatoes over a fire and Barney showed
Valancy how to cook the trout by wrapping them in leaves, coating
them with mud and baking them in a bed of hot coals.  Never were
such delicious meals.  Valancy had such an appetite it was no
wonder she put flesh on her bones.

Or they just prowled and explored through woods that always seemed
to be expecting something wonderful to happen.  At least, that was
the way Valancy felt about them.  Down the next hollow--over the
next hill--you would find it.

"We don't know where we're going, but isn't it fun to go?" Barney
used to say.

Once or twice night overtook them, too far from their Blue Castle
to get back.  But Barney made a fragrant bed of bracken and fir
boughs and they slept on it dreamlessly, under a ceiling of old
spruces with moss hanging from them, while beyond them moonlight
and the murmur of pines blended together so that one could hardly
tell which was light and which was sound.

There were rainy days, of course, when Muskoka was a wet green
land.  Days when showers drifted across Mistawis like pale ghosts
of rain and they never thought of staying in because of it.  Days
when it rained in right good earnest and they had to stay in.  Then
Barney shut himself up in Bluebeard's Chamber and Valancy read, or
dreamed on the wolfskins with Good Luck purring beside her and
Banjo watching them suspiciously from his own peculiar chair.  On
Sunday evenings they paddled across to a point of land and walked
from there through the woods to the little Free Methodist church.
One felt really too happy for Sunday.  Valancy had never really
liked Sundays before.

And always, Sundays and weekdays, she was with Barney.  Nothing
else really mattered.  And what a companion he was!  How
understanding!  How jolly!  How--how Barney-like!  That summed it
all up.

Valancy had taken some of her two hundred dollars out of the bank
and spent it in pretty clothes.  She had a little smoke-blue
chiffon which she always put on when they spent the evenings at
home--smoke-blue with touches of silver about it.  It was after she
began wearing it that Barney began calling her Moonlight.

"Moonlight and blue twilight--that is what you look like in that
dress.  I like it.  It belongs to you.  You aren't exactly pretty,
but you have some adorable beauty-spots.  Your eyes.  And that
little kissable dent just between your collar bones.  You have the
wrist and ankle of an aristocrat.  That little head of yours is
beautifully shaped.  And when you look backward over your shoulder
you're maddening--especially in twilight or moonlight.  An elf
maiden.  A wood sprite.  You belong to the woods, Moonlight--you
should never be out of them.  In spite of your ancestry, there is
something wild and remote and untamed about you.  And you have such
a nice, sweet, throaty, summery voice.  Such a nice voice for love-
making."

"Shure an' ye've kissed the Blarney Stone," scoffed Valancy.  But
she tasted these compliments for weeks.

She got a pale green bathing-suit, too--a garment which would have
given her clan their deaths if they had ever seen her in it.
Barney taught her how to swim.  Sometimes she put her bathing-dress
on when she got up and didn't take it off until she went to bed--
running down to the water for a plunge whenever she felt like it
and sprawling on the sun-warm rocks to dry.

She had forgotten all the old humiliating things that used to come
up against her in the night--the injustices and the disappointments.
It was as if they had all happened to some other person--not to her,
Valancy Snaith, who had always been happy.

"I understand now what it means to be born again," she told Barney.

Holmes speaks of grief "staining backward" through the pages of
life; but Valancy found her happiness had stained backward likewise
and flooded with rose-colour her whole previous drab existence.
She found it hard to believe that she had ever been lonely and
unhappy and afraid.

"When death comes, I shall have lived," thought Valancy.  "I shall
have had my hour."

And her dust-pile!

One day Valancy had heaped up the sand in the little island cove in
a tremendous cone and stuck a gay little Union Jack on top of it.

"What are you celebrating?" Barney wanted to know.

"I'm just exorcising an old demon," Valancy told him.



CHAPTER XXXI


Autumn came.  Late September with cool nights.  They had to forsake
the verandah; but they kindled a fire in the big fireplace and sat
before it with jest and laughter.  They left the doors open, and
Banjo and Good Luck came and went at pleasure.  Sometimes they sat
gravely on the bearskin rug between Barney and Valancy; sometimes
they slunk off into the mystery of the chill night outside.  The
stars smouldered in the horizon mists through the old oriel.  The
haunting, persistent croon of the pine-trees filled the air.  The
little waves began to make soft, sobbing splashes on the rocks
below them in the rising winds.  They needed no light but the
firelight that sometimes leaped up and revealed them--sometimes
shrouded them in shadow.  When the night wind rose higher Barney
would shut the door and light a lamp and read to her--poetry and
essays and gorgeous, dim chronicles of ancient wars.  Barney never
would read novels: he vowed they bored him.  But sometimes she read
them herself, curled up on the wolf skins, laughing aloud in peace.
For Barney was not one of those aggravating people who can never
hear you smiling audibly over something you've read without
inquiring placidly, "What is the joke?"

October--with a gorgeous pageant of colour around Mistawis, into
which Valancy plunged her soul.  Never had she imagined anything so
splendid.  A great, tinted peace.  Blue, wind-winnowed skies.
Sunlight sleeping in the glades of that fairyland.  Long dreamy
purple days paddling idly in their canoe along shores and up the
rivers of crimson and gold.  A sleepy, red hunter's moon.
Enchanted tempests that stripped the leaves from the trees and
heaped them along the shores.  Flying shadows of clouds.  What had
all the smug, opulent lands out front to compare with this?

November--with uncanny witchery in its changed trees.  With murky
red sunsets flaming in smoky crimson behind the westering hills.
With dear days when the austere woods were beautiful and gracious
in a dignified serenity of folded hands and closed eyes--days full
of a fine, pale sunshine that sifted through the late, leafless
gold of the juniper-trees and glimmered among the grey beeches,
lighting up evergreen banks of moss and washing the colonnades of
the pines.  Days with a high-sprung sky of flawless turquoise.
Days when an exquisite melancholy seemed to hang over the landscape
and dream about the lake.  But days, too, of the wild blackness of
great autumn storms, followed by dank, wet, streaming nights when
there was witch-laughter in the pines and fitful moans among the
mainland trees.  What cared they?  Old Tom had built his roof well,
and his chimney drew.

"Warm fire--books--comfort--safety from storm--our cats on the rug.
Moonlight," said Barney, "would you be any happier now if you had a
million dollars?"

"No--nor half so happy.  I'd be bored by conventions and
obligations then."

December.  Early snows and Orion.  The pale fires of the Milky Way.
It was really winter now--wonderful, cold, starry winter.  How
Valancy had always hated winter!  Dull, brief, uneventful days.
Long, cold, companionless nights.  Cousin Stickles with her back
that had to be rubbed continually.  Cousin Stickles making weird
noises gargling her throat in the mornings.  Cousin Stickles
whining over the price of coal.  Her mother, probing, questioning,
ignoring.  Endless colds and bronchitis--or the dread of it.
Redfern's Liniment and Purple Pills.

But now she loved winter.  Winter was beautiful "up back"--almost
intolerably beautiful.  Days of clear brilliance.  Evenings that
were like cups of glamour--the purest vintage of winter's wine.
Nights with their fire of stars.  Cold, exquisite winter sunrises.
Lovely ferns of ice all over the windows of the Blue Castle.
Moonlight on birches in a silver thaw.  Ragged shadows on windy
evenings--torn, twisted, fantastic shadows.  Great silences,
austere and searching.  Jewelled, barbaric hills.  The sun suddenly
breaking through grey clouds over long, white Mistawis.  Icy-grey
twilights, broken by snow-squalls, when their cosy living-room,
with its goblins of firelight and inscrutable cats seemed cosier
than ever.  Every hour brought a new revelation and wonder.

Barney ran Lady Jane into Roaring Abel's barn and taught Valancy
how to snowshoe--Valancy, who ought to be laid up with bronchitis.
But Valancy had not even a cold.  Later on in the winter Barney had
a terrible one and Valancy nursed him through it with a dread of
pneumonia in her heart.  But Valancy's colds seemed to have gone
where old moons go.  Which was luck--for she hadn't even Redfern's
Liniment.  She had thoughtfully bought a bottle at the Port and
Barney had hurled it into frozen Mistawis with a scowl.

"Bring no more of that devilish stuff here," he had ordered
briefly.  It was the first and last time he had spoken harshly to
her.

They went for long tramps through the exquisite reticence of winter
woods and the silver jungles of frosted trees, and found loveliness
everywhere.

At times they seemed to be walking through a spellbound world of
crystal and pearl, so white and radiant were clearings and lakes
and sky.  The air was so crisp and clear that it was half
intoxicating.

Once they stood in a hesitation of ecstasy at the entrance of a
narrow path between ranks of birches.  Every twig and spray was
outlined in snow.  The undergrowth along its sides was a little
fairy forest cut out of marble.  The shadows cast by the pale
sunshine were fine and spiritual.

"Come away," said Barney, turning.  "We must not commit the
desecration of tramping through there."

One evening they came upon a snowdrift far back in an old clearing
which was in the exact likeness of a beautiful woman's profile.
Seen too close by, the resemblance was lost, as in the fairy-tale
of the Castle of St. John.  Seen from behind, it was a shapeless
oddity.  But at just the right distance and angle the outline was
so perfect that when they came suddenly upon it, gleaming out
against the dark background of spruce in the glow of winter sunset
they both exclaimed in amazement.  There was a low, noble brow, a
straight, classic nose, lips and chin and cheek-curve modelled as
if some goddess of old time had sat to the sculptor, and a breast
of such cold, swelling purity as the very spirit of the winter
woods might display.

"'All the beauty that old Greece and Rome, sung, painted, taught',"
quoted Barney.

"And to think no human eyes save ours have seen or will see it,"
breathed Valancy, who felt at times as if she were living in a book
by John Foster.  As she looked around her she recalled some
passages she had marked in the new Foster book Barney had brought
her from the Port--with an adjuration not to expect HIM to read or
listen to it.

"'All the tintings of winter woods are extremely delicate and
elusive'," recalled Valancy.  "'When the brief afternoon wanes and
the sun just touches the tops of the hills, there seems to be all
over the woods an abundance, not of colour, but of the spirit of
colour.  There is really nothing but pure white after all, but one
has the impression of fairy-like blendings of rose and violet, opal
and heliotrope on the slopes--in the dingles and along the curves
of the forest-land.  You feel sure the tint is there, but when you
look at it directly it is gone.  From the corner of your eye you
are aware that it is lurking over yonder in a spot where there was
nothing but pale purity a moment ago.  Only just when the sun is
setting is there a fleeting moment of real colour.  Then the
redness streams out over the snow and incarnadines the hills and
rivers and smites the crest of the pines with flame.  Just a few
minutes of transfiguration and revelation--and it is gone.'

"I wonder if John Foster ever spent a winter in Mistawis," said
Valancy.

"Not likely," scoffed Barney.  "People who write tosh like that
generally write it in a warm house on some smug city street."

"You are too hard on John Foster," said Valancy severely.  "No one
could have written that little paragraph I read you last night
without having seen it first--you know he couldn't."

"I didn't listen to it," said Barney morosely.  "You know I told
you I wouldn't."

"Then you've got to listen to it now," persisted Valancy.  She made
him stand still on his snowshoes while she repeated it.

"'She is a rare artist, this old Mother Nature, who works "for the
joy of working" and not in any spirit of vain show.  Today the fir
woods are a symphony of greens and greys, so subtle that you cannot
tell where one shade begins to be the other.  Grey trunk, green
bough, grey-green moss above the white, grey-shadowed floor.  Yet
the old gypsy doesn't like unrelieved monotones.  She must have a
dash of colour.  See it.  A broken dead fir bough, of a beautiful
red-brown, swinging among the beards of moss'."

"Good Lord, do you learn all that fellow's books by heart?" was
Barney's disgusted reaction as he strode off.

"John Foster's books were all that saved my soul alive the past
five years," averred Valancy.  "Oh, Barney, look at that exquisite
filigree of snow in the furrows of that old elm-tree trunk."

When they came out to the lake they changed from snowshoes to
skates and skated home.  For a wonder Valancy had learned, when she
was a little schoolgirl, to skate on the pond behind the Deerwood
school.  She never had any skates of her own, but some of the other
girls had lent her theirs and she seemed to have a natural knack of
it.  Uncle Benjamin had once promised her a pair of skates for
Christmas, but when Christmas came he had given her rubbers
instead.  She had never skated since she grew up, but the old trick
came back quickly, and glorious were the hours she and Barney spent
skimming over the white lakes and past the dark islands where the
summer cottages were closed and silent.  Tonight they flew down
Mistawis before the wind, in an exhilaration that crimsoned
Valancy's cheeks under her white tam.  And at the end was her dear
little house, on the island of pines, with a coating of snow on its
roof, sparkling in the moonlight.  Its windows glinted impishly at
her in the stray gleams.

