Joanna Godden - BestLightNovel.com
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Ellen despised Arthur Alce--she did not like his looks, his old-fas.h.i.+oned side-whiskers and Gladstone collars, or the amount of hair and freckles that covered the exposed portions of his skin. She despised him, too, for his devotion to Joanna; she did not understand how a man could be inspired with a lifelong love for Joanna, who seemed to her unattractive--coa.r.s.e and bouncing. She also a little resented this devotion, the way it was accepted as an established fact in the neighbourhood, a standing sum to Joanna's credit. Of course she was fond of her sister--she could not help it--but she would have forgiven her more easily for her ruthless domineering, if she had not also had the advantage in romance. An admirer who sighed hopelessly after you all your life was still to Ellen the summit of desire. It was fortunate that she could despise Alce so thoroughly in his person, or else she might have found herself jealous of her sister.
They arrived at Sanger's in good time for the afternoon performance, and their seats were the best in the tent. Alce, ever mindful of Joanna, bought Ellen an orange and a bag of bull's-eyes. During the performance he was too much engrossed to notice her much--the elephants, the clowns, the lovely ladies, were as fresh and wonderful to him as to any child present, though as a busy farmer he had long ago discarded such entertainments and would not have gone to-day if it had not been for Ellen, or rather for her sister. When the interval came, however, he had time to notice his companion, and it seemed to him that she drooped.
"Are you feeling it hot in here?"
"Yes--it's very close."
He did not offer to take her out--it did not strike him that she could want to leave.
"You haven't sucked your orange--that'll freshen you a bit."
Ellen looked at her orange.
"Let me peel it for you," said Alce, noticing her gloved hands.
"Thanks very much--but I can't eat it here; there's nowhere to put the skin and pips."
"What about the floor? Reckon they sweep out the sawdust after each performance."
"I'm sure I hope they do," said Ellen, whose next-door neighbour had spat at intervals between his knees, "but really, I'd rather keep the orange till I get home."
At that moment the ring-master came in to start the second half of the entertainment, and Alce turned away from Ellen. He was unconscious of her till the band played "G.o.d Save the King," and there was a great sc.r.a.ping of feet as the audience turned to go out.
"We'll go and have a cup of tea," said Alce.
He took her into the refreshment tent, and blundered as far as offering her a twopenny ice-cream at the ice-cream stall. He was beginning to realize that she took her pleasures differently from most girls he knew; he felt disappointed and ill at ease with her--it would be dreadful if she went home and told Joanna she had not enjoyed herself.
"What would you like to do now?" he asked when they had emptied their tea-cups and eaten their stale buns in the midst of a great steaming, munching squash--"there's swings and stalls and a merry-go-round--and I hear the Fat Lady's the biggest they've had yet in Rye; but maybe you don't care for that sort of thing?"
"No, I don't think I do, and I'm feeling rather tired. We ought to be starting back before long."
"Oh, not till you've seen all the sights. Joanna ud never forgive me if I didn't show you the sights. We'll just stroll around, and then we'll go to the George and have the trap put to."
Ellen submitted--she was a born submitter, whose resentful and watchful submission had come almost to the pitch of art. She accompanied Alce to the swings, though she would not go up in them, and to the merry-go-round, though she would not ride in it.
"There's Ellen G.o.dden out with her sister's young man," said a woman's voice in the crowd.
"Maybe he'll take the young girl now he can't get the old 'un," a man answered her.
"Oh, Arthur Alce ull never change from Joanna G.o.dden."
"But the sister's a dear liddle thing, better worth having to my mind."
"Still, I'll never believe ..."
The voices were lost in the crowd, and Ellen never knew who had spoken, but for the first time that afternoon her boredom was relieved. It was rather pleasant to have anyone think that Arthur Alce was turning to her from Joanna ... it would be a triumph indeed if he actually did turn ...
for the first time she began to take an interest in him.
The crowd was very thick, and Alce offered her his arm.
"Hook on to me, or maybe I'll lose you."
Ellen did as he told her, and after a time he felt her weight increase.
"Reckon you're middling tired."
He looked down on her with a sudden pity--her little hand was like a kitten under his arm.
"Yes, I am rather tired." It was no pretence--such an afternoon, without the stimulant and sustenance of enjoyment, was exhausting indeed.
"Then we'll go home--reckon we've seen everything."
He piloted her out of the crush, and they went to the George, where the trap was soon put to. Ellen sat drooping along the Straight Mile.
"Lord, but you're hem tired," said Alce, looking down at her.
"I've got a little headache--I had it when I started."
"Then you shouldn't ought to have come."
"Joanna said I was to."
"You should have told her about your head."
"I did--but she said I must come all the same. I said I was sure you wouldn't mind, but she wouldn't let me off."
"Joanna's valiant for getting her own way. Still, it was hard on you, liddle girl, making you come--I shouldn't have taken offence."
"I know you wouldn't. But Jo's so masterful. She always wants me to enjoy myself in her way, and being strong, she doesn't understand people who aren't."
"That's so, I reckon. Still your sister's a fine woman, Ellen--the best I've known."
"I'm sure she is," snapped Ellen.
"But she shouldn't ought to have made you come this afternoon, since you were feeling poorly."
"Don't let out I said anything to you about it, Arthur--it might make her angry. Oh, don't make her angry with me."
--11
During the next few weeks it seemed to Joanna that her sister was a little more alert. She went out more among the neighbours, and when Joanna's friends came to see her, she no longer sulked remotely, but came into the parlour, and was willing to play the piano and talk and be entertaining. Indeed, once or twice when Joanna was busy she had sat with Arthur Alce after tea and made herself most agreeable--so he said.
The fact was that Ellen had a new interest in life. Those words sown casually in her thoughts at the show were bearing remarkable fruit. She had pondered them well, and weighed her chances, and come to the conclusion that it would be a fine and not impossible thing to win Arthur Alce from Joanna to herself.
She did not see why she should not be able to do so. She was prettier than her sister, younger, more accomplished, better educated. Alce on his side must be tired of wooing without response. When he saw there was a chance of Ellen, he would surely take it; and then--what a triumph!