"So am I," said Elizabeth springing ash.o.r.e.
"What have you been doing? -- keeping breakfast waiting this age?"
"I never saw any thing so delicious in all my life," said Elizabeth emphatically, before condescending to say what.
"I shall tell Mr. Haye you are beginning a flirtation already," whispered Miss Cadwallader laughing as they went up to the house.
But the cheek of the other at that became like a thunder- cloud. She turned her back upon her cousin and walked from her to the house, with a step as fine and firm as that of the Belvidere Apollo and a figure like a young pine tree. Rufus, who met her at the door, was astounded with a salutation such as a queen might bestow on a discarded courtier; but by the time the little lady came to the table she had got back her usual air.
"Well, how do you like boating before breakfast?" said Mr Landholm.
"_Very_ much," Elizabeth said.
"I don"t like it very much," said he, "for I ought to have mowed half an acre by this time, instead of being here at my bread and b.u.t.ter."
"It was not my fault, sir."
"No, no; it"s all right, I am glad you went. I should have taken my breakfast and been off, long ago; but I waited out of pure civility to you, to see how you did. "Pon my word, I think you have gained half a pound of flesh already."
"She looks a great deal better," said Asahel.
Elizabeth laughed a little, but entered into no discussion of the subject.
After breakfast the trunks arrived and the young ladies were busy; and two or three days pa.s.sed quietly in getting wonted.
"Mr. Landholm," said Miss Cadwallader, a few mornings after, "will you do one thing for me?"
"A great many, Miss Rose," he said, stopping with his hands on his knees as he was about to leave the table, and looking at her attentively.
"I want you to send somebody to shew me where the strawberries are."
"Strawberries! Do you want to go and pick strawberries?"
"To be sure I do. That"s what I came here for."
"Strawberries, eh," said Mr. Landholm. "Well, I guess you"ll have to wait a little. There aint a soul that can go with you this morning. Besides, I don"t believe there are any ripe yet."
"O yes there are, papa!" said Asahel.
"I guess Bright Spot"s full of them," said Mrs. Landholm.
"Bright Spot!" said the farmer. "Well, we must be all off to the hay-field. You see, there"s some gra.s.s, Miss Rose, standing ready to be cut, that _can"t_ wait; so you"ll have to."
"What if it wasn"t cut?" said Miss Cadwallader pouting.
"What if it wasn"t cut! -- then the cattle would have nothing to eat next winter, and that would be worse than your wanting strawberries. No -- I"ll tell you, -- It"ll be a fine afternoon; and you keep yourself quiet, out of the sun, till it gets towards evening; and I"ll contrive to spare one of the boys to go with you. The strawberries will be all the riper, and you can get as many as you want in an hour or two."
So upon that the party scattered, and the house was deserted to the "women-folks;" with the exception of little Asahel; and even he was despatched in a few hours to the field with the dinner of his father and brothers. The girls betook themselves to their room, and wore out the long day as they could.
It grew to the tempting time of the afternoon.
"Here they are!" said Rose who sat at the east window. "Now for it! That farmer is a very good man. I really didn"t expect it."
"_They?_" said Elizabeth.
"Yes -- both the "boys," as the farmer calls them."
"I should think one might have been enough," said Elizabeth.
"Well, there"s no harm in having two. Isn"t the eldest one handsome?"
"I don"t know."
"You _do_ know."
"I don"t! for I haven"t thought about it."
"Do you have to think before you can tell whether a person is handsome?"
"Yes; -- before I can tell whether I think he is."
"Well, look at him, -- I tell you he has the most splendid eyes."
"Rose Cadwallader!" said her cousin laying down her book, "what is it to you or me if all the farmer"s sons in the land have splendid eyes?"
Elizabeth"s eyebrows said it was very little to her.
"I like to look at a handsome face anywhere," said Rose pouting. "Come -- will you."
Elizabeth did come, but with a very uncompromising set of the said eyebrows.
It appeared that everybody was going strawberrying, except Mrs. Landholm and Winthrop; at least the former had not her bonnet on, and the latter was not in the company at all. The children found this out and raised a cry of dismay, which was changed into a cry of entreaty as Winthrop came in. Winthrop was going after fish. But Winifred got hold of his hand, and Asahel withstood him with arguments; and at last Mrs. Landholm put in her gentle word, that strawberries would de just as well as fish, and better. So Winthrop put up his fishing-rod and shouldered the oars, and armed with baskets of all sizes the whole party trooped after him.
In the boat Elizabeth might have had a good opportunity to act upon her cousin"s request; for Rufus sat in the stern with them and talked, while Winthrop handled the oars. But Rufus and her cousin had the talk all to themselves; Elizabeth held off from it, and gave her eyes to nothing but the river and the hills.
They crossed the river, going a little up, to a tiny green valley just at the water"s edge. On every side but the river it was sheltered and shut in by woody walls nigh two hundred feet in height. The bottom of the valley was a fine greensward, only sprinkled with trees; while from the edge of it the virgin forest rose steeply to the first height, and then following the broken ground stretched away up to the top of the neighbouring mountains. From the valley bottom, however, nothing of these could be seen; nothing was to be seen but its own leafy walls and the blue sky above them.
"Is this the place where we are to find strawberries?" said Miss Cadwallader.
"This is the place," said Rufus; "this is Bright Spot, from time out of mind the place for strawberries; n.o.body ever comes here but to pick them. The vines cover the ground."
"The sun won"t be on it long," said Elizabeth; "I don"t see why you call it Bright Spot."
"You won"t often see a brighter spot when the sun _is_ on it,"
said Winthrop. "It gets in the shadow of Wut-a-qut-o once in a while."
"The gra.s.s is kept very fresh here," said Rufus. "But the strawberry vines are all over in it."
So it was proved. The valley was not a smooth level as it had looked from the river, but broken into little waves and hollows of ground; in parts, near the woods, a good deal strewn with loose rocks and grown with low clumpy bushes of different species of cornus, and buckthorn, and sweetbriar. In these nooks and hollows, and indeed over the whole surface of the ground the vines ran thick, and the berries, huge, rich and rare, pretended to hide themselves, while the whole air was alive with their sweetness.