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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #68249 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68249)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of When a witch is young, by Philip
-Verrill Mighels
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: When a witch is young
-
-Author: Philip Verrill Mighels
-
-Release Date: June 5, 2022 [eBook #68249]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Mary Glenn Krause, Charlene Taylor, Barry Abrahamsen, and
- the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
- https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
- generously made available by The Internet Archive/American
- Libraries.)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WHEN A WITCH IS YOUNG ***
-
-
-
-
-
- WHEN A WITCH IS YOUNG
-
-
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- ═════════════════════════════
- _WHEN A WITCH_
- ─────────────────────
- ❦ _IS YOUNG_ ❦
- ═════════════════════════════
- _A Historical Novel_
- ─────────────────────
- B y 4 — 1 9 — 6 9
- ═════════════════════════════
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-
- ═════════════════════════════
- _R. F. FENNO & COMPANY_
- 9 AND 11 EAST 16TH STREET, New York
- ─────────────────────
- 1901
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1901
- By R. F. FENNO & COMPANY
- In the office of the Librarian of Congress at Washington
-
-
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS.
-
- ---
-
-
- PART I.
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
- I. Le Roi est Mort 9
- II. A Friendship of Chance 14
- III. The Germ of a Passion 22
-
-
- PART II.
-
- I. A Rover and his Retinue 27
- II. An Ungodly Performance 36
- III. ’Twixt Cup and Lip 45
- IV. The Opening of a Vista 53
- V. A Weighty Confidence 62
- VI. Pan’s Brother and the Nymph 71
- VII. The Meeting in the Greenwood 78
- VIII. Paying the Fiddler 86
- IX. A Matter of State 94
- X. To Foil a Spy 100
- XI. Dangerous Tributes 105
- XII. Hours that Grow Dark 110
- XIII. A Kiss Deferred 121
- XIV. Overtures from the Enemy 133
- XV. Love’s Inviting Light 140
- XVI. Garde’s Lonely Vigil 149
- XVII. A Night Attack 153
- XVIII. The Glint of Treasure 160
- XIX. Mutiny 164
- XX. Garde’s Extremity 171
- XXI. Randolph’s Courtship 180
- XXII. David’s Coercion 187
- XXIII. Goody’s Boy 193
- XXIV. A Greenwood Meeting 200
- XXV. Love’s Traps for Confessions 213
- XXVI. A Holiday Ended 221
- XXVII. In Boston Town 228
- XXVIII. Love’s Garden 234
- XXIX. The Enemy in Power 243
- XXX. A Fight at the Tavern 249
- XXXI. A Refugee 255
- XXXII. A Foster Parent 260
- XXXIII. Repudiated Silver 269
- XXXIV. Lodgings for the Retinue 275
- XXXV. Garde Obtains the Jail Keys 280
- XXXVI. Garde’s Ordeal 287
- XXXVII. Rats in the Armory 296
- XXXVIII. Love’s Long Good-by 303
- XXXIX. Mutations 308
- XL. Golden Oysters 314
- XLI. Fate’s Devious Ways 319
- XLII. Little Ruses and Waiting 327
-
-
- PART III.
-
- I. A Topic at Court 335
- II. Illness in the Family 342
- III. Foiled Purposes 345
- IV. Making History 350
- V. Old Acquaintances 357
- VI. Juggling with Fire 362
- VII. A Beef-eater Passes 368
- VIII. A Woman Scorned 371
- IX. Revelations 382
- X. After Six Years 392
- XI. A Blow in the Dark 398
- XII. Adam's Nurse 403
- XIII. Goody in the Toils 407
- XIV. Garde’s Subterfuge 414
- XV. The Midnight Trial 425
- XVI. The Gauntlet Run 436
- XVII. Bewitched 442
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- WHEN A WITCH IS YOUNG.
-
- ----------
-
-
- PART I.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I.
-
- LE ROI EST MORT.
-
-
-THE first, the last—the only King the Americans ever had, was dead. It
-was the 13th day of August, in the year 1676. The human emotions of the
-Puritan people of Massachusetts tugged at the shackles of a long
-repression and broke them asunder, in the seemly town of Plymouth. King
-Philip, the mighty Sachem of the Wampanoag Indians, had been slain. His
-warriors were scattered and slaughtered. His war was ended.
-
-Through the streets of Plymouth poured a vast throng of people. Men,
-women and children, they ran and walked, surrounding a buff-colored army
-that filled the thoroughfares like a turgid flood. This was the regiment
-which Captain Benjamin Church had led to the final camp of King Philip,
-in the swamps at Mt. Hope and Pocasset, where the last scene in the
-sanguinary drama had been enacted.
-
-Here was a troop of sixty horse, with officers. They were well mounted,
-caparisoned with glittering back, breast and headpiece, and armed with
-clanking sword, shouldered carbine, and great pistols, that flopped at
-the waist. Behind them were foot-soldiers, brown Puritans—stern,
-mirth-denying, lusty at fighting. Some of these bore no weapon other
-than a pike. Another frequently had upon him sword, pistol and carbine.
-Above the heads of these men on foot waved a thin forest of pike-staves,
-on the tips of which bright steel threw back the dazzling rays of the
-sun. There was clatter of scabbards on the pavement, thud and thud of
-hoofs and feet in the roadway, and above all, shouts of men and gabble
-of children.
-
-There were hordes on either side of this human flood, pushing and
-crowding to gain the front of the column, while a similar aggregation
-hung back upon the flank of the regiment, hooting, craning necks and
-racing to keep pace with the steady, long strides of the soldiers. This
-division of interest was caused by the two counter attractions of the
-pageant. Thus at the front, a red Indian was leading the march with a
-wild, half-dancing step, while he contorted his body weirdly for the
-purpose of displaying to all beholders the ghastly proof of victory—the
-head of the great King Philip. This Indian ally might have stood for the
-mockery of a drum-major, heading a march of doom.
-
-The spectators, racing, crowding, following, took a crazed delight in
-beholding this gory head. Love, anger, joy, the daily emotions of man,
-were habitually so repressed by these serious people that now it seemed
-as if they reveled as in an orgie of shuddering and gasping, to give
-vent to their pent-up natures. They laughed, they skipped on nimble
-feet, they sang praises. The young men and women snatched the occasion,
-with its looseness of deportment, to look unbridled feelings into one
-another’s eyes.
-
-The other attraction, in the rear, was a captive, a mere boy, as white
-as any in the multitude, and paler than the palest. Tall and lithe as he
-was, his age was scarcely a whit above fourteen. He was dressed as an
-Indian; he bore himself like a sullen brave. At his side was old
-Annawon, the last of King Philip’s councilors, who, having surrendered
-under a promise of “good quarter” was even now being led to his
-execution.
-
-The interest centered, however, in the boy. Through the stoicism which
-he labored to hold as a mask upon his face, the signs of anguish played
-like an undercurrent. In all the throng he had but a single friend, the
-Red-man with whom he was marching. He looked about at the pitiless
-embankment of faces. Near him a score of nimble boys were running, a
-frantic desire to strike him depicted in their eyes. Further away a tall
-man was moving, perforce, with the tide. On his shoulder he bore a
-little Puritan maiden, who might have been crushed had he placed her on
-her feet. She was looking at the boy-captive with eyes that seemed a
-deeper brown for their very compassion. She clung to the man who held
-her, with a tense little fist. Her other tiny hand was pressed upon her
-cheek till all about each small finger was white, in the bonny
-apple-blush of her color. It seemed as if she must cry out to the young
-prisoner, in sympathy.
-
-While the boy was gazing back his answer to the child—a quiver in
-consequence almost loosening his lip—an urchin near him abruptly cast a
-stone that struck him smartly in the side. With a panther-like motion
-the captive launched himself upon his assailant and bore him to earth in
-a second. The old councillor, Annawon, spoke some soft, quick word at
-which the lad in buckskin immediately abandoned his overthrown
-antagonist and regained his place in the march. His eyes blinked
-swiftly, but in vain, for tears, of anger and pain, forced their way
-between his lids and so to his cheeks, when he dashed them swiftly away
-on his sleeve.
-
-The foot-soldiers scurried forward and closed in about their dangerous
-charge. The bawling youths of Plymouth seemed to multiply by magic. But
-their opportunities for committing further mischief were presently
-destroyed. The pageant was passing Plymouth jail. An officer hustled ten
-of his men about the boy-prisoner and wedged them through the press of
-people toward this place of gloom. Above the clamor then rose a voice,
-and in the Indian tongue the boy-captive heard the words:
-
-“Farewell, Little-Standing-Panther.”
-
-It was old Annawon, who had divined that there would be no other parting
-with the lad, who was the only creature which the war had left on earth
-for him to love.
-
-The boy cried: “Farewell,” and the passage through the people closed
-behind him.
-
-Those who looked beheld old Annawon smile faintly and sadly. It was the
-only expression which had played across his face since his surrender,
-and there was never another.
-
-Through nearly every street the glad procession wound. At length, the
-head of the butchered King Philip was thrust upon an iron stake, which
-was planted deeply in the ground. Governor Winslow then requested that
-the people disperse to their several homes.
-
-The night at length came down—night the beneficent, that cloaks the
-tokens of men’s barbarisms. Then the moon arose, casting a pale, cold
-light, lest remorse lose her way. What a passionless calm settled upon
-the sleeping village!
-
-At last, with a tread as silent as that of death itself, an active
-figure crept from shadow to shadow, in the streets which the moon had
-silver-plated. The lone human being came to the square wherein was
-planted the stake with the moon-softened head upon it. The visitor was
-the white boy-captive, dressed in his Indian toggery. He had escaped
-from the jail.
-
-In the moonlight he came forward slowly. He halted and extended his arms
-toward the stake with its motionless burden. He approached in reverence,
-murmuring brokenly in the Indian tongue:
-
-“Metacomet—Metacomet,——my foster-father,——I have come.”
-
-He knelt upon the ground and clasping the cold iron stake in his arms,
-he sobbed and sobbed, as if his heart would break.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II.
-
- A FRIENDSHIP OF CHANCE.
-
-
-THROUGH the gray mist of Plymouth’s dawn there came a sound of
-footsteps, and then a murmur of melodious humming, somewhat controlled
-and yet too sturdy and joyous to be readily accounted for in the strict
-Puritan village. Presently, looming out of the uncertain light, appeared
-the roughly-hewn figure of a young man of five and twenty. He was
-singing to himself, as he hastened with big strides through the deserted
-streets.
-
-On the point of passing the place where the gibbeted head of King Philip
-made a rude exclamation point in the calm of gray Plymouth, the early
-riser suddenly noted the curled-up form of a human being on the ground,
-his arm loosely bent about the iron stake, his head resting loosely
-against it, his eyes fast closed in the sleep of exhaustion. The man
-started slightly, halted and ceased his singing.
-
-He blinked his eyes for a moment, shifted his feet uneasily and rubbed
-stoutly at his jaw, as he gazed in perplexity at the picture before him.
-He then tip-toed as if to go on, quietly, about his own business. He
-glanced at the head, then back to the boy, from whose lips, in his
-sleep, a little moan escaped. The visitor noted the traces where tears
-had channeled down the lad’s pale cheeks. There was something
-unescapable in the attitude of the bare golden head against the stake.
-The man stopped and laid his big hand gently on the half-curled locks.
-
-Instantly the boy awoke, leaped to his feet and fell down again, from
-sheer stiffness, staring at the man with eyes somewhat wild. He arose
-again at once, more steadily, overcoming the cramps in his muscles
-doggedly, never ceasing for a second to watch the man who had waked him.
-
-“I give you good morrow,” said the man. “It seems to me you have need of
-a friend, since you have clearly lost one that you much esteemed.”
-
-There was persuasion and honesty in the stranger’s warm-blue eyes, good
-nature in his broad, smooth face and a large capacity for affection
-denoted in his somewhat sensuous mouth. Such a look of friendship and
-utter sincerity as he bestowed on the startled and defiant boy before
-him could not have been easily counterfeited. The youthful know
-sincerity by intuition.
-
-“Who are you?” said the boy, his voice hoarse and weakened. “What would
-anybody want with me?”
-
-“My name is William Phipps,” said the stranger, simply. “I am a
-ship-builder of Boston. If you have no better friend, perhaps I would do
-till you can find one. I am on my way to Boston now. If you need a
-friend and would like to leave Plymouth, you may come with me, unless
-you feel you cannot trust any one about this village.” He paused a
-moment and then added, “I think you must be the boy I heard of, Adam
-Rust, brought in with the captured Indians.”
-
-“My name is Adam Rust,” the boy admitted. “I have no friends left. If
-you have been helping to kill the Wampanoags I would rather not try to
-be your friend. But I know I would like you and I should be glad to go
-to Boston, or any place away from here.” In the daylight he could not
-bear to look up at the head above him.
-
-“I have been too busy to fight,” said William Phipps, employing the same
-excuse he had used for friends with recruiting proclivities. “And I have
-been too happy,” he added, as if involuntarily. “So, you see, there is
-no reason why I should not be your friend. Have you had any breakfast?”
-He put out his hand to shake.
-
-“No,” said Adam. He lost his hand in the big fist which Phipps
-presented, and restrained himself from crying by making a mighty effort.
-He had gone without eating for two days, but he said nothing about it.
-
-“Then,” said Phipps heartily, “the sooner we start the better. We can
-get something hot on the brig.”
-
-He began his long striding again. Adam hesitated a moment. He looked up
-at the features above him, his heart gushing full of emotion.
-
-Some inarticulate farewell, in the Indian tongue, he breathed through
-his quivering lips. His eyes grew dimmed. He fancied he saw a smile of
-farewell and of encouragement play intangibly on those still, saddened
-lineaments, and so he held forth his arms for a second and then turned
-away to join his new-found protector.
-
-William Phipps, having thought the boy to be following more closely than
-he was, stopped to let him catch up. Thus he noted the look of anguish
-with which the lad was leaving that grim remnant of King Philip behind.
-Phipps was one of Nature’s “motherly men”—hardly ever more numerous than
-rocs’ eggs on the earth. He felt his heart go forth to Adam Rust.
-Therefore it was that he looked down in the boy’s face, time after time,
-as they walked along together. Thus they came to the water-front and
-wharves, at the end of one of which the brig “Captain Spencer” was
-swinging.
-
-“This ship belongs to me and I made her,” said Phipps, with candid pride
-in his achievement. “You shall see that she sails right merrily.”
-
-They went aboard. A few sailors scrubbing down the deck, barefooted and
-with sleeves at elbow, now abandoned their task temporarily, at the
-command of the mate, who had seen his captain coming, to hoist sail and
-let go the hawsers. The chuckle in the blocks, as the sailors heaved and
-hauled at the ropes, gave Adam Rust a pleasure he had never before
-experienced.
-
-Breakfast being not yet prepared for service, Phipps conducted his
-foundling about the craft for a look at her beauties. When Adam had
-putted the muzzle of the brig’s gun and felt the weight of a naked sword
-in his fist, in the armory, the buoyancy of his youth put new color in
-his cheeks and a sparkle in his eyes. He was a bright-natural,
-companionable lad, who grew friendly and smiled his way into one’s
-affections rapidly, but naturally. When he and Phipps had come up again
-to the deck, after breakfast, they felt as if they had always been
-friends.
-
-The brig was under way. Shorewards the gray old Atlantic was wrinkled
-under the fretful annoyance of a brisk, salty breeze. The ship was
-slipping prettily up the coast, with stately courtesies to the stern
-rocks that stood like guardians to the land.
-
-“I think we shall find you were born for a sailor, Adam,” said the
-master of the craft. “I can give you my word it is more joy and life to
-sail a ship than to make one. And some day——” but he halted. The modest
-boasts, with which he warmed the heart of his well-beloved wife, were a
-bit too sacred for repetition, even to a boy so winning. “But,” he
-concluded, “perhaps you would like to tell me something of yourself.”
-
-Thus encouraged Adam related his story. He was the son of John Rust, a
-chivalrous gentleman, an affectionate husband and a serious man, with a
-light heart and a ready wit. John Rust had been the friend of the
-Indians and the mediator between them and the whites until the sheer
-perfidy of the Puritans had rendered him hopeless of retaining the
-confidence of the Red men, when he had abandoned the office. Adam’s
-mother had been dead for something more than four years. Afflicted by
-his sense of loss, John Rust had become a strange man, a restless soul
-hopelessly searching for that other self, as knights of old once sought
-the holy grail.
-
-He went forth alone into the trackless wilderness that led endlessly
-into the west. Although the father and son had been knit together in
-their affections by long talks, long ranges together in the forests and
-by the lessons which the man had imparted, yet when John Rust had gone
-on his unearthly quest, he could not bear the thought of taking young
-Adam with him into the wilds.
-
-He had therefore left the boy with his friends, the lad’s natural
-guardians, the honorable nation of Wampanoags. “Keep him here, teach him
-of your wisdom, make him one of your young warriors,” he had said when
-he went, “so that when I return I may know him for his worth.”
-
-King Philip, the mighty Sachem of the tribe, had thereafter been as a
-foster-father to the boy. For more than two years the Red-man had
-believed John Rust to have found his final lodge, and this was the
-truth. And perhaps he had also found his holy grail. He perished alone
-in the trackless forest. Adam had learned his wood-lore of his red
-brothers. He was stout, lithe, wiry and nimble. He rode a horse like the
-torso of a centaur. He was a bit of a boaster, in a frank and healthy
-way.
-
-King Philip’s war, ascribed, as to causes, to “the passion of the
-English for territory; their confidence that God had opened up America
-for their exclusive occupancy; their contempt for the Indians and their
-utter disregard for their rights,” had come inexorably upon the
-Wampanoags. In its vortex of action, movement, success and failure at
-last for the Indians, Adam Rust had been whirled along with Metacomet.
-He had never been permitted by King Philip to fight against his “white
-brothers,” but he had assisted to plan for the safety of the old men,
-women and children, in procuring game and in constructing shelters. He
-had learned to love these silently suffering people with all his heart.
-The fights, the hardships, the doom, coming inevitably upon the hopeless
-Wampanoags, had made the boy a man, in some of the innermost recesses of
-a heart’s suffering. He had seen the last sad remnants of the
-Wampanoags, the Pocassets and the Narragansetts scatter, to perish in
-the dismal swamps. He had witnessed the death of King Philip, brought
-upon him by a treacherous fellow Red-man. And then he had marched in
-that grim procession.
-
-Adam made no attempt to convey an idea of the magnitude of his loss. It
-would not have been possible. There is something in human nature which
-can never be convinced that death has utterly stilled a beloved voice
-and quenched the fire of the soul showing through a pair of eyes
-endeared by companionship. This in Adam made him feel, even as he told
-his tale to William Phipps, that he was somehow deserting his faithful
-friends.
-
-Bareheaded on the sun-lit deck as he told his story, lithe in his
-gestures, splendidly scornful when he imitated the great chieftains of
-the tribes, and then like a young Viking as at last he finished his
-narrative and looked far and wide on the sparkling sea, in joyousness at
-the newer chapter which seemed to open to the very horizons themselves
-before him, Adam awakened the lusty youth and daring in William Phipps
-and the dreams of a world’s career always present in his brain.
-
-The man’s eyes sparkled, as he spun the wheel that guided the brig,
-bounding beneath their feet. A restlessness seized upon the spirit in
-his breast.
-
-“Adam,” he said, “do you like this ship?”
-
-“Yes!—oh, it makes me feel like shouting!” the boy exclaimed. “I wish I
-could straddle it, like a horse, and make it go faster and wilder, ’way
-off there—and everywhere! Oh, don’t it make you breathe!”
-
-“Then,” said Phipps, repressing his own love of such a madness as Adam
-had voiced, “let us go for a long sail together. I have long had in mind
-a voyage for trading to Hispaniola. If you would like to go with me, I
-will get the brig ready in a week.”
-
-For his answer young Adam leaped as if he would spur the ship in the
-ribs and ride her to the end of the earth forthwith.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III.
-
- THE GERM OF A PASSION.
-
-
-A BONNIE little Puritan maid, Mistress Garde Merrill, stood in the open
-doorway at her home, fervently hugging her kitten. The sunlight seemed
-almost like beaten gold, so tangibly did it lay upon the house, the
-vines that climbed the wall, and the garden full of old-fashioned
-flowers.
-
-A few leaves, which had escaped from the trees, in a longing to extend
-their field of romping, were being whirled about in a brisk zephyr that
-spun in a corner. A sense of warmth and fragrance made all the world
-seem wantoning in its own loveliness.
-
-Little Garde, watching the frolic of the leaves, and thinking them
-pretty elves and fairies, dancing, presently looked up into the solemn
-visage of a passing citizen, who had paused at the gate.
-
-“Mistress Merrill,” he said, gravely, after a moment’s inspection of the
-bright, enchanting little face, “your eyes have not the Puritan spirit
-of meekness.” Thereupon he departed on his way, sadly shaking his head.
-
-Garde’s eyes, in all truth, were dancing right joyously; and dancing was
-not accounted a Puritan devotion. Such brown, light-ensnaring eyes could
-not, however, constrain themselves to melancholy. No more could the
-apple-red of her smooth, round cheeks retreat from the ardor of the sun.
-As for her hair, like strands on strands of spun mahogany, no power on
-earth could have disentangled its nets wherein the rays of golden light
-had meshed and intermeshed themselves. In her brightness of color, with
-her black and white kitten on her arm, the child was a dainty little
-human jewel.
-
-She was watching a bee and a butterfly when a shadow fell again into the
-yard, among the flowers, at the entrance. Garde felt her attention drawn
-and centered at once. She found herself looking not so much at a
-bareheaded boy, as fairly into the depths of his very blue and steadfast
-eyes.
-
-The visitor stood there with his hands clasping two of the pickets of
-which the gate was fashioned. He had seen everything in the garden at
-one glance, but he was looking at Garde. His eyes began laughingly, then
-seriously, but always frankly, to ask a favor.
-
-“I prithee come in,” said Garde, as one a little struck with wonder.
-
-The boy came in. Garde met him in the path and gave him her kitten. He
-took it, apparently because she gave it, and not because he was
-inordinately fond of cats. It seemed to Garde that she knew this boy,
-and yet he had on a suit that suggested a young sailor, and she had
-never made the acquaintance of any sailors whatsoever. If he would only
-look elsewhere than at her face, she thought, perhaps she could
-remember.
-
-“See them,” she said, and she pointed to where the leaves were once more
-capering in the corner.
-
-The boy looked, but his gaze would swing back to its North, which it
-found in two brown eyes.
-
-“I saw you that day in Plymouth,” he said. “And I got out of their old
-jail, and I didn’t see anybody else that looked kind or nice among all
-those people.”
-
-“Oh!” said Garde, suddenly remembering everything, “oh, you were—that
-boy marching with the old Indian. I was so sorry. And I am so glad that
-you got away. I am real glad you came to see me. Grandfather and I were
-down there for a visit—so I saw you. Oh dear me!” She looked at her
-young visitor with eyes open wide by amazement. It seemed almost too
-much to believe that the very boy she had seen and so pitied and liked,
-in that terrible procession at Plymouth, should actually be standing
-here before her in her grandfather’s garden! “Oh dear me!” she presently
-said again.
-
-“I hate Plymouth!” said the boy, “but I like Boston.”
-
-“I am so glad,” said Garde. “Will you tell me your name? Mine is Garde
-Merrill.”
-
-The boy said: “My name is Adam Rust.”
-
-“I was named for all my aunts,” the maid imparted, as if eager to set a
-troublesome matter straight at once, “Gertrude, Abigail, Rosella,
-Dorothy and Elizabeth. The first letters of their names spell G-A-R-D-E,
-Garde.”
-
-Her visitor was rendered speechless for a moment. “Metacomet and all the
-Indians used to call me Little-Standing-Panther,” he then said,
-boyishly, not to be outdone in the matter of names.
-
-“Metacomet—King Philip? Oh, then you are the boy that used to live with
-the Indians, and that was how they got you!” gasped the little maid.
-“Grandfather told auntie all about it. Oh, I wish I could live with the
-Indians! I am very, very sorry they got you! But I am glad you came to
-see me.”
-
-Adam flushed with innocent and modest pride, thus to impress his small
-admirer, who was named so formidably. He thought that nothing so
-pleasant had ever happened in all his life.
-
-“It is too sad to live with Indians,” he answered. A mist seemed to
-obscure the light in his eyes and to cast a shadow between them and the
-sweet face at which he was looking with frank admiration. The cloud
-passed, however, as clouds will in the summer, and his gaze was again
-one of illuminated smiles. “I am a sailor now,” he said, with a little
-boast in his voice. “To-morrow morning we are going to start for
-Hispaniola.”
-
-“Oh dear me!” said Garde, in sheer despair of an adequate expression of
-her many emotions. Then she added contritely: “I mustn’t say ‘Oh dear
-me!’ but—oh dear—I wish I might.”
-
-“I shan’t mind,” said Adam.
-
-“I wish I could go to Hispaniola, too,” said Garde, honestly. “I hate to
-be kept here as quiet as a clock that doesn’t go. I suppose you couldn’t
-take me? Let’s sit down with the kitten and think it over together.”
-
-“I don’t think we could take any girls,” said Adam, seating himself at
-her side on the porch, “but I could bring you back something when I
-come.”
-
-“Oh, let’s talk all about what we would rather have most,” Garde
-responded.
-
-So their fingers mingled in the fur of the kitten and they talked of
-fabulous things with which the West Indies were reported to abound. His
-golden hair, and her hair so darkly red, made the picture in the
-sunlight a thing complete in its brightness and beauty. The wind floated
-a few stray filaments, richly red as mahogany, from the masses on
-Garde’s pretty brow, across to the ringlets on Adam’s temple. To and
-fro, over these delicate copper wires, stretched for its purpose, the
-sweet love that comes first to a lad and a maid, danced with electrical
-activity.
-
-“If you are going to-morrow,” said Garde, “you must see all the flowers
-and everything now.” She therefore took him by the hand and led him
-about the garden, first she, then he, and then she once more carrying
-the kitten.
-
-They were still in the midst of their explorations of the garden, which
-required that each part should be visited several times, when the gate
-opened and in walked Garde’s tall, stern-looking grandfather.
-
-David Donner rubbed his eyes in amazement, hardly believing that his
-senses could actually be recording a picture of his granddaughter, hand
-in hand with some utter stranger of a boy, in his own precincts. He came
-quickly toward the pair, making a sound that came within an ell of being
-a shout.
-
-Garde looked up in sudden affright. Adam regarded the visitor calmly and
-without emotion. Having first dropped the young sailor’s hand, Garde now
-resolutely screwed her little warm fingers back into the boy’s fist.
-
-“Grandfather,” she said boldly, “I shall sail to-morrow for Hispaniola.”
-
-David Donner, at this, was so suddenly filled with steam pressure, which
-he felt constrained to repress, that his eyes nearly popped out of their
-sockets.
-
-“Go away, boy,” he said to Adam. “Mistress Merrill, your conduct is
-quite uncalled for.”
-
-Having divined that his sister had deserted her post and gone, as was
-her wont, to the nearest neighbor’s, for a snack of gossip, he glared at
-Adam, swooped down upon Garde and caught her up in his arms abruptly,
-kitten and all.
-
-Her hold on Adam’s hand being rudely wrenched asunder, Garde felt her
-heart break incontinently. She began to weep without restraint, in fact,
-furiously. She also kicked, and was also deporting herself when the door
-was slammed behind the forms of herself, her kitten and her grandfather,
-a moment later.
-
-Adam looked once where she had gone. His face had assumed a stolidity
-which he was far from feeling. He walked to the gate and went away,
-without once turning to look back at the house.
-
-Mistress Garde, confronted by David Donner at close quarters, soon
-regained her maidenly composure and wept surreptitiously on the stomach
-of the kitten. At length she looked up in defiance at the silent old
-man.
-
-“I have changed the name of my kitten,” she said. “His name is
-Little-Standing-Panther!”
-
-Her grandfather, to whom this outbreak seemed something of an indication
-of mental disorder, on her part, stared at the child dumbly. Not without
-some justification for her deductions, Garde thought him quelled. In a
-spirit of reckless defiance, and likewise to give some vent to her
-feelings, she suddenly threw her arms about the bedewed kitten, on its
-pillow, pressed her face against its fur and said to it, fervently:
-
-“Little-Standing-Panther, I love you, and love you and love you!”
-
-Grandfather Donner looked up in alarm. “Tut, tut, my child,” said he,
-“love is a passion.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- PART II.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I.
-
- A ROVER AND HIS RETINUE.
-
- His only gold was in his hair;
- He had no silver hoard;
- But steel he had, enow to spare—
- In his thews and in his sword!
-
-
-TOWARD the close of a glorious day in September, 1683, William Phipps
-beheld a smart brig nose her way up the harbor of Boston, and drop in
-her anchor in the field of water wherein his ship-yard thrust its toes.
-A small boat then presently put forth and made straight for the
-ship-yard landing, where three men calmly alighted, throwing ashore a
-small heap of shabby-genteel-looking baggage.
-
-Somewhat annoyed, thus to have his precincts employed by any Tom, Dick
-and Harry of chance, Phipps stepped from between the ribs of a ship’s
-skeleton, which was being daily articulated, and strode toward the
-intruders. Then a rumble, which ought to have been a shout, broke from
-his lips, about the same second that a roar of joy appeared to leap out
-of the foremost of the strangers, who had landed and who were coming
-boldly forward.
-
-William Phipps and the leader of the invading trio then rushed hotly
-together and collided, giving each other a bear-like hug from which the
-ship-builder presently extricated himself at a thought of how he might
-be shocking all or any good Puritans who might chance to be witnessing
-the scene.
-
-“Well, shatter my hilt! and God bless you! if it isn’t your same old
-beloved self!” said the stranger, heartily.
-
-“My boy! Bless your eyes, Adam, I never thought to see you again!” said
-bluff William Phipps. “You big young rascal! You full-rigged ship! Where
-have you come from? What do you mean by making me swear myself into
-purgatory at your carelessness in getting yourself killed? You
-twenty-gun frigate—you—you big——”
-
-He left off for very constraint, for his throat blocked up, despite his
-most heroic efforts. He and Adam Rust began to roar with laughter, the
-tears in their eyes needing some excuse. Meantime the two companions who
-had come with the young rover, stood gazing about them, in patience, and
-likewise looking in wonder on the two men before them.
-
-There was reason enough to look, for Adam and Phipps were a pair to
-command attention. It seemed as if a founder had used the big
-ship-builder as a pattern on which to refine his art in casting the
-younger man. Adam’s back was a trifle narrower; his chest was a bit
-wider; he was trimmer at the waist, neater at the thigh, longer-armed.
-His hands were smaller, just as his movements were quicker and lighter.
-
-Although Adam’s hair crowned him with tawny ringlets of gold, while that
-of Phipps was browner, and though the young fellow wore a small
-mustache, in contrast, to the smooth-shaved face of his friend, it might
-yet be said that the two men looked alike. Both were bronzed by weather,
-both had steadfast eyes with the same frank expression, the same blue
-tint and the same integrity about them.
-
-In their dress the two men differed. William Phipps, whatsoever he might
-indulge himself in doing when away on the sea, conformed to the
-dark-brown simplicity of the Puritans when in Boston. Adam, on the other
-hand, wore a brown velvet coat which, though at present somewhat faded
-and moulting, had once been fine feathers in England. His waistcoat had
-been of royal purple, before its nap fled before the onslaughts of the
-clothes-brush, while his breeches were of a time-tanned forest green
-which disappeared into the maw of his wide-topped leather boots. He wore
-at his hip a veteran blade of steel, in a scabbard as battered as the
-outer gate of a stronghold. When not in his fighting fist, the hilt of
-this weapon contented itself with caresses from his softer hand, the
-left.
-
-The two men having shaken hands for the third time, and having looked
-each other over from head to foot, and laughed and asked each other a
-dozen questions, to which neither had returned any answers, Adam
-suddenly remembered his comrades, waiting in the background. He turned
-to them now, not without affection.
-
-“Here, Pike and Halberd,” he said, “you must meet my third father,
-Captain William Phipps, a noble man to whom you will owe allegiance all
-your miserable lives. William, these are my beef-eaters. Don’t ask me
-where I got them. They are neither out of jail nor heaven. But they have
-let me save their lives and feed them and clothe them, and they are
-valiant, faithful rascals. To know them is to love them, and not to know
-them is to be snubbed by Satan. They have been my double shadow for a
-year, sharing my prosperous condition like two peers of the realm.”
-
-The beef-eaters grinned as they exchanged salutations with Phipps. Pike
-was a short individual, inclined to be fat, even when on the slimmest of
-rations. The pupils of his eyes were like two suns that had risen above
-the horizon of his lower lids, only to obscure themselves under the
-cloud-like lids above. Their expression, especially when he gazed upward
-into Adam’s face, was something too appealingly saint-like and
-beseeching for anything mortal to possess. Halberd was a ladder of a man
-up which everything, save success, had clambered to paint expressions on
-his face, which was grave and melancholy to the verge of the ludicrous.
-He had two little bunches of muscle, each of which stuck out like half a
-walnut, at the corners of his jaws, where they had grown and developed
-as a result of his clamping his molars together, in a determination to
-do or to be something which had, apparently, never as yet transpired.
-
-The two looked about as much like beef-eaters as a mouse looks like a
-man-eater. They were ragged, where not fantastic, in their apparel; they
-were obviously fitter for a feast than a fight, for the sea had depleted
-both of their hoardings of vigor and courage.
-
-“Sire,” said Halberd, theatrically, “we have had nothing but good
-reports of you for a year.” Whether he placed his hand on his heart or
-his stomach, as he said this, and what he meant to convey as his
-meaning, could never be wholly clear.
-
-“We shall be honored to fight for you, if need arise,” said Pike, who
-panted somewhat, on all occasions, “while there is a breath in our
-bodies.”
-
-“It is a privilege to know you both,” said Phipps, whose gravity was as
-dry as tinder.
-
-“Any friend of the Sachem’s is a friend of ours,” responded Halberd. He
-said this grandly and made a profound bow.
-
-“The ‘Sachem’?” repeated Phipps, and he looked at Adam, inquiringly.
-
-Adam had the grace to blush a trifle, thus to be caught in one of the
-harmless little boasts in which he had indulged himself, over sea. “Just
-a foolish habit the two have gotten into,” he murmured.
-
-“Ah,” said William Phipps. “Well, then, Sachem, it will soon be growing
-dark, you had best come home with me to dinner.”
-
-Involuntarily Adam turned about to look at the beef-eaters. Their eyes
-had abruptly taken on a preternatural brightness at the word dinner.
-
-“I have much to ask you and much to tell you,” Phipps added. “And the
-goodwife would exact this honor if she knew you were come.”
-
-The invitation did not include Adam’s retinue. He swallowed, as if the
-delicious odors of one of Goodwife Phipp’s dinners were about to escape
-him.
-
-“Well,” he said, “the honors are all the other way about, but—the fact
-is—a previous engagement—I—I have promised a rousing hot din—I have
-accepted an invitation to dine with the beef-eaters, at the Crow and
-Arrow.”
-
-The ship-builder knew all about those “rousing hot dinners” of cold
-eel-pie, potatoes and mustard, for which the Crow and Arrow tavern was
-not exactly famous. He looked at Adam, to whom as their sachem the
-beef-eaters appealed with their eyes, like two faithful animals. Adam
-was regarding the pair silently, a faint smile of cheer and camaraderie
-on his face.
-
-“But—but my invitation included our friends,” Phipps hastened to say.
-“Come, come, the tavern can wait till to-morrow. Gentlemen, you will
-certainly not disappoint me.”
-
-“’Tis well spoken that the tavern can wait,” said Pike.
-
-“To disappoint the friend of the Sachem would be a grievous thing,” said
-Halberd. “Let the galled tavern sweat with impatience.”
-
-They would all have started away together at once, had not Phipps noted
-the heap of baggage, left untidily upon his landing when the travelers
-arrived.
-
-“Well,” said he, “Adam, you know the way to the house, suppose you and
-your friends carry your worldly goods to the tavern, engage your
-apartments, and then follow me on. I, in the meantime, can hasten home
-to apprise the wife that you are coming, with the beef-eaters, and she
-can therefore make due preparations in honor of the event.”
-
-“This is good sense,” said Adam. “Go along, or we shall be there before
-you.”
-
-Phipps, with a half dozen backward looks at his guests and their shabby
-chattels, made his way out of the ship-yard without further delay. Adam
-and his retinue gripped three or four parcels apiece and started, with
-clank of sword, and in some discomfort, for the Crow and Arrow.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II.
-
- AN UNGODLY PERFORMANCE.
-
-
-ADAM RUST knew the Crow and Arrow more by that repute which had traveled
-back to England, through the medium of young stalwarts and sailors, than
-he did from personal acquaintance with its charms. He had seen the place
-frequently enough, when first he came to Boston with William Phipps, but
-the town had expanded much since then and bore an air of unfamiliarity.
-The young man and his beef-eaters therefore wandered somewhat from their
-course.
-
-Being overladen and dressed out of the ordinary fashion, the trio soon
-found themselves attracting attention, particularly from certain of the
-youths of the quarter and the rough characters incidental to shipping
-and the neighborhood thereof. Adam was carrying a long box, somewhat
-decrepit with age. It swung against his legs and struck an occasional
-post, or a corner, held insecurely as it was by his little finger only,
-which was passed through a brass handle. In this manner, and with a
-growing cluster of curious persons beginning to follow on behind, the
-party were in sight of the tavern at last, when this long box of Adam’s
-abruptly opened and spilled out a richly darkened old violin.
-
-With a short exclamation of impatience, Adam halted and dropped his
-other bundles. Over these tall Halberd fell, with a great clatter of
-weapons, tin box and shaken bones. Adam fended him off from the violin,
-snatched it up and scrutinized it with the eager concern which a mother
-might bestow upon a delicate child. He found it uninjured, but, as it
-might have been smashed, he clung to it fondly, reluctant to place it
-again in its treacherous case.
-
-Naturally the downfall of Halberd had delighted the gamin and the
-sailors following. These formed a cluster about the party, and their
-numbers drew additional spectators rapidly. A number of seafaring men
-shoved stoutly forward, their eyes glistening at sight of the musical
-instrument.
-
-“I say, give us something, then, on that there red boy!” demanded one of
-the men, as healthy a looking rascal as ever drew breath.
-
-“You look a bonny lad, come on—there’s a good un,” said another.
-
-“Rattle her guts,” said a third. “We ain’t heard the like of a fiddle
-since we came to this town of preachers.”
-
-Adam looked quietly about him. He knew most of the fellows about in the
-rude circle for rough English rovers who would love him if he played, or
-knock him and his belongings playfully into the street if he refused. He
-was not accustomed to churlishness; moreover, he felt particularly in
-the mood for playing. The ruddy sunset, the warm breath of the passing
-day, the very taste of American air, seemed lusty and joyous, despite
-the rigid Puritanical spirit of the mirth-denying people of the colony.
-He took up the bow, twanged the strings, tightened two that had become
-laggard, and jumped into the middle of a rollicking composition that
-seemed to bubble up out of the body of the violin and tumble off into
-the crowd in a species of mad delight.
-
-Had the instrument been a spirit of wine, richly dark red as old port,
-and rendered alive by the frolicking bow, it could not have thrown off
-more merry snatches of melody’s mirth. It chuckled, it caught its
-breath, like a fat old monk at his laughing, it broke out in guffaws of
-hilarity, till not a soul in the audience could keep his feet seemly
-beneath him.
-
-The sailors danced, boldly, though clumsily. Their faces beamed with
-innocent drunkenness, for drunk they were, with what seemed like the
-fumes and taste of this wine of sound. They had been denied it so long
-that it went to their heads at the first draught.
-
-Across the street, issuing quietly and, he hoped, unobserved, from a
-door that led into the tavern, a Puritan father now appeared, wiping his
-mouth as a man has no occasion for doing unless he had recently dipped
-his upper lip into a mug. He suddenly halted, at the sound of music from
-over the way. He frowned at the now somewhat dense assemblage of boys
-and citizens surrounding Adam Rust, and worked up a mask of severity on
-his face from which it had been temporarily absent. He opened his mouth,
-as if to speak, and then, realizing that he might not be heard at this
-distance from them, moved a rod toward his fellow-beings and took a
-stand in the street.
-
-At this moment an ominous snap resounded above both the playing and its
-accompaniment of scuffling feet and gruff explosions of enjoyment and
-hearty appreciation. Instantly Adam ceased playing. He had felt a string
-writhe beneath his fingers. The man in the roadway grasped at the moment
-instantly, to raise his voice.
-
-“Begone, disperse, you vagabonds!” he said. “What is the meaning of this
-ungodly performance? Disperse, I say, you are bedeviled by this
-shameless disciple of Satan!”
-
-Adam, intent on his violin, which he found had not broken but had merely
-slipped a string, heard this tirade, naturally, as did all the others. A
-few boys sneaked immediately about the cluster of men and sped away, as
-if from some terrible wrath to come.
-
-“Who is yon sufferer for melancholy?” said Adam, looking carelessly at
-the would-be interrupter. Then suddenly a gleam came into his eye, as he
-recognized in the man one of the harsh hypocrites who had been among the
-few zealots who had imprisoned him, years before. “Halberd,” he added,
-“fetch the gentleman forward. Methinks he fain would dance and make
-merry among us.”
-
-His opening question had been hailed with snorts of amusement; his
-proposal ignited all the roguishness in the crowd. Halberd, nothing loth
-to add his quota to the general fun, strode forward at once, way being
-made by the admiring throng, and he bowed profoundly before the bridling
-admonisher in the street. Then without warning, he scampered nimbly to
-the rear of the man of severity, took him by the collar and the slack of
-his knickerbockers and hustled him precipitately into the gathering.
-
-Adam began to play at once. The spectators gathered about the astonished
-and indignant person of severity, thirsty for fun.
-
-“You evidently wanted to dance, therefore by all means commence,” said
-Adam.
-
-“You are a veritable limb of Satan!” said the man. “You shall be
-reported for this unseemly——”
-
-“Halberd,” interrupted Adam, “the gentleman is as shy and timid as your
-veriest girl. Could you not persuade him to dance?”
-
-“I was born for persuasion,” said Halberd. Thereupon he drew from his
-belt a pistol, most formidable, whether loaded or not, and pushed its
-metal lips against the neck of the hedged-in Puritan, whom he continued
-to restrain by the collar. “Make merry for this goodly company by doing
-a few dainty steps,” he requested.
-
-The crowd pushed in closer and roared with delight. Some one among them
-knocked the reluctant dancer’s knees forward. He almost fell down.
-
-“He’s beginning!” cried Adam, and he went for his fiddle with the bow as
-if he were fencing with a dozen pirates.
-
-“Dance!” commanded Halberd, “dance!”
-
-Terpsichore’s victim was not a man of sand. Drops of perspiration oozed
-out on his forehead. A look of abject fear drove the mask of severity
-from his face. He jumped up and down ridiculously, his knees knocking
-together for his castanets.
-
-“Faster!” cried Adam, fiddling like a madman.
-
-“Faster!” echoed Halberd, with his pistol-muzzle nosing in the dancer’s
-ribs.
-
-The man jumped higher, but not faster; he was too weakened by cowardice.
-The sailors joined in. They could not keep their feet on the ground. The
-contagion spread. Pike and Halberd joined the hopping. The offending
-admonisher looked about at them in a frenzy of despair, afraid of who
-might be witnessing his exhibition. He was a sorry dancer, for he was so
-eager to please that he flopped his arms deliriously, as if to convince
-his beholders of his willingness to make himself as entertaining as
-possible. When he suddenly collapsed and fell down, Adam ceased playing.
-The crowd settled on the pavement and applauded.
-
-“For shame, good friend,” said Adam, solemnly, “now that I observe your
-garb, I am shocked and amazed at your conduct. Friends, let us go to the
-tavern and report this gentleman’s unseemly behavior. In payment for the
-fiddling, you may fetch my bales of goods and merchandise.” He waved to
-his shabby baggage and led the way to the Crow and Arrow, which had long
-before disgorged nearly all of its company, and its landlord, to add to
-the audience in the street.
-
-Flinging up his only piece of gold, the young rover ordered refreshment
-for all who crowded into the tavern, and while they were drinking, he
-dragged the beef-eaters, with all the “bales of merchandise,” away to
-the meager apartments provided above stairs in the sorry hostelry.
-
-In the darkness of the hall, he ran heavily against some one who was
-just on the point of quitting a room. The innocent person was bowled
-endways.
-
-“Confound your impudence!” said the voice of a man. “Why don’t you look
-where you are going?”
-
-“I couldn’t see for fools in the way,” retorted Adam. “I am no king,
-requiring you to fall before me.”
-
-“I can’t see your face, but I can see that you are an arrant knave,”
-said the other hotly. “You never could have had a proper drubbing, or
-you would be less reckless of your speech!”
-
-“I have always been pitted to fight with bragging rascals of about your
-size and ability with a weapon, else I might have been drubbed,” Adam
-flung back, laying his hand on his sword as he spoke. “It shames my
-steel to think of engaging a ten-pin!”
-
-“By all tokens, sir, you are blind, as well as idiotic, to walk into
-death so heedlessly. Be good enough to follow me into the yard.”
-
-“Oh, fie on a death that flees and entreats me to follow,” was Adam’s
-answer. “I rolled you once in this hall; I can do so again.
-Halberd—Pike, candles to place at the head and feet of death!”
-
-The beef-eaters, having reached the apartments appointed for their use,
-had heard the disturbance in the hall, and expecting trouble, had
-already lighted the candles. With three of these they now came forth.
-The hall would have been light enough had it been in communication with
-the outside world and the twilight, but as it was, it was nearly dark.
-
-“I grieve for your mother,” sneered the stranger, whose sword could be
-heard backing out of its scabbard. “You must be young to be so
-spendthrift of your life.”
-
-“On the contrary, you will find what a miser I am, even as to the drops
-of my blood,” said Adam. “No one ever yet accused the Sachem——”
-
-“The Sachem!” interrupted the other voice.
-
-Halberd, who had sheltered the candle he bore with his hand, now threw
-its light on the face of the man near by him.
-
-“Shatter my hilt!” exclaimed young Rust, “Wainsworth!”
-
-“Odds walruses!” said the man addressed as Wainsworth, “what a pretty
-pair of fools we are. By gad, Adam, to think I wouldn’t know you by your
-voice!”
-
-Adam had leaped forward, while his sword was diving back into its
-sheath. He caught Wainsworth by the hand and all but wrung it off.
-
-“Bless your old soul,” he said, “why didn’t you say who you were?”
-
-“I was kept busy listening to you telling me who and what I was,”
-Wainsworth assured him, good-naturedly. “I never heard so much truth in
-all my life.”
-
-“I never thought to be so incontinently found out myself,” Adam
-confessed contritely. “But as long as I have found you, I feel as good
-as if I had fought a good fight and wiped my blade. Indeed, Henry, I am
-tremendously glad to see you. How did you get here? When did you come?
-What a blundering fool I was!”
-
-“Come in, come in to my castle,” said Wainsworth, turning back to the
-apartment he had been quitting when knocked over. “Bring in your
-friends. You shall all share in my dinner. I’m a ship, burdened with
-news for cargo to be unloaded. Come in here; we’ll talk all night.”
-
-“But I am due at a dinner already, with my beef-eaters,” said Rust. “I
-have been delayed past all reason now, but——”
-
-“You weren’t delayed by our duel of words, I trust?”
-
-“No, no, but I have kept our host waiting, nevertheless. I shall be back
-before the night’s worn through, however, and then I am yours till
-breath fails me.”
-
-“Haste away then, Sachem Rust, for the sooner you are gone the sooner I
-shall see you returned; and I shall consume myself with impatience till
-I can tell you of the sweetest plight mortal man ever got himself
-tangled in. I’ve got to tell you, for no one else on earth would answer.
-Begone, then. Good-by, and hasten back.”
-
-Adam bade him au revoir, for he felt that already William Phipps must be
-thinking him sadly remiss and ungracious.
-
-Preparations as to evening dress were soon completed. They consisted in
-a brisk wash of face and hands for the trio, not one of the party being
-endowed with a second suit of clothing. Thus they were upon the road,
-walking soberly, though diligently, toward the Captain’s residence,
-before the twilight had begun to fade.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III.
-
- ’TWIXT CUP AND LIP.
-
-
-WITH appetites still further whetted by their various diversions, the
-comrades were hardly made happier when Adam found that once more the
-many years’ growth of Boston town confused him. It was something of a
-walk to the Phipps’ domicile from the Crow and Arrow the best one could
-do. With devious windings added, it became the next thing to provoking.
-
-“Aha, at last I know where we are,” said Adam, finally. “These streets
-are as bad as London’s. But ten minutes more and we shall be at the
-board.”
-
-“If this is not so,” said Halberd, gravely, with a memory of seeing Adam
-part with the last money which they possessed, “it would be a kindness
-to let us lie down and perish here.”
-
-“This is a most unlikely-looking street,” added Pike, dolefully.
-
-“What do you know of Boston streets?” inquired Adam, who had a doubt or
-two of the place himself. “Good beef-eaters, if you weary, wait here for
-a moment, till I can run a little along this road, to see where it
-leads. If it is right I will presently whistle; if wrong I can the
-sooner return.”
-
-The beef-eaters with one accord sat down upon a block of stone, while
-their leader strode hastily up a passage which was in reality an alley,
-at the rear of a number of residences. With a hope that he would soon
-emerge into a street which he thought should be in the neighborhood,
-Adam almost ran. Thus he disappeared about a turn of the lane.
-
-He had gone less than twenty rods when he found himself approaching a
-small assemblage of boys, who were yelling, in suppressed voices, and
-gathering stones which they were throwing with wild aim into a corner,
-where the coming darkness had already formed a center of shadows. Rust
-was well among these young scamps before they were aware of his
-presence. One urchin had by this secured a long stick with which he
-advanced, the others making room to let him through, to poke and jab at
-something which the lads had evidently driven to bay where it could not
-escape. Yet so afraid did the young rogues appear to be that this
-something would yet fly upon them and do them great harm, that Adam
-walked at once among them, touching one upon the shoulder.
-
-“The witch!” screamed this lad, as if the devil himself had clutched
-him. With yells of terror all the boys scudded swiftly away, for a
-matter of twenty feet, and then turned about to look at Rust. Seeing a
-man merely, they were reassured. It is a singular and doubtless a
-fortunate matter that there was never such a thing conceived as a male
-witch.
-
-“What have you here?” said Adam, pleasantly.
-
-“A witch’s cat!” cried one of the boldest youths, re-approaching. “We
-drove it in the corner to stone it to death!”
-
-Now Adam had a lingering fondness for cats, from a time not many years
-past.
-
-“A witch’s cat?” he repeated. “What nonsense! What harm can a poor cat
-do to big healthy boys like you? There are no witches, you young
-varlets.” He went into the corner and peered about eagerly, to find the
-dumb victim of the mad superstition then subtly growing in that
-Massachusetts colony.
-
-“There was a witch and she ran away, screaming!” scolded back the bold
-spokesman of the group of boys, now gaining courage to edge nearer. “She
-ran away through this garden!” He pointed to a rear yard, leading off
-the alley to a house not far distant.
-
-“She made me cough up pins and needles,” asserted another young liar,
-glibly. “And a monster black monkey with cock’s feet followed her when
-she ran.”
-
-“He’s a prince of the powers of air himself,” whispered another lad, in
-awe-stricken tones.
-
-Adam had found the cat, a middle-aged animal, frightened, hurt, soiled,
-but intelligent, since it knew it was being protected at last. He lifted
-it forth from its small retreat, finding it to be a heavy,
-black-and-white specimen, too inoffensive to scratch and claw, even in
-its terror.
-
-“You young——” he started to say.
-
-“Here she comes! Here she comes!” yelled one of the lads, interrupting.
-“Two of them! Run for your lives!”
-
-The self-scared young cowards, screaming like so many demons, darted
-down the alley as fast as their legs would let them go. Adam looked
-where one had pointed and beheld, indeed, two female figures coming on a
-distracted run through the near-by yard, toward him as he was standing
-with the cat in his arms.
-
-Although the first veil of darkness was already drawn through the air,
-Rust could see that they were two young women who were coming. The one
-who led, he then noted, was a plain, but a sweet, wholesome-looking
-girl, who was evidently much excited. He stepped forward toward her,
-with the cat, divining it was the animal she had come for, and so for
-the moment he neglected to glance at the second young woman.
-
-When he did look at her she was not far and he caught his breath
-quickly. “Shatter my hilt!” was the thought that leaped into his brain,
-“they do have young witches here after all!”
-
-Advancing to the middle of the alley he made a profound bow, as the
-foremost girl came pantingly from the garden gate. The girl, seeing him
-now for the first time, halted abruptly.
-
-“Good evening,” said Adam, “may I have the honor of restoring your pet?
-He is excellently well behaved and, I trust, not seriously hurt.”
-
-The girl walked timidly toward him. Her face flushed rosy red with
-pleasure and confusion. Her companion, having been caught on a rosebush,
-in the garden, was delayed and was stooping to disentangle her skirt
-from the thorns.
-
-“Oh, sir, you are very kind,” stammered the girl confronting Adam. “I
-thought they would kill him. He isn’t mine, but I also hold him——”
-
-The second young lady now came hastily out at the gate. Adam had been
-too polite to look past number one, in search for the one he thought so
-witching, but now his heart bounded to see her coming. She ran
-precipitately at him, breaking in upon her companion’s speech.
-
-“Oh, Standing-Panther,” she cried, impetuously, “my own dear, darling
-love, why did you ever come out to such a place?”
-
-She plucked her pet from Adam’s arm in one swoop. Rust, at the old name,
-which he had buried with memories that sorely harrowed his soul, dropped
-his hat, which he had doffed, and raising his hand to his cheek in
-wonder, stared at the girl before him with widened eyes.
-
-“At—at your service, Miss—Mistress Gar—Mistress Merrill,” he stuttered.
-
-Garde, a vision of beauty distraught, suddenly looked up in his face.
-Frank amazement was depicted in her glorious eyes.
-
-“I beg—your pardon,” stammered Adam, “I see you were speaking to your
-cat, and not to me.”
-
-“You!—Adam!—Mr.—Mr. Rust!” she exclaimed. A red-hot blush surged upward,
-flooding her face, her neck and even her delicate ears. “Not
-Little-Standing—Oh dear me! Why, Prudence, what did I say? It—it isn’t
-really——” she stopped in confusion.
-
-“Adam Rust, Kneeling Panther at your service,” supplied the rover. He
-made a bow that was truly splendid, with a long sweep of his hat and a
-touch of his knee on the pavement, that for sheer grace could not have
-been equaled in Boston. “Miss—Mistress Merrill, you have not quite
-forgotten that you commissioned me to bring you something from
-Hispaniola?” he added.
-
-“But you—but you have grown so,” said Garde, still as red as a rose.
-“And to meet like this—that was such a long time ago. I—I thank you for
-saving my cat. I—we—Prudence, you must thank Mr. Rust.”
-
-Prudence, on whom Adam had scarcely looked, since seeing Garde, had been
-standing there looking at Rust with a sudden-born love in her eyes that
-was almost adoration. She had developed, out of the Puritanical spirit
-of the times, a control of her various emotions that Garde would never
-possess. Therefore she had herself in hand at a second’s notice.
-
-“I have thanked Mr. Rust,” she answered, quietly.
-
-Garde was stealing a look at Adam the second he turned in politeness to
-Prudence.
-
-“This was no service at all,” he said. “Pray expend no further words
-upon it.”
-
-“Oh, Adam, I am so glad——” burst from Garde’s lips impetuously, but she
-checked her utterance the instant his glance came flashing back to hers,
-and added. “I mean, Mr. Rust, I am so glad the cat wasn’t hurt, and,
-Prudence, we must surely return to the house at once.”
-
-This was not at all what Garde had started to say, nor what she wanted
-to say; but though it was the same Adam, quite to her heart’s
-satisfaction, yet he was now a man, and a maidenly diffidence shamed her
-riotous gladness, and—Prudence was present.
-
-“But,” said Adam, fumbling in a pocket over the region of his heart,
-“the trinket I brought you from Hispaniola?”
-
-“Oh, marry, it has kept so well all these years,” said Garde roguishly,
-“surely it must still keep till—surely anyway till daylight. Really,
-sir, we must thank you again and return before it is actually dark.” She
-gave him one look which, had he been a woman, he would readily have
-interpreted, but being a man, somewhat of its significance was lost upon
-him.
-
-“But now I know I have kept it too long already,” he insisted, still
-tugging at the stubborn pocket. “Surely——”
-
-“It will be the riper for keeping a little longer,” said Garde, almost
-impatient with him for not seeing that she wanted to receive it only
-when they two were alone together. “We thank you once more, for saving
-Little-Standing-Panther, and so—good night,”
-
-“But when—what day?—to-morrow?” cried the eager rover. “When may I give
-it?”
-
-“Oh stupid!” said Garde to herself, almost vexed at his lack of
-understanding and tact. Aloud she called back, “Did you say good night?
-Prudence, say good night again to Mr. Rust.”
-
-Prudence called good night once more, this making her third time, and
-Adam was left there in the alley alone. He went to the gate and, leaning
-over it, clutched two of its pickets in his hands, as once before he had
-done to another gate, and stood there gazing ardently into the gathering
-darkness.
-
-At length, with a heavy sigh, of joy and impatience blended, he strode a
-little down the lane. Then he strode back. So, up and down he paraded,
-for fifteen minutes. At the end of this time he suddenly bethought him
-of the beef-eaters and the dinner at William Phipp’s. He then hastened,
-tardily enough, back the way he had originally come.
-
-Eager to find his companions, yet completely scatterbrained by the
-meeting with Garde, the sight of her radiant beauty, and the chaos of
-plans for seeing her again at daylight, which were teeming in his head,
-he fairly fell over the outstretched feet of his faithful followers
-before he saw them.
-
-They were still sitting upon the block of stone. They had interlocked
-their arms, for mutual support, and then had fallen fast asleep, worn
-out with the long day and made weak by a longer fast.
-
-“Good old beef-eaters,” said Adam, affectionately, and gently shaking
-them by the shoulders, he aroused them, got them on their feet and
-guided them out of the alley. By great good fortune, he came to a
-land-mark he remembered from his short sojourn in Boston, years before.
-With this as a bearing, he made good time to the Captain’s house. They
-met William Phipps at the gate, going forth to hunt them up.
-
-“We have sauntered along,” said Adam, carelessly, “for such air as this
-is a tonic to the appetite.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV.
-
- THE OPENING OF A VISTA.
-
-
-FOR a man who had taken so much tonic, Adam had but indifferent relish
-for the savory and altogether comforting little dinner which Goodwife
-Phipps had kept all warm and waiting for the coming of her guests. His
-head was filled with love and with altercations between hope that Garde
-had meant this and fears that she might have meant that, and with
-conjuring up all her speeches and glances, till he could hardly have
-told whether he was afoot or horseback.
-
-But if their leader neglected his opportunities, the beef-eaters made
-good the reputation for three, as swordsmen with knife and fork.
-Fortunately Goodwife Phipps had provided amply. But a fowl became a
-glistening skeleton; a hot meat-pie was represented at last by a dish
-that yawned like an empty chasm; a pyramid of Indian maize became a
-scattered wreckage of cobs, and potatoes, bread and pudding vanished
-into mere memories of what they once had been.
-
-Adam, although he said nothing, talked like an auctioneer, during the
-meal, to divert what he could of the attention which his retinue
-perforce attracted to their appetites. This innocent ruse was not lost
-on the charming little wife of William Phipps. She was a sweet little
-woman, plump, black-haired, brown-eyed and gifted by Nature with much
-vivacity, in her wit and in her engaging manners. She was older than her
-husband, having been the widow of one merchant Hull, when she and the
-Captain wedded. They were a happy couple, being indeed un-Puritanly
-joyous in their partnership. She had taken a great liking to Adam, when
-Phipps first brought him home. Now that he was a man, she liked him none
-the less, yet she saw that he would always be a big, straightforward
-boy. She watched him now with pleasure, listening to his quips and
-sallies of nonsense, and nodding motherly at his evident concern for his
-two forlorn beef-eaters, so obviously attached to him by ties of
-affection.
-
-The dinner being at length come to an end, with great satisfaction to
-all concerned, Adam counseled the expanded beef-eaters to fare to the
-Crow and Arrow, lest in their absence anything befall to prevent their
-occupancy of the selected apartments. As nothing was to be had to drink
-where they were, the worthy two were glad to act upon his suggestion.
-Accordingly Adam and his hosts were left to themselves, whereupon they
-fell upon a banquet of narrative and reminiscence forthwith.
-
-“Now, Adam, tell us all about where you have been, and what you have
-done, and all about everything,” said Mrs. Phipps, putting her plump
-elbows on the table, which she had swiftly cleared of the dinner
-wreckage. “Just begin at the day you left, with William, and tell us all
-there is. But tell us first, have you fallen in love? Of course you must
-have, but I do hope you will like one of our own girls best.”
-
-“I fear you would have me begin at the last end first, after all,” said
-Adam, thinking how recently he had fallen victim to Eros. “My tale is
-brief and of no interest. William bade me cultivate the society of
-gentlemen, when he sent me to England. Well, I had fencing and fiddling
-of an Italian nobleman; I have fought with holy friars and princes; I
-have sworn strange oaths with prelates and bishops; I have danced with
-nuns and duchesses; I have ridden to hounds with curs and Kings. If I
-have not learned drinking, gambling, love-making, dueling, swearing and
-sundry other pretty accomplishments, then beshrew me for a clod and call
-the court no place for schooling. I am richer than I was, since I may
-look up at any moment and see you both at a glance. By the same token I
-am happier. As to my heart, I’ll take oath I left it in Boston. And
-there you have me.”
-
-“Oh, this sounds very naughty indeed,” said Mrs. Phipps.
-
-“I never counseled you to apprentice yourself to the devil,” said
-Phipps. “You were first to learn navigation, of some——”
-
-“Oh, of that I neglected to speak,” interrupted the rover. “William, you
-will never make an anchor out of sea foam, nor a solid ship’s master out
-of me, else my first or my last preceptor would have finished me off
-roundly.”
-
-“Who was your latest chief?” the Captain inquired.
-
-“Captain William Kidd,” said Adam, “a generous friend, a fearless and
-skilful seaman, and as bold a fighting man as ever clutched a hilt. I
-met him at Barcelona, shipped with him for Bristol, fell in with my
-beef-eaters, got rid of my money and pushed my sword through a pup—Lord
-Something-or-other——and was still in time to catch Captain Kidd at
-Portsmouth for New York. But I can’t bark enough for a sea-dog, as Kidd
-was good enough to tell me himself.”
-
-William Phipps nodded and nodded. Outwardly he was calm enough; inwardly
-he stewed with heat. Adam had but added fuel to the fever of unrest and
-thirst for adventure with which he had been born. He was not jealous of
-all that his protégé had accomplished ahead of himself—indeed, he had
-furthered the lad’s advancement, at the expense of his own sense of
-bereavement when he and Adam parted,—but he was consumed with impatience
-to be hewing at the great career for which he had from boyhood felt
-himself destined. A light of determination burned in his eyes. He saw
-that the boy before him had utterly outstripped him—the boy to whom he
-had imparted all his own meager, self-acquired education. Not for a
-moment did he regret that from Hispaniola he had sent the lad to
-England, with a fellow-captain, nor would he for any price have stripped
-his protégé of one single experience, but his mouth grew dry with the
-lust for adventure that was glowing within him.
-
-His wife saw these indications. She understood what was passing in his
-mind. Before she had even sighed to herself, as a woman must, who feels
-herself on the brink of a separation from one she truly loves, she
-consented mentally to what she knew he would presently suggest. What she
-was thus prepared for, came sooner than she had expected it might.
-
-“Adam,” said Phipps, somewhat huskily, “I have been waiting for
-something—I never knew what—to come along and start me off after the
-fortune I have promised to get for the wife.”
-
-“You are fortune enough for me, dear,” Mrs. Phipps interposed, in spite
-of herself. “I should be satisfied to live like this forever.”
-
-“I know,” said the Captain, “but I promised you should have a fair brick
-house in the Green Lane, to the north, and I mean that you shall have
-it. Adam, you are the something I have been waiting for, but what with
-my worrying, over thinking you probably dead, I have never realized the
-truth till this night.”
-
-“And what may it be my privilege to do?” said Adam.
-
-“Go with me to recover a fortune, sunk in a wreck. She rests on a reef
-in the Bahamas, in a few fathoms of water. She was laded with gold and
-went down with every ounce. I’ve got the maps, and now that I’ve got
-you, bless your heart, we can sail in a week!”
-
-“And how have you learned of this sunken treasure?” said Adam, who for
-some reason appeared not at all boyishly eager to set off on this new
-adventure. “Has somebody given you this tale and the maps as the price
-for a well-built brig?”
-
-“I had the information from a Spaniard, who died at my ship-yard,” said
-Phipps. “He was the sole survivor of the wrecked vessel. I gave him
-work. He was grateful. Death seized him suddenly, but before the end
-came, he told me his tale, he said, as a measure of gratitude, directing
-me to feel in his pockets for the maps, which I did. I have waited for
-what I now am certain was your return.”
-
-“Well,” said Adam, thoughtfully, twisting the ends of his small
-mustache, “you couldn’t easily have paid me a greater compliment, I am
-sure; but, my dear friend, you place me in an awkward position.”
-
-“Awkward position? What awkward position?” said Phipps. “Here you are a
-good swordsman, a man of some knowledge, and the companion I would
-select of all the men I know.” Here Adam bowed solemnly. “Now what is to
-hinder us from making this venture together? What do you mean by this
-awkward position business?”
-
-“I mean,” said the rover, “that I seem to serve no better purpose, the
-moment I return to Boston, than to separate you two good people. Now I
-am sensitive about a thing like that. I don’t like to be the cause of
-such a separation.”
-
-“What nonsense, you——” started the Captain.
-
-“I prepared my mind for William’s adventure, long ago,” interrupted Mrs.
-Phipps. “If he doesn’t go with you, he will go with some one else. And
-as long as he is bent on going in the end, I should feel so much better,
-Adam, if you were with him.”
-
-Adam bowed to them both, again. He was glad to do this, as he was, in
-point of fact, somewhat confused as to what to say.
-
-“There, you young rascal,” said Phipps, “that knocks away your shores
-and you are launched before you know it.”
-
-“But,” suggested Adam, with an air of great solicitude for his friend’s
-interests, “do you really think any wild-goose chase of this description
-could be as solid and certain and wholesome as the ship-building
-business? Would I be justified in encouraging you, Captain Phipps, to
-leave your established business for such a wild——”
-
-“Wild?” interposed Phipps. “You—you—now look here, what do you mean—you,
-by your own accounts, the wildest young scamp afloat? Wild? As if
-anything could be too wild for you. There is something at the bottom of
-all this. Now out with it!”
-
-“Why, William!” said Goodwife Phipps, “where are your eyes? Why, Adam
-must have a sweetheart in Boston!”
-
-Rust flushed hotly. His eyes would not, for all his pulling at them,
-refrain from dancing. He conjured up an immediate fit of coughing, and
-therefore held a handkerchief before his face.
-
-Phipps looked at him suspiciously. “Is that what ails you?” he demanded.
-“Is that why you are so hot to remain here in Boston?”
-
-“Now I leave it to you both, as two good, sensible people,” said Rust,
-artfully, “how could such a catastrophe have happened? I left Boston
-seven years ago, while a mere cub, and I have been here now less than
-that many hours. Do you think that between sunset and my coming here I
-could have saved some fair angel’s life—or the life of her—her—well, say
-her pet panther? Does that seem likely, or reasonable, say?”
-
-“I wouldn’t dare trust you not to be saving a dozen,” grumbled Phipps.
-“When a man has associated with gentlemen, you never can reckon on his
-conduct.”
-
-“Of course it does seem absurd, Adam, I admit,” said Mrs. Phipps, who
-was enjoying the conversation mightily. “I had to make some suggestion.
-And—oh, why, perhaps some young lady has recently arrived here from the
-old country. Is that it, Adam?”
-
-“I give you my word of honor that no young lady has come to Boston,
-since I went abroad, for whom I care a brass farthing,” Adam assured his
-hostess. “The further you go in this, the more innocent you will find
-me.”
-
-“Then are you turned lazy, or what is it that ails you,” inquired the
-Captain, “that you fail to leap, as, by my word, I had thought you
-would, to embrace this opportunity?”
-
-“Oh, oh, poor dear Adam,” said the Captain’s wife, interrupting any
-answer Rust might have been framing, “perhaps I know what it is, at
-last.” She went to her husband quickly and whispered something in his
-ear.
-
-“Hum!” said Phipps, who was inclined to be a bit short with his protégé
-for his many equivocal answers, “Why couldn’t he say so at once? See
-here, Adam, what’s all this rigmarole about your pride? If you haven’t
-got any money, what’s the odds to me? Who’s asking you to furnish any
-funds? I’ve got the brig and I’ve got provisions and arms in plenty. If
-that is what ails you, drop it, sir, drop it!”
-
-Adam, willing to share another’s money as readily as he would give his
-own last penny to a friend, had thought of nothing half so remote as
-this to offer as an excuse for remaining in Boston, under the same sky
-with Garde. But now that it was broached, he fathered it as quickly and
-affectionately as if he had indeed been its parent.
-
-“I had hoped it would not be unreasonable for me to crave a few days’
-grace before giving you my answer to your generous proposition,” he
-said, “for I am not without hopes of replenishing our treasury at an
-early date.”
-
-“But in the meantime——” started Phipps.
-
-“Dearest,” interrupted his wife, with feminine tenderness of thought for
-any innocent pride, “surely you have no mind to sail to-night? And there
-are so many things for Adam to tell.”
-
-The Captain, who had been drawing down his brow, in that serious
-keep-at-it spirit which through all his life was the backbone of his
-remarkable, self-made success, slacked off the intensity of his mood and
-smiled at his wife, indulgently. He loved her and he loved Adam above
-anything else in the world.
-
-“Get you behind me, golden treasure,” he said, with a wave of his big,
-wholesome hand. “Adam, I would rather hear you talk than to pocket
-rubies.”
-
-“I must be cautious lest I bankrupt myself by telling all I know this
-evening,” said Adam. “Indeed, dear friends, it grows late already. I
-must set my beef-eaters the good example of keeping seemly hours.” He
-arose to go before the sunken treasure topic should again break out,
-with its many fascinations and pitfalls.
-
-His hosts protested against his leaving, yet they presently discovered
-that the hour was, as he said, no longer early. He therefore departed
-and wended his way through the now deserted streets, toward the Crow and
-Arrow, his heart bounding with joyousness, his brain awhirl with
-memories of everything of the evening, save the discussion of the sunken
-treasure.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V.
-
- A WEIGHTY CONFIDENCE.
-
-
-AT the tavern, when Adam entered, Halberd had succumbed to a plethora of
-comfort, which had followed too soon on the paucity thereof, which had
-been the program of the three for many weeks. He was snoring fiercely in
-a corner. Pike, on the other hand, was inflated with life and activity
-of speech. He was bragging eloquently, not only of his own prowess, but
-also of that of Halberd and Adam as well.
-
-Adam heard the end of a peroration of self-appraisement in which the
-doughty Pike announced that one of his recent feats had been the slaying
-of two murderous, giant pirates with his naked fists.
-
-Among the sailors, dock-hands and tavern-loafers who made up the
-auditors who were being entertained by these flights of narrative, was a
-little, red-nosed, white-eyed man of no significance, who now stood up
-and removed his coat.
-
-“If you would like to have a bit of fun with me,” said he. “I’ll play
-one of those pirates, till we see what you can do.”
-
-Pike looked at him ruefully, rubbing his chin while thinking what to
-answer to this challenge. He then waved his hand, grandly.
-
-“Good sir,” he said, “the Sachem, my honored associate, has such an
-appetite for these encounters that until he shall be satisfied I would
-have no heart to deprive him of such good material as I can see you
-would make for a fight. Doubtless I can arrange for him to do you the
-honor you seek, after which I shall be pleased to weep at your funeral.”
-
-“I would rather fight with him than you,” said the would-be belligerent,
-“but before he comes, if you would like to have your neck broken——”
-
-Satisfied that this business had gone far enough, Adam strode into the
-tap-room, where the jovial spirits had congregated.
-
-“My friends,” he interrupted, “you can put your necks to better purpose
-by pouring something down them. Landlord, attend my guests. Pike——”
-
-But the pirate-exterminator had fled, first edging to the door, at the
-appearance of his chief, and then clattering up the stairs to the rooms
-above with a noise like cavalry in full retreat.
-
-“But if you would like to fight,” started the accommodating manikin,
-still in process of baring his drum-stick arms, “why, Mr. Sachem——” but
-he was not permitted to finish.
-
-“Leave off the gab,” said a burly sailor. Clapping his private tankard—a
-thing of enormous dimensions—fairly over the little head of the
-challenger, he snuffed him completely and suddenly lifted him bodily to
-the top of the bar, amid the guffaws of the entire company.
