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<h2> CHAPTER XXVIII </h2>
<p>The progress of Mrs Kilbannon and Miss Christie Cameron up the river to
Montreal, and so west to Elgin, was one series of surprises, most of them
pleasant and instructive to such a pair of intelligent Scotchwomen, if we
leave out the number of Roman Catholic churches that lift their special
symbol along the banks of the St Lawrence and the fact that Hugh Finlay
was not in Elgin to meet them upon their arrival. Dr Drummond, of course,
was there at the station to explain. Finlay had been obliged to leave for
Winnipeg only the day before, to attend a mission conference in place of a
delegate who had been suddenly laid aside by serious illness. Finlay, he
said, had been very loath to go, but there were many reasons why it was
imperative that he should; Dr Drummond explained them all. “I insisted on
it,” he assured them, frankly. “I told him I would take the
responsibility.”</p>
<p>He seemed very capable of taking it, both the ladies must have thought,
with his quick orders about the luggage and his waiting cab. Mrs Kilbannon
said so. “I’m sure,” she told him, “we are better off with you than with
Hugh. He was always a daft dependence at a railway station.”</p>
<p>They both—Mrs Kilbannon and Dr Drummond—looked out of the
corners of their eyes, so to speak, at Christie, the only one who might be
expected to show any sensitiveness; but Miss Cameron accepted the
explanation with readiness. Indeed, she said, she would have been real
vexed if Mr Finlay had stayed behind on her account—she showed
herself well aware of the importance of a nomination, and the desirability
of responding to it.</p>
<p>“It will just give me an opportunity of seeing the town,” she said,
looking at it through the cab windows as they drove; and Dr Drummond had
to admit that she seemed a sensible creature. Other things being equal,
Finlay might be doing very well for himself. As they talked of Scotland—it
transpired that Dr Drummond knew all the braes about Bross as a boy—he
found himself more than ever annoyed with Finlay about the inequality of
other things; and when they passed Knox Church and Miss Cameron told him
she hadn’t realized it was so imposing an edifice, he felt downright sorry
for the woman.</p>
<p>Dr Drummond had persuaded Finlay to go to Winnipeg with a vague hope that
something in the fortnight’s grace thus provided, might be induced to
happen. The form it oftenest took to his imagination was Miss Christie’s
announcement, when she set foot upon the station platform, that she had
become engaged, on the way over, to somebody else, some fellow-traveller.
Such things, Dr Drummond knew, did come about, usually bringing distress
and discomfiture in their train. Why, then, should they not happen when
all the consequences would be rejoiceful?</p>
<p>It was plain enough, however, that nothing of the kind had come to pass.
Miss Christie had arrived in Elgin, bringing her affections intact; they
might have been in any one of her portmanteaux. She had come with definite
calm intention, precisely in the guise in which she should have been
expected. At the very hour, in the very clothes, she was there. Robust and
pleasant, with a practical eye on her promising future, she had arrived,
the fulfilment of despair. Dr Drummond looked at her with acquiescence,
half-cowed, half-comic, wondering at his own folly in dreaming of anything
else. Miss Cameron brought the situation, as it were, with her; it had to
be faced, and Dr Drummond faced it like a philosopher. She was the
material necessity, the fact in the case, the substantiation of her own
legend; and Dr Drummond promptly gave her all the consideration she
demanded in this aspect. Already he heard himself pronouncing a blessing
over the pair—and they would make the best of it. With
characteristic dispatch he decided that the marriage should take place the
first Monday after Finlay’s return. That would give them time to take a
day or two in Toronto, perhaps, and get back for Finlay’s Wednesday prayer
meeting. “Or I could take it off his hands,” said Dr Drummond to himself.
