confirmed Dr. Trentâs diagnosis she would be taken to specialists in Toronto and Montreal. Uncle Benjamin would foot the bill with a splendid gesture of munificence in thus assisting the widow and orphan, and talk forever after of the shocking fees specialists charged for looking wise and saying they couldnât do anything. And when the specialists could do nothing for her Uncle James would insist on her taking Purple PillsââIâve known them to effect a cure when all the doctors had given upââand her mother would insist on Redfernâs Blood Bitters, and Cousin Stickles would insist on rubbing her over the heart every night with Redfernâs Liniment on the grounds that it might do good and couldnât do harm; and everybody else would have some pet dope for her to take. Dr. Stalling would come to her and say solemnly, âYou are very ill. Are you prepared for what may be before you?ââalmost as if he were going to shake his forefinger at her, the forefinger that had not grown any shorter or less knobbly with age. And she would be watched and checked like a baby and never let do anything or go anywhere alone. Perhaps she would not even be allowed to sleep alone lest she die in her sleep. Cousin Stickles or her mother would insist on sharing her room and bed. Yes, undoubtedly they would.
It was this last thought that really decided Valancy. She could not put up with it and she wouldnât. As the clock in the hall below struck twelve, Valancy suddenly and definitely made up her mind that she would not tell anybody. She had always been told, ever since she could remember, that she must hide her feelings. âIt is not ladylike to have feelings,â Cousin Stickles had once told her disapprovingly. Well, she would hide them with a vengeance.
But though she was not afraid of death she was not indifferent to it. She found that she resented it; it was not fair that she should have to die when she had never lived. Rebellion flamed up in her soul as the dark hours passed byânot because she had no future but because she had no past.
âIâm poorâIâm uglyâIâm a failureâand Iâm near death,â she thought. She could see her own obituary notice in the Deerwood Weekly Times, copied into the Port Lawrence Journal. âA deep gloom was cast over Deerwood, etc., etc.âââleaves a large circle of friends to mourn, etc., etc., etc.ââlies, all lies. Gloom, forsooth! Nobody would miss her. Her death would not matter a straw to anybody. Not even her mother loved herâher mother who had been so disappointed that she was not a boyâor at least, a pretty girl.
Valancy reviewed her whole life between midnight and the early spring dawn. It was a very drab existence, but here and there an incident loomed out with a significance out of all proportion to its real importance. These incidents were all unpleasant in one way or another. Nothing really pleasant had ever happened to Valancy.
âIâve never had one wholly happy hour in my lifeânot one,â she thought. âIâve just been a colorless nonentity. I remember reading somewhere once that there is an hour in which a woman might be happy all her life if she could but find it. Iâve never found my hourânever, never. And I never will now. If I could only have had that hour Iâd be willing to die.â
Those significant incidents kept bobbing up in her mind like unbidden ghosts, without any sequence of time or place. For instance, that time when, at sixteen, she had blued a tubful of clothes too deeply. And the time when, at eight, she had âstolenâ some raspberry jam from Aunt Wellingtonâs pantry. Valancy never heard the last of those two misdemeanors. At almost every clan gathering they were raked up against her as jokes. Uncle Benjamin hardly ever missed re-telling the raspberry jam incidentâhe had been the one to
Alexa Wilder, Raleigh Blake