Anne of Windy Poplars - L. M. Montgomery [94]
‘She says I’ve got to be Ivy Trent’s beau!’ snarled Gerald.
‘So he has got to be!’ screamed Geraldine.
‘I won’t be –’
‘You’ve got to be –’
‘Children!’ said Anne.
Something in her tone quelled them. They looked at her and saw a Miss Shirley they had not seen before. For the first time in their young lives they felt the force of authority.
‘You, Geraldine,’ said Anne quietly, ‘will go to bed for two hours. You, Gerald, will spend the same length of time in the hall closet. Not a word! You have behaved abominably, and you must take your punishment. Your mother left you in my charge, and you will obey me.’
‘Then punish us together,’ said Geraldine, beginning to cry.
‘Yes. You’ve no right to sep’rate us. We’ve never been sep’rated,’ muttered Gerald.
‘You will be now.’ Anne was still very quiet.
Meekly Geraldine took off her clothes and got into one of the cots in their room. Meekly Gerald entered the hall closet. It was a large, airy closet with a window and a chair, and nobody could have called the punishment an unduly severe one. Anne locked the door and sat down with a book by the hall window. At least, for two hours she would know a little peace of mind.
A peep at Geraldine a few minutes later showed her to be sound asleep, looking so lovely in her sleep that Anne almost repented her sternness. Well, a nap would be good for her, anyway. When she wakened she should be permitted to get up, even if the two hours had not expired.
At the end of an hour Geraldine was still sleeping. Gerald had been so quiet that Anne decided that he had taken his punishment like a man, and might be forgiven. After all, Ivy Trent was a vain little monkey, and had probably been very annoying.
Anne unlocked the closet door and opened it. There was no Gerald in the closet. The window was open, and the roof of the side porch was just beneath it. Anne’s lips tightened. She went downstairs and out into the yard. No sign of Gerald. She explored the woodshed and looked up and down the street. Still no sign.
She ran through the garden and through the gate into the lane that led through a patch of scrub woodland to the little pond in Mr Robert Creedmore’s field. Gerald was happily poling himself about on it in the small flat Mr Creedmore kept there. Just as Anne broke through the trees Gerald’s pole, which he had stuck rather deep in the mud, came away with unexpected ease at his third tug, and Gerald promptly shot heels over head backward into the water.
Anne gave an involuntary shriek of dismay, but there was no real cause for alarm. The pond at its deepest would not come up to Gerald’s shoulders, and the spot where he had gone into it was little deeper than his waist. He had somehow got on to his feet, and was standing there rather foolishly, with his aureole plastered drippingly down on his head, when Anne’s shriek was re-echoed behind her, and Geraldine, in her nightgown, tore through the trees and out to the edge of the little wooden platform to which the flat was commonly moored.
With a despairing shriek of ‘Gerald!’ she took a flying leap that landed her with a tremendous splash by Gerald’s side, and almost gave him another ducking.
‘Gerald, are you drowned?’ cried Geraldine. ‘Are you drowned, darling?’
‘No…. no… darling,’ Gerald assured her, through his chattering teeth.
They embraced and kissed passionately.
‘Children, come in here this minute!’ said Anne.
They waded to the shore. The September day, warm in the morning, had turned cold and windy in the late afternoon. They shivered terribly; their faces were blue. Anne, without a word of censure, hurried them home, took off their wet clothes, and put them into Mrs Raymond’s bed, with hotwater bottles at their feet. They still continued to shiver. Had they got a chill? Were they heading