“That would free them till the end of the week.” Solicitude increased in
him that the best should be made of it; after all, for a long time they
had been making the worst. Mrs Forsyth, whom it had been necessary to
inform when Mrs Kilbannon and Miss Cameron became actually imminent, saw
plainly that the future Mrs Finlay had made a very good impression on the
Doctor; and as nature, in Mrs Forsyth’s case, was more powerful than
grace, she became critical accordingly. Still, she was an honest soul: she
found more fault with what she called Miss Cameron’s “shirt-waists” than
with Miss Cameron herself, whom she didn’t doubt to be a good woman though
she would never see thirty-five again. Time and observation would no doubt
mend or remodel the shirt-waists; and meanwhile both they and Miss Cameron
would do very well for East Elgin, Mrs Forsyth avowed. Mrs Kilbannon,
definitely given over to caps and curls as they still wear them in Bross,
Mrs Forsyth at once formed a great opinion of. She might be something, Mrs
Forsyth thought, out of a novel by Mr Crockett, and made you long to go to
Scotland, where presumably everyone was like her. On the whole the ladies
from Bross profited rather than lost by the new frame they stepped into in
the house of Dr Drummond, of Elgin, Ontario. Their special virtues, of
dignity and solidity and frugality, stood out saliently against the ease
and unconstraint about them; in the profusion of the table it was little
less than edifying to hear Mrs Kilbannon, invited to preserves, say,
“Thank you, I have butter.” It was the pleasantest spectacle, happily
common enough, of the world’s greatest inheritance. We see it in
immigrants of all degrees, and we may perceive it in Miss Cameron and Mrs
Kilbannon. They come in couples and in companies from those little
imperial islands, bringing the crusted qualities of the old blood bottled
there so long, and sink with grateful absorption into the wide bountiful
stretches of the further countries. They have much to take, but they give
themselves; and so it comes about that the Empire is summed up in the
race, and the flag flies for its ideals.</p>
<p>Mrs Forsyth had been told of the approaching event; but neither Dr
Drummond, who was not fond of making communications he did not approve of,
nor the Murchisons, who were shy of the matter as a queer business which
Advena seemed too much mixed up with, had mentioned it to anyone else.
Finlay himself had no intimates, and moved into his new house in River
Street under little comment. His doings excited small surprise, because
the town knew too little about him to expect him to do one thing more than
another. He was very significant among his people, very important in their
lives but not, somehow, at any expense to his private self. He knew them,
but they did not know him; and it is high praise of him that this was no
grievance among them. They would tell you without resentment that the
minister was a “very reserved” man; there might be even a touch of proper
pride in it. The worshippers of Knox Church mission were rather a reserved
lot themselves. It was different with the Methodists; plenty of expansion
there.</p>
<p>Elgin, therefore, knew nothing, beyond the fact that Dr Drummond had two
ladies from the old country staying with him, about whom particular
curiosity would hardly be expected outside of Knox Church. In view of
Finlay’s absence, Dr Drummond, consulting with Mrs Kilbannon, decided that
for the present Elgin need not be further informed. There was no need,
they agreed, to give people occasion to talk; and it would just be a
nuisance to have to make so many explanations. Both Mrs Kilbannon and her
niece belonged to the race that takes great satisfaction in keeping its
own counsel. Their situation gained for them the further interest that
nothing need be said about it; and the added importance of caution was
plainly to be discerned in their bearing, even toward one another. It was
a portentous business, this of marrying a minister, under the most
ordinary circumstances, not to be lightly dealt with, and even more of an
undertaking in a far new country where the very wind blew differently, and
the extraordinary freedom of conversation made it more than ever necessary
to take heed to what you were saying. So far as Miss Cameron and Mrs
Kilbannon were aware, the matter had not been “spoken of” elsewhere at
all. Dr Drummond, remembering Advena Murchison’s acquaintance with it, had
felt the weight of a complication, and had discreetly held his tongue. Mrs
Kilbannon approved her nephew in this connection. “Hugh,” she said, “was
never one to let on more than necessary.” It was a fine secret between
Hugh, in Winnipeg, whence he had written all that was lawful or desirable,
and themselves at Dr Drummond’s. Miss Cameron said it would give her more
freedom to look about her.</p>
<p>In the midst of all this security, and on the very first day after their
arrival, it was disconcerting to be told that a lady, whose name they had
never heard before, had called to see Miss Cameron and Mrs Kilbannon. They
had not even appeared at church, as they told one another with dubious
glances. They had no reason whatever to expect visitors. Dr Drummond was
in the cemetery burying a member; Mrs Forsyth was also abroad. “Now who in
the world,” asked Mrs Kilbannon of Miss Cameron, “is Miss Murchison?”</p>
<p>“They come to our church,” said Sarah, in the door. “They’ve got the
foundry. It’s the oldest one. She teaches.”</p>
<p>Sarah in the door was even more disconcerting than an unexpected visitor.
