Cover
Morning at Jalna
Morning at Jalna
Mazo de la Roche
Dedication
To Jack and Tony Gray with my love
Contents
Contents
I -- The Home in the New Country
II -- The Visitors
III -- The Tutor
IV -- Night
V -- A Call on Wilmott
VI -- The Meeting
VII -- The Night Prowlers
VIII -- Up the River
IX -- Counterplots
X -- A Variety of Scenes
XI -- News from the South
XII -- Reward
XIII -- Departure
XIV -- The Visit Over
XV -- The Golden Pen
XVI -- Events of the Fall
XVII -- The Ivory Pen
XVIII -- A Night Visitor
XIX -- Doings of the Whiteoak Children
XX -- Punishment
XXI -- The Plan
XXII -- Voyage
XXIII -- The Search
XXIV -- The Runaways
XXV -- The Rescue
XXVI -- Tite and Belle
XXVII -- Another Voyage
I
I
The Home in the New Country
When the American Civil War broke out, this house Jalna, in Ontario, had been completed not many years before. The owner, Captain Whiteoak, and his family had been installed there since the birth of his second son. He and his Irish wife, Adeline Court, had come from India and romantically named the house after the military station to which his regiment there was assigned. Captain Whiteoak had been tired of the restraints of army life. He had longed for the freedom and space of the New World. Adeline Whiteoak always was eager for adventure. Now they felt themselves, if not actually pioneers, to be imbued with the spirit of pioneers, yet they had surrounded themselves with many of the amenities of the old land.
The house, a substantial one of a pleasing shade of brick, with green shutters and five tall chimneys, stood in a thousand acres of land only a few miles from Lake Ontario, the shores of which were deeply wooded and were the haunt of thousands of birds. The virgin soil was rich and prolific of its life-giving growth. Whatever was planted in it flourished with abandon.
The children of the Whiteoaks knew no life other than this free and healthy round of seasons. There were four of them — Augusta, Nicholas, Ernest, and the last comer, the baby Philip. (His father had gone back on his earlier determination to be the only Philip in the family.) The parents were indulgent with them, though at times severe in discipline. Their father would give them orders, when they displeased him, in a stern military voice. Their mother would sometimes, in exasperation, beat them with her own hands, for she had a fiery temper. The daughter, Augusta, suffered discipline with dignified resignation; Nicholas, with a certain haughtiness; Ernest, with tears and promises to be good. Philip, the baby, scarcely knew what it was to be crossed, and if he were, lay down on the floor and kicked and screamed.
On this summer day, husband and wife were looking forward, with not unmixed pleasure, to a visit from an American couple from South Carolina.
“I can’t understand,” Philip was saying, “why you are so concerned over this visit. The Sinclairs must take us as they find us. We have nothing to be ashamed of in the way we live. There is no finer house or better-run estate in this province, I’ll be bound.”
“But think what they are used to,” cried Adeline. “A huge plantation, with hundreds of slaves to wait on them — We don’t know the first thing about real elegance. We should have an entire suite to offer them, instead of one paltry bedroom and a cubbyhole for Mrs. Sinclair’s maid.”
“The guestroom is not paltry. It’s a fine room handsomely furnished. If they don’t like it they can lump it.”
“And how are you going to entertain Mr. Sinclair?” she demanded. “Escort him to view the turnip field? To inspect the twin calves?”
This conversation was interrupted by the noise of their two sons racing along the passage and clattering in their sturdy boots down the stairs. As Nicholas overtook Ernest, the little boy gave a shriek of pretended terror. Ordinarily this display of high spirits would have passed unnoticed by their parents but now Philip said, “They must not carry on like this after our visitors arrive.”
“Don’t worry,” said Adeline. “I am sending the older children to the Busbys for three days. I arranged it with Mrs. Busby yesterday.”
“Gussie knows how to behave herself,” remarked Philip.
“She would miss her brothers. I want an atmosphere of complete peace when the Sinclairs arrive. In Lucy Sinclair’s last letter she spoke of the sad state of her nerves.”
“Are you aware,” demanded Philip, “that the Busbys are completely on the side of the Yankees?”
“I have not told them,” she said, “who our visitors are. Simply that they are friends we made on our last trip to England.”
Philip was perturbed. “Elihu Busby would not like it. I’m certain of that.”
“The Sinclairs are not visiting him.” She spoke hotly. “Let him mind his own business.”
“The children will tell.”
“They’d better not,” she exclaimed. She gathered her three eldest about her.
“You are to spend three days with the Busbys,” she said.
“Hurrah,” cried Nicholas. “I’ve always wanted a visit to their farm. Everybody works but they always have time for fun.”
“Listen to me, children.” Adeline spoke in a tone of portentous warning. “You are not on any account to mention that our guests are from the South and may be bringing one or two servants with them.”
“Blackamoors!” exclaimed Nicholas. “I’ve never seen one and I’m dying to.”
“Are they dangerous?” asked Ernest.
“Of course not, you little ninny,” said his mother. “Remember to say that our guests are friends we met in England. I depend on you, Augusta.”
“I’ll remember,” Augusta promised, in her low voice that would become contralto, “but sooner or later the Busbys will find out.”
“Of course they will, but if they find out at once they’ll probably be so disgusted they’ll send you home again. Patsy will drive you to the Busbys’. Now go, and remember also your manners.”
She left them.
“Manners, my eye,” said Ernest. Augusta was shocked.
“Ernest, wherever did you hear that horrid expression?”
“I don’t know.”
“Well, you had better forget it. Come now and wash your face and brush your hair.” She took him by the hand.
Patsy O’Flynn, the Irish servant from Adeline’s old home who had accompanied the family to Canada, was waiting on