Billy groaned again.
"I NEVER had such a good time as I had at Aunt Nora's. Say, I had to hunt her turkeys up every evening. Roam everywhere I liked and no questions asked so long's I turned up at bedtime with the turks. Here if I go outer the gate it's, 'William, WHERE have you been?' and 'William, did you scrape your boots?' Why, the cats here have to wipe their feet afore they go in."
"Now, Billy, THAT'S exaggerating," said Marigold rebukingly.
"Well, 'tain't exaggerating to say I don't dast throw a single stone here," said Billy defiantly. "It's aggravating, that's what it is. Millions of cats and not a chance to throw a stone at one of 'em. I DID throw one first day I was here - gave her old yellow Tom the thrill of his life - and she jawed at me for a week and made me read a chapter of the Bible every day. I'd rather she'd taken it out of my hide. She thinks out so many different ways of punishing me and I never know what to expect. And then - 'ja hear her? - telling Mrs. Kent what I looked like when I was a baby? She's always at it. Catch Aunt Nora telling on a feller like that. Or kissing me goodnight. Aunt Min always does. Thinks it's her 'duty,' I s'pose."
Billy thrust his hands in his pockets and scowled at the universe. But he was feeling better. Remained only one grievance to be discussed. The worst of all.
"I could worry along if it wasn't for Sundays," he said. "I hate Sunday here - hate it worse'n p'isen."
"Why?"
"'Cause I have to write a snopsis."
"What's a snopsis?"
"Why, you go to church and when you come home you gotter write out all you can remember of the sermon. And if you can't remember enough - oh, boy! She says HER children always done it. She'll make YOU do it, too, next Sunday, I'll bet."
Marigold reflected a bit. She didn't think she would mind. It might be int'resting - a kind of game in fact. For ONE Sunday. But poor Bill had to do it every Sunday.
"Well, never mind," she said soothingly. "Sunday's a long way off yet. Let's see how much fun we can have before that."
Decidedly, thought Billy, here was a girl.
2
Sunday might be far off - but Sunday came. After a week during which Billy forgot to hanker for Aunt Nora's. That was all very well. But Marigold was going home Tuesday. Billy would have been torn in pieces by wild horses before he would have confessed how he hated the thought.
But here was Sunday afternoon - and church. To which Billy and Marigold must go alone because Aunt Min had been summoned to Charlottetown to see an old friend who was passing through and could be seen on no other day.
"I'm sorry I can't go to church," she said, "because young Mr. Harvey Nelson is preaching for a call and I'd like to hear him. But it can't be helped. I've left your suppers in the pantry for you. Now be good children. Marigold, you'll see that Billy behaves properly, won't you? Don't forget to pay close attention to the sermon. You must both write out a synopsis of it this evening, and I want to see a better result than last Sunday, Billy."
"A-ha," gloated Billy as Aunt Min went out. "I told you you'd have to do it, too."
Marigold did not resent his gloating. He was really behaving very well, considering she had been told to look after his behaviour. That was too awful of Aunt Min. Why COULDN'T people understand certain perfectly plain, self-evident things?
"Oh, my, ain't we Sundayfied!" chanted Davy Dixon on the fence, as they went down the lane. Davy was freckled and snub-nosed, bareheaded and barefooted. With no more clothes on than decency required. But he did look so jolly and care-free. All the Dixons did. But they were a family Aunt Min detested. She never let Billy and Marigold play with them, though they lived only a cat's walk away through the bush behind Aunt Min's.
"Comin' to the picnic?" asked Davy.
"What picnic?"
"Oh, just the Dixon family picnic," grinned Davy. "This is Mom's and Pop's wedding-day. Twelve years married 'n' ain't sorry for it yit. We're going to take our new car 'n' go to the sand-hills. Got a basket of eats 'd make your eyes stick out. Yum-yum. 'N' mom said to ask youse to come along, too, 'cause she knew your Aunt Min was going away 'n' youse'd be lonesome."
Marigold found herself wishing they could go. At home she liked going to church, but she was sure she wouldn't like going to Windyside church. She didn't like the look of it; a big, bare, wind-beaten, drab-tinted church with a spire as long and sharp as a needle; somehow it was not a friendly church. And she knew nobody there. A drive in a motor-car to the sand-hills sounded very alluring. But of course it was unthinkable.
WHAT was Billy saying?
"I'll go if you'll lend me that book at your place - The Flying Roll."
"Bill-EE," said Marigold.
"Oh, all right," said Dave. "It belongs to old Aunt Janey but she won't care."
"I'll go," said Billy decidedly. "Coming, Marigold?"
"Oh, please, remember what day this is," implored Marigold, with a wild wish in the back of her mind that she could go. "And what will Aunt Min say?"
"Aunt Min isn't going to know a thing about it. I've got a plan. Aw, come on. We'll have a rip-roaring time."
"Billy, you don't mean it."
"You bet I do. You can go to church if you want to and stick all the afternoon to varnishy seats."
"Gotter make up your mind quick," said Dave. "Lizzie's waiting."
Marigold reflected rapidly. She COULDN'T go alone to a strange church. And it would be so lonesome to stay home. The sand-dunes - the waves - the wind on the sea -
"I'll - go," she said helplessly.
"I knew you'd some gizzard in you. Atta girl," gloated Bill. "Let's scoot back and take off our proud rags. Jes' a minute, Dave."
A few minutes later they were running along the path through a scented field of hay on a short cut to the Dixons. Ordinarily Marigold felt she had wings on a day like this. Now she suddenly felt leaden-footed. But Billy must not suspect it. He would despise her if he found out she really did not care for all this lawlessness.
The Dixons' new car proved to be a very second-hand snub-nosed little Ford, into which they all piled and rattled and bounced down a narrow deep-rutted lane to the sand-dunes. Marigold sat on the knee of Mrs. Dixon, a big, pink, overblown lady who used what even Billy knew to be bad grammar, in a cheerful, excruciating voice. Marigold thought the bones would be shaken out of her before they got to the dunes.
It should have been a wonderful afternoon. Polly Dixon was a pretty, gentle little girl and Marigold liked her. They slid down the sand-hills and made shore pies and dug wells in the sand. They gathered clam-shells and went bathing in a little sand-cove up the shore where the water was like soft, warm, liquid turquoise. They played games with the boys. They laughed and ran and scampered. And under it all Marigold knew perfectly well that she was not having a good time. She was only trying to make herself think she was.
Even the lunch - to which she looked forward a little ashamedly after a week of Aunt Min's diet - was a disappointment. There was plenty of it - but Mrs. Dixon was not a good cook. Marigold ate stale sandwiches, and cookies that reeked of soda, and a piece of mushy lemon-pie. She always believed that she also ate two crickets that had got tangled up in the meringue of the pie. But Billy thought that feed was extra-x. "I wish to goodness I could eat some more but I can't," he sighed, bolting the last morsel of a gorgeous piece of cake whose iced surface was decorated with violent red-and-yellow candies.
3