-
-Rust lost no time in arousing Halberd, whom he herded to the apartments
-aloft with brief ceremony.
-
-Wainsworth, who had been sitting up in his room, writing letters while
-he waited for Adam’s return, now heard his friend coming and opened his
-door to bid him welcome. With another big hand-shake, and a smile over
-their recent mis-encounter, the two went into the lighted apartment,
-Wainsworth closing the door behind him.
-
-“It’s a wonder you find me anything more than a small heap of ashes,”
-said Wainsworth, “for I have fairly burned and smoked with my eagerness
-to see you back.”
-
-“I can smell the smoke,” said Adam. “How very like tobacco it is. And
-now that I am here I presume you are quite put out.”
-
-“You are not in love or your wits would be as dull as mine,” his friend
-replied. “But sit down, sit down, and tell me all about yourself.”
-
-“I thought you wanted to do the telling.”
-
-“Well, I do, confound you, but——”
-
-“What’s all this?” interrupted Adam. He had caught sight, on the table,
-of two glittering heaps of money, English coins, piled in two apparently
-equal divisions on the cloth.
-
-“That? Oh, nothing, your share and mine,” said Wainsworth, taking Adam’s
-hat and sweeping one of the heaps into its maw with utter unconcern.
-“Stow it away and be seated.”
-
-“Well, but——” started Rust.
-
-“Stow it, stow it!” interrupted Wainsworth. “I didn’t bother you with
-buts and whyfores when you divided with me. I have something of more
-importance to chat about.”
-
-“This is ten times as much as I gave to you,” objected Adam, doggedly.
-
-“You gave me ten times more than you kept yourself, when it meant ten
-times as great a favor. I am mean enough only to divide even,” answered
-Wainsworth. “Say anything more about it, and I shall pitch my share out
-of the window.”
-
-As a matter of fact, Rust had impoverished himself for this friend, when
-in England, at a moment most vital in Wainsworth’s career. He had no
-argument, therefore, against accepting this present, much-needed
-capital. He placed the clinking coins in his pocket, not without a sense
-of deep obligation to his friend. It made one more bond between them,
-cementing more firmly than ever that affectionate regard between them,
-on the strength of which either would have made a great personal
-sacrifice for the other. No sooner, however, had Adam cleared his hat
-and weighted his clothing with the money, than he realized that the only
-good argument he had possessed to oppose to Captain Phipps’ scheme to
-take him away from Boston, namely, his poverty, was now utterly
-nullified. He started as if to speak, but it was already too late. If
-the Captain found him out, what could he say or do?
-
-“Now then,” said Wainsworth, “we can talk.”
-
-“I am an empty urn, waiting to be filled with your tales and
-confessions,” said Adam.
-
-Wainsworth settled back in his chair and stroked his small imperial,
-hung on his under lip. “Yes, we can talk,” he repeated. He sat upright
-again, and once more leaned backward. “I don’t know where to begin,” he
-admitted.
-
-“You might start off by saying you’re in love.”
-
-“Who told you I’m in love? I haven’t said so. You’d be in love yourself,
-if ever you had met her. She’s a beauty, Adam! She’s divine! She’s
-glorious! Odds walruses, you’d be clean crazy about her! Why, you would
-simply rave—you couldn’t be as calm as I am if you knew her, Adam! She’s
-the loveliest, sweetest, most heavenly angel that ever walked the earth!
-Why, I can’t give you an idea! She,—she, she just takes your breath!
-There is nothing in Boston like her—nothing in the world. Why, man, you
-couldn’t sit still if you had ever seen her!” He got up and paced the
-room madly. “You could no more sit there and tell me about her as I am
-telling you than you could drink the ocean!”
-
-“No, I suppose I couldn’t.”
-
-“Of course you couldn’t. I’m an older man than you are—a whole year
-older—and I know what I am talking about. You would go raving mad, if
-you saw her. She is the most exquisite—Adam! She’s peerless!”
-
-“Then you are in love?” said Adam. “Up to this last moment I thought
-there might be some doubts about it, but I begin to suspect perhaps you
-are.”
-
-“Love? In love? My dear boy, you don’t know what love is! I adore her! I
-worship her! I would lay down my life for her! I would die ten thousand
-deaths for her, and then say I loved her still!”
-
-“That would be a remarkable post-mortem power of speech,” said Adam.
-“And I suppose she loves you as fervently as you love her.”
-
-“Of course she does—that is,—now, now why would you ask such a silly
-question as that? A love like mine just reaches forth and surrounds her;
-and it couldn’t do that if she didn’t—well, you know how those things
-are.”
-
-“Oh, certainly. If she loves you and you love her, that makes it
-complete, and as I am a bit tired, and this leaves no more to be said——”
-
-“But there is more to be said! Why don’t you ask me some questions?”
-
-“Silly questions?”
-
-“No! Of course not! Some plain, common-sense questions.”
-
-“Well, then, is she beautiful?”
-
-“Odds walruses, Adam, she is the most beautiful girl that ever breathed.
-She surpasses rubies and diamonds and pearls. She eclipses——”
-
-“Ah, but is she lovely?”
-
-“Lovely?—She’s a dream of loveliness. I wish you could see her! You
-would throw stones at your grandmother, if you could see how lovely she
-is. Lovely!—Can’t you invent some better word—something that means more?
-Lovely doesn’t express it. Go on, go on, ask me something more!”
-
-“Oh, well, is she pretty or plain?”
-
-“She is most radiantly beautiful.—Look here, Adam, you think I am an
-ass.”
-
-“My dear old fellow, I didn’t stop to think.”
-
-“You are making fun of me!”
-
-“Impossible, Henry. You told me to ask you some simple questions. Does
-she live here in Boston?”
-
-“She does, of course she does, or I shouldn’t be here, should I? She
-lives here and Boston has become my Heaven!”
-
-“Oh, well, thanks for your hospitality. Let’s see,—is she beauti—but I
-may have asked that before.” He yawned and rubbed his eyes to keep them
-open. “Oh, I do think of another. What is her name?”
-
-“Her name?” chuckled Wainsworth, walking up and down in an ecstasy of
-delight. “Her name is the prettiest name in the universe. It’s
-Garde—Garde Merrill—Garde! Oh, you just love to say Garde, Garde,
-Garde!”
-
-Adam started, suddenly awake and alert. He passed his hand across his
-eyes stiffly. His face became as pale as paper. Wainsworth was still
-walking restlessly up and down, intent on his own emotions.
-
-“It’s a name like a perfume,” he went on. “Garde, Garde. You can’t think
-how that name would cling to a man’s memory for years—how it rings in a
-man’s brain—how it plays upon his soul!”
-
-Adam was thinking like lightning. Garde!—She loved Wainsworth—he had
-said so. It was this that had made her appear so restrained, unnatural,
-eager to return to the house. This was why her answers had been so
-evasive. The whole situation broke in on him with a vividness that
-stunned his senses.
-
-A mad thought chased through his brain. It was that, if he had spoken
-first, this moment of insupportable pain could have been avoided, but
-that Wainsworth having spoken first had acquired rights, which he, as a
-friend, loving him dearly, would be bound to respect. He thought of the
-money he had just accepted from this brother-like friend. He saw the
-impossibility of ever saying to Henry that he too loved Garde
-Merrill—had loved her for seven years—had heard her name pealing like
-the bell of his own very being in his soul! But no—he couldn’t have
-spoken! He knew that. He would never dare to say that she loved him, in
-return for the love he had fostered for her, these seven years. No, he
-could not have spoken of her like this to any soul, under any
-circumstances. To him her name was too precious to be pronounced above a
-whisper to his own beating heart. He did not realize that, by that very
-token of her sacredness to him, he loved her far more deeply, far more
-sublimely than could any man who would say her name over and over and
-babble of his love.
-
-He only knew that his brain was reeling. He could only see that
-Wainsworth, for whom he would have sacrificed almost anything, was all
-engrossed in this love which must mean so much. He only realized that
-all at once he had lost his right to tell this dearly beloved friend the
-truth, and with this he had also lost the right, as an honorable
-comrade, to plead his own soul’s yearning at the door of Garde’s heart.
-
-Wainsworth, in his ecstatic strolling and ringing of praises, was
-tolling a knell for Adam, saying “Garde” and then “Garde” and again
-presently “Garde,” which was the only word, in all his rapid talk that
-reached the other’s ears.
-
-Adam arose, unsteadily. Wainsworth had not observed his well-concealed
-agitation.
-
-“I—must be going,” said Rust, huskily, turning his face away from the
-light. He tried to feign another yawn. “I am no longer good company.
-Good night.”
-
-“What, going?” said Henry, catching him affectionately by the shoulders.
-“Ah, Adam, I suppose I am a bit foolish, but forgive me. You don’t know
-what it is to love as I have learned to love. And, dear friend, it has
-made me love you more—if possible—than ever.”
-
-“Good night, Henry,” said Adam, controlling his voice with difficulty.
-“Good night—and God bless you.”
-
-“Say ‘God bless Mistress Garde Merrill’—for my sake,” said Henry.
-
-Adam looked at him oddly and repeated the words like a mere machine.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI.
-
- PAN’S BROTHER AND THE NYMPH.
-
-
-ADAM returned to his room attempting to pucker his lips for a careless
-whistle which failed to materialize. He had evolved a rude but logical
-philosophy of his own for every phase of life; but what philosophy ever
-fooled the maker thereof, with its sophistries?
-
-The beef-eaters were snoring so ominously that Adam was constrained to
-think of two volcanoes threatening immediate eruptions.
-
-“Poor old boys!” he said to himself. There was no particular reason for
-this, save that he felt he must pity something, and self-pity he
-abhorred. He was trying not to think of the one companion that always
-drew his emotions out of his reluctant heart and gave them
-expression—his violin.
-
-Standing in the middle of the floor, without a light in the room, he
-reasoned with himself. He said to his inner being that doubtless
-Wainsworth loved her more than he did anyway; that he, Adam, having
-carried away a boyish memory, which he had haloed with romanticism for
-seven years, could not call his emotions love. Moreover, he had as yet
-only seen her in the dark, and might not be at all attracted by her true
-self in the daylight. Naturally, also, Wainsworth had as much right in
-the premises as any man on earth, and no man could expect a girl to
-remember a mere homely lad for seven years and know that he loved her,
-or that he thought he did, and so reciprocate the affection and calmly
-await his return. Clearly he was an absurd creature, for he had fostered
-some silly notion in his heart, or brain, that Garde was feeling toward
-him, all these years, as he felt toward her. It was fortunate he had
-found everything out so soon. The thing to do now was to think of
-something else.
-
-All the while he was thus philosophizing, he had a perfect
-subconsciousness that told him the violin would win—that soon or late it
-would drag his feelings out of him, in its own incomparable tones. He
-only paused there arguing the matter because he hated to give in without
-a fight. That violin always won. It must not be permitted to arrogate to
-itself an absolute mastery over his moods.
-
-Presently, beginning to admit that he would yet have to tuck the
-instrument under his chin, whether or no, he worked out a compromise. He
-would not play it, or sound it, or fondle it in the town. If it wanted
-to voice things and would do it—well, he would carry it out into the
-woods.
-
-Feeling that he had, in a measure, conquered, Rust stole silently across
-the apartment to the corner in which he had placed the violin with his
-own loving hands, lifted the case without making a sound and crept out
-as if he had been a thief, pressing the box somewhat rigidly against his
-heart.
-
-He reached the street without difficulty. The town was asleep. A dog
-barking, a mile away, and then a foolish cock, crowing because he had
-waked, were the only sounds breaking over all Boston. The last thin rind
-of the moon had just risen. In the light it cast, the houses and shadows
-seemed but a mystic painting, in deep purple, blacks and grays. Silently
-as Adam could walk, these houses caught up the echo of his footfalls,
-and whispered it on, from one to another, as if it had been a pass-word
-to motionless sentinels.
-
-He came to the Common, discerning Beacon Hill, dimly visible, off to the
-right. With grass under foot he walked more rapidly. Past the
-watch-house and the powder-house, in the center of the Common, he
-strode, on to Fox Hill and then to the Roxbury Flats, stretching wide
-and far, to the west of the town.
-
-Being now far from all the houses, alone in an area of silence, Adam
-modified his gait. He even stood perfectly still, listening, for what he
-could not have heard, gazing far away, at scenes and forms that had no
-existence. Night and solitude wrought upon him to make him again the boy
-who had lived that free, natural existence with the Indians. His tongue
-could not utter, his imagination could not conceive, anything concrete
-or tangible out of the melancholy ecstasy which the night aroused in his
-being and which seemed to demand some outward response from his spirit.
-He felt as if inspiration, to say something, or to do something, were
-about to be born in his breast, but always it eluded him, always it was
-just beyond him and all he could do, as his thought pursued it, was to
-dwell upon the sublimity breathing across the bosom of Nature and so
-fairly into his face.
-
-He had come away without his hat. Bareheaded, at times with his eyes
-closed, the better to appreciate the earth in its slumber, he fairly
-wantoned in the coolness, the sweetness and the beauty of the hour. Thus
-it was past three o’clock in the morning when at length he came to the
-woods.
-
-Man might build a palace of gold and brilliants, or Nature grow an
-edifice of leaves all resplendent with purples, reds, yellows and
-emeralds, but, when night spread her mantle, these gems of color and
-radiance might as well be of ebon. It is the sun that gilds, that
-burnishes, that lays on the tints of the mighty canvas; and when he
-goes, all color, all glitter and all beauty, save of form, have ceased
-to be.
-
-Adam saw the trees standing dark and still, their great black limbs
-outstretched like arms, with upturned hands, suppliant for alms of
-weather. There was something brotherly in the trees, toward the Indians,
-Adam thought, and therefore they were his big brothers also. He had even
-seen the trees retreating backward to the West, as the Red men had done,
-falling before the march of the great white family.
-
-If Nature has aught of awe in her dark hours, she keeps it in the woods.
-The silence, disturbed by the mystical murmuring of leaves, the reaching
-forth of the undergrowth, to feel the passer-by in the depth of shadows,
-the tangled roots that hold the wariest feet until some small
-animal—like a child of the forest—can scamper away to safety, all these
-things make such a place seem sentient, breathing with a life which man
-knows not of, but feels, when alone in its midst.
-
-To Adam all these things betokened welcome. His mood became one of
-peculiar exultation, almost, but not quite, cheer. As a discouraged
-child might say, “I don’t care, my mother loves me, anyway, whether
-anybody else does or not,” so Adam’s spirit was feeling, “If there is no
-one else to love me, at least I am loved by the trees.”
-
-With this little joy at his heart, he penetrated yet a bit further into
-the absolute darkness, and sitting down upon a log, which had given his
-shins a hearty welcome, he removed his violin from its case and felt it
-over with fond hands and put its smooth cheek against his own cheek,
-before he would go on to the further ecstasy which his musical embrace
-became when he played to tell of his moods.
-
-“Now something jolly, my Mistress,” he said to the instrument, as if he
-had doubts of the violin’s intentions. “Don’t be doleful.”
-
-Like a fencer, getting in a sharp attack, to surprise the adversary at
-the outset, he jumped the bow on to the strings with a brisk, debonair
-movement that struck out sparks of music, light and low as if they were
-played for fairies. It was a sally which soon changed for something more
-sober. It might have seemed that the fencer found a foe worthy his steel
-and took a calmer method in the sword-play. Then a moment later it would
-have appeared that Adam was on the defensive.
-
-As a matter of fact, it was next to impossible for Rust to play bright,
-lively snatches of melody, this night, try as he might. The long notes,
-with the quality of a wail in them, got in between the staccato
-sparkles. When Adam thought of the Indians, their minor compositions
-transmitted themselves through his fingers into sound, before he was
-aware. He had braced himself stiffly on philosophy all the way to this
-forest-theater, but to little avail. He presently stopped playing
-altogether.
-
-“If he loves her and she loves him,” he told himself, resolutely, “why,
-then, it is much better that two should be happy than that all three
-should finally be made miserable by some other arrangement, which a man
-like me, in his selfishness, might hope to make. It’s a man’s duty,
-under such circumstances, to dance at the wedding and be a jolly chap,
-and——hunt around for another girl.”
-
-He attacked the violin again, when it was apparently off guard, and
-rattled off a cheerful ditty before the instrument could catch its
-breath, so to speak. Then a single note taunted him with a memory, and
-the violin nearly sobbed, for a second, till the jig could recover its
-balance. The strings next caught at a laggard phrase and suddenly bore
-in a relentless contemplation of the future and its barren promise. The
-brighter tones died away again. So went the battle.
-
-Trying his best to compel the violin to laugh and accept the situation,
-while the instrument strove to sigh, Adam played an odd composition of
-alternating sadness and careless jollity, the outpouring being the
-absolute speech of his soul.
-
-He played on and on. Inasmuch as his philosophy was as right as any
-human reasoning is likely to be, Adam’s more cheerful nature won. But
-the victory was not decided, no more than it was permanent. Yet he was
-at last the master of the situation.
-
-Heedless of the time as he had been, in his complete absorption, Rust
-had not observed the coming of morning. Nevertheless the sun was up, and
-between the branches of the trees it had flung a topaz spot of color at
-his feet—a largess of light and warmth. Without thinking about it, or
-paying any attention to it, Adam had fixed his eyes on this patch of
-gold.
-
-Suddenly his senses became aware that the spot had been blotted out of
-existence. He looked up and beheld a vision of loveliness—as fair a
-nymph as ever enjoyed a background of trees.
-
-It was Garde.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII.
-
- THE MEETING IN THE GREENWOOD.
-
-
-WITH her glorious mahogany-colored hair loose in masses on her
-shoulders, with her eyes inquiring, and her lips slightly parted as she
-stole forward, thrilled with the exquisite beauty of Adam’s playing, in
-such a temple of perfect harmonies, Garde appeared like the very spirit
-of the forest, drawn from sacred bowers by the force of love that
-vibrated the instrument’s strings.
-
-No bark of pine tree was browner than her eyes; no berries were redder
-than her lips, nor the color that climbed upward in her cheeks, the
-white of which was as that of the fir beneath its outer covering. As
-some forest dryad, maidenly and diffident, she held her hand above her
-heart when Adam looked up and discovered her presence.
-
-The man leaped to his feet, like one startled from sleep. It almost
-seemed as if a dream had brought him this radiant figure. No word came,
-for a moment, to his lips.
-
-“Why—it’s you!” said Garde.
-
-“Garde!—Miss—Mistress Merrill!” said Adam, stammering. “By my hilt,
-I—the—the wonder is ’tis you.”
-
-“Not at all,” corrected Garde, recovering something that passed for
-composure. “I come here frequently, to gather herbs and simples for
-Goody Dune, but for you to be here, and playing—like that——”
-
-“Yes,” agreed Adam, when he had waited in vain for her to finish,
-“perhaps it is an intrusion. You—you came away from the town early.”
-
-“Why did you come here to play?” she asked. Her own nature so yearned
-over the forest and things beautiful, her own emotions were so wrought
-upon by the sublimity of earth’s chancels of silence, that she felt her
-soul longing for its kindred companion, who must be one reverent, yet
-joyous, where Nature ruled. She wanted Adam to pour forth the tale of
-his brotherhood with the trees and the loneliness of his heart, that
-would make him thus to play in such a place and at such a time. While
-she looked at him, the love she had fostered from her childhood was
-matured in one glorious blush that welled upward from her bosom to her
-very eyes themselves.
-
-Adam had looked at her but once. It was a long look, somewhat sad, as of
-one parting with a dear companion. In that moment he had known how
-wholly and absolutely he loved her. His pretended doubts of the night
-before had fled as with the darkness. The daylight in her eyes and on
-her face had made him henceforth a sun-worshiper, since the sun revealed
-her in such purity of beauty.
-
-In the great delight which had bounded in his breast at seeing her
-there, he had momentarily forgotten his conversation with Wainsworth.
-When she asked him why he had come to the woods, he would fain have
-knelt before her, to speak of his love, to tell of his anguish and to
-plead his cause, by every leap of his heart, but he had remembered his
-friend and his old Indian schooling in stoicism gathered upon him,
-doubtless for the very presence of the firs and pines, so solemn and
-Indianesque about him. He put on a mask he had worn over melancholy
-often.
-
-“Why, I came here for practise, of which I am sadly in need,” he said.
-“When once I played before King Pirate and his court of buccaneers, I
-was like to be hung for failing, after a mere six hours of steady
-scraping at the strings. If you came for simples, verily you have found
-a simple performer and simple tunes.”
-
-Garde was painfully disappointed in him. His flippancy had, as he
-intended it should, deceived her. She shut that little door of her heart
-through which her soul had been about to emerge, ready to reveal itself
-to and to speak welcome to its mate. She did not cease to love him,
-emotional though she was, for love is like a tincture, or an attar,—once
-it is poured out, not even an ocean of water can so dilute it as to
-leave no trace of its fragrance, and not until the last drop in the
-ocean is drained can it all be removed or destroyed. No, she was pained.
-She desired to retreat, to take back the overture which, to her mind,
-had been a species of abandon of her safeguards and so patent that she
-could not conceive that Adam had failed to note its significance. Yet
-she gave him up for a soulless Pan reluctantly. That playing, which had
-drawn her, psychically, physically, irresistibly to his side, could have
-no part with things flippant. It had been to her like a heart-cry, which
-it seemed that her heart alone could answer. And when she had found that
-it was Adam playing—her Adam—she had with difficulty restrained herself
-from running to him and sobbing out the ecstasy suddenly awakened within
-her. The memory of the music he had made was still upon her and she was
-timidly hopeful again when she said:
-
-“How long have you been practising here?”
-
-Adam mistook this for a little barb of sarcasm. His mind was morbid on
-the subject of Wainsworth and of Garde’s evasiveness of the evening
-before. He put on more of the motley.
-
-“Not half long enough,” he said, “by the violence I still do to melody;
-and yet too long by half, since I have frightened the birds from the
-forest. There is always too much of bad playing, but it takes much bad
-practising to make a good performer. I am better at playing a jig. Shall
-I try, in your honor?”
-
-“Thank you, if you please, no, I would rather you would not,” said
-Garde. It was her first Puritanical touch. If she had given him
-permission to play his jig, very many things might have been altered,
-for Adam would have revealed himself and would have opened her
-heart-doors once again, such a mastery over everything debonair in his
-nature would the violin have assumed, with its spell of deeper emotions,
-inevitable—with Garde so near.
-
-Adam laughed, well enough to appear careless. “I commend your judgment,”
-he said, “though I have always thought, even after last night,—ah, by
-the way, where is your companion, Mistress Prudence somebody?”
-
-He had parried his own tendency to get back to the tender subjects and
-memories flooding his heart, but not in a manner to gladden Garde.
-Indeed, the ring of artificiality in everything he said made her less
-and less happy.
-
-“Her name is Prudence Soam. She is my cousin, and she is at home,” said
-Garde, quietly. “If you would care to see her again, I will tell her of
-your wish.” She could readily understand how any one might like
-Prudence, knowing what a sweet, good girl her cousin was, but it caused
-her an acute pain to think she had cherished the image of Adam in her
-heart for seven years, only to find now that he had been inconstant.
-
-She suddenly thought of the meeting of the evening before. Adam’s
-willingness to present her—in the presence of Prudence—with that
-something which he had brought her from his first trip to Hispaniola,
-appeared to her now in a light, not of his stupidity, but of his
-deliberate intention to show her that he had not preserved a sacred
-dream of their childhood friendship, as she had so fondly hoped he had.
-She even wondered if he might not have seen, known and cared for
-Prudence before. She concluded that he cared for Prudence now, and
-certainly not for herself. Then she thought he might think of that
-something, which he had wished so to give her—that something from
-Hispaniola,—and she feared he might present it to her now. This would
-have been too much to bear, under the circumstances.
-
-Adam was indeed thinking on this very subject, but Wainsworth—his
-friend—arose like a specter in his meditations, and all that Garde had
-said had confirmed him in his belief of her coldness to himself, so that
-he preferred to seem to forget the trinket, which would have been at
-once the token of his love and constancy.
-
-“Mistress Prudence Soam,” Adam repeated, replying to Garde’s last
-remarks. “Indeed I should be but a sorry clod, not to wish to see her
-again. Does she also come searching for simples?”
-
-“No,” replied Garde, a little dully. “But I thank you for reminding me
-that I must set about my task. Therefore I must bid you good day.”
-
-Adam thought something would snap inside his breast. There was the
-sunlight, streaming through the aisles of the trees; there was Garde,
-whom he loved beyond anything of earth, setting off alone when he should
-be at her side, culling her herbs, touching her hands as he gave her the
-aromatic leaves that he too knew so well, and looking into Paradise
-through her eyes, that had so danced when first he knew them. But what
-of Wainsworth? What of the honor of a friend to a friend?
-
-“Good day,” he echoed, with a mock gaiety that struck painfully on the
-ears of both. “I trust your quest will be as successful as I could wish
-your life to be happy.”
-
-He hesitated a moment, for it was hard to part thus. Garde had hoped he
-might volunteer to go along and carry the tiny basket she held on her
-arm, for a woman’s love can never be so discouraged as not to have a new
-little hope every other moment that something may happen to set matters
-aright in spite of all. But Adam did not dare to prolong this test of
-his honor to Wainsworth. He felt that his head was reeling, but with a
-stately bow he took a final, lingering look at the sweetest vision he
-had ever seen, and started away.
-
-Garde, steadied by her pride, returned his bow and walked further into
-the woods.
-
-Adam felt that he must pause and turn; that the “Garde!” that welled up
-from his heart would burst through his lips in spite of all he could do.
-With his violin clasped beneath his arm, however, he conquered himself,
-absolutely, and never so much as turned about again to see where the
-wood-nymph had gone.
-
-But Garde could not so slay her dearest impulse. She turned before she
-had gone ten steps. Looking back, she saw Adam, bareheaded, crowned by
-his golden ringlets,—through which the sunbeams were thrust like fingers
-of gilt,—trailing his sword, clutching his violin, striding off in his
-boots as lithely as a panther and bearing up under his faded brown coat
-as proudly as a king.
-
-“Oh, Adam!” she said, faintly, but he was already too far away to hear
-the little wood-note which her voice had made.
-
-He disappeared. She knew he would soon be clear of the trees.
-Reluctantly at first, and then eagerly, though silently, she flitted
-along from tree to tree, where he had gone, till at length she came to
-the edge of the forest.
-
-Adam, heavy with Wainsworth’s gold, was walking less buoyantly now. He
-was far out on the flat, heading southward, not exactly toward Boston.
-Garde watched him yearningly, going, going and never once looking
-backward to where he had left her.
-
-She could bear no more. She sank down on the moss at the foot of a tree,
-and leaning against the gnarled old trunk, she covered her face with her
-hands and cried, heart-brokenly.
-
-Had she watched but a moment longer, she would have seen Adam halt,
-slowly turn about, and with his hand at his lips gaze toward the woods
-steadily for fully a minute. Then with a slow gesture he waved a kiss
-back to where she was and once more went upon his way.
-
-The man had no mind to walk through Boston in daylight, with his violin
-naked in his hands. Keeping therefore southward, he came at length to
-the upper part of the harbor. Here he engaged a boatman with a sloop to
-convey him down to the ship-yard of Captain William Phipps.
-
-The worthy ship-builder soon made him welcome.
-
-“William,” said Adam, “I have replenished the treasury, as I said I
-might, and I have made up my mind to join you in your treasure-hunting
-expedition.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII.
-
- PAYING THE FIDDLER.
-
-
-ASSUME a cheerfulness, if you have it not, and it may presently grow
-upon you. This happened to Adam, so that when he left Captain Phipps, to
-return to the tavern for his breakfast and to seek out the beef-eaters,
-his mood was almost volatile again. There is much virtue in having
-something other than one’s troubles to think upon. The sunken treasure
-afforded Adam a topic.
-
-He made his way to his apartments in the Crow and Arrow by the stairs at
-the rear. He found the rooms empty. Beef-eaters, bag and baggage were
-gone. Even the violin-case was not to be found.
-
-Somewhat surprised that his faithful followers would so desert him, or
-at least move the family habitation without consulting their comrade,
-and on notice so brief, Rust knocked on Wainsworth’s door, to ask him if
-he had seen anything of the worthy Pike and Halberd. But Wainsworth too
-was out.
-
-Upon proceeding post haste down to the tap-room, Adam broke in upon a
-scene of armistice, after a first shock of war. Standing at bay, with
-drawn swords, the shabby chattels of the trio in a corner behind them,
-were the beef-eaters, confronting and defying the landlord and several
-valiant citizens, in the midst of whom was the small individual who had
-so much desired to fight, on the previous evening, and who was now
-haranguing the opposing forces volubly.
-
-“Here comes the master-vagabond now!” he cried, the moment Adam appeared
-in the room. “Now, sirs, for your proof that you are not a pack of
-wandering beggars and braggarts!”
-
-“At last!” cried Halberd and Pike, together, coming quickly forward to
-grasp their comrade in arms by the hands.
-
-“We have defended your good name and possessions!” said Pike.
-
-“We have flung the lie into the teeth of these varlets!” added Halberd.
-“You have come in good time.”
-
-“What’s the meaning of all this business?” demanded Adam, of the
-assembled company.
-
-Every one started to talk or to shout at once. Adam heard such things
-as:
-
-“They have called you and us a lot of penniless beggars and pirates!”
-
-“What are you but a swaggering bully?”
-
-“You are a fiddling limb of Satan!”
-
-The landlord said, more moderately, “I did but desire to protect my
-house in its good repute.”
-
-The fierce little white-eyed man waved both his fists.
-
-“These dogs,” he snapped to Adam, “have boasted that you are loaded down
-with gold!”
-
-“Yes, they mentioned gold,” said the landlord, tentatively.
-
-“Gold?” said Adam. “Is it a crime to have no gold? How much gold would
-you see?” he pulled his two hands from his pockets and scattered heaps
-of yellow sovereigns on the table.
-
-The beef-eaters nearly collapsed with amazement, at the sight of this
-wealth. The landlord fell to rubbing his hands with ecstasy.
-
-“You unseemly traducers of fair gentlemen,” he said, with virtuous
-indignation, to the belligerents behind him, “how dare you come here to
-insult and to villify my guests?”
-
-“He probably stole it,” cried the incorrigible little white-eyed
-terrier. “He has naught to do but to make God-fearing men——and his
-betters, at that—dance against their will in the public streets!”
-
-“Ah,” said Adam, striding forward and purposely bending with great show
-of looking down to where the little man was standing, “so you have come
-to pay the fiddler for the sport which your friend enjoyed yesterday
-evening? How little he reckons my fiddling worth. This is so sad that
-nothing short of a breakfast can console me. Landlord——”
-
-“Braggart! knave!” cried the little man, interrupting. “I offer to fight
-you again! You dare not fight!”
-
-The smaller the dog the rarer the punishments and the larger the
-arrogance.
-
-“Shatter my hilt!” said Adam, “you and another gnat would devour me
-whole.”
-
-Without warning, and yet gently, Rust took him by the collar, twirled
-him about so that he could lay his other hand on the trousers of the
-midget, and hoisting him off his feet, though he kicked and made a
-disturbance with yelling and raving, carried him at once to the open
-window of the tavern and dropped him out, on the sidewalk beneath.
-
-Three or four partisans, who had backed up little white-eyes and the
-landlord, now edged toward the door. Adam made one motion in their
-direction and they got out with becoming alacrity.
-
-“Lock that door till we have had our breakfast,” Rust commanded.
-
-The landlord had no more than complied, than the little rat, dropped
-from the window, came banging against the barrier on the outside,
-demanding admittance vociferously.
-
-“Who is yon whiffet?” Adam asked.
-
-“His name is Psalms Higgler,” laughed the landlord, with fine hypocrisy.
-“How bravely you served him, and rightly too.” He rubbed his hands
-gleefully.
-
-“And his friend who sent him hither, he that danced so divertingly, what
-may be his name?”
-
-“Isaiah Pinchbecker, you doubtless mean. And what will you have for
-breakfast, sire?”
-
-“I will have you carry my bales of merchandise back to my apartments,”
-said Adam, who did not propose to move out of the house until he felt
-inclined, preferring to remain there and command respect for himself and
-the beef-eaters, even while he knew that the landlord had joined the
-miserable snappers at his heels. “And look to it you move smartly and
-return to order something to eat.”
-
-The landlord, spurred by the sight of the gold, and eager to make all
-possible amends for the errors of judgment he had committed, staggered
-up the stairs, panting like a grampus.
-
-Adam now turned to his comrades, who recited three times over the
-incidents of the morning, which consisted chiefly of the charges made by
-Psalms Higgler, evidently at the instigation of Pinchbecker—the
-nimble-footed—and which had so nearly culminated in their expulsion from
-the tavern.
-
-Tempest in a teapot as it had been, the business was an indication of
-feelings which went as deep as politics, in which the whole colony had
-been simmering for years. Moreover, the incident was not yet concluded.
-
-The same year which had witnessed King Philip’s war, at the close of
-which Adam had gone away, one of the greatest mischief-makers with whom
-the Colonists had ever been called upon to deal, Edward Randolph, had
-come to Boston with a design to despoil the colony of its charter. He
-had worked openly, in some directions, secretly in others. He had
-enlisted malcontents, dissenters-from-everything, hypocrites and men
-with private greeds, in his Tory following. Among these were
-Pinchbecker, his friend, the landlord of the Crow and Arrow, Psalms
-Higgler and many others of their ilk.
-
-Now Pinchbecker came under the category of hypocrites. He assumed the
-Puritans’ manners, speech and customs, and did, in fact, despise some of
-the looser habits of the Royalists, though he was their willing tool,
-working for future favor and gain. He had therefore felt himself sorely
-aggrieved when compelled to his dance, in a public highway, and having
-first egged on his little terrier, Psalms, had then repaired to Edward
-Randolph, himself, for redress of his wrongs.
-
-Randolph, thinking he smelt a bluff and ready Tory lot, in Adam, and his
-company, found occasion to visit the tavern without delay. He arrived
-while Rust and the beef-eaters were still at their breakfast. He entered
-the house at the rear and ordered a drink at the bar.
-
-Motioning the landlord to silence, that worthy being much astonished to
-see him so early, Randolph presently turned about, as if he had not
-before observed the trio at table.
-
-“Gentlemen,” he said, “I drink ill when I drink alone; will you not
-permit me to order something in which you can join me?”
-
-Adam looked up. “Thank you,” he said, “it is our misfortune to have
-ordered, just as you were coming in.”
-
-“The misfortune is mine,” insisted Randolph. He drank alone.
-
-Rust had taken in the visitor’s details at a glance. The man was of
-medium size and nervous temperament. He had a great brow, heavy with
-perceptive faculties, at the expense of those of reflection. His eyes
-were deep-set, round, intense and close together, the nose that divided
-them being as thin and curved as a beak. His lips were thin and
-tight-shutting. He looked like a human bird-of-prey.
-
-“By your dress and manner you are recently from England,” said the man,
-sauntering leisurely toward Adam, when he had smacked his lips and set
-down his mug.
-
-“By your courtesy,” said Adam, “you are a student, curious to know your
-fellow-beings.”
-
-Randolph laughed. “Curious?” said he. “You do me wrong. I care neither
-who nor what a gentleman is, so long as he is witty and blest with
-humor. Your repute and the tale of your love for dancing have preceded
-you, sir. I confess I was tempted to come here and see you.”
-
-“I beseech you for an opportunity to say that I was merely charitable,”
-said Rust. “I ordered the dance to amuse my beef-eaters. Perhaps you are
-a dancer yourself?”
-
-Randolph bit his lip. He was not getting on to his liking. He smiled,
-however, and said:
-
-“I have few graces, after I have mentioned a sense of admiration——”
-
-“And blandishment,” put in Adam, who frankly disliked the man.
-
-“Say appreciation, rather,” corrected Randolph. “I have had a hearty
-laugh over that dance. I wish I had been there to see it; such merriment
-is so rare in Massachusetts.”
-
-“Nearly as rare as introductions between gentlemen,” Adam answered.
-
-He tipped up his mug and drank the last of his brew carelessly. Randolph
-turned red with anger. His gray eyes looked like cold fire, yet he was
-still unwilling to accept defeat in his effort to find out the bent of
-Adam’s political views.
-
-“We live in a time when the stoutest friends and companions in good
-causes might be lost to each other by formality,” he said, with a smile
-doing its best to bend his features. “I must beg your pardon, if I
-seem——”
-
-He was interrupted by the entrance, at this moment, of William Phipps,
-who came in at the door which the landlord had quietly unbolted.
-
-“What, Adam, not yet done with eating?” he called out, bluntly. “Come,
-come, I have been waiting this long time for you and your friends to
-have a look over the brig.”
-
-“With you at once,” rejoined the rover.
-
-He and the beef-eaters knocked over their heavy chairs and stools, as
-they arose from the table. Phipps looked at Randolph. The two men
-nodded, distantly and somewhat frowningly. Without so much as glancing
-at Randolph, Adam and his retinue walked to the door and so away, with
-the Captain.
-
-Randolph needed no further intimation of Adam’s probable leanings,
-politically, than this obvious camaraderie with Phipps—who was a patriot
-as immovable and staunch as a rock fortress. He clenched his fists and
-ground his molars savagely.
-
-“Curse the young fool!” he said. “I’ll make him wish for a civil tongue
-to be hung in his head!”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX.
-
- A MATTER OF STATE.
-
-
-MISTRESS GARDE MERRILL, having several hours before delivered her
-simples and aromatic leaves to old Goody Dune, just outside the limits
-of the town, stood looking out of the window, at her Uncle John Soam’s
-home, where she was visiting. Thus it was that she saw her grandfather,
-David Donner enter the gate. Two minutes afterward she beheld the
-unusual sight of three Governors come into the garden together.
-
-The first was ex-Governor Leverett, that stern old Roundhead, the
-ex-Captain of Cromwell’s horse. At his side was Governor Winslow, up
-from Plymouth, on grave affairs. Behind them was an older man, and
-perhaps a wiser one, Governor Simon Bradstreet, still hale and hearty
-after fifty-three years of service to the colonies.
-
-Bringing up the rear of the little procession was Henry Wainsworth,
-private secretary to Leverett. He looked toward the windows in the hope
-of seeing Garde, but that young lady stepped silently back into the
-shadows, for she had no desire to be seen.
-
-Neither David Donner nor the other visitors came to the house, nor even
-to the front door thereof. It was a fine day, so that the garden seemed
-all smiles. A cow was mooing lustily and chickens were singing in their
-contentment. These sounds were interspersed with the hawing of a saw,
-and then with hammer strokes, these latter disturbances issuing from a
-newly constructed granary and cow-shed which John Soam, Garde’s uncle,
-had recently afforded.
-
-David Donner, who had known that he would find Goodman Soam in this
-shed, had tracked across the garden without ceremony. The governors and
-Wainsworth, having confidence that Donner knew what he was doing,
-followed where he led, to the center whence the clatter of industry
-proceeded.
-
-The hammer-pounding had abated nothing, nor did it cease when the three
-grave citizens and Wainsworth had entered the house and ranged
-themselves silently beside David Donner, to whom they could not well
-speak for the din. They nodded to their friend, however, and looked up,
-like students of astronomy all of one mind, at Goodman Soam above them.
-
-John Soam had never been reputed a carpenter of talent in Boston.
-However, here he was, standing on the head of a barrel and obviously
-completing the task of ceiling this room of the granary, for his head,
-shoulders and arms were out of sight, in the darksome region above the
-ceiling, while part of his body and his legs, below, moved in vigorous
-jerks as he pounded into place and nailed what appeared to be the last
-board but one which would be needed to complete the job on which he was
-so commendably engaged.
-
-It seemed to his visitors that they had never before seen Goodman Soam
-in so tight an orifice as was the one from which he now protruded. They
-waited in patience for the nailing to cease, conversation being
-impossible meantime. John was, by all reckoning, a thorough workman, for
-he drove home nail after nail, without ceasing for so much as a breath.
-
-At length the board was secured to the carpenter’s satisfaction, for he
-ceased to hammer and could be heard to feel his work lovingly as he
-examined its beauties in the half light in which he had labored.
-
-“Good morrow, John Soam,” now said Governor Leverett, having first
-coughed behind his hand. “Here are several fellow-townsmen come to your
-place.”
-
-John was seen to give a squirm. “Oh, good morrow,” said he, his voice
-muffled by the ceiling between him and his friends. “I have been doing a
-little work. Wait a moment, good friend, till I may gather my nails and
-tools.”
-
-The five good men waited, hearing John scramble the nails together with
-a few metallic clinks.
-
-“We went first to your house, David,” said John Winslow to David Donner.
-“We came to see you and John Soam, as promised, on a matter of some
-gravity.”
-
-John Soam now, upon making an effort to retreat out of the slender
-orifice which he had left when he nailed in his board, found his chest
-and shoulders thicker than his waist. He wriggled. This being of no
-avail to extricate him, he struggled. A convulsion of activity then
-seized upon him. He attempted to sit down, he dragged at himself, he
-began to do unseemly things. But he could not get out. He had hammered
-in his own head and arms, with many good nails in the board.
-
-His friends below him now overheard a sound which, in a simian, if
-simians talked at all, would have been a curse. John wrestled as if
-demons, expert in catch-as-catch-can, were restraining him up there in
-the attic. He kicked about, with a violence so great as to overthrow the
-barrel whereon he had been standing. For a second his two blind feet
-felt about for his whilom support in an agony of helplessness.
-
-“Goodman Leverett,” he then bawled, in tones of repressed emotion, “will
-you put back that barrel for a moment, till I may come down?”
-
-“If you will constrain your legs to seemly conduct, I will,” said the
-governor. He and David Donner having received a kick apiece, now
-reinstated Goodman Soam’s pedestal.
-
-John became quiescent for a moment. His friends shifted about, uneasily.
-
-“May we help you in any respect, John?” inquired Winslow.
-
-“Are you fastened in?” added Simon Bradstreet.
-
-“Might we not pull him down?” suggested Wainsworth.
-
-“My friends, how many be you?” said the hot, muffled voice of John.
-
-“Five,” said one of the solemn governors. “Shall we give you a little
-assistance?”
-
-“It would only be a little I should want,” said the carpenter, dropping
-the nails he had clung to in desperation.
-
-The five gentlemen disposed themselves about John’s anatomy and pulled
-at his legs with united strength, grasping the cloth of his trousers for
-the purpose.
-
-“Enough! enough!” roared John, after a moment of hopeless pain and
-wriggling.
-
-His warning came belated. His trousers were of good stuff enow, but
-trousers have their limitations. They parted, slightly above the uneven
-line of gripping hands, and came away in ragged banners.
-
-The five citizens were horrified. So was John. Two of the gentlemen,
-with the booty taken from their friend, fell heavily to the floor.
-
-“Dear me, this was most uncalled for,” said David Donner.
-
-John Soam tried to draw his legs up under his coat, vainly. He made
-terrible sounds of anguish, in his nakedness below and his loneliness up
-above the ceiling. His fellow-citizens, undecided as to whether they
-should go outside, for the sake of modesty, or remain and lend further
-aid to John, looked at one another inquiringly.
-
-“John,” then said Leverett, somewhat sternly, “would you council us to
-get an ax and knock out the board you have hammered into place?”
-
-“Yes,” bawled the carpenter, “there be two axes in the corner. Let them
-both be employed!”
-
-“I have chopped down a tree in my youth,” said David Donner.
-
-He therefore took one of the axes, while Governor Winslow took the
-second.
-
-They were then at a loss to reach the ceiling, wherefore it became
-necessary for the good men to build up a platform, of boxes and boards,
-while John Soam’s legs tried to hide, one behind the other.
-
-The platform being hastily constructed, the ax-men mounted and began to
-swing ill-directed blows upward at the stubborn board which the
-carpenter had hammered in so thoroughly.
-
-No more than three blows had been delivered when John made protest,
-howling lustily for the purpose, as the ax-men failed at first to hear
-him, while busy with their work of salvation.
-
-“It jars me rudely,” he roared out, unable wholly to repress his
-feelings. “It’s hellish.”
-
-“Ahem,” said Governor Leverett. “What would you council us to do next,
-friend Soam?”
-
-“Saw the board,” counseled John. “It was a rare good fit, but it had
-best be sawed.”
-
-The platform was now changed and one after another the five citizens
-plied the saw, for the board was wet, and to saw above one’s head is
-irksome in a high degree. Yet at length the cut was made, at one end,
-and those below could thrust the imprisoning plank upward. Being still
-stoutly nailed at the further end, the board scraped off some buttons,
-erstwhile sewn to John’s waistcoat, and it otherwise harassed him before
-it was high enough to permit the carpenter to emerge from his attic. He
-appeared at last, however, red of countenance and in a fine condition to
-do some private blaspheming, had the opportunity been present for the
-exercise of this, man’s inalienable function. His friends were
-immeasurably relieved to see him, safe.
-
-“Friend John,” said David Donner, “we have come hither on matters of
-state. When you are rehabilitated we shall, I believe, be glad of your
-further counsel.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X.
-
- TO FOIL A SPY.
-
-
-HIS friends, forming a hollow square, now escorted John to the house at
-a quick walk. He disappeared like a Jack into its box, when the door was
-finally opened, while the grave citizens entered the parlor and awaited
-his return. Clothed decorously once more, he was presently with them
-again, when the council of five, with Wainsworth sitting near, drew up
-to the heavy, oaken table.
-
-They now listened to Governor Winslow, who had journeyed from Plymouth
-for this meeting.
-
-“I have begun to lose hope,” he said, “that we shall be able to postpone
-much longer the day of evil. We thought our charter was threatened ten
-or twelve years ago and we have held it by sheer power of
-procrastination and tactics of elusiveness, but Randolph has been with
-us here in Boston for seven years, and the harm he did to our
-independence in seventy-six has been accumulating interest in trouble
-for us, one might say, ever since. He has mastered our methods; he is
-closing in upon us every day. It is now a desperate case, requiring a
-desperate remedy. The only question is, what means can we undertake to
-offset some of the ill repute in which he has caused King Charles to
-hold us, and to nullify his further machinations.”
-
-“It would not be safe, would it, to expel the man Randolph from the
-colony?” said Leverett, who had first coughed behind his hand.
-
-“Oh no,” said Donner.
-
-“Such an action would precipitate difficulties with the King,” added
-Simon Bradstreet.
-
-“And we would not dare to restrain him from further evil work?” John
-Soam inquired.
-
-His friends shook their heads.
-
-“We know well enough that he has gathered much testimony from persons
-willing to swear falsely, as to the grants to Gorges and Mason, in Maine
-and New Hampshire,” said David Donner. “Might we not go over this same
-ground and procure true, sworn testimony and statements from more
-credible persons, with which to refute him?”
-
-“That would have been well advised seven years ago,” said Bradstreet,
-who had a way of tweaking his own nose when he began to speak, “but at
-that time we were still engrossed with, and alarmed by, the war with
-King Philip, and moreover we knew nothing of Randolph’s methods. It
-would have done well then, but now it is too late—much too late—for that
-sort of work.”
-
-“I have thought upon the matter long and seriously,” said Winslow. “I
-can see no way so good as to send an agent from among ourselves to
-England, to intercede with Charles and to plead our cause personally at
-the Court, day after day.”
-
-David Donner knew what was coming. He glared at an imaginary Stuart
-family.
-
-John Soam said: “I can see the wisdom of such a course. I consider that
-when Goodman Simon Bradstreet went to London before, he did this colony
-great service. That was—let me see—why, twenty-three good long years
-since. Are you of a mind to go once more, Friend Simon?”
-
-“I am an old man,” said Bradstreet, tweaking his nose with extra vigor.
-“A younger wit would be of far more service.”
-
-With his four score of years on his head Simon Bradstreet yet did
-injustice to his immortal youth and energy. The council knew that it was
-the gall and wormwood which he had manfully swallowed, twenty-three
-years before, when he went to Charles the Second to congratulate him
-upon his restoration to the throne, that wrought upon him now more than
-did the infirmities of age.
-
-“If we prove successful in finding an agent from among us, Friend Soam,”
-said Winslow, “will you be one with us to find money for his
-pilgrimage?”
-
-“And whom would you have in mind?” John cautiously replied.
-
-The governors turned with one accord to David Donner.
-
-“They have asked this service of me,” said David.
-
-Leverett said: “There is no one else so free, so gifted and so
-bountifully supplied with knowledge of these colonies. Nor is there any
-one among us whose comprehension of the intrigues and artifices employed
-by Randolph is so reliable.”
-
-“We have none among us more diplomatic and logical and yet adherent to
-the cause of truth,” added Winslow.
-
-“I feel sure, David, you are the fittest man in Boston for this
-important undertaking,” John Soam said, gravely.
-
-“And we could count on you to furnish some of the necessary funds, if
-Donner will go, could we not?” asked Winslow, striking while the Soam
-iron was hot.
-
-“You may, to be sure,” John responded, more slowly. “But David has not
-yet indicated whether he will undertake this mission or no.”
-
-This was, indeed, the crucial point. Strict old Puritan that he was,
-despiser of ostentations, father already of that spirit of independence
-and Americanism being sown broadcast in New England, David Donner had
-already made many a wry face over the prospect of serving the colony by
-an expedient so bitter as he conceived this present task to be.
-
-“I have debated this matter, since I had my first intimation of what to
-expect from Governor Winslow,” he said, pursing up his mouth as if he
-were about to swallow a brew of hoarhound. “I am not a young man myself.
-I may never return to this land. But—if it is the prompting of your
-wisdom to send me, I cannot refuse to serve this colony and these
-earnest, toiling people.”
-
-Of the joy which his colleagues felt there was no sign apparent. For
-that matter, they would be as sad at losing Donner from their circle as
-they would be glad to send him on his mission. Their lives were made up
-of joyless duties, woven as a woof through a warp of joyless worship.
-
-But among his hearers there was Wainsworth, and he was glad, not so much
-to have the severe old man going abroad, as to know that Mistress Garde
-Merrill would now in all probability remain permanently with John Soam
-and his wife, who were good-natured, affectionate people. Indeed Mrs.
-Soam was a natural woman, more delighted when she was fostering or
-encouraging a mating, ’twixt youthful hearts, than she was when kneading
-dough into loaves that looked like fat, dimpled babies, and this is
-saying more than might readily be supposed.
-
-Thus when, soon after, the meeting had broken up and the Governors had
-stiffly departed, it was but natural that Henry should discover,
-innocently enough, that he had left a bundle of papers behind. It was
-quite as natural, also, that upon returning and purposely knocking at
-the door of the family living-room, whereas the papers should have been
-still in the parlor, he should be admitted by Goodwife Soam and asked in
-most cordially, and sent with Garde to look for the truant documents.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI.
-
- DANGEROUS TRIBUTES.
-
-
-ELOQUENT as Wainsworth had proved himself, in the presence of Adam, he
-was but an indifferent love’s-man, now that he found himself alone with
-Garde.
-
-“I wanted to come back for—for the papers,” he stammered.
-
-“Yes,” said Garde, whose spirit of elfishness Henry always aroused,
-“they would soon have missed you sorely.”
-
-“Would they—What, papers?—Oh, you are making fun of——”
-
-“I am making a search to find them,” interrupted Garde. “Here they are.
-I am so sorry they have detained you.”
-
-“Thank you—oh, thank you,” said Henry, still stumbling confusedly. “It
-is such a lovely day I thought I should like to come back and—and—and
-see—if I had really left them here.”
-
-“Yes, such a lovely day would make any one wish to do the same thing,”
-said Garde, gravely. “Now that you have them, you must be very happy
-again.”
-
-“Yes, oh yes—no, no, the papers haven’t made me happy.”
-
-“Then I am sorry you are sad,” said Garde. “Perhaps the lovely day
-outside will make you feel more joyous again.”
-
-“But I am not sad,” protested Henry, getting momentarily redder. “I
-wanted to say—I wanted to come back——”
-
-“Yes, you did say so, to get the papers.”
-
-“No—yes!—but I wanted to say——”
-
-“That you had left them, because it was such a lovely day?”
-
-“Yes, of course, but—no, no, I wanted to say—church!”
-
-“Oh, they are church papers, Mr. Wainsworth?” asked Garde innocently.
-
-“No, I—I wanted to say it is such a lovely day——”
-
-“You have said so many things that you may have mentioned the day
-before.” Garde’s eyes were dancing, but he had hardly dared to look at
-her face, lest his tongue should fail him utterly.
-
-He now fixed his attention on the table with all his power of will.
-
-“I wanted to say, if the Sabbath is a lovely day, like this, may I not
-walk to meeting with you and David Donner?”
-
-Piqued somewhat by the way Adam had treated her, Garde instantly saw a
-possible opportunity of arousing Adam’s jealousy. He would doubtless
-attend meeting. He might see her with Henry. As Prudence would also be
-there, with her father, there might be further developments.
-
-“If it is a lovely day, Mr. Wainsworth,” she answered, “I think Granther
-Donner will be glad of your company, but if it is not a lovely day,
-Granther and I will have to get along as best we may, alone, I suppose.”
-
-“No, I meant any sort of a day!” cried Wainsworth, desperately. “If the
-Sabbath is any sort of a day. I only said if it was as lovely as to-day
-because any day, would be a lovely day, if——” and there he stuck.
-
-“If it were as lovely as to-day,” Garde supplied.
-
-“Yes,” said Henry, hopelessly. “Then—then that is settled?”
-
-“Do you mean the weather? It ought to be settled, I should think.”
-
-“No, I mean that I am to go with you and David Donner to meeting, no
-matter what sort of a day it is.”
-
-“I think Granther will be glad of your company,” said Garde again. She
-led the way back to the living-room before Henry could frame any more of
-his tumble-down speeches.
-
-Prudence and her mother were both here, now, and both looked up to smile
-at Wainsworth, whom they had grown to like for his evident sincerity.
-Mrs. Soam was a pleasant woman, with a double chin from which it seemed
-all manner of comfortable little chucklings of good-nature took their
-start. She should have been the mother of several boys, for she liked
-nice boys and felt a sense of motherhood over all she knew. Prudence was
-not at all like her mother. Her face was small and serious. She spoke
-with a quaint drawl. Although quite as old as Garde, she appeared so
-unsophisticated and childish, so quiet and unassertive that no one would
-have looked to find womanly emotions, in her breast.
-
-“Well, Henry,” said Mrs. Soam, who always called “her boys” by their
-first names, “how have you been and what have you been doing? Have you
-heard from England recently? How was your mother, when you heard?”
-
-“She was quite well, thank you,” said Henry, who could talk to Garde’s
-aunt without confusion, “but I have not heard from her recently. Oh—I
-nearly forgot—I have heard from England, in a manner. That is, a friend
-I knew there, arrived in Boston only yesterday.”
-
-“Yes? And who was that?” said Mrs. Soam.
-
-Garde had started to go up-stairs to her own apartment, which she shared
-with Prudence, but she halted at the door and came back, for Wainsworth
-said:
-
-“His name is Adam Rust.”
-
-Garde and Prudence both took up some knitting and began to ply the
-needles, over which their eyes were bent, intently.
-
-“Yes,” said Mrs. Soam, encouragingly. “Is he a Puritan?”
-
-“I don’t know,” said Wainsworth, frankly. “I think perhaps he is. At any
-rate, he belongs here, I feel sure. But wherever he belongs, or whatever
-he is, he’s a splendid fellow. I was riding to hounds when we met. My
-horse threw me, and my foot was caught in the stirrup. I was being
-dragged when Rust stopped my run-away horse. He is one of the most
-superb horsemen I ever knew.”
-
-“Why, do you mean that he saved your life?” inquired Goodwife Soam. “It
-must have been a terrible moment.”
-
-“I haven’t much brains, but I was about to lose what I had,” said
-Wainsworth, generously. “He came in the nick of time. And afterwards,
-when I happened to be a bit short of funds—as a man will, you know,
-sometimes—why, he loaned me nearly every penny he had in the world!”
-
-“Was that not most improvident?” said the listener.
-
-“Yes, I suppose it was. You know, you wouldn’t call him exactly
-provident. He is too good-hearted a fellow to be that, you know. He is
-one of those fellows you can tell anything about yourself. I tell him
-everything.”
-
-He looked up at Garde, as he said this, wishing he could tell her the
-half that he had confided to Rust. She never lifted her eyes, however,
-from her knitting.
-
-“And what did he tell you of your mother?” asked Mrs. Soam.
-
-“Oh, nothing. He never knew the mater.” Henry tried to think what Adam
-had told him. “He just—well, told me of a few general matters.”
-
-Garde listened eagerly, almost breathlessly, dwelling on every word
-concerning Rust, but her aunt returned once more to the subject of
-Wainsworth’s mother and no more was heard of Adam, for Henry presently
-bade them all good day and proceeded to follow, belated as he was, where
-his chief had gone, at the close of the meeting.
-
-When he disappeared, Garde dropped her knitting and went quietly up the
-stairs, for the purpose of being alone, to think.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII.
-
- HOURS THAT GROW DARK.
-
-
-CAPTAIN WILLIAM PHIPPS was as eager as a boy, now that he had definitely
-settled on the purpose which had for its object the quest of the sunken
-treasure. Therefore he and Adam and the beef-eaters worked unceasingly
-to prepare the brig, “Captain Spencer,” for the cruise to the Bahamas.
-
-What with provisioning the craft, enlisting more trustworthy men for the
-voyage and refitting a somewhat depleted and inefficient arsenal, Phipps
-waxed brusque and impatient. He had desired to get away from Boston not
-later than Saturday afternoon, but as the tasks before them had been
-tackled by Adam and the rest of them on Friday morning, the worthy
-Captain’s ambition to be on the sea on the Sabbath—a day for which he
-had little liking—was vain. Saturday night therefore approached and
-Phipps fumed, for he could not so outrage the Puritans’ sense of things
-Godly as to sail on Sunday, wherefore the departure had perforce to be
-postponed till Monday morning.
-
-Adam, with an exaggerated sense of honor, had resisted the longing to go
-by night to that same alley in which he had rescued Garde’s cat and met
-that young lady with Mistress Prudence Soam. He spent the time with his
-beef-eaters and with Wainsworth, making merry for these music-hungering
-friends on the violin, which now seemed to him more than ever the one
-thing left him on which to concentrate the love of his affectionate
-nature.
-
-On Sunday morning Captain Phipps betook himself to his brig, as she lay
-in mid-stream, to pother about by himself, while Adam dutifully escorted
-Goodwife Phipps to meeting, at South Church, which was nearer than the
-old church and more popular as well.
-
-It was a solemn, black procession of Puritans that walked decorously to
-meeting in the sunlight. The day was one of almost unseemly beauty, for
-Nature was fairly barbarous in the colors which she wore like jewels.
-There was riotous gladness in the breeze that tipped back the bonnets
-from many a pretty face, to let the sun have a look at peach-bloom
-cheeks; there was a deviltry in the warmth that the girls felt first at
-their ankles, where thin stockings only protected them; and there was a
-twitter and chirrup of birds in the air.
-
-In their homely black and their stiff white collars, the men were as
-solemn as posts. No bells sounded, either from afar, with mellowed
-pealings, nor nearer with persistent nagging. Men, women and children
-alike walked with their eyes steadfastly fixed on the ground.
-
-However, there were two pairs of eyes less meek. They were Adam’s and
-Garde’s. It therefore came to pass that each discovered the other,
-before the church portals were reached. Garde’s heart began to beat as
-if it were knocking to call Adam’s attention. Adam’s hammered as if it
-were forging more fetters to bind him tighter in his love.
-
-Garde, with her grandfather and Wainsworth, preceded Rust and Mrs.
-Phipps into the sanctuary. Adam followed eagerly, and yet as one about
-to enter a prison. He had seen Wainsworth, but Henry, in his ecstasy,
-had contented himself with looking devotedly at Garde’s little shoes.
-
-Inside the church, Garde sat somewhat toward the back, while Adam, with
-the men, occupied a bench at the side of the building from which he
-could see Mistress Merrill’s profile perfectly, as often as he dared to
-look in her direction.
-
-Garde, with much resolution, permitted herself not so much as one tiny
-flicker of a glance toward Adam, all during the time of service. She
-felt him looking at her, however, from time to time, and rejoiced that
-her little ruse to make him stirred up and mayhap jealous was
-succeeding. The flush of maidenhood’s beauty which had mounted to her
-cheek, the moment she found that Adam was near, remained throughout the
-morning.
-
-Later to church than any other, a man, alone, and none too reverent,
-entered the door and took a seat on the side, from which he could scan
-many of the faces in the place. It was Randolph. He had come there for
-the sole purpose of looking about him, his reasons being various, but
-none of them Godly. He shut his mouth grimly at beholding Adam present,
-but when his gaze finally rested on Garde, all the more radiantly
-beautiful for the simplicity of her dress, it became fixed, first, then
-covetous, and finally passionate.
-
-It was not until the meeting was finished that Garde ventured to take a
-sly glance at Adam. Her gaze met his. She saw and comprehended, then,
-such a fathomless sadness in his look, before he could drop his gaze,
-that she was instantly most penitent over what she had done.
-
-It was the same look she had seen in his eyes that day when he had
-marched as a captive, at the end of King Philip’s war—a look she never
-had, and never could, forget.
-
-As for Rust, he had confirmed to his satisfaction, all that Wainsworth
-had told him. If he had not been convinced before and ready to renounce
-his own hopes, he was quite persuaded and determined now. He thought how
-fortunate it was that Phipps had the brig all ready to sail on the
-morrow. It was very much better to end the matter with the smallest
-possible delay.
-
-He spent the afternoon with Phipps and the beef-eaters on the ship. To
-his credit, he made himself an agreeable and cheerful companion. Indeed,
-what with the songs he had sung for Wainsworth and the others, and the
-spirit of his raillery, boasting and readiness to fight or to fiddle, he
-had succeeded in deceiving them all as to the nature under his
-waistcoat.
-
-Yet when the night was come and the magnet which had been drawing and
-drawing him to that alley, sacred to the memory of Garde’s cat, once
-more exercised its influence, more powerfully than ever, he became a
-restless creature.
-
-It has been said that man justifies himself in whatsoever he does. Adam
-thought he needed justification for desiring to go once, just once, into
-that alley, wherefore he prepared his mind with several excuses. Armed
-with these he at length slipped away from the Crow and Arrow and found
-his way to the rear of that house into which he had seen Garde and
-Prudence disappear, on that memorable first night in Boston.
-
-Had Rust come to this trysting-place at the same hour on the two
-previous evenings, he would have met Mistress Merrill face to face.
-Garde, in her impulsive eagerness to see him again, had waited for
-little debating before she slipped from the house, to see if he might
-not have come to deliver that certain trinket from Hispaniola. Her
-cousin Prudence, more diffident, had desired to come forth also, but she
-had lacked Garde’s readiness of execution and courage. However she had
-not lacked the incentive, and as no maiden is utterly awed, in the
-presence of a tender passion, Mistress Prudence had at length steeled
-her heart, and to-night she came tripping diffidently forth, not long
-after Adam’s arrival on the scene.
-
-So silently had Prudence come that Adam, who might have arranged
-otherwise, suddenly found himself confronted, before he had made up his
-mind whether he wished any one might appear or not.
-
-“Why, good evening, Mr. Rust,” said Prudence, with a little gasp at her
-own daring, “why, I was just walking in the garden and couldn’t think
-who it might be, here by the gate. Why, how strange we should meet!”
-
-Adam had said good evening, waving a salute grandly with his hat, the
-moment Prudence had spoken, for he had realized instantly that she was
-not Garde and his presence of mind had risen to the occasion without
-delay.
-
-“I—wandered up here looking, for—for distressed cats,” said Adam.
-
-“Oh, did you?” said Prudence, innocently. “That was real noble.”
-
-Adam hated to have anything he did called noble. He therefore hastened
-to do penance, in a measure, for his slightly inaccurate statement.
-
-“I am bound to confess,” he added, “that I did have a faint hope that I
-might see either you or Mistress Merrill—or both—to say good-by, for
-to-morrow I am off again, for a jaunt on the sea.”
-
-“Going away?” echoed Prudence. “Oh, why, Garde might be disappointed,
-not to see you and say good-by.”
-
-Adam thought this was sweet of Prudence, as indeed it was. He could have
-mentioned some disappointments himself, but he refrained from doing so.
-He thought, in a somewhat bitterly philosophical vein, that perhaps it
-was better as it was, better that he should not see Garde again, under
-the circumstances.
-
-“You are very kind,” he said. “Perhaps it would not be asking too much
-of you to get you to take a small packet—in fact, I have presumed to
-provide myself with two little packages, which I trust you and Mistress
-Merrill will receive, merely as tokens of a rover’s amusement in the
-little event of a few evenings ago, and of a pleasant memory which the
-episode will furnish for otherwise lonely moments.”
-
-He had indeed made up two small parcels, intending behind the ruse of
-making a small gift to both Garde and Prudence, to bestow thus the
-present to Garde brought from Hispaniola and long delayed as to
-delivery. He therefore took these carefully wrapped trinkets from his
-pocket and held them forth.
-
-“If I might prevail upon your good nature,” he said, “to accept this one
-and to give this other into the hands of Mistress Merrill, I should be
-grateful to you for the favor.”
-
-Fate takes obvious delight in making her weavings complete. It was
-inevitable that Garde should come out to that garden gate, while Adam
-and Prudence were talking there together, and that she should therefore
-see Adam, presenting something to her cousin, and should at once proceed
-to place an erroneous construction on the situation. Angered, humiliated
-and hurt, she fled back to the house, as Prudence was accepting the
-proffered trinkets and regretfully bidding Adam Rust good-by.
-
-It was hardly feasible so to conceal herself in the house that Prudence
-would be long in searching her out, when at length that quiet and
-pleased young lady came back to the house, hence Garde accepted Adam’s
-present before she exactly comprehended what she was doing.
-
-Prudence, having performed her duty, when the gift had passed to its
-rightful owner, hastened away to open her own packet, in privacy. She
-found an old Spanish doubloon in the bit of paper, and though a trifle
-disappointed that she did not discover an accompanying inscription, was
-nevertheless gladdened to the very core of her being.
-
-Garde, rebellious and ready to weep with conflicting emotions, which had
-not been assuaged by hearing Prudence tell how innocently she had
-happened to meet Mr. Rust, felt like flinging Adam’s gift upon the floor
-and stamping it flat with her lively little foot. But the tenderness of
-the love she had fostered so long, and the slight hope to which she
-still clung, combined with her natural curiosity, proved too strong for
-resistance. She opened the neatly tied and folded paper.
-
-Inside was a golden brooch of exquisite workmanship, a treasure
-absolutely irresistible to any beauty-loving young woman. But her gaze
-flew to a secondary little wad of paper, folded as a note. This she tore
-open with nerveless fingers.
-
-“From Hispaniola,” Adam had written, simply.
-
-Under this he had penned a quatrain of rather obscure meaning and weakly
-versification:
-
- “It always haps, when there are three,
- But two can bide in unity;
- That two may long their gladness keep,
- The third should bury sorrow deep.”
-
-Garde read these lines and then read them again, more puzzled by the
-second perusal than she had been by the first. She began then to feel
-wounded. She was ready to cry. The brooch had made her heart bound with
-joy. Then she remembered that Adam had procured it for her years before,
-since when his affections might have been transferred, his ideals might
-have been altered and the sense in which he gave it her might have been
-reduced to something utterly unromantic. He might indeed have given it
-to her only because of his desire to keep a foolish promise made in his
-boyhood.
-
-The lines were not an explanation of his conduct. If they meant that she
-was a third party, interfering with the happiness of himself and
-Prudence, then the unkindness of it all was not the full depth of its
-possibilities—it was impudent, arrogant and fairly hateful, in that
-light.
-
-On the other hand, could it be possible that Adam did not mean that she
-was such a third party as the lines indicated, and if so, what did he
-mean? Was he himself such a third party? This appeared impossible on the
-very face of it, for not only was Garde not interested in, and happy
-with, some other person, but if she had been, Adam could not possibly
-have known it, and certainly, in the two times they had met, she had
-given him no reason for supposing that anything of the sort could exist.
-
-It was too much for her wearied brain to cope with. She had puzzled over
-Adam’s conduct every moment since their meeting in the woods, till she
-could think no more. There was the beautiful brooch, and here were these
-ominous, enigmatical lines. All she knew was that she was very unhappy.
-
-Adam, in the meantime, made progress back to the tavern as if he were
-all but becalmed and had no more than steerage way at the best. He had
-only one thing to be glad about, and that was that his beef-eaters would
-not be at the Crow and Arrow to meet him. They had already taken up
-quarters on the brig. There Adam expected to join them, with the last of
-his worldly goods, when he should have taken final leave of Wainsworth.
-
-When he reached his solitary apartments, however, he was sorry the
-faithful old beef-eaters were not there to give him welcome, for the
-place was dark and cheerless. He lighted his candle and looked about the
-room with melancholy interest.
-
-Presently his attention was attracted to a number of bright spots on the
-floor, irregular patches, from which the light was reflected somewhat
-dully. Candle in hand he walked toward the corner where these glittering
-objects were strewn about. With a sudden misgiving he noted that his
-violin case had been brought out from the place of concealment in which
-he had carefully kept it.
-
-Bending forward, with one hand poised in an attitude of arrested action,
-he stared at the litter on the floor, his face becoming colorless as he
-stood there, numbed. A low moan came from between his lips—such a sound
-as he had made in his sleep, as he once lay curled up at the foot of the
-stake on which King Philip’s head was impaled.
-
-The fragments on the floor were the scraps and litter of his violin.
-There was not one piece as large as three of his fingers. Isaiah
-Pinchbecker and Psalms Higgler had taken their revenge.
-
-Slowly Adam knelt down and gathered the bits of wood in a little heap,
-lovingly. He was not enraged. A lover who finds his sweetheart murdered
-cannot at first be filled with anger. Adam gathered every little scrap
-and splinter. He tried to fit little fragments together; he tried to
-efface heel-marks and bits of boot-grime from some of the pieces, as if
-he searched for features which he loved.
-
-It seemed as if he could not realize that the violin was actually
-destroyed. He looked away from it and then back at the small heap
-beneath his hands, like one half expecting to wake from a dream and find
-everything as it had been before something unthinkable occurred.
-
-Perhaps a woman who had given to her child, willingly and absolutely,
-the mastery over her every emotion, thought and hope, and who had come
-upon the body of that child, slain and mutilated, could have understood
-what lonely Adam Rust underwent.
-
-For like such a woman, conceiving a fear that the despoilers might
-return and rob her even of the body of her child, the man presently, in
-a fever of excitement, took every patch, shred and chip of the red wood
-and hiding it carefully inside his waistcoat, dropped himself down from
-the window to the earth and went away in the darkness, like a wild thing
-pursued.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII.
-
- A KISS DEFERRED.
-
-
-GARDE, when she had questioned her cousin Prudence, until there was
-little or nothing concerning Adam’s visit and farewell at the gate which
-she did not know, was still far from being certain of anything in
-connection with the whole predicament.
-
-One thing, however, gave her a small measure of comfort. This was that
-her brooch was much more beautiful than the Spanish doubloon Adam had
-given to Prudence. Yet this comfort grew cold as she reflected that even
-if Adam did possibly like her as much as he did Prudence, he had written
-her those incomprehensible lines about burying sorrow, and he had gone
-away, she knew not where, or in what manner, without even giving her an
-opportunity of bidding him God-speed.
-
-Mistress Merrill was not impulsive and nimble-witted without having
-resources at command, when occasion demanded. She was up ahead of the
-ordinary lark, on Monday morning, making straight for the home of old
-Goody Dune, for whom she frequently gathered simples.
-
-Goody Dune had not contented herself in life with simples only. She had
-gathered complexities of wisdom and the things abstruse in life, for
-many a year. She was a wrinkled old woman whom children, kittens, dogs,
-horses and all things guided by instinct always sought in friendship at
-once. Anyone with patience enough to reconstruct her face on the lines
-it must once have worn, in her youth, would have found personal beauty
-still indicated in the old woman’s countenance. Her eyes still ensnared
-pretty lights of humor; her lips were still of that soft texture which
-in youth is so charming and in old age too flexible over vacancies where
-teeth are gone. Her hair was plentiful and so entirely gray that one
-might have looked at it closely and then have said: “Yes, the black ones
-seem to be coming; they will soon be getting quite thick.”
-
-Never yet had Garde been able to get to Goody’s house sufficiently early
-to knock on the door. Goody always opened it to receive her. And always
-the old woman’s great black cat stood up, on top of the tall clock, on
-which she had been lying but the moment before, now arching her back and
-stretching, to add her welcome to that of her mistress.
-
-The room never had ceased to have its fascinations for Garde, since the
-first time she had seen it, in her childhood. The small bags, which hung
-from the rafters, along with pendants made of herbs, roots and bulbs,
-might have contained gold and precious gems, for all that Garde knew to
-the contrary, while the dark cupboard and the great chest increased the
-possibilities of the place, which would have been so grand to rummage
-in, had it not been for the brass warming-pan, so terribly like a
-watchful moon, forever looking down from the wall. Then lastly, and
-mostly, in some particulars, there was Rex, the jackdaw, a veritable
-concentration of all the dark arts and wisdoms extant.
