The Shield of Silence eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 374 pages of information about The Shield of Silence.

The Shield of Silence eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 374 pages of information about The Shield of Silence.

“A happening” was looming near.  Something grave threatened.  The evil crew of The Ship was but biding its time to strike, and Mary thrilled and feared at once.

The bread, as Mary sniffed, was ready to be taken from the oven.  The first loaf was poised nicely on the girl’s towel-covered hand when a dark, bent old woman drifted, rather than walked, into the sunny kitchen.  She came noiselessly like a shadow; she was dirty and in rags; she looked, all but her eyes, as if she might be a hundred years old, but her eyes held so much fire and undying youth that they were terrible set in the crinkled, rust-coloured face.

“I want her!” The words, spoken close to her shoulder caused Mary to drop the loaf and turn in affright.

“I want—­her!”

“Gawd!  Aunt Becky!” gasped Mary, dropping, like a cloak, the thin veneer of all that Ridge House had done for her.  “Gawd!  Aunt Becky, I done thought you was—­dead and all.  I ain’t seen you in ages.  Won’t you set?”

The woman stretched a claw-like hand forth and laid it on the shoulder of the girl.

“Don’t you argify with me—­Mary Allan.  I want her.”

There seemed to be no doubt in Mary’s mind as to whom Aunt Becky wanted.

“Sister Angela is at prayer, Aunt Becky,” she whispered, trying to escape from the clutch upon her shoulder.

“Mary Allan—­go tell her I want her.  Go!” There was that in Becky’s tone that commanded obedience.  Mary started to the hall, her feet clattering as she ran toward the chapel on the floor above.

Becky followed, more slowly.  She got as far as the opened door of the living room, then she paused, glanced about, and went in.

There are some rooms that repel; others that seem to rush forward with warm welcome.  The living room at Ridge House was one that made a stranger feel as if he had long been expected and desired.  It was not unfamiliar to the old woman who now entered it.  Through the windows she had often held silent and unsuspected vigil.  It was her way to know the trails over which she might be called to travel and since that day, three years before, when Sister Angela had met her on the road and made her startling proposition, Becky had subconsciously known that, in due time, she would be compelled to accept what then she had so angrily refused.

On that first encounter Sister Angela had said: 

“They tell me that you have a little granddaughter—­a very pretty child.”

“Yo’ mean Zalie?” Becky was on her guard.

“I did not know her name.  How old is she?”

“Nigh onter fifteen.”  The strange eyes were holding Sister Angela’s calm gaze—­the old woman was awaiting the time to spring.

“It is wrong to keep a young girl on that lonely peak away from everyone, as I am told that you do.  Won’t you let her come to Ridge House?  We will teach her—­fit her for some useful work.”

Sister Angela at that time did not know her neighbours as well as she later learned to know them.  Becky came nearer, and her thin lips curled back from her toothless jaws.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Shield of Silence from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.