Part 1 (1/2)
The Dull Miss Archinard.
by Anne Douglas Sedgwick.
CHAPTER I.
Peter Odd was fis.h.i.+ng. He stood knee-deep in a placid bend of stream, whipping the water deftly, his eyes peacefully intent on the floating fly, his mind in the musing, impersonal mood of fisherman reverie, no definite thought forming from the appreciative impressions of sunlit meadows, cool stretches of shade beneath old trees, gleaming curves of river. For a tired man, fis.h.i.+ng is an occupation particularly soothing, and Peter Odd was tired, tired and sad. His pleasure was now, perhaps, more that of the lover of nature than of the true sportsman, the pastoral feast of the landscape with its blue distance of wooded hill, more to him than the expected flas.h.i.+ng leap of a scarlet-spotted beauty; yet the att.i.tude of receptive intentness was pleasant in all its phases, no one weary thought could become dominant while the eyes rested on the water, or were raised to such loveliness of quiet English country. So much of what he saw his own too; the sense of proprietors.h.i.+p is, under such circ.u.mstances, an intimately pleasant thing, and although, where Odd stood at a wide curve of water, a line of hedge and tall beech-trees sloping down to the river marked the confines of his property just here, the woods and meadows before him were all his--to the blue hills on the sky almost, the park behind him stretched widely about Allersley Manor, and to the left the river ran for a very respectable number of miles through woods and meadows as beautiful. The sense of proprietors.h.i.+p was still new enough to give a little thrill, for the old squire had died only two years before, and the sorrow of loss had only recently roused itself to the realization of bequeathed responsibilities, to the realization that energies so called forth may perhaps make of life a thing well worth living. A life of quiet utility; to feel oneself of some earthly use; what more could one ask? The duties of a landowner in our strenuous days may well fill a man's horizon, and Odd was well content that they should do so; for the present at least; and he did not look beyond the present.
In his tweeds and waterproof knee-breeches and boots, a sun-burnt straw hat shading his thin brown face, his hand steady and dexterous, as brown and thin, he was a pleasing example of the English country-gentleman type. He was tall, with the flavor of easy strength and elegance that an athletic youth gives to the most awkwardly made man. His face was at once humorous and sad; it is strange how a humorous character shows itself through the saddest set of feature. Odd's long, rather acquiline nose and Vand.y.k.e beard made a decidedly melancholy silhouette on the sunlit water, yet all the lines of the face told of a kindly contemplation of the world's pathetic follies; the mouth was sternly cut yet very good-tempered, and its firm line held evident suggestions of quiet smiling.
Poor Peter Odd had himself committed a pathetic folly, and, as a result, smiles might be tinged with bitterness.
A captured trout presently demanded concentrated attention. The vigorous fish required long playing until worn out, when he was deftly secured in the landing-net and despatched with merciful prompt.i.tude; indeed, a little look of nervous distaste might have roused in an unsympathetic looker-on conjectures as to a rather weak strain--a foolish width of pity in Peter Odd's character.
”A beauty,” he mentally e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed. He sat down in the shade. It was hot; the long, thick gra.s.s invited a lolling rest.
On the other side of the hedge was a rustic bathing-cabin, and from it Odd heard the laughing chatter of young voices. The adjoining property was a small one belonging to a Captain Archinard. Odd had seen little of him; his wife was understood to be something of an invalid, and he had two girls--these their voices, no doubt. Odd took off his hat and mopped his forehead, looking at the little landing-wharf which he could just see beyond the hedge, and where one could moor boats or dive off into the deepness of the water. The latter form of aquatic exercise was probably about to take place, for Odd heard--
”I can swim beautifully already, papa,” in a confident young voice--a gay voice, quiet, and yet excited too by the prospect of a display of prowess.
A tall, thin girl of about fourteen stepped out on to the landing. A bathing-dress is not as a rule a very graceful thing, yet this child, her skirt to her knee, a black silk sash knotted around her waist, with her slim white legs and charming feet, was as graceful as a young Amazon on a Grecian frieze. A heavy ma.s.s of braids, coiled up to avoid a wetting, crowned her small head. She was not pretty; Odd saw that immediately, even while admiring the well-poised figure, its gallantly held little torso and light energy. Her profile showed a short nose and prominent chin, inharmoniously accentuated. She seemed really ugly when her sister joined her; the sister was beautiful. Odd roused himself a little from his half rec.u.mbency to look at the sister appreciatively.
Her slimness was exaggerated to an extreme--an almost fluttering lightness; her long arms and legs seemed to flash their whiteness on the green; she had an exquisite profile, and her soft black hair swept up into the same coronet of coils. Captain Archinard joined them as they stood side by side.
”You had better race,” he said, looking down into the water, and then away to the next band of shadow. ”Dive in, and race to that clump of aspens. This is a jolly bit for diving.”
”But, papa, we shall wet our hair fearfully,” said the elder girl--the ugly one--for so Odd already ungallantly designated her. ”We usually get in on this shallower side and swim off. We have never tried diving, for it takes so long to dry our hair. Taylor would not like it at all.”
”It is so deep, too,” said the beauty in rather a faltering voice--unfortunately faltering, for her father turned sharply on her.
”Afraid, hey? You mustn't be a coward, Hilda.”
”I am not afraid,” said the elder girl; ”but I never tried it. What must I do? Put my arms so, and jump head first?”
”There is nothing to do at all,” said the Captain, with some acidity of tone. ”Keep your mouth shut and strike out as you come up. You'll do it, Katherine, first try. Hilda is in a funk, I see.”
”Poor Hilda,” Odd e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed mentally. She was evidently in a funk.
Standing on the edge of the landing, one slim foot advanced in a tentative effort, she looked down shrinking into the water--very deeply black at this spot--and then, half entreatingly, half helplessly, at her father.
”Oh, papa, it is so deep,” she repeated.
The Captain's neatly made face showed signs of peevish irritation.
”Well, deep or not, in you go. I must break you of that craven spirit.
What are you afraid of? What could happen to you?”
”I--don't like water over my head--I might strike--on something.”
Tears were near the surface.
What a.s.ses people made of themselves, thought Odd, with their silly shows of authority. The more the father insisted, the more frightened the child became; couldn't the idiot see that? The tear-filled eyes and looks that showed a struggle between fear of her father's anger and fear of the deep, black pool, moved Odd to a sudden though half-amused resentment, for the little girl was certainly somewhat of a coward.