It was on one of the cool, brilliant
days which early June brings to the Narragansett country,
that the steamer “Eolus” pushed out from
Wickford Pier on her afternoon trip to Newport.
The sky was of a beautiful translucent blue; the sunshine
had a silvery rather than a golden radiance.
A sea-wind blew up the Western Passage, so cool as
to make the passengers on the upper deck glad to draw
their wraps about them. The low line of the mainland
beyond Conanicut and down to Beaver Tail glittered
with a sort of clear-cut radiance, and seemed lifted
a little above the water. Candace Arden heard
the Captain say that he judged, from the look of things,
that there was going to be a change of weather before
long.
Captain Peleg King was a great favorite
on his line of travel. He had a pleasant, shrewd
face, grizzled hair, a spare, active figure; and he
seemed to notice every one of his passengers and to
take an interest in them.
“Going down to Newport, Miss?”
he said to Candace, after giving her one or two quick
looks.
The question was superfluous, for
the “Eolus” went nowhere else except to
Newport; but it was well-meant, for the Captain thought
that Candace seemed lonely and ill at ease, and he
wished to cheer her.
“Yes, sir,” she answered, shyly.
“Your folks there for the summer?” he
went on.
“No, sir; I’m going to stay with my cousin
Mrs. Gray.”
“Mrs. Courtenay Gray you mean,
I guess. Well, it’s queer, but I sort er
thought that you favored her a little. She’s
down early this year. I fetched her and the family
across on my evening trip more’n two weeks ago.
Mrs. Gray’s a mighty nice lady; I’m always
pleased when she comes aboard. Wouldn’t
you like to take a seat in the wheel-house, Miss?
The wind’s blowing pretty fresh.”
Candace was not aware that this was
a distinguishing attention which the Captain did not
pay everybody, and which she owed partly to her connection
with Mrs. Gray and partly to her solitary look, which
had touched Captain Peleg’s benevolent heart.
He had a girl of his own “over to Wickford,”
who was about the same age; and it made him “kind
of tender” toward other girls who didn’t
seem to have any one to look after them. But
the wind was fresh, and it was pleasant to be
spoken to and noticed by some one on this, the first
long journey of her short life; so she thankfully
accepted the Captain’s invitation, and let him
escort her along the deck, and assist her to mount
the two steps which led into the wheel-house.
It was rather a pleasant-looking place
in which she found herself. Three sides of the
little enclosure were lined with windows, through which
the green shores, which seemed to be rapidly drifting
past them, could be seen. The fourth side was
filled with a long cushioned bench. In the middle
of the glassed front was the big brass wheel, shining
with polish and friction, and revolving artistically
in the hands of its steersman, who kept his eye fixed
alternately on the water and on his compass.
There seemed to be no regulation against speaking to
this “man at the wheel,” or if there were,
it was not strictly regarded; for two young ladies,
who were already ensconced in one corner of the long
seat, were plying him with all manner of questions.
They were rather pretty girls of that
hard modern type which carries the air of knowing
everything worth the knowing, having a right to everything
worth the having, and being fully determined to claim
that right to its fullest extent. As Candace
entered, they favored her with one rapid, scrutinizing
glance that took in every detail of her apparel, from
the goat-skin boots which were too large for her feet
to the round hat whose every bow bore witness to a
country milliner, and after that they noticed her
no more.
She, for her part, only too glad to
be left unnoticed, looked shyly out of the corners
of her eyes at them. They seemed to her inexpressibly
stylish; for their tailor-made suits, though almost
as plain as her own dress and jacket of blue alpaca,
had that perfect fit and finish which makes the simplest
dress seem all that can be desired. There was
a knowing look to each little detail, from the slender
silver bangles which appeared beneath the loose wrinkled
wrists of their very long gloves to the tortoise-shell
pins with which their hats were fastened to the tightly
braided hair coiled low down on the nape of the neck.
Candace’s hair fell in curls to her waist.
She had always worn it so, and no one had ever thought
anything about it; but now, all in a moment, she felt
that it was wrong and improper.
“Been up to New York, Miss Joy?” said
the Captain.
“No; only as far as the Junction,
to meet a friend,” replied the prettier of the
two girls. “Why weren’t you on the
boat this morning, Captain?”
“I was on the boat. I never
miss a trip, except sometimes the night one in the
summer-time, when the sleeping-train is a running.
I don’t always come over in that. Let me
see, how did I come to miss you to-day?”
“Oh, I sat in the ladies’
cabin all the way, not on deck. But I didn’t
see you when we landed.”
