But as she followed him Harriet, in her mind, had left this magical garden and was back at Stavely while Henry told her what the family’s disagreeable butler had said about the “secret boy”: “Grunthorpe didn’t like him… he said he was a changeling… because he could talk to animals, Grunthorpe said…”
She was sure, really—and had been from the moment she saw him step out from the trees. A straight line ran from the boy who had built a tree-house in the Wellingtonia and owned a dog who was his shadow, to this man, but oh, for proof!
They had reached the
“I’ve told you how important it is to keep the water moving. Well, here is one of the methods I use.” He leaned over and slapped the surface of the water with his hand. “Agatha!” he called. “Come here. I’ve brought you a visitor!”
Harriet looked down into the water. At first she could make out nothing. Then slowly from under a patch of weed there appeared a mass of mottled gray and white whiskers, a snout… A soft blowing and snuffling noise followed; the almond-shaped nostrils twitched and opened… Then the head lifted and Harriet found herself looking into a pair of round, liquid, unutterably soulful eyes.
“Oh, what is it? What is it?” Harriet, who had taught herself never to touch anyone for fear of rebuff, had taken this stranger’s arm. “I’ve never seen anything like it. It’s not a seal?”
“It’s a manatee,” said Verney softly. “
Harriet could not take her eyes from the trusting beast which was now looking at her unperturbed, a bunch of water hyacinths dangling like a dotty bouquet from her mouth. “They’re sacred to some of the Indian tribes,” said Rom, “and anyone who tries to poach them on my land is in trouble. They keep the channels running clear, you see, by eating the water-weed.”
“A manatee!” said Harriet raptly. “I’ve seen a manatee!” She turned away to trace the pattern of the creeper which had laid its stippled leaves along the hand-rail of the bridge, but not before he had seen the glint of tears on her lashes.
“What is it?” he asked gently. “Is anything the matter?”
She gave a small shake of the head. “It’s just that everything is so beautiful… so
“You know now,” said Verney lightly. “And I have to tell you that there is absolutely nothing right about Agatha’s husband; he’s an entirely different kettle of fish—a nasty servile beast perpetually on the lookout for gratuities. In fact, I doubt if he’ll come at all since I haven’t brought any biscuits. No… wait; I’ve maligned him. Here he is!”
The animal which now surfaced did indeed look quite different from the gentle domestic-looking creature still staring lovingly out of the water. The male manatee’s eyes seemed incorrigibly greedy; the short snorts he gave had a vaguely petulant air and the round head which imparted to Agatha such a benign and soothing look was covered, in his case, by large liver-colored spots.
And as Rom had intended, Harriet laughed and said, “I see what you mean.”
Furious at the lack of largesse, the male manatee nudged his wife a couple of times, gave a snort of disgust… and sank.
“Does he have a name?” asked Harriet.
“I call him Grunthorpe,” said Rom—and led her back to the house.
The party was in full swing. Sitting at damask-covered tables decked with exquisite silver, the guests ate roast tapir more delicate than pork, forest grouse wrapped in plantain leaves, a fricassee of turtle meat served in the upturned shell… Only where wine was concerned did Verney turn to Europe, serving a Chateauneuf du Pape which had Dubrov and Count Sternov exchanging a glance of solemnity and awe.
So now I know, thought Harriet, sitting with the girls of the
She looked at the top table where Verney was sitting, saying something to Simonova which made her throw back her head and laugh, and a stab of pity ran through her for the red-haired child who had turned to her with such trust. “If you find him, Harriet, ask him to come back,” Henry had said, but this man would never return to England. She had never seen anyone who belonged to a place so utterly as he did here.