Brownsmiths Boy - A Romance in a Garden - Page 69/241

What beauties they seemed, and how, while those that grew in the shady

parts under the leaves, were of a delicate green, the ones I had picked

from out in the full sunshine were dark and ruddy and bronzed! How they

clustered together too, out here in the top of the tree, so thickly that

it seemed as if I should never get them all.

But by degrees I reached up and up where I could not take the basket,

and thrust the apples into my breast and pockets. One I had a

tremendous job to reach, after going a little lower to where my basket

hung to empty my pockets before climbing again. It was a splendid

fellow, the biggest yet, and growing right at the top of a twig.

It seemed dangerous to get up there, for it meant holding on by the

branch, and standing on the very top round of the ladder, and I

hesitated. Still I did not like to be beaten, and with the branch

bending I held on and went up and up, till I stood right at the top of

the ladder, and then cautiously raising my hand I was about to reach up

at and try to pick the apple, when something induced me to turn my head

and look in the direction of Shock's tree.

Sure enough he was watching me. I saw his face right up in the top; but

he turned it quickly, and there was a rustle and a crack as if he had

nearly fallen.

For a few moments this unsteadied me, and for the first time I began to

think that I was running great risks, and that I should fall. So

peculiar was the feeling that I clung tightly to the swaying bending

branch and shut my eyes.

The feeling went off as quickly as it came, for I set my teeth, and,

knowing that Shock was watching me, determined that he should not see I

was afraid.

The next moment I was reaching up cautiously, and by degrees got my hand

just under the apple, but could get no higher. My head was thrown back,

the branch bending towards me, and my feet on the top round, so that I

was leaning back far out of the perpendicular, and the more I tried to

get that pippin, and could not reach, the more bright and beautiful it

looked.

I forgot all about the danger, for Shock was watching me, and I would

have it; and as I strained up I at last was able to touch it with the

tips of my fingers, for my feet were pressing the branch one way, my

hands drawing it the other, till it came lower, lower, lower, my fingers

grasped the apple--more and more, and at last, when I felt that I could

bear the strain no longer, the stalk gave way, and the apple dropped

between the twig and my hand.