“Well, I don’t know how
it happened, I’m sure. Are your folks down
for the season?”
“Yes: that is, mamma and
I and my brother are here; my married sister won’t
come till next month.” Then she turned to
her friend, but without lowering her voice.
“You can’t think how dull
it’s been, Ethel: no men, no dinners; nothing
going on as yet. The Casino is only just opened,
and people haven’t begun to go there. We
tried to get up a tennis match, but there weren’t
enough good players to make it worth while. There’s
absolutely nothing. Mrs. Courtenay Gray had a
girls’ lunch on Tuesday; but that is all, and
that didn’t count for much.”
“That’s Georgie Gray’s mother, isn’t
it? Is she there?”
“Oh, yes, she and
Gertrude, all the Grays. They’re as nice
and delightful as can be, of course, but somehow they’re
so literary and quiet, and Mrs. Gray is awfully particular
about the girls. She makes them keep on with
studying all summer, and she’s so exclusive, she
won’t let them visit half the new people.”
“Gracious! why not?”
“Oh, I don’t know, she
says they’re not good form, and all that; but
I’m sure she knows queer people enough herself.
There is that tiresome old Miss Gisborne down in Washington
Street, the girls are forever going there;
and I’ve seen them myself ever so many times
coming out of the Hares’, and they
take boarders!”
“Fancy! How extraordinary! Oh, there
are the frigates!”
For the “Eolus,” leaving
the wooded, wall-like bank of Gould’s Island
behind, and rounding a point, had now reached the small
curving bay to the eastward of Coasters’ Harbor,
where lay the training-ships, the “New Hampshire”
and the “Minnesota.” It was a beautiful
sight, the two great war-vessels at anchor,
with their tall tapering spars and flying flags reflected
in the water on which they floated. Lines of glinting
white flashed along the decks; for it was “wash-day,”
and the men’s clothes were drying in the sun.
Two or three barges were disembarking visitors at
the gangway ladders, and beyond them a sail-boat was
waiting its turn to do the same. On the pier
a file of blue-uniformed boys were marching with measured
tread. The sound of their feet came across the
distance like the regular beat of a machine.
A girl in a row-boat was just pushing out from the
farther beach, above which rose a stone house covered
with vines.
“That’s Miss Isherwood,”
said one of the young ladies. “She’s
a splendid rower, and Tom says she swims as well as
he does.”
The whole scene was like enchantment
to Candace, who had lived all her life among the hills
of Connecticut, and had never till that day seen the
ocean. She was much too shy to ask questions,
but she sat like one in a dream, taking in with wide-open
eyes all the details of the charming view, the
shores, broken by red-roofed villas and cottages rising
from clouds of leafy greenery; the Torpedo Island with
its tall flag-staff and floating banner over the dwelling
of the Commandant; Fort Adams, whose steep glacis
seemed powdered with snow just then from the multitude
of daisies in bloom upon them; the light-houses; the
soft rises of hill; and beyond, the shimmering heave
of the open sea. Cat-boats and yachts flitted
past in the fair wind like large white-winged moths;
row-boats filled with pleasure-parties dipped their
oars in the wake of the “Eolus;” steam-launches
with screeching whistles were putting into their docks,
among old boat-houses and warehouses, painted dull-red,
or turned of a blackish gray by years of exposure to
weather. Behind rose Newport, with the graceful
spire of Trinity Church and the long bulk of the Ocean
House surmounting the quaint buildings on the lower
hill. The boat was heading toward a wharf, black
with carriages, which were evidently drawn up to wait
the arrival of the “Eolus.”
“There’s Mrs. Gray’s
team now, Miss,” said the sharp-eyed Captain;
“come down for you, I reckon.”
The two girls glanced at her and then
at each other. They shrugged their shoulders,
and Candace heard one of them whisper,
“Did you ever?” and the
reply, “No; but after all, we didn’t say
anything very bad, and who would have dreamed that
a hat like that had anything to do with the Grays?”
She felt herself blush painfully.
The hat was a new one of brown straw trimmed with
dark blue ribbon. She had felt rather proud of
it when it came home from the milliner’s the
day before, and had considered the little blue pompon
with which Miss Wilson, who was authority in matters
of fashion in North Tolland, had enriched the middle
bow, as a masterpiece of decoration. Alas! the
apple of knowledge was at her lips; already she felt
herself blush at the comments of these unknown girls
whose hats were so different from her own, and was
thoroughly uncomfortable, though she could hardly
have told why.