"Looks exactly like a picture-book, doesn't it?" said Barney.

They had a lovely Christmas.  No rush.  No scramble.  No niggling
attempts to make ends meet.  No wild effort to remember whether she
hadn't given the same kind of present to the same person two
Christmases before--no mob of last-minute shoppers--no dreary
family "reunions" where she sat mute and unimportant--no attacks of
"nerves."  They decorated the Blue Castle with pine boughs, and
Valancy made delightful little tinsel stars and hung them up amid
the greenery.  She cooked a dinner to which Barney did full
justice, while Good Luck and Banjo picked the bones.

"A land that can produce a goose like that is an admirable land,"
vowed Barney.  "Canada forever!"  And they drank to the Union Jack
a bottle of dandelion wine that Cousin Georgiana had given Valancy
along with the bedspread.

"One never knows," Cousin Georgiana had said solemnly, "when one
may need a little stimulant."

Barney had asked Valancy what she wanted for a Christmas present.

"Something frivolous and unnecessary," said Valancy, who had got a
pair of goloshes last Christmas and two long-sleeved, woolen
undervests the year before.  And so on back.

To her delight, Barney gave her a necklace of pearl beads.  Valancy
had wanted a string of milky pearl beads--like congealed moonshine--
all her life.  And these were so pretty.  All that worried her was
that they were really too good.  They must have cost a great deal--
fifteen dollars, at least.  Could Barney afford that?  She didn't
know a thing about his finances.  She had refused to let him buy
any of her clothes--she had enough for that, she told him, as long
as she would need clothes.  In a round, black jar on the chimney-
piece Barney put money for their household expenses--always enough.
The jar was never empty, though Valancy never caught him
replenishing it.  He couldn't have much, of course, and that
necklace--but Valancy tossed care aside.  She would wear it and
enjoy it.  It was the first pretty thing she had ever had.



CHAPTER XXXII


New year.  The old, shabby, inglorious outlived calendar came down.
The new one went up.  January was a month of storms.  It snowed for
three weeks on end.  The thermometer went miles below zero and
stayed there.  But, as Barney and Valancy pointed out to each
other, there were no mosquitoes.  And the roar and crackle of their
big fire drowned the howls of the north wind.  Good Luck and Banjo
waxed fat and developed resplendent coats of thick, silky fur.  Nip
and Tuck had gone.

"But they'll come back in spring," promised Barney.

There was no monotony.  Sometimes they had dramatic little private
spats that never even thought of becoming quarrels.  Sometimes
Roaring Abel dropped in--for an evening or a whole day--with his
old tartan cap and his long red beard coated with snow.  He
generally brought his fiddle and played for them, to the delight of
all except Banjo, who would go temporarily insane and retreat under
Valancy's bed.  Sometimes Abel and Barney talked while Valancy made
candy for them; sometimes they sat and smoked in silence � la
Tennyson and Carlyle, until the Blue Castle reeked and Valancy fled
to the open.  Sometimes they played checkers fiercely and silently
the whole night through.  Sometimes they all ate the russet apples
Abel had brought, while the jolly old clock ticked the delightful
minutes away.

"A plate of apples, an open fire, and 'a jolly goode booke' are a
fair substitute for heaven," vowed Barney.  "Any one can have the
streets of gold.  Let's have another whack at Carman."

It was easier now for the Stirlings to believe Valancy of the dead.
Not even dim rumours of her having been over at the Port came to
trouble them, though she and Barney used to skate there
occasionally to see a movie and eat hot dogs shamelessly at the
corner stand afterwards.  Presumably none of the Stirlings ever
thought about her--except Cousin Georgiana, who used to lie awake
worrying about poor Doss.  Did she have enough to eat?  Was that
dreadful creature good to her?  Was she warm enough at nights?

Valancy was quite warm at nights.  She used to wake up and revel
silently in the cosiness of those winter nights on that little
island in the frozen lake.  The nights of other winters had been so
cold and long.  Valancy hated to wake up in them and think about
the bleakness and emptiness of the day that had passed and the
bleakness and emptiness of the day that would come.  Now she almost
counted that night lost on which she didn't wake up and lie awake
for half an hour just being happy, while Barney's regular breathing
went on beside her, and through the open door the smouldering
brands in the fireplace winked at her in the gloom.  It was very
nice to feel a little Lucky cat jump up on your bed in the darkness
and snuggle down at your feet, purring; but Banjo would be sitting
dourly by himself out in front of the fire like a brooding demon.
At such moments Banjo was anything but canny, but Valancy loved his
uncanniness.

The side of the bed had to be right against the window.  There was
no other place for it in the tiny room.  Valancy, lying there,
could look out of the window, through the big pine boughs that
actually touched it, away up Mistawis, white and lustrous as a
pavement of pearl, or dark and terrible in the storm.  Sometimes
the pine boughs tapped against the panes with friendly signals.
Sometimes she heard the little hissing whisper of snow against them
right at her side.  Some nights the whole outer world seemed given
over to the empery of silence; then came nights when there would be
a majestic sweep of wind in the pines; nights of dear starlight
when it whistled freakishly and joyously around the Blue Castle;
brooding nights before storm when it crept along the floor of the
lake with a low, wailing cry of brooding and mystery.  Valancy
wasted many perfectly good sleeping hours in these delightful
communings.  But she could sleep as long in the morning as she
wanted to.  Nobody cared.  Barney cooked his own breakfast of bacon
and eggs and then shut himself up in Bluebeard's Chamber till
supper time.  Then they had an evening of reading and talk.  They
talked about everything in this world and a good many things in
other worlds.  They laughed over their own jokes until the Blue
Castle re-echoed.

"You DO laugh beautifully," Barney told her once.  "It makes me
want to laugh just to hear you laugh.  There's a trick about your
laugh--as if there were so much more fun back of it that you
wouldn't let out.  Did you laugh like that before you came to
Mistawis, Moonlight?"

"I never laughed at all--really.  I used to giggle foolishly when I
felt I was expected to.  But now--the laugh just comes."

It struck Valancy more than once that Barney himself laughed a
great deal oftener than he used to and that his laugh had changed.
It had become wholesome.  She rarely heard the little cynical note
in it now.  Could a man laugh like that who had crimes on his
conscience?  Yet Barney MUST have done something.  Valancy had
indifferently made up her mind as to what he had done.  She
concluded he was a defaulting bank cashier.  She had found in one
of Barney's books an old clipping cut from a Montreal paper in
which a vanished, defaulting cashier was described.  The
description applied to Barney--as well as to half a dozen other men
Valancy knew--and from some casual remarks he had dropped from time
to time she concluded he knew Montreal rather well.  Valancy had it
all figured out in the back of her mind.  Barney had been in a
bank.  He was tempted to take some money to speculate--meaning, of
course, to put it back.  He had got in deeper and deeper, until he
found there was nothing for it but flight.  It had happened so to
scores of men.  He had, Valancy was absolutely certain, never meant
to do wrong.  Of course, the name of the man in the clipping was
Bernard Craig.  But Valancy had always thought Snaith was an alias.
Not that it mattered.

Valancy had only one unhappy night that winter.  It came in late
March when most of the snow had gone and Nip and Tuck had returned.
Barney had gone off in the afternoon for a long, woodland tramp,
saying he would be back by dark if all went well.  Soon after he
had gone it had begun to snow.  The wind rose and presently
Mistawis was in the grip of one of the worst storms of the winter.
It tore up the lake and struck at the little house.  The dark angry
woods on the mainland scowled at Valancy, menace in the toss of
their boughs, threats in their windy gloom, terror in the roar of
their hearts.  The trees on the island crouched in fear.  Valancy
spent the night huddled on the rug before the fire, her face buried
in her hands, when she was not vainly peering from the oriel in a
futile effort to see through the furious smoke of wind and snow
that had once been blue-dimpled Mistawis.  Where was Barney?  Lost
on the merciless lakes?  Sinking exhausted in the drifts of the
pathless woods?  Valancy died a hundred deaths that night and paid
in full for all the happiness of her Blue Castle.  When morning
came the storm broke and cleared; the sun shone gloriously over
Mistawis; and at noon Barney came home.  Valancy saw him from the
oriel as he came around a wooded point, slender and black against
the glistening white world.  She did not run to meet him.
Something happened to her knees and she dropped down on Banjo's
chair.  Luckily Banjo got out from under in time, his whiskers
bristling with indignation.  Barney found her there, her head
buried in her hands.

"Barney, I thought you were dead," she whispered.

Barney hooted.

"After two years of the Klondike did you think a baby storm like
this could get me?  I spent the night in that old lumber shanty
over by Muskoka.  At bit cold but snug enough.  Little goose!  Your
eyes look like burnt holes in a blanket.  Did you sit up here all
night worrying over an old woodsman like me?"

"Yes," said Valancy.  "I--couldn't help it.  The storm seemed so
wild.  Anybody might have been lost in it.  When--I saw you--come
round the point--there--something happened to me.  I don't know
what.  It was as if I had died and come back to life.  I can't
describe it any other way."



CHAPTER XXXIII


Spring.  Mistawis black and sullen for a week or two, then flaming
in sapphire and turquoise, lilac and rose again, laughing through
the oriel, caressing its amethyst islands, rippling under winds
soft as silk.  Frogs, little green wizards of swamp and pool,
singing everywhere in the long twilights and long into the nights;
islands fairy-like in a green haze; the evanescent beauty of wild
young trees in early leaf; frost-like loveliness of the new foliage
of juniper-trees; the woods putting on a fashion of spring flowers,
dainty, spiritual things akin to the soul of the wilderness; red
mist on the maples; willows decked out with glossy silver pussies;
all the forgotten violets of Mistawis blooming again; lure of April
moons.

"Think how many thousands of springs have been here on Mistawis--
and all of them beautiful," said Valancy.  "Oh, Barney, look at
that wild plum!  I will--I must quote from John Foster.  There's a
passage in one of his books--I've re-read it a hundred times.  He
must have written it before a tree just like that:

"'Behold the young wild plum-tree which has adorned herself after
immemorial fashion in a wedding-veil of fine lace.  The fingers of
wood pixies must have woven it, for nothing like it ever came from
an earthly loom.  I vow the tree is conscious of its loveliness.
It is bridling before our very eyes--as if its beauty were not the
most ephemeral thing in the woods, as it is the rarest and most
exceeding, for today it is and tomorrow it is not.  Every south
wind purring through the boughs will winnow away a shower of
slender petals.  But what matter?  Today it is queen of the wild
places and it is always today in the woods.'"

"I'm sure you feel much better since you've got that out of your
system," said Barney heartlessly.

"Here's a patch of dandelions," said Valancy, unsubdued.
"Dandelions shouldn't grow in the woods, though.  They haven't any
sense of the fitness of things at all.  They are too cheerful and
self-satisfied.  They haven't any of the mystery and reserve of the
real wood-flowers."

"In short, they've no secrets," said Barney.  "But wait a bit.  The
woods will have their own way even with those obvious dandelions.
In a little while all that obtrusive yellowness and complacency
will be gone and we'll find here misty, phantom-like globes
hovering over those long grasses in full harmony with the
traditions of the forest."

"That sounds John Fosterish," teased Valancy.

"What have I done that deserved a slam like that?" complained
Barney.

One of the earliest signs of spring was the renaissance of Lady
Jane.  Barney put her on roads that no other car would look at, and
they went through Deerwood in mud to the axles.  They passed
several Stirlings, who groaned and reflected that now spring was
come they would encounter that shameless pair everywhere.  Valancy,
prowling about Deerwood shops, met Uncle Benjamin on the street;
but he did not realise until he had gone two blocks further on that
the girl in the scarlet-collared blanket coat, with cheeks reddened
in the sharp April air and the fringe of black hair over laughing,
slanted eyes, was Valancy.  When he did realise it, Uncle Benjamin
was indignant.  What business had Valancy to look like--like--like
a young girl?  The way of the transgressor was hard.  Had to be.
Scriptural and proper.  Yet Valancy's path couldn't be hard.  She
wouldn't look like that if it were.  There was something wrong.  It
was almost enough to make a man turn modernist.

Barney and Valancy clanged on to the Port, so that it was dark when
they went through Deerwood again.  At her old home Valancy, seized
with a sudden impulse, got out, opened the little gate and tiptoed
around to the sitting-room window.  There sat her mother and Cousin
Stickles drearily, grimly knitting.  Baffling and inhuman as ever.
If they had looked the least bit lonesome Valancy would have gone
in.  But they did not.  Valancy would not disturb them for worlds.



