Anne's House of Dreams - L. M. Montgomery [12]
‘Gilbert, who is the girl we have just passed?’ asked Anne, in a low voice.
‘I didn’t notice any girl,’ said Gilbert, who had eyes only for his bride.
‘She was standing by that gate – no, don’t look back. She is still watching us. I never saw such a beautiful face.’
‘I don’t remember seeing any very handsome girls while I was here. There are some pretty girls up at the Glen, but I hardly think they could be called beautiful.’
‘This girl is. You can’t have seen her, or you would remember her. Nobody could forget her. I never saw such a face except in pictures. And her hair! It made me think of Browning’s “cord of gold” and “gorgeous snake”!’
‘Probably she’s some visitor in Four Winds – likely someone from that big summer hotel over the harbour.’
‘She wore a white apron and she was driving geese.’
‘She might do that for amusement. Look, Anne – there’s our house.’
Anne looked and forgot for a time the girl with the splendid, resentful eyes. The first glimpse of her new home was a delight to eye and spirit – it looked so like a big, creamy sea-shell stranded on the harbour shore. The rows of tall Lombardy poplars down its lane stood out in stately purple silhouette against the sky. Behind it, sheltering its garden from the too keen breath of sea winds, was a cloudy fir-wood, in which the winds might make all kinds of weird and haunting music. Like all woods, it seemed to be holding and enfolding secrets in its recesses – secrets whose charm is only to be won by entering in and patiently seeking. Outwardly, dark green arms keep them inviolate from curious or indifferent eyes.
The night winds were beginning their wild dances beyond the bar and the fishing hamlet across the harbour was gemmed with lights as Anne and Gilbert drove up the poplar lane. The door of the little house opened, and a warm glow of fire-light flickered out into the dusk. Gilbert lifted Anne from the buggy and led her into the garden, through the little gate between the ruddy-tipped firs, up the trim red path to the sandstone step.
‘Welcome home,’ he whispered, and hand in hand they stepped over the threshold of their house of dreams.
6
CAPTAIN JIM
‘Old Doctor Dave’ and ‘Mrs Doctor Dave’ had come down to the little house to greet the bride and groom. Doctor Dave was a big, jolly, white-whiskered old fellow, and Mrs Doctor was a trim, rosy-cheeked, silver-haired little lady who took Anne at once to her heart, literally and figuratively.
‘I’m so glad to see you, dear. You must be real tired. We’ve got a bite of supper ready, and Captain Jim brought up some trout for you. Captain Jim – where are you? Oh, he’s slipped out to see to the horse, I suppose. Come upstairs and take your things off.’
Anne looked about her with bright, appreciative eyes as she followed Mrs Doctor Dave upstairs. She liked the appearance of her new home very much. It seemed to have the atmosphere of Green Gables and the flavour of her old traditions.
‘I think I would have found Miss Elizabeth Russell a “kindred spirit”,’ she murmured when she was alone in her room. There were two windows in it; the dormer one looked out on the lower harbour and the sand-bar and the Four Winds light.
‘A magic casement opening on the foam
Of perilous seas in fairy lands forlorn,’
quoted Anne softly. The gable window gave a view of a little harvest-hued valley through which a brook ran. Half a mile up the brook was the only house in sight – an old, rambling grey one surrounded by huge willows through which its windows peered, like shy, seeking eyes, into the dusk. Anne wondered who lived there; they would be her nearest neighbours and she hoped they would be nice. She suddenly found herself thinking of the beautiful girl with the white geese.
‘Gilbert thought she didn’t belong here,’ mused Anne, ‘but I feel sure she does. There was something about her that made her part of the sea and the sky and the harbour. Four Winds is in her blood.’
When Anne went downstairs Gilbert was standing before the fireplace talking to a stranger. Both turned as