Sarah invariably took them off their guard, in the door or anywhere. She
freely invited their criticism, but they would not have known how to mend
her. They looked at her now helplessly, and Mrs Kilbannon said, “Very
well. We will be down directly.”</p>
<p>“It may be just some friendly body,” she said, as they descended the
stairs together, “or it may be common curiosity. In that case we’ll
disappoint it.”</p>
<p>Whatever they expected, therefore, it was not Advena. It was not a tall
young woman with expressive eyes, a manner which was at once abrupt and
easy, and rather a lounging way of occupying the corner of a sofa. “When
she sat down,” as Mrs Kilbannon said afterward, “she seemed to untie and
fling herself as you might a parcel.” Neither Mrs Kilbannon nor Christie
Cameron could possibly be untied or flung, so perhaps they gave this
capacity in Advena more importance than it had. But it was only a part of
what was to them a new human demonstration, something to inspect very
carefully and accept very cautiously—the product, like themselves,
yet so suspiciously different, of these free airs and these astonishingly
large ideas. In some ways, as she sat there in her graceful dress and
careless attitude, asking them direct smiling questions about their
voyage, she imposed herself as of the class whom both these ladies of
Bross would acknowledge unquestioningly to be “above” them; in others she
seemed to be of no class at all; so far she came short of small standards
of speech and behaviour. The ladies from Bross, more and more confused,
grew more and more reticent, when suddenly, out of a simple remark of Miss
Cameron’s about missing in the train the hot-water cans they gave you “to
your feet” in Scotland, reticence descended upon Miss Murchison also. She
sat in an odd silence, looking at Miss Cameron, absorbed apparently in the
need of looking at her, finding nothing to say, her flow of pleasant
inquiry dried up, and all her soul at work, instead, to perceive the
woman. Mrs Kilbannon was beginning to think better of her—it was so
much more natural to be a little backward with strangers—when the
moment passed. Their visitor drew herself out of it with almost a
perceptible effort, and seemed to glance consideringly at them in their
aloofness, their incommunicativeness, their plain odds with her. I don’t
know what she expected; but we may assume that she was there simply to
offer herself up, and the impulse of sacrifice seldom considers whether or
not it may be understood. It was to her a normal, natural thing that a
friend of Hugh Finlay’s should bring an early welcome to his bride; and to
do the normal, natural thing at keen personal cost was to sound that
depth, or rise to that height of the spirit where pain sustains. We know
of Advena that she was prone to this form of exaltation. Those who feel
themselves capable may pronounce whether she would have been better at
home crying in her bedroom.</p>
<p>She decided badly—how could she decide well?—on what she would
say to explain herself.</p>
<p>“I am so sorry,” she told them, “that Mr Finlay is obliged to be away.”</p>
<p>It was quite wrong; it assumed too much, her knowledge and their
confidence, and the propriety of discussing Mr Finlay’s absence. There was
even an unconscious hint of another kind of assumption in it—a
suggestion of apology for Mr Finlay. Advena was aware of it even as it
left her lips, and the perception covered her with a damning blush. She
had a sudden terrified misgiving that her role was too high for her, that
she had already cracked her mask. But she looked quietly at Miss Cameron
and smiled across the tide that surged in her as she added, “He was very
distressed at having to go.”</p>
<p>They looked at her in an instant’s blank astonishment. Miss Cameron opened
her lips and closed them again, glancing at Mrs Kilbannon. They fell back
together, but not in disorder. This was something much more formidable
than common curiosity. Just what it was they would consider later;