CHAPTER XXXIV


Valancy had two wonderful moments that spring.

One day, coming home through the woods, with her arms full of
trailing arbutus and creeping spruce, she met a man who she knew
must be Allan Tierney.  Allan Tierney, the celebrated painter of
beautiful women.  He lived in New York in winter, but he owned an
island cottage at the northern end of Mistawis to which he always
came the minute the ice was out of the lake.  He was reputed to be
a lonely, eccentric man.  He never flattered his sitters.  There
was no need to, for he would not paint any one who required
flattery.  To be painted by Allan Tierney was all the cachet of
beauty a woman could desire.  Valancy had heard so much about him
that she couldn't help turning her head back over her shoulder for
another shy, curious look at him.  A shaft of pale spring sunlight
fell through a great pine athwart her bare black head and her
slanted eyes.  She wore a pale green sweater and had bound a fillet
of linnaea vine about her hair.  The feathery fountain of trailing
spruce overflower her arms and fell around her.  Allan Tierney's
eyes lighted up.

"I've had a caller," said Barney the next afternoon, when Valancy
had returned from another flower quest.

"Who?"  Valancy was surprised but indifferent.  She began filling a
basket with arbutus.

"Allan Tierney.  He wants to paint you, Moonlight."

"Me!"  Valancy dropped her basket and her arbutus.  "You're
laughing at me, Barney."

"I'm not.  That's what Tierney came for.  To ask my permission to
paint my wife--as the Spirit of Muskoka, or something like that."

"But--but--" stammered Valancy, "Allan Tierney never paints any
but--any but--"

"Beautiful women," finished Barney.  "Conceded.  Q. E. D., Mistress
Barney Snaith is a beautiful woman."

"Nonsense," said Valancy, stooping to retrieve her arbutus.  "You
KNOW that's nonsense, Barney.  I know I'm a heap better-looking
than I was a year ago, but I'm not beautiful."

"Allan Tierney never makes a mistake," said Barney.  "You forget,
Moonlight, that there are different kinds of beauty.  Your
imagination is obsessed by the very obvious type of your cousin
Olive.  Oh, I've seen her--she's a stunner--but you'd never catch
Allan Tierney wanting to paint her.  In the horrible but expressive
slang phrase, she keeps all her goods in the shop-window.  But in
your subconscious mind you have a conviction that nobody can be
beautiful who doesn't look like Olive.  Also, you remember your
face as it was in the days when your soul was not allowed to shine
through it.  Tierney said something about the curve of your cheek
as you looked back over your shoulder.  You know I've often told
you it was distracting.  And he's quite batty about your eyes.  If
I wasn't absolutely sure it was solely professional--he's really a
crabbed old bachelor, you know--I'd be jealous."

"Well, I don't want to be painted," said Valancy.  "I hope you told
him that."

"I couldn't tell him that.  I didn't know what YOU wanted.  But I
told him _I_ didn't want my wife painted--hung up in a salon for
the mob to stare at.  Belonging to another man.  For of course I
couldn't buy the picture.  So even if you had wanted to be painted,
Moonlight, your tyrannous husband would not have permitted it.
Tierney was a bit squiffy.  He isn't used to being turned down like
that.  His requests are almost like royalty's."

"But we are outlaws," laughed Valancy.  "We bow to no decrees--we
acknowledge no sovereignty."

In her heart she thought unashamedly:

"I wish Olive could know that Allan Tierney wanted to paint me.
ME!  Little-old-maid-Valancy-Stirling-that-was."

Her second wonder-moment came one evening in May.  She realised
that Barney actually liked her.  She had always hoped he did, but
sometimes she had a little, disagreeable, haunting dread that he
was just kind and nice and chummy out of pity; knowing that she
hadn't long to live and determined she should have a good time as
long as she did live; but away back in his mind rather looking
forward to freedom again, with no intrusive woman creature in his
island fastness and no chattering thing beside him in his woodland
prowls.  She knew he could never love her.  She did not even want
him to.  If he loved her he would be unhappy when she died--Valancy
never flinched from the plain word.  No "passing away" for her.
And she did not want him to be the least unhappy.  But neither did
she want him to be glad--or relieved.  She wanted him to like her
and miss her as a good chum.  But she had never been sure until
this night that he did.

They had walked over the hills in the sunset.  They had the delight
of discovering a virgin spring in a ferny hollow and had drunk
together from it out of a birch-bark cup; they had come to an old
tumble-down rail fence and sat on it for a long time.  They didn't
talk much, but Valancy had a curious sense of ONENESS.  She knew
that she couldn't have felt that if he hadn't liked her.

"You nice little thing," said Barney suddenly.  "Oh, you nice
little thing!  Sometimes I feel you're too nice to be real--that
I'm just dreaming you."

"Why can't I die now--this very minute--when I am so happy!"
thought Valancy.

Well, it couldn't be so very long now.  Somehow, Valancy had always
felt she would live out the year Dr. Trent had allotted.  She had
not been careful--she had never tried to be.  But, somehow, she had
always counted on living out her year.  She had not let herself
think about it at all.  But now, sitting here beside Barney, with
her hand in his, a sudden realisation came to her.  She had not had
a heart attack for a long while--two months at least.  The last one
she had had was two or three nights before Barney was out in the
storm.  Since then she had not remembered she had a heart.  Well,
no doubt, it betokened the nearness of the end.  Nature had given
up the struggle.  There would be no more pain.

"I'm afraid heaven will be very dull after this past year," thought
Valancy.  "But perhaps one will not remember.  Would that be--nice?
No, no.  I don't want to forget Barney.  I'd rather be miserable in
heaven remembering him than happy forgetting him.  And I'll always
remember through all eternity--that he really, REALLY liked me."



CHAPTER XXXV


Thirty seconds can be very long sometimes.  Long enough to work a
miracle or a revolution.  In thirty seconds life changed wholly for
Barney and Valancy Snaith.

They had gone around the lake one June evening in their
disappearing propeller, fished for an hour in a little creek, left
their boat there, and walked up through the woods to Port Lawrence
two miles away.  Valancy prowled a bit in the shops and got herself
a new pair of sensible shoes.  Her old pair had suddenly and
completely given out, and this evening she had been compelled to
put on the little fancy pair of patent-leather with rather high,
slender heels, which she had bought in a fit of folly one day in
the winter because of their beauty and because she wanted to make
one foolish, extravagant purchase in her life.  She sometimes put
them on of an evening in the Blue Castle, but this was the first
time she had worn them outside.  She had not found it any too easy
walking up through the woods in them, and Barney guyed her
unmercifully about them.  But in spite of the inconvenience,
Valancy secretly rather liked the look of her trim ankles and high
instep above those pretty, foolish shoes and did not change them in
the shop as she might have done.

The sun was hanging low above the pines when they left Port
Lawrence.  To the north of it the woods closed around the town
quite suddenly.  Valancy always had a sense of stepping from one
world to another--from reality to fairyland--when she went out of
Port Lawrence and in a twinkling found it shut off behind her by
the armies of the pines.

A mile and a half from Port Lawrence there was a small railroad
station with a little station-house which at this hour of the day
was deserted, since no local train was due.  Not a soul was in
sight when Barney and Valancy emerged from the woods.  Off to the
left a sudden curve in the track hid it from view, but over the
tree-tops beyond, the long plume of smoke betokened the approach of
a through train.  The rails were vibrating to its thunder as Barney
stepped across the switch.  Valancy was a few steps behind him,
loitering to gather June-bells along the little, winding path.  But
there was plenty of time to get across before the train came.  She
stepped unconcernedly over the first rail.

She could never tell how it happened.  The ensuing thirty seconds
always seemed in her recollection like a chaotic nightmare in which
she endured the agony of a thousand lifetimes.

The heel of her pretty, foolish shoe caught in a crevice of the
switch.  She could not pull it loose.  "Barney--Barney!" she called
in alarm.  Barney turned--saw her predicament--saw her ashen face--
dashed back.  He tried to pull her clear--he tried to wrench her
foot from the prisoning hold.  In vain.  In a moment the train
would sweep around the curve--would be on them.

"Go--go--quick--you'll be killed, Barney!" shrieked Valancy, trying
to push him away.

Barney dropped on his knees, ghost-white, frantically tearing at
her shoe-lace.  The knot defied his trembling fingers.  He snatched
a knife from his pocket and slashed at it.  Valancy still strove
blindly to push him away.  Her mind was full of the hideous thought
that Barney was going to be killed.  She had no thought for her own
danger.

"Barney--go--go--for God's sake--go!"

"Never!" muttered Barney between his set teeth.  He gave one mad
wrench at the lace.  As the train thundered around the curve he
sprang up and caught Valancy--dragging her clear, leaving the shoe
behind her.  The wind from the train as it swept by turned to icy
cold the streaming perspiration on his face.

"Thank God!" he breathed.

For a moment they stood stupidly staring at each other, two white,
shaken, wild-eyed creatures.  Then they stumbled over to the little
seat at the end of the station-house and dropped on it.  Barney
buried his face in his hands and said not a word.  Valancy sat,
staring straight ahead of her with unseeing eyes at the great pine
woods, the stumps of the clearing, the long, gleaming rails.  There
was only one thought in her dazed mind--a thought that seemed to
burn it as a shaving of fire might burn her body.

Dr. Trent had told her over a year ago that she had a serious form
of heart-disease--that any excitement might to fatal.

If that were so, why was she not dead now?  This very minute?  She
had just experienced as much and as terrible excitement as most
people experience in a lifetime, crowded into that endless thirty
seconds.  Yet she had not died of it.  She was not an iota the
worse for it.  A little wobbly at the knees, as any one would have
been; a quicker heart-beat, as any one would have; nothing more.

Why!

Was it possible Dr. Trent had made a mistake?

Valancy shivered as if a cold wind had suddenly chilled her to the
soul.  She looked at Barney, hunched up beside her.  His silence
was very eloquent:  Had the same thought occurred to him?  Did he
suddenly find himself confronted by the appalling suspicion that he
was married, not for a few months or a year, but for good and all
to a woman he did not love and who had foisted herself upon him by
some trick or lie?  Valancy turned sick before the horror of it.
It could not be.  It would be too cruel--too devilish.  Dr. Trent
COULDN'T have made a mistake.  Impossible.  He was one of the best
heart specialists in Ontario.  She was foolish--unnerved by the
recent horror.  She remembered some of the hideous spasms of pain
she had had.  There must be something serious the matter with her
heart to account for them.

But she had not had any for nearly three months.

Why!

Presently Barney bestirred himself.  He stood up, without looking
at Valancy, and said casually:

"I suppose we'd better be hiking back.  Sun's getting low.  Are
your good for the rest of the road?"

"I think so," said Valancy miserably.

Barney went across the clearing and picked up the parcel he had
dropped--the parcel containing her new shoes.  He brought it to her
and let her take out the shoes and put them on without any
assistance, while he stood with his back to her and looked out over
the pines.

They walked in silence down the shadowy trail to the lake.  In
silence Barney steered his boat into the sunset miracle that was
Mistawis.  In silence they went around feathery headlands and
across coral bays and silver rivers where canoes were slipping up
and down in the afterglow.  In silence they went past cottages
echoing with music and laughter.  In silence drew up at the
landing-place below the Blue Castle.

Valancy went up the rock steps and into the house.  She dropped
miserably on the first chair she came to and sat there staring
through the oriel, oblivious of Good Luck's frantic purrs of joy
and Banjo's savage glares of protest at her occupancy of his chair.

Barney came in a few minutes later.  He did not come near her, but
he stood behind her and asked gently if she felt any the worse for
her experience.  Valancy would have given her year of happiness to
have been able honesty to answer "Yes."

"No," she said flatly.

Barney went into Bluebeard's Chamber and shut the door.  She heard
him pacing up and down--up and down.  He had never paced like that
before.

And an hour ago--only an hour ago--she had been so happy!



CHAPTER XXXVI


Finally Valancy went to bed.  Before she went she re-read Dr.
Trent's letter.  It comforted her a little.  So positive.  So
assured.  The writing so black and steady.  Not the writing of a
man who didn't know what he was writing about.  But she could not
sleep.  She pretended to be asleep when Barney came in.  Barney
pretended to go to sleep.  But Valancy knew perfectly well he
wasn't sleeping any more than she was.  She knew he was lying
there, staring through the darkness.  Thinking of what?  Trying to
face--what?

Valancy, who had spent so many happy wakeful hours of night lying
by that window, now paid the price of them all in this one night of
misery.  A horrible, portentous fact was slowly looming out before
her from the nebula of surmise and fear.  She could not shut her
eyes to it--push it away--ignore it.

