A Daughter of the Forest by Evelyn Raymond (best classic novels txt) đ
- Author: Evelyn Raymond
- Performer: -
Book online «A Daughter of the Forest by Evelyn Raymond (best classic novels txt) đ». Author Evelyn Raymond
Adrian threw up his hands in protest.
âWhat sort of creature are you, anyway?â
âJust plain girl.â
âAnything but that!â
âWell, girl, without the adjective. Suits me rather better;â and she laughed in a way that proved she was not suffering from her mishap.
âThis is the strangest place I ever saw. You are the strangest family. We are certainly in the backwoods of Maine, yet you might be a Holyoke senior, or a circus star, orâa fairy.â
Margot stretched her long arms and looked at them quizzically.
âFairies donât grow so big. Why donât you sit down? Or, if you will, climb up and look toward the narrows on the north. See if Pierreâs birch is coming yet.â
Again Adrian glanced upward, to the flag floating there, and shrugged his shoulders.
âExcuse me, please. That is, I suppose I could do it, only seeing you slipâI prefer to wait awhile.â
âAre you afraid?â
There was no sarcasm in the question. She asked it in all sincerity. Adrian was different from Pierre, the only other boy she knew, and she simply wondered if tree-climbing were among his unknown accomplishments.
It had been, to the extent possible with his city training and his brief summer vacations, though unpracticed of late; but no lad of spirit, least of all impetuous Adrian, could bear even the suggestion of cowardice. He did not sit down, as she had bidden, but tossed aside his rough jacket and leaped to the lower branch of the pine.
âWhy, itâs easy! Itâs grand!â he called back and went up swiftly enough.
Indeed, it was not so difficult as it appeared from a distance. Wherever the branches failed the spiral ladder had been perfected by great spikes driven into the trunk and he had but to clasp these in turn to make a safe ascent. At the top he waved his hand, then shaded his eyes and peered northward.
âHeâs coming! Somebodyâs coming!â he shouted. âThereâs a little boat pushing off from that other shore.â
Then he descended with a rapidity that delighted even himself and called a bit of praise from Margot.
âIâm so glad you can climb. One can see so much more from the tree-tops; and, oh! there is so much, so much to find out all the time! Isnât there?â
âYes. Decidedly. One of the things Iâd like to find out first is who you are and how you came here. If youâre willing.â
Then he added, rather hastily: âOf course, I donât want to be impertinently curious. It only seems so strange to find such educated people buried here in the north woods. I donât see how you live here. IâIâââ
But the more he tried to explain the more confused he grew, and Margot merrily simplified matters by declaring:
âYou are curious, all the same, and so am I. Letâs tell each other all about everything and then weâll start straight without the bother of stopping as we go along. Do sit down and Iâll begin.â
âReady.â
âThereâs so little, I shanât be long. My dear mother was Cecily Dutton, my Uncle Hughâs twin. My father was Philip Romeyn, uncleâs closest friend. They were almost more than brothers to each other, always; though uncle was a student and, young as he was, a professor at Columbia. Papa was a business man, a banker, or a cashier in a bank. He wasnât rich, but mamma and uncle had money. From the time they were boys uncle and papa were fond of the woods. They were great hunters, then, and spent all the time they could get up here in northern Maine. After the marriage mamma begged to come with them, and it was her money bought this island, and the land along the shore of this lake as far as we can see from here. Much farther, too, of course, because the trees hide things. They built this log cabin and it cost a great, great deal to do it. They had to bring the workmen so far, but it was finished at last, and everything was brought up here to make itâjust as you see.â
âWhat an ideal existence!â
âWas it? I donât know much about ideals, though uncle talks of them sometimes. It was real, thatâs all. They were very, very happy. They loved each other so dearly. Angelique came from Canada to keep the house and she says my mother was the sweetest woman she ever saw. Oh! I wishâI wish I could have seen her! Or that I might remember her. Iâll show you her portrait. It hangs in my own room.â
âDid she die?â
âYes. When I was a year old. My father had passed away before that, and my mother was broken-hearted. Even for uncle and me she could not bear to live. It was my fatherâs wish that we should come up here to stay, and Uncle Hugh left everything and came. I was to be reared âin the wilderness, where nothing evil comes,â was what both my parents said. So I have been, andâthatâs all.â
Adrian was silent for some moments. The girlâs face had grown dreamy and full of a pathetic tenderness as it always did when she discussed her unknown father and mother, even with Angelique. Though, in reality, she had not been allowed to miss what she had never known. Then she looked up with a smile and observed:
âYour turn.â
âYesâIâsuppose so. May as well give the end of my story firstââ Iâm a runaway.â
âWhy?â
âNo matter why.â
âThat isnât fair.â
He parried the indignation of her look by some further questions of his own. âHave you always lived here?â
âAlways.â
âYou go to the towns sometimes, I suppose.â
âIâve never seen a town, except in pictures.â
âWhew! Donât you have any friends? Any girls come to see you?â
âI never saw a girl, only myself in that poor broken glass of Angeliqueâs; and, of course, the pictured onesâas of the townsâin the books.â
âYou poor child!â
Margotâs brown face flushed. She wanted nobodyâs pity and she had not felt that her life was a singular or narrow one, till this outsider came. A wish very like Angeliqueâs, that he had stayed where he belonged, arose in her heart, but she dismissed it as inhospitable.