-
-“Good morning, my dear,” said Goody, as Garde entered, breathless with
-her haste, “you have come to see me early.”
-
-“She’s in love,” said the jackdaw, gravely.
-
-“Oh, dear me!” gasped the girl.
-
-“Rex, you wicked one,” expostulated Goody, mildly. “Never mind, my dear,
-he found you out that morning last week.”
-
-This was the truth for Goody had said these very same words, several
-times, in the presence of Rex, no more than five minutes after Garde had
-gone, that day when she and Adam had met in the forest.
-
-“But I—oh, Goody, Rex is really wicked,” said Garde. “But I do so need
-you to tell me something.”
-
-“Who doesn’t,” answered Goody. “What a pity it would be if I could never
-save anyone in the world from some little pain, or some mistake, and
-yet”—she shook her head, smiling half sadly—“how few human beings are
-willing even to listen. They must all burn their fingers and learn for
-themselves.”
-
-“Fools!” said the jackdaw, “fools, fools, fools. I’m a fool myself.”
-
-Fortunately Garde was not unaccustomed to these interruptions on the
-part of the knowing bird, so that, although he always made her pause and
-look at him, as if she expected to see how he did it, when he spoke, she
-was now enabled to tell Goody her troubles with quite as much rapidity
-as coherence.
-
-She held back nothing. She told all about her original glimpse of Adam
-in the Plymouth procession, of their meeting, her immediate regard for
-him, then and there, the long fostering of her affection, and the events
-of the days just past. This done, she produced her slip of paper, on
-which Adam had written his mediocre verse, and laid it before the wise
-woman to be deciphered.
-
-Goody read the lines several times. “How old are you now, my dear?” she
-asked, and then she added, “It hasn’t anything to do with your worries;
-it is only for my own foolish gratification that I ask.”
-
-“I am eighteen,” said Garde.
-
-“Well, I should have been puzzled myself, at eighteen,” said the old
-woman. She looked into vacancy, for a moment, dwelling on some fond
-memory that brought her sad smile to her withered lips again. “But you
-need not be worried. He loves you, dear, as indeed he should, but for
-some reason or other he believes you care for somebody else, and he is
-therefore taking himself away. Believing as he does, he is certainly
-right, as well as brave, in going away.”
-
-“But I don’t love—like any one else,” protested Garde. “And I don’t see
-how or why he ever got such an idea into his head. He doesn’t know
-anybody that I know. He went to meeting with Mrs. Phipps—Oh! oh—Mr.
-Wainsworth!—He does know Mr. Wainsworth.”
-
-“Yes, dearie, and does Mr. Wainsworth seem to fancy you, or anything of
-that sort?”
-
-“And Mr. Wainsworth told us he had seen Adam, and that he told him
-everything,” said Garde, thinking for herself and musing aloud. “Oh,
-dear me!”
-
-“Oh, dear me!” said Rex, derisively.
-
-“And do you know where your Adam is going, and when?” inquired Goody.
-“Those ought to be your main considerations now.”
-
-“Why, to-day,” answered Garde. “But I don’t know where, or anything else
-about it. What shall I do? If he goes away like that, I may never see
-him again!”
-
-“Did you say he went to meeting with Goodwife Phipps?”
-
-“Yes,—yes, I saw him myself.”
-
-“Then you can be almost certain that he is off somewhere with Captain
-William Phipps, for a more restless, sea-hankering man never lived and
-remained so good as Captain Phipps.”
-
-“Oh, I might have thought of that!”
-
-“Then you ought to be able to think of something to do this very
-morning,” said Goody, a little, pretty color burning up in her wrinkled
-cheeks. “It is still early, and you have good stout legs.”
-
-Garde suddenly jumped up and kissed her.
-
-“Good-by!” she said. “Oh, thank you, thank you, so much! But—haven’t you
-something I can take to—to Captain Phipps?”
-
-Goody immediately supplied her with a small package. “Take him this
-tea,” she said. “No sailor should ever go to sea without it.”
-
-Garde sped away, as if on the wings of impulse.
-
-“She’s in love! she’s in love!” screamed the jackdaw, hilariously. As
-she ran, Garde could hear him clapping his wings against his body, in
-noisy applauding.
-
-Running and walking alternately, by the quieter streets and lanes,
-meeting no one on her way, Garde finally arrived in sight of the
-ship-yard belonging to William Phipps. Her first impulsive thought had
-by now had time to abate somewhat and give place to a more sober
-reflection. Mistress Merrill began to wonder what she would say, if she
-did manage to see Adam Rust. It had been by a swift inspiration, almost
-an instinct of a maidenly young woman, that she had provided herself
-with an excuse for racing to this place. No modest girl could bear the
-thought of seeming to run after a man, or to say anything bold to him,
-or anything calculated to show that she held herself in any way other
-than proudly aloof, where he must bring his love, if he would sue for
-her favor.
-
-She thought of all this as she went. She also began to think that
-perhaps Goody Dune might be mistaken. If Adam were found and he did not
-love her after all, not for all the world would he get one sign from her
-that she loved him or cared for him one tiny bit, or cared whether he
-went or remained.
-
-She was breathless, rosy as a cherry and excited. Her hair had fallen
-down and the plaits had loosened. It hung about her face and nestled
-against her creamy throat like strands of ebony, richly copper-plated.
-Her dark eyes were flashing; her lips were parted, revealing her teeth
-like little white soldiers in a row. As she ran, her skirts whipped
-upward, in curves, about the roundest and trimmest ankles imaginable.
-
-She now observed a small boat, approaching the landing. Out in the
-stream the sails of the “Captain Spencer” were rising like clouds. Garde
-then discovered the figure of a tall man, who had been sitting on a heap
-of logs, for he arose and went toward the dory, which had evidently come
-from the ship to fetch him. She recognized familiar outlines and the
-drag of the sword which the man was wearing.
-
-“Adam!” she cried. “Oh, Adam, wait!”
-
-But she was still too far away to be heard. Adam continued leisurely
-walking toward the landing. Then the sailor who had rowed ashore for
-Rust, saw the picturesque figure coming toward them so swiftly, and
-pointed her out to Adam.
-
-Rust was puzzled for a moment. Then he knew it was Garde. His heart
-turned a double somersault in his breast. He felt himself grow red to
-the tips of his ears. He walked toward the girl as one uncertain of what
-is expected of him next.
-
-Garde stopped running, when some distance away, and came on more slowly,
-brushing a wisp of hair from her face. Suddenly afraid of what she had
-done, uncertain of what she would or could say, to explain her presence
-so that he would think no less of her than before, she was glad he had
-not heard her call out his name, but she was tremendously excited. Her
-eyes shone like brown jewels. Her bosom was heaving rapidly.
-
-“Why—good morning, Mistress Merrill,” said Adam.
-
-“Oh—it is you—Mr. Rust!” said Garde, in the surprise which a woman can
-feign on a second’s notice. “Why, I thought—why, good morning. I thought
-I might find Captain Phipps here, and Goody Dune wished me to give him
-this tea, and she heard—she heard he was going away this morning.”
-
-“Oh! thank you, very much,” said Adam, a little thickly, in his
-tremendous excitement, which he was endeavoring to restrain. “Goody Dune
-was very thoughtful, and you were kind to come.”
-
-“But Goody didn’t tell me I should find you here,” said Garde,
-truthfully enough. She had never felt so stirred in her life. But
-outwardly she was beginning to be calm. “You told Prudence you were
-going away. Can it be possible that you are going with Captain Phipps?”
-
-“Yes, this morning,” said Adam.
-
-Then there was a silence for a moment. Garde hardly knew what to say
-next. If she should make the slightest advance and he should receive it
-coldly, or derisively, or without understanding, she would die of
-mortification. The pause became dreadful to bear—to them both.
-
-“I got—Prudence gave me the brooch—from Hispaniola,” Garde stammered,
-presently.
-
-Adam saw it. It was rising and falling like a little golden ship, on her
-bosom. He felt himself somewhat at sea. If he could only have blurted
-out that he loved her—if it had not been for Wainsworth, what a moment
-this would have been!
-
-“I am glad you like it,” he said.
-
-Garde felt that there was little encouragement in this remark. “You will
-not forget to give the tea to Captain Phipps, will you?” she said. “I
-think I must now return.”
-
-“I wish you had brought this tea down here for me!” said Rust suddenly,
-no longer answerable to his loyalty to Wainsworth.
-
-Garde had wished he would say these very words. She had rehearsed the
-answer she would make if he did. Her heart, had it been a bird beating
-its wings, could not have fluttered more wildly.
-
-“If I had come down here to see you, it would only have been to tell you
-that you have made some mistake,” she said, averting her gaze from his
-and looking on the ground.
-
-Adam trembled, uncontrollably, violently. She saw it in his hand.
-
-“Do you mean——” he said.
-
-“Yes,” said Garde, raising her eyes to his frankly.
-
-“Then I can love you! I do love you! I’ll come back here and marry you,
-sweetheart! I shall love you and tell you I love you and love you!” he
-burst forth passionately. “My little Garde! my love! my sweetheart!—my
-little wife that I shall have and love till my heart is full!”
-
-Garde gasped for breath in the whirlwind of his words, that swept her
-fairly off her feet. Her hand had been on a post, where she had been
-picking away little particles of bark. Adam took it. His big hand
-encompassed it all about. She felt his soul rush to his fingers, to meet
-the throbbing of her own emotions.
-
-“Oh, Adam!” was all she could say for a moment.
-
-“Garde!” he replied, “my Garde—my love! Why didn’t you tell me about it
-before?”
-
-“You—you were the one,” she said, somewhat regaining her footing. “You
-were going away without even saying good-by.”
-
-“I thought——”
-
-“Yes, you thought such silly things,” interrupted Garde, impulsively,
-yet joyfully. “You thought I could like somebody else, and that is why
-you were going away—without even asking. And I don’t know why you ever
-came to see me the first time and made me name my cat Standing-Panther,
-if you were going to think such things as that.”
-
-Adam laughed. It was a sudden bubbling over of his spirits. He was the
-bright-eyed, joyous boy again, all at once.
-
-“Poor Henry—poor Henry!” he said, with irrepressible mirth and gladness.
-“But he never loved you as I love you, sweetheart! He couldn’t! I love
-you so that I would cut down an army to get you and run away with you
-here in my arms though all the demons of earth should follow!”
-
-“Oh but, Adam—you mustn’t!” said Garde, as Rust was about to demonstrate
-the ardor of which he had spoken.
-
-“What, sweetheart, not one little kiss?” he said.
-
-“Why, no, of course not, Adam,” she answered him, blushing prettily.
-
-“Aren’t we betrothed?” he demanded.
-
-“I have not said I will marry you, have I, Adam?” she said, roguishly.
-
-“But you shall, sweetheart. I love you so much that you can’t help it! I
-love you so it seems as if I shall explode! I love you, dear! Do you
-hear me say it? I love you! I love you, Garde. You do love me,
-sweetheart—just a little?”
-
-“Yes, I—love you a lit——,” Garde was saying.
-
-“A-d-a-m R-u-s-t.——come—aboard!” came a great voice across the harbor,
-from the brig out in the stream.
-
-“Beg pardon, sir, the Capting’s calling,” shouted the sailor, who had
-rowed ashore for Rust.
-
-Adam waved him a dumb reply. “Then you will give me one little kiss, for
-good-by, sweetheart?” he begged.
-
-“No—it’s too soon,” said Garde. “Besides——”
-
-“But I am going away,” interrupted Adam. “And I have loved you seven
-years!”
-
-“Oh, you are not going away now—not now, when we have just found out
-there was some mistake?” said Garde.
-
-“I have promised to go, and therefore I must,” said Adam. “And I have to
-go and get that fortune now, so that I can come back and marry you,
-sweetheart! I must keep my promise to Captain Phipps.”
-
-“But you won’t stay away for seven years again, will you, Adam?”
-inquired Garde, looking at him wistfully and candidly now, with all her
-love in her eyes. “If you do——” she left the sentence unfinished.
-
-“No, I will not,” Adam assured her. “But if I remained away for fifty
-years, I should love you and love you still. And will you love me,
-dearest, as long as that?”
-
-“Yes, I shall love you longer than that,” answered Garde. She was not
-impulsive now, but her manner was sweetly earnest, therefore it was more
-beautiful than all her other beauty. “I shall always love you now,
-Adam,” she added. “It seems to me as if I always had.”
-
-William Phipps roared across the water once again.
-
-Adam’s less tumultuous, more enduring love, came into his eyes. He
-thought the caress of her long look was sweeter than the kiss Garde
-might have given him.
-
-“I shall have to go,” he murmured. “God bless you and keep you,
-sweetheart. Good-by, dear Garde.”
-
-“Good-by, Adam,” said Garde. “I shall pray for your swift return.”
-
-He swept her little hand to his lips for a second and then strode away.
-
-Garde placed her other hand over the tingling fingers he had kissed, as
-if to prevent the caress from escaping.
-
-As he went out over the water, she waved her tiny handkerchief to him,
-and permitted two warm tears to trickle down her face.
-
-Adam’s memory of her was of her pretty, brown figure, seen from afar,
-and the look in her eyes, which he felt that no space could dim in his
-vision.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV.
-
- OVERTURES FROM THE ENEMY.
-
-
-AGAINST his long journey across the Atlantic, David Donner made
-preparations that consumed no small amount of time. A sufficient
-quantity of money had been subscribed by the patriots who were so
-concerned for the charter, but this was one of the least important
-details of Donner’s contemplated venture. As a matter of fact, the
-Puritans had acquired the arts of procrastination patiently and
-laboriously, for this had proved their most efficient weapon of defense,
-in those days of struggling against the Stuart dynasty, and therefore
-the cream of the putting-off science permeated the very being of David
-Donner. He nursed his preparations till they grew and flourished.
-
-Two ships bound for England sailed without him. He was quite calm as he
-contemplated further events of a like nature. At length his
-fellow-citizens, eager to have him at his work, expostulated with him,
-mildly. His answer astounded them all. He said he had reasons for
-believing that Edward Randolph was beginning to feel inclined toward
-more kindliness of spirit with regard to the Colony and the men who had
-built it there in the wilderness. Randolph had made overtures of
-friendship to him. He appeared to be a more agreeable person than any
-one of them had heretofore believed.
-
-Randolph, indeed, was fairly wooing the old man’s regard. He had begun
-by nodding, pleasantly, when he and Donner passed in the streets. He had
-followed this up by halting at Donner’s gate and admiring his flowers,
-for which the old man had a secret passion.
-
-“If I could dissuade him from his evil purposes,” said David to his
-colleagues, “if I could win his favor for the charter, and so enlist his
-services with us, instead of against us, I should be of vastly more
-service to Massachusetts by remaining here than I could be if I were to
-go to the Court of Charles.”
-
-Nevertheless the governors held the promise of David Donner sacred. He
-would go as agreed, unless he could shortly furnish something
-substantial as a result of this coy flirtation of Randolph’s to gain his
-good opinion.
-
-It had been observed that Randolph had been a regular attendant at South
-Church for several Sundays. This new departure of his had been at first
-regarded with suspicion. Coupled with his attention to David, however,
-it began to look honest and therefore hopeful.
-
-Grandfather Donner was pothering about in his garden, on one of these
-mornings, when Randolph paused at the gate, as he had frequently done,
-and asked leave of the old man to present him with a small rose-tree,
-having even then a beautiful rose upon it, to plant in some sunny corner
-of the place.
-
-No olive branch of peace could have opened Donner’s heart more
-effectually than did this simple matter.
-
-“Come in, friend,” said he. “Come in.”
-
-“It has always seemed a pity to me,” said Randolph, “that men whose
-political ideas may happen to differ should not be friendly in other
-particulars, with no more thought of their daily affairs than they would
-have of the clothing upon their backs.”
-
-“Just so,” said David, who thought the time propitious for missionary
-work at home, “but I should think, however, that with your youth and
-earnestness you might have a great future before you, as one of us,
-working as we work, hoping as we hope, and helping to build this new
-commonwealth on a rock of solidity and unity.”
-
-“I have thought of that,” said the heavy-browed visitor. “But how would
-a man proceed to accomplish a result so remote from one like myself?”
-
-“Would you plant it here, or next to the wall?” said David, holding the
-rose-tree in his hand and looking about for a suitable place in which to
-tuck its roots.
-
-“I would plant it here, by all means,” said Randolph.
-
-Donner began to dig in the earth with a knife. “Well,” said he, “I
-should say you would do best to get married and adopt our ways, and
-labor with us to maintain our government and rights.”
-
-Randolph’s deep-set eyes gleamed with satisfaction. He said: “You may
-not be surprised to know that I have had such an ambition as this. Could
-I look for your encouragement and support, if I entertained the idea of
-marrying, here among your people, and making my life with your lives?”
-
-“Why, to be sure, friend. I would be the first to welcome the attachment
-of your heart and your interests among us. And have you looked with
-favor upon some one of our young women?”
-
-Randolph noted with pleasure that the rose-tree was firmly planted and
-the earth about it patted and pressed down almost affectionately. “It
-would hardly be fair,” he said, “to give one flower, only to ask for
-another.”
-
-“Would you have some of my poor flowers?” said the old man, innocently.
-“Why you shall, then, anything you like.”
-
-“I spoke of my hopes that I have dared to entertain,” said the visitor.
-“I referred to the fairest flower in all Boston, indeed in all
-Massachusetts.”
-
-Donner looked up at him quickly. He rose to his feet, having been down
-on one knee to plant the rose. “Have I understood you aright?” he said.
-
-“It has slipped from my tongue unguardedly,” said the younger man. “Your
-encouragement of my hopes led me to this confidence. But I feel I can
-speak to you almost as if you were in the attitude of a father. I can
-come to you where I could not come to any other man in Boston. I have
-seen Mistress Merrill, in the simplicity and piety of her life, and this
-has made me wish to become one of you, working with you and living your
-lives. Can you not encourage me so far as this?”
-
-David Donner was all but rendered speechless. Such a thought as that
-Garde had grown up and blossomed had never entered his mind. But not
-only to find that this was so, but also to have Edward Randolph—the
-enemy—desiring this alliance, this was more than he could think of, for
-a moment. He had egged the man on, while he had some vague idea of some
-other young woman in mind—some other man’s daughter, or
-granddaughter,—he had been ready to abet such an arrangement, gladly,
-for the good of the colony, but to find that it was Garde that Randolph
-wanted—this was indeed a bolt from a clear sky.
-
-“Friend,” he said, finally, “I shall have to think this over.”
-
-“I feared it would sound abrupt,” said the visitor, “yet it is not a
-sudden fancy with me. It has been my constant thought for many weeks. I
-have even foreseen difficulties. I have worked so many years apparently
-against the interests most dear to the colonists.”
-
-Donner nodded at him, for this sounded frank. But the old man’s thoughts
-were afield, wandering, for the proposition came home to him with
-tremendous significance.
-
-“But,” resumed Randolph, “any man can conceive that an agent must do, to
-the best of his ability, that which he honestly believes to be his duty,
-howsoever unpleasant the task imposed upon him may finally appear.”
-
-“True,” said David, still vaguely.
-
-“I have done my work as well as I could,” the man went on. “I have
-accumulated matter of vast significance. I am almost sorry that I have
-done so thoroughly well, the task appointed me, and still all this work
-might make me the better fitted for citizenship among you, if I follow
-out your suggestion.”
-
-Donner was not insensible of the threat which this artful speech
-implied, the threat that all this accumulated matter and knowledge would
-be used against the colony and the charter, if this man were not made
-one of their number. But Garde was not to be lightly weighed in the
-balance. Randolph’s frankness partially disarmed the old man; and the
-life of the charter, he felt, was the life of their independence, their
-manhood, their very being. The tiny roots and tendrils of American
-patriotism grew from the very hearts of those early fathers of liberty.
-
-“This is a matter which would much concern Mistress Merrill,” said
-Donner. “I made the error of trying to coerce her mother. I shall never
-coerce Garde.”
-
-“I trust not,” replied his guest. “And yet I hope you will think upon
-the matter and mayhap speak to Mistress Merrill in this regard, for
-although I am in a conflict, ’twixt my duty to my King and the high
-regard which I have been constrained to place with you and your people,
-through Mistress Merrill, yet I fear I am eager to be remiss with
-Charles, rather than a traitor to my own heart.”
-
-“I will think upon it,” said David, slowly.
-
-Randolph thanked him, spoke of the rose again and went his way. He was a
-gardener himself, and having planted his seed, knew enough not to dig it
-up to see if it had yet begun to sprout.
-
-David Donner sat down to think, not of Garde and not of all that
-Randolph’s visit signified, but of Garde’s mother and his harshness when
-her heart had burgeoned with aspirations for itself, and of the pain and
-wretchedness he had brought to all concerned. He thought of the mad
-little elopement into which he had driven his daughter, which had ended
-so disastrously to the honest but poverty-overtaken father of her child.
-Then he thought of the home-coming, the birth of Garde and the death of
-the forlorn little mother. He could hear again her faint words of
-forgiveness; he could see again her wan smile on her faded lips; he
-could still feel the weak, white hands that raised to slip themselves
-about his neck and which, when he had put them down, he folded on her
-breast, still forever.
-
-“I have never coerced little Garde,” he said aloud, “never, Ruth,
-never.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XV.
-
- LOVE’S INVITING LIGHT.
-
-
-SOMETHING had happened to Mistress Garde Merrill, even as far back as
-upon that first Sunday at Meeting, when Adam had been beneath the South
-Church roof, where she could see him from the corners of her eyes. Love
-had left its sign-manual upon her. She had suddenly become illumined
-from within, by her heart’s emotions, so that she appeared to shine from
-afar, in the somewhat gray and unjoyous lives of the Puritan young men
-about her.
-
-Thus it was that, in addition to Randolph, who attended the service
-solely for the purpose of feasting his eyes upon her beauty, there was
-always Wainsworth, who heard nothing of the Meeting’s cheerless
-proceedings. And there was also young Piety Tootbaker, who knew not at
-which shrine he was worshiping, from Sunday to Sunday.
-
-Garde was half the time at her uncle, John Soam’s. This fact increased
-the facilities for the young men to seek her presence, for the Soams
-were life-loving people, in spite of their Puritan conformity to the
-somewhat melancholy and smileless practices of the day. Moreover, John
-Soam, who thought himself something of a farmer, as well as a carpenter
-and Jack-of-all-genius, not infrequently impressed the would-be suitors
-into various duties with which he was amusing himself about his place.
-
-Piety Tootbaker was a fat young man of modest wealth in his own right,
-his father having died leaving Piety his sole heir. He was a heavy lump,
-who came often and said next to nothing, so that his intentions might
-have lain anywhere between Prudence, Garde and the family cow, for aught
-that any one could ascertain definitely. He was John Soam’s easiest
-prey, when the farmer or carpenter, as the case might be, was seized
-with a desire to work.
-
-Randolph contented himself with courting David Donner. He felt no small
-contempt for Wainsworth and Tootbaker, whose movements he was stealthily
-watching. He had placed his reliance on power always, and with complete
-success. The present was no time to alter his usual tactics.
-
-Grandfather Donner, left alone with his thoughts, arrived at no
-conclusions rashly. He went systematically to work on his friends, to
-get from each an expression of belief that Randolph, if he would become
-one of them, working for instead of against them, would be a valuable
-factor for the preservation of the charter. This opinion he readily
-secured, especially as he gave no hint, as yet, of the method by which
-Randolph’s conversion was finally to be accomplished. Indeed so much
-promise could his friends discern in the securing of an end so
-commendable, that David Donner began to justify himself in the thought
-of aiding this matter with all reasonable power. He encouraged the
-growth of a better opinion of Randolph, in his own mind. He argued the
-man’s case with his friends, with fanatical insistence, until they
-perforce admitted virtues in Randolph’s disposition, heretofore quite
-overlooked.
-
-Thus he wrought upon himself until, mentally, he accepted the ex-enemy
-as his grandson-in-law, to whom he was willing to extend his welcome, if
-not actually his love. With this development of the case, his dislike
-for the journey to England increased, while, far from abating, his
-concern for the charter grew the more active, as he dreamed of
-preserving it here at his own home.
-
-His state of mind was not a thing at which he arrived immaturely. The
-proposition had come to him with something of a shock. He had never
-contemplated Garde’s marriage at all. She was still a child to him, or
-at least, she had been, up to the moment when Randolph spoke. Not the
-least difficult of his tasks with himself had been that of compelling
-himself to admit that Garde had actually arrived at the threshold of
-womanhood—that she was marriageable. This having been finally
-accomplished, Randolph had half won his battle.
-
-As long as Garde would presently desire to marry, then why not Randolph,
-especially as such an alliance would be of such tremendous political
-significance? Yet he continued still to tell himself that Ruth’s child
-should not be coerced in any direction whither she was not counseled by
-her heart and her own inclination to proceed. He could see no reason,
-however, why she should entertain any notions which might be at variance
-with his own. Nevertheless it was not without emotion that he finally
-summoned Garde to the interview in which he meant to broach the
-proposition.
-
-“My child,” he began, “I have desired to have a talk with you, which
-bears upon matters of some importance to you and of vast significance to
-the state.”
-
-“Yes, Grandther,” said Garde dutifully, and she sat down with her
-knitting. “I suppose you are going to England at last.”
-
-“That remains to be seen,” said David. “The need for something to be
-done is great. No loyal soul in all our commonwealth could wish for
-aught but a chance to serve this colony in her present straits. Have you
-great love for Massachusetts and her people, Garde?”
-
-“Is not love a passion?” she answered, without raising her eyes from her
-work.
-
-“Love of one’s country is not an unseemly passion,” said her
-grandfather.
-
-“Then I have for Massachusetts a seemly regard,” said Mistress Merrill,
-who had given all her love elsewhere.
-
-“And could you sacrifice somewhat of your personal thoughts, and mayhap
-desires, for the colony? Could you be a little patriot in the hour of
-your country’s need, my child?” asked the old man, his look intent upon
-her face.
-
-Garde thought he doubtless referred to his projected trip abroad. She
-was inclined to believe that she could endure the personal sacrifice of
-living with the Soams during his absence.
-
-“I should try to be dutiful,” she answered.
-
-David Donner felt his old heart knocking on his ribs. It was a moment of
-much intensity for him.
-
-“You have always been a dutiful daughter,” he said. “Have you ever had a
-thought, child, of the womanhood come upon you, and that mayhap you will
-one day become a wife now, and be as other women, a child no longer?”
-
-“Any young woman would think on these matters by nature,” replied Garde,
-sagely. “But I have thought of nothing to occur soon, as to such a
-matter.”
-
-“No, no, to be sure,” said David, nervously. “Yet I have desired to
-speak with you upon this subject, for an estimable young man has asked
-me to do this in his favor.”
-
-Garde, who had believed his thought anywhere but here, looked up at him
-quickly. She saw the old man’s face drawn and eager, his eyes bright
-with the flame of incipient fanaticism. She was wholly at a loss to
-understand him.
-
-“A young man?” she repeated. “Some one has spoken to you thus of me?”
-For a moment her thought ran wildly to Adam. Could it be possible that
-he had returned and spoken to Grandther Donner already?
-
-Donner cleared his throat. He was pale, for he had not come to this
-moment without some violence to his own conscience.
-
-“My child,” he said, a little huskily, “a great opportunity is offered
-to you to render a vast service to your country—to Massachusetts. Edward
-Randolph, who has long been against us, has come to me with an earnest
-desire to become one of us, working with us and not against us longer,
-and asking your hand in marriage, to cement the unity of his interests
-and hopes with ours. He appears to be an earnest, sincere man, at last
-heartily in sympathy with our struggles, and worthy of good citizenship
-among us. I have told him I would speak to you upon this matter, Garde,
-and take him your answer.” He paused and mopped his forehead with his
-handkerchief.
-
-Garde could hardly believe her ears. She looked at her grandfather
-oddly. The color left her cheeks, for a moment, only to rush back in a
-flood at thought of Adam and the betrothal, to her so sacred. She had no
-thought whatsoever, during that interval, of the colony, or of
-patriotism, or of anything save what this proposition meant to Adam and
-to her. As for Randolph, she know him only by sight, and her instinct
-had prompted her to shun him, if not to loathe him. Her impulse was to
-start to her feet and cry out a shrill repudiation of the man’s offer.
-But the sight of Donner’s face awed her. She had never seen him look
-like this before. She remained seated. She resumed her knitting.
-
-“But I do not even know Mr. Randolph,” she said, mildly. “I have not
-been taught to trust or to respect him.”
-
-“But if we have done him injustice,” said David, eagerly, “surely we
-must welcome an opportunity to correct it. He has worked against us, it
-is true. He could overthrow our charter, but he chooses rather to become
-one of our number. If I go abroad, I may fail at the Court of Charles.
-If we can save our charter here at home, it will be the grandest thing
-we have ever done. And you can do it, my child—you can do this great
-thing! You will, I feel you will!”
-
-Garde was a little terrified. The old man’s anxiety was almost dreadful
-to see. Had he been laying bare a steel crow-bar in his nature, she
-could not have comprehended more thoroughly the stubbornness which she
-felt opposition to him now would discover in her grandfather.
-
-“This comes to me so suddenly,” she said, “that I cannot at once think
-upon it.”
-
-“But you can think what it means to the colony!” said the man,
-passionately. “You would wish to save the charter! Mr. Randolph has
-become my friend. I have found that my former estimate of his character
-was false. He can take away our charter in a moment—his work is done.
-But he also can save us! He shall save us! Are you a daughter of this
-commonwealth—a daughter of a patriot? You can save the charter. Oh, what
-a glorious honor! You will let me take your answer back?”
-
-Garde’s color had gone again, not to return. This was a moment that
-frightened her heart. No one could have lived there as she had done and
-not be saturated with the hopes and fears of the colonists, not be
-trembling for the government, the independence, the manhood they had
-builded up on those stern rocks. In her first baby utterances she had
-lisped the word “Charter.” For ten years their charter had been their
-Holy Grail to those American men and women of Massachusetts. The air was
-pregnant with patriotism. The Charter had hung trembling in the balance
-month after month, ever since Cromwell’s son had abdicated the English
-throne and Charles had sat in power once again. Garde could not have
-been the true daughter of America she was, had she not thrilled first
-with the possibilities of this fateful moment, before her soul shivered
-at the price she would have to pay to perform this splendid-seeming
-deed.
-
-Sense of duty had been bred and ingrained in the children of that hour.
-It held a sway well-nigh incredible in youthful minds. It fell athwart
-Garde’s thought with appalling weight. And yet her soul leaped to Adam’s
-arms for protection, as her heart bounded to his with love. She felt as
-if she could crash through the window and run away, to the
-woods,——anywhere, to escape even the contemplation of this thing. Had it
-not been for her knitting she felt she must have done something
-dreadful. As it was she seemed to tie herself into the pattern—the
-wilder self—and so to gain a sense of calmness.
-
-“I could hardly answer this so soon,” she said. “Haste first leaves no
-time for thought after.”
-
-“Thought, child?” demanded the old man, on whom her calmness acted as
-her mother’s had before her. “Can you wish to hesitate, when the whole
-state stands breathless for your answer?”
-
-“And did you hold me so lightly that you said, ‘Yes,’ the moment this
-was presented to you?” said Garde. “Grandther, I was but a young girl
-this morning. What has a moment done to make me such a woman as this?”
-
-“But our charter—our government—our liberty, child!” cried David,
-raising his two shaking hands above his head. “You can save them all!”
-
-“And is it so light a matter for me to become the mother of our
-liberty?” said Garde, on whom the spirit of wisdom had strangely
-descended, no doubt from Goody Dune. “Grandther, you would wish to think
-of this yourself.”
-
-She had risen from her seat. She faced her grandfather and he saw her
-eyes nearly on a level with his own. A look of her mother, sad,
-appealing, forgiving, played intangibly across her face. The old man’s
-look seemed to follow its transit. He passed his nervous fingers along
-his brow. The fire died away in his eyes.
-
-“Then think it over,” he said, huskily. “Think it over, my child, think
-it over. I will not coerce your decision. No, I’ll not coerce her, Ruth,
-no, no, I’ll not!”
-
-He moved to the door, as one in a dream, and left the room.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI.
-
- GARDE’S LONELY VIGIL.
-
-
-DAVID DONNER was not to be deterred for long, by the shadow of a memory
-which he had seen flit like a ghost of his past, across Garde’s
-features. He was arriving at that age when a man’s memory is not so
-strong as in years past and when the events of the day at hand seem
-therefore the more important. He fretted under his promise to go abroad,
-desiring this to be abrogated by his fellow-colonists, and this could
-only be done when he should persuade them that the charter would be
-saved, or at least his country better served, by his remaining where he
-was. He had not as yet spoken to his colleagues of Randolph’s
-proposition. He was waiting for Garde to give him her answer.
-
-The girl watched the old man narrowly, to see how long she could wait,
-for her answer was no more ready after a week than it had been on the
-first day. This was not entirely because her affections were placed
-elsewhere. She was a little patriot, otherwise her love for Adam would
-have prompted her reply at once, and from hot lips. She was undergoing a
-genuine struggle with herself. If it were true that she could save the
-charter, should she permit her own happiness or Adam’s to stand before
-the happiness and rights of all the Massachusetts people? Had not Adam
-himself written that when there are three and only two could be happy,
-the one, representing the minority, should suffer sorrow, that the
-greater number might preserve their joy? Then, when she and Adam were
-only two, how much more they should endure sorrow, when all the people
-of that colony weighed against them in the question.
-
-No, it was not a simple matter in which her own desires could speak out
-above the clamor of duty. And yet, she could not feel the truth of
-Randolph’s position and promise. Suppose he had not the ability, so to
-save the charter as her grandfather believed he would. Suppose, having
-the power, he should prove dishonest, when once he had won his desire.
-What was there in a wife to tie him to his obligation? If politics had
-prompted him to go so far, would they not continue to prompt him
-further, after the marriage had given him his way? To sacrifice herself
-and Adam was to Garde a mighty thing. She was capable of any heroism,
-but her mind and her nature exacted that it be not specious. No travail
-of motherhood ever gave a more acute or prolonged agony than was Garde’s
-portion as she strove to give birth to a wise and right resolution.
-
-Her grandfather, in the meantime, waxed more and more impatient. It had
-been his habit from early manhood to have his own way. In avoiding
-precisely the difficulties into which he had fallen with Garde’s mother,
-he felt that he was on the safe side in his promise not to coerce his
-grandchild. This gave him the greater latitude in which to bring
-pressure upon her from what he conceived to be another standpoint. Yet
-that repression of his feelings and passions which he had practised for
-long among the Puritans, made him more patient with Garde’s indecision
-than would otherwise have been the case. He became childishly eager,
-more than harshly insistent, in this frame of mind. He coaxed her many
-times in a day, to see what her bravery and loyalty could do.
-
-Christmas and New Year were long past, and still Garde had made no
-decision. In the spring, when she could make no more excuses for
-delaying, she told her grandfather how gladly she would comply with his
-wishes, if only she could know, absolutely, that Randolph would keep
-faith with the colonists and secure them their charter against all need
-for anxiety. This was her honest word. It came from her heart as if
-every word had been jagged, leaving her wounded and all but ill.
-
-“Let Mr. Randolph prove that he will work for our good with the King,”
-she said. “Let him secure us but one year of ease from this constant
-worry—let him show us a year of the favor he can win from Charles, and
-then I shall be content. This is not much that I ask. If his heart is so
-set upon me as he says, surely he could wait this time and do these
-things. A true regard could wait for as many years as Jacob served for
-Rachel.”
-
-With this decision, which he regarded as a binding promise, and which he
-represented to Randolph as a betrothal, David Donner had to be content.
-Randolph could not, without betraying intended perfidy, object to
-conditions so wisely conceived. Argument was precluded. Grimly shutting
-his jaws, the man consented to the arrangement, for else he must have
-abandoned his quest altogether.
-
-As the months wore on, he went regularly to South Church, there to sit
-out the service, which he detested like poison, for the purpose of
-fixing his eyes upon Garde, as if he had been a beauty-vulture, only to
-be satisfied by gazing upon her until he was all but self-hypnotized. As
-for Garde, conscious as she was that the man thus stared in her
-direction, she never so much as once gave his eyes an answering glance.
-She did not love him; there should never be any pretense, come what
-might, that she did. Her thoughts and her heart beats were true to Adam,
-and so should remain to the end.
-
-David Donner told his colleagues in triumph of what he had done, of the
-answer Garde had made and of the hope they had for the future. He had
-justified himself in remaining in Boston.
-
-The measure of the power wielded, even at the throne of England by
-Edward, Randolph could never have been estimated in Massachusetts, but
-month after month slipped away while the charter remained intact and the
-men of that anxious colony breathed with a sense of relief which none
-had felt before, in nearly a score of years.
-
-Garde, with what hope her year’s respite inspired, began her lonely wait
-and watch for Adam’s return.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII.
-
- A NIGHT ATTACK.
-
-
-THE night was a thing of perfection, on the sea. The moon rode aloft and
-its light danced merrily on the tips of the waves. A smart breeze pouted
-the sails on the “Captain Spencer” till she plowed her way like a
-skimming albatross through the phosphorescence of the southern field of
-ocean.
-
-On deck the beef-eaters, Adam and William Phipps, with the mate and a
-jovial boatswain, were in high spirits. They were nearing their goal,
-after a run which would have awakened some sort of a rollicking devil in
-a deacon. Captain Phipps had felt a spell of bubbling coming upon him
-for days. It always did, the moment he dropped Boston out of sight, over
-the green, serrated edge of the riotous Atlantic. Therefore he had
-broken off the neck of a bottle of good, red juice, which had lain for a
-year in the hold of the brig, and this liquified comfort had circulated
-generously.
-
-The beef-eaters, arm in arm, were now spraddling about the deck in a
-dance of which Terpsichore had never been guilty, even in her A B C’s of
-the art. The boatswain was furnishing music from a tin pipe, the one
-virtue of which was that it was tireless.
-
-At length he altered the tune, or at least, so he said, and after a bar
-or two of the measure had lost itself in the sails and shrouds, Adam
-cleared his throat for a song.
-
- “In the Northern sea I loved a maid,
- As cold as a polar bear,
- But of taking cold I was not afraid—
- Sing too rel le roo,
- And the wine is red—
- For a kiss is a kiss, most anywhere,
- When a man’s heart goes to his head.
-
- Ho! the heart of a man is an onion, boys,
- An onion, boys, with a shedding skin.
- And it never gets old, for you off with its hide,
- When you meet a new love, and it’s fresh within!
-
- In the southern sea I loved a lass,
- As warm as a day in June;
- And oh that a summer should ever pass—
- Sing too rel le roo.
- And the wine is red—
- For my summer, my lads, was gone too soon,
- With a man’s heart gone to his head.
-
- Ho, the heart of a man, etc.
-
- In the Western seas I loved a miss,
- As shy as the sharks that swim;
- And it’s duties we owe to the art of the kiss—
- Sing too rel le roo,
- And the wine is red—
- If a maiden so shy should be took with a whim,
- And a man’s heart gone to his head.
-
- Ho, the heart of a man is an onion, boys,
- An onion, boys, with a shedding skin.
- And it never grows old, for you off with its hide,
- When you meet a new love, and it’s fresh within!”
-
-There were more of these verses, one to fit every sea, of which there be
-more than seven, as the song proved. The beef-eaters and Captain Phipps
-joined in the chorus, for the boatswain gave it a rare flavor of music.
-
-At the wheel, the second mate had jammed a marlin spike between the
-spokes, to hold the brig on the wind, and sitting cosily down had gone
-fast asleep. The lookout aloft had become absorbed in the singing, to
-which he was bending every attention. In the midst of a chorus, which
-might and might not have been the finale of Adam’s ditty, there was a
-sudden alarm that rang from one end to the other of the brig, and all
-too abruptly a black hulk of a ship, with never a light, came sizzling
-the brine in her speed, the length of a few anchor-chains away, and made
-for the “Spencer” with dire intent.
-
-The music ceased as if it had been cut off with a knife. Scuttling
-swiftly to the side of the ship and then bawling orders, and chasing to
-the armory in hot haste, Phipps, Adam and the others yelled that a
-pirate was upon them. The words, like an incantation of marvelous
-potency, summoned men like so many gnomes, from hatches, companion-ways
-and fo’castle, on the instant.
-
-The brig’s deck suddenly swarmed with its own men, running hither and
-thither, shouting, stumbling, swearing, while Phipps and Rust came
-darting back with arms full of cutlasses, pistols and muskets, gathered
-helter-skelter, and now thrown with a great clatter upon the planking.
-
-Scrambling here to arm themselves, the sailors heard a crunch, felt the
-brig shudder beneath their feet and beheld half a dozen iron hooks come
-flying over the gunwale from the pirate, and saw them jerk snug up to
-the rail, as the raiders pulled taut on the lines that quickly lashed
-the two vessels together.
-
-A black cascade of men came leaping from the pirate, landing heavily on
-the “Spencer’s” deck. Their pistols blazed yellow exclamation points of
-fire, as the men struck on their feet, and then with a clash of steel on
-steel, Rust, Phipps and half a score of sailors rushed upon the invaders
-and a mad scuffle and melée ensued.
-
-Rust was conscious of a few things about him in the confusion. He
-thought how cold the naked blades looked, slashing in the moonlight; he
-heard the yells and curses against the background of a slapping sail
-that was making a sound like a weird alarm; he felt the strength of the
-big rascal, who was cutting at him with that brute force and disregard
-for skill which is so deadly to engage. He thought the fellow would
-slice his saber in two. He lost no time in feinting. The brute of a
-buccaneer lurched forward to sweep his blade clean through Adam’s body
-and then suddenly a moonbeam seemed to cleave its way through the
-ruffian’s neck. He dropped his sword and spun around with his head
-lolling sideways and went down.
-
-Adam rushed to the taff-rail. The pirate ship was straining at the ropes
-by which her hooks secured the two black hulks together. Smiting these
-taut ropes with mad fury, Rust saw the pirate drift away and the gulf of
-water widen between the two vessels, while the scoundrels aboard the
-robber-ship yelled a discordant chorus of curses.
-
-Then back into the fray, the din of which was rising, as wounded men
-smarted and yelled and rushed upon one another anew, like snarling
-wolves, Adam darted, pistoling a creature who came running upon him and
-then heaving him overboard as the fellow writhed on the planks.
-
-The sailors of the “Spencer” had somewhat the best of the conflict,
-which was a match in scuffling hotly all over the deck. Less than a
-dozen of the pirates had been able to leap aboard before the vessels
-were apart, and their bawlings for help to their ship had been rendered
-vain, for the moment, by Adam’s prompt action in cutting the lines.
-However, the sea-scoundrels were versed in fighting, where the sailors
-were merely rough-and-tumble sons of Cain whose rage was their principal
-accoutrement. They were at their adversaries, hammer and tongs. They
-were wrestling with some, hacking at others, swearing at all. It was a
-small pandemonium in which it was next to impossible to distinguish
-friend from foe.
-
-Phipps, like the woodsman from Maine that he was, hewed his way from one
-group to another, shouting to his men, hoarsely. The beef-eaters, as
-inseparable as when they were dancing, chose but one man between them,
-and one such they peeled to a horrid core, as the demon rushed upon
-their sharpened weapons.
-
-Adam stepped in a crawling line of gore, its head silver-tipped in the
-moonlight, and slipped till it wrenched him to hold his footing. He saw
-the sailors crowding three of the pirates to the rail and, joining them,
-battered the cutlasses from their fists and helped to hoist them bodily
-over and into the sea.
-
-The din had hardly abated anything of its volume. The scene was one of
-the maddest activity. But the robbers not already done for, were now at
-bay against the masts, the capstan or the rail. One tripped backward
-over a coil of rope. The next instant he was screaming help and murder
-at the top of his lungs. This he continued even after a dreadful rattle
-and spluttering came in his voice.
-
-Over the reddened decks one or two wounded creatures were crawling, one
-wiping gore from his face and flinging it off his fingers. Swords and
-pistols lay about. One dying human was lying on his side, with his arm
-extended and his index finger slowly crooked and straightened and
-crooked again, as if he beckoned to death to come more quickly.
-
-The sail began to slap at the mast again, as the brig swung bow on in
-the wind and stopped in stays. The croaked curses of the pirates, on
-their ship, which was now again drawing swiftly toward the “Spencer,”
-made Adam and Phipps suddenly run to the brig’s brass gun, which was
-looking dumbly forth toward the pirate.
-
-Rust had filled his pocket with loose powder. The cannon was already
-loaded. He poured a small pyramid of powder on the vent and he and
-Phipps, with the combined strength of two giants, slewed the piece
-around till a ball from the pirate could have been tossed into its
-yawning muzzle.
-
-From the galley, the cook came running with blazing coals on a shovel.
-He had been watching the gun. The pirate missed her mark. She came up in
-stays, just as the “Spencer” got again on the wind. The bows of the
-robber-craft were almost in touch with the brig.
-
-Adam saw that the cannon would fail to sweep the pirate’s decks—that the
-shot would be practically wasted, if it went at the gun’s present
-elevation. With a sudden impulse he leaped astride its smooth, brass
-nose and bore it down, depressing the muzzle toward the water, just as
-the crazy cook turned his shovel upside down on the primed vent.
-
-There was suddenly a deafening roar. The concussion shook every man’s
-feet from under him. The gun leaped backward, like a bucking horse, and
-Rust went sprawling on the decks, for he had been left abruptly, with no
-support beneath him.
-
-The shot tore a hole in the pirate the size of a hogshead, squarely on
-her water-line, in her starboard bow. She came about in the wind and the
-sea rushed into her hold in a torrent.
-
-A dreadful silence ensued when the air was clear of the detonation. Then
-a moan from a dying wretch on the “Spencer’s” deck seemed to touch into
-being a chorus of yells from the doomed pirate, where the murderous crew
-found themselves armed to the teeth and yet sinking, defenseless, into
-the very jaws of death. Their sails slackened again and shook with a
-sound as of funeral shrouds.
-
-The “Spencer” scudded away into the boulevard of silver which the moon
-was paving with its light. The sinking pirate gathered the cannon’s
-smoke about her and settled swiftly, but not in silence, into the grave
-that fitted so snugly about its body.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII.
-
- THE GLINT OF TREASURE.
-
-
-THE brig “Captain Spencer,” came duly to her goal at the green Bahamas.
-What with wounds received from the pirates, who had called so
-unceremoniously, and from sea-sickness, which they always had, the
-beef-eaters were glad of the sight of land. Phipps and Rust were filled
-with rejoicings by reason of the dreams they had of thrusting a naked
-arm apiece into the sea and fetching up handfuls of gold with which to
-return to two sweet women in Boston.
-
-All hands were presently doomed to disappointment. Phipps learned that
-his treasure-ship was indeed a fact, but that she was small, both in
-tonnage and her burden of Spanish coins, that she lay in many fathoms of
-water and that, indeed, she was scarcely worth serious attention.
-
-Phipps was, however, a popular man at these bits of jeweled land in the
-emerald sea. He had traded there on several occasions, making friends
-always. Thus it came that a hobbling old salt, whom he had befriended in
-a scrimmage, consoled him with the information of a large treasure-ship,
-sunk somewhere in the neighborhood of Hispaniola. He resolved at once to
-pursue this matter to the end, for which purpose the “Captain Spencer”
-would be wholly inadequate, as the Spanish Main was as filled with
-pirates as the sky may be of buzzards over dying caravans.
-
-With the approval of the entire party, the brig was now headed for
-England, Adam and Phipps feeling confident of their ability to secure a
-larger ship for their enterprise.
-
-On familiar soil when the “Spencer” at length came to anchor, off the
-tower of London, in the Thames, Adam had little difficulty in finding a
-market for the brig. With the proceeds of the sale in his pockets,
-William Phipps, under Adam’s tuition, blossomed out as a gentleman of no
-little personal attractiveness. Adam, as one born to the purple, donned
-a handsome attire and swaggered with all the elegance of a prince.
-
-He was soon in the midst of his former acquaintances, with one of whom
-he fought a duel at the end of the first week, requiring his vanquished
-foe, who was only sufficiently wounded to be satisfied, to kneel in
-humility and to wipe the victor’s blade clean of his own red juice, on
-the hem of his coat.
-
-Rust until now had never had occasion to regret the disfavor in which
-Charles Stuart held him, since a certain distinguished lady had declared
-the “Sachem” to be vastly more entertaining than his Majesty with ready
-narratives. However, he was undismayed, for with James, fated so soon to
-be king, he was amazingly friendly.
-
-William Phipps, for his part, needed but one introduction and no
-recommendation. Above all things temporal, James reveled in naval
-adventure. Blunt, gallant Captain Phipps appealed to him instantly. The
-tale of the treasure-ship set him aflame with eagerness to go with this
-adventurous company to the western Indies, where he could readily
-picture himself, Phipps and Adam fighting their way to the rotting
-strongholds of the Spanish galleon, sunk there half a century before.
-
-With an alacrity which was of a highly complimentary character to Phipps
-and Rust, the Prince procured a fine vessel, the “Rose-Algier,” with a
-crew of ninety-five men and an armament of eighteen guns, and gave her
-into the trust of his friends for their enterprise. It was agreed that
-inasmuch as he thus found the ship and the expenses of the venture, he
-should have ninety per cent. of whatsoever treasure should be recovered,
-Phipps declaring for himself and Adam how contented they would be with
-the remaining one-tenth.
-
-Late in the year, which was 1684, the “Rose-Algier” bore away for
-Hispaniola, Phipps, Adam, and the faithful beef-eaters, whom seasickness
-nor peril could drive from Adam’s side, soon beginning to wonder what
-manner of crew it was with which they had shipped. A few weeks later,
-King Charles the Second died. James ascended the throne. Thus the
-treasure-seekers were backed by the English monarch and his government.
-
-A sunken ship has frequently proved to be a small thing, and the ocean a
-large one, to the seeker, eager for its cargo. The “Rose-Algier” dipped
-into all manner of harbors and her master asked all manner of people all
-manner of questions, to no avail. The months slipped by, in this tedious
-occupation, the crew grew weary of a voyage so profitless and so
-entirely unpromising.
-
-The grumblings of mutiny have a way of keeping below decks, where they
-simmer volcanically. Nevertheless the beef-eaters heard something of the
-discontent in the fo’castle, where the ruffians of the crew were for
-seizing the vessel, running up the black flag and turning pirate
-forthwith. The Rose was a swift, great bird upon the waves, she was
-armed to the teeth, she was well provisioned. What more could be desired
-for buccaneering? And piracy paid its disciples handsomely. Spain and
-France, particularly, had a hundred argosies in constant flight between
-the West Indies and home. Gold was the commonest burden of all. Your
-pirate was a dare-devil, whose life was reputed to be one long round of
-adventure, drinking and looting. All pirates either died happy or hung,
-and anything was better than this pothering about in a good ship,
-seeking for treasure that was sunk admittedly, while millions of
-treasure was afloat and nearly all to be had for the asking. With
-precious few exceptions the crew agreed that this was true enough for
-every practical purpose.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIX.
-
- MUTINY.
-
-
-FORTUNATELY mutinies frequently come to a head prematurely. On the
-“Rose” a jealousy hatched between rival factions of the plotters, so
-that before they were any of them in actual readiness, one faction, in
-order to be ahead of and therefore in command over the other, rushed
-upon the quarter-deck one night and made a sudden descent on Captain
-Phipps, who happened for the moment to be there alone.
-
-Phipps became renowned for his presence of mind and courage. On this
-occasion he promptly knocked down three or four of the ruffians, and
-then with a loaded revolver and a handy marlin spike, he awed the others
-into submission before the alarm had even time to spread. The
-malefactors being summarily placed in irons and thrown into the hold,
-the insurrection below decks retired into the dark corners, to knit
-itself anew into shape.
-
-The sailors now recognized the necessity for uniting their forces.
-Moreover, the faction which had been less precipitate, gained the
-confidence of those half-coward, half-demon followers, or human jackals,
-who were willing to urge the lions of the fo’castle on to strike the
-blows of death, content if they could then sneak upon the scene for a
-feast of remains. Thus a better plan was laid, while the mutineers
-dissembled and lulled even the suspicious Phipps into a sense of
-security that he had not possessed before the overt outbreak, which he
-had been able to quell single-handed.
-
-The plotters found no opportunity of effecting their designs for several
-weeks. At length, however, Phipps steered his vessel into a tiny harbor,
-bitten by the sea into the side of a small, uninhabited island, which
-was even minus a name. This he did for the purpose of reshipping the
-stores, in the hold, a recent storm having shifted this cargo until the
-“Rose” listed to port dangerously, and leaked.
-
-The crew, in silence and obediently enough, constructed a bridge to
-shore and carried the stores to land, heaping them up in piles, on the
-beach.
-
-The unlading being accomplished, the crew desired permission to rest in
-the shade of the near-by woods. This was granted. Once in retirement
-here, they conceived a plan without delay whereby the ship should fall
-into their hands that night.
-
-Already they had managed to purloin a complement of arms. They had
-knives, a few pistols, hatchets and several cutlasses. The stores being
-ashore, the ship was at their mercy. Their plan was simple enough. They
-would remain away from the shore until seven o’clock, when they would
-proceed to the ship in a body, overpower Phipps, Rust, the beef-eaters
-and the few other faithful souls on board, seize the “Rose” and leave
-her captain and his friends on the island, to starve. There was but one
-element lacking—the ship’s carpenter. The “Rose” having sprung a leak,
-in the storm, was regarded by the sailors as no longer seaworthy, until
-the carpenter should put her right. He therefore became a necessary
-adjunct to their numbers.
-
-The carpenter, on being summoned to appear among them by the crew,
-listened to their plan with horror. However, he was not a coward and he
-had his wits about him. He nodded as if in approval of the plan, the
-more readily, perhaps, as he was threatened with death if he dared
-refuse to become one of the murderous gang. Then he informed them that
-some of his tools he would much require, to further the plot.
-
-He was sent aboard the ship, with a guard beside him, who had undertaken
-to see that he permitted no leakage of the crew’s little game into the
-ears of the Captain. However, this carpenter was a man of resources. He
-was suddenly overpowered by illness, on which pretense he went below.
-Then, breaking into a run, he came to the Captain’s cabin, where Adam
-was singing the song of his loves. Bidding Rust to continue, as if
-nothing was happening, he swiftly communicated his news to William
-Phipps.
-
-“Go back at once and pretend to assist in their deviltry,” commanded
-Phipps. “Make no sign of anything, save compliance with their wishes,
-and leave the rest to me.”
-
-The carpenter rejoined his guard so soon that they were entirely
-satisfied. They conveyed him ashore, with his tools, and joining their
-mates again, waited with what patience they could muster, for the
-fateful hour of seven to arrive.
-
-Phipps had now two hours in which to prepare to defend the ship.
-Unfortunately some of the guns had been landed with the stores. Adam
-volunteered to draw the loads from these, and this he accomplished, with
-highly satisfactory speed. But it would have been the work of hours to
-re-transfer the stores to the hold, hence they were left on shore to
-themselves.
-
-With close on ninety armed, desperate brutes against them, the handful
-of men on the “Rose” were hardly in an enviable position. The first
-thing they did was to remove the bridge which had been constructed
-between the ship and the shore. The remaining guns on board were then
-dragged and slewed around till they covered the approach from the woods,
-by which the mutineers would be obliged to come. There was nothing to be
-done, then, but to wait.
-
-The crew were not disappointing. They appeared duly, their savagery
-whetted to a fine edge by the burly ruffian who had assumed command of
-their force. Phipps had prepared his speech. He hailed the men, in his
-big, gruff voice and commanded them to halt where they were, on pain of
-instant annihilation.
-
-“Go near the stores,” he cried, “and I will blow you in splatters
-against those trees!”
-
-The cowed scoundrels edged back toward the woods. All the muttered
-threats of their leader, of what he would do if they refused to charge,
-were empty to the wretches who could look into the chasm-like mouths of
-a dozen guns. There courage oozed out of their veins. They were already
-defeated.
-
-Phipps, aware that a similar number of dummies would be equally
-dangerous, now, had his faithful followers run out the bridge again and
-bring aboard the stores, without which it would have been madness to
-sail. This work consumed no small amount of time. But it was finally
-concluded.
-
-“Now then,” said Phipps, when the situation was all in his favor, “I
-shall pull up anchor and leave you rogues to the fate you had prepared
-for me. You can stay here and starve and rot!”
-
-This brought the mutineers to tears, and to pleading on their knees.
-They were willing to come to any nameable terms, if only he would spare
-them this terrible fate. They threw down their arms, in token of
-absolute surrender, begging quarter of any description.
-
-Inasmuch as so large a vessel could not have been sailed without a crew,
-Phipps received them back, the ring-leaders in chains, and doubled the
-vigor of his mastery.
-
-“But, Adam,” he said, “it’s no use with these scoundrels. They will
-drive me back to England yet, with none of the treasure.”
-
-Distrustful of the brutes he had between decks, Phipps now sailed for
-Jamaica, where he quickly discharged nearly every man Jack of his
-mutinous crew and took on a new lot of sailors. This was not a matter of
-a few days, it required nearly a fortnight of time, Phipps being
-exceedingly particular as to the men he selected. In the meantime two
-things occurred which gave no little anxiety to the treasure-seeking
-captain. Rust fell ill, with an attack of tropical fever, and a letter
-arrived from Goodwife Phipps in which she begged to know if her lord and
-master were still alive, and if so, would he not speedily return to
-Boston and give no further heed to fortune’s beckoning.
-
-William Phipps had seen men sicken and die in these latitudes. Adam,
-attended faithfully by the beef-eaters, took the fever lightly, as he
-seemed to take everything of life. Nevertheless he was weak, when the
-heat had somewhat abated in his body, and in no fit condition to remain
-in the tropics.
-
-“Adam,” said the Captain, gravely, having schooled himself for a day and
-night together for this moment, “I have about concluded that the ‘Rose’
-is no longer fit for this service. I shall return to Hispaniola, but
-unless I shall make out the galleon in a few weeks, I shall sail again
-to England, for a newer ship.”
-
-“All right,” said Adam. “I shall be ready this afternoon.”
-
-“Well,” said Phipps, hemming and hawing, “the fact is, Adam, you are
-quite unfit to remain about these islands. Besides, I should be glad of
-a messenger to send back to Mrs. Phipps in Boston. I would suggest,
-therefore, that you return thither, on a frigate, sailing to-morrow
-morning, and if it chance that I go to England and again return to
-Hispaniola, you could meet me here and help me to find the treasure.”
-
-Rust seemed to hesitate before making his reply. He was sure there was a
-treasure for him in Boston, but he had begun to have his doubts as to
-the sunken, or any other sort of available, gold in the Spanish Main.
-Yet he did not wish to appear eager to abandon the quest, and his heart
-was above all else loyal to Phipps.
-
-“If I should, by great good fortune, discover the treasure,” continued
-the Captain, “you shall suffer no loss for your absence, for your
-services have been ten times over rendered already.”
-
-Much as he was affected by the friendship which prompted Phipps to
-assure him of this, Adam was not in the least concerned with thoughts of
-the treasure, nor influenced by this generous plan which his friend had
-formulated. But being a reasonable being, in some directions, and being
-perhaps unreasonably inclined in others, as for instance, toward
-Massachusetts, he saw the wisdom of the Captain’s arrangements, and
-therefore bade his friend an affectionate farewell, on the following
-day, and sailed for the north, with the beef-eaters close at his heels.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XX.
-
- GARDE’S EXTREMITY.
-
-
-HAD prayers been able to reach him and summon him back to Boston, Adam
-would have been there long before the fever overtook him at Jamaica.
-Garde, more alone than she had ever been in her life, had appealed to
-the stars, to the wind, to the tides of the sea, to convey her yearnings
-to Adam and to bid him hasten to her side. She was alone because she,
-only, distrusted Randolph. She was alone because she felt no longer the
-slightest companionship with her grandfather, because even Wainsworth
-and Tootbaker respected the provisional betrothal she had made with
-Randolph and because not to Prudence nor even to Goody Dune had she felt
-she could confide her cares and the breaking of her heart, under the
-present painful circumstances.
-
-Her distrust of Randolph had grown, despite the fact that, in a measure,
-the threats against the charter had ceased and a pseudo peace contented
-the patriots with the thought that their difficulties had been finally
-remedied by the alliance to which they all now looked forward with
-abnormal interest and confidence.
-
-Garde had maintained her right of immunity from the attentions of
-Randolph, consistently and steadfastly. She had never given him the
-single glance, at Meeting, or elsewhere, for which he was becoming
-crazed. The light of malice that burned in his eyes was a thing that
-Garde felt, occultly. It was a threat to break her will, some day; it
-was tigerish in its animal hunger. No creature of prey ever lay in wait
-for its victim more ready to pounce, to overpower and to drag away to
-its den the coveted object of its greed and passion.
-
-But the months had winged heavily away on their somber-colored pinions,
-and the moment for which Garde had hoped, when she set the one year’s
-time of probation had never come—the moment of Adam’s return. The second
-Christmas, so joyless with the Puritans, was far off, with the other
-departed days of winter. The snow had melted; the tender shoots of grass
-were returning, in hordes, like little green armies; the first buds were
-breaking the cold, dank soil and peeking forth, while still close
-wrapped, as if to say: “Is it time?” And only Garde would have pushed
-them back, only Garde, usually so joyous in the returning of warmth and
-beauty, would have held to the edge of the mantle of snow, to retain it
-where it lay.
-
-Her heart was beating like a lead clapper, that tolled against the bell
-of her soul, day and night, for the fear that was on her of the coming
-week, when her year of respite would end. Already her grandfather looked
-at her with fanatical eagerness in his eyes, and rubbed his shaking
-hands with delight. He had no eyes to see that she was pale, that she
-started at sounds as she had never done before, fearing that Randolph
-had come a few days too soon, to claim and to carry her off. The old
-man’s one idea was the safety of the charter. To secure this, no
-sacrifice could have been too great. But as a matter of fact, David
-Donner had no conception of the sacrifice which he was requiring. Such
-zealots rarely have.
-
-In despair, three days before her dreaded hour should arrive, Garde
-hastened like a child, afraid of an ogre, to Goody Dune. The evening was
-cold, for the sky was overcast, the wind was blowing from the north and
-a few scattered speckles of snow flew spitefully through the air.
-
-“B-u-h-h—it’s cold! B-u-h-h—it’s cold!” said the jackdaw, when Garde
-came in at the door. The bird was echoing the past winter’s history of
-what poor old Goody had suffered, alone in her hut.
-
-“Well, dearie,” said the old woman, who was evidently making
-preparations to go out, on some mission of her own, “you look as if you
-too are in need of some of the simples you gathered in the summer.”
-
-“It is nothing simple that I need,” said Garde. “I have come for wisdom
-and help. Oh, Goody, I don’t know what I shall do. I wish so I had come
-to you sooner!”
-
-“You must stop trembling first,” said Goody. “Here, take this cup of
-tea. It is going to be a bitter night.”
-
-She had prepared the drink for herself, to fortify her meager warmth of
-body against the wind, into which she expected to go on an errand,
-presently.
-
-“It is not from the cold; it is inside that I am trembling,” confessed
-the girl. But she took the cup, obediently. “If you can do nothing to
-help me, I could wish the cold would never let me go back to my home!”
-
-“There, there, drink the tea,” said Goody, after giving her one
-penetrative glance. For young women to feel that terrible demi-mania of
-desiring self-destruction was not new to Goody Dune. She had gone
-through the stages herself. She knew almost exactly the conditions which
-universally promote the emotion in the young of her sex.
-
-“I know that Adam has never returned,” she said, slowly. “You have had
-no word, even. I have seen that in your eyes. But, dear me, have you no
-abiding faith and hope, child? In the spring——”
-
-“Oh it isn’t that, Goody!” broke in Garde. “I could wait—I could wait
-for him fifty years, patiently—yes, patiently. I love him. But you don’t
-know what has happened. I have never told you. What was the use! They
-made me promise;—and if Adam knew—he might never come back. No—he would
-not come back. And I love even the very places where his shadow fell, in
-the forest—and the log he was sitting on. I love the gate where his
-hands rested—I love everything he ever touched!” Her hands pressed upon
-her bosom, where, beneath her frock, she wore the brooch from
-Hispaniola.
-
-Goody had never seen her in such a mood. She had never heard such
-passion from her lips. But by the memory of her own heart-break, she
-caught at the sinister cry of something promised.
-
-“And have you given yourself in promise to somebody else?” she asked,
-quietly, but somewhat severely.
-
-“Grandther forced me. What could I do?” said Garde, feverishly. “What
-could anybody do, with the charter being taken away? If I could save it,
-I ought to save it! But he will never, never keep his word! He is
-deceiving them all,—I feel it! I know it! He is a wicked man! But you
-will tell me what to do. You must tell me what to do!”
-
-“Sit down, dearie,” said the old woman, calmly. “You must tell me all
-about it. I cannot prescribe, even simples, until you let me know what
-you are driving at, you know. Now who is this he, through whom you are
-to save the charter?”
-
-“I don’t know how it ever happened,” said Garde. “He was always known to
-be the enemy of the colony, but he did something to Grandther, who has
-never been the same man since Mr. Randolph——”
-
-“Edward Randolph!” interrupted Goody, with a sudden vehemence, the like
-of which she had never before betrayed to Garde. “Did you say Edward
-Randolph? Have you promised to marry him, to save the charter? There,
-there, sit down and tell me your story, quietly. Only, do make haste.”
-
-Garde wondered, momentarily, at the old woman’s abrupt outburst. It
-served to give her a new hold on herself, for it broke her own morbid
-thought and excitement. She told Goody what had happened to mar her
-happiness almost before Adam’s kiss had ceased to burn on her fingers.
-She told it brokenly, incoherently, for she knew all the details of the
-story so vividly that she could not realize that Goody was not also in
-possession of the entire fabric of thoughts and struggles which had
-brought about her grandfather’s cherished end. However, Goody Dune was a
-woman, and quick-minded and astute at that. She patched as rapidly as
-Garde gave her the irregular fragments of the tale. She had shut her
-mouth tightly at the end of her own outburst, and it seemed to Garde her
-lips had grown harder since. Her eyes were certainly snapping crisply.
-Goody was aroused.
-
-“Come with me,” she presently said, interrupting Garde’s outpourings
-again. “When you came I was starting to go where it would be well for
-you to follow, before the hour grows later.”
-
-“But, Goody, won’t you tell me what to do?” said Garde, in anguish.
-
-“You will know what to do, when you go home,” said the old woman,
-somewhat grimly. “I know Edward Randolph by his works.”
-
-She led the way out into the gathering twilight without further delay.
-Garde shivered a little, as the cold wind struck her again, but she
-followed, eagerly, with wonder in her heart and a little awe of Goody,
-in her tortured mind. What could the old woman mean? Where could she now
-be hastening?
-
-Goody proceeded with a straightness that argued familiarity with the
-route, and fixity of purpose in her mind. She went by alleys that led
-down toward the water, where fisher-folk had builded little shanties on
-the rocks above the roar of the harbor breakers.
-
-“I am taking you to see another young woman,” she said. “She was pretty
-too, and she had no parents. Her mother died five years ago, and her
-father, James Hodder, was lost in the storm, last spring. She was an
-easy prey, you see. Poor Hester! and only fifteen.”
-
-Garde looked at the old woman in wonder. All this half muttered preface
-to something coming, served to make her heart beat so hard that she
-could hear it, painfully.
-
-“What is it about her?” she asked, breathlessly.
-
-Goody made no answer. She had reached the door of one of the huts, and
-pushing it open she entered, Garde, pale and large-eyed, close behind
-her.
-
-“Ned—oh Ned!” came a half sob, half chortle of joy from somewhere in the
-darkness of the place. Garde felt shivers go down her entire form.
-
-“Not Ned yet, my love,” said Goody, in a voice so cooing that Garde
-hardly knew it. “Presently, dear, presently. He is sure to come back
-to-night. Dear me, we must have a light and see how we’re doing.”
-
-Garde had heard a little moan which Goody’s cooing had not sufficed to
-smother. Then there had been the sound of a stifled sob. Goody went to
-the dying embers in the chimney-place, to get a light for a tallow dip
-on which she had put her hand with unerring familiarity with the
-furnishings of the place. The voice, with tears and patience in its
-syllables, came again:
-
-“He will come—back, to-night? He—didn’t come—last night. He hasn’t—come
-for a—week.”
-
-“Oh yes, he will surely come to-night,” crooned Goody, at the fireplace.
-“But how is the little dollie?” Garde was leaning back against the door,
-heavily. Her eyes were staring into the utter darkness with which the
-place was filled. She felt the presence of a woman on a bed of
-motherhood. She was ready to sink on the floor, with terrible
-apprehensions. The woman on the bed made some heroic effort to calm
-herself, and to answer Goody’s question.
-
-“She’s sleeping,” she said. “She was so cold, but I have got her warm
-again.”
-
-The tallow dip now flared. Goody shielded it cautiously as it sputtered
-and then she arose to her feet. Between her fingers the light spread,
-throwing great, grotesque shadows of her hand on the walls, in one
-direction and a larger adumbration of her head in the other. Garde saw
-the couch, which she had known was in the corner. She also saw a white
-face, too thin to be pretty, and all of a soul’s being and anguish
-concentrated in two great eyes. Her own eyes were blazing with the
-emotions by which she was possessed. As if there had been some great
-affinity between them, the young woman on the couch was looking at Garde
-the moment the dip illumined the room.
-
-“Who’s that?” said the startled Hester on the couch.
-
-“A friend, a friend, dear,” said Goody. “I brought her to see you. She
-knows Edward.”
-
-“She—she knows Ned?” said the wasted young mother, raising herself up,
-abruptly. “Let me see her. Oh, oh,—you are so pretty! But you won’t take
-him away from me—you won’t take him, please? He does really love me—he
-didn’t mean what he said. He must love me, now. He hasn’t seen our
-little baby, or he would love me more than anything in the world. You
-wouldn’t take him away from me—now?”
-
-As Hester sat there, propped up by one thin, white arm, brushing her
-hair from her face and leaning eagerly toward her visitor, Garde could
-only put her hand to her cheek and shake her head. Her bosom rose and
-fell in the agitation which was shaking her whole being.
-
-“Oh, I am so glad—oh, I knew you wouldn’t,” said the girl on the couch.
-“You couldn’t have the heart, could you? See—see!”
-
-Weakened as she was, she made a great effort to rally her strength and
-dragged a little bundle forth from between the blankets and her own
-throbbing bosom, where she had kept it partially warm. She was stifling
-sobs all the time she was speaking. Her nerveless fingers sought in the
-folds with instinctive tenderness, to uncover a tiny face, as immobile
-as marble. “It’s our little child,” said the mother. “She looks so like
-him. He would have to love me now—you see he couldn’t help it.”
-
-Goody took the babe in her arms. Garde saw everything. She saw the tidy
-poverty of the hut. She saw the ghost of the girlish beauty, which this
-abandoned mother had once possessed. She saw the young creature tuck in,
-next her bosom, ecstatically, a worn-out stocking—a man’s stocking.
-
-Garde wanted to flee, but Goody brought her the babe—a little doll
-indeed. Goody took her hand, for Garde seemed stricken with
-helplessness, and placed it lightly on the tiny, white face of the
-child. The girl drew it away with a shudder. The babe was dead.
-
-“Go home, dearie,” said Goody, in a croon. “You will know what to do.
-God makes few of the marriages laid at His door, but He does make some
-of these. Hester has a right to believe He made her a wife—else why a
-mother?”
-
-Garde opened the door and ran out, glad, oh so glad it was cold!
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXI.
-
- RANDOLPH’S COURTSHIP.
-
-
-GARDE fled home as if some unthinkable fate were in pursuit. She was
-haunted by the look she had seen in the eyes of that girl-mother, back
-in the hut. She could hear the young thing still begging her not to rob
-her of the man who had taken her all and given her an ineradicable shame
-in exchange.
-
-Yet beneath every other emotion, Garde felt a sense of exultation. The
-estimate of her instinct was confirmed—Randolph was perfidy itself. Not
-a soul among the Puritans, she believed, could do aught but support her
-against this man. And if only she could wrench herself free, how gladly
-would she welcome the penance of waiting years for Adam, in payment for
-her act, which she felt was disloyalty, in consenting to the provisional
-betrothal into which she had been forced!
-
-Her grandfather now would have to be the first to protect her from the
-dread fate which had come so near, she thought. To confuse politics and
-the personal affairs of her narrow life is the privilege of the sex to
-which Garde belonged. She planned, as she darted through the wind-swept
-streets. She would tell it all to Grandfather Donner, and then he should
-save her the ordeal of meeting Edward Randolph in any manner whatsoever.
-She gave no thought to the charter, nor to what the man with the power
-he wielded would do in revenge to their liberties, now that he would
-find himself baffled, at the end of his term of waiting.
-
-She yearned for Adam. She could tell him, now, what she had been driven
-to do, whereas before this she had always wished him to come, yet had
-shrunk from the thought of confessing what she had permitted to be done.
