The Golden Road by L. M. Montgomery, is part of the HackerNoon Books Series. You can jump to any chapter in this book here. A SURPRISING ANNOUNCEMENT
CHAPTER XIII. A SURPRISING ANNOUNCEMENT
âNothing exciting has happened for ever so long,â said the Story Girl discontentedly, one late May evening, as we lingered under the wonderful white bloom of the cherry trees. There was a long row of them in the orchard, with a Lombardy poplar at either end, and a hedge of lilacs behind. When the wind blew over them all the spicy breezes of Ceylonâs isle were never sweeter.
It was a time of wonder and marvel, of the soft touch of silver rain on greening fields, of the incredible delicacy of young leaves, of blossom in field and garden and wood. The whole world bloomed in a flush and tremor of maiden loveliness, instinct with all the evasive, fleeting charm of spring and girlhood and young morning. We felt and enjoyed it all without understanding or analyzing it. It was enough to be glad and young with spring on the golden road.
âI donât like excitement very much,â said Cecily. âIt makes one so tired. Iâm sure it was exciting enough when Paddy was missing, but we didnât find that very pleasant.â
âNo, but it was interesting,â returned the Story Girl thoughtfully. âAfter all, I believe Iâd rather be miserable than dull.â
âI wouldnât then,â said Felicity decidedly. âAnd you need never be dull when you have work to do. âSatan finds some mischief still for idle hands to do!ââ
âWell, mischief is interesting,â laughed the Story Girl. âAnd I thought you didnât think it lady-like to speak of that person, Felicity?â
âItâs all right if you call him by his polite name,â said Felicity stiffly.
âWhy does the Lombardy poplar hold its branches straight up in the air like that, when all the other poplars hold theirs out or hang them down?â interjected Peter, who had been gazing intently at the slender spire showing darkly against the fine blue eastern sky.
âBecause it grows that way,â said Felicity.
âOh I know a story about that,â cried the Story Girl. âOnce upon a time an old man found the pot of gold at the rainbowâs end. There IS a pot there, it is said, but it is very hard to find because you can never get to the rainbowâs end before it vanishes from your sight. But this old man found it, just at sunset, when Iris, the guardian of the rainbow gold, happened to be absent. As he was a long way from home, and the pot was very big and heavy, he decided to hide it until morning and then get one of his sons to go with him and help him carry it. So he hid it under the boughs of the sleeping poplar tree.
âWhen Iris came back she missed the pot of gold and of course she was in a sad way about it. She sent Mercury, the messenger of the gods, to look for it, for she didnât dare leave the rainbow again, lest somebody should run off with that too. Mercury asked all the trees if they had seen the pot of gold, and the elm, oak and pine pointed to the poplar and said,
ââThe poplar can tell you where it is.â
ââHow can I tell you where it is?â cried the poplar, and she held up all her branches in surprise, just as we hold up our handsâand down tumbled the pot of gold. The poplar was amazed and indignant, for she was a very honest tree. She stretched her boughs high above her head and declared that she would always hold them like that, so that nobody could hide stolen gold under them again. And she taught all the little poplars she knew to stand the same way, and that is why Lombardy poplars always do. But the aspen poplar leaves are always shaking, even on the very calmest day. And do you know why?â
And then she told us the old legend that the cross on which the Saviour of the world suffered was made of aspen poplar wood and so never again could its poor, shaken, shivering leaves know rest or peace. There was an aspen in the orchard, the very embodiment of youth and spring in its litheness and symmetry. Its little leaves were hanging tremulously, not yet so fully blown as to hide its development of bough and twig, making poetry against the spiritual tints of a spring sunset.
âIt does look sad,â said Peter, âbut it is a pretty tree, and it wasnât its fault.â
âThereâs a heavy dew and itâs time we stopped talking nonsense and went in,â decreed Felicity. âIf we donât weâll all have a cold, and then weâll be miserable enough, but it wonât be very exciting.â
âAll the same, I wish something exciting would happen,â finished the Story Girl, as we walked up through the orchard, peopled with its nun-like shadows.
âThereâs a new moon tonight, so may be youâll get your wish,â said Peter. âMy Aunt Jane didnât believe there was anything in the moon business, but you never can tell.â
The Story Girl did get her wish. Something happened the very next day. She joined us in the afternoon with a quite indescribable expression on her face, compounded of triumph, anticipation, and regret. Her eyes betrayed that she had been crying, but in them shone a chastened exultation. Whatever the Story Girl mourned over it was evident she was not without hope.
âI have some news to tell you,â she said importantly. âCan you guess what it is?â
We couldnât and wouldnât try.
