The Pool of St. Branok

The Pool of St. Branok Read Online Free PDF

Book: The Pool of St. Branok Read Online Free PDF
Author: Philippa Carr
He and I were immediately attracted to each other. I to him because he was different from anyone I had previously known and he to me perhaps because I so blatantly admired him.
    He was tall for his age; he had very blue eyes which were startling in his bronzed face; his hair was very fair, bleached by the fierce sun of the Antipodes. He had an air of insouciance as Uncle Peter had, but it was almost a swagger in Benedict; I thought Uncle Peter would have been very like him when he was his age. There was a look of amusement as though he saw the world as something made for his advancement and benefit. It was a look I had noticed in Uncle Peter. There could be no doubt of the relationship between them.
    The house in the square had only a small garden. It had paving stones and rather stunted bushes and a pear tree which produced very hard pears. Aunt Amaryllis had had pots put in with flowering shrubs and there was a rustic seat.
    It was in this garden that I had my first meeting with Benedict.
    “Hello,” he said. “You’re a cute little girl. Who are you?”
    “I’m Angelet. Some people call me Angel which is misleading.”
    “I hope it is,” he replied. “I’d be rather scared of an angel.”
    “I don’t think you would ever be scared of anything.”
    That was how I felt about him; and he liked to hear it. His blue eyes shone with pleasure. “I’m not scared of much,” he admitted. “But angels do have a habit of recording people’s sins.”
    “Have you committed many?”
    He nodded conspiratorially and I laughed.
    I said: “Who are you?”
    “Benedict Lansdon. Call me Ben.”
    “Ben suits you better. Benedict sounds a little holy … like a monk or a saint or something.”
    “I fear I should never be one of those.”
    “Ben’s much more suitable.”
    “They call me Ben way back.”
    “Why are you here?”
    “To see my grandfather.”
    “Uncle Peter?”
    “Oh, he’s your uncle, is he?”
    “No, not really. They call people uncle when they don’t know what else to call them. He’s just married to my Aunt Amaryllis, but she’s not my real aunt either. It really is one of those relationships which are too complicated to explain to people.”
    “Well, mine is not a bit complicated. He really is my grandfather.”
    “But there’s something odd about it. He didn’t seem to know he had you for a grandson until you came here to tell him.”
    “Not odd really. All very natural. People sometimes have children they don’t intend to. It takes them by surprise, so to speak, and then what are they going to do with them? That’s what happened to my grandmother and your Uncle Peter.”
    “I see.”
    “And she then went to Australia. He paid for her and sent her money for as long as she lived. My father was born. He was called Peter Lansdon after his father … Peter Lansdon Carter in fact but the Carter was dropped. My grandmother never married but my father did, and they had me. That’s how I come to be your Uncle Peter’s grandson. My grandmother was always talking about England and what a fine fellow my grandfather was. Once there was something in the papers about him. It was not very good, but she laughed over it, and said there was no one like him. When she died we lost touch with him, but he was often spoken of. My mother died and there was just my father and me. We had a small property but it was hard going. The land wasn’t good … too dry and there always seemed to be droughts … and then there were pests … locusts and that sort of thing. When my father knew he was dying he used to talk to me about the future. He knew someone who’d buy the property. He wanted me to go to England and find my grandfather. ‘You’ll find him easily,’ he said. ‘He’s a well known gentleman.’ And when he went I thought I’d like to see England, so I sold up and came.”
    “That was a very brave thing to do.”
    “I don’t look at it like that. I just wanted to come.”
    “What will you do
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