BRADBURY & HOOD
Nik Morton
Angel's trumpets - Wikipedia commons
"Very
generous..." murmured Georgina Hood, trying to keep a straight face.
She sat a few
yards away in the shade of an orange tree, studying her sketching pad.
Mrs Cattermole
was forthright in her views: she had already remonstrated with Georgina
concerning the inadvisable habit of roaming the town of Icod de Los Vinos by
herself, without benefit of chaperone, settling down wherever her artist's eye
and whim took her.
Georgina
sat up straight and stretched, pleased with her efforts. With a flourish she signed the bottom
left-hand corner of the drawing and dated it: 18th of May 1887.
Even
sitting under this lovely aromatic tree she could feel the heat, despite her
white cotton lace-trimmed dress. She
carefully removed the straw hat and mopped her brow with a handkerchief.
A
shadow fell over her drawing.
"They're
beautiful flowers, Ma'am. Angel's
trumpets, I reckon. And, if I may say
so, you have finely caught their likeness." The male voice was definitely American.
She
turned in her collapsible wooden chair and looked up at the dapper tall young
gentleman. The sun was high and she
shielded her eyes with a hand.
"Sorry,"
he quickly ventured, moving out of line with the sun.
"Thank
you." She refrained from making
plain whether her appreciation was for his compliment on her artwork or for him
moving to a more harmonious position.
"You seem to know your plants, sir."
"I
like to think so, Ma'am. I'm here to
study the dragon tree in the town."
Removing
his Panama, he bowed. He had black hair
and his blue eyes twinkled in the light, the corners creasing with his
smile. "Richard Dawes Bradbury,
Ma'am, at your service."
So
many Americans seemed to have strange names, she thought. His features were tanned. A rather prominent
hawk-like nose curved over a thick moustache.
His fawn-coloured suit was of expensive cut, decidedly English. A fob
chain was draped across his waistcoat.
He stood quite nonchalantly, weight on one foot.
She
took his hand: "Miss Georgina Hood."
"And,
Miss Hood, do you feel your artistic accomplishments are threatened by these
new-fangled cameras?"
She
smiled. "One day, perhaps, Mr
Bradbury. But not for a while. Art is an
interpretation, a representation, if you will, while cameras tend to show
everything."
"You
mean cameras never lie, but artists do?"
How
forward these Americans were! Yet she
liked the verbal fencing; so much more spirited than the empty pleasantries of
London. "True lies, perhaps, sir. An oxymoron, I am sure, but art does strive
for truth - an inner truth a mere photograph cannot capture."
He
bowed slightly. "I confess to
knowing little of art, Miss Hood. Some
art and the circles in the art world seem quite pretentious - yes, we have them
in Boston, too - but I cannot abide artifice.
I know what I like and I greatly admire your work."
She
felt her cheeks flush but was pleasantly gratified by his praise. "Art is a great leveller these days."
She tried to keep a straight face as she continued: "You could say it is an instrument of a
new kind of class fusion. The professional house decorator is no longer a mere
tradesman, and the architect and artist are socially not only acceptable in
society but positively interesting!"
"Ah,
class. Yes, that disease has crossed the
Atlantic too!" He chuckled.
"Who knows, one day perhaps we Americans will reverse the trend and export
our mores to your English shores!"
"You
must surely feel proud already, Mr Bradbury.
Haven't we already taken up your wonderful invention, the type-writing
machine?"
"Just
so!"
"As
I recall it was advertised recently in The
Lady as a machine that 'does not overtax the physical and mental abilities
of women'."
"Sounds
mighty condescending to me."
She
smiled, liking him for that observation.
"I thought so, too."
"And,
Miss Hood, do you market your art-work?"
"Yes. My illustrations often accompany the articles
I sell to newspapers and magazines in England."
"A
lady journalist?" His tone verged
on disbelief, just short of being rude.
"Yes." She fought to contain here ire. "Is that so strange?"
"No,
no," he hastened to mollify.
"We Americans pride ourselves on moving with the times. Why, a few ladies are entering professions
usually considered the province of men - as though marriage is no longer the
natural course of things..."
"I
shall just have to forego the pleasure of darning a husband's socks while he
reads to me what he thinks is suitable material from his newspaper."
"You
like sewing, then?" He was grinning
again, clearly amused by her irony.
She
laughed. "I abhor it as a means to pass time - though admire it as an
accomplished skill which sadly I do not possess." She slipped her sketch-pad into a leather
satchel.
"Might
I be so bold as to ask to accompany you at dinner this evening?" For all his seeming American brashness, he
appeared quite fearful of a refusal. She
had not noticed him in the dining room before so perhaps he had arrived today,
yet clearly he was aware that she travelled -
and ate - alone. She was intrigued.
She
nodded and recalled her Head Mistress's dictum: "Pigeons nod, my
dear. Young ladies speak." She smiled at the memory. "I would be
delighted," she said.
***
This is about a third of the first chapter and establishes the hero and heroine who join forces to set up a detective agency.
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