<h2><SPAN name="link2H_4_0020" id="link2H_4_0020"></SPAN> XX<br/> The Way It Often Happens</h2>
<p>Anne rose betimes the next morning and blithely greeted the fresh day, when the
banners of the sunrise were shaken triumphantly across the pearly skies. Green
Gables lay in a pool of sunshine, flecked with the dancing shadows of poplar
and willow. Beyond the land was Mr. Harrison’s wheatfield, a great,
windrippled expanse of pale gold. The world was so beautiful that Anne spent
ten blissful minutes hanging idly over the garden gate drinking the loveliness
in.</p>
<p>After breakfast Marilla made ready for her journey. Dora was to go with her,
having been long promised this treat.</p>
<p>“Now, Davy, you try to be a good boy and don’t bother Anne,”
she straitly charged him. “If you are good I’ll bring you a striped
candy cane from town.”</p>
<p>For alas, Marilla had stooped to the evil habit of bribing people to be good!</p>
<p>“I won’t be bad on purpose, but s’posen I’m bad
zacksidentally?” Davy wanted to know.</p>
<p>“You’ll have to guard against accidents,” admonished Marilla.
“Anne, if Mr. Shearer comes today get a nice roast and some steak. If he
doesn’t you’ll have to kill a fowl for dinner tomorrow.”</p>
<p>Anne nodded.</p>
<p>“I’m not going to bother cooking any dinner for just Davy and
myself today,” she said. “That cold ham bone will do for noon lunch
and I’ll have some steak fried for you when you come home at
night.”</p>
<p>“I’m going to help Mr. Harrison haul dulse this morning,”
announced Davy. “He asked me to, and I guess he’ll ask me to dinner
too. Mr. Harrison is an awful kind man. He’s a real sociable man. I hope
I’ll be like him when I grow up. I mean <i>behave</i> like him . . . I
don’t want to <i>look</i> like him. But I guess there’s no danger,
for Mrs. Lynde says I’m a very handsome child. Do you s’pose
it’ll last, Anne? I want to know?”</p>
<p>“I daresay it will,” said Anne gravely. “You <i>are</i> a
handsome boy, Davy,” . . . Marilla looked volumes of disapproval . . .
“but you must live up to it and be just as nice and gentlemanly as you
look to be.”</p>
<p>“And you told Minnie May Barry the other day, when you found her crying
’cause some one said she was ugly, that if she was nice and kind and
loving people wouldn’t mind her looks,” said Davy discontentedly.
“Seems to me you can’t get out of being good in this world for some
reason or ‘nother. You just <i>have</i> to behave.”</p>
<p>“Don’t you want to be good?” asked Marilla, who had learned a
great deal but had not yet learned the futility of asking such questions.</p>
<p>“Yes, I want to be good but not <i>too</i> good,” said Davy
cautiously. “You don’t have to be very good to be a Sunday School
superintendent. Mr. Bell’s that, and he’s a real bad man.”</p>
<p>“Indeed he’s not,” said Marila indignantly.</p>
<p>“He is . . . he says he is himself,” asseverated Davy. “He
said it when he prayed in Sunday School last Sunday. He said he was a vile worm
and a miserable sinner and guilty of the blackest ‘niquity. What did he
do that was so bad, Marilla? Did he kill anybody? Or steal the collection
cents? I want to know.”</p>
<p>Fortunately Mrs. Lynde came driving up the lane at this moment and Marilla made
off, feeling that she had escaped from the snare of the fowler, and wishing
devoutly that Mr. Bell were not quite so highly figurative in his public
petitions, especially in the hearing of small boys who were always
“wanting to know.”</p>
<p>Anne, left alone in her glory, worked with a will. The floor was swept, the
beds made, the hens fed, the muslin dress washed and hung out on the line. Then
Anne prepared for the transfer of feathers. She mounted to the garret and
donned the first old dress that came to hand . . . a navy blue cashmere she had
worn at fourteen. It was decidedly on the short side and as
“skimpy” as the notable wincey Anne had worn upon the occasion of
her debut at Green Gables; but at least it would not be materially injured by
down and feathers. Anne completed her toilet by tying a big red and white
spotted handkerchief that had belonged to Matthew over her head, and, thus
accoutred, betook herself to the kitchen chamber, whither Marilla, before her
departure, had helped her carry the feather bed.</p>
<p>A cracked mirror hung by the chamber window and in an unlucky moment Anne
looked into it. There were those seven freckles on her nose, more rampant than
ever, or so it seemed in the glare of light from the unshaded window.</p>
<p>“Oh, I forgot to rub that lotion on last night,” she thought.