-Yes, she could lay it all bare before him now, and fairly scourge
-herself with her own reproaches, joyously. What an exquisite pleasure it
-would be to ask his forgiveness thus, and not at first receive it, and
-then at last be taken home to his arms and his love! For her thoughts,
-her heart-beats, her soul’s longings had all been constant to him, and
-to him alone. She would like to tell him all this. And she would let him
-kiss her, now. For through what hours had she wished, when she had
-thought they might never meet in that way again, that his kiss had been
-placed upon her lips that day of their parting. She almost frightened
-herself with the thought of how that one kiss on her fingers might have
-been his only kiss. But the next moment she tingled with ecstasy, to
-think she was free and that some day he would come back, and then she
-would know how to love him and to cherish him as never before she could
-have known.
-
-Thus glowing one moment, with love’s own reveries, and chilling the
-next, with sudden reminders of what had just been and what might still
-be, she reached her grandfather’s house, where she had been staying with
-the old man for the past year, with only rare visits to the Soams. She
-went in by the kitchen door. This apartment being dark, she passed
-through to the dining-room, which was lighted but unoccupied, hence she
-continued on to the parlor, where she fancied she heard voices. Entering
-here, she could have fallen to the floor in sheer astonishment and
-fright.
-
-She found herself confronting her grandfather and Edward Randolph
-himself.
-
-“Ah, here she is, you see,” said David Donner, rubbing his hands
-together, delightedly. “I thought she couldn’t be far away. My child,
-Mr. Randolph has come to have a little chat. Natural enough, I should
-think.” He chuckled with pleasure, adding: “Dear me, I mustn’t forget to
-cover my rose, on a night like this.” With fatuous smiles, that ill
-suited his grim old visage, he quitted the room, in a sprightly, playful
-manner, and left Garde facing Randolph, alone.
-
-“Good evening, Mistress Merrill,” said the man, fastening the hungry
-gaze of his deep-set eyes upon her face. “I am glad to see you looking
-so well.”
-
-“Good evening, sir, and thank you,” said Garde, in a voice scarcely
-audible. She had become suddenly pale. She trembled. She looked at the
-man as one fascinated by a baleful point of light.
-
-“It seemed but reasonable that I should call and see you, since our
-betrothal is so soon to end in our marriage,” said Randolph, moving
-slowly toward her, as if to prolong his own anticipation of standing
-where he could reach her at last. “I have been very patient, have I not,
-my pretty sweetheart?”
-
-“You—have been very—patient,” echoed Garde, helplessly and panting like
-a spent doe, to catch her breath.
-
-“And I have kept my word,” he went on, still slowly approaching.
-“Massachusetts has her charter, and now—I have my wife.”
-
-He put out his hand, like a talon, to clutch her fast.
-
-One convulsive shiver seemed to break the spell which had held Garde
-enthralled. She leaped away, her eyes blazing, her lips quivering, her
-frame shaken with emotion.
-
-“No!” she cried. “No! Don’t touch me! Keep away! I loathe you! I know
-what you are! Keep away,—I can’t bear you!”
-
-“What’s this?” said the man, scowling, till his great brow threw a
-sinister shadow as far down as his cheek bones. “Have a care, my dear
-Garde. We made our bargain a year ago. This is no time for kittenish
-pranks. Come back here where you were.”
-
-His tone was authoritative. The gleam in his eyes was a warning against
-disobedience. But Garde could be no further frightened than he had made
-her by his mere presence. She stood there, alert for the first sign
-which would send her running, if need be, to jump through the window.
-
-“I shall never touch you, nor go near you!” she said. “There is no
-bargain between us. I would rather die than to be your wife! I know what
-you are, I say. I have been to Hester Hodder’s, to-night! I have seen
-her. I know what you are!”
-
-Randolph took hold of his lip and pinched it viciously. He glared at the
-girl in silence, for a moment. “This has nothing to do with me,” he
-said. “You have made some mistake.”
-
-“I made a terrible mistake when I first submitted to this loathsome
-plan,” said Garde, gaining courage as she spoke. “I always distrusted
-you, despised you. Do you think I would trust a man to save our charter
-who wouldn’t save a woman’s honor—who would do what you have done? You
-may go—you may go away! I loathe you! I scorn you! Oh, I have found you
-out in time!”
-
-“This is silly talk, Mistress Merrill,” said the man. “I know nothing of
-your Hester Hodder.”
-
-Garde made a gesture expressive of disgust and impatience.
-
-“But all this has no bearing on anything one way or the other,” Randolph
-continued. “You must not forget that I have as much power over the
-charter and the colony as ever—in fact, more. I have become the friend
-of these people, but you can make me their enemy with a very little of
-your nonsense. Come, now, let us be two sensible beings and not begin
-our union by quar——”
-
-“If you have had any power to do us injury,” interrupted Garde, “we will
-find it done. You wouldn’t dare to trust yourself. I have a fear, such
-as I never had before, of the harm you have doubtless done this colony,
-darkly, in the year just passed.”
-
-Garde had a way, fairly uncanny, of saying terrible truths, as if from
-some sort of inspiration, which came upon her unawares. Randolph had his
-pockets full of documents, at that moment, which lay there like a mine
-of explosives, ready to shatter the charter and government, almost at
-his whisper of command. His mind could conceive of nothing so exquisite
-in treachery, to these people that he hated, and in vengeance against
-Garde, for the attitude she had always assumed toward him, as to marry
-her first and then to destroy the charter afterward. This had been his
-dream for more than the year. He had waited for its climax as patiently
-as a cat will wait before a hole till the mouse shall reappear. Garde’s
-words were as so many poignards, only that they failed to strike him in
-a fatal spot. They stung him to greater fury than he had ever felt and
-to a hotter determination to humble the girl and to reduce Massachusetts
-to abject servility and despair.
-
-The man saw that this was an ill time to threaten Garde. She was not
-made of the wax which his sophistries had substituted for the metal once
-in David Donner’s composition.
-
-“You have entertained some strange ideas of me, Mistress Merrill, for
-which I am at a loss to account,” he said, more quietly. “I feel sure we
-merely misunderstand each other. Have I not shown, for a year, that my
-one wish is to prove myself a staunch friend of these good people and
-worthy of your esteem? I am willing to do anything further, if you can
-think of anything you would like to suggest, before we are married.”
-
-“We shall never be married,” said the girl, self-possessed, now, and
-calm enough to be fairly judicial. “If you wish to win my respect, go
-and marry Hester Hodder, and let your child not be buried in shame.”
-
-The man winced, but not visibly. He took his lip in his fingers again
-and pinched it till it was white. He realized that in her present frame
-of mind, Garde was utterly incorrigible. He only made matters worse by
-remaining where she was. He knew of a trick worth two of prolonging this
-interview. Yet he must retire in good order.
-
-“I must tell you once more,” he said, “that I know nothing about this
-person of whom you speak. I regret that something has prejudiced your
-mind against me, especially when you insist upon doing me this wrong.
-Let me say good night, for I am sure I shall find you in an altered mood
-to-morrow.”
-
-“Good night,” said Garde, icily.
-
-The man smiled and went out, closing the door as if it had been the bars
-of a cage, which he had dared to enter, at the risk of frightening his
-prey to death.
-
-He went out into the garden and called to David Donner.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXII.
-
- DAVID’S COERCION.
-
-
-DAVID DONNER came in from that interview in the garden an angered
-fanatic. The bitter cold of the night had entered into his soul, with
-all the heaped-up threats which Randolph had hurled at his head.
-
-These threats had not been fired at David loudly nor fiercely. Randolph
-had told him of Garde’s insubordination, of her charges and of her
-repudiation of her promise. He had shown that whether her allegations as
-to Hester Hodder were true or false, they had nothing to do with
-Massachusetts politics. He had then opened up with his main battery—a
-recital of the power he had steadily accumulated, during the past year,
-and of his intention to use it, immediately, if Donner and Garde now
-failed in the slightest particular to keep their share of the bargain.
-
-Donner became nearly crazed. For a year he had dwelt with fondness upon
-the topic of the charter and of how he had saved it, until nothing else
-could get foothold in his mind. Indeed he had become mildly insane upon
-the subject. He had counted the days, and finally the hours waiting for
-the final ratification of the contract with Randolph, whose influence
-with King James had exceeded even that which he had exercised when
-Charles sat upon the throne. To reflect that now, at the eleventh hour,
-the mere whim of a silly girl could destroy this whole fabric and sweep
-away their jealously guarded liberty and independence, at a single
-breath, nearly made a maniac of the old man.
-
-Hester Hodder was as nothing. A hundred such women, with their dead
-babes, would have been as nothing, compared to the safety of the
-charter. What had Garde been born for, if she was not to save the day,
-when her promise was made and when she alone stood between ruin and the
-colony? What was her girlish folly, that it should stand in the path
-forbidding the colony its existence? What should be her very life, when
-the matter against it weighed so ponderously?
-
-Thinking what his compatriots would say, if they should learn of this
-latest turn of affairs, Donner wrung his hands in agony, and then
-clenched them in rage. For twenty years the charter had fluttered
-between life and death. For the last year it had gained in strength till
-it seemed that all danger had passed. No religious fanaticism, no zeal
-of inquisitions ever possessed a man’s soul, heart and brain more
-thoroughly than his patriotism possessed Grandfather Donner.
-
-When he went into the house, his trembling, bony hands were as cold as
-those of a skeleton. He was half crying, with his utter vexation and
-fear for the charter, and yet he ground his teeth, in his anger and
-stubborn determination to compel his grandchild to adhere to her
-promise. When he came to where Garde was awaiting his return indoors,
-she mistook the mad light in his eyes for righteous indignation at
-Randolph’s perfidy, of which she believed he had become apprised.
-
-“Oh, Grandther,” she said, running trustingly toward him and beginning
-already to cry, from her stress of emotions. “I am so glad you have come
-back to protect me!”
-
-“Protect you? Protect you?” he almost screamed, clutching her by the
-shoulders, so fiercely that the cold and the pain which he caused seemed
-to penetrate her through and through. “What madness have you committed?
-What have you done? The charter,—the charter—the charter!—you shall save
-the charter! Do you hear me? You shall keep your promise and save the
-colony!” He shook her till the girl was gasping. She could think of
-nothing but a hideous nightmare.
-
-“Oh, he hasn’t told you, Grandther,” she cried. “If you knew the truth
-you would turn him from the door! I have seen poor Hester and her baby.
-I cannot bear to think of him—I should die!”
-
-“You—you—you traitor!” stammered the old man, in his mania. “You—you
-betray the colony! You are mad, mad! You promised. You made your own
-conditions. You have deceived me. You would play us false, now—now, when
-our liberties are taking heart. But you shall not! What? You come home
-here with this silly story, you—you, the daughter of a Donner—and ready
-to tear up the charter for your silly notions. No—no! no! no!—you shall
-marry this man! You shall keep this your bargain! The charter—you shall
-save the charter!”
-
-“Oh, but, Grandther, the story is true,” said Garde, wringing her hands.
-“He is the one that is false. And I thought you would hold me too
-precious for such a thing as——”
-
-“Enough!” commanded the crazed old man. “My word—the colony’s word—has
-been given. The bargain shall be kept. This has gone too far already. To
-think that for one moment you would so jeopardize the charter! I am
-stricken with shame at your want of honor at this crisis of our
-liberties!”
-
-Garde still failed to believe she heard her grandfather correctly. She
-still hoped his impatience would abate sufficiently for her to tell of
-what she had seen. It could not be possible that a Puritan, so
-high-minded and strict for moral conduct, could know what she knew and
-still insist upon this infamous marriage. To her, at that moment, it was
-virtue and honor that were all important to be saved, the charter and
-the colony that had become insignificant.
-
-“If you had touched that little dead baby,” she said. “If you had heard
-Hester begging, Grandther—oh, you would have kept your promise,—you
-would never coerce me in this terrible——”
-
-“Stop! stop!” cried Donner, madly, angered almost beyond control by this
-appeal, which was so unbearably remindful of her mother. “I have not
-coerced you, never! You made your promise freely. The honor of the
-colony, and more than that, the safety of the charter, now hang upon
-your faith in keeping your own agreement. And you shall keep it—for the
-family pride—for the colony’s good name! This story—what is the
-woman?—what is her child?—what is anything, when our liberty and
-independence tremble in the balance? No more—I’ll hear no more of
-this,—not a word!”
-
-Garde brushed a wisp of her red-black hair from her forehead. Her great
-brown eyes were fastened wide open by amazement. Her lips alone
-contained any color. How red they seemed against the white of her oval
-face! Her eyebrows seemed like two curved black brands on her brow. She
-looked at her grandfather in silence. It was positively incredible that
-he had said what she had heard, she thought. If Hester and her child and
-“everything” were held of so little worth, why—what of herself? Had it
-come to this? Was it admittedly and shamelessly a sacrifice of her very
-soul, to a creature only waiting to have his way first before destroying
-the charter later?
-
-To the pure, natural mind of the girl, Randolph had become as
-translucent as water, in his plotted perfidies. It appeared impossible
-that any man could still believe in his lies. She would have spoken of
-this, but the sight of the fanatical old man before her, sealed her
-lips. She recognized the light in his eyes at last. At any other moment
-her pity would have fluttered forth to him, yearningly, her little
-mother instinct would have taken her on the wings of concern to smooth
-the care-channeled wrinkles from his brow, but now all these tenderer
-emotions had fled away, in fear and awe. She said nothing further. There
-was nothing left to say, nothing that would have any weight against
-mania. At length even her gaze fell before the wild look with which
-David Donner confronted her, insanely.
-
-“Now then,” said the old man, at length, in a voice made raucous by his
-recent passions, “you may go to bed and prepare your mind for
-obedience.”
-
-“Good night, dear Grandther,” said Garde, by force of habit, and with
-nothing more, she passed from the room.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIII.
-
- GOODY’S BOY.
-
-
-THE right of Spring to exercise idiosyncrasies of weather was conceded,
-doubtless, by the first man. Spring is well known to be female, for this
-very proclivity of changing her mind as to what she will do next. Having
-been a spitfire nearly all night, Spring smiled in the morning, as balmy
-as if she had caught the fancy of some tropical zephyr, that hastened
-rashly northward to catch her for a kiss.
-
-The first ray of the sun found itself entangled in the hair of Mistress
-Merrill. Garde had not slept during the night. She had not gone to bed,
-nor had she prepared her mind for obedience to her grandfather’s
-commands. She had spent the hours sitting at the window, waiting for the
-morning.
-
-She now sped swiftly through the unawakened streets, a prey to a sense
-of fear that she was being pursued. From time to time she cast a quick
-glance across her shoulder, but there was no one following. There was
-hardly a sound, save that a few birds—hardy little scouts, ahead of the
-northward-creeping caravan of summer—twittered and set up rival centers
-of melody in the trees.
-
-There was no hesitation in the girl’s footsteps. She knew where she was
-going. Goody Dune’s was the only place where she could go, with her
-present resolutions. She had come to a logical conclusion, as to what
-was now to be done, shortly after leaving David Donner. Her mouth was
-firmly set, where determination had come to abide.
-
-As always, she found Goody stirring about, with her door wide open, when
-she came to the tidy little home. Goody beheld her coming before she
-reached the gate. Peering into her face knowingly, the old woman gave a
-little shake to her head. She was adept at deciphering the hieroglyphics
-which human emotions write upon brows and lips and eyes, especially in
-the faces of the young.
-
-“So your grandfather insists and you are going to run away?” she said,
-as Garde came eagerly up the garden path to the door.
-
-“Yes,” said Garde, in some awe of the wise old woman and her means of
-acquiring knowledge, “and I want you to help me,—oh, you must help
-me—just as fast as you can! How did you know?”
-
-“I could see that you were deeply troubled, and I know exactly what a
-girl like you would do,” said Goody. “I was the same kind of a girl,
-once, myself. Now tell me, first, where are you going.”
-
-“I don’t know,” said Garde, “I think to Plymouth, to my aunt Rosella.”
-
-“You would do well to make up your mind on that point,” said Goody. “And
-how are you going, shall you sail, or ride, or walk?”
-
-“Oh, I shall run,” said Garde.
-
-“If you walk it will last longer,” said the old woman, with just a
-suspicion of a smile. “Then, those two points being settled, have you
-brought anything to eat, in your pocket?”
-
-“No—no, I didn’t wait for anything. I shan’t want anything to eat for
-days. I don’t feel like eating, and I don’t know when I ever shall.”
-
-“And no blankets to sleep in?”
-
-“Oh no, Goody, how could I?” said Garde.
-
-“Let me see; it is something like forty or fifty miles to Plymouth,”
-Goody mused. “Have you thought how it would look if a young woman were
-seen, running night and day for sixty miles? You know many people walk
-from Plymouth here.”
-
-“Yes,” said Garde, eagerly. “That is the only trouble. I want you to do
-something for me, or tell me what to do. Everybody would see a girl and
-if Grandther were told, he would have me caught and brought back—and I
-would rather die!”
-
-Goody laughed at her now, more than half gaily. Her own eyes twinkled
-with delight over the venture. “What would be the good of all the things
-my friends have given me, all these years, if I did not use them at such
-a time as this?” she asked.
-
-“Oh, have you got anything I could really use?” Garde responded. “What
-is it? What can you do? I mustn’t wait,—they will catch me, just as sure
-as the world!”
-
-“Not if I make you invisible,” chucked Goody. She dived into a chest she
-had opened and began to paw, in an orderly manner, at a heap of clothing
-which the box contained. She presently drew forth a complete suit of
-clothing for a boy. “There,” she continued, “go into the next room and
-put those on, as fast as ever you are a mind to.”
-
-“Those?” said the astonished Garde. “But these are——”
-
-“Yes, I know. They will make you invisible—as a girl. Do you wish to be
-seen? If not, go and put them on and let me get at something else. We
-still have other fish to fry.”
-
-“But——” started Garde, when Goody pushed her into the next apartment.
-
-Goody continued to rummage in the chest, producing a hat, much the worse
-for age, a pair of stout shoes, a stick and a large, red handkerchief.
-Into this handkerchief she knotted a number of slices of bread, some
-pickles and some cold meat. She then secured it on the end of the stick,
-and dropped inside it a little wad of money, tied in a parcel by itself.
-
-Garde now returned, blushing as red as a rose and bending her legs
-inward at the knee most shyly, although anything prettier could hardly
-be conceived, and there was no one present save the old woman to look,
-anyway.
-
-“Oh dear me!” said the jackdaw. “Oh dear me!”
-
-“Stand up stiffly on your pins,” commanded Goody. “You are not invisible
-as a girl at all. Come, now, be a man.”
-
-“But—Goody——” gasped Garde. “I—I really can’t——”
-
-“Yes, you can. You must,” corrected the old woman. “Or else you can give
-up running away altogether.”
-
-“Oh no, no!”
-
-“Then do as I tell you. Feet more apart, knees stiff. That’s better.”
-
-“But, I feel—I feel so—so cold.”
-
-“Where, in your face? Nonsense. Now try on this hat.”
-
-Goody adjusted the hat. It was much too small to cover all of Garde’s
-glorious hair.
-
-“This will have to come off,” said the old woman.
-
-“Oh!” was all Garde could reply.
-
-It did seem a pity, but the business in hand was altogether grim. The
-scissors snipped briskly. The hat presently covered a quaint, pretty
-head with close-cropped locks. Garde caught the gleam in Goody’s eyes,
-for Goody could not but admire her for a most handsome and irresistible
-boy, and again the blushes leaped into her cheeks, and those tell-tale
-knees began to try to hide one another.
-
-Goody shook her head. “Any one would still know you for Garde Merrill,”
-she confessed, “whether they had ever known you before or not.”
-
-“Then what shall I do? I might as well go back to my own clothes,” said
-the girl eagerly.
-
-“You remain where you are,” instructed her mentor. “If you are going to
-run away successfully, you must muster up your courage. But perhaps you
-prefer to go back to——”
-
-“No! I’ll——do anything,” interrupted Garde. A sudden horror of the
-thought of going back, or of being caught and taken back, to Randolph
-and all the rest of it, put good steel into her shoulders and some also
-into her legs. “Please make haste and let me be starting,” she added.
-“They may be coming at any moment!”
-
-Goody lost but little time in thinking. She produced a cup, from her
-shelf of decoctions, and dabbling her finger into its contents she
-proceeded to stain the girl’s face a rich brown color, which made her
-more handsome than ever, if possible, but which masked her so completely
-that her own reflection would not have known her. The brown stuff went
-into her pretty ears and all around her plump pretty throat and even on
-top of her eyelids as they were closed, for Goody was something of an
-artist. When she had finished, she regarded her work critically.
-
-“The angel Gabriel wouldn’t know you now, himself,” she said. “When you
-wish to get it off, use vinegar. Take your stick and your little pack,
-put it over your shoulder, so, and now you are ready. Would you like
-something to eat before you go?”
-
-“Oh no,” gasped the girl, frightened half out of her wits, at the
-prospect of going forth into the world with two pretty, visible legs to
-walk withal. “I—I couldn’t eat anything. I—wait a minute. I—I think I
-would like a little drink of water.”
-
-Goody gave her a dipper full, of which she took one miniature sip.
-
-“Do I—do I look—terrible?” she faltered.
-
-“You look like a farmer’s boy—a lout of a country lad,” said Goody. “So,
-good-by, young man. My last word is, forget you have got any legs, or
-you will surely be detected.”
-
-“Legs!” said the jackdaw, glad of a new word. “Legs! Legs!”
-
-“I couldn’t—wear anything—over them, could I?” said Garde, timidly,
-having jumped when Rex croaked so suddenly.
-
-“You can wear a wedding gown over them, if you prefer,” said the old
-woman, grimly, and suggestively. “I really expected you to do better
-than this.”
-
-“Well—I will!” said the poor child, resolutely. “Good-by, dear Goody. I
-shall always love you, more than ever, for this.”
-
-Goody kissed her, as she bent affectionately forward, and patted her
-motherly on the back. “That’s a good boy,” she said.
-
-She opened the door and Garde went forth. The open air made her
-conscious of her attire instantly. But she did her best, shy and
-unboyish as the effort was.
-
-“Oh, I forgot to ask,” she said, glad to get one more moment in which to
-get ready. “How is Hester? How was she when you saw her last?”
-
-Goody’s face darkened. “I saw her the first thing this morning,” she
-said. “Some one must have called last night, after I left. Hester is
-dead.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIV.
-
- A GREENWOOD MEETING.
-
-
-ADAM RUST, sailing northward, grew more and more hearty once again with
-every day, although his pulse-beat quickened almost hourly, with a fever
-of impatience which began to fasten itself upon him. He was quite
-himself again, long before the ship arrived at the port of New York. But
-the beef-eaters were a sorry pair, for the sea still took its revenge
-upon them for Adam’s total disregard of its powers, and the passage had
-been exceptionally rough.
-
-It was no more than natural that Pike and Halberd, on arriving as far as
-New Amsterdam, should desire to have done with the boisterous Atlantic.
-Adam, on the other hand, was in such a fever to go on to Boston that,
-had no ships been available, and no other means possible, he would have
-been tempted to swim. As it was, there was no vessel putting for the
-north to any point beyond Plymouth for a week, so that Adam determined
-to sail that far and either to catch another captain there, who would
-convey him onward, or to walk the remaining distance alone.
-
-The beef-eaters, seeming absolutely in need of a rest from their
-adventures on the water, reluctantly saw the “Sachem” depart without
-them, they in the meantime remaining with Captain William Kidd, at his
-New York home, expecting to go on to Boston with him later. This had
-been the first time that Rust had been more glad than otherwise to be
-for a brief season without his faithful followers. But never before had
-the conditions of his going to Boston been the same.
-
-Thus, on a fine day in April, Adam found himself landed in the old town,
-of which he had no pleasant memories. He would have confined his
-inspection of and visit to Plymouth to the docks, had not a hurried tour
-of inquiry elicited the information that no vessels were due to sail to
-Boston for two or three days. To remain in the place for such a time as
-that was not to be thought of on any account.
-
-Providing himself with a small parcel of food, at one of the taverns,
-Adam was soon striding through a street of the town, which he remembered
-vividly as one wherein he had walked on a former occasion, as a captive
-boy, in a procession of fanatical Puritans. The memory was far from
-being pleasant.
-
-He would have avoided the place, had he known his way sufficiently well,
-but before he knew it was so very near, he had come to that square in
-which the stake with King Philip’s head upon it had once been set.
-
-He looked at the plain surroundings of the locality with a reminiscence
-of melancholy stealing upon him. He fancied he saw the precise spot
-where the stake had stood. It brought back a flood of memories, of his
-days spent with the Wampanoags, his companionship with King Philip, the
-war and then the end. The sequent thought was of his first glimpse of
-Garde, held in her grandfather’s arms and looking across the bank of
-merciless faces with a never-to-be-forgotten sympathy in her sweet,
-brown eyes. Dwelling then in fondness upon the recollection of his first
-meeting with William Phipps, the rover felt that, as his last sadness
-here had been an augury of better times to come, so this present moment
-might presage a happiness even greater. With this comforting thought to
-spur him on to Boston, he quitted the square and was soon leaving the
-outskirts of Plymouth behind him.
-
-Spring seemed to be getting ready for some great event. She was trimming
-herself with blossoms and virgin grass, and she was warm with all her
-eagerness to make herself lovely. Adam opened his mouth to breathe in
-the fragrance exhaled by flirt Nature. He walked swiftly, for there was
-resilience under foot as well as in his being.
-
-“If Garde were somewhere near, the day could hardly be lovelier,” he
-said, half aloud. “She must be breathing in this direction.”
-
-His glance was invited here and attracted there. Wherever it rested,
-Nature met it with a smile. Adam felt like hugging a tree, yet no single
-tree was that elusive spirit of Nature which he so longed to clasp and
-to hold in his arms. But if he was mocked by the ethereal presence of
-beauty too diffuse to be held, by a redolence too subtle to be defined,
-and by bird notes too fleeting to be retained, yet he was charmed,
-caressed, sublimated by the omnipresence of Nature’s loveliness.
-
-At noon he was ten good miles from Plymouth and trailing his sword
-through a wood, where one could feel that some goddess of intangible and
-exquisite entity had just escaped being seen, by fleeing into the aisles
-of the trees, leaving an aroma of warmth, pine-breath and incense to
-baffle bees behind her. Where a little brook tinkled upon pebbles, for
-cymbals, he got down on his knees and had a long drink. Hearing voices,
-where some party seemed approaching, he arose and went forward,
-presently coming to a cross-road in the forest, where he beheld a scene
-that aroused his momentary indignation.
-
-It amounted to little. Three young country clods had evidently been
-pursuing a fourth young fellow, who was scarcely more than a boy, and
-shorter than any in the group, and now, having come up to him, at the
-cross-roads, had “cornered” him up against a tree and were executing
-something like an Indian war-dance about him, as he stood attempting to
-face all three at once.
-
-They began to yell and to run in at their captive, who was striking at
-them awkwardly and not more than half-heartedly with a stick, in order,
-apparently, to prevent them from snatching away his hat. It was entirely
-too unequal, this sham combat, to accord with Adam’s notions of fair
-play. He started to run toward the group.
-
-“Here!” he shouted. “Here, wait a bit,—I’ll take a hand, to make it
-even.”
-
-The youth against the tree saw him coming before the others were aware
-of his presence. When Adam shouted, however, they turned about quickly
-enough, and yelling in added delight at being chased, they made off
-briskly, running back on the cross-road, the way they had come.
-
-Adam strode more leisurely toward the boy who remained leaning, in
-obvious confusion of emotions, against the tree. He saw a remarkably
-handsome, brown-complexioned youth, with delicate features, large eyes,
-that gazed upon him in wonder, and exquisitely rounded legs, one of
-which was nervously bent inward at the knee.
-
-It was Garde.
-
-Fortunately she had seen him before he came close. Therefore the little
-involuntary cry of gladness which had risen to her lips, had been too
-faint for him to catch, at a distance. Then in the moment when her
-persecutors had been scampering away, she had grasped at the opportunity
-to control her emotions to the extent of deciding, in one second of
-timid and maidenly thoughts, that never, never would she reveal herself
-to Adam, if she could help it, while dressed in these awful garments.
-She must act the boy now, or she would perish with mortification.
-Luckily the blush that leaped to her cheeks was masked by Goody’s brown
-stain. Nevertheless she panted with excitement and her bosom would not
-be quiescent.
-
-“Good morning,” said Adam, coming forward and doffing his hat, which he
-felt that he must do to a youth so gentle and so handsome. “You were
-making a very pretty fight, but it lacked somewhat of vigor. The next
-time, slash this way, and that way; guard against assault with your
-other arm, so, and do your cutting at their heads.” He had drawn his
-sword with which to illustrate, and flourished it lustily at the
-imaginary enemy, after which he added: “Now then, who are you any way,
-and where are you bound?”
-
-“Good—good morning,” faltered Garde, in a voice scarcely more than
-audible. “I am—I am not used to fighting.”
-
-“No, I should say not,” said Adam, trying to make his voice delicate and
-sweet, in imitation of hers. “You must speak up, boy, the same as you
-would fight, roaring thus: ‘What ho, varlets!’ on your right, and ‘Have
-at you, knaves!’ on your left. Shatter my hilt! I haven’t seen so
-girlish a boy since Will Shakspeare’s play. Stand out here and let us
-get acquainted, for I think I shall like you, though you do fight and
-roar so ill.”
-
-Immensely relieved to find that he did not suspect her identity, Garde
-summoned all the courage which ten days away from home had sprouted in
-her being. Moreover, she knew that if the deception was to be made
-successful, she must act her part with all her ability. She therefore
-left the tree, against which she had continued to lean and stood forth,
-with what bravery she could muster.
-
-“And who may you be?” she managed to inquire.
-
-“Ha, that’s better,” said Adam. “Don’t be afraid to speak up. A dog that
-barks at once seldom has need to bite. And you have the making of a man
-in you yet. You could be taller, but let that pass. You have fine,
-sturdy legs; your eye is clear. Why, you have nothing to blush for. What
-ails the lad?”
-
-The red beneath the brown stain was too ardent to be hidden. Garde’s
-gaze fell before his admiring look.
-
-“You—haven’t told me your name,” she faltered, heroically striving to
-stand stiffly and to conjure a voice to change the subject withal.
-
-“So I haven’t,” Adam agreed. “I asked you for yours first, but no
-matter. I am a mad lover, on my way to Boston. My name is Rust, with a
-spice of the old Adam thrown in. If you are going in the same direction,
-I shall be glad of your company.”
-
-Garde was going in the same direction. She had never reached so far as
-Plymouth. Footsore and weary, she had trudged along, going less than ten
-miles a day, stopping at night with the farming people, the wives of
-whom she had found most kind, and so at last had arrived at a farm near
-by these cross-roads, unable to go any further. She had therefore rested
-several days, and only this very morning she had learned, by word from
-another traveler, that David Donner, suddenly afflicted by the double
-woe of finding her gone and himself cursed by Randolph, who had
-immediately set in motion his machinery for depriving Massachusetts of
-its charter, was on his back, delirious and ill, perhaps unto death.
-
-She was going back, all contritely, yearning over the old man, who had
-taken the place of her parents for so many years, and weighted down with
-a sense of the wretchedness attending life. It was not that her
-resolution to escape Randolph had abated one particle of its stiffness,
-that she was turning about to retrace her steps, it was merely that her
-womanly love, her budding mother-instinct, her loyalty and gratitude for
-her grandfather’s many years of kindness and patience,—that all these
-made no other thought possible.
-
-And now to learn that Adam was traveling to Boston also, that she should
-have him for her strong protector and comrade, this filled her with such
-a gush of delight that she with difficulty restrained herself from
-crying, in joy, and the tendency to give up and lean upon his supporting
-arm.
-
-At sight of him, indeed, before her mortification had come upon her, for
-the costume, in which it seemed to her she would rather be seen by any
-other person in the world than Adam, she had nearly run to his arms and
-sobbed out her gladness. It would have been so wholly sweet to obey this
-impulse. Her love for the big, handsome fellow had leaped so exultantly
-in her breast, again to see him and to hear his voice, when she had been
-so beset with troubles. But she had denied herself splendidly, and now
-every moment strengthened her determination to play her part to the end.
-Yet what joy it would be to travel back to Boston, through the
-greenwood, by his side.
-
-And being not without her sense of humor, Garde conceived many
-entertaining possibilities which might be elicited from the situation,
-the standpoint of man to man being so wholly different from anything
-heretofore presented to her ken.
-
-“Yes,” she said, in answer to Adam’s last remark, “I am going to
-Boston—or near there,—but you may find that I cannot walk fast, nor very
-far, in a day. My walking will doubtless prove to be like my fighting.
-So that if you are so mad with—with love, and so eager to hasten,
-perhaps——” and she left the sentence unfinished.
-
-“Well,” said Adam, pulling his mustache smartly, “I confess I am a bit
-hot on foot, and so you would be, young man, if by any good fortune you
-knew my sweetheart, yet I like you well enough, and my lady has such a
-heart that she would counsel me to go slower, if need be, to lend any
-comfort or companionship to a youth so gentle as yourself.”
-
-“I am sure she would,” said Garde, readily enough.
-
-“Are you, though? One would think you knew her,” said Adam. “Don’t plume
-yourself on this matter so prematurely. Come, let us start.”
-
-“One moment, please, till I can tie my shoe,” said Garde, who felt such
-merriment bubbling up in her heart that she was constrained to bend
-downward to the ground quickly, to hide her smiles.
-
-Adam stood waiting, glancing around at the woods, wondering which way
-his heart had flown, on its lightsome wings, in that temple of beauty.
-Garde looked up at him slyly. He was dressed in great brown boots, that
-came above his knees, brown velvet trousers, a wine-colored velvet coat,
-with a leather jerkin over it, sleeveless and long enough to reach to
-the tops of his boots, almost, and on his head he wore a large slouch
-hat, becoming and finishing to his striking figure.
-
-Garde was looking at the back of his head rapturously when he started to
-turn, to see why she made the tying process so deliberate.
-
-“I am ready,” she said, cheerily, springing to her feet. “Is this the
-road?”
-
-“By all the promptings of my heart, it is,” said Adam. “But, by the way,
-you have not yet told me your name, my boy.”
-
-“Oh,—why—why my name is—John Rosella.” She had thought of her aunt’s
-first name, on the spur of the moment, and John had been the simplest
-and first thing which had popped into her head.
-
-“John Rosella,” repeated Adam. “It sounds like Spanish. That would
-account for your dark complexion.” He looked at her critically. “Yes,
-you are a nice, gentle boy. Have you ever been in love?”
-
-“With—with a girl? never!” said Garde, trembling with delight and fear
-of being detected, especially if she answered too many questions. “Do
-tell me all about your lady—lady love.”
-
-“That’s a bit too precious to tell to any man,” Adam assured her,
-gravely. “And yet, you are so nearly like a girl that I can almost tell
-you about her.”
-
-“What is her name?” asked Garde, catching her breath in little quick
-gasps.
-
-“Her name? Ah, I hardly tell it to myself, often. But her name would
-sound sweet in these woods. Her name is—now, mark you, don’t you ask me
-to repeat it again. Never mind her name, anyway.... Well, it’s Garde.
-You will have to be contented with that. Ah, but she is the sweetest,
-most beautiful little woman in the world. Her loveliness goes all
-through, the same as beauty is everywhere in these woods. It’s her
-nature to be lovely.”
-
-His voice became an utterance of melody. It seemed a part of the forest
-tones. He had taken off his hat, for in his mind Garde stood before him,
-a smiling dream, even as Garde actually walked beside him, a smiling
-reality.
-
-“Is she tall?” said Mistress Merrill.
-
-“Yes, somewhat taller than you,” said Adam, “Being gentle and likeable
-you might make one think upon her, but her voice is sweeter than yours,
-and, well—she is a girl, and you are merely girlish.”
-
-“Have you loved her long?” said Garde, again casting her gaze upon the
-ground, as she walked.
-
-“Years!” said Rust. “I have loved her all my life, for I never began to
-live till I saw her first, and I loved her the moment I saw her.”
-
-“And does she love you?”
-
-“Ah, now you approach forbidden ground. It would be a sacrilege for me
-to prate—even here in these woods—of her sweet thoughts. I have told you
-too much already. You are a very devil of a boy, to have gotten so much
-from me, touching on this subject. I’ll be sworn, I don’t know why I
-have let you draw me out like this. But I stop you here. It is no
-concern of yours whether she likes me or not.”
-
-“Oh,” said Garde. Then she added slyly, “I should think she would.”
-
-“I thank you and warn you, in a breath, young man,” Adam replied. “You
-have gotten the best of me already. Let good enough alone.”
-
-Garde loved him the more for the sacredness in which he held her name
-and the inclination of her heart. She loved him for the modesty which
-crept into his speech and deportment when least expected. Loving him
-thus, so fully, and in this realm, so made for the growth of tender
-passions, she found it difficult to cease her questions. It was so
-wholly delightful to hear him repeat, again and again, how he loved her.
-She was, however, obedient by nature, and now cautious by circumstance.
-
-“Perhaps you will tell me of your travels,” she said, this subject being
-next in importance to hearing of his great affection. “I am sure you
-could relate much of interest, if you are so minded.”
-
-“And how shall you know I have traveled?” said the man.
-
-“Why—” Garde found herself confused, having thoughtlessly spoken on a
-matter of which she did actually know, yet of which she must seem to be
-in ignorance. “Why—I would know this from your appearance—your dress, to
-which the young men here are not accustomed. Have you not recently come
-from over sea?”
-
-“I have,” said the rover, satisfied with her answer. “I went away
-seeking my fortune—which still remains to be sought.”
-
-“Oh, well, never mind,” said Garde, who for the moment was his partner,
-to share all his disappointments. “I mean—I mean you don’t seem to
-mind,” she added. “I should like to hear you tell about your
-adventures.”
-
-Adam, who felt that he could talk to this boy by the hour, was nothing
-loath to narrate his wanderings, the more especially as he had always
-found it difficult sufficiently to praise his friend William Phipps.
-Therefore, as they walked onward together, Garde thrilling with her
-love, and turning her eyes fondly upon him, whensoever he was unaware,
-Adam told and retold of the fights, the hopes, the storms, the success
-in England, and the illness which had finally given him his leave to go
-home to his sweetheart.
-
-No lover of Nature ever lingered more fondly over the sighs of trees,
-the fanning by of fragrant zephyrs, or the love-tales sung by the birds,
-than did Garde on his every word. And, inasmuch as she could not cling
-to his arm, when he recited the perils through which he had come, she
-artfully coaxed him back to declarations of love for his sweetheart,
-from time to time, to give some satisfaction to her yearning.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXV.
-
- LOVE’S TRAPS FOR CONFESSIONS.
-
-
-SOME time before nightfall, the two having shared their luncheons
-together and wandered on, through the delightful patches of sunlight,
-slanting through the trees, they came upon one of the farms where Garde
-had already tested the hospitality of the good people residing by the
-highway.
-
-Here, by a little dexterity, and through Adam’s generosity toward the
-delicate boy, to whom he had taken such a fancy, Garde occupied the
-spare apartment she had made her own when headed in the other direction,
-and Adam contented himself in the hay-loft of the barn.
-
-In the morning they were up betimes, to greet another smiling sun, and
-so resumed their leisurely journey toward the north. At noon they halted
-as before, and made a meal of the stock of bread and other provisions
-they had been able to secure at the farm-house.
-
-Garde sat upon a mossy bank, while Adam reclined on a stone, somewhat
-below her woodland throne. Adam looked at her so long and so steadfastly
-that she grew most uneasy, lest he were about to pierce her disguise.
-
-“What are you looking at?” she said, with an attempt to be boyishly
-pert.
-
-“I was looking at your legs,” said Adam, frankly. “They are uncommonly
-symmetrical, but a shade too pretty for a boy.”
-
-Garde immediately bent the plump objects of interest underneath her and
-sat on her heels.
-
-“You find a great deal of fault with me,” she said, a little vexed.
-
-“It’s because you have faults, as a boy,” Adam told her, honestly. “You
-know, my lad, you could be a bit sturdier and none the worse. And yet, I
-like you immensely as you are. Perhaps if you were changed, you would
-lose some charm and spoil it all. I shall have to let you be, and
-content myself with you as you are.”
-
-“Oh, thank you,” said Garde, already smiling at him again, to herself.
-“Then please make no more remarks about me.”
-
-“About your legs? Well, I won’t, since you appear so sensitive about
-them. Mind you, they will do well enough, after all.”
-
-“Shall we go on?” Garde asked him. She was a little weary and would have
-been glad of further rest, but she found she was much more comfortable
-when they were walking side by side.
-
-Adam was up at once, for walk they never so fast, he felt he could by no
-means come up with his thoughts and desires, which had run so far ahead
-of them always.
-
-“Never mind what I say,” said he, as they resumed the onward march. “I
-have to have my say out, when I think it. And you know you do puzzle me
-constantly.”
-
-“I don’t see why, or how,” said Garde.
-
-“It’s because I seem to think I have seen you somewhere before. And yet
-I know that is impossible, hence I am driven to think of your
-girlishness, for an explanation.”
-
-Garde said: “I think this is very much in your imagination, Adam Rust.”
-
-“Not a bit of it,” corrected her comrade. “You were patterned for a
-girl, my boy, depend upon it. There was some mistake, or some bit of
-trickery, when you became one of us. Why, a man couldn’t even think a
-little oath, in your presence.”
-
-“Then is it not better that I was raised somewhat after the manner of
-girls?” said Garde, complimented as much by the reverent tone in his
-voice as by what he had said. “Does not the rearing I have known serve
-some good purpose, if what you say is so?”
-
-“By my faith, yes. But then you do admit that you were treated in your
-younger days, somewhat as a girl?”
-
-“I hope it is no shame to confess this is so,” she answered, looking
-down on the ground to hide the dancing of her eyes. “I was treated
-somewhat in this manner and I was even dressed as a girl, at times.”
-
-“Ah, that accounts for your bashfulness and so forth. But you need not
-blush for this. Bless your heart, a man’s the better for it, if he has
-something of the woman in his heart—and even in his hand.”
-
-“I am glad to hear you say so,” murmured the girl.
-
-“Oh, yes, it’s all right,” said Adam magnanimously. He looked at her
-with frank admiration. “Only it is something of a pity you were not a
-girl, you know.”
-
-“Oh. But why?”
-
-“Because you would be such an one as a man could love.”
-
-“But not you, Adam Rust. You have said you love a sweetheart already.”
-
-“I do—mightily! But if you were a girl I would enjoy finding a man
-worthy to love you.”
-
-“But this is unseemly. You forget that I am a boy.”
-
-“Yes, for some reason or other, it is easy to forget that. But I was
-merely supposing. Say that a man had come along when you were dressed as
-a girl—why, what then?”
-
-“What then indeed,” said she, with some spirit, “would you have talked
-like this to me, of—of love?”
-
-“No, I wouldn’t,” said Rust, stoutly enough. “It would then have been
-quite another matter. As it is, you play the deuce with my brain and
-fancy. I start in to talk to you as man to man, and then I think you are
-almost better fitted to be a girl—and you admit you were raised somewhat
-in that manner, so what can one expect?”
-
-“Well, what if your sweetheart heard you speaking thus?” said Garde, who
-was enjoying the situation the more for the very danger of it. “Should
-you like to have her hear you telling me I should have made a girl that
-a man could—could love?”
-
-“You being a boy, why not?” Adam made answer. “Ah, she is too present in
-my thought and feeling for me to say anything I would be loth for her to
-hear.”
-
-They had arrived at the edge of a brook which was somewhat swelled by
-the snow, back on the hills, melting in the genial warmth of the sun. It
-was nothing for Adam to stride across, stepping from rock to rock, but
-Garde hesitated, her femininity uppermost in a moment, despite her
-utmost efforts to be boyish.
-
-“Here, give us your hand,” said big Adam, turning back to help her over.
-“Now, then, jump!”
-
-Thrilling with the delight of his warm, strong fingers closing so firmly
-on her own, Garde came across the brook in safety and then reluctantly
-released her grip from his.
-
-Adam had not escaped unscathed from this contact of love, with which she
-was fairly thrilling. He looked at her oddly, when they were safe again
-on the further side. Garde caught her breath, in fear that she had
-betrayed herself at last, in that moment of weakness.
-
-“You are too much for me, John,” Adam admitted, shaking his head in
-puzzlement. “You are a strange boy.”
-
-“I thought it was all explained,” Garde replied, anxious to get him
-quieted on the subject. “How far should you say it is to Boston?”
-
-“I think I begin to work it out a little,” the man went on, musingly.
-“It’s because you remind me of some one I have known.”
-
-“Do I?” said Garde, half afraid of her question. “Of whom?”
-
-“I don’t quite know,” he confessed, looking at her earnestly. “And yet I
-ought to be able to tell. It was some one I liked, I am sure.”
-
-“As much as you did your sweetheart?”
-
-Adam seemed not to hear this question. “Your complexion,” he resumed,
-“makes me think of a sweet maid I knew at Jamaica.”
-
-“Oh!”
-
-“And yet your eyes are like those of a lovely French damsel that I met,
-one time.” Here he sighed. “Your hands bring back a memory of a charming
-Countess at the court of Charles. Some of your ways make me think of a
-nice little Indian Princess I once knew; while your ankles—but you don’t
-care to hear about your ankles.”
-
-Garde was duly shocked. She knew not what to think of Adam, who was
-revealing such astonishing epochs in his life. This was terrible. Yet
-she wished, or almost wished, he had gone on, just a little further,
-though she dared not encourage him to do so, right as it might be for
-her to know it if his heart had strayed elsewhere, at any time during
-his absence. She was alarmed, curious, piqued. She forgot that she was a
-boy to whom he had spoken.
-
-“It seems to me,” she presently answered, “that I remind you of nothing
-but the ladies and maids of these countries where you have traveled.”
-
-“Well, you don’t remind me of the lads, that I admit,” said Adam.
-
-Garde made up her mind to profit by the occasion. She piled her little
-courage up to the top-most mark.
-
-“And who was the little maid of Jamaica?” she asked.
-
-“Oh, she was as sweet a little thing as ever prattled Spanish,” Rust
-replied, with a reminiscent look in his eyes. “You would have liked her,
-I know.”
-
-Garde entertained and reserved her own opinion on that point. “Well—did
-she like you?” she asked, indifferently.
-
-“Oh yes, she said she did, and I am sure you could depend upon her to
-tell the truth. She used to like to sit on my knee, dear little thing!”
-
-Garde gasped. It was fortunate that Adam’s mind was occupied with
-memories. His perfidy was coming forth finely. She knew not whether she
-wished to cry or to stamp her foot in anger. She controlled her impulses
-heroically.
-
-“About how old was she?” was her next question.
-
-“Three, I should say,” said Adam. “She was a pitiful little thing, more
-than pretty. In a way she made me think of Garde, so I couldn’t help but
-like her.”
-
-Garde was flooded, all through her being, with feelings of love and
-penitence. To think that she had entertained for a moment a notion that
-Adam—and yet, stay, there were the others,—dames and countesses. They
-could not all have been mere tots of children. Then she wondered if it
-were fair, thus to try to trap the poor fellow and take advantage of
-him, to make him confess these subjects as to another man. Of course for
-his own good it might be better to let him tell. And she would
-understand him so much more thoroughly.
-
-“Was the French damsel only three also?” she summoned courage to
-inquire.
-
-“Oh dear, no. She was three and ninety, but still sprightly in the
-minuet and with eyes that could easily have lighted the sun again, had
-he chanced to go out. I shouldn’t have been sorry to have her for a
-mother—except that I flatter myself I had a better one—once upon a
-time.”
-
-Garde would have felt like a coward indeed, had she desired to ask him
-of any of the others. Having done him a little measure of injustice, she
-made it up to him by loving him the more, now that she found him so
-innocent. Nevertheless she had ears to listen with when he volunteered
-some information about the countess he had seen and admired at the court
-of Charles.
-
-It turned out, however, that he had merely seen her safely married to
-one of his royal friends, for whose happiness he had the most sincere of
-wishes.
-
-Garde felt her spirit of daring and merriment return. It was so tempting
-to play around the point of her identity that she could not altogether
-resist the impulse of her nature, to keep him talking.
-
-“I seem to be happy in reminding you of many persons,” she said. “But I
-think I would rather remind you of some one else. Since you claim to be
-so much in love, it would compliment me more if I could remind you of
-your Mistress Garde.”
-
-“Maybe you would,” said Adam, “only that I am getting so near to Boston
-that such a reminiscence, in a boy, would be sheer impertinence.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVI.
-
- A HOLIDAY ENDED.
-
-
-HAVING the fortune to be overtaken by a good-natured farmer, who was
-trotting his horses northward, along their road, from a trip to market,
-the travelers got the benefit of a lift that landed them within a few
-hours’ walk of Boston. However, as the farmer’s journey ended where
-there were no accommodations, and there was still another hour of light,
-which would suffice to bring them to a small hostelry, where Garde knew
-she could make such arrangements as she desired, they tramped onward as
-before.
-
-With every step that brought them further toward their destination Adam
-waxed more and more impatient to hurry, while Garde found her courage
-and her footsteps lagging.
-
-She had momentarily forgotten her troubles, in the joy of being with
-Adam, strolling for hours through the vales of peace and loveliness, but
-now her tribulations returned, with compound interest. She yearned over
-her smitten grandfather, yet she feared for what he might do, when he
-should see her again within his reach, for if he had been well-nigh
-insane when she saw him last, how much more violent he might now have
-become.
-
-She trembled likewise at the thought of Randolph, and the measures of
-revenge which he might adopt, backed by the power which was sufficient
-to uphold or to overthrow the charter. From these meditations she was
-tempted to fly to Adam’s arms and implore his protection. It afforded
-her infinite relief to think that he would at least be near. If the
-worst came of her returning, she would manage to go to him, by some
-means, she was certain, and under the stress of circumstances she would
-not be deemed immodest in beseeching his protection, for which purpose
-she would consent immediately to become his wife.
-
-Eager to justify herself in what she had done, refusing to believe that
-honor had been as nothing and Randolph’s promises all important, she
-framed many introductions to the subject, before she could finally begin
-to question her fellow-traveler upon it.
-
-She then began by reciting to him somewhat of the news of Boston town.
-She told of the fear for the charter, which had become a mania with the
-older patriots, of the baleful power of Randolph and of the culminations
-which at last he was beginning to work against the colony. Adam waxed so
-wroth against Randolph, whom he remembered distinctly, that she was much
-encouraged to go on with a hypothetical case which she soon invented.
-
-She dared not connect the name of Randolph directly with her story and
-questions, lest Adam, when he arrived in Boston, should learn more,
-concerning the whole wretched business, and know it was she who had
-undergone the ordeal. Also it required a great concentration of her
-courage, backed by repeated assurances to herself that Adam thought her
-a youth, before she could approach the subject in any manner whatsoever.
-Yet she knew she would have no such opportunity to speak to him again
-with anything like the freedom which was now possible, and Goody Dune
-had made her a sensible young woman.
-
-“Suppose,” she finally said, “that a man who had influence with the King
-threatened to use all his power against the colony and its charter, if
-some young girl should refuse to become his wife. Would it be her duty
-to marry the man?”
-
-“That would depend on her spirit of patriotism,” said Adam. “If she
-believed she could save the colony from a grave danger, it seems to me
-she ought to do so.”
-
-“Yes—I think so too,” said Garde, honestly. “But suppose she found out
-that the man had been very false.”
-
-“In what manner?”
-
-“Well,—that he had deceived another young woman.”
-
-“Do you mean betrayed some other young woman?” said Adam bluntly.
-
-Garde averted her gaze and answered: “Yes.”
-
-“Well, suppose this was so, then what is your question?”
-
-“The question is, what do you think the first young woman should do
-then—after she found out that—that this was true?”
-
-“That would depend again on the particular young woman,” said Rust, who
-believed he was speaking as man to man, and who knew that when women are
-betrayed it is not always the fault wholly of the male-being in the
-case. “If she wanted to save the charter, or anything of that sort, I
-don’t see how this would alter the case particularly.”
-
-“You wouldn’t excuse the man?” said Garde, turning pale under her brown
-stain.
-
-Adam had in mind a painful incident which had occurred in the life of a
-friend of his in England. “I might,” he answered. “Possibly a great deal
-could be said in defense of the poor devil, in some way or another.”
-
-“But,” insisted Garde, somewhat desperately, “if you were a girl you
-wouldn’t marry such a man?”
-
-“If I were a girl and I loved him,” said Rust, still thinking of the
-case of his friend, “why—I think perhaps I should.”
-
-“But if you hated and loathed him?” Garde almost cried.
-
-“Oh, that is quite a different matter. If hate entered in, I should
-welcome any excuse to get away. In the actual case of which I was
-thinking, it seems to me the girl ought to forgive——But I had forgotten
-all about the element of the charter, which we were supposing was to
-figure in the case.”
-
-Garde cared for nothing further about the discussion. He had justified
-her, at least partially. She had always felt that Randolph would have
-betrayed the colony, even had she sacrificed herself and Adam, to marry
-him, as her grandfather had desired. She was now a little troubled that
-Adam could think so nearly as her grandfather had done; that he could
-really condone such a terrible dishonor in a fellow-man. Had it not been
-that, under cover of her present disguise she had proved how true and
-good her Adam was, she would have been pained and perhaps worried by his
-latitude of thought. She had to finish the subject, so she said:
-
-“If she—this girl—not only hated the man, but felt sure he would not
-keep his promise to do good for the charter, but would deceive her and
-every one else, just as he had deceived the other girl—then what ought
-she to do?”
-
-“It would be high time, under those circumstances,” replied her
-companion, “to refuse absolutely, or to ship on the first departing
-vessel, or to do anything else that would be quick and to the point.”
-
-“That is just what I think,” said Garde, now well satisfied.
-
-“It’s more important for us, my boy, to think of what we shall do when
-we arrive in Boston, to-morrow,” Adam now remarked. “By the way, do you
-know anybody there?”
-
-Garde hesitated before answering. She had to be clever. “Nobody there
-will know me when I get there,” she said, “unless it is some one I might
-once have known.”
-
-Rust did not analyze the ambiguity of this reply. He was engrossed with
-other reflections.
-
-“Have you got any money?” he asked her next. “Because if you haven’t you
-can have the half of mine,—not much to speak of, but enough to feed you
-and put you to bed. I hope to get into some better tavern than the Crow
-and Arrow.”
-
-“Thank you,” said Garde, looking at him slyly with a tender light of
-love in her eyes, “I think I have enough for a time.”
-
-“If we stop at the same tavern, and have our meals served together, it
-will cost you less,” Adam informed her practically, “and besides, I have
-grown so fond of you, my boy, that I should be sorry to lose sight of
-you, in the town.”
-
-“But the sooner you lose sight of me, the sooner you will see your
-sweetheart,” said Garde, with difficulty restraining her lips from
-curving in a smile.
-
-“Ah, but I shall wish her to know you,” said Adam, generously. “For to
-no one else save you have I ever been able to talk of my love for her
-sweet self, and this is something of a miracle. As I think upon it, you
-do remind me of her often, by your voice, though it is not so sweet as
-hers, as I may have said before, and by other tokens, which I am at a
-loss to define. But because of these things, I would fight for you, and
-with her sweet approval.”
-
-“I am sure of it,” said Garde. “I trust you will have great joy when you
-find her again. And you may tell her for me, if you will, that——well,
-that she should love you with her whole soul,——but she does already, I
-am sure.”
-
-“You are a kind as well as a gentle boy,” said Adam to her gravely. “I
-am glad it could be no matter to her for me to like you so exceedingly,
-you being a boy,——but, boy, you do bedevil my brain with your girlish
-ways. I shall never explain you, I’ll be sworn.”
-
-“Here is where we turn, for the night’s rest,” Garde replied, avoiding
-the puzzled look which Rust directed to her face. “We have had a
-pleasant journey of it together. I shall never forget it.”
-
-“Let’s wait till it’s finished before we sum it up,” said Adam.
-“To-morrow we have a few more hours, ere we reach the town, and these
-may be the pleasantest of all.”
-
-Yet when the boy said good night to him, after their supper, he felt a
-strange sense of loss for which he was wholly unable to account.
-
-In the morning the matter was somewhat explained. The boy had arisen
-before the sun and gone on her way without him.
-
-It was not without a little pang in his heart that the rover trudged
-onward, alone.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVII.
-
- IN BOSTON TOWN.
-
-
-GARDE fairly ran, when she made her early morning start. She had not
-been able to think of any other solution of the problem of getting back
-to her own proper sphere without permitting Adam to become aware of the
-whole situation. She had not come to her resolution to cope with the
-difficulty thus without many little sighs of regret and a few little
-fears of what might be the consequences. Nevertheless, she had seen the
-necessity of prompt action, after which she had felt a desire only for
-haste. She was, however, buoyed up by the glad thought that Adam would
-not be long behind her, in his march to town, hence she would soon be
-seeing him there, under circumstances which would make it possible to
-accept his love and to lean upon his strong, protecting arm.
-
-The sun was no more than an hour up in the sky when she came to the
-outskirts of Boston and ran quickly on to Goody Dune’s. Goody was not at
-all surprised to see her thus returning. Indeed she had looked to see
-her back at least a week earlier. The old woman, preparing against this
-moment, had plaited the long locks of hair which Garde had been obliged
-to leave behind, and these she helped the truant to wind upon her head,
-with some semblance of natural growth, an effect which she heightened by
-providing a small lace cap, which made of Mistress Merrill a very
-demure-appearing little person.
-
-The brown stain rapidly succumbed to Goody’s treatment with vinegar.
-Garde emerged from the mask as rosy and cream white as an apple, for the
-open air and the days with Adam had wrought such evidence of health and
-happiness upon her that not the dread of what she might discover at
-home, nor any excitement of being in the land of her enemy, could make
-any paleness in her face of more than a moment’s duration. She was too
-excited to eat, although Goody tried to urge her to take even a cup of
-tea, and so she went on to her grandfather’s house, and let herself in,
-at the rear.
-
-As Granther Donner’s sister had passed away a number of years before, he
-had been left quite to himself when Garde decamped. But when his illness
-came so suddenly upon him, Mrs. Soam and Prudence, both persuaded that
-Garde was almost, if not entirely, in the right, appeared dutifully at
-his bedside as ministering angels.
-
-Thus Garde, upon entering the kitchen, found her Aunt Gertrude engaged
-in preparing a breakfast. The good lady was startled.
-
-“Why—Garde!” she gasped. “Oh, dear me, is it really you? Child, where
-have you been? Oh, David is very ill indeed. I am so glad you have come
-home!”
-
-“I came because I heard he was ill,” said Garde, who was more calm than
-might have been expected. “I didn’t know you were here. It was real good
-of you to come, dear aunty. I suppose you will scold me.”
-
-“It was all a terrible thing,” said her aunt, “but John says he thinks
-Mr. Randolph meant to take away our charter anyway.”
-
-“Oh, I am sure of it!” cried Garde, so glad to hear of a partisan. “If I
-hadn’t believed that, I don’t think I should ever have run away. Oh,
-thank you, so much, dear aunty! I am so glad. God bless Uncle John! I
-knew I was right!”
-
-“But your uncle and all of us are very sad,” her aunt proceeded to add.
-“They don’t think we will have the charter through the summer. It is a
-terrible time, but they all say that Randolph must have been getting
-ready, or he couldn’t have done so much so quickly. It is a sad day for
-Massachusetts. But, there, run in and see David, do,—but, dearie, don’t
-be surprised if he doesn’t seem to know you.”
-
-In the dining-room Garde and Prudence met, a moment later.
-
-“Good morning, Garde,” said the cousin, without the slightest sign of
-emotion.
-
-Garde kissed her, impulsively. “Oh, I am so glad to see you, dear!” she
-said. Indeed love had so wrought upon her that she felt she had never so
-cared for any one before as she did for all these dear ones now.
-
-She hastened on to her grandfather, and Prudence was left there, looking
-where her cousin had gone and solemnly wishing she also might do
-something emotional and startling.
-
-But a few hours only sufficed to reduce the spirit of wildness and
-youthful exhilaration which Garde had brought with her back from the
-road in the forest. To hear the old patriot raving, childishly, and
-crying and praying over the charter and over Garde as a baby, which was
-the way he seemed to remember his grandchild, was a thing that rent her
-heart and drove all joy from the life of care into which she came, in
-her mood of penitence and quiet.
-
-The days slipped by and became weeks. Prudence returned to her father at
-once. Goodwife Soam remained to help Garde over the crisis, and then she
-too left the girl with the stricken old man, who had become a prattling
-child, on whom the word “Charter” acted like a shock to make him
-instantly insane against his daughter’s child.
-
-In the meantime Adam Rust, having come to Boston in a moment when
-excitement, despair and bitter feeling, such as the town nor the colony
-had ever known before, and which completely altered the Puritan people,
-had heard a garbled story of Randolph’s perfidy and his attempt to marry
-Garde which made his blood boil. Fortunately the fact that Garde had run
-away had been kept so close a secret, that more persons had heard how
-devotedly she was attending David Donner than knew any hint of her
-escapade. Adam having first paid his respects to Mrs. Phipps, to whom he
-delivered the Captain’s messages and letters, had found himself
-apartments in a tavern quite removed from the Crow and Arrow, where he
-had been able easily to avoid all his former acquaintances of Boston. He
-might have desired to search out Wainsworth, but Henry was away at
-Salem. Randolph, of whom Adam naturally thought, had betaken himself to
-New York, there to conclude some details of snatching the charter from
-the colony of Massachusetts.
-
-Once settled, Adam lost no time in searching for Garde. Thus he was soon
-made aware of the state of the Donner household, into the affairs of
-which it would have been anything but thoughtful and kind to obtrude his
-presence. With a courteous patience he set himself to wait for a seemly
-moment in which to apprise Garde of his reappearance. He told himself
-that, as she had no intimation that he had returned to Boston, it would
-be a greater kindness to keep himself in the background, until her
-trials should be lessened.
-
-Naturally all these various matters had somewhat obliterated from his
-mind the thoughts of the youth with whom he had traveled from the
-environs of Plymouth. While he was curbing his spirit and his too
-impatient love, a message arrived, in care of Goodwife Phipps, from
-Captain William Kidd, to the effect that the beef-eaters, far from
-recuperating after their voyage, had become seriously ill, and were
-begging each day for the “Sachem.”
-
-Rust had been contemplating the acceptance of an offer from Mrs. Phipps
-to assume command at the ship-yard, the foreman in charge being then
-arrogating powers unto himself which were not at all quieting. Adam
-reflected that if he took this place he could settle down, marry his
-sweetheart presently, and become a sober citizen.
-
-With the advent of the message from the beef-eaters, he was completely
-at a loss to know what to do. He yearned over these faithful companions,
-whose affection had been repeatedly demonstrated, under circumstances
-the most trying. If they should die while he remained away, selfishly
-denying them so little a thing as his presence, he would never obtain
-his own forgiveness. Yet he could not go to New York, or any other where
-on earth, without first having at least seen Garde. Indeed he reflected
-now that mayhap it had been a mistaken kindness for him to remain away
-from her side so long. Should he not have gone to her long before, and
-offered what service he could render in her trial?
-
-As a matter of fact he had been kind as it was, for Garde had hardly
-enjoyed a moment in which to do so much as to think of love and her
-lover. Her grandfather had occupied her attention day and night. She had
-stinted him in nothing, else with her spirit of penitence upon her—for
-all that she had helped to hasten upon him—she could never have had any
-peace of mind nor contentment in her soul.
-
-But at last, when the old man was out of danger, sitting in his chair by
-the hour, she had time to think of Adam again and to wonder why it was
-that he had never attempted to see her. She answered herself by saying
-it was better that he had not done so, but then, when she suddenly
-thought that he might have heard all manner of wild stories, and might
-indeed have gone away, angered and not understanding the truth, she
-yearned for him feverishly.
-
-As if the message of her love flew unerringly to him, Adam suddenly, in
-the midst of thinking of going to the beef-eaters, determined to see his
-sweetheart, cost what it might.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVIII.
-
- LOVE’S GARDEN.
-
-
-AFTER nearly a week of rain and dull, gray skies, the weather was again
-entrancing. The warm, soporific breeze which played through the house
-lulled Grandther Donner off to sleep, as he sat in his chair, staring at
-vacancy and rubbing his thumb across the ends of his fingers.
-
-Garde, responding to the mood of coming summer, could not resist the
-impulse to go out into the garden, which to her would always be
-associated with her childish meeting with Adam Rust, and which therefore
-now made of her yearning to see him a positive force.
-
-Thus it doubtless appeared to her as an answer to her longing when she
-felt a presence and glanced up at the gate, to see him standing there,
-as he had so many years before, with two of the pickets clasped in his
-big, strong hands.
-
-Her heart gave a leap that almost hurt, so suddenly did it send the
-ecstasy bounding through her veins. Yet so sublimated was the look on
-Adam’s face, as, with parted lips and visible color rising and falling
-in his face, he gazed at her, steadfastly, and as one entranced, that
-she went toward him as slowly as if walking might disturb the spell.
-
-One of her hands, like a homing dove, came up to press on her bosom
-above her heart. She was pale, for the cares of those weeks had bleached
-the rose-tints from her cheeks. Nevertheless, the moment painted them
-with vestal flames of love’s own lamp, as she looked into Adam’s eyes
-and saw the tender passion abiding there.
-
-“Adam, I prithee come in,” she said, in a soft murmur, unconsciously
-repeating what she had said when first he had leaned upon this gate.
-
-As one approaching something sacred, Adam came in and took her two hands
-in his. He raised them slowly to his lips, and then pressed them
-together against his breast.
-
-“Garde,” he said, almost whispering. “Garde. My little Garde.”
-
-“Oh, Adam,” she answered.
-
-They looked at one another and smiled, she through shining tears. Then
-they laughed, for there were no words, there was nothing which could
-absolutely express their overflowing joy, but their laughing, which was
-wholly spontaneous, came the nearest.
-
-“Oh, I have been so afraid this moment would never come,” said Garde,
-presently, when she could trust herself to speak. “It has been such a
-long, long time to wait.”
-
-“I love you. Garde, dearest, I love you,” said Adam. “I love to say that
-I love you. I could say it all day: ‘Garde, I love you. Garde, I love
-you, dear, and love you.’ I have told every star in the heavens to tell
-you how I love you, dear. But I would rather tell you myself. Let me see
-you. Let me look at you, sweetheart.” He still held her hands, but at
-arms’ length away, and looked at her blushing face with such an
-adoration in his eyes as she had never beheld.
-
-Indeed, Adam’s passion had swept her from her feet. It possessed her,
-enveloped her form, held her enthralled in an ecstasy so profound that
-she gasped to catch her breath, while her heart leaped as if it were
-pealing out her happiness.
-
-They were standing thus, oblivions of everything, when a sour-visaged
-Puritan, passing by the gate, halted a moment to look at them
-malignantly. It was none other than Isaiah Pinchbecker, the scolding
-hypocrite who had danced to Adam’s fiddling, several years before. He
-suddenly gave himself a nudge in the ribs. His eyes lighted up with grim
-satisfaction. He had recognized the rover, and with news in his narrow
-head he hastened away, prodding himself assiduously as he went.
-
-In the meantime, Grandther Donner, whose naps lasted hardly as long as
-forty winks, had awakened. He started from his sleep as if he had
-suddenly caught himself neglecting to watch the charter. Glancing
-hastily about the room, he missed Garde at once. In his brain, two cells
-had broken their walls so that their substance commingled, till Garde
-and the charter seemed at times the same, and always so interlinked that
-he dared not let her go a yard from his sight.
-
-He tottered to his feet, and rubbing his thumb diligently across the
-ends of his fingers, went out at the open door, toward his grandchild,
-guided by some sense which in an animal is often highly developed. He
-came upon the scene in the garden just as Adam, after looking his heart
-full, nearly to bursting, had drawn Garde close again, to kiss her hands
-in uncontainable joy.
-
-At sight of Adam’s costume, which was not a great departure from that of
-the Royalists of the day, in contradistinction from that of the
-Puritans, David Donner flew into a violent rage. He raised his two
-palsied hands above his head and screamed.
-
-“Garde!” he cried, “Garde! Kill that man—Kill him!—kill him! The
-charter! The King’s devil! Kill him! He’s ripping the charter to pieces
-with his teeth!”
-
-He came running toward them, clawing his nails down across his face till
-he made his pale cheeks bleed, and tore out little waving filaments,
-like gossamer, from his snow-white hair. Almost at their feet he fell
-full length, where he struck at the soil and dug in his finger nails,
-frantically, all the while making terrible sounds in his paroxysm, most
-dreadful to hear.
-
-Adam and Garde had started, he merely alert in the presence of the
-unexpected, she in a fear that sent the color from her face so abruptly
-that it seemed she must swoon at once. She uttered one little cry, clung
-galvanically to Adam’s fingers for a second, and then bent quickly down
-to place her hand on the old man’s head.
-
-His delirious fury lasted but a moment. It then subsided as quickly as
-it had come, leaving him limp, exhausted, dull-eyed and panting like
-some run-down animal. A more pitiable sight than he then became, as he
-began to weep, shaken by the convulsive sobs which sometimes possess the
-frame of a man, Adam hoped he should never be obliged to witness.
-
-Well as he understood that the sight of himself had precipitated this
-painful episode, Adam was also now aware that the old man, for the
-moment, saw and comprehended nothing. He therefore lifted him tenderly
-up in his arms and carried him into the house, placing him gently down
-on a lounge which he readily saw had been recently employed for the old
-man’s couch.
-
-Garde had followed, her hands clasped together, the look of a tired
-mother in her face, making it infinitely sweet and patient.
-
-“Garde, dear, forgive me,” said Adam. “I came too soon to see you.”
-
-“Oh Adam!” she said, sadly. “In a few days, a week, dear, he is sure to
-be better.”
-
-“Is there anything I can do?” said Adam, from the depths of his distress
-and sympathy and love.
-
-“Oh, he is coming back to himself. Go, Adam, please,” said Garde, “don’t
-wait, dear, please. Come back to the gate, this evening.”
-
-Adam went without so much as waiting to say good-by, for Garde had
-turned to her grandfather quickly, and anything further he might have
-said he abandoned, when David feebly spoke.
-
-Depressed by the whole affair immeasurably, Adam was still too exalted
-by love’s great flight to dwell for long upon old Donner’s mania. His
-worries for Garde, in her tribulations, however, were strewn like sad
-flowers of thought through his reverie. He longed to help her, yet he
-knew how utterly impossible such a thing would be.
-
-Walking aimlessly, he came before long to the harbor shore. The melted
-emerald and sapphire, which the sea was rolling against the rocks, with
-sparkles of captured sunlight glinting endlessly through and upon the
-lazy billows, gave him the greatest possible sense of delight. He sat
-down on a rock where the green velvet moss had dried like fur, after a
-wetting.
-
-No king on a throne ever detected more evidences of the world’s gladness
-than did the rover, thinking away the hours of that balmy afternoon. He
-forgot all about dinner, when the sun went down, and he had nearly
-forgotten old man Donner, when at length he started to his feet, in the
-twilight, in love with the evening for having come so soon, although
-half an hour before he had been thinking the day would never end.
-
-He was soon at the gate in front of Donner’s house, listening, watching
-the darkened windows, holding his breath as every fragrant zephyr
-trailed its perfumes by, thinking Garde was coming, preceded by the
-redolence attendant on her loveliness.
-
-But he had many such breathless moments of suspense, in vain. Evening
-glided into the arms of night. The hours winged by, on raven wings, and
-still no Garde appeared. Adam paced up and down, restoring, time after
-time, the picture of Garde as he had seen her, during those precious few
-moments before the interruption.
-
-He was not conscious of the flight of time. He was well content to be
-near where his lady was and to wait there, knowing that she knew he was
-waiting, thinking of her, as he knew she was thinking of him. He clasped
-his hands back of his head; then he folded his arms, the better to press
-on his heart; then he stopped and tossed kisses to the silent house,
-after which he again walked back and forth, pausing to listen, and then
-going on as before.
-
-At length, near midnight, he stood looking up at the stars, completely
-absorbed in a dream he was fashioning to suit himself.
-
-There was a faint flutter.
-
-“Adam—oh, are you there?” said a sweet voice, subdued and a bit
-tremulous. “Oh, I am so glad you didn’t go away, discouraged.”
-
-Adam had turned about instantly, a glad sound upon his lips. In one
-stride he reached the gate and caught her two trembling hands where they
-rested on the pickets.
-
-“Dearest!” he murmured to her joyously. “At last!”
-
-“I can only stop a minute, Adam,” said Garde, who was quaking a little,
-lest her grandfather wake and come again into the garden. “He has been
-very restless, and he wouldn’t go to sleep, and he wakes up so easily!
-But I couldn’t let you go away like that. And I have tried to come out
-five times, but he woke up every time, and now I must say good night,
-Adam, and run right back at once.”
-
-“Oh, but I love you so,” said Adam, illogically. “If you must go,
-though, you must. I know I can never tell you how much I love you,
-dearest.”