Captain Peleg politely carried her
bag for her across the landing-plank to where the
“team,” a glossy coupe with one horse,
was waiting. He beckoned to the smart coachman,
who wore a dark green overcoat with big metal buttons,
to draw nearer.
“Here’s your passenger,”
he said, helping Candace into the carriage. “Good-day,
Miss. I hope we’ll see you again on the
‘Eolus.’ All right, driver.”
“Oh, thank you,” cried
Candace, finding voice and forgetting shyness in her
gratitude; “you’ve been real kind to me,
Captain.”
“That child’s got mighty
pretty eyes,” soliloquized Captain King, as he
marched down the wharf. “I wonder what relation
she is to the Grays. She don’t seem their
sort exactly. She’s been raised in the country,
I expect; but Mrs. Gray’ll polish her up if
anybody can, or I’m mistaken. Steady there what’re
you about?” as a trunk came bounding and ricochetting
across the gangway; “this wharf ain’t no
skittle-ground!”
Meanwhile the coupe was slowly climbing
a steep side-street which led to the Avenue.
Looking forth with observant eyes, Candace noted how
the houses, which at first were of the last-century
build, with hipped roofs and dormer windows like those
to which she was accustomed in the old hill village
that had been her birthplace, gave way to modernized
old houses with recent additions, and then to houses
which were unmistakably new, and exhibited all manner
of queer peaks and pinnacles and projections, shingled,
painted in divers colors, and broken by windows of
oddly tinted glass. Next the carriage passed a
modern church built of pinkish-brown stone; and immediately
after, the equable roll of the wheels showed that
they were on a smooth macadamized road. It was,
in fact, though Candace did not know it, the famous
Bellevue Avenue, which in summer is the favorite drive
for all fashionable persons, and thronged from end
to end on every fair afternoon by all manner of vehicles,
from dainty pony-wagons to enormous mail-coaches.
There were only a few carriages in
sight now, though they seemed many to our little country
maid. Shops were opening for the season.
Men were busy in hanging Eastern rugs and curtains
up to view, and arranging in the windows beautiful
jars and plates of porcelain and pottery, glittering
wares from Turkey and Damascus, carved furniture, and
inlaid cabinets. Half a dozen florists exhibited
masses of hot-house flowers amid a tangle of palms
and tree-ferns; beyond was the announcement of an
“opening” by a well-known dressmaker, whose
windows were hung with more beautiful things than
Candace in her small experience had ever dreamed of
before, laces, silks, embroideries.
The shops gave way to houses, each
set in a court-yard gay with newly planted beds of
flowers or foliage plants. Vines clustered everywhere;
the trees, not yet fully in leaf, were like a tossing
spray of delicate fresh green: a sense of hope,
of expectation, of something delightful which was
being prepared for, seemed to be in the air.
Suddenly the coupe turned in between
a pair of substantial stone gate-posts, and drew up
before a large square house, with piazzas on two sides,
and a small but very smooth lawn, whose closely cut
grass looked like green velvet. It was dappled
with weeping-trees and evergreens, and hedged with
a high wall of shrubs which shut off the view of the
street. A continuous flower-bed ran all round
the house close to its walls, planted full of geraniums,
heliotrope, nasturtiums, mignonette, and pansies.
Every window and balcony boasted its box of ferns or
flowers; and in spite of the squareness of the building,
and the sombre green-gray with which it was painted,
the general effect was of cheerfulness, and shade
broken by color, an effect which is always
pleasant.
Candace had forgotten herself in the
excitement of new sights and experiences; but her
shyness came back with a rush as the carriage stopped
and the door was opened by a very smart French butler.
“Is Mrs. Gray at home?”
she asked timidly, bending forward.
“Descendez, Mademoiselle, s’il
vous plait. Madame est occupée
pour lé moment; il y a du
monde dans lé salon.”
Then, seeing the perplexed look in Candace’s
eyes, he explained in broken English: “Mees
is to get out. Madame is beesy with coompany
for little while. Mees will please go up-stair.”
Candace got out; the carriage drove
away, and she followed the butler into the hall.
He gave a low call at the foot of the stairs, which
brought down a ladies’-maid with a ruffed cap
perched on the back of her head.
“This way, if you please, Miss,”
she said, and led Candace up the staircase, which
was a wide one with three square turns and a broad
landing, lit with a range of windows and furnished
with a low cushioned seat; then came an upper hall,
and she was shown into a pretty corner room.
“If you’ll please sit
down and rest yourself, Miss,” said the maid,
“Mrs. Gray’ll be up as soon as some company
she has is gone. Would you like to have a cup
of tea, Miss?”
