Angel Island eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 247 pages of information about Angel Island.

Angel Island eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 247 pages of information about Angel Island.

Clara never flew high.  It was apparent, however, that if she made a tremendous effort, she could take any height.  On the other hand, she flew more swiftly than either Lulu or Chiquita.  She seemed to keep by preference to the middle altitudes.  She hated wind and fog; she appeared only in calm and dry weather.  Perhaps this was because the wind interfered with her histrionics, the fog with the wavy complications of her red hair.  For she postured as she moved; whatever her hurry, she presented a picture, absolutely composed.  And her hair was always intricately arranged, always decked with leaves and flowers.

“By jiminy, I’d make my everlasting fortune off you,” Honey Smith once addressed her, as she flew over his head, “selling you to the moving-picture people.”

Wings straight up, legs straight out, arms straight ahead, delicately slender feet, and strong-looking hands dropping like flowers, her only answer to this remark was an enigmatic closing of her thick-lashed lids, a twist into a pose even more sensuously beautiful.

“Say, I’m tired waiting,” Ralph Addington growled one day, when the lovely trio flew over his head in a group.  “Why doesn’t that blonde of mine put in an appearance?  Oh, Clara, Lulu, Chiquita,” he called, “won’t you bring your peachy friend the next time you call?”

It was a long time, however, before the “peachy one” appeared.  Then suddenly one day a great jagged shadow enveloped them in its purple coolness.  The men looked up, startled.  She must have come upon them slowly and quietly, for she was close.  Her mischievous face smiled alluringly down at them from the wide triangle of her blue wings.

Followed an exhibition of flying which outdid all the others.

Dropping like a star from the zenith and dropping so close and so swiftly that the men involuntarily scattered to give her landing-room, she caught herself up within two feet of their heads and bounded straight up to the zenith again.  Up she went, and up and up until she was only a blue shimmer; and up and up and up until she was only a dark dot.  Then, without warning, again she dropped, gradually this time, head-foremost like’ a diver, down and down and down until her body was perfectly outlined, down and down and down until she floated just above their heads.

Coming thus slowly upon them, she gave, for the first time, a close view of her wonderful blondeness.  It was a sheer golden blondeness, not a hint of tow, or flaxen, or yellow; not a touch of silver, or honey, or auburn.  It was half her charm that the extraordinary strength and vigor of her contours contrasted with the delicacy and dewiness of her coloring, that from one aspect, she seemed as frail as a flower, from another as hard as a crystal.  She had, at the same time, the untouched, unstained beauty of the virgin girl, and the hard, muscular strength of the virgin boy.  Her skin, white as a lily-petal and as thick and smooth, had been deepened by a single

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Project Gutenberg
Angel Island from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.