Deadham Hard eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 604 pages of information about Deadham Hard.

Deadham Hard eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 604 pages of information about Deadham Hard.

Young Tom Verity, having no convenient armour-plating of stupidity, suffered its influence intimately as—­looking about him with quick enquiring glances—­he followed the man-servant across it between the dumpy pillars.  He felt self-conscious and disquieted, as by a smile of silent amusement upon some watchful elderly face.  So impressed, indeed, was he that, on reaching the door, he paused, letting the man pass on alone to announce him.  He wanted time in which to get over this queer sensation of shyness, before presenting himself to the company assembled, there, in the garden outside.

Yet he was well aware that the prospect out of doors—­its amplitude of mellow sunlight and of space, its fair windless calm in which no leaf stirred—­was far more attractive than the room in the doorway of which he thus elected to linger.

For the glass-door gave directly on to an extensive lawn, set out, immediately before the house front, with scarlet and crimson geraniums in alternating square and lozenge-shaped beds.  Away on the right a couple of grey-stemmed ilex trees—­the largest in height and girth Tom had ever seen—­cast finely vandyked and platted shadow upon the smooth turf.  Beneath them, garden chairs were stationed and a tea-table spread, at which four ladies sat—­one, the elder, dressed in crude purple, the other three, though of widely differing ages and aspect, in light coloured summer gowns.

To the left of the lawn, a high plastered wall—­masked by hollies, bay, yew, and at the far end by masses of airy, pink-plumed tamarisk—­shut off the eastward view.  But straight before him all lay open, “clean away to the curve of the world” as he told himself, not without a pull of emotion remembering his impending voyage.  For, about sixty yards distant, the lawn ended abruptly in a hard straight line—­the land cut off sheer, as it seemed, at the outer edge of a gravelled terrace, upon which two small antiquated cannon were mounted, their rusty muzzles trained over swirling blue-green tide river and yellow-grey, high-cambered sand-bar out to sea.

Between these innocuous engines of destruction, little black cannon balls had been piled into a mimic pyramid, near to which three men stood engaged in desultory conversation.  One of them, Tom observed as markedly taller, more commanding and distinguished in bearing, than his companions.  Even from here, the whole length of the lawn intervening, his presence, once noted, became of arresting importance, focussing attention as the central interest, the one thing which vitally mattered in this gracious scene—­his figure silhouetted, vertically, against those long horizontal lines of river, sand-bar, and far-away delicate junction of opal-tinted sea with opal-tinted sky.

Whereupon Tom became convicted of the agreeable certainty that no disappointment awaited him.  His expectations were about to receive generous fulfilment.  This visit would prove well worth while.  So absorbed, indeed, was he in watching the man whom he supposed—­and rightly—­to be his host, that he failed to notice one of the ladies rise from the tea-table and advance across the lawn, until her youthful white-clad form was close upon him, threading its way between the glowing geranium beds.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Deadham Hard from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.