“No, thank you,” faltered
Candace; and then the maid went away, shutting the
door behind her.
The room, which had no bed in it,
and was, in fact, Mrs. Gray’s morning-room,
was so full of curious things that Candace’s
first thought was that it would take a week at least
to see half that was in it. The sage-green walls
were thickly hung with photographs, watercolors, charcoal
sketches, miniatures, bits of faience, lacquered trays
and discs, and great shining circles of Syrian and
Benares metalwork. There were many pieces of
pottery of various sorts, set here and there, on the
chimney-piece, on book-shelves, on the top of a strangely
carved black cabinet, with hinges and handles of wrought
iron. In one corner stood an Italian spinning-wheel
of ebony and silver; in another an odd instrument,
whose use Candace could not guess, but which was in
reality a Tyrolean zither. An escritoire, drawn
near a window, was heaped with papers and with writing
appliances of all sorts, and all elegant. There
were many little tables covered with books and baskets
of crewels and silks, and easy-chairs of every description.
Every chair-back and little stand had some quaint
piece of lace-work or linen-work thrown over it.
It was, in fact, one of those rooms belonging distinctly
to our modern life, for the adornment of which every
part of the world is ransacked, and their products
set forth in queer juxtapositions, to satisfy
or to exhibit the varied tastes and pursuits of its
occupants. To Candace it was as wonderful as
any museum; and while her eyes slowly travelled from
one object to another, she forgot her strangeness and
was happy.
Tick, tick, tick, tick, went the little
French clock on the mantelpiece. Suddenly it
struck her that it was a long while that she had been
left alone in this room. She glanced at the clock;
it really was almost an hour. All her latent
homesickness returned with fresh force. Her eyes
filled with sudden tears; in another moment she would
have been actually crying, but just then came a quick
step, a little rustle, and she had just time to wipe
away the drops when the door opened, and Mrs. Gray
hurried into the room.
“My poor child,” she exclaimed,
“have you been alone all this time? It
is quite too bad! I made sure that I should hear
the carriage drive up, and at least run out and give
you a welcome, but somehow I didn’t; and people
came so fast and thick that I couldn’t get a
chance to glance at the clock.” She kissed
Candace, and looked at her with a sort of soft scrutiny.
It was to the full as penetrating as that of the strange
girls on the steamer had been; but it did not hurt
like theirs. Mrs. Gray had beautiful, big, short-sighted
blue eyes with black lashes; when she smiled they
seemed to brim with a sudden fascinating radiance.
She smiled now, and reminded Candace somehow of a
great, soft, fully opened garden rose.
“You have something of your
mother’s looks, Cannie,” she said.
“I knew her best when she was about your age.
I never saw much of her after she married your father
and went up to live among the hills.” She
sighed softly: there was a short pause.
Then, with a sudden change of tone, she continued:
“And all this time you have never been shown
your room. I can’t think why they were
so stupid. Who was it put you here, Cannie?”
“It was a lady in
a cap,” replied Candace, hesitatingly.
“A lady? cap?
Oh, it must have been Elizabeth. She’s my
maid, don’t make such a mistake again,
dear; you must learn to discriminate. Well, come
with me now, and let me see you comfortably established.
The girls are gone on a yachting-party to the upper
end of the island. It was an old engagement,
made before your aunt’s letter came, or they
would not have been absent when you arrived.
They were very sor ”
But in the very middle of the word
came Frederic, the butler, with the announcement of
new visitors; and, just taking time to lead Candace
down the entry to a room whose door stood wide open,
Mrs. Gray hurried away, saying rapidly: “Take
off your hat, dear. Lie down for a rest, hadn’t
you better? I’ll be up again presently.”
“I wonder if everybody is always
in a hurry in Newport?” Candace thought.
She was again alone, but this time
she felt no disposition to cry. Her trunk had
been brought up by somebody, and stood already in its
place, with the straps unloosened. She took off
her hat and jacket, unpacked a little, and peeped
out of the window to see where she was. The room
faced the east, and across a corner of the lawn and
the stable-yard she had a glimpse of the sea, which
had become intensely blue with the coming of the later
afternoon.
“Oh, that is good,” she
said to herself. “I shall see it all summer.”
She glanced about the room with a growing sense of
proprietorship which was pleasant. It was not
a large room, but it looked cheerful, with its simple
furniture of pale-colored ash and a matted floor, over
which lay a couple of Persian rugs. There was
a small fireplace bordered with blue tiles which matched
the blue papering on the walls; and the tiles on the
washstand, and the chintz of the easy-chair and lounge,
and the flower-jars on the mantelpiece were blue also.