“I’d better run down to the pantry and do it now.”</p>
<p>Anne had already suffered many things trying to remove those freckles. On one
occasion the entire skin had peeled off her nose but the freckles remained. A
few days previously she had found a recipe for a freckle lotion in a magazine
and, as the ingredients were within her reach, she straightway compounded it,
much to the disgust of Marilla, who thought that if Providence had placed
freckles on your nose it was your bounden duty to leave them there.</p>
<p>Anne scurried down to the pantry, which, always dim from the big willow growing
close to the window, was now almost dark by reason of the shade drawn to
exclude flies. Anne caught the bottle containing the lotion from the shelf and
copiously anointed her nose therewith by means of a little sponge sacred to the
purpose. This important duty done, she returned to her work. Any one who has
ever shifted feathers from one tick to another will not need to be told that
when Anne finished she was a sight to behold. Her dress was white with down and
fluff, and her front hair, escaping from under the handkerchief, was adorned
with a veritable halo of feathers. At this auspicious moment a knock sounded at
the kitchen door.</p>
<p>“That must be Mr. Shearer,” thought Anne. “I’m in a
dreadful mess but I’ll have to run down as I am, for he’s always in
a hurry.”</p>
<p>Down flew Anne to the kitchen door. If ever a charitable floor did open to
swallow up a miserable, befeathered damsel the Green Gables porch floor should
promptly have engulfed Anne at that moment. On the doorstep were standing
Priscilla Grant, golden and fair in silk attire, a short, stout gray-haired
lady in a tweed suit, and another lady, tall stately, wonderfully gowned, with
a beautiful, highbred face and large, black-lashed violet eyes, whom Anne
“instinctively felt,” as she would have said in her earlier days,
to be Mrs. Charlotte E. Morgan.</p>
<p>In the dismay of the moment one thought stood out from the confusion of
Anne’s mind and she grasped at it as at the proverbial straw. All Mrs.
Morgan’s heroines were noted for “rising to the occasion.” No
matter what their troubles were, they invariably rose to the occasion and
showed their superiority over all ills of time, space, and quantity. Anne
therefore felt it was <i>her</i> duty to rise to the occasion and she did it,
so perfectly that Priscilla afterward declared she never admired Anne Shirley
more than at that moment. No matter what her outraged feelings were she did not
show them. She greeted Priscilla and was introduced to her companions as calmly
and composedly as if she had been arrayed in purple and fine linen. To be sure,
it was somewhat of a shock to find that the lady she had instinctively felt to
be Mrs. Morgan was not Mrs. Morgan at all, but an unknown Mrs. Pendexter, while
the stout little gray-haired woman was Mrs. Morgan; but in the greater shock
the lesser lost its power. Anne ushered her guests to the spare room and thence
into the parlor, where she left them while she hastened out to help Priscilla
unharness her horse.</p>
<p>“It’s dreadful to come upon you so unexpectedly as this,”
apologized Priscilla, “but I did not know till last night that we were
coming. Aunt Charlotte is going away Monday and she had promised to spend today
with a friend in town. But last night her friend telephoned to her not to come
because they were quarantined for scarlet fever. So I suggested we come here
instead, for I knew you were longing to see her. We called at the White Sands
Hotel and brought Mrs. Pendexter with us. She is a friend of aunt’s and
lives in New York and her husband is a millionaire. We can’t stay very
long, for Mrs. Pendexter has to be back at the hotel by five
o’clock.”</p>
<p>Several times while they were putting away the horse Anne caught Priscilla
looking at her in a furtive, puzzled way.</p>
<p>“She needn’t stare at me so,” Anne thought a little
resentfully. “If she doesn’t <i>know</i> what it is to change a
feather bed she might <i>imagine</i> it.”</p>
<p>When Priscilla had gone to the parlor, and before Anne could escape upstairs,
Diana walked into the kitchen. Anne caught her astonished friend by the arm.</p>
<p>“Diana Barry, who do you suppose is in that parlor at this very moment?
Mrs. Charlotte E. Morgan . . . and a New York millionaire’s wife . . .
and here I am like <i>this</i> . . . and <i>not a thing in the house for dinner
but a cold ham bone</i>, Diana!”</p>
<p>By this time Anne had become aware that Diana was staring at her in precisely
the same bewildered fashion as Priscilla had done. It was really too much.</p>
<p>“Oh, Diana, don’t look at me so,” she implored.
“<i>You</i>, at least, must know that the neatest person in the world
couldn’t empty feathers from one tick into another and remain neat in the
process.”</p>
<p>“It . . . it . . . isn’t the feathers,” hesitated Diana.