meanwhile Mrs Kilbannon responded with what she would have called cool
civility.</p>
<p>“Perhaps you have heard that Mr Finlay is my nephew?” she said.</p>
<p>“Indeed I have. Mr Finlay has told me a great deal about you, Mrs
Kilbannon, and about his life at Bross,” Advena replied. “And he has told
me about you, too,” she went on, turning to Christie Cameron.</p>
<p>“Indeed?” said she.</p>
<p>“Oh, a long time ago. He has been looking forward to your arrival for some
months, hasn’t he?”</p>
<p>“We took our passages in December,” said Miss Cameron.</p>
<p>“And you are to be married almost immediately, are you not?” Miss
Murchison continued, pleasantly.</p>
<p>Mrs Kilbannon had an inspiration. “Could he by any means have had the
banns cried?” she demanded of Christie, who looked piercingly at their
visitor for the answer.</p>
<p>“Oh, no,” Advena laughed softly. “Presbyterians haven’t that custom over
here—does it still exist anywhere? Mr Finlay told me himself.”</p>
<p>“Has he informed all his acquaintances?” asked Mrs Kilbannon. “We thought
maybe his elders would be expecting to hear, or his Board of Management.
Or he might have just dropped a word to his Sessions Clerk. But—”</p>
<p>Advena shook her head. “I think it unlikely,” she said.</p>
<p>“Then why would he be telling you?” inquired the elder lady, bluntly.</p>
<p>“He told me, I suppose, because I have the honour to be a friend of his,”
Advena said, smiling. “But he is not a man, is he, who makes many friends?
It is possible, I dare say, that he has mentioned it to no one else.”</p>
<p>Poor Advena! She had indeed uttered her ideal to unsympathetic ears—brought
her pig, as her father would have said, to the wrong market. She sat
before the ladies from Bross, Hugh Finlay’s only confidante. She sat
handsome and upheld and not altogether penetrable, a kind of gipsy to
their understanding, though indeed the Romany strain in her was beyond any
divining of theirs. They, on their part, reposed in their clothes with all
their bristles out—what else could have been expected of them?—convinced
in their own minds that they had come not only to a growing but to a
forward country.</p>
<p>Mrs Kilbannon was perhaps a little severe. “I wonder that we have not
heard of you, Miss Murchison,” said she, “but we are happy to make the
acquaintance of any of my nephew’s friends. You will have heard him
preach, perhaps?”</p>
<p>“Often,” said Advena, rising. “We have no one here who can compare with
him in preaching. There was very little reason why you should have heard
of me. I am—of no importance.” She hesitated and fought for an
instant with a trembling of the lip. “But now that you have been persuaded
to be a part of our life here,” she said to Christie, “I thought I would
like to come and offer you my friendship because it is his already. I hope—so
much—that you will be happy here. It is a nice little place. And I
want you to let me help you—about your house, and in every way that
is possible. I am sure I can be of use.” She paused and looked at their
still half-hostile faces. “I hope,” she faltered, “you don’t mind my—having
come?”</p>
<p>“Not at all,” said Christie, and Mrs Kilbannon added, “I’m sure you mean
it very kindly.”</p>
<p>A flash of the comedy of it shot up in Advena’s eyes. “Yes,” she said, “I
do. Good-bye.”</p>
<p>If they had followed her departure they would have been further confounded
to see her walk not quite steadily away; shaken with fantastic laughter.
They looked instead at one another, as if to find the solution of the
mystery where indeed it lay, in themselves.</p>
<p>“She doesn’t even belong to his congregation,” said Christie. “Just a
friend, she said.”</p>
<p>“I expect the friendship’s mostly upon her side,” remarked Mrs Kilbannon.
“She seemed frank enough about it. But I would see no necessity for
encouraging her friendship on my own account, if I were in your place,
Christie.”</p>
<p>“I think I’ll manage without it,” said Christie.</p>
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