Wrecked but not Ruined by R. M. Ballantyne (best manga ereader .TXT) đ
- Author: R. M. Ballantyne
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On the two âladiesâ thus addressed Redding and his man had been gazing in silent surprise, for they were so good-looking and so blooming, that it seemed to the two men, who had been accustomed of late to the sight of none but the brown dames of the red skins, as if a couple of beings from another and a purer world had dropped suddenly upon their path. One of the two was evidently a lady, and was possessed of no common share of beauty. Her dark hair contrasted powerfully with the fairness of her skin and the whiteness of her teeth. Her dazzling black eyes almost, and her red lips altogether, laughed as she observed Reddingâs gaze of astonishment. Her companion, a very pretty Canadian girl, was evidently her maid.
âWe owe you many thanks, kind sirs,â said the lady, âfor your opportune assistance.â
âPardon me, madam,â said Redding, hastening forward in some confusion as he recovered from his rather rude stare of surprise, âI dwell in the wilderness and have been so unaccustomed of late to the sight of ladies thatâthatâallow me to assist you into the sleigh!â
âMademoiselle, permettez moi,â said Le Rue, advancing to the waiting-maid and politely offering his hand.
Another moment and the âladiesâ were seated in the vehicle and carefully repacked by our travellers, while their Irish driver mounted to his seat in front and gathered up the reins.
âThanks, gentlemen, many thanks,â repeated the ladies, with bewitching smiles.
âGood luck to âee both,â cried the driver, as he flourished his whip and drove away.
Redding and his man stood silently gazing for several minutes at the turn in the road where the vision had vanished.
âHeaven for two minits, anâ nowâgone for evair!â said Le Rue, with a deep sigh.
Redding echoed the sigh, and then laughed at the lugubrious expression of his manâs face.
âOh such eyes!â exclaimed Le Rue.
âYes, sheâs rather good-looking,â replied Redding, thinking of the lady.
âGood-looking! nonâbootifoolâexiquitely bootifool,â cried Le Rue, thinking of the maid.
Again Redding laughed. âWell well, François,â said he, âwhether good-looking or beautiful matters little, for itâs not likely that we shall ever see them again, so the less you think about them the better.âAllons! we are late enough and must not loiter.â
They pushed ahead at once at a rapid pace, but although neither spoke, each thought with somewhat similar feelings of the little incident just described.
Lest the reader should be surprised at so small a matter affecting them so deeply, we must remark that these fur-traders had lived for some years in a region where they saw no females except the brown and rather dirty squaws of the Indians who visited the Cliff Fort with furs. Their fort was indeed only three daysâ journey from the little settlement of Partridge Bay, but as the space which lay between was a particularly rugged part of the wilderness, with only a portion of roadâunworthy of the nameâhere and there, and the greater part of the way only passable on foot or by means of dog-sledges, none but an occasional red man or a trapper went to and fro; and as the nature of the fur-traderâs business called for very little intercourse with the settlementsâtheir furs being sent by water to Quebec in summerâit followed that the inhabitants of the Cliff Fort rarely visited Partridge Bay. The sudden vision, therefore, of two pretty females of a higher type had not only the effect on Redding and his man of novelty, but also stirred up old memories and associations.
Such good use did they now make of their time that the settlement of Partridge Bay was reached before dark, and our hero went off immediately in quest of the surveyor.
Mr Gambart was a cheerful, healthy, plump little man, with a plump little wife, and three plump little daughters. Plumpness was not only a characteristic of the Gambarts, but also of their surroundings, for the cottage in which they dwelt had a certain air of plumpness about it, and the spot on which it stood was a round little knob of a hill.
Here Reginald Redding was hospitably receivedâwe might almost say joyfully, because visitors to the settlement were so rare that whoever made his appearance was sure to be received as a âwelcome guestâ if he only carried the credentials of honesty and ordinary good nature on his countenance.
Reddingâs impatience, however, to get at the truth of the matter that had brought him there, induced him very soon to forsake the society of the three plump little daughters and retire to the plump little fatherâs work-room.
âIt is my opinion,â said Mr Gambart, as he carefully unfolded the plan, âthat you may find the McLeods have trespassed somewhat on your reserves, for, if my memory serves me rightly, there is a small isletâas you see hereâjust in the centre of the creek, half of which belongs to you.â
âI see it,â said the fur-trader, earnestly gazing on the dot which represented the said island.
âWell,â continued the surveyor, âthat islet is a mere rock just above the waterfall, and I am of opinion that it would be almost impossible for any one to erect a mill there without encroaching to some extent on your half of it.â
âGood,â replied the fur-trader, âcan you let me have a copy of the plan to-morrow?â
âTo-night if you please. I have one by me.â
âThen Iâll be off by daybreak the day after to-morrow,â said Redding, with much decision.
