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Authors: L.M. Montgomery

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“Well, I suppose Blair Water and the old life here are to him as a tale that is told now.

“I didn't realise how much I had been building on Ilse and Teddy being here for the summer or how much the hope of it had helped me through a few bad times in the winter. When I let myself remember that not once this summer will
I hear Teddy's signal whistle in Lofty John's bush – not once happen on him in our secret, beautiful haunts of lane and brookside – not once exchange a thrilling, significant glance in a crowd when something happened which had a special meaning for us, all the colour seems to die out of life, leaving it just a drab, faded thing of shreds and patches.

“Mrs. Kent met me at the post-office yesterday and stopped to speak – something she very rarely does. She hates me as much as ever.

“‘I suppose you have heard that Teddy is not coming home this summer?'

“‘Yes,' I said briefly.

“There was a certain odd, aching triumph in her eyes as she turned away – a triumph I understood. She is very unhappy because Teddy will not be home for
her
but she is exultant that he will not be home for
me
. This shows, she is almost sure, that he cares nothing about me.

“Well, I daresay she is right. Still, one can't be altogether gloomy in spring.

“And Andrew is engaged! To a girl of whom Aunt Addie entirely approves. ‘I could not be more pleased with Andrew's choice if I had chosen her myself she said this afternoon to Aunt Elizabeth.
To
Aunt Elizabeth and
at
me. Aunt Elizabeth was coldly glad – or said she was. Aunt Laura cried a little – Aunt Laura always cries a bit when any one she knows is born or dead or married or engaged or come or gone or polling his first vote. She couldn't help feeling a little disappointed. Andrew would have been such a
safe
husband for me. Certainly there is no dynamite in Andrew.”

THREE
I

A
t first nobody thought Mr. Carpenter's illness serious. He had had a good many attacks of rheumatism in recent years, laying him up for a few days. Then he could hobble back to work, as grim and sarcastic as ever, with a new edge to his tongue. In Mr. Carpenter's opinion teaching in Blair Water school was not what it had been. Nothing there now, he said, but rollicking, soulless young nonentities. Not a soul in the school who could pronounce February or Wednesday.

“I'm tired trying to make soup in a sieve;” he said gruffly.

Teddy and Ilse and Perry and Emily were gone – the four pupils who had leavened the school with a saving inspiration. Perhaps Mr. Carpenter was a little tired of – everything. He was not very old, as years go, but he had burned up most of his constitution in a wild youth. The little, timid, faded slip of a woman who had been his wife had died unobtrusively in the preceding autumn. She had never seemed to matter much to Mr. Carpenter; but he had “gone down” rapidly after her funeral. The school children went in awe of his biting tongue
and his more frequent spurts of temper. The trustees began to shake their heads and talk of a new teacher when the school year ended.

Mr. Carpenter's illness began as usual with an attack of rheumatism. Then there was heart trouble. Dr. Burnley, who went to see him despite his obstinate refusal to have a doctor, looked grave and talked mysteriously of a lack of “the will to live.” Aunt Louisa Drummond of Derry Pond came over to nurse him. Mr. Carpenter submitted to this with a resignation that was a bad omen – as if nothing mattered any more.

“Have your own way. She can potter round if it will ease your consciences. So long as she leaves me alone I don't care what she does. I
won't
be fed and I
won't
be coddled and I
won't
have the sheets changed. Can't bear her hair, though. Too straight and shiny. Tell her to do something to it. And why does her nose look as if it were always cold?”

Emily ran in every evening to sit awhile with him. She was the only person the old man cared to see. He did not talk a great deal, but he liked to open his eyes every few minutes and exchange a sly smile of understanding with her – as if the two of them were laughing together over some excellent joke of which only they could sample the flavour. Aunt Louisa did not know what to think of this commerce of grins and consequently disapproved of it. She was a kind-hearted creature, with much real motherliness in her thwarted maiden breast, but she was all at sea with these cheerful, Puckish, deathbed smiles of her patient. She thought he had much better be thinking of his immortal soul. He was not a member of the church, was he? He would not even let the minister come in to see him. But Emily Starr was welcomed whenever she came. Aunt Louisa had her own secret suspicion of the said Emily Starr. Didn't she write? Hadn't she put her own mother's second-cousin, body and
bones, into one of her stories? Probably she was looking for “copy” in this old pagans deathbed.
That
explained her interest in it, beyond a doubt. Aunt Louisa looked curiously at this ghoulish young creature. She hoped Emily wouldn't put
her
in a story.

