Why, Gideon, what has happened
to thee?” and saucepan in hand, she stared at her
husband’s cloudy brow.
“Tut—nothing!” he answered, thrusting a projecting
log into the fire with his foot. “The young man’s face
seemed—as I thought—’twas but a passing fancy—but
I thought it was familiar. It was the voice more than the
face. And a bold face it was. I wish,” he broke off,
“that the lass would come in. From to-night I will have[11]
no more wanderings after sunset! One stranger follows
another, and it is not safe for her to be out so late——”
“Hush!” interrupted the woman, holding up a forefinger.
“Here she comes.”
“Not a word!” said Gideon, warningly.
As he spoke the door opened, the dog bounded in with
a short yelp of satisfaction, and close behind him, framed
like a picture in the dark doorway, stood a young girl.
CHAPTER II.
She had evidently run some distance, for she stood panting
and breathless, the color coming and going on her face,
which shone out of the hood which half covered her head.
She was dressed in a plain cotton dress which a woodman’s
daughter might wear, and which was short enough
in the skirt to reveal a shapely foot, and scant enough in
the sleeves to show a white, shapely arm.
But no one would have wasted time upon either arm or
foot after a glance at her face.
To write it down simply and curtly, it was a beautiful
face; but such a description is far too meager and insufficient.
It requires an artist, a Rembrandt or a Gainsborough,
to describe it, no pen-and-ink work can do it.
Beautiful faces can be seen by the score by anyone who
chooses to walk through Hyde Park in the middle of the
season, but such a face as this which was enframed by the
doorway of the woodman’s hut is not seen in twenty seasons.
It was a face which baffles the powers of description, just
as a sunset sky laughs to scorn the brush of the ablest
painter. It was neither dark nor fair, neither grave nor
sad, though at the moment of its entrance a smile played
over it as the moonbeams play over a placid lake.
To catalogue in dry matter-of-fact fashion, the face
possessed dark brown eyes, bright brown hair, and red,
ripe lips; but no catalogue can give the spirit of the face,
no description convey an idea of the swift and eloquent
play of expression which, like a flash of sunlight, lit up
eyes and lips.
Beautiful! The word is hackneyed and worn out. Here[12]
was a face more than beautiful, it was soulful. Like the
still pool in the heart of a wood, it mirrored the emotion of
the heart as faithfully as a glass would reflect the face.
Like a glass—joy, sorrow, pleasure, mirth, were reflected
in the eloquent eyes and mobile lips.
Of concealment the face was entirely ignorant; no bird
of the forest in which she lived could be more frank, innocent
of guile, and ignorant of evil.
With her light summer cloak held round her graceful
figure, she stood in the doorway, a picture of grace and
youthful beauty.
For a moment she stood silent, looking from the woodman
to his wife questioningly, then she came into the
room and threw the hood back, revealing a shapely head,
shining, bronze-like, in the light of the lamp.
“Did you send Dick for me, father?” she said, and her
voice, like her face, betokened a refinement uncommon in
a woodman’s daughter. “I was not far off, only at the pool
to hear the frogs’ concert. Dick knows where to find me
now, he comes straight to the pond, though he hates frogs’
music; don’t you, Dick?”
The dog rubbed his nose against her hand and wagged
his tail, and the girl took her seat at the table.
To match face and voice, her mien and movements
were graceful, and she handled the dinner-napkin like—a
lady. It was just that, expressed in a word. The girl
was not only beautiful—but a lady, in appearance, in tone,
in bearing—and that, notwithstanding she wore a plain
cotton gown in a woodman’s hut, and called the woodman
“father.”
“You did not come by your usual path, father,” she said,
turning from the deerhound, who sat on his haunches and
rested his nose in her lap, quite content if her hand
touched his head, say once during the meal.
“No, Una,” he replied, and though he called her by her
Christian name, and without any prefix there was a subtle
undertone in his voice and in his manner of addressing
her, which seemed to infer something like respect. “No,
I went astray.”
“And you were late,” she said. “Was anything the matter?”[13]
she added, turning her eyes upon him, with, for the
first time, an air of interrogation.
“Matter? No,” he said, raising himself and coming to
the table. “What should be? Yes, I came home by another
path, and I don’t think you must come to meet me
after dark, Una,” he added, with affected carelessness.
“No?” she asked, looking from one to the other with a
smile of surprise. “Why not? Do you think I should get
lost, or have you seen any wolves in Warden Forest, father?
I know every path from end to end, and wolves have left
merry England forever.”
“Not quite,” said Gideon, absently.
“Yes, quite,” and she laughed. “What Saxon king was
it who offered fivepence for every wolf’s head? We were
reading about it the other night, don’t you remember?”
“Reading! you are always reading,” said the woman, as
she put a smoking dish on the table, and speaking for the
first time. “It’s books, books, from morn to night, and
your father encourages you. The books will make thee
old before thy time, child, and put no pence in thy
father’s pocket.”
“Poor father!” she murmured, and leaning forward, put
her arms round his neck. “I wish I could find in the poor,
abused books the way to make him rich.”
Gideon had put up his rough hand to caress the white one
nestling against his face, but he let his hand drop again
and looked at her with a slight cloud on his brow.
“Rich! who wants to be rich? The word is on your lips
full oft of late, Una. Do you want to be rich?”
“Sometimes,” she answered. “As much for your sake
as mine. I should like to be rich enough for you to rest,
and”—looking round the plainly furnished but comfortable
room—“and a better house and clothes.”
“I am not weary,” he said, his eyes fixed on her with
a thoughtful air of concealed scrutiny. “The cot is good
enough for me, and the purple and fine linen I want none
of. So much for me; now for yourself, Una?”
“For myself?” she said. “Well, sometimes I think,
when I have been reading some of the books, that I should
like to be rich and see the world.”
“It must be such a wonderful place! Not so wonderful[14]
as I think it, perhaps, and that’s just because I have
never seen anything of it. Is it not strange that for all
these years I have never been outside Warden?”
“Strange?” he echoed, reluctantly.
“Yes; are other girls so shut in and kept from seeing
the world that one reads so pleasantly of?”
“Not all. It would be well for most of them if they
were. It has been well for you.
1 comment