“It’s . . . it’s . . . your nose, Anne.”</p>
<p>“My nose? Oh, Diana, surely nothing has gone wrong with it!”</p>
<p>Anne rushed to the little looking glass over the sink. One glance revealed the
fatal truth. Her nose was a brilliant scarlet!</p>
<p>Anne sat down on the sofa, her dauntless spirit subdued at last.</p>
<p>“What is the matter with it?” asked Diana, curiosity overcoming
delicacy.</p>
<p>“I thought I was rubbing my freckle lotion on it, but I must have used
that red dye Marilla has for marking the pattern on her rugs,” was the
despairing response. “What shall I do?”</p>
<p>“Wash it off,” said Diana practically.</p>
<p>“Perhaps it won’t wash off. First I dye my hair; then I dye my
nose. Marilla cut my hair off when I dyed it but that remedy would hardly be
practicable in this case. Well, this is another punishment for vanity and I
suppose I deserve it . . . though there’s not much comfort in
<i>that</i>. It is really almost enough to make one believe in ill-luck, though
Mrs. Lynde says there is no such thing, because everything is
foreordained.”</p>
<p>Fortunately the dye washed off easily and Anne, somewhat consoled, betook
herself to the east gable while Diana ran home. Presently Anne came down again,
clothed and in her right mind. The muslin dress she had fondly hoped to wear
was bobbing merrily about on the line outside, so she was forced to content
herself with her black lawn. She had the fire on and the tea steeping when
Diana returned; the latter wore <i>her</i> muslin, at least, and carried a
covered platter in her hand.</p>
<p>“Mother sent you this,” she said, lifting the cover and displaying
a nicely carved and jointed chicken to Anne’s greatful eyes.</p>
<p>The chicken was supplemented by light new bread, excellent butter and cheese,
Marilla’s fruit cake and a dish of preserved plums, floating in their
golden syrup as in congealed summer sunshine. There was a big bowlful of
pink-and-white asters also, by way of decoration; yet the spread seemed very
meager beside the elaborate one formerly prepared for Mrs. Morgan.</p>
<p>Anne’s hungry guests, however, did not seem to think anything was lacking
and they ate the simple viands with apparent enjoyment. But after the first few
moments Anne thought no more of what was or was not on her bill of fare. Mrs.
Morgan’s appearance might be somewhat disappointing, as even her loyal
worshippers had been forced to admit to each other; but she proved to be a
delightful conversationalist. She had traveled extensively and was an excellent
storyteller. She had seen much of men and women, and crystalized her
experiences into witty little sentences and epigrams which made her hearers
feel as if they were listening to one of the people in clever books. But under
all her sparkle there was a strongly felt undercurrent of true, womanly
sympathy and kindheartedness which won affection as easily as her brilliancy
won admiration. Nor did she monopolize the conversation. She could draw others
out as skillfully and fully as she could talk herself, and Anne and Diana found
themselves chattering freely to her. Mrs. Pendexter said little; she merely
smiled with her lovely eyes and lips, and ate chicken and fruit cake and
preserves with such exquisite grace that she conveyed the impression of dining
on ambrosia and honeydew. But then, as Anne said to Diana later on, anybody so
divinely beautiful as Mrs. Pendexter didn’t need to talk; it was enough
for her just to <i>look</i>.</p>
<p>After dinner they all had a walk through Lover’s Lane and Violet Vale and
the Birch Path, then back through the Haunted Wood to the Dryad’s Bubble,
where they sat down and talked for a delightful last half hour. Mrs. Morgan
wanted to know how the Haunted Wood came by its name, and laughed until she
cried when she heard the story and Anne’s dramatic account of a certain
memorable walk through it at the witching hour of twilight.</p>
<p>“It has indeed been a feast of reason and flow of soul, hasn’t
it?” said Anne, when her guests had gone and she and Diana were alone
again. “I don’t know which I enjoyed more . . . listening to Mrs.
Morgan or gazing at Mrs. Pendexter. I believe we had a nicer time than if
we’d known they were coming and been cumbered with much serving. You must
stay to tea with me, Diana, and we’ll talk it all over.”</p>
<p>“Priscilla says Mrs. Pendexter’s husband’s sister is married
to an English earl; and yet she took a second helping of the plum
preserves,” said Diana, as if the two facts were somehow incompatible.</p>
<p>“I daresay even the English earl himself wouldn’t have turned up
his aristocratic nose at Marilla’s plum preserves,” said Anne
proudly.</p>
<p>Anne did not mention the misfortune which had befallen <i>her</i> nose when she
related the day’s history to Marilla that evening. But she took the
bottle of freckle lotion and emptied it out of the window.</p>
<p>“I shall never try any beautifying messes again,” she said, darkly
resolute. “They may do for careful, deliberate people; but for anyone so
hopelessly given over to making mistakes as I seem to be it’s tempting
fate to meddle with them.”</p>
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