âIâm not poor. Not in the least. I have everything any girl could want and I haveâuncle! He is the best, the wisest, the noblest man in all the world. I know it, and so Angelique says. Sheâs been in your towns, if you please. Lived in them and says she never knew what comfort meant until she came to Peace Island and us. You donât understand.â
Margot was more angry than she had ever been, and anger made her decidedly uncomfortable. She sprang up hastily, saying:
âIf youâve nothing to tell, I must go. I want to get into the forest and look after my friends there. The storm may have hurt them.â
She was off down the mountain, as swift and sure-footed as if it were not a rough pathway that made him blunder along very slowly. For he followed, at once, feeling that he had not been âfair,â as she had accused, in his report of himself; and that only a complete confidence was due these people who had treated him so kindly.
âMargot! Margot! Wait a minute! Youâre too swift for me! I want toâââ
Just there he caught his foot in a running vine, stumbled over a hidden rock, and measured his length, head downward, on the slope. He was not hurt, however, though vexed and mortified. But when he had picked himself up and looked around the girl had vanished.
CHAPTER VII A WOODLAND MENAGERIEâHoo-ah! Yo-ho! H-e-r-e! Thisâway!â
Adrian followed the voice. It led him aside into the woods on the eastern slope, and it was accompanied by an indescribable babel of noises. Running water, screaming of wild fowl, cooing of pigeons, barking of dogs or some other beasts, cackling, chattering, laughter.
All the sounds of wild life had ceased suddenly in the tree-tops, as Adrian approached, recognizing and fearing his alien presence. But they were reassured by Margotâs familiar summons, and soon the âmenagerieâ he had suspected was gathered about her.
âWhew! It just rains squirrelsâand chipmunksâand birds! Hello! Thatâs a fawn. Thatâs a fox! As sure as Iâm alive, a magnificent red fox! Why isnât he eating the whole outfit? Andââ Hurra!â
To the amazement of the watcher there came from the depths of the woods a sound that always thrills the pulses of any hunterâthe cry of a moose-calf, accompanied by a soft crashing of branches, growing gradually louder.
âSo they tame even the mooseâthese wonderful people! What next!â and as Adrian leaned forward the better to watch the advance of this uncommon âpet,â the ânextâ concerning which he had speculated also approached. Slowly up the river bank, stalked a pair of blue herons, and for them Margot had her warmest welcome.
âHeigho, XanthippĂ©, Socrates! What laggards! But hereâs your breakfast, or one of them. I suppose youâve eaten the other long ago. Indeed, youâre always eating, gourmands!â
The red fox eyed the newcomers with a longing eye and crept cautiously to his mistressâ side as she coaxed the herons nearer. But she was always prepared for any outbreak of nature among her forest friends, and drew him also close to her with the caressing touch she might have bestowed upon a beloved house-dog.
âReynard, you beauty! Your head in my lap, sir;â and dropping to a sitting posture, she forced him to obey her. There he lay, winking but alert, while she scattered her store of good things right and left. There were nuts for the squirrels and âmunks, grains and seeds for the winged creatures, and for the herons, as well as Reynard, a few bits of dried meat. But for Browser, the moose-calf, she pulled the tender twigs and foliage with a lavish hand. When she had given some dainty to each of her oddly assorted pets, she sprang up, closed the box, and waved her arms in dismissal. The more timid of the creatures obeyed her, but some held their ground persistently, hoping for greater favors. To these she paid no further attention, and still keeping hold of Reynardâs neck started back to her human guest.
The fox, however, declined to accompany her. He distrusted strangers and it may be had designs of his own upon some other forest wilding.
âThatâs the worst of it. We tame them and they love us. But they are only conquered, not changed. Isnât Reynard beautiful? Doesnât he look noble? as noble as a St. Bernard dog? If youâll believe me, that fellow is thoroughly acquainted with every one of Angeliqueâs fowls, and knows he must never, never touch them, yet heâd eat one, quick as a flash, if he got a chance. Heâs a coward, though; and by his cowardice we manage him. Sometimes;â sighed Margot, who had led the way into a little path toward the lake.
âHow odd! You seem actually grieved at this state of things.â
âWhy shouldnât I be? I love him and I have a notion that love will do anything with anybody or anything. I do believe it will, but that I havenât found just the right way of showing it. Uncle laughs at me, a little, but helps me all he can. Indeed, it is he who has tamed most of our pets. He says it is the very best way to study natural history.â
âHmm. He intends your education shall be complete!â
âOf course. But one thing troubles him. He cannot teach me music. And you seem surprised. Arenât girls, where you come from, educated? Doesnât everybody prize knowledge?â
âThat depends. Our girls are educated, of course. They go to college and all that, but I think youâd down any of them in
Comments (0)