âWhy such haste?â asked the surveyor, âthe McLeods are not likely to run away from you. I know them well, for they dwelt long in this settlement, and were ever regarded as men of firm purposeâquite immovable indeed when once they had made up their minds on any point, so youâll be sure to find them at Jenkins Creek carrying out their plans, even though you should delay your return for a month. Come, make up your mind to stay with us at least a few days. It will do you as well as me good, and will send you back to banishment in a better frame of mind.â
Redding, although strongly tempted by the comforts of civilised life and the hospitality of his hostânot to mention the attractions of the plump little daughtersâsternly resolved not to swerve an inch from the path of what he believed to be his duty. He entertained a strong suspicion that these McLeods had penetrated into the wilderness to the neighbourhood of the Cliff Fort, not so much for the purpose of cutting timber as for secret opposition in the fur-trade, of which the company he represented had for many years enjoyed almost a monopoly. His pride was touched, his spirit was fired. Perhaps the peaceful and secluded life he had led rendered this little opportunity of warfare more a pleasure than a pain to him. At all events the thing was not to be tolerated. The saw-mill, which the McLeods had an undoubted right to erect on the unoccupied lands, was being planted on the very border of the Companyâs reserve lands, which they had purchased, and which were clearly laid down in plans. He would see to it that these interlopers did not trespass by an inchâno, not by an eighth of an inchâif he had power to prevent it! The fact that the McLeods were said to be resolute men made him more determined to assert his rights. He therefore declined Mr Gambartâs invitation firmly.
âI will stay,â said he, âonly one day, to look out for a house, and then return.â
âLook out for a house!â exclaimed the surveyor, in surprise, âwhat mean you? Do you think of settling down here?â
âIndeed I do,â replied Redding, with a smile. âI have long been brooding over that subject. The fact is, Mr Gambart, that I am tired of solitude. I am a sociable being, and find it hard to endure the society of only five or six men in a place where there are no women, no children, and no end of bears! I intend to leave the Fur Companyâs service,âindeed my resignation is already sent in,âpurchase a small farm here, and getââ
âGet a wife, a horse, a dog, and a gun, and settle down to enjoy yourself, eh?â interrupted the surveyor.
âWell, I had not gone quite so much into details,â answered Redding, with a laugh, âbut you are right in so far as settling down goes. My only fear is that it wonât be easy to find a place that will at once suit my fancy and my purse. The small sum of money left me by my father at his death two years ago will not purchase a very extensive place, butââ
âI know the very thing to suit you,â interrupted the surveyor with emphasis, âa splendid little cottageâquite a mansion in miniatureâwith garden, fences, fields, outhouses, etcetera, all complete and going literally for an old song. Come, weâll âgo visit it by the pale moonlightâ just now, return to have tea with the ladies, and to-morrow weâll go see it by daylight. It is close at hand, the name is Loch Dhu, and it has only one objection.â
âWhat may that be?â asked Redding, much amused at the abrupt little manâs energy.
âWonât tell you till youâve seen it; come.â
Without more ado they sallied forth and walked along the snowy track that led to the cottage in question. A few minutes sufficed to bring them to it, and the first glance showed the fur-trader that his friend had not exaggerated the beauty of the place. The cottage, although small, was so elegant in form and so tastefully planned in every respect that it well deserved the title of a mansion in miniature. It stood on a rising ground which was crowned with trees; and the garden in front, the summer-house, the porch, the trellis-work fence, the creepers, the flower-bedsâeverything in fact, told that it had been laid out and planned by a refined mind.
Of course Redding had to call in the aid of his imagination a little, for at the moment when he first beheld it, the whole scene was robed in a mantle of snow. Close to the house, and in sight of the front windows, was a small lake or pond, by the side of which rose an abrupt precipice of about fifty feet in height. Beyond this, a little to the right, lay the undulating fields of the settlement, dotted with clumps of trees and clusters of cottages.
âMost beautiful!â exclaimed the fur-trader, âbut why named Loch Dhu, which, if I mistake not, is the Gaelic for Black Lake?â
âBecause that little pond,â answered the surveyor, âwhen freed from its wintry coat, looks dark and deep even at mid-day under the shadow of that beetling cliff.â
âTruly, I like it well,â said Redding, as he turned again to look at the cottage, âare you its architect?â
âI am,â answered Mr Gambart, âbut a greater mind than mine guided my pencil in the process of its creation.â
âIndeed! and what is the objection to it that you spoke of?â
âThat,â replied the surveyor, with a mysterious look, âI must, on second thoughts, decline to tell you.â
âHow, then, can you expect me to buy the place?â demanded Redding, in surprise.
âWhy, because I, a disinterested friend, strongly recommend you to do so. You believe in me. Well, I tell you that there is no objection to the place but one, and that one wonât prove to be an objection in the long run, though it is one just now. The price is, as you know, ridiculously small, first, because the family who owned it have been compelled by reverses of fortune to part with it, and are in urgent need of ready cash; and, secondly, because few people have yet found out the beauties of this paradise, which will one day become a very important district of Canada.â
âHumph, well, I believe in your friendship, and to some extent in your wisdom, though I doubt your capacity to prophesy,â said Redding. âHowever,
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