Altogether it was a pretty little chamber, with which
any girl might be sufficiently well-pleased; and as
Candace noticed the tiny nosegay of mignonette and
tea-roses which stood on the bureau, her heart lightened
with the sense that it had been put there for her.
Some one had thought of her coming, and prepared for
it.
She brushed out her curls and washed
her face and hands, but did not change her dress.
The blue alpaca was the newest she had, and she wished
to look her best on that first evening. She sat
down in the window to listen to the soft boom of the
surf, which seemed to grow louder as the night drew
on, and did not hear Mrs. Gray as she came down the
entry. That lady stood a moment in the half-open
door, surveying her young visitor.
“What am I to do with her?”
she thought. “I want to befriend Candace’s
child, but I did not quite realize, till I saw her
just now, what a disadvantage she would be at among
all these girls here, with their French clothes and
their worse than French ideas. She’s not
plain. There’s a good deal of beauty about
that shy little face of hers, and refinement too,
if only she were not so awkward. If I can once
get her into a dress that fits, and do something with
that mop of curls, she would look well enough.
I wonder if she will take it kindly, or flare up and
feel offended at every little suggestion. That
would be terrible! You are listening to
the surf, dear. I’m afraid it means rain
to-morrow. That sound generally is a symptom
of mischief.”
“Is it?” said Candace; “what a pity!”
“A pity about the rain?”
“No but it’s such a pretty
sound.”
“So it is. Well, if you
are ready, let us go downstairs. I expect the
girls every moment. Ah, there they are now!”
The line of windows on the staircase
landing commanded a view of the gate and approach,
and looking through them Candace saw a village cart
with two girls on the front seat, one driving, and
a third girl in the rumble behind, approaching the
house. A couple of young men on horseback rode
close beside the cart. One of them jumped from
his horse, helped the young ladies out, there was
a moment of laughter and chat; then, touching their
hats, the riders departed, and the three girls came
into the hall.
“Mamma! mammy! where are you,
dear?” sang out three youthful voices.
“Here I am, half-way upstairs,”
replied Mrs. Gray, seating herself on the cushioned
bench of the landing.
“What on earth are you doing
up there? And who’s that with you?”
“It’s your cousin Candace. Come up
and be introduced.”
Up they came at a run, each trying
to be the first to arrive. Candace had never
known many girls, but these were of a different species
from any she had seen before. They seemed full
of spirits, and conveyed the idea of being, so to
speak, bursting with happiness, though I suppose not
one of the three but would have resented the imputation
of being happier than people in general are or ought
to be. Georgie, the eldest, was short and round,
and had her mother’s blue near-sighted eyes without
her mother’s beauty. Gertrude was unusually
tall, and had a sort of lily-like grace; her light
hair was very thick, and so fine in quality that it
stood out like a nimbus round her pale pretty face.
Little Marian, the youngest, two years Candace’s
junior, was not yet in society, but had been allowed
to go to the picnic as a great favor. Her hair
had a reddish tint in its chestnut, and was braided
in one large plait down her back; she had brown eyes
and a capable little face which was full of expression.
They all spoke kindly to Candace,
they all kissed her, but she felt much less at ease
with them than with their mother, whose peculiarly
charming manner seemed to invite confidence from everybody.
After a few questions and a few words of welcome,
they plunged into a description of their picnic, the
yacht-sail, the landing, the luncheon, the general
delightfulness of everything.
“Berry Joy was not there,”
remarked Georgie. “She had gone up to Wickford
to meet some one. By the way, she must have come
down on the ‘Eolus’ with you, Candace.
Did you see her?”
“There were two young ladies,” answered
Candace, timidly.
“Did you hear their names? Did you talk
to them?” asked Gertrude.
“No yes no I
mean the Captain called one of them Miss Joy.
I didn’t talk to them, but they knew you.”
“Why, how could you tell that?”
“I heard them talking about you.”
“What fun! What did they say?”
Candace hesitated. Her face grew
crimson. “I’d rather I
don’t ” she began. Then
with a great effort, rallying her powers, she went
on: “I didn’t like to sit there and
hear them and not tell them that I was your cousin;
but I was too too frightened
to speak to them, so I thought I would never repeat
what they said, and then it wouldn’t be any matter.”
“Quite right, Cannie,”
said Mrs. Gray, quickly. Something in the girl’s
little speech seemed to please her very much.