第7章
Presently he heard a faint rustle at the other end of the room, and he turned.A sudden tremulousness swept along his pulses, and then they seemed to pause; he drew a deep breath that was almost a sigh, and remained motionless.
He had no preconceived idea of falling in love with Miss Sally at first sight, nor had he dreamed such a thing possible.Even the girlish face that he had seen in the locket, although it had stirred him with a singular emotion, had not suggested that.And the ideal he had evolved from it was never a potent presence.But the exquisitely pretty face and figure before him, although it might have been painted from his own fancy of her, was still something more and something unexpected.All that had gone before had never prepared him for the beautiful girl who now stood there.
It was a poor explanation to say that Miss Sally was four or five years older than her picture, and that later experiences, enlarged capacity, a different life, and new ambition had impressed her youthful face with a refined mobility; it was a weird fancy to imagine that the blood of those who had died for her had in some vague, mysterious way imparted an actual fascination to her, and he dismissed it.But even the most familiar spectator, like Sophy, could see that Miss Sally had the softest pink complexion, the silkiest hair, that looked as the floss of the Indian corn might look if curled, or golden spider threads if materialized, and eyes that were in bright gray harmony with both; that the frock of India muslin, albeit home-made, fitted her figure perfectly, from the azure bows on her shoulders to the ribbon around her waist; and that the hem of its billowy skirt showed a foot which had the reputation of being the smallest foot south of Mason and Dixon's Line! But it was something more intangible than this which kept Courtland breathless and silent.
"I'm not Miss Miranda Dows," said the vision with a frankness that was half childlike and half practical, as she extended a little hand, "but I can talk 'fahm' with yo' about as well as aunty, and Ireckon from what Major Reed says heah," holding up the letter between her fingers, "as long as yo' get the persimmons yo' don't mind what kind o' pole yo' knock 'em down with."The voice that carried this speech was so fresh, clear, and sweet that I am afraid Courtland thought little of its bluntness or its conventional transgressions.But it brought him his own tongue quite unemotionally and quietly."I don't know what was in that note, Miss Dows, but I can hardly believe that Major Reed ever put my present felicity quite in that way."Miss Sally laughed.Then with a charming exaggeration she waved her little hand towards the sofa.
"There! Yo' naturally wanted a little room for that, co'nnle, but now that yo' 've got it off,--and mighty pooty it was, too,--yo'
can sit down." And with that she sank down at one end of the sofa, prettily drew aside a white billow of skirt so as to leave ample room for Courtland at the other, and clasping her fingers over her knees, looked demurely expectant.
"But let me hope that I am not disturbing you unseasonably," said Courtland, catching sight of the fateful little slipper beneath her skirt, and remembering the window."I was so preoccupied in thinking of your aunt as the business manager of these estates that I quite forget that she might have a lady's hours for receiving.""We haven't got any company hours," said Miss Sally, "and we haven't just now any servants for company manners, for we're short-handed in the fields and barns.When yo' came I was nailing up the laths for the vines outside, because we couldn't spare carpenters from the factory.But," she added, with a faint accession of mischief in her voice, "yo' came to talk about the fahm?""Yes," said Courtland, rising, "but not to interrupt the work on it.Will you let me help you nail up the laths on the wall? Ihave some experience that way, and we can talk as we work.Do oblige me!"The young girl looked at him brightly.
"Well, now, there's nothing mean about THAT.Yo' mean it for sure?""Perfectly.I shall feel so much less as if I was enjoying your company under false pretenses.""Yo' just wait here, then."
She jumped from the sofa, ran out of the room, and returned presently, tying the string of a long striped cotton blouse--evidently an extra one of Sophy's--behind her back as she returned.
It was gathered under her oval chin by a tape also tied behind her, while her fair hair was tucked under the usual red bandana handkerchief of the negro housemaid.It is scarcely necessary to add that the effect was bewitching.
"But," said Miss Sally, eying her guest's smartly fitting frock-coat, "yo' 'll spoil yo'r pooty clothes, sure! Take off yo'r coat--don't mind me--and work in yo'r shirtsleeves."Courtland obediently flung aside his coat and followed his active hostess through the French window to the platform outside.Above them a wooden ledge or cornice, projecting several inches, ran the whole length of the building.It was on this that Miss Sally had evidently found a foothold while she was nailing up a trellis-work of laths between it and the windows of the second floor.Courtland found the ladder, mounted to the ledge, followed by the young girl, who smilingly waived his proffered hand to help her up, and the two gravely set to work.But in the intervals of hammering and tying up the vines Miss Sally's tongue was not idle.Her talk was as fresh, as quaint, as original as herself, and yet so practical and to the purpose of Courtland's visit as to excuse his delight in it and her own fascinating propinquity.Whether she stopped to take a nail from between her pretty lips when she spoke to him, or whether holding on perilously with one hand to the trellis while she gesticulated with the hammer, pointing out the divisions of the plantation from her coign of vantage, he thought she was as clear and convincing to his intellect as she was distracting to his senses.