Anne of Windy Poplars - L. M. Montgomery [112]
Where was Flying Cloud? What a name! Out of Tomorrow again. It was maddening to be so near Tomorrow and not be able to get into it. But suppose the wind blew up rain for tomorrow? Elizabeth knew she would never be allowed to go anywhere in rain.
She sat up in bed and clasped her hands.
‘Dear God,’ she said, ‘I don’t like to meddle, but could You see that it is fine tomorrow? Please, dear God!’
The next afternoon was glorious. Little Elizabeth felt as if she had slipped from some invisible shackles when she and Miss Shirley walked away from that house of gloom. She took a huge gulp of freedom, even if the Woman was scowling after them through the red glass of the big front door. How heavenly to be walking through the lovely world with Miss Shirley! It was always so wonderful to be alone with Miss Shirley. What would she do when Miss Shirley had gone? But little Elizabeth put the thought firmly away. She wouldn’t spoil the day by thinking of it. Perhaps – a great perhaps – she and Miss Shirley would get into Tomorrow this afternoon, and then they would never be separated. Little Elizabeth just wanted to walk quietly on towards that blueness at the end of the world, drinking in the beauty around her. Every turn and kink of the road revealed new loveliness, and it turned and kinked interminably, following the windings of a tiny river that seemed to have appeared from nowhere.
On every side were fields of buttercups and clover, where bees buzzed. Now and then they walked through a milky way of daisies. Far out the Strait laughed at them in silver-tipped waves. The harbour was like watered silk. Little Elizabeth liked it better that way than when it was like pale-blue satin. They drank the wind in. It was a very gentle wind. It purred about them and seemed to coax them on.
‘Isn’t it nice, walking with the wind like this?’ said little Elizabeth.
‘A nice friendly, perfumed wind,’ said Anne, more to herself than Elizabeth. ‘Such a wind as I used to think a mistral was. Mistral sounds like that. What a disappointment when I found out it was a rough, disagreeable wind!’
Elizabeth didn’t quite understand – she had never heard of the mistral – but the music of her beloved’s voice was enough for her. The very sky was glad. A sailor with gold rings in his ears – the very kind of person one would meet in Tomorrow – smiled as he passed them. Elizabeth thought of a line from a verse she had learned in Sunday School: ‘The little hills rejoice on every side.’ Had the man who wrote that ever seen hills like those blue ones over the harbour?
‘I think this road leads right to God,’ she said dreamily.
‘Perhaps,’ said Anne. ‘Perhaps all roads do, little Elizabeth. We turn off here just now. We must go over to that island; that’s Flying Cloud.’
Flying Cloud was a long, slender islet lying about a quarter of a mile from the shore. There were trees on it and a house. Little Elizabeth had always wished she might have an island of her own, with a little bay of silver sand in it.
‘How do we get to it?’
‘We’ll row out in this flat,’ said Miss Shirley, picking up the oars in a small boat tied to a leaning tree.
Miss Shirley could row. Was there anything Miss Shirley couldn’t do? When they reached the island it proved to be a fascinating place where anything might happen. Of course, it was in Tomorrow. Islands like this didn’t happen except in Tomorrow. They had no part or lot in humdrum Today.
A little maid who met them at the door of the house told Anne she would find Mrs Thompson on the far end of the island, picking wild strawberries. Fancy an island where wild strawberries grew!
Anne went to hunt Mrs Thompson up, but first she asked if little Elizabeth might wait in the living-room. Anne was thinking that little Elizabeth looked rather tired after her unaccustomed long walk, and needed a rest. Little Elizabeth didn’t think she did, but Miss Shirley’s lightest wish was law.
It was a beautiful room, with flowers everywhere and wild sea-breezes blowing in. Elizabeth liked