âTell us right off,â implored Felix. âYou look as if it was something tremendous.â
âSo it is. ListenâAunt Olivia is going to be married.â
We stared in blank amazement. Peg Bowenâs hint had faded from our minds and we had never put much faith in it.
âAunt Olivia! I donât believe it,â cried Felicity flatly. âWho told you?â
âAunt Olivia herself. So it is perfectly true. Iâm awfully sorry in one wayâbut oh, wonât it be splendid to have a real wedding in the family? Sheâs going to have a big weddingâand I am to be bridesmaid.â
âI shouldnât think you were old enough to be a bridesmaid,â said Felicity sharply.
âIâm nearly fifteen. Anyway, Aunt Olivia says I have to be.â
âWhoâs she going to marry?â asked Cecily, gathering herself together after the shock, and finding that the world was going on just the same.
âHis name is Dr. Seton and he is a Halifax man. She met him when she was at Uncle Edwardâs last summer. Theyâve been engaged ever since. The wedding is to be the third week in June.â
âAnd our school concert comes off the next week,â complained Felicity. âWhy do things always come together like that? And what are you going to do if Aunt Olivia is going away?â
âIâm coming to live at your house,â answered the Story Girl rather timidly. She did not know how Felicity might like that. But Felicity took it rather well.
âYouâve been here most of the time anyhow, so itâll just be that youâll sleep and eat here, too. But whatâs to become of Uncle Roger?â
âAunt Olivia says heâll have to get married, too. But Uncle Roger says heâd rather hire a housekeeper than marry one, because in the first case he could turn her off if he didnât like her, but in the second case he couldnât.â
âThereâll be a lot of cooking to do for the wedding,â reflected Felicity in a tone of satisfaction.
âI sâpose Aunt Olivia will want some rusks made. I hope she has plenty of tooth-powder laid in,â said Dan.
âItâs a pity you donât use some of that tooth-powder youâre so fond of talking about yourself,â retorted Felicity. âWhen anyone has a mouth the size of yours the teeth show so plain.â
âI brush my teeth every Sunday,â asseverated Dan.
âEvery Sunday! You ought to brush them every DAY.â
âDid anyone ever hear such nonsense?â demanded Dan sincerely.
âWell, you know, it really does say so in the Family Guide,â said Cecily quietly.
âThen the Family Guide people must have lots more spare time than I have,â retorted Dan contemptuously.
âJust think, the Story Girl will have her name in the papers if sheâs bridesmaid,â marvelled Sara Ray.
âIn the Halifax papers, too,â added Felix, âsince Dr. Seton is a Halifax man. What is his first name?â
âRobert.â
âAnd will we have to call him Uncle Robert?â
âNot until heâs married to her. Then we will, of course.â
âI hope your Aunt Olivia wonât disappear before the ceremony,â remarked Sara Ray, who was surreptitiously reading âThe Vanquished Bride,â by Valeria H. Montague in the Family Guide.
âI hope Dr. Seton wonât fail to show up, like your cousin Rachel Wardâs beau,â said Peter.
âThat makes me think of another story I read the other day about Great-uncle Andrew King and Aunt Georgina,â laughed the Story Girl. âIt happened eighty years ago. It was a very stormy winter and the roads were bad. Uncle Andrew lived in Carlisle, and Aunt Georginaâshe was Miss Georgina Matheson thenâlived away up west, so he couldnât get to see her very often. They agreed to be married that winter, but Georgina couldnât set the day exactly because her brother, who lived in Ontario, was coming home for a visit, and she wanted to be married while he was home. So it was arranged that she was to write Uncle Andrew and tell him what day to come. She did, and she told him to come on a Tuesday. But her writing wasnât very good and poor Uncle Andrew thought she wrote Thursday. So on Thursday he drove all the way to Georginaâs home to be married. It was forty miles and a bitter cold day. But it wasnât any colder than the reception he got from Georgina. She was out in the porch, with her head tied up in a towel, picking geese. She had been all ready Tuesday, and her friends and the minister were there, and the wedding supper prepared. But there was no bridegroom and Georgina was furious. Nothing Uncle Andrew could say would appease her. She wouldnât listen to a word of explanation, but told him to go, and never show his nose there again. So poor Uncle Andrew had to go ruefully home, hoping that she would relent later on, because he was really very much in love with her.â
âAnd did she?â queried Felicity.
âShe did. Thirteen years exactly from that day they were married. It took her just that long to forgive him.â
âIt took her just that long to find out she couldnât get anybody else,â said Dan, cynically.
About HackerNoon Book Series: We bring you the most important technical, scientific, and insightful public domain books.
This book is part of the public domain. L. M. Montgomery (2008). The Golden Road. Urbana, Illinois: Project Gutenberg. Retrieved https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/316/pg316-images.html
This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org, located at https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html.