There could be nothing seriously wrong with her heart, no matter
what Dr. Trent had said.  If there had been, those thirty seconds
would have killed her.  It was no use to recall Dr. Trent's letter
and reputation.  The greatest specialists made mistakes sometimes.
Dr. Trent had made one.

Towards morning Valancy fell into a fitful dose with ridiculous
dreams.  One of them was of Barney taunting her with having tricked
him.  In her dream she lost her temper and struck him violently on
the head with her rolling-pin.  He proved to be made of glass and
shivered into splinters all over the floor.  She woke with a cry of
horror--a gasp of relief--a short laugh over the absurdity of her
dream--a miserable sickening recollection of what had happened.

Barney was gone.  Valancy knew, as people sometimes know things--
inescapably, without being told--that he was not in the house or in
Bluebeard's Chamber either.  There was a curious silence in the
living-room.  A silence with something uncanny about it.  The old
clock had stopped.  Barney must have forgotten to wind it up,
something he had never done before.  The room without it was dead,
though the sunshine streamed in through the oriel and dimples of
light from the dancing waves beyond quivered over the walls.

The canoe was gone but Lady Jane was under the mainland trees.  So
Barney had betaken himself to the wilds.  He would not return till
night--perhaps not even then.  He must be angry with her.  That
furious silence of his must mean anger--cold, deep, justifiable
resentment.  Well, Valancy knew what she must do first.  She was
not suffering very keenly now.  Yet the curious numbness that
pervaded her being was in a way worse than pain.  It was as if
something in her had died.  She forced herself to cook and eat a
little breakfast.  Mechanically she put the Blue Castle in perfect
order.  Then she put on her hat and coat, locked the door and hid
the key in the hollow of the old pine and crossed to the mainland
in the motor boat.  She was going into Deerwood to see Dr. Trent.
She must KNOW.



CHAPTER XXXVII


Dr. Trent looked at her blankly and fumbled among his
recollections.

"Er--Miss--Miss--"

"Mrs. Snaith," said Valancy quietly.  "I was Miss Valancy Stirling
when I came to you last May--over a year ago.  I wanted to consult
you about my heart."

Dr. Trent's face cleared.

"Oh, of course.  I remember now.  I'm really not to blame for not
knowing you.  You've changed--splendidly.  And married.  Well,
well, it has agreed with you.  You don't look much like an invalid
now, hey?  I remember that day.  I was badly upset.  Hearing about
poor Ned bowled me over.  But Ned's as good as new and you, too,
evidently.  I told you so, you know--told you there was nothing to
worry over."

Valancy looked at him.

"You told me, in your letter," she said slowly, with a curious
feeling that some one else was talking through her lips, "that I
had angina pectoris--in the last stages--complicated with an
aneurism.  That I might die any minute--that I couldn't live longer
than a year."

Dr. Trent stared at her.

"Impossible!" he said blankly.  "I couldn't have told you that!"

Valancy took his letter from her bag and handed it to him.

"Miss Valancy Stirling," he read.  "Yes--yes.  Of course I wrote
you--on the train--that night.  But I TOLD you there was nothing
serious--"

"Read your letter," insisted Valancy.

Dr. Trent took it out--unfolded it--glanced over it.  A dismayed
look came into his face.  He jumped to his feet and strode
agitatedly about the room.

"Good heavens!  This is the letter I meant for old Miss Jane
Sterling.  From Port Lawrence.  She was here that day, too.  I sent
you the wrong letter.  What unpardonable carelessness!  But I was
beside myself that night.  My God, and you believed that--you
believed--but you didn't--you went to another doctor--"

Valancy stood up, turned round, looked foolishly about her and sat
down again.

"I believed it," she said faintly.  "I didn't go to any other
doctor.  I--I--it would take too long to explain.  But I believed I
was going to die soon."

Dr. Trent halted before her.

"I can never forgive myself.  What a year you must have had!  But
you don't look--I can't understand!"

"Never mind," said Valancy dully.  "And so there's nothing the
matter with my heart?"

"Well, nothing serious.  You had what is called pseudo-angina.
It's never fatal--passes away completely with proper treatment.  Or
sometimes with a shock of joy.  Have you been troubled much with
it?"

"Not at all since March," answered Valancy.  She remembered the
marvellous feeling of re-creation she had had when she saw Barney
coming home safe after the storm.  Had that "shock of joy" cured
her?

"Then likely you're all right.  I told you what to do in the letter
you should have got.  AND of course I supposed you'd go to another
doctor.  Child, why didn't you?"

"I didn't want anybody to know."

"Idiot," said Dr. Trent bluntly.  "I can't understand such folly.
And poor old Miss Sterling.  She must have got your letter--telling
her there was nothing serious the matter.  Well, well, it couldn't
have made any difference.  Her case was hopeless.  Nothing that she
could have done or left undone could have made any difference.  I
was surprised she lived as long as she did--two months.  She was
here that day--not long before you.  I hated to tell her the truth.
You think I'm a blunt old curmudgeon--and my letters ARE blunt
enough.  I can't soften things.  But I'm a snivelling coward when
it comes to telling a woman face to face that she's got to die
soon.  I told her I'd look up some features of the case I wasn't
quite sure of and let her know next day.  But you got her letter--
look here, "Dear Miss S-t-E-r-l-i-n-g.'"

"Yes.  I noticed that.  But I thought it a mistake.  I didn't know
there were any Sterlings in Port Lawrence."

"She was the only one.  A lonely old soul.  Lived by herself with
only a little home girl.  She died two months after she was here--
died in her sleep.  My mistake couldn't have made any difference to
her.  But you!  I can't forgive myself for inflicting a year's
misery on you.  It's time I retired, all right, when I do things
like that--even if my son was supposed to be fatally injured.  Can
you ever forgive me?"

A year of misery!  Valancy smiled a tortured smile as she thought
of all the happiness Dr. Trent's mistake had bought her.  But she
was paying for it now--oh, she was paying.  If to feel was to live
she was living with a vengeance.

She let Dr. Trent examine her and answered all his questions.  When
he told her she was fit as a fiddle and would probably live to be a
hundred, she got up and went away silently.  She knew that there
were a great many horrible things outside waiting to be thought
over.  Dr. Trent thought she was odd.  Anybody would have thought,
from her hopeless eyes and woebegone face, that he had given her a
sentence of death instead of life.  Snaith?  Snaith?  Who the devil
had she married?  He had never heard of Snaiths in Deerwood.  And
she had been such a sallow, faded, little old maid.  Gad, but
marriage HAD made a difference in her, anyhow, whoever Snaith was.
Snaith?  Dr. Trent remembered.  That rapscallion "up back!"  Had
Valancy Stirling married HIM?  And her clan had let her!  Well,
probably that solved the mystery.  She had married in haste and
repented at leisure, and that was why she wasn't overjoyed at
learning she was a good insurance prospect, after all.  Married!
To God knew whom!  Or what!  Jailbird?  Defaulter?  Fugitive from
justice?  It must be pretty bad if she had looked to death as a
release, poor girl.  But why were women such fools?  Dr. Trent
dismissed Valancy from his mind, though to the day of his death he
was ashamed of putting those letters into the wrong envelopes.



CHAPTER XXXVIII


Valancy walked quickly through the back streets and through Lover's
Lane.  She did not want to meet any one she knew.  She didn't want
to meet even people she didn't know.  She hated to be seen.  Her
mind was so confused, so torn, so messy.  She felt that her
appearance must be the same.  She drew a sobbing breath of relief
as she left the village behind and found herself on the "up back"
road.  There was little fear of meeting any one she knew here.  The
cars that fled by her with raucous shrieks were filled with
strangers.  One of them was packed with young people who whirled
past her singing uproariously:


     "My wife has the fever, O then,
      My wife has the fever, O then,
      My wife has the fever,
      Oh, I hope it won't leave her,
      For I want to be single again."


Valancy flinched as if one of them had leaned from the car and cut
her across the face with a whip.

She had made a covenant with death and death had cheated her.  Now
life stood mocking her.  She had trapped Barney.  Trapped him into
marrying her.  And divorce was so hard to get in Ontario.  So
expensive.  And Barney was poor.

With life, fear had come back into her heart.  Sickening fear.
Fear of what Barney would think.  Would say.  Fear of the future
that must be lived without him.  Fear of her insulted, repudiated
clan.

She had had one draught from a divine cup and now it was dashed
from her lips.  With no kind, friendly death to rescue her.  She
must go on living and longing for it.  Everything was spoiled,
smirched, defaced.  Even that year in the Blue Castle.  Even her
unashamed love for Barney.  It had been beautiful because death
waited.  Now it was only sordid because death was gone.  How could
any one bear an unbearable thing?

She must go back and tell him.  Make him believe she had not meant
to trick him--she MUST make him believe that.  She must say good-
bye to her Blue Castle and return to the brick house on Elm Street.
Back to everything she had thought left behind forever.  The old
bondage--the old fears.  But that did not matter.  All that
mattered now was that Barney must somehow be made to believe she
had not consciously tricked him.

When Valancy reached the pines by the lake she was brought out of
her daze of pain by a startling sight.  There, parked by the side
of old, battered ragged Lady Jane, was another car.  A wonderful
car.  A purple car.  Not a dark, royal purple but a blatant,
screaming purple.  It shone like a mirror and its interior plainly
indicated the car caste of Vere de Vere.  In the driver's seat sat
a haughty chauffeur in livery.  And in the tonneau sat a man who
opened the door and bounced out nimbly as Valancy came down the
path to the landing-place.  He stood under the pines waiting for
her and Valancy took in every detail of him.

A stout, short, pudgy man, with a broad, rubicund, good-humoured
face--a clean-shaven face, though an unparalysed little imp at the
back of Valancy's paralysed mind suggested the thought, "Such a
face should have a fringe of white whisker around it."  Old-
fashioned, steel-rimmed spectacles on prominent blue eyes.  A
pursey mouth; a little round, knobby nose.  Where--where--where,
groped Valancy, had she seen that face before?  It seemed as
familiar to her as her own.

The stranger wore a green hat and a light fawn overcoat over a suit
of a loud check pattern.  His tie was a brilliant green of lighter
shade; on the plump hand he outstretched to intercept Valancy an
enormous diamond winked at her.  But he had a pleasant, fatherly
smile, and in his hearty, unmodulated voice was a ring of something
that attracted her.

"Can you tell me, Miss, if that house yonder belongs to a Mr.
Redfern?  And if so, how can I get to it?"

Redfern!  A vision of bottles seemed to dance before Valancy's
eyes--long bottles of bitters--round bottles of hair tonic--square
bottles of liniment--short, corpulent little bottles of purple
pills--and all of them bearing that very prosperous, beaming moon-
face and steel-rimmed spectacles on the label.  Dr. Redfern!

"No," said Valancy faintly.  "No--that house belongs to Mr.
Snaith."

Dr. Redfern nodded.

"Yes, I understand Bernie's been calling himself Snaith.  Well,
it's his middle name--was his poor mother's.  Bernard Snaith
Redfern--that's him.  And now, Miss, you can tell me how to get
over to that island?  Nobody seems to be home there.  I've done
some waving and yelling.  Henry, there, wouldn't yell.  He's a one-
job man.  But old Doc Redfern can yell with the best of them yet,
and ain't above doing it.  Raised nothing but a couple of crows.
Guess Bernie's out for the day."

"He was away when I left this morning," said Valancy.  "I suppose
he hasn't come home yet."

She spoke flatly and tonelessly.  This last shock had temporarily
bereft her of whatever little power of reasoning had been left her
by Dr. Trent's revelation.  In the back of her mind the aforesaid
little imp was jeeringly repeating a silly old proverb, "It never
rains but it pours."  But she was not trying to think.  What was
the use?

Dr. Redfern was gazing at her in perplexity.

"When you left this morning?  Do you live--over there?"

He waved his diamond at the Blue Castle.

"Of course," said Valancy stupidly.  "I'm his wife."

Dr. Redfern took out a yellow silk handkerchief, removed his hat
and mopped his brow.  He was very bald, and Valancy's imp
whispered, "Why be bald?  Why lose your manly beauty?  Try
Redfern's Hair Vigor.  It keeps you young."

"Excuse me," said Dr. Redfern.  "This is a bit of a shock."

"Shocks seem to be in the air this morning."  The imp said this out
loud before Valancy could prevent it.

"I didn't know Bernie was--married.  I didn't think he WOULD have
got married without telling his old dad."

Were Dr. Redfern's eyes misty?  Amid her own dull ache of misery
and fear and dread, Valancy felt a pang of pity for him.

"Don't blame him," she said hurriedly.  "It--it wasn't his fault.
It--was all my doing."