-
-“Oh, Adam!” she said, expressing more than he did, poor fellow, in all
-his protestations. “Oh, dear! I really must go, Adam. But in about a
-week I am sure he will be much better.”
-
-“Shan’t I see you for a week?” said he.
-
-“It might be better not,” she answered, “if we could wait.”
-
-“I could go down to see my poor old beef-eaters, I suppose,” Adam mused.
-
-In relating his travels, on the road, he had told Garde of the
-beef-eaters, so that now, although she said nothing to betray herself,
-she understood what he meant.
-
-“And then you’ll come back, as soon as you can, in a few days, or a
-week?” she asked. “Oh, dear—it is too bad. But, Adam, I must not remain
-another single minute. I must say good night, dear, and run.”
-
-Adam had remained on his own side of the gate, retaining her hands,
-which he had kissed repeatedly, till they fairly burned with their
-tingling. He now reached over the gate and took her sweet face between
-his two big palms.
-
-“Good night, dearest little love,” he said, and slowly leaning forward,
-he kissed her, once—then he kissed her three times more.
-
-She started slowly away, looking back at him lovingly.
-
-“Oh, Garde!” he whispered.
-
-She stopped and came fluttering back to meet him. He had let himself in
-at the gate with one quick movement. He took her home to his arms and
-held her in breathless joy against his throbbing heart. With love in her
-eyes her face was turned upward to his own.
-
-“My Adam!” she said, with all the fervor of her nature.
-
-“My love! My darling!” he responded.
-
-He kissed her again. It was a warm, sweet kiss that brought their very
-souls to their lips. Then he dropped down on his knee and kissed her
-hands and pressed their fragrant palms against his face.
-
-“My love!” he said. “My own love!”
-
-She nestled in his arms yet once again. She gave him the one more kiss
-that burned on her lips to be taken, and then she fled swiftly to the
-house.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIX.
-
- THE ENEMY IN POWER.
-
-
-ADAM found his faithful beef-eaters on the verge of the grave. The
-miserable old rogues had no better sense than to be pining to death like
-two masterless dogs. They had been ill enough, in all conscience, and
-even somewhat mentally disordered, but there had been no sufficient
-grounds for the pair to believe themselves abandoned by their “Sachem,”
-and there had been absolutely no excuse for them to refuse to eat.
-
-However, the rascals nearly “wagged” themselves to pieces when Rust was
-finally beside them, and the way they laughed was most suggestively like
-the glad whimpering of two dumbly loving animals expressing their joy.
-Adam would have scolded the two for having brought themselves to such a
-condition of weakness and bones, only that he had not the heart to do
-this justice to the case.
-
-There was, however, no such thing as getting the old fellows back on
-their pins in a week, nor yet in two, nor three. They even hesitated,
-after he had come, between running backward toward their long sleep and
-coming along with him to vales of renewed health. They were like
-affectionate creatures divided between two masters. The grim visitor had
-come so near to winning them both, with his beckoning, that they
-appeared to think it their duty to die.
-
-Adam, however, was a persuasive force. He had won them away from
-themselves before; he won them again on this occasion. Captain Kidd, a
-braw Scotsman, who ordinarily dropped his native dialect, having little
-affection for his country, his father having suffered tortures for
-becoming a non-conformist clergyman, felt he must needs relapse into
-something barbaric to express himself on the beef-eaters.
-
-“Of all the twas that ere twad,” said he, “you’re muckle the strangest
-twa.”
-
-By this he meant to convey that of all the couples that ever mated, the
-two old rascals were the oddest pair.
-
-The convalescence being a slow affair, Adam was obliged to give up all
-thought of returning immediately to Boston. Yet so hopeful was he that
-every day would perform some miracle of restoring the strength to the
-muscles and the meat to the bones of his retinue, that it was not until
-he had been away from Garde for more than three weeks that he finally
-wrote to tell her of why he had failed to return. But the letter, for
-some unknown reason, was never delivered.
-
-At length, however, what with the fulness of summer come upon them and
-the hope which Adam had inspired in their breasts, the beef-eaters
-became padded out to the fulness of their old-time grandeur, and once
-more swaggered about and bragged of their prowess.
-
-Adam’s money had, by this time, dwindled down to a sum which was not at
-all difficult to transport from place to place, nor even from pocket to
-pocket. Having no heart to put the retinue on shipboard, to convey them
-to Massachusetts, he sacrificed nearly his last bit of coin to secure
-them passage, by coach and wagon, from Manhattan to Boston. This left
-him either one of two expedients for himself. He could walk, or he could
-make shift to secure a passage by vessel, giving work as payment for the
-favor. He argued that once in Boston he would accept the position
-offered by Goodwife Phipps at the ship-yard, and hither also would he
-take his followers, so that by honest toil they might all be happy and
-continue their time-sealed companionship, and desert the rolling-stone
-business as an occupation.
-
-It was not without misgivings that the beef-eaters accepted this
-arrangement. But being obedient things that would willingly have gone
-into fire, or the sea itself, at Adam’s command or wish, they meekly
-bade him a temporary adieu and saw him depart before them, a ship being
-several days ahead of the coach in point of time for departing.
-
-In the meantime, history had been making fast in Boston. The crafty
-Randolph, whose coup had long been prepared, had returned from New
-Amsterdam, bearing a commission from the King of England declaring the
-charter null and void and delegating upon him power to form a new
-provisional government for the colony of Massachusetts. Great tracts of
-territory, comprising New Hampshire, Maine and other areas, were lopped
-off from the province at one fell blow. Randolph created Joseph Dudley
-provisional governor, Dudley having long been seeking his favor, against
-this final moment of changes. The courts fell into the hands of the
-newly-elected power. The soldiers, constabulary, everything assumed an
-ultra-English tone and arrogance. The people clenched their fists and
-wrought their passions up to a point where rebellions are lighted in a
-night.
-
-Yet Boston was a loyal town, obedient to its liege lord and nearly as
-eager to serve him and to do him homage as it was to preserve its
-liberties and the independence, which gradual development had created
-and long usage had confirmed as inalienable, in the belief of all the
-patriotic citizens. Stoughton and Bradstreet, beholding the
-revolutionary tendency, which would have plunged the colony most
-unwisely into a sea of trouble, submitted to the new order of things,
-which for long they had seen coming, inevitably, out of the malignant
-spirit in which the Stuart dynasty had always desired to govern these
-non-conformist hard-heads.
-
-There were many creatures in Boston swift to join the Tory party, under
-Randolph, for the plums of official recognition. Thus this party rapidly
-assumed considerable dimensions, and therefore power, to add to that of
-which the King himself was the fountain-head.
-
-Boston at that time was a prosperous town of something more than six
-thousand souls. It was substantially built, if crookedly, for the most
-part of wood. Yet there was a fair sprinkling of brick houses along its
-cow-path streets, and a few were of stone, which, in several instances,
-had been brought to this undeveloped land from England. The town was
-distinctly English, both as to customs and thoughts, but the seeds which
-hardihood had sown, were to grow the pillars of Americanism—synonymous
-with a spirit of Democracy sufficient to inspire the world!
-
-Naturally Isaiah Pinchbecker became a master-jackal under the new
-régime. Psalms Higgler, the lesser light of lick-spittling, became, by
-the same token, a lesser carnivora, but no less hungry to be feeding on
-the foe-masters of the recent past. And Pinchbecker, having found Adam
-in the town, was alert to find him again.
-
-Yet not even Pinchbecker, with his knife-edge mind, devoted to evolving
-schemes of vengeance, could have comprehended the tigerish joy with
-which Randolph remembered Adam Rust, from that morning in the Crow and
-Arrow, and with which he now put two and two together, to arrive at
-Adam’s relationship with Garde Merrill.
-
-Randolph was a subtle schemer, never fathomed by the Puritans, against
-whom he displayed such an implacable hatred. He was far too wise ever to
-appear as the point, when a thrust of revenge was to be delivered. He
-never for a moment relaxed his obsequious demeanor, nor his air of
-injured guiltlessness. Like all men of power, he had much material,
-self-offered, from which to choose his henchmen. He had chosen
-Pinchbecker wisely, for a hypocrite, a fawner, and an arrant knave who
-could work endless harm, in an underhanded fashion. But for his more
-aggressive employment he attached to his service a great, burly brute,
-with a face like a mastiff’s, an intelligence like a sloth’s, and a
-courage like that of a badger. This masterpiece of human animalism
-responded to the name of “Gallows,” for once a man had been hanged on
-his back, as in early English-Irish usage, and of this he was
-matchlessly proud.
-
-Adam arrived in the midst of that first elation of Randolph and his
-following, the like of which is frequently the cause of reaction so
-violent as to quite reverse the fates themselves. But although the
-Puritans hated Dudley, almost more than Randolph, for traitorously
-joining the party of destruction, their growlings checked nothing of the
-all-importance which the creatures in power felt and made their
-fellow-beings feel. A spirit of sullen brooding settled on the people.
-
-Unaware that Rust had been away from Boston, since he had seen him that
-day in Donner’s garden with Mistress Merrill, Pinchbecker had been
-seeking for him diligently, ever since Randolph’s return. But believing
-that his quarry would be found eventually in the vicinity of the Crow
-and Arrow, his field of investigations was narrow.
-
-It had naturally happened, however, that Adam had quite forgotten to
-tell the beef-eaters of his change of abode in Boston. They would
-therefore proceed to the old tavern immediately upon their arrival. He
-thought of this before he landed. Having come ashore at twilight, he
-made it his duty to stroll to the Crow and Arrow, for the purpose of
-leaving a message for Pike and Halberd, when at last they should come to
-the town.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXX.
-
- A FIGHT AT THE TAVERN.
-
-
-IT was a quiet time of the day, in a quiet part of the city. Adam
-discerned one or two individuals only and was not concerned with noting
-that he was suddenly preceded by a noiseless person, who hastened ahead
-of him to the tavern. The rover was much more occupied in observing the
-beauties of a horse that stood hitched to a post across the way from the
-public house.
-
-The animal, a fine bay, imported from England, was the property of one
-of Randolph’s followers, a drinking young dandy with questionable
-ambitions and many extravagant tastes. Charmed by the horse’s
-impatience, as evinced by his pawing at the ground, Adam was tempted to
-get astride his back for a gallop.
-
-However, after standing for a moment on the sidewalk, while his gaze
-caressed the champing animal, he turned and passed on into the tavern.
-Desiring to conclude his business as speedily as possible, he was
-somewhat annoyed to find the way to the bar, in front of the landlord,
-completely blocked by a great hulk of a creature, with a sword loosely
-girt about his loins, and two or three others, of whom the rover took
-less notice.
-
-“By your leave,” he said, politely, not yet suspicious of the odd
-silence which had fallen on the company at his entrance, “I would like
-to get to the——”
-
-“What!” roared the big lout, whom he had slightly touched upon the arm.
-“Who the devil are you? Keep your hands off of me, you fool!”
-
-The person on whom Adam looked was Gallows, whose face, florid almost to
-being purple, was so savagely contorted as to comprise an insult in
-itself.
-
-“My cross-eyed friend,” retorted Adam, whose temper had risen without
-delay, “have done looking at yourself, if you would see no fool. If you
-will tell me which hand I put on you, I’ll cut it off, else I may live
-to see it rot!”
-
-The company had turned about at once. Pinchbecker was there, with his
-satellite, Psalms Higgler, the little white-eyed scamp that Adam had
-once dropped from the near-by window. The foppish young Englishman, who
-owned the horse outside, was likewise in the party. They all saw the
-burly Gallows turn to them hopelessly, befuddled by Adam’s answer.
-
-“You be a fool!” he roared again, his eyes bulging out of their sockets
-in his wrath, “and I be the fool-killer!”
-
-The company guffawed at this, the monster’s solitary sally of wit.
-
-“You are a liar by the fact that you live,” said Rust. “Bah, you disgust
-me with the thought of having the duties, which you have so patently and
-outrageously neglected, thrust upon me. Begone. There’s no fire to roast
-a barbecue, if I should be minded to spit you!”
-
-The creature looked again at his fellows, who had obviously egged him
-on.
-
-“He insults you right prettily, good Gallows,” said the dandy, who was
-himself a rascal banished from his own country. “But he dare not fight
-you, we can see it plainly.”
-
-“With you thrown in, I dare say there might be a moment’s sport in a
-most unsavory blood-letting,” said Rust, whose hand went to his
-sword-hilt calmly. “I should want some fresh air if I stuck either one
-of you carrion-fed buzzards.”
-
-Gallows knew by this that it was time to draw his blade. “You be a fool
-and I be the fool-killer,” he roared as before, this being his best hold
-on language to suit the occasion. Only now he came for Adam like a
-butcher.
-
-“Outside—go outside, gentlemen!” cried the landlord excitedly.
-
-“Go outside!” said the voice of some one who was not visible. It was
-Randolph, concealed in the adjoining room and watching the proceedings
-through a narrow crack, where he had opened the door.
-
-“Go on out, and I’ll fight you!” bellowed Gallows.
-
-“After you,” said Rust, whose blade was out and being swiftly passed
-under his exacting eye. “Go out first. You will need one more breath
-than I.”
-
-The brute obeyed, as if he had to do so and knew it, receiving Adam’s
-order like the clod he was.
-
-The other creatures made such a scrambling to see the show, and
-otherwise evinced such an abnormal interest in the coming fight, that
-Adam had no trouble in divining that the whole affair had been
-prearranged, and that if he did not get killed, he would be arrested,
-should he slay his opponent. He concluded he was something of a match
-for the whole outfit.
-
-“Have at you, mountain of foul meat,” he said, as he tossed down his
-hat. “What a mess you will make, done in slices!”
-
-The young dandy laughed, despite himself, from his place by the door.
-
-Gallows needed no further exasperations. He came marching up to Rust and
-made a hack at him, mighty enough and vicious enough to break down the
-stoutest guard and cleave through a man’s whole body as well.
-
-Rust had expected no less than such a stroke. He spared his steel the
-task of parrying the Gallows’ slash. Nimbly leaping aside, he made a
-motion that had something debonair in its execution, and cut a ghastly
-big flap, like a steak, from the monster’s cheek.
-
-The fellow let out an awful bellow and ran at his opponent, striking at
-him like a mad Hercules.
-
-“Spare yourself, fool-killer,” said Adam. He dared to bow, as he dodged
-a mighty onslaught, in which Gallows used his sword like a hatchet, and
-then he flicked the giant’s ear away, bodily, taking something also of
-his jowl, for good measure.
-
-The great hulk stamped about there like an ox, the blood hastening down
-from his face and being flung in spatters about him. Adam next cut him
-deeply in the muscle of his great left arm.
-
-“I warm to my work,” he said, as he darted actively away and back.
-“Gentlemen, is your choice for a wing or a leg of the ill-smelling
-bird?”
-
-The dandy, fresh from England, guffawed and cried “Bravo!” He had been
-born a gentleman, in spite of himself.
-
-The fight was a travesty on equality. The monster was absolutely
-helpless. He was simply a vast machine for butchery, but he must needs
-first catch his victim before he could perform his offices. He was a
-terrible sight, with his great sword raised on high, or ripping downward
-through the air, as he ran, half blinded by his own gore, to catch the
-rover, who played with him, slicing him handily, determined not to kill
-the beast and so to incur a penalty for murder.
-
-The creatures inside the tavern, appalled by the exhibition they had
-brought about, saw that their monster was soon to be a staggering tower
-of blood and wounds.
-
-“Don’t let him get away! Kill him! Kill him!” said the voice of
-Randolph, from behind the others.
-
-Adam heard him. He saw Pinchbecker shrink back at once. Psalms Higgler,
-however, glad of an excuse and ready to take advantage of a man already
-sufficiently beset, came scrambling out. The foppish gentleman was too
-much of a sport to take a hand against such a single swordsman as he
-found in Rust.
-
-Aware that he was to have no chance, and convinced abruptly that these
-wretches had plotted to kill him, Adam deftly avoided Gallows, as the
-dreadful brute came again upon him, and slashing the fellow’s leg behind
-the knee, ham-strung him instantly.
-
-Roaring like a wounded bull, the creature dropped down on his side, and
-then got upon his hands and knees and commenced to crawl, wiping out his
-eyes with his reddened hands.
-
-Unable to restrain his rage, and fearing his intended victim would yet
-avoid him, Higgler being already at bay and disarmed, Randolph came
-abruptly out from the tavern himself, pistol in hand, to perform the
-task which otherwise was doomed to failure.
-
-“Call the guard!” he cried. “Call the guard!”
-
-Adam had been waiting for some such treachery. He cut at the pistol the
-second it rose, knocking it endways and slicing Randolph’s arm,
-superficially, from near the wrist to the elbow. He waited then for
-nothing more.
-
-Across the road, before any one guessed his intention, he was up on the
-back of the horse, before the yelled protest of the English gentleman
-came to his ears.
-
-“Gentlemen all,” he called to the group, “good evening.”
-
-Clapping his heels to the ribs of the restive animal, he rode madly
-away, just as Isaiah Pinchbecker, with half a dozen constables came
-running frantically upon the scene.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXI.
-
- A REFUGEE.
-
-
-IRRESPONSIBLY joyous, thus to be in a saddle, on a spirited horse, Rust
-was soon dashing across the common and turning about like a centaur, for
-ease and grace, glanced back to see who might be joining in the race.
-His naked sword was still in his hand. It was red from point to hilt. He
-wiped it on the horse, thereby causing the animal to plunge and to run
-in a frenzy of nervousness.
-
-Adam chortled. The affair from beginning to end, from his present
-standpoint, appealed to his sense of humor. The consequences of his
-adventure would be presented to his mind soon enough. He merely knew now
-that he had won out of a tight corner, as a gentleman should, that a
-glorious animal was bounding beneath him and, that sweet night air came
-rushing upon him as if it opened its arms to receive him.
-
-Aware that he would soon be pursued, and mentally acknowledging that the
-horse was not his own, he rode to a farm-house about a mile or so out
-from the town, and there dismounted. Reluctantly he said farewell to the
-charger, bidding the farmer have the animal returned to Boston in the
-morning, with his thanks and compliments. For the service he presented
-the wondering man with a piece of silver, the last he had of the small
-amount left him after paying the fares of the beef-eaters up to
-Massachusetts.
-
-Coolly inviting himself to have a bite of the farmer’s scanty supper, he
-bade the man good night, about five minutes before the mounted
-constables came riding hotly to the place. He even heard them, when they
-left the farm and began to scour the woods to jump him up. At this he
-smiled with rare good humor, confident of the powers of superior
-wood-craft to baffle anybody or anything in all Massachusetts, save
-alone an Indian.
-
-Understanding all the delighted chucklings of the forest as he did, he
-felt at once secure among the trees, as one of the family. Moreover he
-loved to be wandering in the woods at night. He continued to walk, on
-and on, beginning to wonder at last what he really intended to do. Then,
-at the thought of Garde, who might be expecting to see him, and whom he
-very much desired again to see, he waxed somewhat impatient with this
-enforced flight from the town where she was.
-
-The more he thought upon it, then, the more impossible it seemed for him
-to return. Against Randolph, enthroned in power, and against all his
-wretched disciples, he could not expect to breathe a word which would
-avail to get him justice. It would be sheer madness to make the attempt.
-The creatures would charge him with all the crimes on the calendar, and,
-swearing all to one statement, would convict him of anything they chose.
-The whole affair had been planned to beat him, or worse, and to a
-galling extent it had quite succeeded. He was balked, completely and
-absolutely, in whatsoever direction his meditations turned. To try to
-see Garde would be fairly suicidal. Not to see her, especially after his
-promises, would be, to a man so much in love as he, a living death.
-
-And again, the beef-eaters. What was to become of his faithful retinue?
-They would arrive there, only to find that he had again deserted them,
-leaving them wholly at the mercy of Randolph and his jackals. These
-demons would not be slow at recognizing who and what Pike and Halberd
-were, from episodes of the past. The two would go straight into the
-lion’s mouth, at the Crow and Arrow.
-
-He thought at first of going to Plymouth. He could write to Garde from
-there, he reflected, and also to Halberd and Pike. But he soon concluded
-that this would be to walk merely into the other end of the enemy’s
-trap, for no good or comforting purpose. New York presented itself as a
-jurisdiction where Randolph’s arm would have no power to do him harm.
-But New York was a long way off. If he went there, not only would he
-miss seeing Garde, but he could not warn his retinue in time to keep
-them out of Randolph’s clutches.
-
-The business was maddening. He began to think, as a consequence of
-dwelling on the hopelessness of his own situation, that Randolph would
-be aiming next at Garde herself, in wreaking his dastardly vengeance for
-his past defeats. This was intolerable. He halted, there in the dark
-woods, swaying between the good sense of hiding and the nonsense of
-going straight back to the town, to carry Garde away from the harpies,
-bodily.
-
-A picture of old David Donner, stricken, helpless, a child, arose in his
-mind, to confront him and to mock his Quixotic scheme. He could not
-carry both Garde and her grandfather away to New York, nor even to the
-woods. He was penniless. This was not the only obstacle, even supposing
-Donner would consent so to flee, which was not at all likely.
-
-It was also certain that Garde would not permit him to carry her off and
-leave the old man behind. But at least, he finally thought, he could go
-back to the town and be near, to protect her, if occasion should require
-a sword and a ready wit. Could he but manage to do this—to go there
-secretly and remain there unknown—he could gather his beef-eaters about
-him and together they could and would combat an army!
-
-But how to go back and be undetected, that was the question. In the
-first place he despised the idea of doing anything that did not smack of
-absolute boldness and fearlessness. Yet Boston was a seething whirlpool
-of Randolph’s power, at this time. Simply to be caught like a rat and
-killed like a pest would add nothing of glory to his name, nor could it
-materially add to Garde’s happiness and safety.
-
-Driven into a corner of his brain, as it were, by all these moves and
-counter-moves on the chess-board of the situation, he presently
-conceived a plan which made him hug himself in sheer delight.
-
-He would simply disguise himself as an Indian and go to town to make a
-treaty with Randolph, the Big-man-afraid-to-be-chief.
-
-This so tickled his fancy that, had an Indian settlement been near at
-hand, he would have been inside his buckskins and war-paint and back to
-Boston ahead of the constables themselves. In such a guise, he told
-himself, he could manage to see his sweetheart, he could get his
-beef-eaters clear of danger, baffle his foes, and arrange to carry both
-Garde and her grandfather away to safety.
-
-But the first consideration was, where should he find an Indian? He was
-aware that the Red men had been pushed backward and westward miles from
-the towns of the whites. It was years since he had roamed through the
-forests and mountains——years since he had known where his old-time, red
-brothers built their lodges. There could be but one means of finding a
-camp, namely: to walk onward, to penetrate fairly to the edge of the
-wilderness beyond.
-
-Nothing daunted by the thought of distance, he struck out for the west.
-Like the Indians themselves, he could smell the points of the sunrise
-and sunset, unerringly. With boyish joy in his thoughts, and in the
-dreams he fashioned of the hair-breadth events that would happen when he
-arrived in the town in his toggery, he plodded along all night, happy
-once more and contented.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXII.
-
- A FOSTER PARENT.
-
-
-ADAM covered many a mile before the morning. Mindless of his hunger,
-spurred by the thought that he must soon be back in Boston, he felt that
-the further he went the more he must hasten. Thus he marched straight on
-till noon.
-
-He rested briefly at this time, filled his craving stomach with water,
-and again made a start. In fifteen minutes he came upon a clearing, at
-the edge of a little valley where up-jutting rocks were as plentiful as
-houses in a city. Pausing for a moment, to ascertain the nature of the
-place, and to prepare himself against possible surprise, he presently
-approached a small log hut, of more than usually rude construction.
-
-There appeared to be no signs whatsoever of life about the place. No
-smoke ascended from the chimney; there was no animal in sight, not even
-so much as a dog.
-
-Adam glanced hurriedly about the acre or so of land, beholding evidences
-of recent work. A tree had been felled, not far away, within the week.
-In a neat little patch of tilled soil, green corn stood two feet high
-and growing promisingly.
-
-Going to the cabin-door he knocked first and gave it a push afterward,
-for it was not latched, although it was nearly closed. There being no
-response from the inside, he entered. The light entered with him. It
-revealed a strange and dreadful scene.
-
-On the floor lay a man, dressed, half raised on his elbow, looking up at
-the visitor with staring eyes, while he moved his lips without making a
-sound. A few feet away sat a little brown baby-boy, clothed only in a
-tiny shirt. He looked up at big Adam wistfully. Strewn about were a few
-utensils for cooking, a bag which had once contained flour, the dust of
-which was in patches everywhere, and an empty water-bucket and dipper,
-with all the bedding and blankets from a rude wooden bunk, built against
-the wall.
-
-In amazement Adam stood looking at the man. In the haggard face, with
-its unkempt beard and glassy eyes he fancied he saw something familiar.
-Memory knocked to enter his brain. Then, with a suddenness that gave him
-a shock, he recognized a man he had known in England—an elder brother of
-Henry Wainsworth, supposed to have died years before—drowned while
-attempting to escape from an unjust sentence of imprisonment for
-treason.
-
-“Wainsworth!” he said, “good faith! what is the meaning of this?”
-
-The man sank back on the floor, a ghost of a smile passing across his
-face. He moved his lips again, but Adam heard not a word.
-
-Bending quickly down, he became aware that the man was begging for
-water. He caught up the bucket and hastened forth, presently finding the
-spring, to which a little path had been worn in the grass.
-
-Back at once, he placed the dipper to the dried-out lips and saw this
-fellow-being drink with an evidence of joy such as can only come to the
-dying. Wainsworth shivered a little, as the dipper left his teeth, and
-jerked his hand toward the silent child, sitting so near, on the floor.
-Adam comprehended. He gave more of the water to the small, brown baby.
-It patted the dipper with its tiny hands and looked up at him dumbly.
-
-“What in the world has happened here?” said Rust.
-
-Making a mighty effort, the man on the floor partially raised his head
-and arms. He looked at Adam with a hungering light in his eyes.
-“I’m—done—for,” he said, thickly and feebly.
-
-Adam hustled together the blankets on the floor and made a pillow, which
-he placed for Wainsworth to lie on. “Shall I put you into the bed?” he
-asked.
-
-The man shook his head. “I’m crushed,” he said, winking from his eyes
-the already gathering film that tells of the coming end.
-“Tree—fell—killed the—wife. I—crawled—here.”
-
-Adam looked at him helplessly. He knew the man was dying. He felt what
-agonies the man must have suffered. “Man!” he said, “can’t I get you
-something to eat?”
-
-Wainsworth waved his hand toward the wreckage strewed on the floor.
-“Nothing—here,” he said. Then he made a great effort, the obvious rally
-of his strength. “Save the—boy,” he implored. “Give him a—chance....
-Don’t—tell—about me. I married—his mother—Narragansett—God bless—her....
-Give—him—a—chance.... Thanks.”
-
-As he mentioned the child’s mother, his eyes gave up two tears—crystals,
-which might have represented his soul, for it had quietly escaped from
-his broken body.
-
-Adam, kneeling above him, looked for a moment at his still face, on
-which the shadow of a smile rested. Then he looked at the little, brown
-youngster, half Narragansett Indian, gazing up in his countenance with a
-timid, questioning look, winking his big black eyes slowly, and quite as
-deliberately moving his tiny toes.
-
-It was not a situation to be thought out nor coped with easily. To have
-found any human being in this terrible plight would have been enough,
-but to have found Henry Wainsworth’s brother thus, and to have him tell
-such a brief, shocking story, and make of his visitor all the things
-which Adam would have to become at once, was enough to make him stand
-there wondering and wondering upon it all.
-
-“You poor little rascal,” he said to the child, at last.
-
-He selected a shovel and a pick, from some tools which he noted, in a
-corner, and laying aside his sword, he went to work, on the preface to
-his duties, out by the patch of corn where he found the pretty, young
-Indian mother, clasped and held down to earth in an all too ardent
-embrace, by an arm of the fallen tree.
-
-When he had padded up the mound over the two closed human volumes, he
-was faint with hunger. He carried the tools again to the house, and
-stood as before, looking at the baby-boy, who still sat where he had
-left him, on the floor.
-
-“Well, I suppose you are hungry, you little brown man,” he said. “I must
-see what there is to be had.”
-
-There was little opportunity for extended explorations. The one room had
-contained the all of Wainsworth and his Narragansett partner. Rust soon
-found himself wondering what the two had lived upon. What flour and meal
-there had been, the man, despite his two crushed legs, had pulled down,
-from a box-like cupboard, on the wall, together with a bit of dried
-meat. Of the latter only a dry fragment remained, still tied to a
-string, while of the meal and flour, only the empty bags gave evidence
-that they once had existed.
-
-There was no way possible for Adam to know that in the forest, not far
-away, the lone woodsman had set his traps, for squirrels and rabbits,
-nor that fifteen minutes’ walk from the door a trout stream had
-furnished its quota to the daily fare. He only knew that there was
-nothing edible to be found here now. There was salt, a bit of grease, on
-a clean white chip of pine, and a half gourd, filled with broken-up
-leaves, which had doubtless been steeped for some manner of tea or
-drink.
-
-“Partner,” he said, to the child, “someone has been enforcing sumptuary
-laws upon us. I hesitate in deciding whether we shall take our water
-salted or fresh.”
-
-With his hand on the hilt of his sword he regarded the youngster
-earnestly. Nothing prettier than the little naked fellow could have been
-imagined, howbeit he was not so plump as a child of his age should be,
-for the lack of nourishment had already told upon him markedly. Adam
-felt convinced, from various indications, that the tree which had done
-its deadly work had fallen about a week before, and that Wainsworth had
-not been able to do anything more than to crawl to the cabin, to die,
-neither for himself or the child.
-
-For a time the rover wondered what he must do. His own plans had nearly
-disappeared from his mind. He reflected that a child so brown as this,
-so obviously half a little Narragansett, would be ill received by the
-whites. The Indians would be far more likely to cherish the small man,
-according to his worth. He therefore believed the best thing he could do
-would be to push onward, in the hope of finding an Indian settlement
-soon. There were several reasons, still remaining unaltered, why it
-would be wiser not to take the child to Boston.
-
-“Well, our faces are dirty, partner,” he said, at the end of a long
-cogitation, in which the baby had never ceased to look up in his
-countenance and wink his big eyes, wistfully. “Let’s go out and have a
-bath.”
-
-He took the tiny chap up in his arms and carried him forth to the
-spring. Here, in the warm sunlight, he got down on his knees in the
-grass, bathed his protégé, over and over again, for the pleasure it
-seemed to give the child and the joy it was to himself, to feel the
-little wet, naked fellow in his hands.
-
-The sun performed the offices of a towel. Without putting his tiny shirt
-back upon him, Adam rolled the small bronze bit of humanity about his
-back, patting his velvety arms and thighs and laughing like the grown-up
-boy he was, till the little chap gurgled and crowed in tremendous
-delight. But it having been only the freshness of the water, air and
-sunlight which had somewhat invigorated the baby, he presently appeared
-to grow a little dull and weary. Adam became aware that it was time to
-be moving. He washed out the child’s wee shirt and hung it through his
-belt to dry as they went. Then taking a light blanket from the cabin,
-for the child’s use at night, he left the cabin behind and proceeded
-onward as before.
-
-He walked till late in the afternoon without discovering so much as a
-sign of the Indian settlement he was seeking. By this time his own pangs
-of hunger had become excruciating. It was still too early in the summer
-for berries or nuts to be ripe, and the half green things which he found
-where the sun shone the warmest were in no manner fit to be offered to
-the child, as food.
-
-Arriving at another small valley, as the sun was dipping into the
-western tree-tops, the rover sat down for a rest, and to plan something
-better than this random wandering toward the sunset. He had chuckled
-encouragement to the child from time to time, laughing in the little
-fellow’s face, but hardly had he caught at the subtle signs on the small
-face, at which a mother-parent would have stared wild-eyed in agony.
-
-Now, however, as he sat the tiny man on the grass before him, he saw in
-the baby’s eyes such a look as pierced him to the quick. For a moment
-the infinite wistfulness, the dumb questioning, the uncomplaining
-silence of it, made him think, or hope, the child was only sad. He got
-down on all fours at once.
-
-“Partner,” said he, jovially, “you are disappointed in me. I make poor
-shift as a mother. Do you want to be cuddled, or would you rather be
-tickled?”
-
-He laid the little chap gently on his back and tried to repeat the
-frolic of the earlier hours. He rolled the small bronze body in the
-grass, as before, and petted him fondly. But the baby merely winked his
-eyes. He seemed about to cry, but he made no sound. Adam’s fingers
-ceased their play, for the joy departed from them swiftly.
-
-“Maybe you’re tired and sleepy,” he crooned. “Shall I put on your shirt
-and sing you a little Indian lullaby? Yes? That’s what he wants, little
-tired scamp.”
-
-He adjusted the abbreviated shirt, awkwardly, but tenderly, after which
-he held his partner in his arms and hummed and sang the words of a
-Wampanoag song, which he had heard in his boyhood, times without number.
-The song started with addresses to some of the elements, thus:
-
- “Little Brook, it is night,
- Be quiet, and let my baby sleep.
-
- “Little wind, it is night,
- Go away, and let my baby sleep.
-
- “Little storm, it is night,
- Be still, and let my baby sleep.
-
- “Little wolf, it is night,
- Howl not, and let my baby sleep.”
-
-and after many verses monotonously soothing, came an incantation:
-
- “Great Spirit, I place my babe
- Upon the soft fur of thy breast,
- Knowing Thou wilt protect,
- As I cannot protect;
- And therefore, oh Great Spirit,
- Guard my child in slumber.”
-
-Adam sang this song like a pleading. But his little partner could not
-sleep, or feared to sleep. Then the rover looked at the tiny face and
-realized that the child would soon be dying of starvation. At this he
-started to his feet, abruptly.
-
-He had undergone the pains of hunger often, himself; he was not
-impatient now with the pangs in his stomach, nor the weakness in his
-muscles. But he could not bear the thought of the child so perishing,
-here in the wilderness.
-
-He saw poor Wainsworth again, and heard him beg that the child be given
-a chance. He thought of the man’s shattered life, his escape from
-persecution, his isolation, in which he had preferred the society of his
-Indian wife and child to association with his kind. Then he blamed
-himself for coming further into this deserted region, when he knew that
-by going back, at least he could find something for the child to
-eat—something that would save its life!
-
-But he could not forget that he himself was a refugee. Wrongly or
-rightly, Randolph was still on his track. Nothing in his own case had
-been altered, but the case was no longer one concerning himself alone.
-He took the child on his arm, where he had carried him already many
-miles, and faced about.
-
-“Partner, let them take me,” he said. “I wish them joy of it.”
-
-He started back for Boston, for in the child’s present extremity, the
-nearest place where he could be sure of finding food was the only one
-worthy a thought.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXIII.
-
- REPUDIATED SILVER.
-
-
-SOMETIME, along toward the middle of the night, Adam tripped, on a root
-which lay in his path, and in catching himself so that his small partner
-should not be injured, he sprained his foot. He proceeded onward without
-sparing the member, however, for he had begun to feel a fever of
-impatience.
-
-His foot swelled. It finally pained him excessively, so that he limped.
-He wore away the night, but when the morning came, he was obliged to
-snatch an hour of sleep, so great was the sense of exhaustion come upon
-him.
-
-His face had become pale. With his hair unkempt, his eyes expressive of
-the fever in his veins and his mouth somewhat drawn, he was not a little
-haggard, as he resumed his lame, onward march. The child in his arms was
-no burden to his enduring strength, but as a load on his heart the
-little chap was heavy indeed. Sleeping, the miniature man appeared to be
-sinking in a final rest, so wan had his tiny face become. Waking, he
-gazed at Adam with such a dumb inquiry ever present in his great,
-wistful eyes, that Rust began to wish he would complain—would cry, would
-make some little sound to break his baby silence.
-
-They were obliged to rest frequently, throughout the day. Try as he
-might, Adam could not cover the ground rapidly. Whenever he resumed
-walking, after sitting for a moment on a log, or a rock, he found his
-foot had become so bad that, in the late afternoon, he gave up halting
-thus altogether.
-
-The twilight came upon him, then the night-fall. At last, with a
-smothered cry of delight on his lips, he saw the gleam of a light. He
-had come to the farm-house where he had stopped to return the English
-dandy’s horse and to eat his last supper. Thinking thereby to disguise
-himself, even if only slightly, he halted, threw off his leather jerkin,
-sword and coat, turned the latter inside out and concealed his weapon
-and outside garment in the brush. Thus altered in appearance, he dragged
-his aching foot across the space between the woods and the house, where
-he knocked upon the door and entered.
-
-“Who’s there?” cried the farmer, in a fright which recent events had
-instilled in his being. He was a shaking old bachelor, suspected by many
-who knew him of being a miser with a great horde of gold on his
-premises.
-
-Adam was confronted by the man, as soon as he stepped across the
-threshold.
-
-“Food, man,” he said, hoarsely. “Food, or this child will die!”
-
-The man recognized him instantly. He fairly quaked with dread.
-
-“Go out! Go out!” he cried. “I’ve no food here—I’ve nothing here!”
-
-“Peace!” commanded Adam. “Bring me forth something to eat for the child,
-you knave, or I shall find it for myself.”
-
-He looked terrible enough to execute a much more dreadful threat. The
-farmer retreated before him, cringing and whining.
-
-“I have nothing, or you should have it,” he said, with a whimper. “My
-neighbors—ten minutes’ walk up the clearing—go to them. They have
-plenty, and I have nothing.”
-
-Adam remembered the scantiness of the fare he had tasted here before.
-Nevertheless it had been food, and anything now might save his little
-partner’s life.
-
-“Then you go, friend,” he ordered. “Make haste and bring me what you
-can, from your neighbors’!”
-
-The man seemed about to refuse. He changed his mind abruptly.
-
-“I’ll go. I’ll go!” he hastened to say, and without his hat, or waiting
-for anything further, he hobbled out at the door and was gone.
-
-Rust lost no time in ransacking the cupboard. To his unspeakable
-disappointment he found that the man had not spoken wide of the truth.
-There was as little here, in the way of a few gnawed crusts of bread and
-a rind of cheese, as might well stand between nothing and something to
-eat and to feed to a starving child. His heart sank within him. But then
-he thought that inasmuch as the farmer had told the truth about his
-larder, he would be the more likely to have spoken correctly about the
-neighbors. He would soon be back with something fit for the wee
-Narragansett.
-
-Adam looked at the baby-boy compassionately. The little fellow was
-awake, looking up, winking slowly, asking his dumb, wistful question
-with his eyes.
-
-Adam patted him softly while he waited. “I’m a wretched mother, little
-partner,” he said. “But we’ll soon have you banqueting, now. Can’t you
-speak up a little bit? Don’t you want to give old Adam just one little
-smile? No? Well, never mind. Little man is tired.”
-
-He had placed his charge in a chair. Soon growing impatient, he limped
-about the room, crunching a crust of bread in his teeth, abstractedly.
-Unable to endure the suspense, he went again to the cupboard and threw
-everything down, in his search for something fit for the child. There
-was nothing more than he had seen before. He went to the water pail and
-drank, for his mouth had found the crust a poor substitute for food.
-
-Yet no sooner had he sipped the water than a sense of the deliciousness
-of the dry bread pervaded his being. He ran to gather up the other
-crusts at once and limped to the child in a frenzy of gladness.
-
-“Here, little man,” he said, kneeling down on the floor. “If you can
-only chew that up and then take a sip of water, you will think the
-King’s kitchen has opened.”
-
-He gently thrust a small piece of the rock-hard bread between the little
-chap’s lips, where, to his intense disappointment, it remained.
-
-“Can’t you chew it?” he said. “Just try, for old Adam.”
-
-The child was too weak to do anything but wink. Its appealing gaze was
-more than Adam could stand.
-
-“What can Adam do for the little man?” he said.
-
-He limped painfully back and forth again. The farmer should have
-returned before this. What could be keeping the wretch? The rover saw
-that the little life was fluttering, uncertainly, not yet sure of its
-wings on which to fly away.
-
-“I have it!” he cried, in sudden exultation. “Bread and water!”
-
-He hobbled across the room, snatched up a cup, crunched a fistful of
-crusts in his hand, put them in his cup and filled it half to the top
-with water. Then he stirred the hard pieces with his finger and crushed
-them smaller and padded them up against the side of the vessel, working
-the mass softer in feverish haste. Impatient to get results, he put the
-cup to the baby’s lips.
-
-“Drink,” he coaxed. “Take a little, like a good partner. Can’t you take
-a little weeny bit?”
-
-Groaning, thus to find the small Narragansett so weak, he hobbled about
-to find a spoon, with which he came hastily limping back. To his joy
-then, he saw a little of the slightly nutritious water disappear between
-the silent lips. He crooned with delight, hitched himself closer and
-plied his spoon clumsily, but with all the patience of a woman.
-
-The child began to take the nourishment with interest.
-
-Adam was happy in the midst of this new-found expedient, when the door
-behind him was suddenly thrown open, violently, and in burst half a
-dozen constables, armed to the teeth and panting wildly.
-
-“Give up! I arrest you in the name of the King!” cried the foremost of
-the men. He presented a pistol at the head of the kneeling man. “Take
-him!” he screamed to his following, and before Rust could so much as
-rise, on his wounded foot, he was suddenly struggling in a mass of men
-who had fallen upon him.
-
-He got to his feet. He knocked three of the constables endways. But his
-strength was gone quickly, so long had he been famished, and so far had
-he taxed his endurance. They overpowered him, making a noise of mad
-confusion. They threw him toward a chair. He made one cry of anguish and
-protest. Three of the scrambling clods fell together upon the little
-partner, and when they arose, his little heart had ceased to beat.
-
-The farmer-miser now came worming his way through the door. He was
-laughing like a wolf.
-
-“You’ve got him!” he cried. “I told you! I told you! Heh, heh, heh. I’m
-not in league with thieves and murderers. Here, here, take your silver!
-I’ll none of your silver!”
-
-He took from his pocket the coin which the rover had paid him to take
-back the Englishman’s horse and threw it hysterically down at Adam’s
-feet.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXIV.
-
- LODGINGS FOR THE RETINUE.
-
-
-THE beef-eaters arrived in the afternoon of the same day that Adam was
-arrested. Alighting from the coach, they did exactly what he had feared
-they would. They wended their way promptly to the Crow and Arrow.
-
-Randolph and his henchmen, having missed their intended prey, at their
-first attempt, were engaged elsewhere in the town, attempting to make
-good their failure. Believing Rust would return and attempt to see
-Mistress Merrill, Randolph kept one or two of his creatures in the
-vicinity of David Donner’s house day and night. But Gallows, being for
-the time totally disabled, had been domiciled at the tavern, in a small
-apartment off the tap-room, where he spent many hours of the day roaring
-out his exceeding displeasure at the turn of events and the consequences
-thereof, into which his friends had brought him.
-
-Pike and Halberd appeared at the inn when the place was all but
-deserted. Naturally the tavern had become popular with the Royalists,
-but it had been gradually falling into disfavor with sailors and dock
-hands for several years.
-
-Striding haughtily into the place, the beef-eaters accosted the landlord
-familiarly.
-
-“My good fellow,” said little Pike, “be kind enough to let the Sachem
-know that we have arrived and wait upon his pleasure.”
-
-“And assure him of the excellence of our health,” said Halberd.
-
-“I don’t know what you mean,” said the landlord, eying the pair
-suspiciously and cudgeling his brains to remember where and when he had
-seen them before. “I have no Mr. Sachem in the house.”
-
-“He has no Mr. Sachem in the house,” said the beef-eaters, in chorus,
-turning to one another with raised eyebrows and indulgent smiles.
-
-“This surpasses belief,” said Halberd.
-
-“My good friend, you mistook what we said,” added Pike. “We are
-inquiring for The Sachem—not Mr. Sachem, but The Sachem.”
-
-“I don’t know the Sachem,” said the landlord, frowning upon the guests.
-“What do you want?”
-
-“He don’t know the Sachem!” said the comrades, again in chorus. They
-looked perfectly incredulous.
-
-“Then I pity you for your loss,” Pike remarked.
-
-“But if he is not at this house, where is he?” asked Halberd.
-
-“Tell us where to find him and we will burden you with wealth,” Pike
-added, grandly.
-
-The landlord began to be certain they were crazy. “How should I know who
-it is you seek?” he asked.
-
-“Water! fetch me water!” roared Gallows, from the adjoining room.
-
-“What disturbance is this?” Halberd wanted to know. He strode to the
-door and looked in at the mountain of meat, propped up in bed, poulticed
-and patched past all semblance to himself. “Friend,” Halberd said to
-him, boldly, “your voice needs bleeding.”
-
-“Ha!” bellowed Gallows, “you be a fool and I be the fool-killer! Let me
-get——Howtch!” He made this latter exclamation on attempting to rise from
-his lair.
-
-Halberd and Pike both fell to the rear a step, at the awful voice of the
-brute, but no sooner did they see him sink helplessly down on the couch
-than they laughed in eloquent scorn.
-
-“I should enjoy nothing better than to slay something large, before
-dinner,” little Pike remarked.
-
-“Tut. This is my recreation,” said Halberd. “Come forth, friend, till I
-warm some cold steel in your belly.”
-
-“Leave be!” commanded the landlord, coming forward to shut the door
-between the rooms, and flapping his apron at the belligerent
-beef-eaters. “Let me know your wants, if you have them, and if not, be
-off about your business.”
-
-“Sensibly spoken,” said Halberd. “All we desire of you is that you let
-the Sachem know we are come.”
-
-“But I said I didn’t know this Sachem!” cried the exasperated boniface.
-
-“True, true,” said Pike. “But it seems too monstrous to be so.”
-
-“But,” put in Halberd, “you must remember that wealthy young nobleman,
-who paved our way with gold, when we were with you a number of years
-ago. Surely you cannot yet have spent what we scattered in your house?”
-
-“And you will certainly remember the drubbing we gave those varlets,
-with the flat of our swords, here in this very room—some dozen of the
-fellows there were in all,” added the other of the pair. “They dared to
-insinuate that we were beggars—aye, beggars, forsooth!”
-
-The landlord remembered them now, clearly enough. He restrained himself
-from calling them vile names, by making an effort truly heroic.
-
-“Oh, to be sure, I do recall it now,” he said, cunningly. “I believe
-your Sachem did even call here, to ask if you had come. Yes, yes. I
-think he said he meant to return here this afternoon again. Was he not a
-tall, noble-looking gentleman?”
-
-“Like a king,” said Pike.
-
-“With a manner like this,” added Halberd, strutting and swaggering
-across the room. “He should have walked in over several prostrate forms,
-in the manner of a prince and our associate.”
-
-“The same, the very same,” agreed the landlord. “He is certain to be
-here within the hour. Sit down, gentlemen, and let me serve you, and
-then I shall be honored to have a look about, myself, to see if I may
-not find him.”
-
-“Said like a scholar,” Halberd assured him.
-
-“We do this honor to your house for his sake,” Pike added.
-
-The two sat them down and the landlord hustled them out the vilest drink
-he could draw, tampered with, as it was, to add some crude substance,
-the effect of which on the brain was overpowering. The fellow saw the
-beef-eaters drinking and waited for nothing more. He scampered away from
-the rear of his place, as fast as his limbs could convey him.
-
-Fifteen minutes later a small army of constables arrived, captured the
-two brain-fuddled beef-eaters without the slightest resistance and
-carried them off to the sumptuous apartments of the city jail. There,
-with aching heads and crestfallen countenances, they discovered
-themselves to be, when the baleful effects of their drink had somewhat
-abated.
-
-“By my fighting hand!” said Halberd, “I’d not be sworn that we have not
-been tricked.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXV.
-
- GARDE OBTAINS THE JAIL KEYS.
-
-
-UNBEKNOWN to his retinue, Adam was accommodated in the same jail where
-Pike and Halberd had been landed while the evening was still
-comparatively young. The body of the little Narragansett, brutally
-snatched from Adam’s arms, had likewise been brought into Boston.
-
-Randolph had lost no time in having Rust examined and declared a
-prisoner of the state, charged with a whole category of crimes against
-the peace and dignity of the King. To all of this, and to nearly all of
-their questions, Rust had made no reply whatsoever. He realized the
-uselessness of pitting his one voice against those of half a dozen
-perjured rascals, who came about him the moment it was known he had
-finally been taken, ready to swear to anything which would be likeliest
-to jeopardize his life.
-
-Thus, before half-past eight that night, the whole of Boston was wagging
-its tongue over an astonishing story, instigated at once by Edward
-Randolph. This dangerous, blood-thirsty rascal, Rust, had been taken in
-the forest, whither he had fled to join his Indian wife, and in his
-struggles to avoid arrest he had slain his half-Indian child.
-
-This was the indictment, mildly expressed, that reached the ears of
-Garde Merrill concerning her lover. She was simply appalled. It was
-unbelievable, it was monstrous. She scorned to think it could possibly
-be true. And yet, if he had been in Boston several days before, as the
-story had it, why had she known nothing about it? The whole thing had
-been a gross fabrication. He could not have been in the town and going
-to a tavern to mix in a horrid brawl. He would certainly have come to
-see her immediately on his arrival. He had promised to return in about a
-week from a visit to the beef-eaters.
-
-When she got as far as that, she suddenly tried to stop thinking. He had
-been gone many weeks instead of the one; the beef-eaters had not been
-with him when he had the alleged fight, nor when he was captured, and he
-had mentioned to her, on their walk from Plymouth, that he had once
-stopped at the Crow and Arrow, where the brawl was reported to have
-taken place.
-
-Nearly frantic with the terrible thoughts in her head, Garde hastened to
-John Soam’s to get what she could of sober truth, which John would have
-as no one else might in the town.
-
-She was mentally distraught when she came to her uncle’s. She had
-carried a dish belonging to her aunt Gertrude, to make an excuse for her
-late evening visit. She was more glad than she could have said that
-Prudence was away, for her cousin knew something of her feeling for
-Adam.
-
-Garde, having been made welcome, had no need to ask questions. John Soam
-was telling the story of the night with countless repetitions. His wife
-cross-examined him in every direction which her womanly ingenuity could
-suggest.
-
-Thus Garde discovered that it was undeniably true that Adam had been in
-town several days before; that he had been engaged in a terrible fight,
-in which he had inflicted grave injuries on Randolph and one of his
-“peaceable officers”; that he had then escaped back to the woods, from
-which, it was alleged, he had emerged solely for this fighting, and
-that, when captured, he had a half-Indian child in his possession.
-
-John Soam had seen the body of the child himself. He had heard the
-examination, in his capacity of clerk to the court and magistrates. Rust
-was lame, he said, and he was a sullen man, who had returned no answers
-but such as cut wittily. He had not denied that the child was his own.
-He had absolutely refused to say whose it was and how he came to have
-it. He had come to the farmer’s house, at the edge of the woods, for
-purposes of robbery. There was every reason to believe that he had
-consorted with the Indians, and that the child was his. It was a pretty
-child, but many thought it looked as if it had been shockingly abused.
-There could be no doubt that, when he had found himself being taken, he
-had profited by the confusion to slay the little half-Indian boy.
-
-Garde’s horror grew as she listened. She remembered terrible things that
-Adam had told her when he believed her a youth. He had excused
-Randolph’s conduct with Hester Hodder, hinting broadly that, in a case
-he had in mind, he thought another young woman—in this instance Garde
-herself—ought to forgive such a treachery to honor. He had even
-mentioned that she, when dressed as a boy and browned, reminded him of a
-young Indian woman whom he had known and liked. He had lived with the
-Indians as a boy; he had gone back to them as a man.
-
-All those other dreadful half-confessions, in this new light, looked no
-longer innocent—the French damsel, the Countess, and the others. He had
-deceived her about going to New York to see the beef-eaters, she told
-herself, in agony. He had gone to the forest instead. And God only knew
-what things he had done in those silent woods! Had he abandoned the
-mother of his child, as Randolph had done——or had he committed something
-worse? for Hester, in the similar instance, had died so strangely.
-
-At least it was plain that before Adam could marry again he would be
-obliged to abandon that Indian woman. And what if she were Indian? Was
-she less a woman? Would she suffer less agony? Garde thought of Hester,
-and of how the wild young thing had begged her not to take away the man
-who had so cruelly wronged her. The picture was almost more than she
-could bear. The whole affair fell upon her heart with a weight that
-crushed her happiness into a shapeless, dying thing. In whatsoever
-direction she turned, Adam’s own actions and words confronted her with
-the blank wall of hideous truth.
-
-She knew now why, after he had walked all the way to Boston at her side,
-he had failed to appear at Grandther Donner’s, for days and days. She
-saw it all, plainly—horribly plainly. It was so absolutely unescapable.
-And yet, he had seemed so honest; he had spoken so of love; he had so
-convinced her heart and her soul of his purity, nobility and worth! She
-loved him still. She could not avoid this. It had grown up with her; it
-had become a part of her very being. She would love him always, but—she
-could not become his wife—not after this—never! The thought of such a
-thing made her shiver. His perfidy was almost greater than Randolph’s—as
-an Indian woman would have been so much more innocent and trustful than
-even Hester.
-
-Her heart cried. “Oh!” and yet again, “Oh!” in its anguish. If he had
-only left some little loophole for doubt—if he had only denied their
-accusations—if only he had not said those terrible things to her, upon
-the highway, perhaps——“No, no, no, no,” she cried, in her soul; this was
-compromising with loathsome dishonor. Far better it was that the awful
-truth was so indisputably established! It left her no ground for
-excusing his deeds, at the dictates of her unreasoning love! Yet, oh, it
-had been so sweet to believe in him, to love him without reserve, to
-trust her very soul in his keeping! She wrung her hands under the table,
-as she listened, with ears that seemed traitors to her love, to all that
-her uncle could add to the story.
-
-She soon learned that Adam was Randolph’s particular prisoner; that
-there had been some old-time grudge between them, and that the crafty
-man of power would undoubtedly make an effort to hang his captive.
-
-At this her womanly inconsequence was suddenly aroused. He might be
-guilty, but she had always thought him noble and good. She would never
-marry him, after this, but she would love him forever. He had been her
-idol, her king. He must live, for at least she had a right to keep
-enshrined in her heart the thought of him, pulsating heart to heart with
-her, as once he had. No! He must not be permitted to die—not like
-this—not in infamy—not at the hands of this monster of iniquity—this
-Randolph!
-
-It was not that she had the slightest hope that he could ever be the
-same to her again, or that she should ever wish to see him again, but at
-least he had a right to live, to redeem himself, partially, perhaps to
-suffer and to sorrow for his deeds. Indeed he must so live—he must so
-redeem himself for her sake—to justify the love and the trust she had
-given him out of her heart!
-
-She felt that she should choke if she did not soon get out in the air.
-She wanted to run to the prison, hammer with her fist on the gate,
-demand admittance and set him free—free from Randolph’s clutches. But
-she knew this was madness. Her mouth grew parched and dry with her
-excitement, so tremendously held in control. How could she manage to get
-him free? Oh, if only she dared to tell her uncle John and get him to
-help her!
-
-He had the duplicate keys to every door in the jail. He brought them
-home night after night and hung them up on—There they were, now! They
-hung there within reach of her hand! Her heart knocked and beat in her
-bosom, as if it were hammering down the barriers to Adam’s cell. She
-weaved dizzily, with the possibilities of the moment. Just to take those
-keys and run—that was all, and the trick would be done. He could go—and
-their love would be a thing of living death!
-
-She meant to take those keys. The impulse swayed her whole being. She
-felt she would die rather than miss her opportunity. With clenched hands
-and with set jaws she arose to her feet.
-
-“I must be going home,” she said, with apparent calm. “Oh, what was
-that?”
-
-“What was what?” said her aunt and uncle together.
-
-“Why—some noise, in the other room,” she said with a tremor easily
-simulated, in her excited state. “I am sure I heard something in there,
-moving!”
-
-“Hum—let’s see,” said John.
-
-“It might be that I left the window open,” said Goodwife Soam.
-
-The man took the lamp, opened the door to the adjoining apartment, and
-went in, followed by his wife. Garde, with a gasp, and a clutching at
-her heart, lifted the keys from their nail and dropped them into her
-pocket with a barely audible jingle. She followed her aunt a second
-later.
-
-“Why, it was—nothing, after all,” she said, weaving a trifle in her
-stress of emotion and nervousness. “But the window was up, as you said.
-I’m glad that was all. Good night.”
-
-“Good night,” said John Soam and his wife, from the window which John
-was pushing down, and without waiting another minute, Garde let herself
-out and sped away in the darkness.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXVI.
-
- GARDE’S ORDEAL.
-
-
-HOW to get the keys into Adam’s possession, now that she had them in her
-own, was the first question that presented itself to the mind of Garde.
-Her ruse at her uncle’s had been so quickly and easily planned and
-executed that she had almost fancied Adam freed already. Yet as she
-hastened homeward, filled with conflicting emotions of excitement, grief
-and despair, she soon comprehended that her task had not as yet really
-begun.
-
-Could she only ascertain in what portion of the prison the rover was
-incarcerated, she thought it might be possible to convey him the keys
-through the window, provided he had one in his cell. Thinking of this,
-she naturally remembered the jailer’s wife, a poor ailing creature, who
-lived in the building, with her husband, and to whom Goody Dune had
-ministered, times without number, frequently sending Garde with simples
-to relieve her of multitudinous aches and pains. This was her cue. She
-could take her some of the herbs of which a plentiful stock had been
-collected in the Donner household, for the use of her grandfather.
-
-Fortunately David Donner had so far progressed, if not toward recovery,
-then at least toward change, that he slept for hours, like a weary
-child, waking after dreamless slumber all pink and prattling. He was
-thus asleep when she came to the house. She was therefore soon on her
-way to the prison, her simples in a small basket, hung on her arm.
-
-The hour was unusual for any one thus to be visiting the jailer’s wife,
-so that the good woman, when Garde came in, after knocking, was
-obviously surprised at the honor.
-
-“Oh, Mrs. Weaver,” said the girl, hurriedly, “I heard you had been
-having trouble here to-day, and I knew how it always upsets you, and
-Goody had given me all these simples to bring, three days ago, so I
-thought I had better bring them to you the moment I knew you were being
-so worried.”
-
-It was a fact that the jailer’s wife was invariably very much distressed
-when guests were thrust upon their hospitality. She always feared at
-first that they would get away, and afterward that they would not, as
-her abhorrence and then her sympathy came respectively into play. She
-also conjectured all manner of terrible things that might at any moment
-happen to Blessedness Weaver, her worthy husband. To-night she was
-particularly nervous, owing to the sudden increase in the jail’s
-population and the blood-freezing details and rumors afloat as to the
-nature of the company assembled under the roof of the building.
-
-“Dear me, lassie,” she said, in answer to Garde’s well-chosen speech,
-“do come in directly. I am that fidgety and poorly, the night! Lauk,
-lassie, but you are a dear, thoughtful heart, and I shall never forget
-you for this. And we have such terrible gentlemen, the night!”
-
-She always called the guests gentlemen, till she found out which way lay
-the sympathies of a given visitor, when they all became rogues,
-forthwith, if she found herself encouraged to this violent language.
-Later on, again, when her sympathies for their plight were aroused, they
-were restored to their former social appellations.
-
-“Oh, I am so sorry for you!” said Garde. “I had heard of one prisoner;
-but could you have had more than one?”
-
-“Lauk, yes,” said the woman rolling her eyes heavenward. “They took the
-principal rogue in the woods, I believe, but they captured his two
-brutal companions at the Crow and Arrow in the afternoon.”
-
-This was news to Garde. She recognized the beef-eaters from this vivid
-description. If Adam had his friends at his side, he must be much more
-contented, and they would all be planning to escape.
-
-“And so all three are under lock and key, safely together?” she said,
-innocently. “How fortunate!”
-
-“Oh dear me, no,” corrected Mrs. Weaver. “The two taken by daylight are
-together in the southern exposure, while the last one was thrust in the
-dungeon. Oh Lauk, Mistress, but he is a terrible man!”
-
-Garde felt her heart sink, even though it never ceased for a moment to
-beat so hard that it pained her. Adam in a dungeon! How in the world
-could she ever manage to get the keys to him now? Dungeons, she knew,
-were under the ground; they were dank, death-dealing places, with moldy
-straw in one corner and with slimy rocks for walls. She could have cried
-in her sudden wretchedness of spirit, although it could never mean
-anything to her, whether Adam lived or died, in prison or out. However,
-she mastered herself splendidly.
-
-“A dungeon?” she said. “Oh, I didn’t know you had a dungeon here. It
-must be very deep down in the earth.”
-
-“It’s a creepy place; oh lauk, it’s that creepy!” said the woman. “But
-it’s not so deep, dearie. It’s nine steps down. I’ve counted the steps
-many’s the time. But it is where we puts the monstrously wicked rogues,
-such as this bloodthirsty man! And it’s that dark, my dear—oh lauk, what
-a place to spend the night!”
-
-“Of course it must be dark,” said Garde, suppressing her eagerness.
-“They couldn’t have a window in such a place as that.”
-
-“Indeed we have, though; we’ve a window in every room in the place,”
-corrected the jailer’s wife, with commendable pride in the architectural
-arrangements. “Oh yes, it has its window, no bigger than my hand,
-lassie, and slanting up through the rock, but it’s a rare little light
-it lets in to the poor gentlemen down below!”
-
-“I’m glad he—the prisoners here have some light,” said Garde, honestly,
-“but I don’t see where such a window could be.”
-
-“It’s on the dark side of the house, night and day the same,” explained
-Mrs. Weaver. “It’s around on the dark side, where no one would find it
-in a month of Sundays, just about the length of my foot above the
-ground. Such a small thing it is, and the light it lets in is that
-little! Oh lauk, I’m feeling worse to be thinking upon it!”
-
-“Then you mustn’t talk about it any more,” Garde assured her,
-sympathetically. “And I must be going home. I do hope the simples will
-make you better, and I’m so glad I came. I must say good night, for I
-suppose you will all be going to bed very soon.”
-
-“I shall be there directly,” Mrs. Weaver informed her, “but dear me,
-Blessedness won’t be touching a pillow for an hour, and then he’ll sleep
-with his stockings on. He always does the first night with new rogues in
-the house. Good night, dearie, and God bless you for a sweet child.”
-
-Garde went out and walked slowly toward Grandther Donner’s. She had an
-hour to wear away, for she would not dare to be searching about the jail
-before the jailer at least retired to his couch.
-
-The time was one of dread and chills. Her teeth chattered, not from any
-suggestion of cold in the night air, but from the nervous strain of this
-time of suspense. She had never been so frightened of any action in her
-life, as she was when at length she crept back to the prison, through
-the dark, deserted streets, and began to search about to find the tiny
-window of which Mrs. Weaver had spoken.
-
-There were two dark sides to the building. One was constantly in the
-shadow of a tavern, which almost abutted against it, while the other was
-on the northern face of the building, in a narrow street. Garde went
-first to the northern exposure, for in order to get at the other shaded
-side, she would have been obliged to climb a low, brick wall.
-
-Scarcely had she more than come to her destination, and begun her
-feverish search, before she heard the sound of distant footsteps, which
-rapidly approached. She crouched in a black little niche, in fear, with
-a violent commotion in her breast which threatened to drop her down in a
-swoon. Almost stepping on her toes, some pedestrian passed, leaving the
-girl so horribly weak that she shut her eyes and leaned against the
-wall, laboring to get her breath.
-
-Nerved again by the things Mrs. Weaver had told her, she came out of her
-hiding-place, after several minutes, and feeling the cold rock-wall she
-passed eagerly along, shaking with her chill and fearing to breathe too
-loud, in the silence.
-
-She was doomed here to bitter disappointment. The window was not to be
-found. She searched again and again, unwilling to give it up, but it was
-not there. She realized that she must climb the brick barrier, and try
-on the other side of the building.
-
-She found the wall not difficult to surmount, but when she jumped down,
-on the further side, she struck on a heap of broken crockery, thrown out
-from the tavern.
-
-She crouched down instantly, for the noise she had made attracted the
-notice of some one in the public house. A door at the rear of the
-hostelry was thrown open and a man looked out. He appeared to be looking
-straight at her and listening.
-
-“Must have been a cat,” he said, to somebody back in the house, and he
-disappeared and closed the door.
-
-Garde could not have been any more wrought upon than the whole affair
-had made her already. She could not become calm. She could merely wait
-for moments of partial relief from overwhelming emotions.
-
-Thus in time she was creeping along again, feeling the dark stone as
-before and peering vainly and desperately into the shadows which lay so
-densely upon the whole enclosure. Hastily she traversed the whole length
-of the wall. She arrived at the far end, ready to sink down and cry in
-anguish. She had not discovered the window.
-
-Back again she went, choking back hysterical sobs and bruising her
-delicate hands on the rough rocks, as she played with her fingers along
-that grim, dark pile. She failed again.
-
-Sitting where she was, in the grass, which was growing rank in the
-place, she clasped her hands in despair. She would have to give it up.
-There was some mistake. There was no window.
-
-Yet once more she would try. She could not give it up. The dungeon’s
-horrors and the terrible character of Edward Randolph made her fear that
-if the morning came before Adam was free, he would no longer have need
-for freedom, nor light.
-
-Slowly, this time, and digging at the base of the stone-wall that rose
-above her, she felt down to the very roots of the grass, for the
-aperture which represented a window. To her unspeakable joy, her fingers
-suddenly ran into an absolute hole in the solid rock, in a matted growth
-of roots and grass, which had grown up about it!
-
-She sank down, momentarily overcome with this discovery. It was too much
-to believe. She felt she was almost dying, so insupportable was the
-agitation of her heart. But she presently clutched at the grass and tore
-it away in a mad fever of haste. She dug, with her fingers and her
-finger nails. She could smell the odor of the bruised grass, and then
-the wholesome fragrance of earth. She had soon uncovered a small square
-opening, no larger, as the jailer’s wife had said, than a good-sized
-hand.
-
-On her knees as she was, she bent her head down to a level with the hole
-and put her lips close to the opening. She tried to speak, but such a
-faintness came upon her that she could not utter a sound. She had worked
-with a tremendous resolution toward this end, and now the flood of
-thoughts of everything said and done that evening, came upon her and
-rendered her dumb, with emotion and dread.
-
-Making a great effort she essayed to speak again. Once more she failed.
-But she waited doggedly, for the power she knew would not desert her in
-the end. Thus for the third time she mustered all her strength and
-leaned down to the window.
-
-“Adam,” she said, faintly, and then she waited, breathlessly.
-
-There was no response. There was not a sound from that tomb, the
-dankness of which she now began to detect in her nostrils.
-
-“Adam!” she repeated, this time more strongly.
-
-Some subterranean rustling then came to her ears.
-
-“Adam! Oh, Adam!” she said, in a voice that trembled uncontrollably.
-
-“Who’s that? Who’s speaking? Is it you, John Rosella?” came in a rumble
-from the dungeon.
-
-She failed to recognize his voice, so altered did the passage from his
-place of imprisonment make it.
-
-“Oh, is that you, Adam—Mr. Rust?” she asked, trembling violently.
-
-“Garde!” he said, joyously. “Garde! Oh, my darling! Yes, it’s I. Where
-are you? What have you done?”
-
-Garde felt her strength leave her treacherously. Thus to hear the
-endearing names leap upward to her from that terrible place was too much
-to bear, after all she had learned.
-
-“Here—here are the keys,” she whispered down to him, haltingly. “And
-your friends—your two companions—they are also in the prison. I hope—I
-hope you can find your way out. I am dropping them down—the keys. Here
-they come.” She tossed the bunch, which she had taken from her pocket
-with nerveless fingers, and now she heard the metallic clink, as they
-struck the floor, come faintly up through the aperture.
-
-Adam was starting to say something. She dared not wait to listen. Now
-that her task was done, she knew she would absolutely collapse, if she
-did not at once bestir herself to flee.
-
-“I mustn’t stop!” she said to him, a little wildly. “Be careful.
-Good-by,” and without even waiting to hear him answer, she arose, thrust
-a bunch of grass back into place over the opening, and hastened away.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXVII.
-
- RATS IN THE ARMORY.
-
-
-ADAM’S disappointment, when he got no more responses to the eager
-questions and blessings he breathed upward to his unseen sweetheart, was
-keener than all the anguish he had felt at being so foully imprisoned.
-He had caught up the keys, quickly enough, but when he failed to catch
-any more of her trembling words he felt more deserted and surrounded by
-the blackness than he had been in all this new experience. However, his
-heart was soon tripping with gladness.
-
-At least it was Garde who had come to save him. Love was his guardian
-angel. He could face the world full of foes, after this. He grew
-impatient, abruptly, to get out of the dungeon at once and go to
-Garde—his brave, darling Garde!
-
-Then he thought of the beef-eaters. He had fancied he heard their
-voices, as Randolph’s men had been taking him into the prison corridor.
-It had seemed impossible that they had already arrived and been
-apprehended till he remembered how many days it had been since last he
-had seen them.
-
-Having been asleep when Garde first called down to him, through the tiny
-air-passage, the rover was a little refreshed. But he was still nearly
-famished for something to eat, having been provided only with a dry
-chunk of bread, as large as his fist, and a jug of water. He was also
-quite lame, for he had not been able to do anything for his wounded
-foot.
-
-Nevertheless he was alert, now, for his slumber of an hour had been
-profoundly deep and his constitution was one of great elasticity,
-rapidly responding to the most inconsiderable restorative influence. He
-hobbled about in his small den, finding the door without difficulty,
-after which he tried the lock with key after key, on the bunch, until he
-thought he had rejected all, when his high hopes came swiftly tumbling
-down.
-
-The key to the dungeon had not been found among the lot on the ring!
-
-In his weakened condition this apparent discovery was prostrating in its
-dire effect. He suffered more than he would have done had there been no
-attempt made to free him at all. He felt cold beads of perspiration
-break out on his brow. Hope for himself and the beef-eaters, snatched
-away almost as soon as given, unnerved him. Nevertheless he pulled
-himself together, to try every key in the bunch again.
-
-The first one he handled entered the lock and threw back the bolt.
-
-Cautiously swinging the door open, he suddenly started, at the sound of
-some one approaching in the corridor. In a second he was back in the
-dark hole and had locked the door again upon himself. Weaver, the
-jailer, making an unusual round of the premises, came down the
-dungeon-steps and tried the door. Satisfied that all was well, he
-proceeded onward to his bed.
-
-Adam lost little time in again starting forth. This time he locked the
-dungeon and took his bunch of keys with him. He climbed the nine steps,
-which the jailer’s wife had so frequently counted, and found himself in
-the corridor, which was lighted by a single lamp, which was small and
-odorous. Noting his bearings, he limped along toward the cell where he
-thought he had heard the beef-eaters talking.
-
-There was no sound to give him guidance now, and there were several
-doors confronting him, behind any one of which his retinue might be
-locked. It was a matter presenting necessities for nicety in judgment.
-If he were to open the door on some wrong prisoner, the ensuing
-disturbance would be most unfortunate. Moreover, he did not know but
-what there might be guards galore in some of the jail-apartments. It
-would not do to call, or to whisper, for the sake of attracting the
-beef-eaters’ attention, for obvious reasons.
-
-There was nothing for it but to open door after door till he found the
-faithful pair. Luckily the doors were numbered, and he found there were
-corresponding numbers on the keys. There being no choice, he unlocked
-the first door he saw. Shifting the bolt cautiously, he was presently
-able to listen for anything like a sound inside the cell.
-
-He could hear nothing. The room was empty. To the next door he went, and
-repeated his simple experiment. This apartment proved to be, not a cell,
-but a place in which all manner of rubbish had been thrown. It also
-contained swords, pistols, some blunderbusses and other arms. The room,
-indeed, was the prison armory. Adam nodded at this discovery as being
-good, but it left him as far as before from his friends. Leaving this
-door unlocked, he went back in the other direction and tried again.
-
-Listening now, as before, upon opening a second cell, he heard snoring.
-Better than this, it was snoring that he knew. He went in and nudged the
-retinue with his foot.
-
-“What, ho! Who knocks?” said Halberd, in a sleepy growl.
-
-“Be quiet,” said Adam. “Get up, the two of you, quickly. We are about to
-seek more commodious apartments.”
-
-“The Sachem!” said Pike.
-
-“Who else,” answered Halberd. “Sire, I have been expecting this kindness
-these three hours.”
-
-“You may expect to be hanged, in the morning, if you do not shut your
-mouth and come with me instantly,” said Rust.
-
-“I was dreaming of my wedding with a fair princess,” said Pike. “These
-are no days of chivalry, when a man will leave so sweet a damsel in so
-vile a place.”
-
-“What have you done with your swords and side arms?” the Sachem
-demanded, in a whisper. “Did they take them from you?”
-
-“They did. Else we had slain the whole score of rascals that took us,”
-said Halberd.
-
-“Make haste, then, till we arm anew,” instructed the rover.
-
-He locked the door behind them and led the way to the armory at once.
-They had gone half the distance to the place when there came a clanking
-of opening doors, a rattle of scabbards, a rumble of muffled voices and
-the tramp of many feet, around in the angle of the corridor, leading to
-the outside world.