For a long time Emily had refused to believe that it
was
Mr. Carpenter's deathbed. He
couldn't
be so ill as all that. He didn't suffer – he didn't complain. He would be all right as soon as warmer weather came. She told herself this so often that she made herself believe it. She could not let herself think of life in Blair Water without Mr. Carpenter.

One May evening Mr. Carpenter seemed much better. His eyes flashed with their old satiric fire, his voice rang with its old resonance; he joked poor Aunt Louisa – who never could understand his jokes but endured them with Christian patience. Sick people must be humoured. He told a funny story to Emily and laughed with her over it till the little low-raftered room rang. Aunt Louisa shook her head. There were some things she did not know, poor lady, but she did know her own humble, faithful little trade of unprofessional nursing; and she knew that this sudden rejuvenescence was no good sign. As the Scotch would say, he was “fey.” Emily in her inexperience did not know this. She went home rejoicing that Mr. Carpenter had taken such a turn for the better. Soon he would be all right, back at school, thundering at his pupils, striding absently along the road reading some dog-eared classic, criticising her manuscripts with all his old trenchant humour. Emily was glad. Mr. Carpenter was a friend she could not afford to lose.

II

Aunt Elizabeth wakened her at two. She had been sent for. Mr. Carpenter was asking for her.

“Is he worse –?” asked Emily, slipping out of her high, black bed with its carved posts.

“Dying,” said Aunt Elizabeth briefly. “Dr. Burnley says he can't last till morning.”

Something in Emily's face touched Aunt Elizabeth.

“Isn't it better for him, Emily?” she said with an unusual gentleness. “He is old and tired. His wife has gone – they will not give him the school another year. His old age would be very lonely. Death is his best friend.”

“I am thinking of myself,” choked Emily.

She went down to Mr. Carpenter's house, through the dark, beautiful spring night. Aunt Louisa was crying but Emily did not cry. Mr. Carpenter opened his eyes and smiled at her – the same old, sly smile.

“No tears,” he murmured. “I forbid tears at my deathbed. Let Louisa Drummond do the crying out in the kitchen. She might as well earn her money that way as another. There's nothing more she can do for me.”

“Is there anything I can do?” asked Emily.

“Just sit here where I can see you till I'm gone, that's all. One doesn't like to go out – alone. Never liked the thought of dying alone. How many old she-weasels are out in the kitchen waiting for me to die?”

“There are only Aunt Louisa and Aunt Elizabeth,” said Emily, unable to repress a smile.

“Don't mind my not – talking much. I've been talking – all my life. Through now. No breath – left. But if I think of anything – like you to be here.”

Mr. Carpenter closed his eyes and relapsed into silence. Emily sat quietly, her head a soft blur of darkness against the window that was beginning to whiten with dawn. The ghostly hands of a fitful wind played with her hair. The perfume of
June lilies stole in from the bed under the open window – a haunting odour, sweeter than music, like all the lost perfumes of old, unutterably dear years. Far off, two beautiful, slender, black firs, of exactly the same height, came out against the silver dawn-lit sky like the twin spires of some Gothic cathedral rising out of a bank of silver mist. Just between them hung a dim old moon, as beautiful as the evening crescent. Their beauty was a comfort and stimulant to Emily under the stress of this strange vigil. Whatever passed – whatever came – beauty like this was eternal.

Now and then Aunt Louisa came in and looked at the old man. Mr. Carpenter seemed unconscious of these visitations but always when she went out he opened his eyes and winked at Emily. Emily found herself winking back, somewhat to her own horror – for she had sufficient Murray in her to be slightly scandalised over deathbed winks. Fancy what Aunt Elizabeth would say.

“Good little sport,” muttered Mr. Carpenter after the second exchange of winks. “Glad – you're there.”

At three o'clock he grew rather restless. Aunt Louisa came in again.

“He can't die till the tide goes out, you know,” she explained to Emily in a solemn whisper.

“Get out of this with your superstitious blather,” said Mr. Carpenter loudly and clearly. “I'll die when I'm d – n well ready, tide or no tide.”

Horrified, Aunt Louisa excused him to Emily on the ground that he was wandering on his mind and slipped out.