"You didn't ask him to marry you, I suppose," twinkled Dr. Redfern.
"He might have let me know.  I'd have got acquainted with my
daughter-in-law before this if he had.  But I'm glad to meet you
now, my dear--very glad.  You look like a sensible young woman.  I
used to sorter fear Barney'd pick out some pretty bit of fluff just
because she was good-looking.  They were all after him, of course.
Wanted his money?  Eh?  Didn't like the pills and the bitters but
liked the dollars.  Eh?  Wanted to dip their pretty little fingers
in old Doc's millions.  Eh?"

"Millions!" said Valancy faintly.  She wished she could sit down
somewhere--she wished she could have a chance to think--she wished
she and the Blue Castle could sink to the bottom of Mistawis and
vanish from human sight forevermore.

"Millions," said Dr. Redfern complacently.  "And Bernie chucks them
for--that."  Again he shook the diamond contemptuously at the Blue
Castle, "Wouldn't you think he'd have more sense?  And all on
account of a white bit of a girl.  He must have got over THAT
feeling, anyhow, since he's married.  You must persuade him to come
back to civilisation.  All nonsense wasting his life like this.
Ain't you going to take me over to your house, my dear?  I suppose
you've some way of getting there."

"Of course," said Valancy stupidly.  She led the way down to the
little cove where the disappearing propeller boat was snuggled.

"Does your--your man want to come, too?"

"Who?  Henry.  Not he.  Look at him sitting there disapproving.
Disapproves of the whole expedition.  The trail up from the road
nearly gave him a conniption.  Well, it WAS a devilish road to put
a car on.  Whose old bus is that up there?"

"Barney's."

"Good Lord!  Does Bernie Redfern ride in a thing like that?  It
looks like the great-great-grandmother of all the Fords."

"It isn't a Ford.  It's a Grey Slosson," said Valancy spiritedly.
For some occult reason, Dr. Redfern's good-humoured ridicule of
dear old Lady Jane stung her to life.  A life that was all pain but
still LIFE.  Better than the horrible half-dead-and-half-aliveness
of the past few minutes--or years.  She waved Dr. Redfern curtly
into the boat and took him over to the Blue Castle.  The key was
still in the old pine--the house still silent and deserted.
Valancy took the doctor through the living-room to the western
verandah.  She must at least be out where there was air.  It was
still sunny, but in the southwest a great thundercloud, with white
crests and gorges of purple shadow, was slowly rising over
Mistawis.  The doctor dropped with a gasp on a rustic chair and
mopped his brow again.

"Warm, eh?  Lord, what a view!  Wonder if it would soften Henry if
he could see it."

"Have you had dinner?" asked Valancy.

"Yes, my dear--had it before we left Port Lawrence.  Didn't know
what sort of wild hermit's hollow we were coming to, you see.
Hadn't any idea I was going to find a nice little daughter-in-law
here all ready to toss me up a meal.  Cats, eh?  Puss, puss!  See
that.  Cats love me.  Bernie was always fond of cats!  It's about
the only thing he took from me.  He's his poor mother's boy."

Valancy had been thinking idly that Barney must resemble his
mother.  She had remained standing by the steps, but Dr. Redfern
waved her to the swing seat.

"Sit down, dear.  Never stand when you can sit.  I want to get a
good look at Barney's wife.  Well, well, I like your face.  No
beauty--you don't mind my saying that--you've sense enough to know
it, I reckon.  Sit down."

Valancy sat down.  To be obliged to sit still when mental agony
urges us to stride up and down is the refinement of torture.  Every
nerve in her being was crying out to be alone--to be hidden.  But
she had to sit and listen to Dr. Redfern, who didn't mind talking
at all.

"When do you think Bernie will be back?"

"I don't know--not before night probably."

"Where did he go?"

"I don't know that either.  Likely to the woods--up back."

"So he doesn't tell you his comings and goings, either?  Bernie was
always a secretive young devil.  Never understood him.  Just like
his poor mother.  But I thought a lot of him.  It hurts me when he
disappeared as he did.  Eleven years ago.  I haven't seen my boy
for eleven years."

"Eleven years."  Valancy was surprised.  "It's only six since he
came here."

"Oh, he was in the Klondike before that--and all over the world.
He used to drop me a line now and then--never give any clue to
where he was but just a line to say he was all right.  I s'pose
he's told you all about it."

"No.  I know nothing of his past life," said Valancy with sudden
eagerness.  She wanted to know--she must know now.  It hadn't
mattered before.  Now she must know all.  And she could never hear
it from Barney.  She might never even see him again.  If she did,
it would not be to talk of his past.

"What happened?  Why did he leave his home?  Tell me.  Tell me."

"Well, it ain't much of a story.  Just a young fool gone mad
because of a quarrel with his girl.  Only Bernie was a stubborn
fool.  Always stubborn.  You never could make that boy do anything
he didn't want to do.  From the day he was born.  Yet he was always
a quiet, gentle little chap, too.  Good as gold.  His poor mother
died when he was only two years old.  I'd just begun to make money
with my Hair Vigor.  I'd dreamed the formula for it, you see.  Some
dream that.  The cash rolled in.  Bernie had everything he wanted.
I sent him to the best schools--private schools.  I meant to make a
gentleman of him.  Never had any chance myself.  Meant he should
have every chance.  He went through McGill.  Got honours and all
that.  I wanted him to go in for law.  He hankered after journalism
and stuff like that.  Wanted me to buy a paper for him--or back him
in publishing what he called a 'real, worthwhile, honest-to-
goodness Canadian Magazine.'  I s'pose I'd have done it--I always
did what he wanted me to do.  Wasn't he all I had to live for?  I
wanted him to be happy.  And he never was happy.  Can you believe
it?  Not that he said so.  But I'd always a feeling that he wasn't
happy.  Everything he wanted--all the money he could spend--his own
bank account--travel--seeing the world--but he wasn't happy.  Not
till he fell in love with Ethel Traverse.  Then he was happy for a
little while."

The cloud had reached the sun and a great, chill, purple shadow
came swiftly over Mistawis.  It touched the Blue Castle--rolled
over it.  Valancy shivered.

"Yes," she said, with painful eagerness, though every word was
cutting her to the heart.  "What--was--she--like?"

"Prettiest girl in Montreal," said Dr. Redfern.  "Oh, she was a
looker, all right.  Eh?  Gold hair--shiny as silk--great, big,
soft, black eyes--skin like milk and roses.  Don't wonder Bernie
fell for her.  And brains as well.  SHE wasn't a bit of fluff.
B.A. from McGill.  A thoroughbred, too.  One of the best families.
But a bit lean in the purse.  Eh!  Bernie was mad about her.
Happiest young fool you ever saw.  Then--the bust-up."

"What happened?"  Valancy had taken off her hat and was absently
thrusting a pin in and out of it.  Good Luck was purring beside
her.  Banjo was regarding Dr. Redfern with suspicion.  Nip and Tuck
were lazily cawing in the pines.  Mistawis was beckoning.
Everything was the same.  Nothing was the same.  It was a hundred
years since yesterday.  Yesterday, at this time, she and Barney had
been eating a belated dinner here with laughter.  Laughter?
Valancy felt that she had done with laughter forever.  And with
tears, for that matter.  She had no further use for either of them.

"Blest if I know, my dear.  Some fool quarrel, I suppose.  Bernie
just lit out--disappeared.  He wrote me from the Yukon.  Said his
engagement was broken and he wasn't coming back.  And not to try to
hunt him up because he was never coming back.  I didn't.  What was
the use?  I knew Bernie.  I went on piling up money because there
wasn't anything else to do.  But I was mighty lonely.  All I lived
for was them little notes now and then from Bernie--Klondike--
England--South Africa--China--everywhere.  I thought maybe he'd
come back some day to his lonesome old dad.  Then six years ago
even the letters stopped.  I didn't hear a word of or from him till
last Christmas."

"Did he write?"

"No.  But he drew a check for fifteen thousand dollars on his bank
account.  The bank manager is a friend of mine--one of my biggest
shareholders.  He'd always promised me he'd let me know if Bernie
drew any checks.  Bernie had fifty thousand there.  And he'd never
touched a cent of it till last Christmas.  The check was made out
to Aynsley's, Toronto--"

"Anysley's?"  Valancy heard herself saying Aynsley's!  She had a
box on her dressing-table with the Aynsley trademark.

"Yes.  The big jewellery house there.  After I'd thought it over a
while, I got brisk.  I wanted to locate Bernie.  Had a special
reason for it.  It was time he gave up his fool hoboing and come to
his senses.  Drawing that fifteen told me there was something in
the wind.  The manager communicated with the Aynsleys--his wife was
an Aynsley--and found out that Bernard Redfern had bought a pearl
necklace there.  His address was given as Box 444, Port Lawrence,
Muskoka, Ont.  First I thought I'd write.  Then I thought I'd wait
till the open season for cars and come down myself.  Ain't no hand
at writing.  I've motored from Montreal.  Got to Port Lawrence
yesterday.  Enquired at the post-office.  Told me they knew nothing
of any Bernard Snaith Redfern, but there was a Barney Snaith had a
P. O. box there.  Lived on an island out here, they said.  So here
I am.  And where's Barney?"

Valancy was fingering her necklace.  She was wearing fifteen
thousand dollars around her neck.  And she had worried lest Barney
had paid fifteen dollars for it and couldn't afford it.  Suddenly
she laughed in Dr. Redfern's face.

"Excuse me.  It's so--amusing," said poor Valancy.

"Isn't it?" said Dr. Redfern, seeing a joke--but not exactly hers.
"Now, you seem like a sensible young woman, and I dare say you've
lots of influence over Bernie.  Can't you get him to come back to
civilisation and live like other people?  I've a house up there.
Big as a castle.  Furnished like a palace.  I want company in it--
Bernie's wife--Bernie's children."

"Did Ethel Traverse ever marry?" queried Valancy irrelevantly.

"Bless you, yes.  Two years after Bernie levanted.  But she's a
widow now.  Pretty as ever.  To be frank, that was my special
reason for wanting to find Bernie.  I thought they'd make it up,
maybe.  But, of course, that's all off now.  Doesn't matter.
Bernie's choice of a wife is good enough for me.  It's my boy I
want.  Think he'll soon be back?"

"I don't know.  But I don't think he'll come before night.  Quite
late, perhaps.  And perhaps not till tomorrow.  But I can put you
up comfortably.  He'll certainly be back tomorrow."

Dr. Redfern shook his head.

"Too damp.  I'll take no chances with rheumatism."

"Why suffer that ceaseless anguish?  Why not try Redfern's
Liniment?" quoted the imp in the back of Valancy's mind.

"I must get back to Port Lawrence before rain starts.  Henry goes
quite mad when he gets mud on the car.  But I'll come back
tomorrow.  Meanwhile you talk Bernie into reason."

He shook her hand and patted her kindly on the shoulder.  He looked
as if he would have kissed her, with a little encouragement, but
Valancy did not give it.  Not that she would have minded.  He was
rather dreadful and loud--and--and--dreadful.  But there was
something about him she liked.  She thought dully that she might
have liked being his daughter-in-law if he had not been a
millionaire.  A score of times over.  And Barney was his son--and
heir.

She took him over in the motor boat and watched the lordly purple
car roll away through the woods with Henry at the wheel looking
things not lawful to be uttered.  Then she went back to the Blue
Castle.  What she had to do must be done quickly.  Barney MIGHT
return at any moment.  And it was certainly going to rain.  She was
thankful she no longer felt very bad.  When you are bludgeoned on
the head repeatedly, you naturally and mercifully become more or
less insensible and stupid.

She stood briefly like a faded flower bitten by frost, by the
hearth, looking down on the white ashes of the last fire that had
blazed in the Blue Castle.

"At any rate," she thought wearily, "Barney isn't poor.  He will be
able to afford a divorce.  Quite nicely."



CHAPTER XXXIX


She must write a note.  The imp in the back of her mind laughed.
In every story she had ever read when a runaway wife decamped from
home she left a note, generally on the pin-cushion.  It was not a
very original idea.  But one had to leave something intelligible.
What was there to do but write a note?  She looked vaguely about
her for something to write with.  Ink?  There was none.  Valancy
had never written anything since she had come to the Blue Castle,
save memoranda of household necessaries for Barney.  A pencil
sufficed for them, but now the pencil was not to be found.  Valancy
absently crossed to the door of Bluebeard's Chamber and tried it.
She vaguely expected to find it locked, but it opened unresistingly.
She had never tried it before, and did not know whether Barney
habitually kept it locked or not.  If he did, he must have been
badly upset to leave it unlocked.  She did not realise that she was
doing something he had told her not to do.  She was only looking for
something to write with.  All her faculties were concentrated on
deciding just what she would say and how she would say it.  There
was not the slightest curiosity in her as she went into the lean-to.