-
-“Quick! Quick!” commanded Adam, and darting forward, lame foot and all,
-to the armory-door, he opened it, thrust in the beef-eaters, with a word
-of admonition to beware of making a noise, and closed the barrier, only
-as Randolph and six of his creatures came tiptoeing down the passage and
-stopped fairly opposite where Adam was standing.
-
-The rover reached out in the dark of the room they were in, as he braced
-silently against the door, and felt his hand come in contact with a
-sword, which he had noted when first he peered into the room. He could
-hear the men outside, whispering.
-
-Weaver was with them, pale and frightened at what he knew these midnight
-visitors contemplated doing. He dared not make the slightest protest;
-his master stood before him.
-
-“Here, is this the room above the dungeon?” said Randolph. He laid his
-hand on the knob, the inside mate of which Adam was holding.
-
-“No, sir, this is the room, here upon the other side,” said Weaver.
-“It’s a few steps further along.”
-
-The private executioners, with their chief, were moving away, when one
-of the beef-eaters stepped upon something on the floor of the armory,
-making a sound that seemed terrific.
-
-“What was that?” demanded Randolph, quickly.
-
-“We have rats in the property chamber,” said Weaver, honestly.
-
-“It sounded too big for rats,” said the voice of Psalms Higgler, whom
-Adam readily identified.
-
-“We may look there if you like,” said the jailer.
-
-“Never mind the rats at present,” dictated Randolph. “Show us the room
-above the cellar.”
-
-The other door could then be heard to open and to close behind the
-visitors. Adam snatched up swords for three on the instant.
-
-“Here, take it—and not a word,” he breathed, thrusting a weapon upon
-each of his trembling companions. “If they come for us—fight!”
-
-Silently and slowly he reopened the door, having buckled a sword upon
-him. There came a light patter of footsteps on the corridor floor. Just
-as the rover was stepping forth, Psalms Higgler, who had not been
-satisfied with the theory of the rats, came gliding to the spot. He and
-Adam suddenly faced one another, a foot apart. The startled little
-monster stared wildly for the briefest part of a second and then would
-have fallen back, yelling like a demon to raise the alarm.
-
-Pouncing upon him, without a sound, yet with the terrible strength and
-nimbleness of a tiger, Adam clutched him fiercely by the neck, with both
-his powerful hands, and choking back the yell already starting to the
-creature’s lips, lifted him bodily off the floor, to prevent him from
-kicking upon it, to raise a disturbance, and carried him, squirming and
-writhing, to the door by which the visitors had so recently entered.
-
-“Open the door! Open the door and get out!” ordered Rust of his
-followers, sternly, never for a moment relaxing his grip or his lift on
-Higgler. “Lift the bar! Lift it! There!”
-
-The door swung open. The beef-eaters sprang outside, trying both to go
-at once. The commotion they made rang through the building. Adam was
-after them swiftly, forgetting to limp, as he felt the outside air in
-his face.
-
-Higgler by this was becoming absolutely limp. Adam dropped him on the
-ground, where he lay, barely left alive and unable to move or to speak.
-
-Adam had the keys in his pocket, the largest one uppermost. This was the
-one to this outside door. He could hear the men inside running toward
-the spot and already shouting the alarm. He dared to lock the door,
-deliberately, and to pull out the key and put it again in his pocket.
-Then he calmly drew the borrowed sword from its scabbard, rammed its end
-smartly home, in the key-hole and snapped it off short, spiking the
-aperture completely.
-
-Already the beef-eaters were running up the street. Psalms Higgler was
-drawing his breath in awful gasps, where he lay.
-
-“Good friend, farewell,” said Rust to him, cheerfully. “I shall be
-pleased to report you an excellent rat-catcher, at the earliest
-opportunity afforded.”
-
-He disappeared from Higgler’s ken in a twinkling and soon overtook his
-retinue, making good time for the country.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXVIII.
-
- LOVE’S LONG GOOD-BY.
-
-
-AWARE that his ruse in locking the jail upon his jailers would hold them
-only till they could think of taking off the lock and knocking out the
-sword-end, Adam was nevertheless determined upon going to David Donner’s
-residence, for the purpose of seeing Mistress Garde.
-
-With this purpose in view, and expecting his pursuers to be soon on a
-keen race for the open flats, which he had been known to cross before,
-in his successful escape to the woods, he led his retinue straight off
-at right angles from such a course, and brought them in fifteen minutes
-to the silent ship-yard of William Phipps.
-
-Here, with small ado, they climbed the fence and struck across the
-enclosure, past the gaunt skeleton of a ship, growing on the ways, and
-so came to a quiet bit of water, at the private landing, where three
-small boats were moored in safety.
-
-The trio were soon aboard the lightest skiff and rowing her westward,
-with silent, effectual strokes. Guided by the rover, the beef-eaters
-steered for the shore, and after a ten-minute pull Adam landed near the
-spot where he had sat upon a rock, waiting for night, on the occasion of
-his last meeting with his sweetheart.
-
-“Wait for me here,” he said. “I shall not be long.”
-
-He was soon at the gate and then in the garden. There was not a sound to
-be heard. The house was dark. He raised a little whistle, as he slowly
-walked about the place, watching the windows intently.
-
-Garde heard him. She was up. She had not had a moment of peace or
-freedom from dreadful suspense since arriving at the house, while
-waiting, listening, starting at all those uncanny sounds of stretching,
-in which a building will indulge itself at night. Greater unhappiness or
-despair she had never known, nor greater worry, fearing that Adam would
-come, and then fearing more that he would not.
-
-When she heard him whistle, her heart seemed suddenly dislodged in her
-bosom. Her breath came laboredly. She opened the window in the kitchen,
-this room being furthest from her grandfather’s apartment, and saw Adam
-limp eagerly toward her.
-
-“Garde!—Sweetheart!” he said.
-
-“Oh—oh, you—you got away,” she faltered, faintly. “Here, I have—tied you
-up—a luncheon. Take it, please, and—and you had better go—at once.”
-
-“God bless you!” said Adam, stuffing the parcel she gave him inside his
-coat. “I have brought you back the keys. My Garde! My own blessed
-sweetheart. Oh, Garde, dearest, come out to me, just for a moment—just
-for one little good-by.”
-
-“I—I cannot,” Garde said, fighting heroically against the greatest
-temptation she had ever known. “We must say——good-by, now, and I must——”
-
-“Yes, I know, dear,” he broke in impetuously, “but just for a moment,
-just——”
-
-He was at the window. He tried to take her hands, to draw her toward
-him. She shrank away with an action so strange that his sentence died on
-his lips. “Why, Garde,” he said, “can’t I even touch your hands?”
-
-She shook her head. He could barely see her, in the pale light which the
-stars diffused.
-
-“I—I must never see—never see you—again,” she stammered, painfully, “we
-must say—say good-by.”
-
-“You must never——Garde—why—we must say—But, Garde, dear,—I don’t
-understand you. What does all this mean?”
-
-“Oh, please go—now,” she said. “That is all—all I can say. It must be
-good-by.”
-
-Adam was made dumb for a moment. He stared at her unbelievingly. He
-passed his hand across his brow, as if he feared his fasting and
-long-endured labors had weakened his mind.
-
-“What in heaven’s name has happened?” he said, as if partially to
-himself. “Am I Adam Rust? Are you Garde? Say good-by?——Dearest, has
-anything happened?”
-
-She nodded to him, forcing back the sob that arose in her throat.
-“Something—something has happened,” she repeated. For maidenly shame she
-could not broach the subject of the Indian child.
-
-He was silent for a moment before replying.
-
-“But you came to-night and gave me the keys, an hour or so ago,” he
-said, in wonderment and confusion. “You did that?”
-
-“I—couldn’t—do less,” she answered, mastering her love and anguish by a
-mighty resolution.
-
-“Do you mean—you would have done the same for anybody?” he asked. And
-seeing her nod an affirmative he gave a little laugh. “I am crazy now,
-or I have been crazy before,” he told himself. “Something has happened.
-Something—Of course—it couldn’t help happening, in time. Some one has
-told you——I might have known it would happen.... And yet—you once said
-you could wait for me fifty years. And I believed it.... Well, I thank
-you. I have been amused.”
-
-His broken sentences seemed to Garde to fill in the possible gaps of the
-story—to make his confession complete. But Adam had, in reality, stopped
-himself on the verge of accusing her of listening to the love-making of
-some one other than himself, in his absence.
-
-She made no reply to what he had said. She felt there was absolutely
-nothing she could say. Her heart would have cried out to him wildly.
-When he spoke so lightly of the fifty years which she could have waited,
-she swayed where she stood, ready to drop. Almost one atom more of
-impulse and she would have thrown herself in his arms, crying out her
-love passionately, in defiance of the story of his perfidy. But her
-honor, her maidenly resolution, steeled her in the nick of time. Though
-her heart should break, she could not accept the gilded offer of such a
-love.
-
-“Oh, Garde—sweetheart, forgive me,” said Adam, after a moment of
-terrible silence. “I have wronged you. Forgive me and tell me it is all
-some nightmare—some dreadful——”
-
-The night stillness was broken by the sound of men running swiftly up
-the street. Randolph had thought of the possibility of Adam’s visit to
-Mistress Merrill.
-
-Garde heard and comprehended. Rust heard and was careless.
-
-“Oh, go, Ad—Mr. Rust, please go at once,” pleaded the girl already
-closing down the window.
-
-“Garde! Garde!—not forever?” cried the man in a last despair.
-
-“Forever,” she answered, so faintly that he barely heard, and then the
-window came down to its place.
-
-Limping back into the shadow, at the rear of the garden, Adam lay out
-full length on the ground, as two tiptoeing figures entered the gate and
-came sneaking silently about the somber house. He saw them make a
-circuit of the garden. One of them walked to within a rod of where he
-lay—therefore within a rod of death,—and then turned uncertainly away
-and retired from the place with his fellow-hound.
-
-The rover heard them go on up the street, hurriedly making toward the
-woods. He came back to the place by the window, at last, and whistled
-softly once again, unable to believe that what he had heard could be so.
-There must be some explanation, if only he could get it.
-
-There was no response, partially for the reason that Garde had sunk down
-upon the floor, on the other side of the window, in a dead faint.
-
-His lameness fully upon him again, Adam hobbled a few steps away, halted
-to look back, yearningly, and then once more dragged himself off, to
-join the faithful beef-eaters, waiting in patience with the boat.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXIX.
-
- MUTATIONS.
-
-
-WHILE Garde, heart-broken, pale and ill, was restoring her uncle’s keys
-to their accustomed hook, in the morning, Adam and his retinue were
-taking a much-needed sleep in the woods.
-
-Having recovered his own good sword and his leather jerkin, from the
-place where he had concealed them, on the evening of his capture, he had
-led the beef-eaters into a maze of trees where no one in Boston could
-have found them, and here he was doing his best to prove himself a
-cheerful and worthy companion, to share their natural distresses.
-
-Refusing at first to eat of the luncheon provided by Garde, the rover
-finally yielded to the importunities of his companions, and thereby got
-much-needed refreshment. By noon they were far on their way toward New
-Amsterdam, their only safe destination. They kept close to the edge of
-the woods, as they went, remaining thereby in touch with the farms, on
-which they depended, in their penniless condition, for something to eat.
-
-By sheer perversity, Adam wore away his lameness. He bathed his foot
-often and he also wrapped it in leaves, the beneficent qualities of
-which he had learned from the Indians, years before, and this did as
-much, or more, than his doggedness to make repairs in the injured
-tendons.
-
-They were many days on this wearisome march which contrasted, for Adam,
-so harshly with that other stroll, to Boston, from Plymouth. On many
-occasions they went hungry for a day and a night together. But what with
-cheer and good water, they lost nothing of their health.
-
-With boots beginning to gape at the toes, and with raiment dusty and
-faded, they arrived, at last, at the modest house, at the corner of
-Cedar and William streets, in New Amsterdam, where Captain William Kidd
-resided with his wife. Here they were made welcome. On behalf of himself
-and his comrades, Adam presently secured a working passage to
-Hispaniola, where he meant to rejoin William Phipps, in the search for
-the sunken treasure. He could think of nothing else to do, and he had no
-longer the slightest desire to remain on American soil.
-
-Prior to sailing, however, he wrote a long, detailed account of his
-finding the man and his Indian child, with all the incidents related
-thereto, which he forwarded straight to Henry Wainsworth. This concluded
-his duties. He only regretted, he said in his letter to Henry, that he
-could not apprise him of what disposition had been made of the body of
-the little man, Henry’s nephew, when the minions of Randolph took it in
-their charge.
-
-This letter came duly into Henry Wainsworth’s possession. Having been
-aware, as no other man in Massachusetts was, that his refugee brother
-was living his isolated life in the woods, Henry was much overcome by
-this sad intelligence. He made what cautious inquiries he dared, with
-the purpose of ascertaining what had become of the little body. He then
-made a pilgrimage into the woods, stood above the grave which Adam had
-made, and then, taking a few worthless trinkets, as mementoes, from the
-deserted cabin, he came sadly away.
-
-But not Henry’s sadness, nor yet that of Garde, served to do more than
-to signalize the sense of affliction which the citizens of the colony
-felt had come upon them. They had been a joyless people, with their
-minds and their bodies dressed in the somber hues suggested by a morbid
-condition of religious meditation, but at least they had enjoyed the
-freedom for which they had come so far and fought so persistently. With
-their charter gone, and the swift descent upon them of the many things
-which they had found intolerable in England, they were a melancholy,
-hopeless people indeed.
-
-But even as Garde’s sorrow typified that of her fellow-beings, so did
-the fortitude and uncomplaining courage, with which she endured her
-burden, typify the stolid suffering of the citizens of Massachusetts, in
-this hour of their first great “national” woe.
-
-The summer ripened and passed. The autumn heralded the ermine-robed King
-Winter, with glorious pageantry. The trees put on their cloth of gold
-and crimson, and when the hoary monarch came, the millions of leaves
-strewed his path, and, prostrate before his march, laid their matchless
-tapestry beneath his merciless feet.
-
-During all this time Randolph had made no sign toward his revenge upon
-Garde, for the scorn with which she had cast him from her side. No petty
-vengeance would gratify his malignant spirit. The whole colony must
-suffer for this indignity, and Garde and her grandfather should feel his
-hand mightily, when all was ready. He prepared his way with extreme
-caution. He was never hurried. He laid wires to perform his mischief far
-ahead. Indeed he lingered almost too long, in his greed to prolong his
-own anticipation of what was to be.
-
-Thus in December of that year, 1686, the frigate “Kingfisher,” from
-England, brought to the colony their newly-appointed Governor, Sir
-Edmund Andros, who assumed the reins of power with an absolute
-thoroughness which left Randolph somewhat shorn of his capacity for
-working evil.
-
-Andros, who had formerly been Governor for New York, for a matter of
-three years, was a person of commendable character, in many respects,
-but the policy which he had come to put into being and force was stupid,
-oppressive and offensive to the people he had to govern. Being the
-thorough Tory that he was, he enforced the policy with a vigor which
-brought upon him the detestation of the Puritans, who visited the errors
-he was ordered to commit upon his own less guilty head.
-
-The Puritans, in the extremes to which they had fled, in their
-separation from the English forms of worship, had adopted a rigid
-simplicity in which the whole fabric of ceremonials had been swept away
-bodily. They rang no bells for their divine service; they regarded
-marriage as a civil contract, purely; they observed no festivals nor
-holidays of the church; they buried their dead in stolid silence. They
-abhorred the English rites.
-
-Governor Andros inaugurated countless ceremonies. That very Christmas
-the English party of Boston held high revel in the city. The Puritans
-refused to close their shops, or to join either in rites or merriment.
-They brought in their fire-wood and went about their business,
-grim-faced and scowling darkly upon the innovations come among them,
-with their fascinations for the young and their enchantment of the
-frivolous.
-
-The offenses against their rigid notions increased rapidly. In February
-they beheld, with horror, the introduction of a new invention of the
-devil. One Joseph Mayhem paraded in the main street of Boston with a
-rooster fastened on his back,—where it flapped its wings
-frantically,—while in his hand the fellow carried a bell, on which he
-made a dreadful din as he walked. Behind him came a number of ruffians,
-blindfolded and armed with cart-whips. Under pretense of striking at
-Mayhem and the chanticleer, they cut at the passers-by, roaring with
-laughter and otherwise increasing the attention which their conduct
-attracted. This exhibition was thought to smack of Papacy and the hated
-days of Laud.
-
-The church itself was invaded. There was as yet no Church of England in
-the town. Governor Andros therefore attended with the Puritans, at their
-own house of meeting, but to their unnameable horror, he compelled
-Goodman Needham, the sexton, to ring the bell, according to English
-usage.
-
-Rebellion being impossible, the Puritans nursed their grievances in
-sullen stolidity. They were powerless, but never hopeless of their
-opportunity still to come.
-
-Taxation came as a consequence of the pomp in which the new Governor
-conceived it to be his right to exist, as well as the natural result of
-his glowing reports to England that the people could be made to disgorge
-and would not resist.
-
-To crown their heritage of woe, Edward Randolph, profiting by their
-already established fanaticism and ripeness for the folly, subtly
-introduced and finally fastened upon them that curse of superstitious
-ignorance, which was doomed to become such a blot upon their page of
-history—the “detection” of and persecutions for witchcraft.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XL.
-
- GOLDEN OYSTERS.
-
-
-CAPTAIN WILLIAM PHIPPS, when Adam left him at Jamaica, had returned, as
-he had said he intended, to the waters wherein the old Spanish galleon,
-with her golden treasure, was supposed to have sunk. He had met with a
-small measure of luck, for an old sailor had pointed out what he alleged
-to be the exact reef of rocks on which the galleon had split, half a
-century before. This spot was a few leagues to the north of Port de la
-Plata.
-
-Having examined the place without success, Phipps had then discovered
-that his crew was not reliable and the ship not much better, in point of
-soundness. He had therefore headed for England, coming in due season to
-anchor in the Thames.
-
-Undaunted by the failure which his enterprise had been, he sought out
-the King, reported what he had done, and requested the use of another
-ship and a better lot of men.
-
-James was amused and entertained. He commended the bold skipper on his
-courage and his tenacity of purpose; he believed his story. But he shook
-his head at the thought of furnishing funds and a new ship and crew for
-further adventures with pirates and mutineers in the Spanish Main.
-
-However, at the Court, Captain Phipps had made influential friends. He
-was admired for his manly qualities; he was trusted as a man of
-exceptional integrity. The Duke of Albemarle, with several friends,
-agreed again to back the doughty Captain for the venture. They secured a
-new charter for the business from the King; they found a good staunch
-ship. Away went Phipps, with a hope so high that nothing could have
-served to suppress it.
-
-It was when the captain arrived once more at Port de la Plata that Adam
-Rust and the beef-eaters joined him. The meeting was one in which the
-demonstration of a great and enduring affection between the two big men
-was the more affecting because of its utter simplicity and quietness.
-Adam was welcomed to his share in the new promise with that great spirit
-of generosity and justice which characterized everything that Phipps was
-ever known to do.
-
-The preparations for a careful search were pushed ahead rapidly. A
-small, stout boat was built and launched, near the fatal reef, while the
-ship was anchored at some distance away, in less treacherous water.
-
-Daily the small boat put forth and the reef was examined, but to no
-avail. It was found that the shelf of rock, which had broken the old
-galleon, ended so abruptly as to form a sheer drop of many fathoms,
-whereas a few feet away it was only a ship’s-hold distance from the
-surface. It was conjectured then that the galleon had struck, had filled
-with water and so had fallen over the edge of the submerged precipice,
-where she would lay forever, undisturbed by prodding man.
-
-The search was at length abandoned as being futile. The small boat,
-being slowly rowed away, Adam beheld a plant, of many colors and rare
-beauty, growing on the reef below them, in the clear, emerald water. He
-requested a diver to fetch it up. The boat was halted and overboard went
-the man. He was soon seen spraddling like some singular creature, back
-up through the brine. He had fetched the plant and he told of having
-seen on the bottom the encrusted gun of some sunken vessel.
-
-At Adam’s eager command he returned again to the spot and presently
-arose to the surface with an ingot of silver, slimy and dark, clutched
-firmly in his hands. The treasure was found!
-
-Putting for the ship at once, where Captain Phipps was somewhat
-laboriously writing a long report of the second failure, the rover gave
-the almost incredible news, that set the whole ship afire with amazement
-and joy.
-
-The entire crew were speedily pressed into service. The work was
-prosecuted with vigor. Adam looked upon this treasure, coming so late
-into his sight and life, with a grim smile upon his lips and with scorn
-in his eyes. He saw the divers fetch up masses of bullion, first, then
-golden oysters, encrusted with calcareous matter, then broken bags
-bursting with their largess of Spanish doubloons, and finally precious
-stones, shimmering, untarnished, in the sunlight.
-
-It was a feverish time. Day after day went by and the boats were filled
-with fortunes. It seemed as if the more they took, the more they found.
-The gold on top hid gold underneath.
-
-An old shipmate of Captain Phipps’ whose imagination the ship-builder
-had fired, months before, arrived from Providence. He was able so easily
-to fill his boat with gold that he went raving crazy and died in a
-lunatic asylum at Bermuda.
-
-The provisions on the ship began to run low, before the examination of
-the sunken wreck was complete. Moreover the sailors, their
-avariciousness aroused by the sight of all these riches, which daily
-they were snatching from the sea, for other men to enjoy, grew restive
-and threatened to take a contagion of mutiny.
-
-Treasure to the value of three hundred thousand pounds had been
-recovered, and much still remained untouched. Phipps determined to sail
-with what he had, planning to return to the field in the future. He
-enjoined silence and secrecy on all the sailors, but the word leaked out
-and adventurers gathering from far and near, the rotting galleon was
-despoiled of everything she had hoarded so jealously and successfully
-throughout the years.
-
-Phipps brought his vessel in safety to England. The enormous success
-which had attended his efforts so aroused the cupidity of certain of the
-King’s retainers that they advised James to confiscate the entire
-treasure, on the ground that Phipps had withheld such information, on
-his former return, as would have induced the crown to finance the second
-enterprise, had the truth been told.
-
-King James, however, was too honorable a monarch to resort to trickery
-so infamous. Instead he commended the captain in the highest terms, made
-him an intimate of his court, knighted him Sir William Phipps and
-invited him to become an Englishman and reside with them there for the
-remainder of his life.
-
-Phipps received his honors modestly. He was too patriotic to desert
-America and bluntly said so to his King. He and Adam received, as their
-share of the treasure, the one tenth agreed upon, amounting to thirty
-thousand pounds, of which sum all that the Captain could prevail upon
-Rust to accept was a third, a sum, the rover said, far in excess of the
-needs of his retinue and himself.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLI.
-
- FATE’S DEVIOUS WAYS.
-
-
-AT Boston it was not a matter of many months before Henry Wainsworth and
-piety Tootbaker, having been made aware that Garde was no longer
-provisionally betrothed to Randolph, resumed their former hopes and
-attentions, as to attending Meeting and paying sundry little visits to
-the Soams, when Garde could be expected to be seen.
-
-Garde had become a subdued little person, wishing only that she might
-not be seen by any one as she came and went on her simple rounds of
-daily life. Her grandfather had recovered so that once more he pothered
-about in his garden and read in his Bible and busied himself with
-prattle, more childish than wise.
-
-The old man saw little of his compatriots. He lived as one only
-partially awake from a recent dread. He never discussed the colony’s
-politics, for his friends, when they came to see him, spared him the
-ordeal which invariably resulted from a mention of the word charter. On
-this topic he was quite mad. Almost galvanically, the word produced in
-his brain a mania, half fear, half fury, in which he seemed to conceive
-that Garde was the author of woes to which nothing could ever give
-expression. In such a mood, he was savagery itself, toward the patient
-girl.
-
-Gradually, so gradually that she could not have said when the impression
-commenced to grow upon her, Garde discovered that Henry Wainsworth was
-exceedingly kind, thoughtful and soothing, in her joyless existence.
-There was something kindred in his own isolation, and in his very
-bashfulness, or timidity, for it kept him so often silent, when he was
-with her alone. She had always respected Henry. His patient devotion
-could not but touch her at length. It was not so much a flattery as it
-was a faithfulness, through all the discouragements she had given him
-always.
-
-This line of thought having been awakened in her breast, she noted more
-of the little, insignificant signs which go to make up the sum of a
-man’s real regard—the regard on which a woman can safely rely as one to
-endure and to grow.
-
-In the soreness of her heart, it was almost sweet to think of Henry’s
-quiet attentions. It was calming. It lent a little spot of warmth and
-color to her otherwise cheerless life. She could never love him, as she
-had loved Adam—nay, as she loved him still,—but the dreariness of her
-present days might find relief in a new sort of life. Out of the duties,
-which as a housewife she would experience daily, surely a trust, an
-esteem for Henry, great enough almost to be called a love, would come,
-with the years.
-
-She yearned to bury her sorrow. It was not a healthy, wholesome thing
-for any young woman to foster. She had enjoyed her day of love, yes—her
-years of love. She had felt like a widowed bride. To her, Adam’s kisses
-had been like the first sacred emblems of their marriage. She had not
-been able to conceive of permitting such caresses until she should feel
-that their souls were mated and their hearts already wedded. But it
-could never be the duty of a woman to mourn such a loss till she died.
-And then—this newly contemplated union would make her forget.
-
-But, if she could encourage Henry toward this possibility of a union
-such as she thought upon, it would be her duty to be more cheerful, more
-living in the every-day hours that were, instead of dreaming sadly and
-morbidly upon her heart-break of the past.
-
-It was not with a sense of gratifying her own longing for happiness that
-she finally thought a marriage with Henry possible; there was a sense of
-combating her own selfishness in it. It was a selfishness, it was
-pampering the morbid in her nature, she felt, to continue indefinitely
-in a “widowhood” of Adam’s love. It must also be admitted that Garde was
-human, wherefore the element of pique was not absolutely lacking in her
-being. No woman would ever wish a man she had rejected to believe that
-she could not, or would not, marry elsewhere. She would wish to show
-that other opportunities were not lacking, as well as she would desire
-to have him know that her heart was not broken beyond repair.
-
-Having spent at least a month upon these introspective and other
-meditations, Garde appeared to Wainsworth so much more bright and
-beautiful that there was no containing his emotions. The poor fellow
-nearly broke his neck, metaphorically speaking, in a vain attempt to ask
-her to become his wife, on the first occasion afforded, after he made
-his discovery of her alteration in moods and appearance.
-
-It was of no use to screw up his courage. It would not stick. He
-determined to write what he could not utter, and then, when a moment
-should be propitious, to deliver his written declaration into her hand,
-to be read when he had fled the scene. To this end he composed an
-elegant and eloquent epistle.
-
-To avoid any possibility of making mistakes, Henry carefully deposited
-his letter in the pocket of the coat he always wore to Meeting. This
-pocket had been heretofore employed as a receptacle for things precious
-over which he desired to exercise particular care.
-
-Having without difficulty obtained permission from Garde to walk at her
-side to church and back, poor Wainsworth lost appetite and sleep, while
-waiting for the fateful day. When it came, he was in a nervous plight
-which revealed to Garde the whole state of his mind. She felt her
-sympathy for him expand in her bosom till she hoped it would burgeon
-into love. Had he gone with her into her aunt Gertrude’s home, after the
-service, Garde would doubtless have helped to simplify what she was well
-aware he wished to say, but, alas for the timid lover, he dared not, on
-this occasion, so jeopardize his courage.
-
-He knew that if ever he got inside the house and faced her, alone, he
-would not be able even to deliver his letter. But out of doors his nerve
-was steadier. Therefore, at the gate having fortified himself against
-the moment, he nervously drew from his pocket a good-sized packet of
-paper and put it shakingly into her hand.
-
-“I wish—I wish you would read—this letter,” he stammered. “Good-by. I—I
-hope you will read it quite through.”
-
-Garde looked at him compassionately. He was only made the more confused.
-He bowed himself away with a nervousness painful to see.
-
-“Poor Henry!” said Garde, with a little smile to herself. She knew what
-to expect in the document and vaguely she wondered if she would not feel
-more at peace when she had consented to become his wife. Her memory of
-words and looks, behind which the figure of Adam, the sad boy-captive,
-the love-irradiated champion of her cat, and then the melancholy
-violinist in the woods—this had all, of late, been more than usually
-strong upon her.
-
-Garde’s cat had died within the week just passed. This event had served
-to open up old tombs, containing her dead dreams. She had almost caught
-herself wishing she had taken less to heart the story of Adam’s perfidy,
-or at least that she might never have heard the story at all. But when
-she had shaken off the spell which this past would persist in weaving
-about her, she was resolved to accept Henry Wainsworth, so that her duty
-might compel her to forget.
-
-With a half melancholy sense of sealing her own sentence of banishment
-from her land of bitter-sweet memories, she delayed the moment of
-unfolding Henry’s letter. When she found herself alone, she laid it down
-before her, on the table, and looked at it with lackluster eyes. But
-presently, then, having tossed off the reverie which was stealing upon
-her, she sighed once, heavily, and took up the papers with a resolute
-hand.
-
-She opened the stiff sheets and bent them straight. She read “Dear
-friend,” and thought Henry’s writing had altered. Her eyes then sped
-along a number of lines and she started with a new, tense interest in
-the document.
-
-The letter she held in her hands was the one which Adam Rust had penned
-to Wainsworth, concerning his brother.
-
-“Why!” she presently said, aloud, “why—he couldn’t have meant—” yet
-Henry, she recalled, had asked her particularly to read all the pages
-through.
-
-She had only made a start into Adam’s narrative, yet her heart had begun
-to leap till she could barely endure its commotion. She spread the
-sheets out before her on the table, with nervous fingers. She read
-swiftly, greedily. Her bosom heaved with the tumult of suddenly stirred
-emotions. She made a glad little noise, as she read, for the
-undercurrent of her thought was of a wild exultation to find that Adam
-was innocent, that she was justified in loving him now, as she had been
-justified always—that her instinct had guided her rightly when she had
-helped him to break from the prison.
-
-Her eyes were widely dilated. Her pent-up emotions swayed her till she
-suddenly clutched up the sheets and crumpled them in joy against her
-bounding heart.
-
-“Adam!” she said, half aloud. “Oh, Adam! My Adam!”
-
-She bent above the letter again, crooning involuntarily, in the
-revelation of Adam made again his noble self by the lines he had written
-so simply and innocently here upon the paper. She was reading, but
-having, almost in the first few lines, discovered so much that her
-intuition had far out-raced her eyes, she was hardly comprehending the
-sentences that ran so swiftly beneath her gaze, so abandoned were her
-senses to the sudden hope and the overwhelming joy which the revelation
-compelled. She kissed the papers. She laid her cheek upon them, she
-surrounded them warmly with her arms.
-
-She felt so glad that she had loved him in spite of that horrible story!
-Her soul leaped with exultation. She would not be obliged to marry
-Wainsworth, to forget. She would never forget! She would wait for Adam
-now—if need be till Judgment Day itself!
-
-She kissed Adam’s writing again. She fondled it lovingly. It restored
-him. It gave her back her right to love him. It was too much to think
-upon or to try to express.
-
-She had only half read it; the sense of the story had escaped her grasp.
-It had been enough that Adam was guiltless. Her breath came fast; the
-color had flamed to her cheeks. Her eyes were glowing with the love
-which she had welcomed home to her throbbing heart.
-
-She had risen, unable to control herself, so abruptly and unexpectedly
-had the discovery come upon her. Now she sat down again at the table and
-read the letter more carefully. It was such a sad little story.
-
-“Unfortunately I sprained my ankle, and this delayed me,” she read,
-where Adam had written. She pictured him now, limping through the
-forest, with the little brown child, and her heart yearned over his
-suffering, his patience and his self-sacrifice in coming back to the
-cruel fate in store for him, there in Boston.
-
-She thought of him then in the prison. She blessed the instinct of love
-which had made her go to his aid. He was not an outlaw. He was not a
-renegade. He was her own Adam.
-
-Then she thought of the moment in which she had sent him away. After all
-the heart-breaking trials he had already endured, she had added the
-final cruelty. She remembered how he had limped, when she saw him
-starting off, just before she had fainted at the window, that terrible
-night. Longing to call him back, now, and to cry out her love,—that had
-never died,—her trust, which should now endure for ever, and her plea to
-be forgiven, she fancied she heard him again saying: “Garde! Garde!—not
-forever?” and she felt a great sob rising in her throat.
-
-“Oh, Adam!” she said, as if from the depths of her heart.
-
-The hot tears, of joy and sadness blended, suddenly gave vent to the
-pent-up emotions within her. They rolled swiftly down across her face
-and splashed in great blots on the writing.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLII.
-
- LITTLE RUSES, AND WAITING.
-
-
-WHEN she had recovered somewhat of her calm again, Garde found herself
-confronted by several difficulties with which she would be obliged to
-cope. In the first place she had ruined Adam’s letter to Henry
-Wainsworth, crumpling the sheets and permitting her tears to fall upon
-their surfaces, till no one save herself, aided by love, could have
-deciphered some of the sentences at all.
-
-In the second place, if Henry had really intended to ask her hand in
-marriage, as she could not avoid believing, there might be complications
-in that direction at an early date. She could only resolve, upon this
-point, that she must not, under any circumstances, permit Henry to make
-his proposal, either orally or through the medium of another letter.
-
-As to this letter, from Adam to Henry, it was certainly of a private
-character, but Henry had asked her to read it, and now she could not
-have disguised the fact that she had done so. She could not see how she
-could possibly return it to Henry at all, under the circumstances. She
-could not bear to think of letting him see the evidence of her emotions,
-wrought upon it. Moreover, it was precious to her. She felt entitled to
-own it. To her it meant far more than it possibly could to any other
-person in the world. She resolved to make a fair copy of it, for Henry,
-while she herself would retain the original—in Adam’s own writing.
-
-Her third proposition was the most vital of them all. She could not
-think of what she should do to repair the harm which she alone, after
-all, had done, when she sent Adam away with that little word “Forever!”
-How should she let him know of the infamous story which she had been
-made to believe? How should she convince him, even supposing she could
-reach him with a word, that the story had left no room in her mind for
-doubt of its truth? How could she manage to persuade him that she had
-loved him always; that she knew at last of the wrong she had done him;
-that she begged his forgiveness; that she should wait for him even
-longer than the fifty years of which he had spoken on that last
-agonizing night?
-
-He might not forgive her, she told herself. It might be too late
-already. She knew not where he had gone, or what he had done. He too
-might have thought of marriage with somebody else—to try to forget.
-
-As a result of her brain cudgeling, to know what she would do to make
-Adam aware that she had made a great mistake and desired his
-forgiveness, she determined to write him a letter. Having decided, she
-wrote at once. Had she waited a little longer, her letter might have
-been more quiet in its reserve, but it could not then have been so
-utterly spontaneous, nor expressive of the great love she bore him, kept
-alive during all those months of doubt and agony.
-
-As it was, the little outburst was sufficiently dignified; and it was
-sweet, and frank. She told him that she had read his letter to Henry,
-and that suddenly she had known of the great wrong she had done him. She
-mentioned that a dreadful story had been fastened upon him, with all too
-terrible semblances of truth and justice. She begged his forgiveness in
-a hundred runes. Finally, when she had finished, she signed it
-“Garde—John Rosella,” in memory of her walk with him through the woods,
-from near Plymouth to Boston.
-
-Not without blushes and little involuntary thrills of delight did she
-add the name which confessed the tale of that wonderful walk, but she
-felt that Adam would know, by this very confession, how deep for him
-must be her love and trust and how contrite was the spirit in which she
-desired his forgiveness.
-
-This epistle having at length been disposed of to her satisfaction, she
-made the fair copy of Adam’s letter to Henry and sent it to Wainsworth
-at once, with a short note of explanation that some moisture having
-fallen upon the original, making it quite illegible and indeed
-destroying it utterly, for his use, she felt she could do no less than
-to make this reparation. She likewise expressed the compliment she felt
-it was to herself that Henry had desired her to know of this sad affair
-in the life of his brother, but that she had been so affected by the
-tale that she must beg him not to permit her to read any further letters
-for some time to come.
-
-This was a masterly composition, for poor Wainsworth destroyed the
-proposing epistle he had written at such infinite pains, and for a time,
-wholly abandoned any thought of speaking of marriage. He was exceedingly
-mortified to think he had made such a blunder as to give her the letter
-which he had guarded so cautiously. Timidity settled upon him,
-especially as he noted another, altogether incomprehensible change in
-Garde’s demeanor, when next they met.
-
-Having despatched her letter to Adam, Garde felt a happiness grow and
-expand in her bosom daily. She expected the wait to be a long one, till
-a letter, or some other manner of a reply, could come from Adam.
-Goodwife Phipps, of whom she had artfully contrived to get the rover’s
-address, had assured her of the very great number of weeks that elapsed
-between communications from William, in answer to the fond little flock
-of letters which she was constantly launching forth to the distant
-island across the sea. But when weeks became months, and time fled
-onward inexorably, with never a sign or a word in return for what she
-had written, she had many moments in which sad, vain regrets and
-confirmed despair took possession of her thoughts.
-
-She was a resigned, patient girl, however, with her impulses curbed, for
-the sadness of the times, aside from her own little affairs, cast a
-gloom upon the colony which seemed to deepen rather than to promise ever
-to dissolve.
-
-Her heart felt that the fifty years had passed many times over her head,
-when, after a longer time than Mrs. Phipps had mentioned as sufficient
-to bring even a delayed reply had passed, and nothing had come from Adam
-Rust. Garde watched for the ships to come, one by one, her hopes rising
-always as the white sails appeared, and then falling invariably, when no
-small messenger came to her hand. She lived from ship to ship, and sent
-her own little argosies of thought traveling wistfully across the seas,
-hoping they might come to harbor in Adam’s heart at last and so convey
-to him her yearning to hear just a word, or to see him just once again.
-
-In the meantime, she could not endure the thought that either Henry
-Wainsworth or Piety Tootbaker should even so much as think of her as if
-they stood in Adam’s place. She therefore went to work with all her
-maidenly arts, to render such a situation impossible, in the case of
-either of the would-be suitors.
-
-Thus she contrived to tell the faithful Henry that Prudence Soam was
-very fond of him indeed. For this she had a ground work of fact. She
-then conveyed to Prudence the intelligence that Henry was thinking upon
-her most fondly. This also began soon to be true enough, for Henry had
-been flattered, not a little, by the news he heard and did look at
-Prudence with a new and wondering interest. He likewise underwent a
-process of added intelligence in which he realized that Garde was not
-for him, howsoever much he might have dreamed, or would be able to dream
-in the future. It was remarkable, then, how soon the timid Henry and the
-diffident Prudence began to understand one another. Prudence, who had
-never had a sweetheart before, blossomed out with pretty little ways and
-with catching blushes and looks of brightness in her eyes that made her
-a revelation, not only to Henry but to Garde herself. And Henry became
-really happy and almost bold.
-
-For Piety, alas, there was no Prudence available. Garde racked her
-brains for a plan to fit the case of Tootbaker’s state of mind. At
-length, when John Soam began to talk to his wife about the colony
-patriots again desiring that money which had never been used to send
-David Donner abroad, for the purpose of sending somebody else, in the
-spring, Garde knew exactly what to do.
-
-She would manage to send Piety Tootbaker away to England. She went to
-work in this direction without delay. Her success was not a thing of
-sudden growth. It took no little time and persuasion to fire Piety with
-an ambition to serve his country by going so far from his comfortable
-home and his equally comfortable wooing, in which he believed he was
-making actual progress.
-
-For their agent extraordinary, to plead their cause at the Court of King
-James, the colonists selected Increase Mather, a man at once astute,
-agreeable and afflicted with religious convictions which had every
-barnacle of superstition that ever lived, attached upon them. Piety
-Tootbaker was to go as his clerk and secretary.
-
-The preparations for sending Mather abroad were conducted with no small
-degree of secrecy. Nevertheless Edward Randolph became aware of what was
-being contemplated, for his hypocritical Puritan agents were everywhere
-and in all affairs of state, or even of private business.
-
-Permitting the scheme to ripen, Randolph waited until almost the moment
-for Mather’s sailing. He then swooped down upon the enterprise and
-attempted to arrest Mather, on the process of some sham prosecution. The
-patriots, incensed almost to the point of rebellion, played cunning for
-cunning. They delayed the departure of the ship, the captain of which
-was a staunch “American,” and then hustled Mather aboard under cover of
-darkness, and so sent him off on his mission.
-
-For a week after Piety had gone, Garde felt such a sense of relief that
-she almost persuaded herself she was happy in her long wait for Adam, or
-for a word which might finally come. But the months again began their
-dreary procession, and her fear that Adam was lost to her forever
-deepened and laid its burden more and more upon her heart.
-
-Yet there came a day when, a ship having arrived in the harbor, and her
-hope having greeted it wistfully, only to flutter back to her own
-patient bosom again, a letter did actually come to her hand.
-
-It was not particularly neat; it looked as if it might have been opened
-before it came to her possession, but her heart bounded wildly when she
-saw it, and her fingers trembled as she broke it open to read its
-contents.
-
-Then her joy vanished. The letter was from Piety Tootbaker. He
-announced, as if to break the intelligence to her frankly, that the
-voyage had made him so exceedingly ill that he had determined never to
-trust himself upon the billows again. He would therefore reside
-hereafter in England, which was “a pleasing countrie and much more
-merrie than Boston.”
-
-“I shall never, never get an answer to my letter,” said Garde to
-herself, made sadder by the arrival of Piety’s letter, which proved that
-letters could actually come from over the sea. “He will never, never
-reply, I know.”
-
-She was not far mistaken, for Adam had never received her letter. It had
-fallen into the hands of Edward Randolph, who had constituted himself
-censor of communications sent abroad from Massachusetts. Malignantly he
-was keeping those love-scented sheets, against the day of his vengeance.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- PART III.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I.
-
- A TOPIC AT COURT.
-
-
-IN the midst of a gay throng, in the production of which the Court of
-King James lagged little, if any, behind that of his brother, Charles,
-Adam Rust and Captain Phipps were prime favorites. Sir William, who had
-adopted a cane, gave no promise that he would ever be at home with the
-disciples of the minuet and the hunt, while Adam seemed a very part of
-the social mechanism.
-
-Richly dressed, ready with his wit and his sword, handsome, wealthy
-enough to attract the soft glances of dames of all ages and degrees, he
-was a puzzle to the blunt captain, who had marked a change that had come
-upon him between going home from Jamaica and coming back again to help
-in recovering the treasure.
-
-Whitehall was ablaze with light and warmth, which were reflected from
-myriad sparkling jewels and from rosy cheeks. The King had disappointed
-his guests, nevertheless they were not at a loss to find amusement.
-Ready as ever to entertain, either with a song for the ladies or a duel
-with the men, Adam was pressed for a roundel to fit the merry hour. He
-had found a glass which responded with a particularly musical tinkle to
-the tap of his finger. He held it up before the admiring company and
-rang it crisply. Catching the key from its mellifluous tintinnabulation
-he began his song:
-
- “Oh your jolliest girl is your cup of sack,
- Your Mistress Sack, with her warm, brown eyes;
- She’ll love you, and never she’ll turn her back,
- Nor leave you a thought
- In her meshes uncaught,
- And never you’ll know if she lies.
-
- “Then it’s drink, drink, drink,
- And you’ll never have need to think;
- And it’s fol de rol,
- And who has use for a brain?
- With your cup that loves your lip,
- You need fear no faithless slip,
- And your heart will never know the stabs of pain.
-
- “Oh your languorous maid is your glass of wine,
- Your Lady Amour, with her ruby kiss.
- She suffers no rivals, or thinking—in fine,
- She owns all your soul
- And she takes for her toll
- A payment in dull-witted bliss.
-
- “Then drink, drink, drink, etc.
-
- “Oh, your mistress for faith is your poison cup.
- Your poison cup, with its juice of death.
- She’ll hold you, ha! ha! till the Doomsday’s up,
- In her passion’s embrace,
- And so close to her face
- That you’ll never get time for a breath.
-
- “Then it’s drink, drink, drink,
- And you never of love need think;
- And it’s fol de rol,
- For who has use for a heart?
- With a cup that loves your lip,
- You need fear no faithless slip,
- Nor feel the pangs of any pains that dart.”
-
-Not being at all certain that they knew what he meant, the company
-applauded with great enthusiasm.
-
-“But, my dear sir,” said a nobleman, with a head on him hardly bigger
-nor less wrinkled than a last winter’s apple, and a stomach as big as a
-tun, “you have not tasted a drink to-night. Demme, look at me, sir. I
-love my sack and my wine. I know nothing of your poison cup, and I have
-no wish to, demme. But, sir, I think you have no bowels for drinking.”
-
-“My lord, you furnish the bowels and I will furnish the brains to know
-about drinking,” said Adam. “By my faith, no drink ever yet went to your
-head.”
-
-“No, sir! I’m proud of it, demme,” said his lordship. “I have drunk up a
-fortune, and where is it?—It’s gone.”
-
-“Distill your breath and get it back,” suggested Rust.
-
-“What’s that? Demme, you are laughing at me, sir.”
-
-“Never!” said Adam, decisively. “Above all persons you make me sober.
-Breathe toward our friend the Viscount. He has ever wished fortune to
-wing in his direction.”
-
-“The Viscount? Where? Demme, yes. My dear old chap, how are you?” and
-turning, inconsequently, to a friend whose little eyes seemed to swim
-around in the florid sea of his face, his lordship was deserted by the
-rover. Sauntering through a cluster of friends who would have detained
-him, Adam approached a window, where he sat himself down on a miniature
-divan.
-
-Here he had but a second to himself, for while somebody else was
-preparing to sing to the company, a beautiful little lady, with eyes
-that were fairly purple in their depths of blue, came and took the seat
-beside him.
-
-“Oh, Mr. Rust,” she said, “what a strange song that was. Why, but you
-know nothing of wine and sack, and poison. Oh, why did you say poison?
-That was dreadful. And why should you wish never to think of love? What
-has poor little love ever done to you?”
-
-“You must remember, Lady Violet,” said Adam, “that before I sang I had
-not seen you, to speak a word, during the entire evening.”
-
-Lady Violet blushed. “That hasn’t anything to do with anything,” she
-said.
-
-Adam replied: “That makes me equivalent to nothing.”
-
-“It doesn’t,” the lady protested. “You mix me all up. I don’t believe
-you know anything more about love than you do about drinking.”
-
-“Do you counsel me to learn of these arts?”
-
-“No, not of drinking—certainly not, Mr. Rust.”
-
-“If we eliminate the drinking, that only leaves the love.”
-
-“Oh, but I—I didn’t say that I—I don’t wish to counsel you at all. You
-twist about everything I say.”
-
-“And you twist about every man you meet,” retorted Adam.
-
-“Oh, I do not!” she objected. “How rude you are to say so. I don’t even
-like all the men I meet, and if I did——”
-
-“You mean, then, that you twist only the ones like myself, that you
-like.”
-
-“I don’t! I——You make me say things I don’t want to say.”
-
-“Then I shall make you say that you love me desperately,” said Adam,
-complacently.
-
-“Mr. Rust!” she gasped. “I—I—I——”
-
-“If you are going to say it now, let me know,” Adam interrupted.
-
-She was blushing furiously. She did love him, just about as Rust had
-described, but he had never guessed it and was merely toying with the
-one absorbing and universal topic of the court.
-
-“I—I am not going to say anything of the kind!” she stammered.
-
-“Then that proves my case,” Adam announced, judicially. “I cannot compel
-you to say anything at all that is not already at the point of your
-tongue.”
-
-“You—you are very rude,” she said, helplessly.
-
-“So I have been told by Lady Margaret,” Adam confessed. “Here she is
-herself. Lady Margaret, we are having quite a discussion. Tell us, if a
-man tries to make a lady say she loves him desperately, is he
-necessarily rude?”
-
-A superb young widow, who was gradually emerging from her mourning
-black, and who had come to the gathering with her father, halted in
-front of the two on the small divan and looked them over.
-
-“Dear Lady Violet,” said the new comer, “your brother and Lord
-Kilkrankie are looking for you everywhere.”
-
-“Oh, thank you, so much,” said the confused little lady, and without
-waiting for anything further she jumped up and fled from the scene. She
-was vexed at and distrustful of Lady Margaret; but she could not remain
-and give her battle.
-
-The second lady took Violet’s seat, calmly. “What have you been saying
-of love to that little, brainless child?” she said. “You haven’t been
-making love to her, surely?”
-
-“Oh no,” said Adam, “I was occupying my time till you should come along
-and make love to me.”
-
-“You wretch,” she said, with perfect calm. “You wouldn’t know love if
-you saw it.”
-
-“Is it so rare at Court?” he inquired. “Perhaps I should spend my time
-better in looking at you.”
-
-“Don’t be silly,” she said. “But tell me, what is your opinion, really,
-of love.”
-
-“It makes a poor fare for dinner, a poor coat in the winter, and a poor
-comfort when you are dead,” said Rust. “It tricks the clever; it’s the
-wandering Jew of emotions. If you wish me to do you an injury, bid me to
-love you forthwith.”
-
-“Where have you learned, that you speak with such wisdom?” said Lady
-Margaret. “Surely not such a child as Violet——”
-
-“You do yourself an injustice,” Adam interrupted.
-
-“Adam,” she said, “this is the sort of thing you say to all the women.”
-
-“And which of your friends would you ask me to neglect?” he asked. “A
-woman’s judgment is the one thing I lack.”
-
-“You are a heartless wretch!” she announced.
-
-“On the contrary, I am a wretch of a thousand hearts,” he corrected.
-“How long would you continue to love me if I had any less?”
-
-“Adam! I don’t love you, and you know it.”
-
-“That leaves a vacancy in my life which I shall fill at once,” he told
-her. “Wait—perhaps I can catch the eye of the Countess.”
-
-The Countess had one of the most catchable eyes imaginable. She came up
-immediately.
-
-“Margaret says she no longer loves me,” said the incorrigible Rust, “I
-shall give her place to you.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II.
-
- ILLNESS IN THE FAMILY.
-
-
-SICK of the women, to all of whom he made love, openly, to avoid being
-thought serious by any; weary of the specious show, which failed to
-bring him the forgetfulness he craved, Adam left the assemblage early
-and went to search out the beef-eaters, at their humble quarters.
-
-Improvidents that they were, Pike and Halberd had soon dispersed the not
-inconsiderable sum of money which Adam had divided between them, since
-which time he had provided the pair with their lodgings, keep, clothing
-and amusements.
-
-The night being fine and the air soon reviving the rover’s livelier
-moods of delight in sheer existence, he found himself loitering along,
-stopping to look in the windows of the scattered shops still open for
-the tag-ends of the day’s trading. It was only the little knick-knack
-shops, old curio dens and lesser establishments that still had their
-lights aglow, but it happened that these were the particular ones in
-which Adam took an interest.
-
-He stopped before one of the dingiest for fifteen minutes, carefully
-scanning a considerable collection of violins which the window
-contained. At length his eye lighted, he muttered something half
-exclamatory and went into the shop at once. The dealer knew him and
-nodded delightedly, glad to have him again in his place, as he had fully
-expected when he placed the rare old fiddle which Rust had seen, in his
-window.
-
-Adam bought the instrument with all the eagerness of the confirmed
-connoisseur and went his way contented.
-
-When he came to the tavern where the beef-eaters made their abode, he
-found little Pike dangerously ill with pleurisy and thinking of
-shuffling off forlornly into his next existence.
-
-The one thing which alone could transform Adam Rust into the cheerful
-fellow he had been before his veneer of cynicism came upon him, was
-illness in his family. He refused to let his beef-eaters think of dying.
-They were his tie to everything he still held dear.
-
-He pulled off his coat and went to work on Pike, whose spirits he raised
-with songs, raillery and cheer, and whose fever he lowered with teas and
-bitter drinks, which he steeped himself, from various herbs and roots,
-the specific qualities of which he had known from the Indians.
-
-The Court saw no more of the reckless Adam for a week. At the end of
-this time he had coaxed the faithful Pike to something like his former
-health again, when he announced his intention of going to Spain, to add
-to his growing collection of violins. He therefore said good-by to Sir
-William Phipps and went off with his beef-eaters both in charge.
-
-Having learned that the Pyrenees afforded splendid possibilities for
-building up depleted health and strength, the rover domiciled himself
-and companions in a spot that was charmingly lonely. And William Phipps,
-when Adam’s first letter arrived, wondered vaguely what manner of
-violins his comrade was finding in the mountains.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III.
-
- FOILED PURPOSES.
-
-
-INCREASE MATHER met with a dignified and polite reception at the Court
-of the King, for Sir William Phipps, with all his influence and
-persuasiveness, prepared the way for the envoy extraordinary to approach
-the master of the colonies.
-
-Sir William even constituted himself another champion of downtrodden
-Massachusetts, and added his importunities to those of Mather, to induce
-James to re-establish the rights and territory of the colony and to give
-it back its beloved charter.
-
-“We love you much, Sir William,” said the King, with a firmness which
-was never to be shaken, “but we cannot accede to your wishes. Anything
-but this that you will ask shall be granted.”
-
-Disappointed, but never disconcerted, Sir William conferred with Mather,
-whom he was obliged to assure that nothing that either of them could say
-to him now would beget an alteration of King James’s decision. Mather,
-persistent, suave and convinced of the justice of his cause, determined
-to remain in touch with the Court and the King’s retainers, until sheer
-patience and persistence should win what persuasion could not.
-
-Phipps, knowing only too well the disposition of the King, when once his
-word was passed, determined that he could do more for his country if
-present in the colony than he could by remaining in London. Reminding
-the King that he had already granted him any other favor than the
-restoration of the colony’s charter, he announced his desire to be
-appointed Sheriff of New England.
-
-Regretting to lose the hearty Captain from his company, James
-nevertheless kept his word by complying with Sir William’s request. The
-appointment was duly made and confirmed. Leaving Mather behind him,
-Phipps returned to Boston and set about the administration of his
-new-made duties, with more ardor than cunning, with more honesty than
-diplomacy.
-
-It is doubtful if William Phipps ever had a more aggravating experience,
-in all his adventures, with mutineers and pirates, than he underwent at
-the hands of Randolph and Governor Andros. He was not a man of finished
-education. Born in Maine, in a family of twenty-one children, he had
-been obliged to commence the round of shifting for himself at an early
-age. He had apprenticed himself to a ship-carpenter at eighteen and then
-had come to Boston four years later, when he went to work and taught
-himself to read and to write.
-
-Hampered now, by this lack of early opportunities, insulted, and finding
-his most sincere efforts nullified and his plans constantly frustrated,
-by the delays and artifices of the council under Andros, he was made
-heartily sick of the whole situation.
-
-His return to Boston, however, was not marked entirely by chagrin and
-discouragement. He had his wife with him, and herein lay the greatest
-happiness which ever came into his eventful life. He built her the “fair
-brick house, in the Green Lane,” which he had promised, years before,
-and he endeared many of the staunch patriots, who beheld his efforts to
-help them, sadly, though with admiration.
-
-Although Garde had never known how very intimate indeed had been the
-relations of Captain Phipps and Adam, yet she was aware that they had
-been much together. She had naturally learned, in common with all the
-inhabitants of Boston, that Sir William had found the treasure he had
-spent so many years in seeking, but she had never known that when she
-sent Adam away he had gone to Hispaniola to join the searching
-expedition. Therefore she was in ignorance of the fact that Adam was
-wealthy.
-
-But, after all, she was only concerned with Adam’s present whereabouts,
-and the reasons why, after all these months and months of waiting—it
-being now two full years since that last tragic meeting—he had never
-relented sufficiently to write, or to send her a word.
-
-As time had gone on, she had become more and more convinced, either that
-Adam intended never to forgive her, or that he had married some one else
-and therefore could not, in honor, think longer upon her. Her belief
-inclined toward the first explanation. She confessed that she had done
-him a great wrong, especially as she had never even so much as permitted
-him to deny the story of the Indian child, but she argued that had she
-been in his place and forgiveness had been so earnestly implored, she
-could not have had the heart to refuse.
-
-It was the one little sad privilege left her, to make up her mind she
-would wait, till death, if need be, patiently, lovingly, till Adam
-should one day know she loved him and that she was keeping herself
-sacred for his claiming. And if he never did come to claim her, still
-she would love him. If death came to take her, she would go to death as
-a bride would go to church, to wait the coming of her love.
-
-In the frame of mind which her vigil had begotten, fortified by her
-sense of maidenly pride and diffidence, it was utterly impossible for
-her to think of going either to Sir William Phipps, or to his wife, to
-ask for information concerning Adam. She was aware that the Captain
-doubtless knew of Adam’s whereabouts, his position in life and whether
-or not he was married, but if Adam chose to remain silent, disdainful
-and unforgiving, she would rather die than go to a stranger to ask about
-him, or to send him anything further, in the way of a word or a letter.
-
-As a matter of fact, Garde had attempted to send another little letter,
-a year after the first one had gone, but it too had fallen into the
-clutches of Randolph. The creature had destroyed it, as containing
-nothing of importance to any of his machinations, for it merely asked
-the rover if he had received the first epistle.
-
-Thus Garde’s golden opportunity slipped away unused, and her life
-narrowed down, more and more, to the simple duties of taking what care
-she could of the white-haired old man, her grandfather, who rubbed his
-thumb across the ends of his fingers endlessly, although he was slowly
-being restored to his old-time activity of mind and body.
-
-Utterly disheartened, by the futility of his desires and efforts to
-serve his country in his capacity of Sheriff, Sir William Phipps was
-glad to receive a letter that came from Increase Mather, informing him
-that the time was drawing near for renewed labors to be attempted in
-England. Responding to this, he deserted his useless office and sailed
-for London in the midst of the winter season.
-
-The opportunity of which Garde might have availed herself, to learn
-something of Adam, was gone. She knew not what she had done, or what she
-had lost.
-
-Phipps came to England at a moment when epochs were fairly in the
-process of crystalization.
-
-King James, the last of Britain’s Roman Catholic monarchs, had been
-obliged to abdicate his throne and to flee to Ireland for his life.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV.
-
- MAKING HISTORY.
-
-
-UNTHRONED and uncrowned as he was, James, for some inexplicable reason,
-still entertained a wild idea that the colonies, the patriots of which
-he had taken no pains to endear to his cause or himself, would still
-remain loyal and contented to acquiesce in his dominion. He made all
-haste to communicate with Sir William Phipps, as a representative of New
-England whom he had always honored and esteemed. He offered to appoint
-the Captain his Governor of all New England, with plenary powers, in
-almost any direction, concerning the old charter and all.
-
-Promptly and with the blunt wisdom which marked his course through life,
-Phipps refused the honor. Catholicism had never appealed to his sense of
-good government, and loyalty to the English throne, from which the
-colonies had their being, was deeply ingrained in his nature. Gratitude
-to James for past favors, to which he felt he was somewhat entitled, was
-a large quality in Sir William, but between gratitude and folly he drew
-a sturdy line.
-
-With Increase Mather, Phipps went to work at once at the Court of
-William of Orange, who with Mary ascended the British throne early in
-1689. Intelligence as to the sinister machinations of Randolph and
-Andros leaked through the censorship, and came to Mather and the
-Captain. Their case was strengthened. The Prince of Orange was bound, by
-all the faith of his Protestant principles, to grant what release he
-might to the American colonies from the oppressors placed in power by
-the Stuarts.
-
-The new King’s declaration of his sway was conveyed in haste to the
-American shores. It was taken overland from Virginia to Massachusetts.
-The spirit of the Puritans, which had simmered so long, began to make
-the sounds of boiling.
-
-Andros, mighty in his sovereignty, arrested the messenger who had
-fetched the news, but the news had leaped from lip to lip, and the torch
-had been applied to combustible thought.
-
-In March, John Winslow confirmed the declaration of the new monarchs.
-The people now gathered together their all-but-forgotten muskets and
-pikes. Against the flood-tide coming toward him, Governor Andros reared
-a barricade of threats. The frigate “Rose” was lying in the harbor,
-bristling with guns that showed like so many sinister, black fangs. Her
-decks were alive with soldiers. The Governor demanded the submission and
-disarmament of the people, on pain of death. He declared his intention
-of employing the cannon and arsenal of the frigate forthwith, if the
-angry disturbances did not immediately cease.
-
-On the 18th of April the patriots were prepared with their answer. The
-captain of the frigate, with nearly all of his officers, had come
-ashore, to hold a conference with Andros and Randolph. The Puritans
-suddenly swooped down upon them and captured every Jack of the lot. The
-frigate was thus put out of action at one clever stroke.
-
-Now rolled the alarm of beaten drums through the martial city of Boston.
-In their old Indian-fighting regalia, the citizens swarmed from their
-houses into the streets. They set up their ensign on Beacon Hill, at the
-edge of the Common, they fired a signal gun for action, and falling upon
-Randolph and many of the council, which Andros had collected about him,
-they rushed them to jail and took possession of the town.
-
-The proclamation of King William was read, with loud acclaim. The
-excited populace surged in the narrow, crooked highways. The leaders
-demanded of Andros that he surrender both his office and himself. The
-man refused and fled to his stronghold, whence he defied the patriots
-and continued to the last to declare his power, though like water now
-fast escaping from his grasp.
-
-Surrounding their ex-master they made him a prisoner, not a refugee, and
-at length he gave in and was captured and sent to confinement, along
-with the others of his recent government.
-
-With an instinct for conventions, the citizens were soon assembled.
-Howsoever great had been their heat in their moment of rebellion and
-triumph, they were calm enough to be wise when the time arrived to
-declare for themselves. They reinstated Bradstreet and the Council of
-’86. They declared the old Government in force and their former charter
-_ipso facto_ restored, unimpaired by the interim of nearly three years
-of maladministration.
-
-William and Mary received the report of all these swiftly terminated
-proceedings with a favor which was not unblended with astonishment.
-Admiring the Protestant spirit, which it had become their own special
-province to uphold, they lost no time in confirming the entire course of
-actions, even to the temporary resumption of their old charter
-privileges and powers, by the patriots across the sea. And there, for a
-time, they were contented to permit the matter to rest. The affairs of
-England they had found so completely engrossing that they had no time to
-spare toward regranting a specific charter to Massachusetts.
-
-Increase Mather, suspicions of privileges and liberties not absolutely
-signed, sealed and delivered, remained at his post, working continuously
-and sedulously to obtain that monarchical support and confirmation of
-the colony’s prerogatives which his many compatriots had sent him to
-secure.
-
-Sir William Phipps, on the other hand, realized the busy state of mind
-in which William and Mary had been so abruptly plunged, and he therefore
-deferred further work with Mather for a time more suitable. Then, when
-he learned that the French Catholics in America had formed alliances
-with the Indians and were already overrunning the Protestant territory
-and committing daily depredations, he made up his mind once more to
-return to the field of action, in which he might be able to render more
-effective service than he could by remaining in England.
-
-He arrived in the summer of that fateful year, ’89, and offered himself
-to Bradstreet at once. The period of warfare in which he thereupon
-engaged was one of great length and of much bitterness.
-
-Alternating defeat and victory left the advantages with the French and
-Indians, so far as hopes of ultimate success were concerned. The
-colonists had to make such long, tedious marches that decisive victories
-for their arms were almost impossible. The enemy gained in confidence,
-audacity and numbers.
-
-In despair the General Court finally offered two sloops of war, free,
-together with all the profits of plunder which might result from the
-enterprise, to any man who would undertake to reduce to ashes Penobscot,
-St. John’s and Port Royal, the seats of the French and Indian power. The
-offer attracted Phipps, who foresaw, in the execution of the task, an
-infinite amount of adventure and action.
-
-He enlisted men for the undertaking. Yet matters grew worse with such
-alarming rapidity that before the enterprise could be placed in
-readiness for work, it became necessary to raise a small fleet of
-vessels prepared for war-like operations. Thus seven sloops and seven
-hundred men, under command of Sir William, sailed away to the North on
-their sinister errand.
-
-Port Royal, secure and arrogant, in her fancied isolation from attack,
-was surprised and taken. The French were routed with great loss. The
-town was looted until hardly so much as a sauce-pan was left by the
-thorough-going warriors of New England. The plunder, while not
-enormously valuable, nevertheless was sufficient to help materially in
-meeting the expenses of the venture. But its indirect effect on the
-colonists was not so happy. Cupidity is so often the jackal that follows
-righteous indignation.
-
-The Puritans foresaw opportunities to punish the enemy, at the enemy’s
-own expense. A second expedition, to go against Quebec, was planned, the
-patriots expecting in confidence that, like the first, it would surely
-succeed, if Phipps were at its head, and that the plunder would more
-than repay the initial expenses of the expedition.
-
-Sir William, having expressed his doubts of the wisdom of this
-over-ambitious scheme, nevertheless commanded the fleet once more as it
-sailed away, eager for further conquest.
-
-The enterprise was doomed to failure from the first. It dragged out
-interminably, it developed jealousies, it was ill-planned. Such a
-bedraggled, failure-smitten lot of lame-duck sloops returned to Boston
-that the council were simply appalled. They had expended so much of
-their meager hoard of funds on the venture, that the treasury was
-practically bankrupted.
-
-Blame rained upon the head of Phipps, for not having succeeded against
-impossible conditions. Driven to extremities, by the woeful lack of
-plunder, the colony-fathers were obliged, for the first time in their
-history, to issue paper currency. The notes ranged in value from
-denominations of two shillings up to ten pounds.
-
-Still an undimmed patriot, ready to serve his country in whatsoever
-direction an opportunity was afforded, Williams Phipps gave his gold for
-the colony’s bills, absorbing thus a very considerable sum. His example
-induced investments in the paper from all directions. Nevertheless the
-currency soon came tumbling down in value, till a pound in paper was
-worth less than three-fourths of its face.
-
-The sailors, and other working people, lost heavily, in these times of
-trouble and weakened confidence. Yet eventually the money was all
-redeemed at par by the Massachusetts government.
-
-Sir William, weary of being reviled for his pains, returned to England
-once again and resumed his labors with Increase Mather, to secure to the
-colony a definite charter.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V.
-
- OLD ACQUAINTANCES.
-
-
-ADAM RUST failed, even in the intricacies of collecting violins and the
-pursuit of health for the old beef-eaters, to find the depths of
-forgetfulness she sought, but which could not come to a nature such as
-his had always been. Indeed seclusion, away from the gaiety of Court and
-his fellow-beings seemed rather to develop the old, half-forgotten
-memories in his brain, whereon had once been shadowed the sufferings of
-King Philip, his Indian foster-father, and all his race of hunted
-people.
-
-The beef-eaters, also, were not absolutely contented, away from their
-own country and the haunts wherein they were wont to brag, to drink and
-to swagger. Yielding at last to their importunities, Adam returned with
-the pair to London.
-
-Once in the foggy capital again, he was soon pounced upon, by old
-associates, with whom he found it exhilarating once again to consort. A
-treatise on rare violins and their makers, over which he had labored and
-pondered for months, or even years, was now neglected.
-
-He sharpened his wits, had a look at his sword and brightened up his
-disused tinsel of conversation. He soon began to believe the greatest
-forgetfulness, after all, is where the Babel of tongues is loudest, and
-that the most absolute solitude is to be found in the midst of the
-largest throng.
-
-The social functions of the new King were fewer, less brilliant and not
-to be compared, in point of popularity, with those of James. The Dukes,
-the Marchionesses and lesser lights were therefore constrained to make
-the more of their private parties. There was, in consequence, no stint
-of hunting, drinking and dancing—all as condiments poured about the
-omniprevalent piece de resistance—making love.
-
-At the Duchess of Kindlen’s, Adam found the set he had known
-particularly well. He was welcomed back to their circle as a long-lost
-fixture without whose presence no one was at all able to explain how
-they had managed to go on existing. They fitted him back in his niche
-with a promptness which might have been flattering, had he not been
-aware that they wished merely to feed upon him as a new entertainer, or
-an old one refurbished.
-
-He was not surprised to learn that Lady Violet had been married in his
-absence. He was duly informed of this event, which he described as an
-irreparable calamity in his life, by Lady Margaret, who was more of a
-brilliant blossom of feminine charm and enticements than even before.
-
-“But you, my dear Lady Margaret,” he said, “you have been true to my
-memory? You have never learned to love another?”
-
-“I never learned to love you, Adam,” she said.
-
-“Then it must have been a matter of spontaneous combustion,” he
-concluded. “You always did manage your compliments adroitly.”
-
-“Confirmed villain,” she answered, “a woman would be mad who loved such
-a bubble of flattering reflections as you have always been.”
-
-“I was not accusing you of sanity,” he told her frankly. “I was merely
-inquiring whether or not you have learned to love somebody else, in my
-absence.”
-
-“And if I had, what then?”
-
-“I should wish to pause for reflection, before determining whether I
-should be more sorry for the other fellow or for myself.”
-
-“Fiend!” she said, mildly, “you shall never know.”
-
-“Know what?—know where to place my sympathy?”
-
-“You shall never know whether I have learned to love another, or not.”
-
-“Well, neither will you—that one’s consolation.”
-
-“But at least I shall know how I feel toward you, Adam Rust.”
-
-“So shall I,” said the cheerful Adam. “I have always known. If you
-should say you were dying, I should know you were dying to run away with
-me, forthwith. It’s not your fault, you can’t help it.”
-
-“I never dreamed of such a thing in my life!” she said.
-
-“Then you ought at once to consult a physician for a bad case of
-insomnia. I thought your eyes looked a bit weary.”
-
-“You vile thing!” she answered. “Ted never said such a thing as that in
-his life.”
-
-“Then you have been trying to learn to love Ted? I thought you had a
-faithless look about you—all except about your eyes. Alas, from the way
-you talk I know you must be married already to this Ted.”
-
-“I’m not!” she said, unguardedly. “I refused only to-night to set the
-day.”
-
-“This was a thoughtfulness toward me I had not expected,” said Rust,
-complacently. “But you are betrothed, and this was unkind.”
-
-“Unkind to whom?” she demanded.
-
-“To Ted—and to me.”
-
-“You will like Ted,” she told him, more artfully.
-
-“At the other end of a duel, yes—immensely.”
-
-“He’s a terrible swordsman,” she said, to urge him on.
-
-“Yet how poorly he fenced with you.”
-
-“What do you mean?”
-
-“You won. You got him—poor devil.”
-
-“Wretch! Ted at least would never pick on a woman.”
-
-“If it’s Ted Suffle,” said Rust, “I saw him pick on his teeth, to-night,
-and that is worse——in company.”
-
-“His tooth aches terribly!” said Lady Margaret, defending poor Suffle
-gallantly.
-
-“He indulges in too much sweets,” Adam remarked, unmoved. “Treat him the
-way you do me and he’ll soon be better.”
-
-“I wish Ted could hear the way you talk to me,” she said.
-
-“If he could hear the things you say to me, he would demand that duel
-quicker,” Rust responded. “Tell me something outrageous to say to the
-fellow, so that he will be obliged to challenge.”
-
-“Nonsense,” she said, looking at him slyly, “don’t be silly. You
-wouldn’t fight a duel over me.”
-
-“Ah, but think what a lot of ladies would think me a hero,” he replied
-with enthusiasm. “And I might also be banished from the country. You can
-never tell where luck and lightning will strike next.”
-
-“Go away, Adam,” she said. “You are perfectly monstrous.”
-
-“I’ll go and have a look at Ted,” he answered, calmly. “If he is a
-gentleman he will probably insult me without delay.”
-
-To Lady Margaret’s utter dismay and astonishment, he sauntered off at
-once and actually went to where Suffle was standing, and had himself
-presented.
-
-“I have asked for this honor,” he said, “the sooner to offer my best
-congratulations on your betrothal. Lady Margaret has told me a little
-about it. She is the happiest girl I have ever seen in all my life.”
-
-“You are a good chap to say so,” said Suffle. “Do you know, I fancied I
-should like you, Mr. Rust, the moment I saw you.”
-
-“I should like to give you my friendship as a wedding present,” Adam
-told him, honestly, knowing at once that Suffle was a fellow he could
-really somewhat like. Then he added, more equivocally: “I have known
-Lady Margaret so long that I shall take great happiness in seeing the
-consummation of this happy event.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI.
-
- JUGGLING WITH FIRE.
-
-
-LADY MARGARET was a beautiful woman. The next time he met her, Adam
-realized that this was true. He stood looking down upon her, where she
-sat on a low divan which was made to throw two persons very close
-together, and into which he had avoided squeezing. The young woman
-looked up at him winningly, a slumberous passion in her garnet-brown
-eyes. Her creamy white bosom rose and fell in a calm voluptuousness, the
-twin beauties of which were more than suggested.
-
-Rust could not recall that he had ever seen shoulders more superb, nor a
-throat more delightfully round and built upward in curves to the perfect
-chin at the top. In contrast with her lustrously dark eyes and her
-almost black eyebrows, spanning her forehead with their dainty arches,
-her old-gold hair was an amazing crown of loveliness.
