Angel Island by Inez Haynes Gillmore (book recommendations for young adults .txt) đź“•
In brief, men were always divided in their own minds in regard to RalphAddington. They knew that, constantly, he broke every canon
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“You’re on,” Ralph said in a disgusted tone. “Foxy little devils!”
“Gee, it must have hurt!” Honey exclaimed. “They must have been torn to
ribbons at first. Some pluck, believe me!”
“I bet you dollars to doughnuts, Julia’s at the bottom of it,” remarked
Pete.
“No question about that,” Frank commented. “Julia thinks.”
“Considerable bean, too,” said Honey. “Well, we’ve got to put a stop to
it tonight.”
“Sure!” Ralph agreed. “Read the riot act the instant we get home. By the
Lord Harry, if it’s necessary I’ll tie my wife up!”
“I never could do that,” said Pete.
“Nor I,” said Frank.
“Nor I,” said Honey. “But I don’t think we’ll have to resort to violent
measures. We’ve only got to appeal to their love; I can twist Lulu right
round my finger that way.”
“I guess you’re right,” Ralph smiled. “That always fetches them.”
“I don’t anticipate any real trouble from this,” Billy went on as though
arguing with himself. “We’ve got to take it at the start, though. We
can’t have Angela flying after she’s grown.”
“Sure,” said Honey, “it’ll blow over in a few days. But now that they
can walk, let’s offer to teach them how to dance and play tennis and
bocci and golf. And I’ll tell you what - we’ll lay out some gardens for
them - make them think they’re beautifying the place. We might even
teach them how to put up shelves and a few little carpentering tricks
like that. That’ll hold them for a while. Oh, you’ll all come round to
my tactics sooner or later! Pay them compliments! Give them presents!
Jolly them along! And say, it will be fun to have some mixed doubles.
Gee, though, they’ll be something fierce now they’ve learned how to
walk. They’ll be here half the time. They’ll have so many ideas how the
New Camp ought to be built and a woman is such an obstinate cuss. Asking
questions and arguing and interfering - they delay things so. We’ve got
to find out something harmless that’ll keep them busy.”
“Oh, we never can have them here - never in the world,” Ralph agreed.
“But we’ll fix them tonight. How about it, old top?” he inquired
jovially of Frank.
Frank did not answer.
In point of fact they did not “fix” the women that night, owing to the
simple reason that they found the camp deserted - not a sign of woman or
child in sight or hearing.
“Well, there’s one thing about it,” Ralph said on their way back to the
New Camp the next morning, “you can always beat any woman’s game by just
ignoring it. They can stand anything but not being noticed. Now our play
is to do nothing and say nothing. They’re on this island somewhere. They
can’t walk off it, and they can’t swim off it, and they can’t fly off
it. They may stay away for day or more or possibly two. By the end of
week they’ll certainly be starved out. And they’ll be longing for our
society. We want to keep right at work as if nothing had happened. Let
them go and come as they please. But we take no notice - see! We’ve done
that once before and we can do it again. When they come home, they’ll be
a pretty tired-out, hungry, discouraged gang of girls. I bet we never
hear another word out of them on this subject.”
The men worked as usual the whole morning; but they talked less. They
were visibly preoccupied. At every pause, they glanced furtively up the
trail. When noon came, it was evident that they dropped their tools with
relief. They sat with their eyes glued to the path.
“Here they come!” Billy exclaimed at last.
The men did not speak; nor until they came to the little knoll that
debouched from the trail did the women. Again Julia acted as spokesman.
“We have given you a night to think this matter over,” she said briefly.
“What is your decision? Shall Angela’s wings go uncut?”
“No, by God! ” burst out Ralph. “No daughter of mine is going to fly. If
you - .”
But with a silencing gesture, Billy interposed. “Aren’t you women
happy?” he asked.
“Oh, no,” Julia answered. “Of course we’re not. I mean we have one kind
of happiness - the happiness that come’s from being loved and having a
home and children. But there is another kind of happiness of which when
you cut our wings we were no longer capable - the happiness that comes
from a sense of absolute freedom. We can bear that for ourselves, but
not for our daughters. Angela and all the girl-children who follow her
must have the freedom that we have lost. Will you give it to them?”
“No!” Ralph yelled. And “Go home!” Honey said brutally.
The women turned.
A dead tree grew by the knoll, one slender limb stretching across its
top to the lake. Peachy ran nimbly along this limb until she came as
near to the tip as her weight would permit. She stood there an instant
balancing herself; then she walked swiftly back and forth. Finally she
jumped to the ground, landing squarely on her feet. She ran like a deer
to join the file of women.
Involuntarily the men applauded.
“Remember the time when they first came to the island,” Ralph said, “how
she was proud like a lion because she managed to hold herself for an
instant on a tree-branch? Her wings were helping her then. Now it’s a
real balancing act. Some stunt that! By Jove, she must have been
practising tightrope walking.” In spite of his scowl, a certain
tenderness, half of past admiration, half of present pride, gleamed in
his eyes.