There were no beautiful women hanging by their hair on the walls.
It seemed a very harmless apartment, with a commonplace little
sheet-iron stove in the middle of it, its pipe sticking out through
the roof.  At one end was a table or counter crowded with odd-
looking utensils.  Used no doubt by Barney in his smelly
operations.  Chemical experiments, probably, she reflected dully.
At the other end was a big writing desk and swivel-chair.  The side
walls were lined with books.

Valancy went blindly to the desk.  There she stood motionless for a
few minutes, looking down at something that lay on it.  A bundle of
galleyproofs.  The page on top bore the title Wild Honey, and under
the title were the words "by John Foster."

The opening sentence--"Pines are the trees of myth and legend.
They strike their roots deep into the traditions of an older world,
but wind and star love their lofty tops.  What music when old �olus
draws his bow across the branches of the pines--"  She had heard
Barney say that one day when they walked under them.

So Barney was John Foster!

Valancy was not excited.  She had absorbed all the shocks and
sensations that she could compass for one day.  This affected her
neither one way nor the other.  She only thought:

"So this explains it."

"It" was a small matter that had, somehow, stuck in her mind more
persistently than its importance seemed to justify.  Soon after
Barney had brought her John Foster's latest book she had been in a
Port Lawrence bookshop and heard a customer ask the proprietor for
John Foster's new book.  The proprietor had said curtly, "Not out
yet.  Won't be out till next week."

Valancy had opened her lips to say, "Oh, yes, it IS out," but
closed them again.  After all, it was none of her business.  She
supposed the proprietor wanted to cover up his negligence in not
getting the book in promptly.  Now she knew.  The book Barney had
given her had been one of the author's complimentary copies, sent
in advance.

Well!  Valancy pushed the proofs indifferently aside and sat down
in the swivel-chair.  She took up Barney's pen--and a vile one it
was--pulled a sheet of paper to her and began to write.  She could
not think of anything to say except bald facts.


"Dear Barney:--

I went to Dr. Trent this morning and found out he had sent me the
wrong letter by mistake.  There never was anything serious the
matter with my heart and I am quite well now.

I did not mean to trick you.  Please believe that.  I could not
bear it if you did not believe that.  I am very sorry for the
mistake.  But surely you can get a divorce if I leave you.  Is
desertion a ground for divorce in Canada?  Of course if there is
anything I can do to help or hasten it I will do it gladly, if your
lawyer will let me know.

I thank you for all your kindness to me.  I shall never forget it.
Think as kindly of me as you can, because I did not mean to trap
you.  Good-bye.

Yours gratefully,

Valancy."


It was very cold and stiff, she knew.  But to try to say anything
else would be dangerous--like tearing away a dam.  She didn't know
what torrent of wild incoherences and passionate anguish might pour
out.  In a postscript she added:


"Your father was here today.  He is coming back tomorrow.  He told
me everything.  I think you should go back to him.  He is very
lonely for you."


She put the letter in an envelope, wrote "Barney" across it, and
left it on the desk.  On it she laid the string of pearls.  If they
had been the beads she believed them she would have kept them in
memory of that wonderful year.  But she could not keep the fifteen
thousand dollar gift of a man who had married her of pity and whom
she was now leaving.  It hurt her to give UP her pretty bauble.
That was an odd thing, she reflected.  The fact that she was
leaving Barney did not hurt her--yet.  It lay at her heart like a
cold, insensible thing.  If it came to life--Valancy shuddered and
went out--

She put on her hat and mechanically fed Good Luck and Banjo.  She
locked the door and carefully hid the key in the old pine.  Then
she crossed to the mainland in the disappearing propeller.  She
stood for a moment on the bank, looking at her Blue Castle.  The
rain had not yet come, but the sky was dark, and Mistawis grey and
sullen.  The little house under the pines looked very pathetic--a
casket rifled of its jewels--a lamp with its flame blown out.

"I shall never again hear the wind crying over Mistawis at night,"
thought Valancy.  This hurt her, too.  She could have laughed to
think that such a trifle could hurt her at such a time.



CHAPTER XL


Valancy paused a moment on the porch of the brick house in Elm
Street.  She felt that she ought to knock like a stranger.  Her
rosebush, she idly noticed, was loaded with buds.  The rubber-plant
stood beside the prim door.  A momentary horror overcame her--a
horror of the existence to which she was returning.  Then she
opened the door and walked in.

"I wonder if the Prodigal Son ever felt really at home again," she
thought.

Mrs. Frederick and Cousin Stickles were in the sitting-room.  Uncle
Benjamin was there, too.  They looked blankly at Valancy, realising
at once that something was wrong.  This was not the saucy, impudent
thing who had laughed at them in this very room last summer.  This
was a grey-faced woman with the eyes of a creature who had been
stricken by a mortal blow.

Valancy looked indifferently around the room.  She had changed so
much--and it had changed so little.  The same pictures hung on the
walls.  The little orphan who knelt at her never-finished prayer by
the bed whereon reposed the black kitten that never grew up into
cat.  The grey "steel engraving" of Quatre Bras, where the British
regiment forever stood at bay.  The crayon enlargement of the
boyish father she had never known.  There they all hung in the same
places.  The green cascade of "Wandering Jew" still tumbled out of
the old granite saucepan on the windowstand.  The same elaborate,
never-used pitcher stood at the same angle on the sideboard shelf.
The blue and gilt vases that had been among her mother's wedding-
presents still primly adorned the mantelpiece, flanking the china
clock of berosed and besprayed ware that never went.  The chairs in
exactly the same places.  Her mother and Cousin Stickles, likewise
unchanged, regarding her with stony unwelcome.

Valancy had to speak first.

"I've come home, Mother," she said tiredly.

"So I see."  Mrs. Frederick's voice was very icy.  She had resigned
herself to Valancy's desertion.  She had almost succeeded in
forgetting there was a Valancy.  She had rearranged and organised
her systematic life without any reference to an ungrateful,
rebellious child.  She had taken her place again in a society which
ignored the fact that she had ever had a daughter and pitied her,
if it pitied her at all, only in discreet whispers and asides.  The
plain truth was that, by this time, Mrs. Frederick did not want
Valancy to come back--did not want ever to see or hear of her
again.

And now, of course, Valancy was here.  With tragedy and disgrace
and scandal trailing after her visibly.

"So I see," said Mrs. Frederick.  "May I ask why?"

"Because--I'm--not--going to die," said Valancy huskily.

"God bless my soul!" said Uncle Benjamin.  "Who said you were going
to die?"

"I suppose," said Cousin Stickles shrewishly--Cousin Stickles did
not want Valancy back either--"I suppose you've found out he has
another wife--as we've been sure all along."

"No.  I only wish he had," said Valancy.  She was not suffering
particularly, but she was very tired.  If only the explanations
were all over and she were upstairs in her old, ugly room--alone.
Just alone!  The rattle of the beads on her mother's sleeves, as
they swung on the arms of the reed chair, almost drove her crazy.
Nothing else was worrying her; but all at once it seemed that she
simply could not endure that thin, insistent rattle.

"My home, as I told you, is always open to you," said Mrs.
Frederick stonily, "but I can never forgive you."

Valancy gave a mirthless laugh.

"I'd care very little for that if I could only forgive myself," she
said.

"Come, come," said Uncle Benjamin testily.  But rather enjoying
himself.  He felt he had Valancy under his thumb again.  "We've had
enough of mystery.  What has happened?  Why have you left that
fellow?  No doubt there's reason enough--but what particular reason
is it?"

Valancy began to speak mechanically.  She told her tale bluntly and
barely.

"A year ago Dr. Trent told me I had angina pectoris and could not
live long.  I wanted to have some--life--before I died.  That's why
I went away.  Why I married Barney.  And now I've found it is all a
mistake.  There is nothing wrong with my heart.  I've got to live--
and Barney only married me out of pity.  So I have to leave him--
free."

"God bless me!" said Uncle Benjamin.  Cousin Stickles began to cry.

"Valancy, if you'd only had confidence in your own mother--"

"Yes, yes, I know," said Valancy impatiently, "What's the use of
going into that now?  I can't undo this year.  God knows I wish I
could.  I've tricked Barney into marrying me--and he's really
Bernard Redfern.  Dr. Redfern's son, of Montreal.  And his father
wants him to go back to him."

Uncle Benjamin made a queer sound.  Cousin Stickles took her black-
bordered handkerchief away from her eyes and stared at Valancy.  A
queer gleam suddenly shot into Mrs. Frederick's stone-grey orbs.

"Dr. Redfern--not the Purple Pill man?" she said.

Valancy nodded.  "He's John Foster, too--the writer of those nature
books."

"But--but--"  Mrs. Frederick was visibly agitated, though not over
the thought that she was the mother-in-law of John Foster--"DR.
REDFERN IS A MILLIONAIRE!"

Uncle Benjamin shut his mouth with a snap.

"Ten times over," he said.

Valancy nodded.

"Yes.  Barney left home years ago--because of--of some trouble--
some--disappointment.  Now he will likely go back.  So you see--I
had to come home.  He doesn't love me.  I can't hold him to a bond
he was tricked into."

Uncle Benjamin looked incredibly sly.

"Did he say so?  Does he want to get rid of you?"

"No.  I haven't seen him since I found out.  But I tell you--he
only married me out of pity--because I asked him to--because he
thought it would only be for a little while."

Mrs. Frederick and Cousin Stickles both tried to speak, but Uncle
Benjamin waved a hand at them and frowned portentously.

"Let ME handle this," wave and wave and frown seemed to say.  To
Valancy:

"Well, well, dear, we'll talk it over later.  You see, we don't
quite understand everything yet.  As Cousin Stickles says, you
should have confided in us before.  Later on--I dare say we can
find a way out of this."

"You think Barney can easily get a divorce, don't you?" said
Valancy eagerly.

Uncle Benjamin silenced with another wave the exclamation of horror
he knew was trembling on Mrs. Frederick's lips.

"Trust to me, Valancy.  Everything will arrange itself.  Tell me
this, Dossie.  Have you been happy up back?  Was Sn--Mr. Redfern
good to you?"

"I have been very happy and Barney was very good to me," said
Valancy, as if reciting a lesson.  She remembered when she studied
grammar at school she had disliked the past and perfect tenses.
They had always seemed so pathetic.  "I have been"--it was all over
and done with.

"Then don't worry, little girl."  How amazingly paternal Uncle
Benjamin was!  "Your family will stand behind you.  We'll see what
can be done."

"Thank you," said Valancy dully.  Really, it was quite decent of
Uncle Benjamin.  "Can I go and lie down a little while?  I'm--I'm--
tired."

"Of course you're tired."  Uncle Benjamin patted her hand gently--
very gently.  "All worn out and nervous.  Go and lie down, by all
means.  You'll see things in quite a different light after you've
had a good sleep."

He held the door open.  As she went through he whispered, "What is
the best way to keep a man's love?"

Valancy smiled wanly.  But she had come back to the old life--the
old shackles.  "What?" she asked as meekly as of yore.

"Not to return it," said Uncle Benjamin with a chuckle.  He shut
the door and rubbed his hands.  Nodded and smiled mysteriously
round the room.

"Poor little Doss!" he said pathetically.

"Do you really suppose that--Snaith--can actually be Dr. Redfern's
son?" gasped Mrs. Frederick.

"I see no reason for doubting it.  She says Dr. Redfern has been
there.  Why, the man is rich as wedding-cake.  Amelia, I've always
believed there was more in Doss than most people thought.  You kept
her down too much--repressed her.  She never had a chance to show
what was in her.  And now she's landed a millionaire for a
husband."

"But--" hesitated Mrs. Frederick, "he--he--they told terrible tales
about him."

"All gossip and invention--all gossip and invention.  It's always
been a mystery to me why people should be so ready to invent and
circulate slanders about other people they know absolutely nothing
about.  I can't understand why you paid so much attention to gossip
and surmise.  Just because he didn't choose to mix up with
everybody, people resented it.  I was surprised to find what a
decent fellow he seemed to be that time he came into my store with
Valancy.  I discounted all the yarns then and there."

"But he was seen dead drunk in Port Lawrence once," said Cousin
Stickles.  Doubtfully, yet as one very willing to be convinced to
the contrary.

"Who saw him?" demanded Uncle Benjamin truculently.  "Who saw him?
Old Jemmy Strang SAID he saw him.  I wouldn't take old Jemmy
Strang's word on oath.  He's too drunk himself half the time to see
straight.  He said he saw him lying drunk on a bench in the Park.
Pshaw!  Redfern's been asleep there.  Don't worry over THAT."