-
-She had led him away from the company, “to look for Ted,” with an art
-which had for once deceived the crafty rover completely. Now, as he
-looked upon her, assuming a coldness it was utterly impossible to feel,
-and be a man, he noted a beauty in her bare arms which made him think of
-the perfect lines of a tiger’s paw. He could have suggested nothing to
-make them more splendid.
-
-Indeed she was well-nigh matchless as a creation of nature and polite
-society. Her shimmering satin gown clung to her form as if ardently. Her
-pretty gold-slippered feet and her slender ankles, in red silk,
-open-work stockings, defied a glance to ignore them.
-
-“Adam,” she said, smiling up at him archly, “I wish you were a girl—just
-for a few moments, you know.”
-
-“You would suffer by the contrast between us,” said Rust.
-
-“You would know what a—what a bore he is,” she went on, regardless of
-his comment. “And it would serve you right.”
-
-“You doubtless mean the King,” he replied. “Your expedients are cruel.
-Make anything out of me—a camel, if you like,—but not a girl.”
-
-“I mean Ted,” she said, a little desperately. “You know I mean Ted. You
-know what a bore he is.”
-
-“Then you have spoiled him since morning.”
-
-“You have no right to be the only man who isn’t a bore,” she went on.
-
-“You’ll be telling me I am the only man you ever loved, in a moment,” he
-answered. “I can feel it coming.”
-
-“And if I did,” she said with a passionate glance, “what then?”
-
-Adam was frightened, as he had never been before in his life. He took
-out his handkerchief and flecked a bit of dust from his boot,
-nonchalantly.
-
-“I should advise you to be bled for fever,” he said. “And I should know
-the old affection you had for me once had departed forever. Couldn’t you
-break my heart in some simpler way, dear Lady Margaret?”
-
-“It was all your fault for going away,” she told him. “You knew I liked
-you before you went away.”
-
-“Oh yes,” he responded gaily, “but I saw that your passionate love for
-me was waning, so I went away to kindle it over again.”
-
-“Do be serious for a moment,” she murmured, vexed with his calmness and
-his raillery. “You know Ted is a dreadful bore.”
-
-“Then since you have given him the love that once was mine, my cue is to
-become a bore instanter.”
-
-“You would never know it, if I loved you madly,” she said, looking up
-into his face with her declaration centered in her eyes.
-
-“Yes, I would,” he corrected, placidly. “If you loved me madly you would
-tell me about it; you know you would.”
-
-Her breath came fast. Her bosom rose and fell rapidly. “You wouldn’t
-believe me if I did,” she said.
-
-“If you told me you loved me madly,” said Adam, “I should know you
-didn’t. So please let me go on with my fond delusions.”
-
-She was silent a moment. He could feel her burning gaze on his face.
-“Adam,” she said presently, “do sit down.” She moved to make half room
-enough for him on the divan.
-
-“What, and make you stand?” he replied. “Never!”
-
-She placed her hand on the arm of the seat, where she knew his fingers
-would return when he had finished scratching at a tiny white speck on
-his coat-lappel. He observed her motion and thrust his fist in his
-pocket.
-
-“Oh, I am dying,” she presently whispered, after another silence.
-
-“How interesting,” Adam cheerfully commented. “What are you dying for, a
-glass of water, or a new set of diamonds?”
-
-“You know what I am dying for,” she said, tremulously, in a voice hardly
-above a whisper. “You said if I were dying, you—you would know what
-for.”
-
-“Oh, did I?” Adam mused. He was pale behind his calm. His hands were
-perspiring, coldly. “Yes, of course. I said you would be dying to run
-away with me. And now you would try to prove that this was all wrong. My
-dear Lady Margaret, this is unkind.”
-
-She arose from her seat. She was driven to her wits’ end for anything to
-say.
-
-“Silly boy,” she answered, as she came toward him, and then she quickly
-added: “Oh, Adam, would you mind just clasping this strap?”
-
-The strap was a narrow bit of finery which crossed her bare shoulder.
-She had artfully loosened the golden clasp and now came to present
-shoulder, strap, clasp and all for re-arrangement.
-
-“There is nothing I can do with greater ease,” said Rust, “There you
-are,—done already.” He had performed his office with amazing dexterity
-and with a touch so fleeting that she would never have known when it
-alighted.
-
-“Oh, you haven’t done it right, my dear foolish Adam,” she said, with a
-delicious little chuckle. “I’ll put my arm across your shoulder, so.
-Now, make it right, do, Adam, please.”
-
-She dropped her exquisite arm on his shoulder as she spoke and edged
-closer. She turned so that her face was so near to his that he could
-feel how glowing warm she was. Her breath fanned against his cheek,
-hotly. The man felt a sense of intoxication stealing upon him. Yet he
-was fixing the clasp as briefly as before, when she made a movement with
-her slipper.
-
-“Oh, I am falling,” she said in a little cry, and throwing both arms
-about him, to support herself, she was clasped close to his breast, for
-a moment, before he could seem to re-establish her balance. In that
-brief time a mad horde of thoughts ran riotously through his brain. She
-was beautiful; she loved him; she had fascinated something in him
-always. Could he not be happy, loving her and having her love in return?
-Why not run away with her—to the Continent—anywhere—and fill the aching
-void in his nature with love and caresses!
-
-His heart was beating furiously. He trembled. A fever leaped into his
-brain. Through his arms shot a galvanic contraction, as they halted in
-the act of closing about the superb, slender figure he was holding. It
-seemed as if he must kiss her, on her lips, her throat—her shoulder!
-
-“Adam, I am dying!” she whispered to him again, as he held her.
-
-“Don’t die standing up,” he said, with a sudden recovery of the mastery
-over himself. “Sit down and do it calmly.”
-
-He swayed her aside, and there was nothing she could do but to take the
-seat she had occupied before.
-
-“How provoking of me to trip on my gown,” she said, looking up at him
-sullenly. “Do you think we shall have snow to-morrow?”
-
-“I shall pray against a precipitation of icebergs,” said Adam. “There is
-nothing suggestive of love in ice.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII.
-
- A BEEF-EATER PASSES.
-
-
-THE rigors of the London winter pursued the beef-eaters relentlessly,
-tapping them remindfully on the shoulder, now and again, with a cold, or
-a spell of bronchitis, and then, under cover of a fog, some deadly
-affliction fastened upon the pair all at once. The rover found them,
-after an absence from their quarters of two days, so ill that first one
-and then the other was crawling from his bed to minister to his comrade,
-so that both grew rapidly worse.
-
-Adam looked at the two of them ruefully, when at length he came to where
-they were. He had never known them ill in this manner before. They cared
-nothing for eating; they slept but little. Their eyes were bright. They
-were perfectly cheerful, in a feeble sort of way. After the Sachem had
-come they declared they wanted for nothing, provided he would talk to
-them, sing a little and let them lie there and see him, or hear him play
-on his favorite violin.
-
-He brought them every comfort which money could buy. He cooked for them,
-served them and ate at their board—which was a board indeed, reaching
-from one bed to the other, where they could easily get at what he spread
-on its surface for their pleasure. But the choice wines he fetched, and
-the fruits and the delicate bits of game and fish, remained almost
-wholly untasted.
-
-Adam was soon at a loss to know what to do. He tried to get at their
-symptoms.
-
-“Pike, you rogue,” he said, “I want to know where you feel bad. You are
-ill, you know; now where is the pain?”
-
-“By my sword-stroke,” said Pike, in a worn-down voice, “I have no pain.
-I may be tired, to-day, but to-morrow, bring me a pirate and I shall eat
-him without the trouble of slicing him first.”
-
-“Tired, that’s it,” agreed Halberd. “I’m a bit tired myself, this
-afternoon, but by cock’s crow to-morrow I could enjoy pulling the tail
-out of a lion and beating the beast to death with the bloody end of it.”
-
-“Well, doesn’t your stomach ache, or your head hurt you?” insisted Adam.
-“When you cough like that, doesn’t it hurt your chest?”
-
-“No, I like it, for the tickling,” said Halberd.
-
-The two old scamps were afraid of being taken across the channel to
-Spain again, or down into France, or perhaps across to Morocco. After
-three days of his “tinkering” unsuccessfully, with his faithful
-companions, Adam called in a doctor.
-
-The worthy physician promptly bled the two patients. Little Pike became
-quieter, if possible, than before. Halberd, on the contrary, was
-somewhat wrought up in his feelings.
-
-“By my steel!” said he, when the doctor had departed, “this puny Sir
-Nostrum has let more of my juice with his nonsense than ever was taken
-by swordsman out of my carcass. Faith! I’ll pulp the fellow, and he
-comes again!”
-
-Adam laughed, for Halberd suddenly got back a monstrous appetite. He
-likewise abounded in pains, which he permitted the Sachem to soothe; and
-he otherwise improved past all belief. He had been a little ill, and his
-sympathy with Pike had made his ailment mischievous.
-
-Pike, however, had no such rally in him. He put in his time smoothing
-the coverlet with slow, feeble movements, while he lay there looking at
-Adam with dumb affection until one could almost fancy he was wagging a
-tail, with weak, joyful jerks.
-
-He got the Sachem to sing him the love song of the many seas, for Pike
-had once had a heart full of love for a maiden himself, and while the
-experience was nothing jollier than a funeral on the day set for the
-wedding, nevertheless he liked the lively song, with all its various
-maids and misses mentioned, for he conceived them all to be the
-self-same girl, after all, simply transported to different climes.
-
-While Adam was singing and playing, with the merriest spirit he could
-conjure, the wistful old Pike had the impudence to close his eyes and
-die.
-
-A faint smile lingered on his face; whether as a result of his joke on
-Adam and Halberd, or his pleasure derived from the song, could never be
-known.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII.
-
- A WOMAN SCORNED.
-
-
-SIR WILLIAM PHIPPS and Increase Mather, together with the other Puritan
-patriots who made up the small band of charter-hunters at the Court of
-William and Mary, worked consistently, if not harmoniously, toward their
-end.
-
-They found their monarch disposed to permit them to do about as they
-pleased, when at length he comprehended their situation and the needs of
-Massachusetts. His attorney-general was ordered to draw up a charter, on
-the broad lines suggested by the American council. No sooner did they
-get it into their hands, however, than they fell into heated discussions
-over trifling divergencies which they found between it and the older
-charter, which they had come to regard with almost idolatrous awe and
-reverence.
-
-The new charter granted them many liberties and privileges which the old
-one had not contained. Time even proved the new one to be the better
-document for the colony, but despite these facts, and the further fact
-that it restored to their dominion the provinces of Maine, New
-Hampshire, and Nova Scotia, to the St. Lawrence River, they found much
-at which to grumble.
-
-However, they finally accepted what they had, with what show of
-gratitude they were able to simulate. Their disaffection doubtless had
-its purpose, and it might have been fruitful of the further concession
-which they gained, namely, the privilege of nominating their own next
-Governor.
-
-Here, for once, they were quite unanimous. They requested that Sir
-William Phipps be appointed. They knew that without the priceless
-services which he had rendered the cause, during all his sojourn in
-England, they might never have received a tithe of what was now secured
-to their country with all possible stability.
-
-The nomination of Captain Phipps was made complete by the King without
-delay. He was constituted Captain-General and Governor-in-Chief of the
-Province of Massachusetts Bay, in New England, and likewise
-Captain-General of the Colonies of Connecticut and Rhode Island.
-
-Weighted down with these new responsibilities, he went seeking for Adam
-Rust, at the gay salon of the Duchess of Kindlen, noted in its day for
-its scope and the liberties acceded to the guests who assembled in its
-spacious halls.
-
-Having heard from a mutual friend that Sir William would be looking him
-up at the Duchess’, Adam repaired to the scene rather more early than
-was his custom. He had seen but little of the captain for a matter of
-several years. He was chiding himself upon the negligence by which this
-had been made possible, when he arrived at the house.
-
-The funeral of the faithful Pike, and the plight of the lorn old
-Halberd, since losing his comrade, had depressed Adam’s spirits
-immeasurably. Halberd had been following him about, dumbly, ever since
-the dire event in the family. He said but little; he made no complaints
-of his loneliness. He simply hung on Adam’s footsteps, like a homeless
-old dog, whose one remaining instinct is faithfulness and undying
-affection, waiting for his master when he came from the brightly-lighted
-houses, pleased and excited whenever he could have the Sachem to talk
-with on the topic of Pike’s many virtues and traits of character that
-confirmed him in his fellow’s affections.
-
-Adam had taken the lorn beef-eater into his own apartments, where he
-could keep a more careful watch over his health and his negative
-happiness. No friend among all his noble acquaintances had such a hold
-on Adam’s heart as had this bragging old remnant of his retinue, and to
-none did he drop the mask of frivolity as he did before this companion,
-whom nothing could discourage nor alter.
-
-Thus he had been glad to think of going no more where the Duchess, Lady
-Margaret and the others assembled, with their tinsel show, their
-thinly-plated talk, their gambling and amours, but had contemplated
-going away with Halberd, into Nature’s simpler walks and profounder
-beauties.
-
-The garish glitter struck inharmoniously upon him, as he walked
-impatiently through the brilliant rooms, in a search for Sir William
-Phipps, who had not yet arrived. He presently found himself confronted
-by Suffle, who, in turn, had been looking about for Lady Margaret.
-
-“How do you do?” said Suffle, at once. “My dear Rust, I am charmed to
-see you again. I have been wanting to see you, ’pon my word. Would you
-mind just giving me a few minutes’ talk?”
-
-“One of my greatest delights is derived from listening to a brilliant
-conversationalist,” said Rust. “Where shall we go?”
-
-“There is no one as yet in the dice-box,” said the other. “If you don’t
-mind, we might stroll in there by ourselves.”
-
-Saying, “I am yours to command,” Adam followed leisurely behind his
-friend to the now empty room employed nightly for gambling.
-
-“It’s rather a delicate business—what I have to say,” confessed Suffle,
-by way of a preface, “but you are a frank, decent fellow, that a man can
-talk to, well—openly—don’t you know.”
-
-“Thanks,” said Adam. “If it is anything about Lady Margaret, let us be
-sensible, by all means.”
-
-“That’s devilish clever of you, old chap,” responded Suffle, evidently
-much relieved already. “Of course you know how matters stand.”
-
-“I would never be sure of where anything stood, that had a woman for an
-element in its make-up.”
-
-“Yes, I know. That’s clever, too—deucedly clever. Perhaps I had better
-put it plainly.”
-
-“Do, I beg of you.”
-
-“Now—you are a frank, sensible man. Now—do you really like—you
-know—love, you know—Lady Margaret,—just speaking as man to man,
-sensibly, as you so cleverly said?”
-
-“Would you force me to become either ungallant or a traitor?”
-
-“Not at all, I——”
-
-“Well, let us say that I am ungallant, since we are to be frank,” said
-Rust. “I will even admit that I am ungallant.”
-
-“Good,” said Suffle. “That’s what I thought—I mean, you know——”
-
-“Yes, I know what you mean. Proceed.”
-
-“Well, I feel very much relieved. You are a decent sort, Rust—a deucedly
-decent sort. Now I am very fond of Lady Margaret. I have learned to be,
-you know. My uncle requires me to marry her, don’t you see, or be cut
-off with a brass farthing. So I have learned to be deucedly fond of her,
-you know.”
-
-“Very reasonable and like a man,” said Adam.
-
-“Yes, I fancy so myself. I am coming to the point.”
-
-“Then there is a point?”
-
-“Oh dear me, yes. You see, as you don’t care for Lady Margaret, that
-way, and I do——”
-
-“Why then, to be sure, take her and let me give you my blessing,” Rust
-interrupted. “I will do this with all my heart.”
-
-“Thanks, old chap, but that is not quite the point,” Suffle assured him.
-“The fact of the matter is, she rather likes you, Rust, you know. I’m
-bound to admit she does, though God knows why, and we are two sensible
-men, you know, and that is what I wanted to talk about.”
-
-“You do me too great an honor,” Adam assured him. “But what would you
-have me do?”
-
-“Why—that’s just the point. Of course I wouldn’t like to ask you to
-clear out of the country——”
-
-“Don’t let modesty stand in your way, my dear Suffle. This favor would
-be nothing—a mere trifle.”
-
-“Oh no, now, I wouldn’t permit it,” said Suffle, magnanimously. “But you
-are such a deucedly clever fellow, don’t you know, that I thought you
-might be able to devise something, something to—well, you know.”
-
-“Yes, oh yes,” said Adam, pulling calmly at his long golden mustache. He
-meditated for a moment and idly picked up a dice-box, placed in
-readiness for the evening’s play upon the table. “Do you ever fripper
-away your time with these? If you do, perhaps we might arrange a little
-harmless device without much trouble.”
-
-At one of the doors, the figure of Lady Margaret appeared and
-disappeared as Suffle expressed his eagerness to know what the plan in
-Adam’s head might be. Although she had glided swiftly from room to room
-in search of Rust, Lady Margaret had frowned when she saw him in company
-with her fiancé, and petulantly beating her fan in her fragrant little
-palm, she had gone back around toward a secondary entrance, in which a
-heavy curtain hung. She was vaguely wondering what the two could find to
-talk about together, and to what extent they were gambling, that they
-went at the dice thus early.
-
-She now met Sir William Phipps, Governor-elect of New England, who had
-finally arrived and who was scanning the gathering company for a sight
-of Adam Rust.
-
-“Oh, how well you are looking, Sir William,” she cried to Phipps,
-delightedly.
-
-“I am looking for a friend,” said the captain, with his customary
-bluntness. “But thank you, Lady Margaret, thank you, heartily.”
-
-“If you are looking for a friend, why, look over my head?” she said to
-him, prettily. “Oh, you dear Colonial Governors are such delightfully
-honest people. We all have to like you, really.”
-
-“I have found some honest men in England,” said the Captain, with
-conviction. “The Puritans are growing numerous among your people.”
-
-Lady Margaret laughed, spontaneously enough. “And what about our women?”
-she said. “Do you find them at all—well, charming?”
-
-“Some are as bold as a pirate,” he said, without intending anything
-personal. He could see many ropes and clusters of jewels, gleaming from
-afar. “And some of them must have plundered many a good ship of her
-treasure,” he added. “If I don’t put about and do some cruising, I shall
-never speak that boy to-night.”
-
-He bowed, somewhat jerkily, and sauntered off. Lady Margaret continued
-on her way around toward that curtained door, on the other side of which
-she had seen Rust and Suffle with the dice.
-
-William Phipps spent no further time in conversing with the women,
-beyond a word as he passed, so that finally he came to the gambling
-apartment, where he found his protégé. Knitting his brows for a second,
-in an ill-concealed annoyance, to see Adam Rust engaged in such a
-pursuit as this, he stood there in the doorway, hoping to catch Adam’s
-eye and so to admonish him silently for indulging even a moment’s whim
-at this vice.
-
-“One thousand more,” said Adam, somewhat hotly.
-
-Sir William pricked up his ears in amazement.
-
-“Lost again!” Rust exclaimed. “The devil is in the dice!” His back was
-toward the curtained door. There was a mirror, however, directly across
-the room. Watching the glass he presently beheld the reflection of a
-movement, where the tapestry swayed behind him. “Three thousand now, or
-nothing!” he added, desperately.
-
-The dice rattled out of the box in the silence that followed.
-
-“It’s luck,” said Suffle, scooping up the dice to throw again.
-
-“It’s sorcery!” exclaimed the rover, in evident heat. “Come, sir, I have
-two thousand left. I’ll stake it all on a single throw!”
-
-Phipps would have interfered, had it been in any place but a private
-house, where the scandal would spread so swiftly. He twitched in
-nervousness, as he gripped the cane with which he would have liked to
-knock the dice-box endways.
-
-The throw was completed.
-
-“I’m done!” said Rust. “I’ve nothing more to stake!”
-
-“Oh, come,” said Suffle, tauntingly, “play your sword, your—surely you
-must have something you prize. What, no resources? Must we cease the
-play so soon?”
-
-“My sword? No!” said Adam, with temper. “But stay; since you speak so
-slightingly of my sword, I have one more stake to offer.”
-
-“By all means name it and play.”
-
-“My stake, sir, is the Lady Margaret,” Adam growled at him, angrily.
-“Betrothed to you, she loves me more. Come, sir, stake me a thousand
-against my chances to win her and take her away from you, heart and
-soul. A thousand, sir, and if you can win it—your field shall be open,
-you shall hear nor fear no more from me!”
-
-“By my faith,” said Suffle, rising, as Adam had done, “you hold this
-lady lightly, that you prattle of her name like this. Better I should
-run you through, for an arrant knave.”
-
-“Bah!” said Rust, “you think more of your winnings than you do of your
-lady. You hesitate and scold over a paltry thousand. Stake it, man, or
-by my troth I shall tell her what valuation you put upon her worth.”
-
-Lady Margaret’s face appeared for a second at the curtain. It was white
-with rage.
-
-“You insult this lady with your monstrous proposition,” cried Suffle.
-
-“And you insult her worse, with your parsimony!” came the swift retort.
-
-“It is calumny for you to say she loves you!” Suffle growled.
-
-“Yet stake me, sir, or you shall see me get her and laugh at your
-stinginess,” Rust flung at him banteringly. “Come, sir, one more moment
-and I withdraw the offer.”
-
-“Done!” said Suffle, “for by ’sdeath, my fortune shall prove you a liar!
-Throw the dice.”
-
-Adam threw and counted. “My luck has changed at last,” he said, in
-triumph.
-
-“We shall see,” retorted Suffle, and flinging the dice he sat down and
-roared with laughter.
-
-“Lost!” said Adam, tragically. “So be it. To the devil with you, sir;
-and I wish you joy of your winnings.”
-
-He strode from the table, met Sir William Phipps at the door, winked at
-him merrily and so drew him out in the hall.
-
-“What’s this? What’s this?” said the Governor, excitedly. “I come here
-to see you, with news on my tongue, and find you—like this!”
-
-“Tush, William,” said Adam, laughing boyishly, and as cool as a fish. “I
-was betting in farthings. I must have lost a hundred. Did you think the
-luck was all with Suffle?”
-
-“But, sir, this—this lady?”
-
-“There is more than one way to cure a woman of a heart’s distemper,”
-said the young man, cheerfully. “Lady Margaret was just there, behind
-the curtain. But this is wasting time. What is your news?”
-
-Phipps looked at him in wonder, for a moment, then shaking his head,
-sadly, he presently drew his hand down across his face, to his double
-chin, as if to wipe out a smile, which had come out of his eyes and
-traveled all over his countenance.
-
-“Adam,” he said, “they have made me Governor of the colony, and I want
-you to go home with me to Boston.”
-
-Adam said nothing, for a moment, then he answered: “Let’s get out of
-this. I want some fresher air to think it over in.”
-
-They were soon walking out at the gate, arm in arm. The air was not only
-fresh, it was bitter cold. When they turned to go down the street, Adam
-having first looked about, without seeing what he sought, old Halberd
-issued from a niche, where he had been dancing to keep himself warm, and
-followed along behind his master.
-
-“Well, now that you have thought it over,” said Phipps, at last, “what
-do you say?”
-
-Adam had thought it over, from a thousand standpoints. The magnet at
-Boston had drawn him and drawn him so long that he felt his whole soul
-was already across the Atlantic. Why fight his longing any further? Why
-not at least go home, look the proposition in the face and perhaps be
-disillusionized?
-
-“I’m your man,” he said, as if to catch himself before he should alter
-his mind. “When are you sailing?”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX.
-
- REVELATIONS.
-
-
-WHEN the Andros government came to an end, Edward Randolph had
-languished in jail for a brief time only. The Puritans were chiefly
-angered at his master, whom they had finally put aboard a ship and sent
-away from the country. Thus the more mischievous spirit, and author of
-many of their wrongs, escaped to work his malignant will upon them for
-years.
-
-Randolph was so crafty, so insidious, and willing to remain so in the
-background, that until it was quite too late to redeem their position,
-the Puritans failed even to suspect him of the monstrous iniquities he
-induced them to commit upon one another. The witchcraft persecutions,
-which he fastened upon them, had not originated in his brain, fertile as
-that organ was for the growth of things diabolical. He got his cue from
-England, where thousands of persons perished, at the stake and
-otherwise, convicted on fantastic testimony of practising arts that were
-black and mysterious.
-
-Randolph, realizing that Boston had been made too warm for active
-operations, began his work in Salem. That center offered him exceptional
-opportunities. The growth of the dread disease was appalling. History
-which would convey an adequate idea of this criminal fanaticism should
-be bound in charred human skin.
-
-Boston was duly afflicted with the scourge. Randolph then returned,
-quietly, and so manipulated his work and his dupes, from behind his own
-scenes, that scores of old women were charged with and convicted of
-witchcraft, in Randolph’s hope of wreaking his vengeance thus on
-whatsoever old woman it might have been who had told Garde Merrill of
-his affair with Hester Hodder. Having never been able to ascertain that
-this person was Goody Dune, he was sweeping his net in all waters, to
-make sure of his prey, in the same merciless spirit that Herod slew all
-the male infants, to accomplish his terrible purpose.
-
-When Governor Phipps, with Adam Rust and Increase Mather, arrived at
-Boston, in the frigate “Nonsuch,” in May, 1692, the prisons were crowded
-full of witches, for the smell of whose burning or rotting flesh scores
-of fanatical maniacs were clamoring.
-
-All Massachusetts had known that William Phipps, the Governor who had
-risen so mightily from the ranks of the working men among them, was
-coming. The name of the lane wherein his house had been built was
-altered to Charter street, in his honor; the citizens beat their drums;
-the disciples of gladness in the stomach arranged for a banquet; the
-hordes marched in joy and with pomp and Puritan splendor, which lacked
-nothing in ceremony, as Sir William was conducted to his house and then
-to the public dinner. Even the fanatics waxed enthusiastic and developed
-symptoms of being yet more greatly pursued and bewitched by the witches
-whose incarceration they had already procured.
-
-In the madness, confusion and excess of glee, two persons were more
-inwardly stirred than all the others, not by the arrival of William
-Phipps, but by that of Adam Rust. One was Garde, to whose ears and heart
-the story of Adam’s return came swiftly flying. The other was Edward
-Randolph, who saw an opportunity for deviltry for which he had waited so
-long that he had almost despaired of ever tasting its bitter-sweet. With
-his own eyes he beheld Adam Rust, and he grinned.
-
-At the end of that long, fatiguing day, Rust retired to the privacy of
-his tavern apartments, secured haphazard, during one of the moments less
-filled than the others with pressing events. Here he sat him down for
-the purpose of thinking. He wondered why he had come to Boston again,
-and what he would do, now that at last he lived under the same sky with
-Garde, hearing the same sounds she was hearing, breathing the same
-fragrance of the Spring that stole to her. Should he try to see her?
-Perhaps. But to speak to her—no, he thought he could make no advance in
-this direction. But he could learn whether she had married, as of course
-she must have done, long before, and then—well, something in him ought
-to be satisfied—that something which had urged him so inexorably to
-return and to make this moment possible.
-
-In the midst of his reveries, he heard a knock upon his door. It was
-poor old Halberd, doubtless, who had been so forlorn and so ill on the
-ocean. He had left him asleep, but, no matter, he would be glad to see
-him, privacy of thought notwithstanding.
-
-“Come in,” he said. “Come in.”
-
-The door opened, not as Halberd was wont to perform an act so simple,
-and Adam was conscious that a stranger had intruded upon him. He looked
-up, winked his eyes and looked more intently, as if absolutely
-incredulous that he was awake and sane.
-
-His visitor was Edward Randolph.
-
-“Mr. Rust, I am glad to see you again in Boston,” said the man, coming
-forward in a tentative manner and smiling by sheer force of effort. “You
-didn’t expect me, but I have taken this early opportunity of calling, to
-say I know what a great wrong I did you in the past, and to make what
-reparation I can.”
-
-“The devil could do no more,” said Adam, looking him over calmly. “And I
-doubt if the devil ever had your impertinence.”
-
-“You do me wrong,” Randolph assured him, meekly. “I could do no less
-than to come here and tender what apologies I may, and to do you a small
-favor. I was grossly misled, concerning your worth and your courage, by
-spiteful persons who had, as I now understand, some personal grudge.”
-
-“As I knew but two men in the town, when first I had the honor of
-appraising you for a rascal,” said Adam, “your tale pleases me but
-indifferently well. As for favors, I have none to ask of you, and none
-to grant.”
-
-“Yet, if only in a Christian spirit,” the fellow insisted, “you must
-permit me to beg your pardon for my errors of the past. I have long
-regretted my grievous mistake of judgment, and for that long I have
-desired an opportunity of showing my mortification and doing you the one
-kindness in my power.”
-
-“In the spirit of the Christian crusaders,” said Rust, “I feel that I
-could deny you little. You would do well, sir, to retire in good order
-while my indisposition to throw you through the window is still upon
-me.”
-
-“But, my dear Mr. Rust, you don’t know what an injury you are doing to
-yourself,” the visitor went on. “If you knew how cruelly we were both
-wronged, almost at the same time and by the same person, you would
-listen, if only for that one compassion.”
-
-“I have been wronged in Boston,” Adam agreed, ominously, “and shatter my
-hilt if I know why I hesitate to redress myself while I may.”
-
-“But I did you no wrong to your heart, sir. Our injuries were both of
-the heart,” Randolph reiterated, persistently. “Look, sir, I had a
-heart, six years ago, and I felt it cruelly trampled under foot—the same
-foot that trampled upon yours, and here——”
-
-“Beware!” Adam growled. “I shall cut out your tongue, for little more.
-Begone, sir, and thank your God at every step you take, that you still
-live—if you value your life at all; and this I am driven to doubt.”
-
-“Here, here!” replied Randolph, nervously, and with shaking fingers he
-drew from his pocket a packet of paper folded in the form of a letter.
-“You will never believe me till I show you this. But I lay my heart
-open—I expose my wounds, to prove how you wrong me. Read it, read it—the
-letter she sent me—and then I shall be willing to bide by your answer.”
-
-Adam could not fail to be impressed by the man’s tenacity of purpose.
-Being a just man, he had a faint suspicion dart through his head that,
-after all, the man might not have known what he was doing when he
-committed all his fiendish acts, years before. There had never been any
-sufficient reason for what he had done, that Adam knew. He took the
-letter, briefly to see what it was the fellow meant and wanted.
-
-He began to read, and then to feel that the man had obviously undergone
-some trial, severe and not readily to be forgotten. It was Garde’s own
-letter to himself he was reading.
-
-“She sent me that and then broke my heart after,” said Randolph,
-speaking in a low, emotional voice, while Adam looked at the letter. “As
-if she had not shattered my life sufficiently before.”
-
-“I’m sorry for you,” said Rust, after a moment. “Here, I don’t care to
-pry into your letter. Take it, and go in peace.”
-
-“But read it, read it. You don’t know who wrote it,” said Randolph, who
-was white with excitement. “I shouldn’t have come to you here with my
-mortifying apologies, if there had not been a bond between us.”
-
-Adam gave him a look, as of one baffled by an inscrutable mystery. He
-could not comprehend his visitor’s meaning. Then suddenly a flush leaped
-into his face, as he remembered something he had heard in those by-gone
-days, when he walked with that youth, whose very name he could not
-recall, from Plymouth to Boston.
-
-He read the letter again with a new interest, a terrible interest. He
-had gone away from Garde—sent away—with a stab in his heart, from which
-he had never been able to recover. He had thought at first she sent him
-away as a renegade, a fugitive from pseudo-justice, whom to have loved
-openly would be a disgrace. He had thought then that perhaps she loved
-Wainsworth, or even this Randolph. He had thought till he nearly went
-crazy, for circumstances had compelled him to flee from Boston for his
-life, and therefore to flee from all explanations which might have been
-made. Garde having released him from jail, he had been driven to think
-she believed him innocent. She had said she could do no less. Then he
-had been left no belief to stand on but that of her loving some one else
-more than she did himself. She had admitted that something had happened.
-Cornered thus, he had found the case hopeless, and thoughts of return to
-Boston then had seemed to him madness.
-
-This letter, now in his hand, confirmed all those more terrible thoughts
-and beliefs. She had done some wrong to Randolph, too, as she here
-confessed in her letter. She had believed some infamous story against
-him, and now prayed his forgiveness. And what, in God’s name, had she
-then added to this first wrong to the man, that Randolph now was so
-bitter?
-
-Terribly stirred, he raced his glance over the pages and so to the
-little quaintly affectionate ending. Then he read her signature,
-“Garde—John Rosella.”
-
-John Rosella!—the name of that youth! She! Garde!
-
-He felt he should suddenly go mad. That boy he had so learned to
-love—had been Garde! She had written this letter—she had signed that
-name, which meant so much to him and to her, and so little to any one
-else!
-
-He made a strange little sound, and then he began to read the letter
-over again, from the first, letting every word, every syllable, sink
-into his soul with its comfort and its fragrance of love. He forgot that
-Randolph stood there before him. He was oblivious of everything. He was
-on that highroad again. He was standing with Garde in the garden at
-midnight, her kisses still warm on his lips.
-
-“You see there is a bond between us,” said Randolph.
-
-Adam ceased reading, galvanically. But for a second he did not raise his
-eyes. He folded the letter and held it in his hand. He arose to his feet
-and slowly moved between Randolph and the door.
-
-“There is a bond between us,” he agreed, speaking with nice
-deliberation. “It is something more than a bond. It’s a tie of blood and
-bone and suffering.”
-
-“I thought you would see it,” said Randolph. “This was all I came to
-tell you,—this, and my sense of having done you wrong.”
-
-“Oh yes, I see it,” said Adam, turning the key in the lock and putting
-it calmly in his pocket, “I see it all clearly. By the way, sir, who is
-John Rosella, if I may ask?”
-
-Randolph had become pale. His eyes were growing wild. He had watched
-Rust lock the door with quaking dread.
-
-“John Rosella?” he repeated, with a sickening sense of having overlooked
-something important, which he had thought an insignificant trifle; “why,
-that is merely the—her middle names. Her full name is Garde John Rosella
-Merrill.”
-
-“I trust you are gentleman enough to fight,” said Rust, placing the
-letter in his pocket, “for I shall tell you, sir, that you are a liar, a
-scoundrel, a murderous blackguard.”
-
-Walking up to the staring wretch, calmly, Adam slapped his face till the
-blow resounded in the room and Halberd came hastening to the door to
-know what could be the matter.
-
-“I rang the bell,” said Rust, who opened the door with great
-deliberation. “Bring a sword for one. The gentleman wishes to fight.”
-
-“What do you mean, sir?” said the trembling coward. “Give me back my
-letter. I shall leave this place at once!”
-
-“Will you jump through the window?” Adam inquired, with mock concern.
-“Don’t call that letter yours again, or I may not let you off with a
-mere killing.”
-
-Halberd came with his sword. Adam drew his own good blade from the
-battered scabbard he had always retained, and looked at the edge and the
-point, critically.
-
-“I refuse to fight you!” said Randolph, who had once seen that terrible
-length of steel at play. “I demand to be released from this place!”
-
-Rust went up and slapped him again. “Get up just manhood enough to raise
-that sword,” Adam implored. “Take it and strike any sort of a foul blow
-at me—one of your foulest—do! you dog.”
-
-The craven tried to make a run at the door. Adam pushed him back and
-kicked him again toward the center of the room.
-
-“This is murder! I refuse to fight with such a villain!” cried the
-fellow. “Let me out, or I shall call for help.”
-
-“You wouldn’t dare to let anybody know you are in town,” said Rust,
-contemptuously. “Howl, do howl, and let me tell the public what you are.
-Halberd, alas, there is no manhood in it. Therefore fetch me the whip I
-saw in your apartments, for a sad bit of business.”
-
-To all of Randolph’s protests and wild chatterings of fear and hatred,
-Rust was deaf. He took the whip, which Halberd presently brought, and
-proceeded to cut Randolph across the face, the legs, the shoulders and
-the hands till the craven smarted with a score of purple welts.
-
-“Halberd, you may clean your boots afterward,” Adam said at last. “Be
-good enough to kick the dog from the room.”
-
-Halberd placed but two of his aids to departure, and then, Rust opening
-the door, the craven flew madly out and away, a maniac in appearance, an
-assassin in his state of mind.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X.
-
- AFTER SIX YEARS.
-
-
-AT Grandther Donner’s house, Garde had passed the day with her heart so
-fluttering between hope and fear that she was all unstrung by the time
-the evening arrived. She could bear it no longer, then, and with a shawl
-on her head she started out to go to the Soams’ to learn what she might
-of the many events of the hour.
-
-In the garden she paused. The stillness, the calm, the redolence of
-Spring, burgeoning into maidenly summer, brought back to her mind that
-similar time, six long years before, when she and Adam had met here
-among the flowers, for that brief time of joy.
-
-The fire of love, kept so sacred by the vestal virgin spirit of her
-nature, burned upward in her cheeks, as warm, as ardent as ever, after
-these years of her lonely vigil.
-
-But would he ever stand there again, in the garden? Would he ever more
-clasp her hands on the pickets of the gate? Or would he now prove
-disdainful, proud of his friendship with the new Governor, aloof and
-silent, as he had been since she sent him her letter?
-
-No matter what might be, she so hungered to hear some word of his
-coming, some meager description of how he looked, some mere hearsay of
-how he bore himself, that it seemed as if she must consume herself with
-impatience on her way to her uncle’s.
-
-In the dusk which was swiftly descending on the face of the world, she
-closed the gate behind her and started along the road, her face so pale
-and yet so eager, in her yearning, that it was almost luminous. She was
-presently conscious that some one, dimly visible, ahead, was rapidly
-approaching. She drew her shawl a little more closely about her face and
-quickened her footsteps, the sooner to pass this pedestrian.
-
-A metallic tinkle came to her ears and made her heart give an extra
-bound, she knew not why. It had simply sounded like a scabbard, beating
-its small accompaniment to sturdy strides. She looked up, timidly, to
-see who it was that carried a sword into such a quiet part of Boston.
-Then she halted and suddenly placed her hand out, to the near-by fence,
-for a moment’s support.
-
-The man was almost passing her by, where she stood. He halted. He made
-some odd little sound, and then he remained there, looking upon her, his
-hand coming involuntarily up to his heart.
-
-Garde looked up in his face, without fear, but not without sadness,
-wistfully—with the inquiry of six long years in her steadfast eyes.
-
-“Garde,” said Adam, in a voice she barely heard, “Garde—I have—come
-home. I never got your letter till to-night.”
-
-She could not answer, for a moment.
-
-“I—have been waiting,” she then said, and striving to hold her lips from
-trembling, she let two great tears trickle slowly across her face as she
-still looked up in his eyes.
-
-There was nothing he could say. He read her whole story of faithfulness
-and of suffering, her epic of a love that could not die, in that one
-long look. Slowly he went up to her and taking her face in his hands he
-kissed away the tears from her cheeks. He put her head gently against
-his breast and let her cry.
-
-She still held to the fence, as if she dared not too suddenly lean on
-his love, without which she had learned to live so long. But gradually,
-as he held her there, saying nothing, but softly kissing her hair and
-the one little hand he had taken in his own, her arms crept upward about
-his shoulders and her heart beat against his, in a peace surpassing
-anything of earth.
-
-“My Garde,” he finally began to whisper, over and over again, “my own
-Garde—my darling, precious Garde.”
-
-“Oh, this may all be wrong, Adam,” she answered him, after a time. “I
-don’t understand it. We don’t know what has happened, in all these
-years. Oh, how did you happen to come?”
-
-“You drew me, sweetheart,” he said, in a voice made tremulous with
-emotion. “I have had no peace till now. I have loved you so! I have
-dreamed of you so! But I never knew—till to-night, when I got your
-letter.”
-
-“You—never got it till to-night? Oh Adam,” she said. “Oh, Adam, I have
-been so punished for the wrong I did. Oh, you can never, never forgive
-me!”
-
-“There, there, sweetheart,” he said to her soothingly, letting her cry
-out the sobs she had stifled so vainly. “Forgive you, dear? You had no
-need to ask for forgiveness—you who came to me there in that jail—you,
-whose sweet little motherly spirit so provided for my poor old
-beef-eaters, when they were hungry and fleeing for their lives. Dearest,
-I don’t see how you did it, when I was a hunted renegade, a fugitive,
-with doubled infamies piled upon my head. Oh, forgive me, dear, that
-ever I doubted my own little mate.”
-
-“No, I should never have believed them—not all the world!” she
-protested. “My Adam. My Adam.”
-
-With his strong arm about her, and her head leaned in confidence and
-love on his shoulder, he led her back to the garden, at once the scene
-of their joys and tragedies.
-
-He enthroned her on the steps of the porch, where as a child she had
-been enthroned, when he as her boy-lover had sat, as now, at her feet
-and listened to the dainty caresses of her voice. Only now he held her
-hand in his and placed it on his cheek and kissed it fondly, as he
-listened and told her of how he had come at last to receive the letter.
-
-At this she was frightened. She wanted to cradle his head upon her
-bosom, now, and hold forth a hand to shield him from danger. She felt
-that the perils for them both were clustered about his fearless head and
-that hers was the right to protect.
-
-“Oh, please be careful, Adam, dear,” she implored. “That man is a
-terrible man. Oh, I wish you had let him go. You will be careful, dear.
-You must be careful, and watchful, every moment.”
-
-His reply was a kiss and a boyish laugh. Now that he had her once more,
-he said, and now that nothing should ever part them again, his world was
-complete, and there were no dangers, nor evils, nor sorrows.
-
-Then he begged her to tell him of the years that had passed. He petted
-her fondly, as she spoke of her long, long wait. She seemed to him
-thrice more beautiful, in the calm and dignity of her womanhood, which
-had laid not so much as a faded petal on her beauty and her endless
-youth.
-
-He exchanged a history of heart-aches, matching with one of his own
-every pang she had ever endured. There was something ecstatic, now, in
-the light of their new-found rapture, in recounting those long days of
-sadness and despair. Every pain thus rehearsed drew them the closer,
-till their love took on a sacredness, as if suffering and constancy had
-wedded them long before. Like parents who have buried the children they
-loved, they were made subdued and yet more truly fervent, more absolute
-in the divine passion which held them heart to heart.
-
-And so, at last, when Garde was sure that Adam ought to go, they walked
-hand in hand to the gate together.
-
-“Sweetheart, let me go outside, for a moment,” said Adam, quickly
-shutting the barrier between them. “Now, with your two dear hands in
-mine, it is just as it was six years ago. The night is the same, your
-beauty is the same, our hearts and love are the same as before, and
-nothing has ever come between us—except this gate.”
-
-He kissed her hands and her sweet face, as he had done on that other
-happy night.
-
-“And we can open the gate,” said Garde, in a little croon of delight.
-
-Adam laughed, like the boy he was. He flung open the gate and went
-inside and took her in his arms, kissing her upon the lips, rapturously,
-time after time.
-
-“Oh Garde, I love you so!” he said. “I love you! I adore you, my own
-little mate!”
-
-“I could have waited fifty years,” she answered him, nestling close and
-patting his hand as she held it, in excess of joy, to her heart. “Oh
-Adam! My Adam!”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI.
-
- A BLOW IN THE DARK.
-
-
-THE rover, so lost in exalted happiness that he hardly knew where he was
-going, when at length he said his final good night to Garde, was not
-aware that the faithful old Halberd finally fell into his tracks behind
-him and followed him off toward the tavern.
-
-Immensely relieved again to see his master, whom he had not been able to
-locate before, the old beef-eater was soon convinced that Adam was in a
-mood the like of which had not appeared in the family for many a day. He
-therefore glided silently after the dreamer, a rod or so to the rear,
-waiting until Adam should turn about, as was his wont, to bid him walk
-at his side.
-
-But to-night the Sachem was so thoroughly engrossed with his love and
-his forming plans, that he completely forgot to think of his lorn
-retinue, and therefore the beef-eater felt more alone and sad than
-usual. There was nothing in Boston, save Adam, with which he could
-associate any thoughts of jollier days. There was nothing but Adam left
-in the world, to which to devote the great fund of affection and
-devotion in his simple breast.
-
-But he was making no complaint, not even to himself. Whatever the Sachem
-did was right. Nothing that Adam could have done would have driven him
-away, nor have altered his love by so much as one jot. All he desired
-was the privilege of loving his master, at whose heels he would have
-followed, though the path led to Hell itself, and this with never so
-much as a question, nor a murmur of hesitation.
-
-The moon had been silvering the roofs of the houses for some time, and
-Adam and Halberd wended their way, in their short procession, through
-the deserted business streets of the town. Masses of shadow lay upon the
-sidewalk, where Adam was striding buoyantly along.
-
-Within fifteen feet of him, and between him and Adam, suddenly Halberd
-heard a sound that made him halt where he stood. Three figures, their
-faces masked with black cloth, ran out from a deep doorway, where they
-had crowded back, for concealment, and darted upon the rover, walking
-unconsciously onward.
-
-“Sachem! Sachem!” cried the beef-eater, wildly.
-
-He darted forward, in time to see Adam turn to receive a stab in the
-neck and a blow on the head that sent him to earth before he could even
-so much as raise a hand to ward off his murderous assailants.
-
-Dragging his sword from his scabbard as he ran, old Halberd leaped
-frantically into the midst of the three asassins, ready to battle
-against any odds conceivable, in this the climax-moment of his loyalty.
-
-He struck but a single blow, which fell upon one of the bludgeons held
-by the masked ruffians. He screamed out his terrible tocsin of anguish
-and rage. Then a blow from behind him crushed in his skull and he fell
-across the master he had striven to serve, a corpse.
-
-Waiting for nothing further, the three figures sped away, down the
-street, dived into the darkness of an alley and were gone, past all
-finding, when a few startled citizens opened their windows or doors and
-looked out on the street to see what the awful cries of Halberd had
-betokened.
-
-“I see something—down on the sidewalk,” said the voice of one of the
-men. “The lantern, wife, the lantern!”
-
-“What is it? What is it?” called another, from across the way.
-
-And others answering, that they knew not what it meant, or that it had
-sounded like some terrible deed being done, there were presently half a
-dozen awed men coming forth, when their neighbor appeared at his door
-with his light.
-
-The black, still heap which had been seen from a window smote them all
-with horror. A dark stream, from which the light was suggestively
-reflected, already trickled to the gutter. They lifted Halberd from the
-second prostrate form and found that Adam was swiftly bleeding to death
-from a ghastly wound in the neck, from which the life-fluid was leaping
-out in gushes.
-
-“Turn him over, turn him over!” commanded the man with the lantern. “Run
-to my house and ask the wife for everything to tie up an
-artery—bandages, too!”
-
-He knelt down in the red stream. Digging his fingers into the gaping,
-red mouth of the wound, he clutched upon the severed artery with a skill
-at once brutal and sure. The gushes ceased, almost entirely.
-
-Adam’s face, already deathly white, had been turned upward.
-
-“Saints preserve us!” said one of the citizens. “It’s the bosom friend
-of the Governor!”
-
-“Then we know where to take him, if he doesn’t die in spite of me,” said
-the skilful surgeon who had pounced upon the wound. “Look to the other
-man and see if he too, is bleeding.”
-
-One of the other men had already loosened the collar about old Halberd’s
-neck. Another came to assist him.
-
-“He’s bleeding a little, from the back of his head,” said he. “O Lord!
-He’s dead!”
-
-The doctor’s wife came running to the place herself, with her husband’s
-case in which he had a score of cunning tools and the needs of his
-craft.
-
-The good woman pushed the men aside and with an assurance and a courage
-almost totally unknown in her sex, at the time, in such a case as this,
-bent down above the wounded man and lent to her husband the nimble
-fingers and the quick comprehension without which he might easily have
-failed to prevent that deadly loss of blood.
-
-As it was, Rust was at the door of death. The turn he had made, when
-Halberd called out in alarm, had saved him from inevitable death. The
-steel driven so viciously into his neck, would have severed the jugular
-vein completely had he turned the fraction of a second less soon than he
-did, or an inch less far.
-
-The blow on his temple had glanced, so that half the power, which in the
-case of Halberd had crushed in the skull instantly, had been lost,
-nevertheless it had served to render him wholly unconscious. Therefore,
-two hours later, when brave little Mrs. Phipps got him laid in a clean,
-sweet couch, he looked like death, and his heart-beat was feeble and
-faintly fluttering between mere life and the Great Stillness.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII.
-
- ADAM’S NURSE.
-
-
-WHEN the intelligence of the almost unparalleled crime spread with
-terror and awe in its wake through Boston, in the morning, Garde heard
-it like a knell—a fatality almost to have been expected, when she and
-Adam had been at last so happy. She did not faint. Not even a moan
-escaped her lips. She turned white and remained white.
-
-“Grandther,” she said to the old man who owed his restoration to health
-and almost complete soundness of mind to her ministrations, “I am
-betrothed to this friend of our new Governor’s. I shall go to attend
-him.”
-
-She left her grandfather staring at her in wonder, and with only her
-shawl on her head, she went to the “fair brick house” which William
-Phipps had built for his wife at the corner of Salem and Charter streets
-in the town.
-
-“I am betrothed to Adam Rust,” she repeated, simply. “I have come to
-attend him.”
-
-As if poor Garde had not already, in six years of waiting and hoping and
-vain regrets, sufficiently suffered for a moment’s lack of faith in her
-lover, the anguish now came upon her in a flood tide. Adam no sooner
-recovered a heart-beat strong enough to give promise of renewed
-steadiness, than he lapsed from his unconscious condition into one of
-delirium.
-
-Had Garde been wholly in ignorance of his past and his life of many
-tragedies, she would have been doomed to learn of all of it now. He
-lived it all over, a hundred times, and told of it, brokenly, excitedly,
-at times with sallies of witty sentences, but for the most part in the
-sighs with which his life had filled his heart to overflowing, but to
-which he had never before given utterance.
-
-She knew now what the boy had suffered when King Philip, the Sachem of
-the Wampanoags, was slain, with the people of his nation. She felt the
-pangs he had felt when, on first returning to Boston, he had believed
-himself supplanted in Garde’s affections by his friend Henry Wainsworth.
-She heard him croon to the little Narragansett child, as he limped again
-through the forest. And then she sounded the depths of a man’s despair
-when the whole world and the woman he loves drive him forth, abased.
-
-Yet much as she suffered with him in this long rehearsal of his
-heartaches, there was still one little consolation to her soul.
-
-The one name only that he spoke, and spoke again and again, in murmurs
-of love and in heart-cries of agony, was—Garde.
-
-Having acquired her skill in the harsh school where her grandfather’s
-illness had been the master, Garde could almost have rejoiced in this
-reparation she was making to Adam for what she had contributed to his
-pangs in the past, had it not been that his hovering so at the edge of
-death frightened all other emotions than alarm from her breast.
-Nevertheless she believed he would live. He could not die, she insisted
-to herself, while she gave him a love so vast and so sustaining.
-
-This feeling was fairly an instinct. And the truth in which it was
-grounded came struggling to the fore, one morning, when Adam opened his
-eyes, after his first refreshing sleep, and laughed at her gayly, if a
-little weakly, to see her there, bending down above him.
-
-“John Rosella,” he said, “I have been dreaming of you—the sweetest boy
-that ever lived.”
-
-“Oh, Adam,” said Garde, suddenly crimsoning. “Oh—now you—you mustn’t
-talk. You must go back to sleep at once.”
-
-Adam was drowsy, despite himself. “I remember—every word—we said,” he
-murmured, “and every—look of your sweet—sweet face.” And then he fell
-again into peaceful slumber.
-
-Arrived so far as this toward recovery, he made rapid progress. Healthy
-and wholesome as he was, sound, from habits of clean, right living, he
-mended almost too fast, according to Garde’s ideas of convalescence, for
-she feared he would rise in revolt, over soon, and do himself an injury
-by abandoning care and comfort before she could pronounce him quite
-himself.
-
-In reality there had been but little more than his loss of blood to
-contend with, save that his state of mind had engendered a fever, as a
-result of all he had undergone, so that when this latter was allayed and
-the wound in his neck was healing with astonishing rapidity, his
-strength came back to his muscles and limbs by leaps and bounds.
-Therefore, despite her solicitude, Garde was soon happy to see him again
-on his feet and making his way about the house, his face a little wan
-and white, but the twinkle in his eye as merry as the light in a jewel.
-
-He could furnish no accurate or reliable information as to whom his
-murderous assailants had been. He could only conjecture that Randolph
-had been at the bottom of the affair, from motives of vengeance. This
-was the truth. But the disappearance of Randolph from Boston was
-reckoned so variously, as having taken place anywhere from two days to
-three years before, that nothing could be reliably determined.
-
-Moreover, it sufficed for Adam and Garde that they were here, in the
-land of the living, together, and though it made the rover feel sad to
-think of the loss of his last beef-eater, the faithful old Halberd.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII.
-
- GOODY IN THE TOILS.
-
-
-THE worthy Puritan citizens of Boston fêted Governor Phipps in one
-breath and asked him to make concessions of his powers to his council in
-the next. They worked themselves weary with enthusiasm over his advent
-and then they wore him out with exactions, with their epidemic of
-persecuting witches and with the faults they found with his methods of
-life and government.
-
-Sir William had not been long in his new harness, when he was heard to
-wish he again had his broadax in hand and were building a ship of less
-dimensions than one of state. A little of his old love for his calling
-and the men it had gathered about him was expressed in a dinner which he
-gave to ship-carpenters, from whose ranks he was proud to have risen, as
-he told them and told the world. He had a hasty temper, as a result of
-having been so long a captain on the sea, accustomed to absolute
-obedience at the word of command. Yet his squalls of anger were soon
-blown over, leaving him merry, honest and lovable as before.
-
-Unfortunately Governor Phipps was largely under the influence of
-Increase Mather and his son, the Reverend Cotton Mather, who were both
-as mad fanatics on the topic of religion and witchcraft as one could
-have found in a day’s walk. The influence over Phipps had been gained by
-the elder Mather in England, where he and Sir William were so long
-associated in their efforts to right their colony and its charter.
-
-Witchcraft persecutions, having fairly run amuck in England, Increase
-Mather had enjoyed exceptional opportunities for observing the various
-phenomena developed by this dreadful disease. He arrived in Boston after
-Randolph had succeeded far beyond the dreams of his own malice in
-starting the madness on its terrible career. The field offered an
-attraction not to be withstood, by either of the Mathers. They were soon
-fairly gorging themselves on the wonders of the invisible world,
-testimonies and barbarous punishments.
-
-Lieutenant-Governor Stoughton was an active figure in all this
-lamentable business. Phipps was dragged into the maelstrom bodily. He
-pitied the frightened wretches in the prisons and secretly instructed
-his jailers to be remiss in their duties of chaining, ironing and
-otherwise inflicting needless punishment on these helpless mortals.
-
-The more effectually and quietly to turn the fearful tide, so
-appallingly engulfing the minds of the wrought-up populace, Phipps
-organized a court of Oyer and Terminer, wherein he sat himself, with
-seven magistrates, to try the wretched old women, dragged screaming to
-the farcical examinations. At these trials, devilish children swore away
-the lives of fellow-creatures, abandoned alike by their kind and by
-their God. In this court of his own making, William Phipps was slowly
-and surely putting a stop to the mania, for the horrors of some of the
-executions sent a thrill of fright and dread through the whole of
-Boston.
-
-Exercising his power of pardoning, and then expending his own money to
-assist them to flee from the state, William Phipps saved so many
-defenseless women that he fairly broke the fabric of the awful mania in
-twain. Early after his arrival, however, he was called away to Plymouth.
-No sooner was his back turned than the zealots pounced, tooth and nail,
-upon a new crop of witches and hailed them before the court, on trial
-for their lives, in haste before the Governor should return to work his
-leniency upon them.
-
-Thus it came about that Garde, having exhausted the small supply of
-simples possessed by herself and Goodwife Phipps, went to Goody Dune’s
-and there witnessed the work of a witch-hunting mob.
-
-It was a warm, summery morning, fit jewel for the year’s diadem of
-things beautiful. Cries, yells, of pretended fear, and harsh, discordant
-prayers, screamed into the air, assailed Garde’s ears before she could
-yet see the little flower-surrounded hut where Goody lived. She felt a
-sudden misgiving strike through her heart as she hastened onward.
-
-She came upon the scene in a moment. Nearly fifty men and boys, with a
-sprinkling of mere girls and one or two women, were storming the small
-stronghold of the old wise woman, who had done so much for those
-afflicted by ailments and troubles. Indeed in the crowd there were many
-citizens who had blessed her name and the wisdom by which she had mended
-their bodily woes. But all now were mad with excitement. Some were
-purposely frothing at the mouth. A dozen leaped frantically about,
-declaring they were being pinched and bitten by the demons that Goody
-was actuating to malice. Young boys slily put nails and pins in their
-mouths and then spat them forth, to show what evils were then and there
-being perpetrated upon them.
-
-The tidy little garden was trampled to pitiable wreckage of flowers and
-vines. The house was being boldly entered by a few lusty knaves, with
-Psalms Higgler and Isaiah Pinchbecker in their midst. Sounds of wild
-beating, upon the pans and kettles inside, made half the assembled
-people turn pale with self-induced fear, which they loved to experience.
-
-Suddenly Goody’s old black cat came bounding forth. The men, boys and
-women fell down in affright, screaming that the devil was upon them. To
-add to their horror and superstitious dismay, the jackdaw, Rex, came
-flying out. He perched for a moment on the ridge and then circled once
-or twice about the house. He was wounded, for the ruffians in the
-cottage had beaten him savagely, with sticks and whips. He was
-bedraggled; for they had thrown water upon him. His feathers were all
-awry. He was altogether a sorry spectacle.
-
-“B-u-h-h—it’s cold,” called the bird. “Fools, fools, fools!” and
-flapping his ragged wings so that they clapped against his sides as he
-flew, he started straight for the woods and was soon out of sight.
-
-If the witch-hunters had been smitten with delightful fear before, they
-were appalled by this terrible bird. They fell down upon their knees and
-wept and prayed and made a thousand and one mysterious signs by which
-evil could be averted. Those who knew in their hearts that the whole
-thing, up to this, had been humbug and fraud, now quaked with a fear
-that was genuine. The devil himself had said some horrible, unthinkable
-rigmarole which would doubtless cast a spell upon them such as they
-would never be rid of again in their lives. Their children would be born
-with fishes’ tails, with asses’ legs, with seven heads. Above the wails
-of anguish, which arose on the air, came the shouts of the captors of
-Goody Dune. They were now seen dragging her forth with hooks, which were
-supposed to insulate the operator from the evils which a witch could
-otherwise pronounce upon her enemies with dire and withering effect. And
-then it was seen what the shouting of triumph was.
-
-Each of the captors bore a Bible in his hand from which he read,
-haphazard, at the top of his voice as he walked, thus disinfecting
-himself, or fumigating himself, as it were, to prevent him from catching
-the evil which was hovering about the witch, like an aureole of
-dangerous microbes of the devil’s own breeding.
-
-No sooner did old Goody’s well-known form appear than the fanatics in
-the garden fled in a panic for the gate, howling and wailing their
-prayers more loudly than before, but pushing and jostling one another
-and falling endways, as they tried to run and to look behind them at the
-same time. They must see everything, whatever the cost.
-
-The men were seen to be armed with pitchforks. There is nothing in the
-way of a weapon which your devil so abhors as a pitchfork, in the hands
-of any one save himself.
-
-This noisy, mad procession moved in great disorder out into the highway,
-where Garde had paused, dismayed and concerned for Goody. She saw the
-wise old woman walking calmly along with her captors, for Goody, unlike
-the witches of lesser wisdom, knew too much to cry out wild protests
-against this infamy, and so to convict herself of uttering curses,
-spells and blasphemies on the public roads. She looked about her, at men
-and women she had relieved of pains, and at children whose early
-ailments she had exorcised with her simples.
-
-They were all now possessed of the devil, in good faith, for the mad
-capers they cut to show that Goody was all potent to produce the most
-fiendish and heinous results upon them could only have been invented out
-of the sheer deviltry which is one of the component parts of the human
-animal.
-
-Helpless, terrified by these maniacs about her, Garde could only lean
-against the fence and hold her place while the running, neck-twisting
-people went by.
-
-“Oh, poor dear Goody,” she murmured to herself, involuntarily.
-
-The old wise woman looked across the bank of bobbing heads about her and
-half smiled, in a weary, hopeless manner that sent a pang straight to
-Garde’s heart. She knew that Goody was saying, “Never mind me, dear,”
-and this only made it all the more unendurable.
-
-Goody had been hustled by in a moment. The dust arose from the scurrying
-feet. The hobble-de-hoy pageant went rapidly toward the town, its
-numbers being momentarily augumented, as fresh persons heard the
-disturbance rising and coming near, on the summer air, and joined the
-throng.
-
-Unwilling to let her friend be conveyed thus away without her even
-knowing where she was now to be taken, Garde followed the last of the
-stragglers, and so saw the crowd become a mob, in the more populous
-streets of the town, and finally beheld Goody hurried to one of the
-prisons and shut out of sight behind the doors.
-
-The jail was the one into which, six years before, Adam Rust had been so
-infamously thrown.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV.
-
- GARDE’S SUBTERFUGE.
-
-
-NEARLY as strong and well as ever, Adam Rust heard Garde’s excited and
-desperate tale of Goody’s capture with an indignation which far outran
-her own. He failed to realize, at first, the full import of Goody’s
-position. Then, as Garde made him understand the almost inevitable
-execution, staring this old woman-friend in the face, at the end of a
-trial from which Truth would fly moaning, with her hands to her ears,
-the rover would have buckled on his sword and gone to batter down the
-jail to set the old wise woman free, had his sweetheart not restrained
-him with all her powers of dissuasion.
-
-“Oh, we have got to be far more clever than that,” she said. “We have
-got to get her out of there quietly—so quietly that we can get her
-away—a long way off, before the awful crowds shall find it out. Help me
-to do this. Help me to get her out cunningly, or we shall fail—and
-to-night it will all be too late.”
-
-“Couldn’t the Governor pardon her out?” said Adam. “Why has he gone away
-at such a time? Here, couldn’t Mrs. Phipps write a pardon? We could take
-it to the jailer, and try him. If he then refused to release our friend,
-we could try with a little gold in his hand. Mrs. Phipps—Mrs. Phipps,”
-he called to the Captain’s wife.
-
-The plump little woman would have done anything on earth for Adam—her
-boy—and for Garde, whom she loved no less, but she shook her head at
-this new proposal. The potentialities of the position in which William’s
-sudden elevation had placed her still gave her a little fright to
-contemplate. She knew nothing of the powers of a Governor, still less of
-those of a Governor’s wife.
-
-“I would be glad to do this thing, dear Adam,” she said, “for your sake,
-or Garde’s, or even for old Goody herself, but can I? Would I dare? I
-fear you hardly know the temper of these people on this question of
-witches. They are mad.”
-
-“Try it,” said Adam. “We can do no less than to give it a trial. The
-jailer will know of no reason for limiting the Governor’s prerogatives,
-nor even those of his good wife. Write what I shall dictate, and let us
-make the attempt. A bit of boldness is often as good as an army.”
-
-Never able to resist when Adam begged or even suggested, Goodwife Phipps
-wrote, as he directed, one of the most sweeping and imperious pardons
-ever reduced to cold language. This being duly sanded, and approved,
-Rust folded it up and placed it safely in his pocket.
-
-“Now then, John Rosella,” he said to Garde, who blushed prettily, in
-spite of her many conflicting emotions, “even supposing this works its
-charm, we have only then made a good beginning. I must have a horse on
-which to convey old Goody out of the reach of harm, when they find she
-has slipped between their fingers. And the horse must be my own. No more
-borrowed horses will do for me. Therefore content your mind, sweetheart,
-while I go forth to make my needed purchases.”
-
-He kissed her, while Goodwife Phipps bustled off importantly about her
-duties, and reassuring her that all should yet be well for Goody, he
-went out into the glorious sunlight, and felt his old-time vigor spring
-forward—from the warmth and the joyousness of Nature—to meet him.
-
-But the matter of finding a horse in Boston was not one to be disposed
-of lightly. He hunted far and wide, for of those which were offered for
-sale, many were old, a few were lame and others were vicious. These
-latter he would have liked, for himself, since they challenged him,
-their spirit against his, but foregoing the pleasant anticipation of a
-battle royal, he rejected offers right and left, until he had used up
-the morning completely, and at length felt obliged to be satisfied with
-a somewhat undersized bay, who nevertheless seemed strong and otherwise
-fit for the business in hand.
-
-Garde in the meantime had grown nervous with impatience, afraid as she
-was, of one of those swift, inhuman trials of Goody which so often were
-the subterfuges of the fanatics for rushing a person pre-condemned, to
-the death from which there was no escape.
-
-“I have thought the matter over calmly,” said Adam, who knew nothing of
-real calmness in a moment of daring, “and I feel certain we shall double
-our chances of success by waiting till dark, or near it, when the jailer
-might be persuaded to think we could get her away unnoticed noticed by
-the rabble, and so might consent to the plan, when otherwise he would
-think he must refuse.”
-
-There was reason in this, as Garde could see. Making Adam promise to
-take a rest, before the time should be ripe for their enterprise, she
-went home to David Donner, to set things to rights, and otherwise to
-keep abreast of her little housewifely duties. She found the old man
-excited, by a call which had come for his services, at noon.
-
-One of the seven magistrates who sat in the court of Oyer and Terminer,
-to try the witches, had fallen ill. David had been requested to assume
-his place. At this wholly unexpected news, Garde felt her heart leap
-with a sudden rejoicing. If the worst came, Goody would have at least
-one friend at the trial, to whose words of wisdom the Council had so
-frequently listened. She ran to the old man and gave him a kiss.
-
-“Oh, I am so glad, dear Grandther,” she said. “They know how wise you
-are and just!”
-
-“Thankee, child, thankee,” said the white-haired old man, smiling with
-the pleasure which the whole transaction had excited in his hungering
-breast. “They recognize me—a little—at last.”
-
-Yet so eager had the girl become, and so frightened of what the results
-were almost certain to be, if Goody ever came to her trial, during the
-absence of Governor Phipps, that she and Adam were hastening off to the
-jail the moment the twilight began to descend on the town.
-
-“Jailer Weaver owes me some little favor,” she said as they came to the
-place, “and he really owes a great deal to Goody.” Her voice was
-shaking, her teeth felt inclined to chatter, so excited was all this
-business making her feel.
-
-Vivid recollections of those terrible moments in which she had come to
-see Mrs. Weaver and then had hovered about the prison, to liberate Adam,
-made her cling to his arm in terror of what they were now about to
-attempt.
-
-Adam himself, wondering if the jailer would by any chance remember his
-face, and the break he and the poor old beef-eaters had made, had the
-boldness and the love of adventure come surging up in his heart, till he
-petted the hilt of his sword with a clenching fist.
-
-They entered at the door of that portion of the prison building where
-the Weavers made their residence, as this would excite no suspicion on
-the part of the few pedestrians in the street. The nature of their
-business being partially secret, they chose to interview the jailer in
-the room which answered for his parlor.
-
-Weaver was a man who constantly raised and lowered his eyebrows—a habit
-he had gained through years of alternately scowling at his guests and
-then looking puzzled or surprised that, being so innocent as they always
-were, they should still be brought to such a place. He listened to
-Adam’s flowery and courtly address, in which he announced the advent of
-Goody’s pardon, with at least a hundred of these eyebrow contortions.
-
-“But the Governor never pardons before a trial,” he said. “Else, how
-should he know but what he was pardoning a very guilty person indeed? If
-he had pardoned her, or if he will pardon her, after the trial, I shall
-be glad to give her freedom, poor soul. But you see she hasn’t even been
-tried, and moreover this pardon comes from the Governor’s good lady.”
-
-Garde’s heart sank. The man was so unanswerably logical.
-
-“But, my good man,” said Adam, “I tell you this would be the Governor’s
-pleasure. And the Governor stands in the shoes of the King, in matters
-of grave importance. Now call in any one and ask if I am not the
-Governor’s friend—his secretary, indeed.”
-
-“I know your face,” said Weaver, who remembered Adam well enough, as a
-former guest of the house, but who chose to say nothing on delicate
-subjects. “I saw you with Sir William the day he landed. Oh, aye, you
-are his friend, I know that well. But——”
-
-“Good!” Adam interrupted. “Then, the Governor—who stands, mind you, in
-the King’s shoes, in this matter, is away. I, being his friend, for the
-moment take his place. Therefore I stand in the King’s shoes myself, and
-I desire this woman’s pardon! Bring forth your ink, and I shall add my
-signature to the document, in the King’s name.”
-
-Weaver was bewildered. This reasoning was as clear as a bell, yet he
-knew what the angry mobs would soon be demanding from his stronghold.
-
-“But—but there can be no pardon, as I said, till after trial,” he
-stammered.
-
-“What!” said Rust striding back and forth, while Garde looked on and
-trembled, “do you refuse to obey your King?”
-
-“Oh, sir, alas, no,” said the jailer. “But what can I do?”
-
-“Do? Do? My friend, do you value your daily bread? Do you wish to retain
-your office? Or shall the Governor grant your dismissal?”
-
-This was touching the man on a spot where he could endure no pressure.
-He quailed, for he found himself between the devil—as represented by the
-fanatical spirit of the mob—and the deep sea into which the loss of his
-place would plunge him at once.
-
-“Oh, don’t turn me out!” he begged, convinced well enough of Adam’s
-power with the Governor. “I would do anything to please you, sir, and I
-have done much already to please the Governor. I am an old man, sir, and
-we have saved nothing, and we know no other trade, and many people hate
-us. There would be no place for me and mine. Do not turn us away for
-this.”
-
-“I don’t wish to turn you away,” said Adam. “I merely ask you to release
-this woman.”
-
-“She has never done any harm,” put in Garde. “She has been very good to
-your wife and you. Surely you could spare her this.”
-
-“I would, Miss, I would,” said the wretched man. “I am sick to death of
-this terrible craze of witches, but what can I do? If I do not release
-her, I shall lose my place and starve. If I do let her go, I shall have
-all the mobs down upon me, when they find there is no witch for trial.
-How can I show them a paper, instead of a prisoner? My life might pay
-the forfeit.”
-
-“Oh, Adam, this is terrible,” said Garde. “What can we do?”
-
-“After trial, you can surely get her pardoned,” the man insisted. “You
-have the power. You can save her then.”
-
-“Oh, they will never wait!” cried the girl. “They may try her to-night,
-and find her guilty and hang her the first thing in the morning!”
-
-Weaver turned pale. He knew that what she said might in all probability
-be true.
-
-“But I cannot give them a bit of paper instead of a prisoner,” he
-repeated. “If you will bring me some one else, who will vouch for the
-mob’s respect of your pardon, as you vouch for the Governor——”
-
-“We’ve got to have her,” interrupted Adam. “You can say she escaped, by
-her power of witchcraft. Release her, or look your last on these
-cheerful walls.”
-
-“Oh, but, Adam,” said Garde, “why should we make such misery and trouble
-for one person—for two persons, indeed with Mrs. Weaver—in trying to
-save another? I like these good people. They are very kind to their
-prisoners. They have spent much of their own money to give them little
-comforts. Can we not think of some other way, as good as this, to get
-poor Goody out and do no harm to innocent people?”
-
-Weaver was ready to break into tears. He started to repeat, “Bring me
-some one to——”
-
-“Oh! Oh, I know! I know what to do!” cried Garde, interrupting. “All you
-need is some one else to blame, when they find she is gone! It would
-never be your fault if some one took her place. It would be a trick on
-you, when they found it out. I’ll take her place. I’ll take her place,
-because when they find out they are starting to try only me, they will
-have to laugh it off as a joke. And Grandther is one of the
-magistrates—appointed to-day—so they will have to let me go—and Goody
-will be far away, by then—and no one will get into trouble!”
-
-“So one could blame me—nor they wouldn’t,” said Weaver, slowly, “but as
-for you, Miss——”
-
-“Then we can do it!” Garde broke in, a little wildly. “Oh, hurry! we
-might he too late. You can put me wherever Goody is, and I can change
-clothes with her, and then, Adam——”
-
-“Yes, but——” started Adam.
-
-“Oh, let me, dear. I shan’t mind it a bit. And in the morning it will
-all be over, and Goody will be safe, and no one harmed—and there is no
-other way. And I want to! Oh, Goody has been like a mother to me! I must
-do it. Please don’t say anything more. Mr. Weaver, take me to Goody
-now!”
-
-“You brave little woman!” said Adam, his own courage leaping to greet
-this intrepid spirit in his sweetheart. “I believe you can do it! We
-shall win!”
-
-“Come back as early as you can,” said Garde, on whom a thought of the
-lonely part of the business was suddenly impressed. “It won’t seem long.
-And when it is over, I shall feel so glad I could do a little thing for
-Goody. We must hurry. Every moment may be precious!”
-
-“But, lassie——” the jailer tried to insist once more, “you——”
-
-“Please don’t talk any more,” said Garde. “Take me to her now. And when
-somebody looking like me comes back, let her go out by Mrs. Weaver’s
-door with Mr. Rust.”
-
-“Yes, I, but——”
-
-“In the King’s name, no more talk,” interrupted Adam. Then he turned to
-Garde. “You won’t be timid, little mate?” he said. “I shall not be gone
-past midnight at the most.”