“Excuse my common way, won't you?” said Mr. Carpenter. “I
had
to shock her out. Couldn't have that elderly female person – round watching me die. Given her – a good yarn to tell – the rest of her – life. Awful – warning. And yet – she's a
good soul. So good – she bores me. No evil in her. Somehow – one needs – a spice – of evil – in every personality. It's the – pinch of– salt – that brings out – the flavour.”

Another silence. Then he added gravely

“Trouble is – the Cook – makes the pinch – too large – in most cases. Inexperienced Cook – wiser after – a few eternities.”

Emily thought he really was “wandering” now but he smiled at her.

“Glad you're here – little pal. Don't mind being – here – do you?”

“No,” said Emily.

“When a Murray says – no – she means it.”

After another silence Mr. Carpenter began again, this time more to himself, as it seemed, than any one else.

“Going out – beyond the dawn. Past the morning star. Used to think I'd be frightened. Not frightened. Funny. Think how much I'm going to know – in just a few more minutes, Emily. Wiser than anybody else living. Always wanted to know – to
know
. Never liked guesses. Done with curiosity – about life. Just curious now – about death. I'll know the truth, Emily – just a few more minutes and I'll know the – truth. No more guessing. And if– it's as I think – I'll be – young again. You can't know what – it means. You – who
are
young – can't have – the least idea – what it means – to be young –
again
.”

His voice sank into restless muttering for a time, then rose clearly.

“Emily, promise me – that you'll never write – to please anybody – but yourself.”

Emily hesitated a moment. Just what did such a promise mean?

“Promise,” whispered Mr. Carpenter insistently.

Emily promised.

“That's right,” said Mr. Carpenter with a sigh of relief “Keep that – and you'll be – all right. No use trying to please everybody. No use trying to please – critics. Live under your own hat. Don't be – led away – by those howls about realism. Remember – pine woods are just as real as – pigsties – and a darn sight pleasanter to be in. You'll get there – sometime – you have the root – of the matter – in you. And don't – tell the world – everything. That's what's the – matter – with our – literature. Lost the charm of mystery – and reserve. There's something else I wanted to say – some caution – I can't – seem to remember –”

“Don't try,” said Emily gently. “Don't tire yourself.”

“Not – tired. Feel quite through – with being tired. I'm dying – I'm a failure – poor as a rat. But after all, Emily – I've had a – darned interesting time.”

Mr. Carpenter shut his eyes and looked so death-like that Emily made an involuntary movement of alarm. He lifted a bleached hand.

“No – don't call her. Don't call that weeping lady back. Just yourself, little Emily of New Moon. Clever little girl, Emily. What was it – I wanted to say to her?”

A moment or two later he opened his eyes and said in a loud, clear voice, “Open the door – open the door. Death must not be kept waiting.”

Emily ran to the little door and set it wide. A strong wind of the grey sea rushed in. Aunt Louisa ran in from the kitchen.

“The tide has turned – he's going out with it – he's gone.”

Not quite. As Emily bent over him the keen, shaggy-browed eyes opened for the last time. Mr. Carpenter essayed a wink but could not compass it.

“I've – thought of it,” he whispered. “Beware – of– italics.”

Was there a little impish chuckle at the end of the words? Aunt Louisa always declared there was. Graceless old
Mr. Carpenter had died laughing – saying something about Italians. Of course he was delirious. But Aunt Louisa always felt it had been a very unedifying deathbed. She was thankful that few such had come in her experience.

III

Emily went blindly home and wept for her old friend in the room of her dreams. What a gallant old soul he was – going out into the shadow – or into the sunlight? – with a laugh and a jest. Whatever his faults there had never been anything of the coward about old Mr. Carpenter. Her world, she knew, would be a colder place now that he was gone. It seemed many years since she had left New Moon in the darkness. She felt some inward monition that told her she had come to a certain parting of the ways of life. Mr. Carpenter's death would not make any eternal difference for her. Nevertheless, it was as a milestone to which in after years she could look back and say,

“After I passed that point everything was different.”

All her life she had grown, as it seemed, by these fits and starts. Going on quietly and changelessly for months and years; then all at once suddenly realising that she had left some “low-vaulted past” and emerged into some “new temple” of the soul more spacious than all that had gone before. Though always, at first, with a chill of change and a sense of loss.

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