"But his clothes--and that awful old car--" said Mrs. Frederick
uncertainly.

"Eccentricities of genius," declared Uncle Benjamin.  "You heard
Doss say he was John Foster.  I'm not up in literature myself, but
I heard a lecturer from Toronto say that John Foster's books had
put Canada on the literary map of the world."

"I--suppose--we must forgive her," yielded Mrs. Frederick.

"Forgive her!"  Uncle Benjamin snorted.  Really, Amelia was an
incredibly stupid woman.  No wonder poor Doss had gone sick and
tired of living with her.  "Well, yes, I think you'd better forgive
her!  The question is--will Snaith forgive US!"

"What if she persists in leaving him?  You've no idea how stubborn
she can be," said Mrs. Frederick.

"Leave it all to me, Amelia.  Leave it all to me.  You women have
muddled it enough.  This whole affair has been bungled from start
to finish.  If you had put yourself to a little trouble years ago,
Amelia, she would not have bolted over the traces as she did.  Just
let her alone--don't worry her with advice or questions till she's
ready to talk.  She's evidently run away in a panic because she's
afraid he'd be angry with her for fooling him.  Most extraordinary
thing of Trent to tell her such a yarn!  That's what comes of going
to strange doctors.  Well, well, we mustn't blame her too harshly,
poor child.  Redfern will come after her.  If he doesn't, I'll hunt
him up and talk to him as man to man.  He may be a millionaire, but
Valancy is a Stirling.  He can't repudiate her just because she was
mistaken about her heart disease.  Not likely he'll want to.  Doss
is a little overstrung.  Bless me, I must get in the habit of
calling her Valancy.  She isn't a baby any longer.  Now, remember,
Amelia.  Be very kind and sympathetic."

It was something of a large order to expect Mrs. Frederick to be
kind and sympathetic.  But she did her best.  When supper was ready
she went up and asked Valancy if she wouldn't like a cup of tea.
Valancy, lying on her bed, declined.  She just wanted to be left
alone for a while.  Mrs. Frederick left her alone.  She did not
even remind Valancy that her plight was the outcome of her own lack
of daughterly respect and obedience.  One could not--exactly--say
things like that to the daughter-in-law of a millionaire.



CHAPTER XLI


Valancy looked dully about her old room.  It, too, was so exactly
the same that it seemed almost impossible to believe in the changes
that had come to her since she had last slept in it.  It seemed--
somehow--indecent that it should be so much the same.  There was
Queen Louise everlastingly coming down the stairway, and nobody had
let the forlorn puppy in out of the rain.  Here was the purple
paper blind and the greenish mirror.  Outside, the old carriage-
shop with its blatant advertisements.  Beyond it, the station with
the same derelicts and flirtatious flappers.

Here the old life waited for her, like some grim ogre that bided
his time and licked his chops.  A monstrous horror of it suddenly
possessed her.  When night fell and she had undressed and got into
bed, the merciful numbness passed away and she lay in anguish and
thought of her island under the stars.  The camp-fires--all their
little household jokes and phrases and catch words--their furry
beautiful cats--the lights agleam on the fairy islands--canoes
skimming over Mistawis in the magic of morning--white birches
shining among the dark spruces like beautiful women's bodies--
winter snows and rose-red sunset fires--lakes drunken with
moonshine--all the delights of her lost paradise.  She would not
let herself think of Barney.  Only of these lesser things.  She
could not endure to think of Barney.

Then she thought of him inescapably.  She ached for him.  She
wanted his arms around her--his face against hers--his whispers in
her ear.  She recalled all his friendly looks and quips and jests--
his little compliments--his caresses.  She counted them all over as
a woman might count her jewels--not one did she miss from the first
day they had met.  These memories were all she could have now.  She
shut her eyes and prayed.

"Let me remember every one, God!  Let me never forget one of them!"

Yet it would be better to forget.  This agony of longing and
loneliness would not be so terrible if one could forget.  And Ethel
Traverse.  That shimmering witch woman with her white skin and
black eyes and shining hair.  The woman Barney had loved.  The
woman whom he still loved.  Hadn't he told her he never changed his
mind?  Who was waiting for him in Montreal.  Who was the right wife
for a rich and famous man.  Barney would marry her, of course, when
he got his divorce.  How Valancy hated her!  And envied her!
Barney had said, "I love you," to HER.  Valancy had wondered what
tone Barney would say "I love you" in--how his dark-blue eyes would
look when he said it.  Ethel Traverse knew.  Valancy hated her for
the knowledge--hated and envied her.

"She can never have those hours in the Blue Castle.  They are
MINE," thought Valancy savagely.  Ethel would never make strawberry
jam or dance to old Abel's fiddle or fry bacon for Barney over a
camp-fire.  She would never come to the little Mistawis shack at
all.

What was Barney doing--thinking--feeling now?  Had he come home and
found her letter?  Was he still angry with her?  Or a little
pitiful.  Was he lying on their bed looking out on stormy Mistawis
and listening to the rain streaming down on the roof?  Or was he
still wandering in the wilderness, raging at the predicament in
which he found himself?  Hating her?  Pain took her and wrung her
like some great pitiless giant.  She got up and walked the floor.
Would morning never come to end this hideous night?  And yet what
could morning bring her?  The old life without the old stagnation
that was at least bearable.  The old life with the new memories,
the new longings, the new anguish.

"Oh, why can't I die?" moaned Valancy.



CHAPTER XLII


It was not until early afternoon the next day that a dreadful old
car clanked up Elm Street and stopped in front of the brick house.
A hatless man sprang from it and rushed up the steps.  The bell was
rung as it had never been rung before--vehemently, intensely.  The
ringer was demanding entrance, not asking it.  Uncle Benjamin
chuckled as he hurried to the door.  Uncle Benjamin had "just
dropped in" to enquire how dear Doss--Valancy was.  Dear Doss--
Valancy, he had been informed, was the same.  She had come down for
breakfast--which she didn't eat--gone back to her room, come down
for dinner--which she didn't eat--gone back to her room.  That was
all.  She had not talked.  And she had been let, kindly,
considerately, alone.

"Very good.  Redfern will be here today," said Uncle Benjamin.  And
now Uncle Benjamin's reputation as a prophet was made.  Redfern was
here--unmistakably so.

"Is my wife here?" he demanded of Uncle Benjamin without preface.

Uncle Benjamin smiled expressively.

"Mr. Redfern, I believe?  Very glad to meet you, sir.  Yes, that
naughty little girl of yours is here.  We have been--"

"I must see her," Barney cut Uncle Benjamin ruthlessly short.

"Certainly, Mr. Redfern.  Just step in here.  Valancy will be down
in a minute."

He ushered Barney into the parlour and betook himself to the
sitting-room and Mrs. Frederick.

"Go up and tell Valancy to come down.  Her husband is here."

But so dubious was Uncle Benjamin as to whether Valancy could
really come down in a minute--or at all--that he followed Mrs.
Frederick on tiptoe up the stairs and listened in the hall.

"Valancy dear," said Mrs. Frederick tenderly, "your husband is in
the parlour, asking for you."

"Oh Mother."  Valancy got up from the window and wrung her hands.
"I cannot see him--I cannot!  Tell him to go away--ASK him to go
away.  I can't see him!"

"Tell her," hissed Uncle Benjamin through the keyhole, "that
Redfern says he won't go away until he HAS seen her."

Redfern had not said anything of the kind, but Uncle Benjamin
thought he was that sort of a fellow.  Valancy knew he was.  She
understood that she might as well go down first as last.

She did not even look at Uncle Benjamin as she passed him on the
landing.  Uncle Benjamin did not mind.  Rubbing his hands and
chuckling, he retreated to the kitchen, where he genially demanded
of Cousin Stickles:

"Why are good husbands like bread?"

Cousin Stickles asked why.

"Because women need them," beamed Uncle Benjamin.

Valancy was looking anything but beautiful when she entered the
parlour.  Her white night had played fearful havoc with her face.
She wore an ugly old brown-and-blue gingham, having left all her
pretty dresses in the Blue Castle.  But Barney dashed across the
room and caught her in his arms.

"Valancy, darling--oh, you darling little idiot!  Whatever
possessed you to run away like that?  When I came home last night
and found your letter I went quite mad.  It was twelve o'clock--I
knew it was too late to come here then.  I walked the floor all
night.  Then this morning Dad came--I couldn't get away till now.
Valancy, whatever got into you?  Divorce, forsooth!  Don't you
know--"

"I know you only married me out of pity," said Valancy, brushing
him away feebly.  "I know you don't love me--I know--"

"You've been lying awake at three o'clock too long," said Barney,
shaking her.  "That's all that's the matter with you.  Love you!
Oh, don't I love you!  My girl, when I saw that train coming down
on you I knew whether I loved you or not!"

"Oh, I was afraid you would try to make me think you cared," cried
Valancy passionately.  "Don't--don't!  I know all about Ethel
Traverse--your father told me everything.  Oh, Barney, don't
torture me!  I can never go back to you!"

Barney released her and looked at her for a moment.  Something in
her pallid, resolute face spoke more convincingly than words of her
determination.

"Valancy," he said quietly, "Father couldn't have told you
everything because he didn't know it.  Will you let ME tell you--
everything?"

"Yes," said Valancy wearily.  Oh, how dear he was!  How she longed
to throw herself into his arms!  As he put her gently down in a
chair, she could have kissed the slender, brown hands that touched
her arms.  She could not look up as he stood before her.  She dared
not meet his eyes.  For his sake, she must be brave.  She knew him--
kind, unselfish.  Of course he would pretend he did not want his
freedom--she might have known he would pretend that, once the first
shock of realisation was over.  He was so sorry for her--he
understood her terrible position.  When had he ever failed to
understand?  But she would never accept his sacrifice.  Never!

"You've seen Dad and you know I'm Bernard Redfern.  And I suppose
you've guessed that I'm John Foster--since you went into
Bluebeard's Chamber."

"Yes.  But I didn't go in out of curiosity.  I forgot you had told
me not to go in--I forgot--"

"Never mind.  I'm not going to kill you and hang you up on the
wall, so there's no need to call for Sister Anne.  I'm only going
to tell you my story from the beginning.  I came back last night
intending to do it.  Yes, I'm 'old Doc. Redfern's son'--of Purple
Pills and Bitters fame.  Oh, don't I know it?  Wasn't it rubbed
into me for years?"

Barney laughed bitterly and strode up and down the room a few
times.  Uncle Benjamin, tiptoeing through the hall, heard the laugh
and frowned.  Surely Doss wasn't going to be a stubborn little
fool.  Barney threw himself into a chair before Valancy.

"Yes.  As long as I can remember I've been a millionaire's son.
But when I was born Dad wasn't a millionaire.  He wasn't even a
doctor--isn't yet.  He was a veterinary and a failure at it.  He
and Mother lived in a little village up in Quebec and were
abominably poor.  I don't remember Mother.  Haven't even a picture
of her.  She died when I was two years old.  She was fifteen years
younger than Father--a little school teacher.  When she died Dad
moved into Montreal and formed a company to sell his hair tonic.
He'd dreamed the prescription one night, it seems.  Well, it caught
on.  Money began to flow in.  Dad invented--or dreamed--the other
things, too--Pills, Bitters, Liniment and so on.  He was a
millionaire by the time I was ten, with a house so big a small chap
like myself always felt lost in it.  I had every toy a boy could
wish for--and I was the loneliest little devil in the world.  I
remember only one happy day in my childhood, Valancy.  Only one.
Even you were better off than that.  Dad had gone out to see an old
friend in the country and took me along.  I was turned loose in the
barnyard and I spent the whole day hammering nails in a block of
wood.  I had a glorious day.  When I had to go back to my roomful
of playthings in the big house in Montreal I cried.  But I didn't
tell Dad why.  I never told him anything.  It's always been a hard
thing for me to tell things, Valancy--anything that went deep.  And
most things went deep with me.  I was a sensitive child and I was
even more sensitive as a boy.  No one ever knew what I suffered.
Dad never dreamed of it.