“You betchu they have. They’ve been practising running and jumping and
leaping and vaulting and God only knows what else. Well, we’ve only got
to keep this up two or three days longer and they’ll come back.” Honey
spoke in a tone which palpably he tried to make jaunty. In spite of
himself, there was a wavering note of uncertainty in it.
“Oh, we’ll get them yet!” Ralph said. “How about it, old fellow?” Ralph
had never lost his old habit of turning to Frank in psychological
distress.
But Frank again kept silence.
“Betchu we find them at home tonight,” Honey said as they started down
the trail an hour ahead of time. “Who’ll take me. Come!”
No one took him, luckily for Honey. There was no sign of life that
night, nor the next, nor the next. And in the meantime, the women did
not manifest themselves once during the daytime at the New Camp.
“God, we’ve got to do something about this,” Ralph said at the end of
five days. “This is getting serious. I want to see Angela. I hadn’t any
idea I could miss her so much. It seems as if they’d been gone for a
month. They must have been preparing for this siege for weeks. Where the
thunder are they hiding - in the jungle somewhere, of course?”
“Oh, of course,” Honey assented. “I miss the boys, too,” he mourned, “I
used to have a frolic with them every morning before I left and every
night when I got home.”
“And it’s all so uncomfortable living alone,” Ralph grumbled. He was
unshaven. The others showed in various aspects of untidiness the lack of
female standards.
“I’m so sick of my own cooking,” Honey complained.
“Not so sick as we are,” said Pete.
“Anybody can have my job that wants it,” Honey volunteered with a touch
of surliness unusual with him.
At noon the five women appeared again at the end of the trail.
In contrast to the tired faces and dishevelled figures of the men, they
presented an exquisite feminine freshness, hair beautifully coiled,
garments spotless and unwrinkled. But although their eyes were like
stars and their cheeks like flowers, their faces were serious; a dew, as
of tears lately shed, lay over them.
“Shall Angela fly?”’ Julia asked without parley.
The women turned.
“Wait a moment,” Frank called in a sudden tone of authority. “I’m with
you women in this. If you’ll let me join your forces, I’ll fight on your
side.”
He had half-covered the distance between them before Julia stopped him
with a “Wait a moment!” as decisive as his own.
“In the first place,” she said, “we don’t want your help. If we don’t
get this by our own efforts, we’ll never value it. In the second place,
we’ll never be sure of it. We don’t trust you - quite. You tricked us
once. That was your fault. If you trick us again, that’s our fault.
Thank you - but no, Frank.”
The women disappeared down the trail while still the men stood staring.
“Well, can you beat it?” was the only comment for a moment - and that
came from Pete. In another instant, they had turned on Merrill, were
upbraiding him hotly for what they called his treason.
“You can’t bully me,” was his unvarying answer. “Remember, any time they
call on me, I’ll fight for them.”
“Well, you can do what you want with your own wife, of course,” Ralph
said, falling into one of his black rages. “But I’m damned if you’ll
encourage mine.”
“Boys,” he added later, after a day of steadily increasing rage, “I’m
tired of this funny business. Let’s knock off work to-morrow and hunt
them. What gets me is their simplicity. They don’t seem to have
calculated on our superior strength. It won’t take us more than a few
hours to run them to earth. By God, I wish we had a pair of
bloodhounds.”
“All right,” said Billy. “I’m with you, Ralph. I’m tired of this.”
“Let’s go, to bed early tonight,” said Pete, and start at sunrise.”
“Well,” said Honey philosophically, “I’ve hunted deer, bear, panther,
buffalo, Rocky Mountain sheep, jaguar, lion, tiger, and rhinoceros - but
this is the first time I ever hunted women.”
They started at sunrise - all except Frank, who refused to have anything
to do with the expedition - and they hunted all day. At sunset they
camped where they fell exhausted. They went back to the search the next
day and the next and the next and the next.
And nowhere did they find traces of their prey.
“Where are they? Ralph said again and again in a baffled tone. “They
couldn’t have flown away, could they?”
And, as often as he asked this question, his companions answered it in
the varying tones of their fatigue and their despair. “Of course they
couldn’t - their wings were too short.”
“Still,” Frank said once. “It’s now long past the half-yearly shearing
period.” He added in another instant, “I don’t think, though, that their
wings could more than lift them.”
“Well, it’s evident, wherever they are, they won’t budge until we go
back to work,” Billy said at the end of a week. “This is useless and
hopeless.”
The next day they returned to the New Camp.
“Here they come,” Billy called joyously that noon. “Thank God!” he added
under his breath.
Again the five women appeared at the beginning of the trail. Their faces
were white now, hollow and lined; but as ever, they bore a look of
extraordinary pristineness. And this time they brought the children.
Angela lay in her mother’s arms like a wilted flower. Her wings sagged
forlornly and her feet were bandaged. But stars of a brilliant blue
flared
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