"When he sent me to a private school--I was only eleven--the boys
ducked me in the swimming-tank until I stood on a table and read
aloud all the advertisements of Father's patent abominations.  I
did it--then"--Barney clinched his fists--"I was frightened and
half drowned and all my world was against me.  But when I went to
college and the sophs tried the same stunt I didn't do it."  Barney
smiled grimly.  "They couldn't make me do it.  But they could--and
did--make my life miserable.  I never heard the last of the Pills
and the Bitters and the Hair Tonic.  'After using' was my nickname--
you see I'd always such a thick thatch.  My four college years
were a nightmare.  You know--or you don't know--what merciless
beasts boys can be when they get a victim like me.  I had few
friends--there was always some barrier between me and the kind of
people I cared for.  And the other kind--who would have been very
willing to be intimate with rich old Doc. Redfern's son--I didn't
care for.  But I had one friend--or thought I had.  A clever,
bookish chap--a bit of a writer.  That was a bond between us--I had
some secret aspirations along that line.  He was older than I was--
I looked up to him and worshipped him.  For a year I was happier
than I'd ever been.  Then--a burlesque sketch came out in the
college magazine--a mordant thing, ridiculing Dad's remedies.  The
names were changed, of course, but everybody knew what and who was
meant.  Oh, it was clever--damnably so--and witty.  McGill rocked
with laughter over it.  I found out HE had written it."

"Oh, were you sure?"  Valancy's dull eyes flamed with indignation.

"Yes.  He admitted it when I asked him.  Said a good idea was worth
more to him than a friend, any time.  And he added a gratuitous
thrust.  'You know, Redfern, there are some things money won't buy.
For instance--it won't buy you a grandfather.'  Well, it was a
nasty slam.  I was young enough to feel cut up.  And it destroyed a
lot of my ideals and illusions, which was the worst thing about it.
I was a young misanthrope after that.  Didn't want to be friends
with any one.  And then--the year after I left college--I met Ethel
Traverse."

Valancy shivered.  Barney, his hands stuck in his pockets, was
regarding the floor moodily and didn't notice it.

"Dad told you about her, I suppose.  She was very beautiful.  And I
loved her.  Oh, yes, I loved her.  I won't deny it or belittle it
now.  It was a lonely, romantic boy's first passionate love, and it
was very real.  And I thought she loved me.  I was fool enough to
think that.  I was wildly happy when she promised to marry me.  For
a few months.  Then--I found out she didn't.  I was an involuntary
eavesdropper on a certain occasion for a moment.  That moment was
enough.  The proverbial fate of the eavesdropper overtook me.  A
girl friend of hers was asking her how she could stomach Doc.
Redfern's son and the patent-medicine background.

"'His money will gild the Pills and sweeten the Bitters,' said
Ethel, with a laugh.  'Mother told me to catch him if I could.
We're on the rocks.  But pah! I smell turpentine whenever he comes
near me.'"

"Oh, Barney!" cried Valancy, wrung with pity for him.  She had
forgotten all about herself and was filled with compassion for
Barney and rage against Ethel Traverse.  How dared she?

"Well,"--Barney got up and began pacing round the room--"that
finished me.  Completely.  I left civilisation and those accursed
dopes behind me and went to the Yukon.  For five years I knocked
about the world--in all sorts of outlandish places.  I earned
enough to live on--I wouldn't touch a cent of Dad's money.  Then
one day I woke up to the fact that I no longer cared a hang about
Ethel, one way or another.  She was somebody I'd known in another
world--that was all.  But I had no hankering to go back to the old
life.  None of that for me.  I was free and I meant to keep so.  I
came to Mistawis--saw Tom MacMurray's island.  My first book had
been published the year before, and made a hit--I had a bit of
money from my royalties.  I bought my island.  But I kept away from
people.  I had no faith in anybody.  I didn't believe there was
such a thing as real friendship or true love in the world--not for
me, anyhow--the son of Purple Pills.  I used to revel in all the
wild yarns they told of me.  In fact, I'm afraid I suggested a few
of them myself.  By mysterious remarks which people interpreted in
the light of their own prepossessions.

"Then--you came.  I HAD to believe you loved me--really loved ME--
not my father's millions.  There was no other reason why you should
want to marry a penniless devil with my supposed record.  And I was
sorry for you.  Oh, yes, I don't deny I married you because I was
sorry for you.  And then--I found you the best and jolliest and
dearest little pal and chum a fellow ever had.  Witty--loyal--
sweet.  You made me believe again in the reality of friendship and
love.  The world seemed good again just because you were in it,
honey.  I'd have been willing to go on forever just as we were.  I
knew that, the night I came home and saw my homelight shining out
from the island for the first time.  And knew you were there
waiting for me.  After being homeless all my life it was beautiful
to have a home.  To come home hungry at night and know there was a
good supper and a cheery fire--and YOU.

"But I didn't realise what you actually meant to me till that
moment at the switch.  Then it came like a lightning flash.  I knew
I couldn't live without you--that if I couldn't pull you loose in
time I'd have to die with you.  I admit it bowled me over--knocked
me silly.  I couldn't get my bearings for a while.  That's why I
acted like a mule.  But the thought that drove me to the tall
timber was the awful one that you were going to die.  I'd always
hated the thought of it--but I supposed there wasn't any chance for
you, so I put it out of my mind.  Now I had to face it--you were
under sentence of death and I couldn't live without you.  When I
came home last night I had made up my mind that I'd take you to all
the specialists in the world--that something surely could be done
for you.  I felt sure you couldn't be as bad as Dr. Trent thought,
when those moments on the track hadn't even hurt you.  And I found
your note--and went mad with happiness--and a little terror for
fear you didn't care much for me, after all, and had gone away to
get rid of me.  But now, it's all right, isn't it, darling?"

Was she, Valancy being called "darling"?

"I can't believe you care for me," she said helplessly.  "I KNOW
you can't.  What's the use, Barney?  Of course, you're sorry for
me--of course you want to do the best you can to straighten out the
mess.  But it can't be straightened out that way.  You couldn't
love me--me."  She stood up and pointed tragically to the mirror
over the mantel.  Certainly, not even Allan Tierney could have seen
beauty in the woeful, haggard little face reflected there.

Barney didn't look at the mirror.  He looked at Valancy as if he
would like to snatch her--or beat her.

"Love you!  Girl, you're in the very core of my heart.  I hold you
there like a jewel.  Didn't I promise you I'd never tell you a lie?
Love you!  I love you with all there is of me to love.  Heart,
soul, brain.  Every fibre of body and spirit thrilling to the
sweetness of you.  There's nobody in the world for me but you,
Valancy."

"You're--a good actor, Barney," said Valancy, with a wan little
smile.

Barney looked at her.

"So you don't believe me--yet?"

"I--can't."

"Oh--damn!" said Barney violently.

Valancy looked up startled.  She had never seen THIS Barney.
Scowling!  Eyes black with anger.  Sneering lips.  Dead-white face.

"You don't want to believe it," said Barney in the silk-smooth
voice of ultimate rage.  "You're tired of me.  You want to get out
of it--free from me.  You're ashamed of the Pills and the Liniment,
just as she was.  Your Stirling pride can't stomach them.  It was
all right as long as you thought you hadn't long to live.  A good
lark--you could put up with me.  But a lifetime with old Doc
Redfern's son is a different thing.  Oh, I understand--perfectly.
I've been very dense--but I understand, at last."

Valancy stood up.  She stared into his furious face.  Then--she
suddenly laughed.

"You darling!" she said.  "You do mean it!  You do really love me!
You wouldn't be so enraged if you didn't."

Barney stared at her for a moment.  Then he caught her in his arms
with the little low laugh of the triumphant lover.

Uncle Benjamin, who had been frozen with horror at the keyhole,
suddenly thawed out and tiptoed back to Mrs. Frederick and Cousin
Stickles.

"Everything is all right," he announced jubilantly.

Dear little Doss!  He would send for his lawyer right away and
alter his will again.  Doss should be his sole heiress.  To her
that had should certainly be given.

Mrs. Frederick, returning to her comfortable belief in an
overruling Providence, got out the family Bible and made an entry
under "Marriages."



CHAPTER XLIII


"But, barney," protested Valancy after a few minutes, "your father--
somehow--gave me to understand that you STILL loved HER."

"He would.  Dad holds the championship for making blunders.  If
there's a thing that's better left unsaid you can trust him to say
it.  But he isn't a bad old soul, Valancy.  You'll like him."

"I do, now."

"And his money isn't tainted money.  He made it honestly.  His
medicines are quite harmless.  Even his Purple Pills do people
whole heaps of good when they believe in them."

"But--I'm not fit for your life," sighed Valancy.  "I'm not--
clever--or well-educated--or--"

"My life is in Mistawis--and all the wild places of the world.  I'm
not going to ask you to live the life of a society woman.  Of
course, we must spend a bit of the time with Dad--he's lonely and
old--"

"But not in that big house of his," pleaded Valancy.  "I can't live
in a palace."

"Can't come down to that after your Blue Castle," grinned Barney.
"Don't worry, sweet.  I couldn't live in that house myself.  It has
a white marble stairway with gilt bannisters and looks like a
furniture shop with the labels off.  Likewise it's the pride of
Dad's heart.  We'll get a little house somewhere outside of
Montreal--in the real country--near enough to see Dad often.  I
think we'll build one for ourselves.  A house you build for
yourself is so much nicer than a hand-me-down.  But we'll spend our
summers in Mistawis.  And our autumns travelling.  I want you to
see the Alhambra--it's the nearest thing to the Blue Castle of your
dreams I can think of.  And there's an old-world garden in Italy
where I want to show you the moon rising over Rome through the dark
cypress-trees."

"Will that be any lovelier than the moon rising over Mistawis?"

"Not lovelier.  But a different kind of loveliness.  There are so
many kinds of loveliness.  Valancy, before this year you've spent
all your life in ugliness.  You know nothing of the beauty of the
world.  We'll climb mountains--hunt for treasures in the bazaars of
Samarcand--search out the magic of east and west--run hand in hand
to the rim of the world.  I want to show you it all--see it again
through your eyes.  Girl, there are a million things I want to show
you--do with you--say to you.  It will take a lifetime.  And we
must see about that picture by Tierney, after all."

"Will you promise me one thing?" asked Valancy solemnly.

"Anything," said Barney recklessly.

"Only one thing.  You are never, under any circumstances or under
any provocation, to cast it up to me that I asked you to marry me."



CHAPTER XLIV


Extract from letter written by Miss Olive Stirling to Mr. Cecil
Bruce:


"It's really disgusting that Doss' crazy adventures should have
turned out like this.  It makes one feel that there is no use in
behaving properly.

"I'm SURE her mind was unbalanced when she left home.  What she
said about a dust-pile showed that.  Of course I don't think there
was ever a thing the matter with her heart.  Or perhaps Snaith or
Redfern or whatever his name really is fed Purple Pills to her,
back in that Mistawis hut and cured her.  It would make quite a
testimonial for the family ads, wouldn't it?

"He's such an insignificant-looking creature.  I mentioned this to
Doss but all she said was, 'I don't like collar ad men.'

"Well, he's certainly no collar ad man.  Though I must say there is
something rather distinguished about him, now that he has cut his
hair and put on decent clothes.  I really think, Cecil, you should
exercise more.  It doesn't do to get too fleshy.

"He also claims, I believe, to be John Foster.  We can believe THAT
or not, as we like, I suppose.

"Old Doc Redfern has given them two millions for a wedding-present.
Evidently the Purple Pills bring in the bacon.  They're going to
spend the fall in Italy and the winter in Egypt and motor through
Normandy in apple-blossom time.  Not in that dreadful old Lizzie,
though.  Redfern has got a wonderful new car.

"Well, I think I'll run away, too, and disgrace myself.  It seems
to pay.

"Uncle Ben is a scream.  Likewise Uncle James.  The fuss they all
make over Doss now is absolutely sickening.  To hear Aunt Amelia
talking of 'my son-in-law, Bernard Redfern' and 'my daughter, Mrs.
Bernard Redfern.'  Mother and Father are as bad as the rest.  And
they can't see that Valancy is just laughing at them all in her
sleeve."



CHAPTER XLV


Valancy and Barney turned under the mainland pines in the cool dusk
of the September night for a farewell look at the Blue Castle.
Mistawis was drowned in sunset lilac light, incredibly delicate and
elusive.  Nip and Tuck were cawing lazily in the old pines.  Good
Luck and Banjo were mewed and mewing in separate baskets in
Barney's new, dark-green car en route to Cousin Georgiana's.
Cousin Georgiana was going to take care of them until Barney and
Valancy came back.  Aunt Wellington and Cousin Sarah and Aunt
Alberta had also entreated the privilege of looking after them, but
to Cousin Georgiana was it given.  Valancy was in tears.

"Don't cry, Moonlight.  We'll be back next summer.  And now we're
off for a real honeymoon."

Valancy smiled through her tears.  She was so happy that her
happiness terrified her.  But, despite the delights before her--
'the glory that was Greece and the grandeur that was Rome'--lure of
the ageless Nile--glamour of the Riviera--mosque and palace and
minaret--she knew perfectly well that no spot or place or home in
the world could ever possess the sorcery of her Blue Castle.



THE END




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