-
-“I shall be so glad to think I am leaving Goody in your strong, dear
-hands,” said Garde, with a smile of love in her eyes. “Good-by,
-dear,—good night, till the morning.”
-
-She kissed him, and smiling at him bravely, followed the jailer, who saw
-that his place in the jail depended now on compliance with Adam’s and
-Garde’s demand. The tremulous pressure of her little hand in his
-remained with Adam when she had gone. He wondered if he were doing well,
-thus to let his sweetheart assume poor Goody’s place. Then his own
-boldness of spirit rebuked him and he laughed at the imaginary scene of
-the magistrates, when they should finally discover their trial to be
-nothing but a farce.
-
-Weaver meantime took a candle in his hand and led the way down the
-corridor of the prison. Garde hesitated when she saw him descending the
-steps.
-
-“Why—where is she?” she asked, timidly.
-
-“In the dungeon, lass,” said the jailer. “I was over sorry, but it could
-not be helped. We are full everywhere else. But I shall leave you the
-light, and anything you like for comfort. Only, if you hear any one
-coming, blow out the candle straightway, or I shall be in a peck of
-troubles.”
-
-Quelling her sense of terror, and thinking of Goody, alone in that
-darkness, with such dreadful fates awaiting her reappearance among the
-people, she promised herself again it would soon be over, and so
-followed resolutely down into the hole where Adam had once been locked,
-in those long-past days of despair.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XV.
-
- THE MIDNIGHT TRIAL.
-
-
-GOODY DUNE was a frightened and pitiable spectacle, with her age and the
-terrors of the dungeon and coming execution upon her. She struggled in
-an effort to maintain a show of composure, at sight of Garde and the
-jailer. Nevertheless she would not, at first, listen to a word of the
-plan of substitution, to get her away from the prison.
-
-When at last she had fairly overridden Goody’s objections, and had made
-her complete the exchange of garments, Garde kissed her with all the
-affection of a daughter, and sent her forth to Adam’s protection. She
-then heard the lock in the dungeon-door shoot squeakingly into place
-with a little thrill of fear, which nothing human and womanly could have
-escaped.
-
-She listened to the footfalls receding down the corridor, and then the
-utter silence of the place began to make itself ring in her ears. She
-looked about her, by the aid of the flickering light which the tallow
-dip was furnishing, at the barren walls, the shadows, and the heap of
-straw in the corner. At all this she gave a little shiver of dread.
-
-All the excitement which had buoyed her up to make this moment possible
-escaped from her rapidly. She began to think how Goody must have felt,
-till her moment of deliverance came. Then she thought of what Adam had
-endured when, lame, hungry, exhausted and defamed, he had been thrown
-with violence into this horrible hole, from which he could have had no
-thought of being rescued.
-
-She took the candle in hand and went in search of the tiny window, down
-through which she had dropped him the keys. When she saw it, she gave a
-little shudder, to note how small it was, and how it permitted no light
-to enter the place.
-
-Returning then to a paper, filled with bread and butter, pie, cake and
-cold meat, which Weaver had fetched her, while she and Goody had been
-exchanging garments, she tried to eat a little, to occupy her time and
-her thoughts. But she could only take a sip of the milk, which stood
-beside the paper, and a nibble at the bread. To eat, while in her
-present state of mind, was out of the question.
-
-The stillness seemed to increase. She felt little creeps of chill
-running down her shoulders. What a terrible thing it would be to have no
-hope of leaving this fearful cellar! Suppose anything should happen to
-Adam, to prevent him from returning! How long would it be till morning?
-Surely she must have been there nearly an hour already. She clasped her
-hands, that were cold as ice. She almost wished she had not tried this
-solution of the difficulty. Then she remembered the wise old woman, who
-had made her neighbors’ children her own care—as she had no sons nor
-daughters of her own—and who had been sister, mother and friend to
-Hester Hodder, and guardian angel, teacher and kindly spirit over
-herself. This made her calmer, for a time, and again courageous.
-
-When once more the dread of the place and the ringing silence and the
-doubts that seemed to lurk in the shadows, came stealing back, she
-thought of Adam, rehearsing every incident in every time they had ever
-met. And thus she lingered long over that walk from Plymouth to Boston.
-
-In the midst of sweet reveries which really did much to dissipate her
-qualms and chills, she heard someone walking heavily along in the
-corridor above her. Swiftly calling to mind what the jailer had said
-about the light, she blew it out and stood trembling with nervousness,
-waiting for the door to open before her.
-
-But the sounds of heavy boots on the upper floor presently halted. Then
-they retreated. She breathed more freely. And then—she suddenly felt the
-darkness all about her.
-
-Fear that some one had been about to enter had, for the moment, made her
-oblivious of the curtain of gloom which closed in so thickly when she
-blew out the candle. Now, when she realized that she could not again
-ignite that wick, a horror spread through her, till she closed her eyes
-and sank on the floor in despair.
-
-The time that passed was interminable. She had not thought of how
-terrible the dungeon would be without the candle. She could almost have
-screamed, thus to be so deprived of the kindly light which had made the
-place comparatively cheerful. But she pulled up her resolution once
-again, thinking how Goody and Adam had endured nothing but darkness, and
-with no hope of succor such as she could see illuminating her hours of
-dread.
-
-Midnight came at last and found Garde unstrung. When the tramp of many
-feet rang above her, at last, she welcomed the thought that some one was
-near. She hoped it was morning and that Adam had returned. But then she
-heard a jangle of keys, and footfalls on the steps leading down to where
-she was, and her heart stood still.
-
-In the natural consternation which the hour, the darkness and the
-suspense had brought upon her, she hastily hid her head and face in
-Goody’s shawl, and bending over, to represent the older woman, she
-tremblingly saw the door swing open and heard the jailer command her to
-come forth.
-
-With her heart beating violently and her knees quaking beneath her,
-Garde came out, relieved in some ways to flee from that awful hole of
-darkness, but frightened, when she saw the array of stern-faced men, who
-had come, as she instantly comprehended, to take her away to a trial.
-
-There was not one among the five or six men that she knew. She
-remembered the faces of Pinchbecker and Higgler, having seen them in the
-morning, when Goody was taken, but the others were witnesses that
-Randolph had sent from Salem, experts in swearing away the lives of
-witches. They too had been present at the capture of Goody.
-
-Undetected as she was, Garde was surrounded by this sinister group of
-men, and was marched away, out of the jail, into the sweet summer’s
-night air, and so down a deserted street, to a building she had never
-entered before in her life.
-
-Hardly had the prison been left behind when Adam Rust, swiftly
-returning, after having readily provided for the safe escape of Goody
-Dune, came galloping into Boston, his brain on fire with a scheme of
-boldness.
-
-He had made up his mind to ride straight to the prison, demand
-admittance, compel the jailer to deliver Garde up at once, carry her
-straight to a parson’s, marry his sweetheart forthwith, and then take
-her off to New Amsterdam. Weaver could blame the rescue of the witch to
-him and be welcome. He could even permit Adam to tie him and gag him, to
-make the story more complete, but submit he should, or Rust would know
-the reason. His wild ride had begotten the scheme in his
-adventure-hungry mind.
-
-He knew the residence of the parson who had married Henry Wainsworth and
-Prudence Soam, the week before he and Phipps had returned to
-Massachusetts, for Garde had told him all the particulars, time after
-time—having marriage in her own sweet thought, as indeed she should. He
-therefore went first to this parson’s, knocked hotly on the door, to get
-him out of bed, and bade him be prepared to perform the ceremony within
-the hour.
-
-The parson had readily agreed, being a man amenable to sense and to the
-luster of gold in the palm, wherefore Adam had gone swiftly off to work
-the _tour de force_ on which all else depended. He arrived at the jail
-when Garde had been gone for fifteen minutes. Here he learned with
-amazement of the midnight trial to which she had been so summarily led.
-
-Trembling like a leaf, Garde was conducted into a chamber adjoining the
-room wherein the dread magistrates were sitting, with their minds
-already convinced that this was a case so flagrant that to permit the
-witch to live through the night would be to impair the heavenly heritage
-of every soul in Boston.
-
-Here the girl was left, in charge of Gallows and two other ruffianly
-brutes, whose immunity from the evil powers of witches had been
-thoroughly established in former cases. In the meantime her accusers had
-gone before the magistrates, ahead of herself, to relate the unspeakable
-things of which Goody Dune had been guilty.
-
-Shaking, not daring to look up, nor to utter a sound, Garde had tried to
-summon the courage to throw off the whole disguise, laugh at her captors
-and declare who she was, but before she should arrive in the presence of
-Grandther Donner, who would protect her and verify her story, at least
-as to who she was, she could not possibly make the attempt.
-
-Terribly wrought upon by the suspense of waiting to be summoned before
-that stern tribunal of injustice, Garde began to think of the anger
-which these unmirthful men might show, when she revealed the joke before
-their astounded eyes. She swayed, weakly, almost ready to swoon, so
-great became her alarm.
-
-She could hear the high voices of Psalms Higgler and Isaiah Pinchbecker,
-penetrating through the door. They were giving their testimony, in which
-they had been so well coached by Edward Randolph, who was even now in
-there among the witnesses, disguised, and keeping as much as possible in
-the background.
-
-The door presently opened and Garde was bidden to enter. Her heart
-pounded with tumultuous strokes in her breast. She could barely put one
-foot before the other. She caught at the door-frame to prop herself up
-as she entered the dimly-lighted, shadow-haunted room.
-
-Then her gaze leaped swiftly up where the magistrates were sitting. She
-saw strangers only—men she knew in the town, but not David Donner. She
-felt she should faint, when one of the men turned about, and she
-recognized her grandfather, looking feverish, wild-eyed and hardly sane.
-This was why she had not known him sooner.
-
-“Oh, Grandther!” she suddenly cried. “It’s I! It’s Garde! Oh, save me!
-Oh, take me home!”
-
-She flung off Goody’s shawl, and darting forward ran to her
-grandfather’s side and threw her arms like a child about his neck, where
-she sobbed hysterically and laughed and begged him to take her away.
-
-The court was smitten with astonishment from which no one could, for the
-moment, recover.
-
-Randolph had pressed quickly forward. But he now retired again into the
-shadow.
-
-“What’s this? What’s this?” demanded the chief of the magistrates,
-sternly. “What business is this? What does this mean? Where is——”
-
-“Witchcraft! A young witch! Cheated! We are cheated! The young witch has
-cheated us of the old witch!” cried Pinchbecker, shrilly.
-
-“My child! My child!” said David Donner. “This is no witch,
-fellow-magistrates and friends.”
-
-“She has cheated us of the old witch!” repeated Pinchbecker wildly. “She
-has daily consorted with a notorious witch. She has aided a witch to
-escape. She is a witch herself! We know them thus! She is a dangerous
-witch! She is a terrible young witch!”
-
-“How comes this?” said the chief again, excitedly. His associates also
-demanded to know how this business came to be possible, and what was its
-meaning. The room was filled with the shrill cries of the men denouncing
-Garde more stridently than before, and with the exclamations of
-astonishment and shouts to know what had become of the witch they had
-come there to try.
-
-During all this confusion, Garde was clinging to her grandfather and
-begging him to take her home.
-
-“Have the girl stand forth,” commanded the chief magistrate. “We must
-know how this business has happened.”
-
-Three of the men laid hold of Garde and took her from her wondering
-grandfather’s side. She regained her composure by making a mighty
-effort.
-
-“Goody Dune was no witch!” she cried. “You all know what a good, kind
-woman she has been among you for years—till this madness came upon us!
-She is a good woman—and I love her, for all she has done. She is not a
-witch—you know she is not a witch!”
-
-The witnesses, who knew all the ways in which witches were to be
-detected, raised their voices at once, in protest.
-
-“Order in the Court!” commanded the magistrate. “Young woman, have you
-connived to let this Goody Dune escape?”
-
-“She was no witch!” repeated Garde, courageously now. “I knew you would
-try to send her to the gallows. I knew she was fore-condemned! I could
-do no less—and you men could have done no less, had you been less mad!”
-
-“Blasphemy!” cried Higgler. “She is convicted out of her own mouth!”
-
-“When a witch is young,” cried Pinchbecker, “she can work ten times more
-awful evils and arts!”
-
-One of the magistrates spoke: “No woman ever yet was beautiful and
-clever both at one time. If she be the one, she cannot be the other.
-This young woman, being both, is clearly a witch!”
-
-“She’s a witch—worse than the other!” screamed another of the witnesses.
-“Condemn her! Condemn her!”
-
-“Oh, Grandther,” cried Garde, “take me away from these terrible men!”
-
-Randolph now came sneaking forth, out of the shadow.
-
-“This is that same young woman,” he cried, “who lost the colony its
-charter!”
-
-“The charter!” screamed David Donner, instantly a maniac. “The charter!
-She lost us the charter! Witch! The charter! Condemn her! Kill her! The
-charter! She! She! She! Kill her!—Where is she? The charter! The
-charter! The charter!”
-
-With his two bony, palsied hands raised high above his head, like
-fearful talons, with his white hair awry over his brow, with his eyes
-blazing with maniacal fire, the old man had suddenly stood up and now he
-came staggering forward, screaming in a blood-chilling voice and making
-such an apparition of horror that the men fell backward from his path.
-
-“Oh Grandther! Grandther!” cried Garde, holding forth her arms and going
-toward him, to catch him as she saw him come stumbling toward her.
-
-“Witch!” screamed the old man shrilly. “Kill her! Kill her! I never
-coerced her! The charter! Witch! Witch! The charter!”
-
-He suddenly choked. He clutched at his heart in a wild, spasmodic
-manner, and with froth bursting from his lips, he fell headlong to the
-floor and was dead.
-
-“She has killed him!” cried Higgler. “She has killed him with her
-hellish power!”
-
-“Witch! A murderous young witch!”
-
-“Condemn her! Condemn her!” came in a terrible chorus.
-
-“To the gallows! Hale her to the gallows!” Randolph added from the rear.
-
-The man called Gallows thought this referred to him. He grinned. He and
-the two brutes who had handled many defenseless witches before, came
-toward the girl, who stood as if petrified, her hand pressed against her
-heart in dumb anguish.
-
-Suddenly the door was thrown open and in there came Governor Phipps,
-cane in hand, periwig adjusted, cloak of office on his shoulders. He was
-blowing his nose as he entered, so that no one saw his face plainly, yet
-all knew the tall, commanding figure and the dress.
-
-“What, a trial, at night, and without me?” he roared, in a towering
-rage, which many present had already learned to fear. “Is this your
-province, you magistrates, assembled to deal out justice? Do you heckle
-a defenseless woman like this? Disperse!—the whole of you, instantly. I
-command it! If you have condemned, I pardon. The prisoner will leave the
-court with me!”
-
-The men, craven that they were, he could deceive, but Garde knew the
-voice, the gait, the bearing of her lover. She sprang to his side with a
-little cry of gladness and clung to him wildly, as his strong arm swung
-boldly about her waist. She could hardly more than stand, so tremendous
-had been the stress of her fearful emotions.
-
-Scorning to expend further scolding or shaming upon them, and
-comprehending that delay had no part in his game, Adam turned his back
-on the slinking company and strode away, half supporting Garde, who hung
-so limply in his hold.
-
-Randolph, baffled, afraid to reveal himself by denouncing the imposture
-which he had been only a second behind Garde in detecting, stole close
-to his henchmen and whispered the truth in their ears.
-
-Higgler and Pinchbecker, conscious of the blood of Adam on their hands,
-felt their knees knock suddenly together. The man must be the very devil
-himself.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI.
-
- THE GAUNTLET RUN.
-
-
-WITH his bride up behind him on his horse, the rover spurred swiftly
-away from the parson’s, still within the hour, in which he had promised
-to return to his wedding. Unafraid of whatsoever the world, before or
-behind, might contain, while her lover-husband lived at her side, Garde
-felt a sense of exhilaration, at leaving Boston, such as she had never
-known in all her life.
-
-With her grandfather dead and Goody no longer at the little cottage on
-the skirts of town, she had no ties remaining, save those at the houses
-of Soam and Phipps. And what were these, when weighed in the balance
-against Adam Rust—her Adam,—her mighty lord?
-
-Trembling and clinging as she was, he had carried her off. Gladly she
-had gone to the parson’s. Her heart now rejoiced, as he told her that
-Massachusetts was behind them forever. For its people, with their harsh,
-mirthless lives of austerity and fanaticism, she had only love enough to
-give them her pity. But her life was life indeed, when, ever and anon,
-Adam halted the horse, lest she fear a fall, and twisted about to give
-her a kiss and a chuckle of love and to tell of the way he had cheated
-the mob and the court of their witches.
-
-“Make no doubt of it, you are a witch—one of the sweetest, cleverest,
-bravest, most adorable little witches that ever lived,” he said, “and I
-love you and love you for it, my darling wife!”
-
-They had left the town early in the morning. By break of day they were
-not so far from Boston as Adam could have wished. The horse had been
-wearied by carrying double, when he conveyed Goody Dune to a place of
-safety,—so that the old woman could subsequently join himself and Garde
-in New Amsterdam,—and therefore he had halted the animal humanely, from
-time to time, as the load under which the good beast was now working was
-not a trifle.
-
-Having avoided the main road, for the greater part of the remaining
-hours of darkness, Adam deemed it safe at last to return to the highway,
-as he thought it unlikely they had been pursued under any circumstances.
-Thus the sun came up as they were quietly jogging along toward a copse
-of trees through which the road went winding with many an invitation of
-beauty to beckon them on.
-
-Crossing a noisy little brook, the rover permitted the horse to stop for
-a drink. Not to be wasting the precious time, Adam turned himself half
-way around in the saddle, as he had done so frequently before, and gave
-his bride a fair morning salute.
-
-He had then barely ridden the horse a rod from the stream, when, without
-the slightest warning, the figure of Gallows, mounted on a great black
-steed, suddenly broke from cover among the trees and bore down upon
-them.
-
-The great hulk, sword in hand, made a quick dash toward the defenceless
-two, and slashed at Garde with all his fearful might.
-
-Jerking his horse nearly out of the road, Adam swung from the line of
-the brute’s cowardly stroke, yet before he could do aught to prevent it,
-Gallows righted, flung out his leaden fist and dragged the girl fairly
-off from her seat, till she struck on the back of her head, among the
-rocks of the road, and lay there unconscious, and almost beneath the
-tread of the horse’s prancing feet.
-
-Then the monster spurred at his horse and turning him back, rode to
-drive him madly over the prostrate form in the dust.
-
-Making a short, sharp cry of anger, Adam whipped out his sword and
-dashed upon the murderous butcher before he could get within fifteen
-feet of Garde, where she lay in the sunlight.
-
-Gallows had plenty of time to see him coming. The two met in a
-tremendous collision of steel on steel that sounded a clangor through
-the woods and sent the two swords flying from their owners’ grips.
-
-Disarmed, the pair thudded together in a swift and hot embrace, sawing
-their horses close in, the more firmly and straight erect to hold their
-seats.
-
-“You be a fool and I be the fool-killer!” roared Gallows, hoarsely. He
-tugged with his giant strength, to drag Adam fairly across to his own
-big saddle, where he could either break his back or beat him to death
-with the butt of a pistol, which he was trying to draw with the hand
-that held the reins.
-
-Slipping his wrist under the chin and his hand around to the fellow’s
-massive shoulder, Adam tilted back the heavy head with a force so great
-that Gallows was glad to release his hold, else he would surely have
-toppled from his perch.
-
-The horses leaped a little apart. Back their riders jerked them. Again
-the two big human forms shot together, and clung in a fierce embrace,
-like two massive chunks of iron, welded together by their impact. Once
-more Gallows used his great brute strength, while Rust employed his wit
-and got his same terrible leverage on the monster’s neck.
-
-For a moment Gallows fought to try to break the hold, and to drag his
-opponent headlong from his horse, by kicking Adam’s animal stoutly in
-the flank. But Adam was inflicting such an agony upon him as he could
-not endure. They broke away, only to rush for the third time, back to
-this giant wrestling.
-
-“The fool will never learn. I shall kill him yet!” cried Rust to
-himself, for he went for Gallows’s neck as before and got it again in
-his hold.
-
-He threw a tremendous strength into the struggle. Gallows let out a
-bellow. Releasing the reins, he threw both his arms about his foe and
-deliberately fell from his seat, with the intention of crushing Rust
-beneath his weight, on the ground.
-
-Adam’s turn in the air was the work of the expert wrestler. The horses
-shied nervously away.
-
-The two were up on their feet and telescoped abruptly in one compact,
-struggling mass, as if two malleable statues of heroic size had suddenly
-been bent and intertwisted together.
-
-With his ox-like force Gallows began to force Adam backward. Adam let
-him expend himself in this manner for a moment. He then discovered the
-great hulk’s design. He meant to force the rover to where Garde was
-still lying, and so to trample upon her till the life should be stamped
-and ground from her helpless form.
-
-Randolph had sent him to commit this final infamy.
-
-The rage that leaped up in Adam’s breast was a terrible thing. He
-feinted to drop as if in exhaustion. Gallows loosened his hold to snatch
-a better one, at once. In that second Adam dealt him a blow in the
-stomach that all but felled him where he stood.
-
-Before he could straighten to recover, Rust was upon him like a tiger.
-Getting around the great brute’s side, he threw both hands around the
-short, thick neck and twisted himself into position so that he and
-Gallows were placed nearly back to back. Then with one movement he
-lifted at the man’s whole weight, with the monster’s head as a lever,
-hauled fiercely backward. Into the action he threw such a mighty rush of
-strength that Gallows was hoisted bodily off the ground, for a second,
-and then his neck gave forth a tremendous snap and was broken so
-fearfully that one of the jagged ends of a vertebra stabbed outward
-through the flesh, and dripped with red.
-
-The whole dead weight of the fellow’s carcass rested for a second on
-Rust’s back and shoulder, and then Adam let him fall to the ground,
-where, like a slain hog, he rolled heavily over and moved no more.
-
-Panting, fierce-eyed, ready to slay him again, Adam stood above the body
-for a moment, his jaws set, his fists clenched hard in the rage still
-upon him.
-
-Then he heard a little moan, and turning about saw Garde, attempting to
-raise herself upward, in the road. He ran to her instantly and propped
-her up on his knee.
-
-“Dearest, dearest,” he said, “are you badly hurt? Garde, let me help
-you. Don’t look—don’t look there. It’s all right. Here, let me get you
-back to the shade.”
-
-He took her up tenderly in his arms and carried her out of the road to a
-near-by bank of moss. Here he sat her down, with her back to a tree, and
-ran to fill his hat with water from the stream.
-
-The two horses, having stopped to take a supplementary drink, and a
-nibble at the grass, were easily caught. The rover secured them both and
-tied them quickly to a bush, with the dragging reins. Then back to Garde
-he ran with the water.
-
-“Oh, thank you, dear,” she said, “I don’t think I am hurt. But with the
-fright, and the fall, I think I must have fainted.”
-
-“Thank God!” said Adam, as she drank from his hat and smiled in his
-face, a little faintly, but with an infinite love in her two brown eyes.
-“Thank God, for this delivery. There will be no more trouble. I feel it!
-I know it. At last we have run the gauntlet.”
-
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII.
-
- BEWITCHED.
-
-
-IN his tidy little house in New Amsterdam, Adam sat reading a letter
-from Governor William Phipps, written at Boston.
-
- “I forgyve you y^r merrie empersonashun and all ye other things
- alsoe, save y^e going away without goode-bye,” he read, “but let
- it pass. I w^d write to say God Blesse you bothe. And as I have
- never known such a goode blade as y^{rs} in fight, I w^d offer
- you to make you my commander of ye forces to goe in war against
- ye French, where they do threat to harasse our peeple as of
- yore——”
-
-Adam halted here and looked up at the battered old sword on the wall.
-His thought went truant, to his helpmate, away for a few minutes’ walk
-to Goody Dune’s. He shook his head at the Governor’s generous offer.
-
-“Well, well, William,” he said aloud, “I don’t know. I don’t know what
-may be the matter, but—no more fighting for me, old comrade. I think it
-must be that I—am bewitched.”
-
-
- THE END.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- ● Transcriber’s Notes:
- ○ Missing or obscured punctuation was silently corrected.
- ○ Typographical errors were silently corrected.
- ○ Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation were made consistent only
- when a predominant form was found in this book.
- ○ Text that:
- was in italics is enclosed by underscores (_italics_).
- ○ The use of a caret (^) before a letter, or letters, shows that the
- following letter or letters was intended to be a superscript, as
- in S^t Bartholomew or 10^{th} Century.
-
-
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WHEN A WITCH IS YOUNG ***
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of When a witch is young, by Philip Verrill Mighels</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: When a witch is young</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Philip Verrill Mighels</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: June 5, 2022 [eBook #68249]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Mary Glenn Krause, Charlene Taylor, Barry Abrahamsen, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WHEN A WITCH IS YOUNG ***</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/cover.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-<div>
- <h1 class='c001'>WHEN A WITCH IS YOUNG</h1>
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div>═════════════════════════════</div>
- <div><span class='c004'><em class='gesperrt'>WHEN A WITCH</em></span></div>
- <div>─────────────────────</div>
- <div><span class='c004'>❦ <em class='gesperrt'>IS YOUNG</em> ❦</span></div>
- <div>═════════════════════════════</div>
- <div><span class='c005'><em class='gesperrt'><span class="blackletter">A Historical Novel</span></em></span></div>
- <div>─────────────────────</div>
- <div><span class='c004'>B y&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4 — 1 9 — 6 9</span></div>
- <div>═════════════════════════════</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>&nbsp;</p>
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/publogo.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<p class='c007'>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c008'>
- <div>═════════════════════════════</div>
- <div><em class='gesperrt'>R. F. FENNO &amp; COMPANY</em></div>
- <div><span class='c009'><span class='sc'>9 and 11 East 16th Street</span>, <i>New York</i></span></div>
- <div>─────────────────────</div>
- <div>1901</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div>Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1901</div>
- <div>By R. F. FENNO &amp; COMPANY</div>
- <div>In the office of the Librarian of Congress at Washington</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_iii'>iii</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CONTENTS.</h2>
-</div>
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div><span class='c012'>PART I.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='17%' />
-<col width='68%' />
-<col width='13%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'><span class='xsmall'>CHAPTER</span></td>
- <td class='c014'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c015'><span class='xsmall'>PAGE</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>I.</td>
- <td class='c014'>Le Roi est Mort</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_9'>9</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>II.</td>
- <td class='c014'>A Friendship of Chance</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_14'>14</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>III.</td>
- <td class='c014'>The Germ of a Passion</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_22'>22</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div><span class='c012'>PART II.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='17%' />
-<col width='68%' />
-<col width='13%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>I.</td>
- <td class='c014'>A Rover and his Retinue</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_27'>27</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>II.</td>
- <td class='c014'>An Ungodly Performance</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_36'>36</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>III.</td>
- <td class='c014'>’Twixt Cup and Lip</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_45'>45</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>IV.</td>
- <td class='c014'>The Opening of a Vista</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_53'>53</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>V.</td>
- <td class='c014'>A Weighty Confidence</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_62'>62</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>VI.</td>
- <td class='c014'>Pan’s Brother and the Nymph</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_71'>71</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>VII.</td>
- <td class='c014'>The Meeting in the Greenwood</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_78'>78</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>VIII.</td>
- <td class='c014'>Paying the Fiddler</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_86'>86</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>IX.</td>
- <td class='c014'>A Matter of State</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_94'>94</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>X.</td>
- <td class='c014'>To Foil a Spy</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_100'>100</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>XI.</td>
- <td class='c014'>Dangerous Tributes</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_105'>105</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>XII.</td>
- <td class='c014'>Hours that Grow Dark</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_110'>110</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>XIII.</td>
- <td class='c014'>A Kiss Deferred</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_121'>121</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>XIV.</td>
- <td class='c014'>Overtures from the Enemy</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_133'>133</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>XV.</td>
- <td class='c014'>Love’s Inviting Light</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_140'>140</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_iv'>iv</span>XVI.</td>
- <td class='c014'>Garde’s Lonely Vigil</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_149'>149</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>XVII.</td>
- <td class='c014'>A Night Attack</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_153'>153</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>XVIII.</td>
- <td class='c014'>The Glint of Treasure</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_160'>160</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>XIX.</td>
- <td class='c014'>Mutiny</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_164'>164</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>XX.</td>
- <td class='c014'>Garde’s Extremity</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_171'>171</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>XXI.</td>
- <td class='c014'>Randolph’s Courtship</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_180'>180</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>XXII.</td>
- <td class='c014'>David’s Coercion</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_187'>187</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>XXIII.</td>
- <td class='c014'>Goody’s Boy</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_193'>193</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>XXIV.</td>
- <td class='c014'>A Greenwood Meeting</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_200'>200</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>XXV.</td>
- <td class='c014'>Love’s Traps for Confessions</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_213'>213</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>XXVI.</td>
- <td class='c014'>A Holiday Ended</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_221'>221</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>XXVII.</td>
- <td class='c014'>In Boston Town</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_228'>228</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>XXVIII.</td>
- <td class='c014'>Love’s Garden</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_234'>234</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>XXIX.</td>
- <td class='c014'>The Enemy in Power</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_243'>243</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>XXX.</td>
- <td class='c014'>A Fight at the Tavern</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_249'>249</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>XXXI.</td>
- <td class='c014'>A Refugee</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_255'>255</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>XXXII.</td>
- <td class='c014'>A Foster Parent</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_260'>260</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>XXXIII.</td>
- <td class='c014'>Repudiated Silver</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_269'>269</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>XXXIV.</td>
- <td class='c014'>Lodgings for the Retinue</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_275'>275</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>XXXV.</td>
- <td class='c014'>Garde Obtains the Jail Keys</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_280'>280</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>XXXVI.</td>
- <td class='c014'>Garde’s Ordeal</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_287'>287</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>XXXVII.</td>
- <td class='c014'>Rats in the Armory</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_296'>296</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>XXXVIII.</td>
- <td class='c014'>Love’s Long Good-by</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_303'>303</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>XXXIX.</td>
- <td class='c014'>Mutations</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_308'>308</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>XL.</td>
- <td class='c014'>Golden Oysters</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_314'>314</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>XLI.</td>
- <td class='c014'>Fate’s Devious Ways</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_319'>319</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>XLII.</td>
- <td class='c014'>Little Ruses and Waiting</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_327'>327</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div><span class='c012'>PART III.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='17%' />
-<col width='68%' />
-<col width='13%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>I.</td>
- <td class='c014'>A Topic at Court</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_335'>335</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>II.</td>
- <td class='c014'>Illness in the Family</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_342'>342</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_v'>v</span>III.</td>
- <td class='c014'>Foiled Purposes</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_345'>345</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>IV.</td>
- <td class='c014'>Making History</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_350'>350</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>V.</td>
- <td class='c014'>Old Acquaintances</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_357'>357</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>VI.</td>
- <td class='c014'>Juggling with Fire</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_362'>362</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>VII.</td>
- <td class='c014'>A Beef-eater Passes</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_368'>368</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>VIII.</td>
- <td class='c014'>A Woman Scorned</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_371'>371</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>IX.</td>
- <td class='c014'>Revelations</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_382'>382</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>X.</td>
- <td class='c014'>After Six Years</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_392'>392</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>XI.</td>
- <td class='c014'>A Blow in the Dark</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_398'>398</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>XII.</td>
- <td class='c014'>Adam's Nurse</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_403'>403</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>XIII.</td>
- <td class='c014'>Goody in the Toils</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_407'>407</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>XIV.</td>
- <td class='c014'>Garde’s Subterfuge</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_414'>414</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>XV.</td>
- <td class='c014'>The Midnight Trial</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_425'>425</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>XVI.</td>
- <td class='c014'>The Gauntlet Run</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_436'>436</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>XVII.</td>
- <td class='c014'>Bewitched</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#Page_442'>442</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span><span class='c016'>WHEN A WITCH IS YOUNG.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div><span class='c018'>PART I.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER I.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>LE ROI EST MORT.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>The</span> first, the last—the only King the Americans ever
-had, was dead. It was the 13th day of August, in the
-year 1676. The human emotions of the Puritan people
-of Massachusetts tugged at the shackles of a long repression
-and broke them asunder, in the seemly town
-of Plymouth. King Philip, the mighty Sachem of the
-Wampanoag Indians, had been slain. His warriors
-were scattered and slaughtered. His war was ended.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Through the streets of Plymouth poured a vast throng
-of people. Men, women and children, they ran and
-walked, surrounding a buff-colored army that filled the
-thoroughfares like a turgid flood. This was the regiment
-which Captain Benjamin Church had led to the
-final camp of King Philip, in the swamps at Mt. Hope
-and Pocasset, where the last scene in the sanguinary
-drama had been enacted.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Here was a troop of sixty horse, with officers. They
-were well mounted, caparisoned with glittering back,
-breast and headpiece, and armed with clanking sword,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>shouldered carbine, and great pistols, that flopped at
-the waist. Behind them were foot-soldiers, brown
-Puritans—stern, mirth-denying, lusty at fighting. Some
-of these bore no weapon other than a pike. Another
-frequently had upon him sword, pistol and carbine.
-Above the heads of these men on foot waved a thin
-forest of pike-staves, on the tips of which bright steel
-threw back the dazzling rays of the sun. There was
-clatter of scabbards on the pavement, thud and thud
-of hoofs and feet in the roadway, and above all, shouts
-of men and gabble of children.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There were hordes on either side of this human flood,
-pushing and crowding to gain the front of the column,
-while a similar aggregation hung back upon the flank
-of the regiment, hooting, craning necks and racing to
-keep pace with the steady, long strides of the soldiers.
-This division of interest was caused by the two counter
-attractions of the pageant. Thus at the front, a red
-Indian was leading the march with a wild, half-dancing
-step, while he contorted his body weirdly for the purpose
-of displaying to all beholders the ghastly proof of
-victory—the head of the great King Philip. This Indian
-ally might have stood for the mockery of a drum-major,
-heading a march of doom.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The spectators, racing, crowding, following, took a
-crazed delight in beholding this gory head. Love,
-anger, joy, the daily emotions of man, were habitually
-so repressed by these serious people that now it seemed
-as if they reveled as in an orgie of shuddering and
-gasping, to give vent to their pent-up natures. They
-laughed, they skipped on nimble feet, they sang praises.
-The young men and women snatched the occasion, with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>its looseness of deportment, to look unbridled feelings
-into one another’s eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The other attraction, in the rear, was a captive, a
-mere boy, as white as any in the multitude, and paler
-than the palest. Tall and lithe as he was, his age was
-scarcely a whit above fourteen. He was dressed as an
-Indian; he bore himself like a sullen brave. At his
-side was old Annawon, the last of King Philip’s councilors,
-who, having surrendered under a promise of
-“good quarter” was even now being led to his execution.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The interest centered, however, in the boy. Through
-the stoicism which he labored to hold as a mask upon
-his face, the signs of anguish played like an undercurrent.
-In all the throng he had but a single friend,
-the Red-man with whom he was marching. He looked
-about at the pitiless embankment of faces. Near him
-a score of nimble boys were running, a frantic desire to
-strike him depicted in their eyes. Further away a tall
-man was moving, perforce, with the tide. On his
-shoulder he bore a little Puritan maiden, who might
-have been crushed had he placed her on her feet. She
-was looking at the boy-captive with eyes that seemed a
-deeper brown for their very compassion. She clung
-to the man who held her, with a tense little fist. Her
-other tiny hand was pressed upon her cheek till all
-about each small finger was white, in the bonny apple-blush
-of her color. It seemed as if she must cry out to
-the young prisoner, in sympathy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>While the boy was gazing back his answer to the
-child—a quiver in consequence almost loosening his
-lip—an urchin near him abruptly cast a stone that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>struck him smartly in the side. With a panther-like
-motion the captive launched himself upon his assailant
-and bore him to earth in a second. The old councillor,
-Annawon, spoke some soft, quick word at which
-the lad in buckskin immediately abandoned his overthrown
-antagonist and regained his place in the march.
-His eyes blinked swiftly, but in vain, for tears, of anger
-and pain, forced their way between his lids and so to
-his cheeks, when he dashed them swiftly away on his
-sleeve.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The foot-soldiers scurried forward and closed in about
-their dangerous charge. The bawling youths of Plymouth
-seemed to multiply by magic. But their opportunities
-for committing further mischief were presently
-destroyed. The pageant was passing Plymouth jail.
-An officer hustled ten of his men about the boy-prisoner
-and wedged them through the press of people toward
-this place of gloom. Above the clamor then rose a
-voice, and in the Indian tongue the boy-captive heard
-the words:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Farewell, Little-Standing-Panther.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was old Annawon, who had divined that there
-would be no other parting with the lad, who was the
-only creature which the war had left on earth for him
-to love.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The boy cried: “Farewell,” and the passage through
-the people closed behind him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Those who looked beheld old Annawon smile faintly
-and sadly. It was the only expression which had played
-across his face since his surrender, and there was never
-another.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Through nearly every street the glad procession
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>wound. At length, the head of the butchered King
-Philip was thrust upon an iron stake, which was planted
-deeply in the ground. Governor Winslow then requested
-that the people disperse to their several homes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The night at length came down—night the beneficent,
-that cloaks the tokens of men’s barbarisms. Then
-the moon arose, casting a pale, cold light, lest remorse
-lose her way. What a passionless calm settled upon
-the sleeping village!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At last, with a tread as silent as that of death itself,
-an active figure crept from shadow to shadow, in the
-streets which the moon had silver-plated. The lone
-human being came to the square wherein was planted
-the stake with the moon-softened head upon it. The
-visitor was the white boy-captive, dressed in his Indian
-toggery. He had escaped from the jail.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the moonlight he came forward slowly. He halted
-and extended his arms toward the stake with its motionless
-burden. He approached in reverence, murmuring
-brokenly in the Indian tongue:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Metacomet—Metacomet,——my foster-father,——I
-have come.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He knelt upon the ground and clasping the cold iron
-stake in his arms, he sobbed and sobbed, as if his heart
-would break.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER II.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>A FRIENDSHIP OF CHANCE.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>Through</span> the gray mist of Plymouth’s dawn there
-came a sound of footsteps, and then a murmur of melodious
-humming, somewhat controlled and yet too
-sturdy and joyous to be readily accounted for in the
-strict Puritan village. Presently, looming out of the
-uncertain light, appeared the roughly-hewn figure of a
-young man of five and twenty. He was singing to himself,
-as he hastened with big strides through the
-deserted streets.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>On the point of passing the place where the gibbeted
-head of King Philip made a rude exclamation point in
-the calm of gray Plymouth, the early riser suddenly
-noted the curled-up form of a human being on the
-ground, his arm loosely bent about the iron stake, his
-head resting loosely against it, his eyes fast closed in
-the sleep of exhaustion. The man started slightly,
-halted and ceased his singing.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He blinked his eyes for a moment, shifted his feet
-uneasily and rubbed stoutly at his jaw, as he gazed in
-perplexity at the picture before him. He then tip-toed
-as if to go on, quietly, about his own business. He
-glanced at the head, then back to the boy, from
-whose lips, in his sleep, a little moan escaped. The
-visitor noted the traces where tears had channeled down
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>the lad’s pale cheeks. There was something unescapable
-in the attitude of the bare golden head against the
-stake. The man stopped and laid his big hand gently
-on the half-curled locks.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Instantly the boy awoke, leaped to his feet and fell
-down again, from sheer stiffness, staring at the man
-with eyes somewhat wild. He arose again at once,
-more steadily, overcoming the cramps in his muscles
-doggedly, never ceasing for a second to watch the man
-who had waked him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I give you good morrow,” said the man. “It
-seems to me you have need of a friend, since you have
-clearly lost one that you much esteemed.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There was persuasion and honesty in the stranger’s
-warm-blue eyes, good nature in his broad, smooth face
-and a large capacity for affection denoted in his somewhat
-sensuous mouth. Such a look of friendship and
-utter sincerity as he bestowed on the startled and defiant
-boy before him could not have been easily counterfeited.
-The youthful know sincerity by intuition.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Who are you?” said the boy, his voice hoarse and
-weakened. “What would anybody want with me?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My name is William Phipps,” said the stranger,
-simply. “I am a ship-builder of Boston. If you have
-no better friend, perhaps I would do till you can find
-one. I am on my way to Boston now. If you need a
-friend and would like to leave Plymouth, you may come
-with me, unless you feel you cannot trust any one about
-this village.” He paused a moment and then added,
-“I think you must be the boy I heard of, Adam Rust,
-brought in with the captured Indians.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My name is Adam Rust,” the boy admitted. “I
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>have no friends left. If you have been helping to kill
-the Wampanoags I would rather not try to be your
-friend. But I know I would like you and I should be
-glad to go to Boston, or any place away from here.” In
-the daylight he could not bear to look up at the head
-above him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I have been too busy to fight,” said William Phipps,
-employing the same excuse he had used for friends with
-recruiting proclivities. “And I have been too happy,”
-he added, as if involuntarily. “So, you see, there is
-no reason why I should not be your friend. Have you
-had any breakfast?” He put out his hand to shake.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No,” said Adam. He lost his hand in the big fist
-which Phipps presented, and restrained himself from
-crying by making a mighty effort. He had gone without
-eating for two days, but he said nothing about it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Then,” said Phipps heartily, “the sooner we start
-the better. We can get something hot on the brig.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He began his long striding again. Adam hesitated a
-moment. He looked up at the features above him, his
-heart gushing full of emotion.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Some inarticulate farewell, in the Indian tongue, he
-breathed through his quivering lips. His eyes grew
-dimmed. He fancied he saw a smile of farewell and of
-encouragement play intangibly on those still, saddened
-lineaments, and so he held forth his arms for a second
-and then turned away to join his new-found protector.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>William Phipps, having thought the boy to be following
-more closely than he was, stopped to let him catch
-up. Thus he noted the look of anguish with which the
-lad was leaving that grim remnant of King Philip
-behind. Phipps was one of Nature’s “motherly men”—hardly
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>ever more numerous than rocs’ eggs on the
-earth. He felt his heart go forth to Adam Rust. Therefore
-it was that he looked down in the boy’s face, time
-after time, as they walked along together. Thus they
-came to the water-front and wharves, at the end of one
-of which the brig “Captain Spencer” was swinging.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“This ship belongs to me and I made her,” said
-Phipps, with candid pride in his achievement. “You
-shall see that she sails right merrily.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They went aboard. A few sailors scrubbing down
-the deck, barefooted and with sleeves at elbow, now
-abandoned their task temporarily, at the command of
-the mate, who had seen his captain coming, to hoist
-sail and let go the hawsers. The chuckle in the blocks,
-as the sailors heaved and hauled at the ropes, gave
-Adam Rust a pleasure he had never before experienced.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Breakfast being not yet prepared for service, Phipps
-conducted his foundling about the craft for a look at
-her beauties. When Adam had putted the muzzle of
-the brig’s gun and felt the weight of a naked sword in
-his fist, in the armory, the buoyancy of his youth put
-new color in his cheeks and a sparkle in his eyes. He
-was a bright-natural, companionable lad, who grew
-friendly and smiled his way into one’s affections rapidly,
-but naturally. When he and Phipps had come up
-again to the deck, after breakfast, they felt as if they
-had always been friends.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The brig was under way. Shorewards the gray old
-Atlantic was wrinkled under the fretful annoyance of a
-brisk, salty breeze. The ship was slipping prettily up
-the coast, with stately courtesies to the stern rocks that
-stood like guardians to the land.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>“I think we shall find you were born for a sailor,
-Adam,” said the master of the craft. “I can give you
-my word it is more joy and life to sail a ship than to
-make one. And some day——” but he halted. The
-modest boasts, with which he warmed the heart of his
-well-beloved wife, were a bit too sacred for repetition,
-even to a boy so winning. “But,” he concluded, “perhaps
-you would like to tell me something of yourself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thus encouraged Adam related his story. He was
-the son of John Rust, a chivalrous gentleman, an affectionate
-husband and a serious man, with a light heart
-and a ready wit. John Rust had been the friend of the
-Indians and the mediator between them and the whites
-until the sheer perfidy of the Puritans had rendered him
-hopeless of retaining the confidence of the Red men,
-when he had abandoned the office. Adam’s mother had
-been dead for something more than four years. Afflicted
-by his sense of loss, John Rust had become a
-strange man, a restless soul hopelessly searching for
-that other self, as knights of old once sought the holy
-grail.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He went forth alone into the trackless wilderness
-that led endlessly into the west. Although the father
-and son had been knit together in their affections by
-long talks, long ranges together in the forests and by
-the lessons which the man had imparted, yet when John
-Rust had gone on his unearthly quest, he could not
-bear the thought of taking young Adam with him into
-the wilds.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He had therefore left the boy with his friends, the
-lad’s natural guardians, the honorable nation of Wampanoags.
-“Keep him here, teach him of your wisdom,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>make him one of your young warriors,” he had said when
-he went, “so that when I return I may know him for
-his worth.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>King Philip, the mighty Sachem of the tribe, had
-thereafter been as a foster-father to the boy. For more
-than two years the Red-man had believed John Rust to
-have found his final lodge, and this was the truth. And
-perhaps he had also found his holy grail. He perished
-alone in the trackless forest. Adam had learned his
-wood-lore of his red brothers. He was stout, lithe,
-wiry and nimble. He rode a horse like the torso of a
-centaur. He was a bit of a boaster, in a frank and
-healthy way.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>King Philip’s war, ascribed, as to causes, to “the
-passion of the English for territory; their confidence
-that God had opened up America for their exclusive
-occupancy; their contempt for the Indians and their
-utter disregard for their rights,” had come inexorably
-upon the Wampanoags. In its vortex of action, movement,
-success and failure at last for the Indians, Adam
-Rust had been whirled along with Metacomet. He had
-never been permitted by King Philip to fight against
-his “white brothers,” but he had assisted to plan for the
-safety of the old men, women and children, in procuring
-game and in constructing shelters. He had learned
-to love these silently suffering people with all his heart.
-The fights, the hardships, the doom, coming inevitably
-upon the hopeless Wampanoags, had made the boy a
-man, in some of the innermost recesses of a heart’s
-suffering. He had seen the last sad remnants of the
-Wampanoags, the Pocassets and the Narragansetts
-scatter, to perish in the dismal swamps. He had witnessed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>the death of King Philip, brought upon him by
-a treacherous fellow Red-man. And then he had
-marched in that grim procession.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam made no attempt to convey an idea of the magnitude
-of his loss. It would not have been possible.
-There is something in human nature which can never
-be convinced that death has utterly stilled a beloved
-voice and quenched the fire of the soul showing through
-a pair of eyes endeared by companionship. This in
-Adam made him feel, even as he told his tale to William
-Phipps, that he was somehow deserting his faithful
-friends.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Bareheaded on the sun-lit deck as he told his story,
-lithe in his gestures, splendidly scornful when he imitated
-the great chieftains of the tribes, and then like
-a young Viking as at last he finished his narrative and
-looked far and wide on the sparkling sea, in joyousness
-at the newer chapter which seemed to open to the very
-horizons themselves before him, Adam awakened the
-lusty youth and daring in William Phipps and the
-dreams of a world’s career always present in his brain.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The man’s eyes sparkled, as he spun the wheel that
-guided the brig, bounding beneath their feet. A restlessness
-seized upon the spirit in his breast.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Adam,” he said, “do you like this ship?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes!—oh, it makes me feel like shouting!” the boy
-exclaimed. “I wish I could straddle it, like a horse,
-and make it go faster and wilder, ’way off there—and
-everywhere! Oh, don’t it make you breathe!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Then,” said Phipps, repressing his own love of such
-a madness as Adam had voiced, “let us go for a long sail
-together. I have long had in mind a voyage for trading
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>to Hispaniola. If you would like to go with me,
-I will get the brig ready in a week.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>For his answer young Adam leaped as if he would
-spur the ship in the ribs and ride her to the end of the
-earth forthwith.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER III.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>THE GERM OF A PASSION.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>A bonnie</span> little Puritan maid, Mistress Garde Merrill,
-stood in the open doorway at her home, fervently
-hugging her kitten. The sunlight seemed almost like
-beaten gold, so tangibly did it lay upon the house, the
-vines that climbed the wall, and the garden full of old-fashioned
-flowers.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A few leaves, which had escaped from the trees, in a
-longing to extend their field of romping, were being
-whirled about in a brisk zephyr that spun in a corner.
-A sense of warmth and fragrance made all the world
-seem wantoning in its own loveliness.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Little Garde, watching the frolic of the leaves, and
-thinking them pretty elves and fairies, dancing, presently
-looked up into the solemn visage of a passing
-citizen, who had paused at the gate.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Mistress Merrill,” he said, gravely, after a moment’s
-inspection of the bright, enchanting little face, “your
-eyes have not the Puritan spirit of meekness.” Thereupon
-he departed on his way, sadly shaking his head.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde’s eyes, in all truth, were dancing right joyously;
-and dancing was not accounted a Puritan devotion.
-Such brown, light-ensnaring eyes could not,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>however, constrain themselves to melancholy. No
-more could the apple-red of her smooth, round cheeks
-retreat from the ardor of the sun. As for her hair, like
-strands on strands of spun mahogany, no power on
-earth could have disentangled its nets wherein the rays
-of golden light had meshed and intermeshed themselves.
-In her brightness of color, with her black and
-white kitten on her arm, the child was a dainty little
-human jewel.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She was watching a bee and a butterfly when a shadow
-fell again into the yard, among the flowers, at the entrance.
-Garde felt her attention drawn and centered
-at once. She found herself looking not so much at a
-bareheaded boy, as fairly into the depths of his very
-blue and steadfast eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The visitor stood there with his hands clasping two
-of the pickets of which the gate was fashioned. He had
-seen everything in the garden at one glance, but he was
-looking at Garde. His eyes began laughingly, then
-seriously, but always frankly, to ask a favor.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I prithee come in,” said Garde, as one a little struck
-with wonder.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The boy came in. Garde met him in the path and
-gave him her kitten. He took it, apparently because
-she gave it, and not because he was inordinately fond
-of cats. It seemed to Garde that she knew this boy,
-and yet he had on a suit that suggested a young sailor,
-and she had never made the acquaintance of any sailors
-whatsoever. If he would only look elsewhere than
-at her face, she thought, perhaps she could remember.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“See them,” she said, and she pointed to where the
-leaves were once more capering in the corner.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>The boy looked, but his gaze would swing back to its
-North, which it found in two brown eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I saw you that day in Plymouth,” he said. “And
-I got out of their old jail, and I didn’t see anybody else
-that looked kind or nice among all those people.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh!” said Garde, suddenly remembering everything,
-“oh, you were—that boy marching with the
-old Indian. I was so sorry. And I am so glad that you
-got away. I am real glad you came to see me. Grandfather
-and I were down there for a visit—so I saw you.
-Oh dear me!” She looked at her young visitor with
-eyes open wide by amazement. It seemed almost too
-much to believe that the very boy she had seen and so
-pitied and liked, in that terrible procession at Plymouth,
-should actually be standing here before her in her
-grandfather’s garden! “Oh dear me!” she presently
-said again.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I hate Plymouth!” said the boy, “but I like
-Boston.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I am so glad,” said Garde. “Will you tell me your
-name? Mine is Garde Merrill.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The boy said: “My name is Adam Rust.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I was named for all my aunts,” the maid imparted,
-as if eager to set a troublesome matter straight at once,
-“Gertrude, Abigail, Rosella, Dorothy and Elizabeth.
-The first letters of their names spell G-A-R-D-E,
-Garde.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Her visitor was rendered speechless for a moment.
-“Metacomet and all the Indians used to call me Little-Standing-Panther,”
-he then said, boyishly, not to be
-outdone in the matter of names.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Metacomet—King Philip? Oh, then you are the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>boy that used to live with the Indians, and that was
-how they got you!” gasped the little maid. “Grandfather
-told auntie all about it. Oh, I wish I could live
-with the Indians! I am very, very sorry they got you!
-But I am glad you came to see me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam flushed with innocent and modest pride, thus
-to impress his small admirer, who was named so
-formidably. He thought that nothing so pleasant
-had ever happened in all his life.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It is too sad to live with Indians,” he answered.
-A mist seemed to obscure the light in his eyes and
-to cast a shadow between them and the sweet face at
-which he was looking with frank admiration. The
-cloud passed, however, as clouds will in the summer,
-and his gaze was again one of illuminated smiles. “I
-am a sailor now,” he said, with a little boast in his
-voice. “To-morrow morning we are going to start for
-Hispaniola.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh dear me!” said Garde, in sheer despair of an
-adequate expression of her many emotions. Then she
-added contritely: “I mustn’t say ‘Oh dear me!’ but—oh
-dear—I wish I might.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I shan’t mind,” said Adam.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I wish I could go to Hispaniola, too,” said Garde,
-honestly. “I hate to be kept here as quiet as a clock
-that doesn’t go. I suppose you couldn’t take me? Let’s
-sit down with the kitten and think it over together.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t think we could take any girls,” said Adam,
-seating himself at her side on the porch, “but I could
-bring you back something when I come.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, let’s talk all about what we would rather have
-most,” Garde responded.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>So their fingers mingled in the fur of the kitten and
-they talked of fabulous things with which the West
-Indies were reported to abound. His golden hair, and
-her hair so darkly red, made the picture in the sunlight
-a thing complete in its brightness and beauty. The
-wind floated a few stray filaments, richly red as mahogany,
-from the masses on Garde’s pretty brow, across to
-the ringlets on Adam’s temple. To and fro, over these
-delicate copper wires, stretched for its purpose, the
-sweet love that comes first to a lad and a maid, danced
-with electrical activity.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“If you are going to-morrow,” said Garde, “you
-must see all the flowers and everything now.” She therefore
-took him by the hand and led him about the garden,
-first she, then he, and then she once
-more carrying the kitten.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They were still in the midst of their explorations of
-the garden, which required that each part should be
-visited several times, when the gate opened and in
-walked Garde’s tall, stern-looking grandfather.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>David Donner rubbed his eyes in amazement, hardly
-believing that his senses could actually be recording a
-picture of his granddaughter, hand in hand with some
-utter stranger of a boy, in his own precincts. He came
-quickly toward the pair, making a sound that came
-within an ell of being a shout.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde looked up in sudden affright. Adam regarded
-the visitor calmly and without emotion. Having first
-dropped the young sailor’s hand, Garde now resolutely
-screwed her little warm fingers back into the boy’s fist.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Grandfather,” she said boldly, “I shall sail to-morrow
-for Hispaniola.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>David Donner, at this, was so suddenly filled with
-steam pressure, which he felt constrained to repress,
-that his eyes nearly popped out of their sockets.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Go away, boy,” he said to Adam. “Mistress Merrill,
-your conduct is quite uncalled for.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Having divined that his sister had deserted her post
-and gone, as was her wont, to the nearest neighbor’s,
-for a snack of gossip, he glared at Adam, swooped down
-upon Garde and caught her up in his arms abruptly,
-kitten and all.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Her hold on Adam’s hand being rudely wrenched
-asunder, Garde felt her heart break incontinently. She
-began to weep without restraint, in fact, furiously. She
-also kicked, and was also deporting herself when the
-door was slammed behind the forms of herself, her kitten
-and her grandfather, a moment later.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam looked once where she had gone. His face had
-assumed a stolidity which he was far from feeling. He
-walked to the gate and went away, without once turning
-to look back at the house.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Mistress Garde, confronted by David Donner at close
-quarters, soon regained her maidenly composure and
-wept surreptitiously on the stomach of the kitten. At
-length she looked up in defiance at the silent old man.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I have changed the name of my kitten,” she said.
-“His name is Little-Standing-Panther!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Her grandfather, to whom this outbreak seemed
-something of an indication of mental disorder, on her
-part, stared at the child dumbly. Not without some
-justification for her deductions, Garde thought him
-quelled. In a spirit of reckless defiance, and likewise
-to give some vent to her feelings, she suddenly threw
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>her arms about the bedewed kitten, on its pillow,
-pressed her face against its fur and said to it, fervently:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Little-Standing-Panther, I love you, and love you
-and love you!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Grandfather Donner looked up in alarm. “Tut, tut,
-my child,” said he, “love is a passion.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span><span class='c018'>PART II.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER I.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>A ROVER AND HIS RETINUE.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<div class='lg-container-b c021'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>His only gold was in his hair;</div>
- <div class='line in2'>He had no silver hoard;</div>
- <div class='line'>But steel he had, enow to spare—</div>
- <div class='line in2'>In his thews and in his sword!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>Toward</span> the close of a glorious day in September,
-1683, William Phipps beheld a smart brig nose her way
-up the harbor of Boston, and drop in her anchor in the
-field of water wherein his ship-yard thrust its toes. A
-small boat then presently put forth and made straight
-for the ship-yard landing, where three men calmly
-alighted, throwing ashore a small heap of shabby-genteel-looking
-baggage.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Somewhat annoyed, thus to have his precincts employed
-by any Tom, Dick and Harry of chance, Phipps
-stepped from between the ribs of a ship’s skeleton,
-which was being daily articulated, and strode toward
-the intruders. Then a rumble, which ought to have
-been a shout, broke from his lips, about the same second
-that a roar of joy appeared to leap out of the foremost
-of the strangers, who had landed and who were coming
-boldly forward.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>William Phipps and the leader of the invading trio
-then rushed hotly together and collided, giving each
-other a bear-like hug from which the ship-builder presently
-extricated himself at a thought of how he might
-be shocking all or any good Puritans who might chance
-to be witnessing the scene.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, shatter my hilt! and God bless you! if it
-isn’t your same old beloved self!” said the stranger,
-heartily.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My boy! Bless your eyes, Adam, I never thought
-to see you again!” said bluff William Phipps. “You
-big young rascal! You full-rigged ship! Where have
-you come from? What do you mean by making me swear
-myself into purgatory at your carelessness in getting
-yourself killed? You twenty-gun frigate—you—you
-big——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He left off for very constraint, for his throat blocked
-up, despite his most heroic efforts. He and Adam
-Rust began to roar with laughter, the tears in their
-eyes needing some excuse. Meantime the two companions
-who had come with the young rover, stood
-gazing about them, in patience, and likewise looking
-in wonder on the two men before them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There was reason enough to look, for Adam and
-Phipps were a pair to command attention. It seemed
-as if a founder had used the big ship-builder as a pattern
-on which to refine his art in casting the younger
-man. Adam’s back was a trifle narrower; his chest
-was a bit wider; he was trimmer at the waist, neater
-at the thigh, longer-armed. His hands were smaller,
-just as his movements were quicker and lighter.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Although Adam’s hair crowned him with tawny
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>ringlets of gold, while that of Phipps was browner, and
-though the young fellow wore a small mustache, in
-contrast, to the smooth-shaved face of his friend, it
-might yet be said that the two men looked alike. Both
-were bronzed by weather, both had steadfast eyes with
-the same frank expression, the same blue tint and the
-same integrity about them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In their dress the two men differed. William Phipps,
-whatsoever he might indulge himself in doing when
-away on the sea, conformed to the dark-brown simplicity
-of the Puritans when in Boston. Adam, on the
-other hand, wore a brown velvet coat which, though
-at present somewhat faded and moulting, had once been
-fine feathers in England. His waistcoat had been of
-royal purple, before its nap fled before the onslaughts
-of the clothes-brush, while his breeches were of a
-time-tanned forest green which disappeared into the maw
-of his wide-topped leather boots. He wore at his hip
-a veteran blade of steel, in a scabbard as battered as
-the outer gate of a stronghold. When not in his fighting
-fist, the hilt of this weapon contented itself with
-caresses from his softer hand, the left.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The two men having shaken hands for the third time,
-and having looked each other over from head to foot,
-and laughed and asked each other a dozen questions, to
-which neither had returned any answers, Adam suddenly
-remembered his comrades, waiting in the background.
-He turned to them now, not without affection.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Here, Pike and Halberd,” he said, “you must meet
-my third father, Captain William Phipps, a noble man
-to whom you will owe allegiance all your miserable
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>lives. William, these are my beef-eaters. Don’t ask
-me where I got them. They are neither out of jail nor
-heaven. But they have let me save their lives and feed
-them and clothe them, and they are valiant, faithful
-rascals. To know them is to love them, and not to
-know them is to be snubbed by Satan. They have been
-my double shadow for a year, sharing my prosperous
-condition like two peers of the realm.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The beef-eaters grinned as they exchanged salutations
-with Phipps. Pike was a short individual, inclined
-to be fat, even when on the slimmest of rations.
-The pupils of his eyes were like two suns that had risen
-above the horizon of his lower lids, only to obscure
-themselves under the cloud-like lids above. Their expression,
-especially when he gazed upward into Adam’s
-face, was something too appealingly saint-like and
-beseeching for anything mortal to possess. Halberd was
-a ladder of a man up which everything, save success,
-had clambered to paint expressions on his face, which
-was grave and melancholy to the verge of the ludicrous.
-He had two little bunches of muscle, each of which
-stuck out like half a walnut, at the corners of his jaws,
-where they had grown and developed as a result of his
-clamping his molars together, in a determination to do
-or to be something which had, apparently, never as
-yet transpired.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The two looked about as much like beef-eaters as
-a mouse looks like a man-eater. They were ragged,
-where not fantastic, in their apparel; they were obviously
-fitter for a feast than a fight, for the sea had
-depleted both of their hoardings of vigor and courage.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Sire,” said Halberd, theatrically, “we have had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>nothing but good reports of you for a year.” Whether
-he placed his hand on his heart or his stomach, as he
-said this, and what he meant to convey as his meaning,
-could never be wholly clear.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“We shall be honored to fight for you, if need arise,”
-said Pike, who panted somewhat, on all occasions,
-“while there is a breath in our bodies.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It is a privilege to know you both,” said Phipps,
-whose gravity was as dry as tinder.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Any friend of the Sachem’s is a friend of ours,”
-responded Halberd. He said this grandly and made a
-profound bow.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The ‘Sachem’?” repeated Phipps, and he looked
-at Adam, inquiringly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam had the grace to blush a trifle, thus to be
-caught in one of the harmless little boasts in which he
-had indulged himself, over sea. “Just a foolish habit
-the two have gotten into,” he murmured.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Ah,” said William Phipps. “Well, then, Sachem,
-it will soon be growing dark, you had best come home
-with me to dinner.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Involuntarily Adam turned about to look at the beef-eaters.
-Their eyes had abruptly taken on a preternatural
-brightness at the word dinner.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I have much to ask you and much to tell you,”
-Phipps added. “And the goodwife would exact this
-honor if she knew you were come.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The invitation did not include Adam’s retinue. He
-swallowed, as if the delicious odors of one of Goodwife
-Phipp’s dinners were about to escape him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well,” he said, “the honors are all the other way
-about, but—the fact is—a previous engagement—I—I
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>have promised a rousing hot din—I have accepted
-an invitation to dine with the beef-eaters, at the Crow
-and Arrow.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The ship-builder knew all about those “rousing hot
-dinners” of cold eel-pie, potatoes and mustard, for which
-the Crow and Arrow tavern was not exactly famous.
-He looked at Adam, to whom as their sachem the
-beef-eaters appealed with their eyes, like two faithful
-animals. Adam was regarding the pair silently, a faint
-smile of cheer and camaraderie on his face.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But—but my invitation included our friends,”
-Phipps hastened to say. “Come, come, the tavern
-can wait till to-morrow. Gentlemen, you will certainly
-not disappoint me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“’Tis well spoken that the tavern can wait,” said
-Pike.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“To disappoint the friend of the Sachem would be a
-grievous thing,” said Halberd. “Let the galled tavern
-sweat with impatience.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They would all have started away together at once,
-had not Phipps noted the heap of baggage, left untidily
-upon his landing when the travelers arrived.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well,” said he, “Adam, you know the way to the
-house, suppose you and your friends carry your worldly
-goods to the tavern, engage your apartments, and then
-follow me on. I, in the meantime, can hasten home
-to apprise the wife that you are coming, with the
-beef-eaters, and she can therefore make due preparations
-in honor of the event.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“This is good sense,” said Adam. “Go along, or we
-shall be there before you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Phipps, with a half dozen backward looks at his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>guests and their shabby chattels, made his way out of
-the ship-yard without further delay. Adam and his
-retinue gripped three or four parcels apiece and started,
-with clank of sword, and in some discomfort, for the
-Crow and Arrow.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER II.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>AN UNGODLY PERFORMANCE.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>Adam Rust</span> knew the Crow and Arrow more by that
-repute which had traveled back to England, through
-the medium of young stalwarts and sailors, than he did
-from personal acquaintance with its charms. He had
-seen the place frequently enough, when first he came
-to Boston with William Phipps, but the town had expanded
-much since then and bore an air of unfamiliarity.
-The young man and his beef-eaters therefore
-wandered somewhat from their course.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Being overladen and dressed out of the ordinary
-fashion, the trio soon found themselves attracting
-attention, particularly from certain of the youths of
-the quarter and the rough characters incidental to
-shipping and the neighborhood thereof. Adam was
-carrying a long box, somewhat decrepit with age. It
-swung against his legs and struck an occasional post,
-or a corner, held insecurely as it was by his little finger
-only, which was passed through a brass handle. In
-this manner, and with a growing cluster of curious
-persons beginning to follow on behind, the party were
-in sight of the tavern at last, when this long box of
-Adam’s abruptly opened and spilled out a richly darkened
-old violin.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>With a short exclamation of impatience, Adam halted
-and dropped his other bundles. Over these tall Halberd
-fell, with a great clatter of weapons, tin box and shaken
-bones. Adam fended him off from the violin, snatched
-it up and scrutinized it with the eager concern which a
-mother might bestow upon a delicate child. He found
-it uninjured, but, as it might have been smashed, he
-clung to it fondly, reluctant to place it again in its
-treacherous case.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Naturally the downfall of Halberd had delighted the
-gamin and the sailors following. These formed a
-cluster about the party, and their numbers drew additional
-spectators rapidly. A number of seafaring men
-shoved stoutly forward, their eyes glistening at sight
-of the musical instrument.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I say, give us something, then, on that there red
-boy!” demanded one of the men, as healthy a looking
-rascal as ever drew breath.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You look a bonny lad, come on—there’s a good
-un,” said another.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Rattle her guts,” said a third. “We ain’t heard
-the like of a fiddle since we came to this town of
-preachers.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam looked quietly about him. He knew most of
-the fellows about in the rude circle for rough English
-rovers who would love him if he played, or knock him
-and his belongings playfully into the street if he refused.
-He was not accustomed to churlishness; moreover, he
-felt particularly in the mood for playing. The ruddy
-sunset, the warm breath of the passing day, the very
-taste of American air, seemed lusty and joyous, despite
-the rigid Puritanical spirit of the mirth-denying people
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>of the colony. He took up the bow, twanged the
-strings, tightened two that had become laggard, and
-jumped into the middle of a rollicking composition that
-seemed to bubble up out of the body of the violin and
-tumble off into the crowd in a species of mad delight.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Had the instrument been a spirit of wine, richly dark
-red as old port, and rendered alive by the frolicking
-bow, it could not have thrown off more merry snatches
-of melody’s mirth. It chuckled, it caught its breath,
-like a fat old monk at his laughing, it broke out in
-guffaws of hilarity, till not a soul in the audience
-could keep his feet seemly beneath him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The sailors danced, boldly, though clumsily. Their
-faces beamed with innocent drunkenness, for drunk they
-were, with what seemed like the fumes and taste of
-this wine of sound. They had been denied it so long
-that it went to their heads at the first draught.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Across the street, issuing quietly and, he hoped, unobserved,
-from a door that led into the tavern, a Puritan
-father now appeared, wiping his mouth as a man has
-no occasion for doing unless he had recently dipped his
-upper lip into a mug. He suddenly halted, at the
-sound of music from over the way. He frowned at the
-now somewhat dense assemblage of boys and citizens
-surrounding Adam Rust, and worked up a mask of
-severity on his face from which it had been temporarily
-absent. He opened his mouth, as if to speak, and then,
-realizing that he might not be heard at this distance
-from them, moved a rod toward his fellow-beings and
-took a stand in the street.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At this moment an ominous snap resounded above
-both the playing and its accompaniment of scuffling feet
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>and gruff explosions of enjoyment and hearty appreciation.
-Instantly Adam ceased playing. He had felt a
-string writhe beneath his fingers. The man in the roadway
-grasped at the moment instantly, to raise his voice.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Begone, disperse, you vagabonds!” he said.
-“What is the meaning of this ungodly performance?
-Disperse, I say, you are bedeviled by this shameless
-disciple of Satan!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam, intent on his violin, which he found had not
-broken but had merely slipped a string, heard this
-tirade, naturally, as did all the others. A few boys
-sneaked immediately about the cluster of men and
-sped away, as if from some terrible wrath to come.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Who is yon sufferer for melancholy?” said Adam,
-looking carelessly at the would-be interrupter. Then
-suddenly a gleam came into his eye, as he recognized in
-the man one of the harsh hypocrites who had been
-among the few zealots who had imprisoned him, years
-before. “Halberd,” he added, “fetch the gentleman
-forward. Methinks he fain would dance and make
-merry among us.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>His opening question had been hailed with snorts of
-amusement; his proposal ignited all the roguishness in
-the crowd. Halberd, nothing loth to add his quota to
-the general fun, strode forward at once, way being made
-by the admiring throng, and he bowed profoundly before
-the bridling admonisher in the street. Then without
-warning, he scampered nimbly to the rear of the man of
-severity, took him by the collar and the slack of his
-knickerbockers and hustled him precipitately into the
-gathering.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam began to play at once. The spectators gathered
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>about the astonished and indignant person of severity,
-thirsty for fun.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You evidently wanted to dance, therefore by all
-means commence,” said Adam.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You are a veritable limb of Satan!” said the man.
-“You shall be reported for this unseemly——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Halberd,” interrupted Adam, “the gentleman is
-as shy and timid as your veriest girl. Could you not
-persuade him to dance?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I was born for persuasion,” said Halberd. Thereupon
-he drew from his belt a pistol, most formidable,
-whether loaded or not, and pushed its metal lips against
-the neck of the hedged-in Puritan, whom he continued
-to restrain by the collar. “Make merry for this
-goodly company by doing a few dainty steps,” he
-requested.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The crowd pushed in closer and roared with delight.
-Some one among them knocked the reluctant dancer’s
-knees forward. He almost fell down.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“He’s beginning!” cried Adam, and he went for his
-fiddle with the bow as if he were fencing with a dozen
-pirates.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Dance!” commanded Halberd, “dance!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Terpsichore’s victim was not a man of sand. Drops
-of perspiration oozed out on his forehead. A look of
-abject fear drove the mask of severity from his face.
-He jumped up and down ridiculously, his knees knocking
-together for his castanets.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Faster!” cried Adam, fiddling like a madman.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Faster!” echoed Halberd, with his pistol-muzzle
-nosing in the dancer’s ribs.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The man jumped higher, but not faster; he was too
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>weakened by cowardice. The sailors joined in. They
-could not keep their feet on the ground. The contagion
-spread. Pike and Halberd joined the hopping.
-The offending admonisher looked about at them in
-a frenzy of despair, afraid of who might be witnessing
-his exhibition. He was a sorry dancer, for he was so
-eager to please that he flopped his arms deliriously, as
-if to convince his beholders of his willingness to make
-himself as entertaining as possible. When he suddenly
-collapsed and fell down, Adam ceased playing. The
-crowd settled on the pavement and applauded.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“For shame, good friend,” said Adam, solemnly,
-“now that I observe your garb, I am shocked and
-amazed at your conduct. Friends, let us go to the tavern
-and report this gentleman’s unseemly behavior. In
-payment for the fiddling, you may fetch my bales of
-goods and merchandise.” He waved to his shabby baggage
-and led the way to the Crow and Arrow, which
-had long before disgorged nearly all of its company, and
-its landlord, to add to the audience in the street.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Flinging up his only piece of gold, the young rover
-ordered refreshment for all who crowded into the
-tavern, and while they were drinking, he dragged the
-beef-eaters, with all the “bales of merchandise,” away
-to the meager apartments provided above stairs in the
-sorry hostelry.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the darkness of the hall, he ran heavily against
-some one who was just on the point of quitting a room.
-The innocent person was bowled endways.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Confound your impudence!” said the voice
-of a man. “Why don’t you look where you are
-going?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>“I couldn’t see for fools in the way,” retorted Adam.
-“I am no king, requiring you to fall before me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I can’t see your face, but I can see that you are an
-arrant knave,” said the other hotly. “You never
-could have had a proper drubbing, or you would be
-less reckless of your speech!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I have always been pitted to fight with bragging
-rascals of about your size and ability with a weapon,
-else I might have been drubbed,” Adam flung back,
-laying his hand on his sword as he spoke. “It shames
-my steel to think of engaging a ten-pin!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“By all tokens, sir, you are blind, as well as idiotic,
-to walk into death so heedlessly. Be good enough to
-follow me into the yard.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, fie on a death that flees and entreats me to
-follow,” was Adam’s answer. “I rolled you once in
-this hall; I can do so again. Halberd—Pike, candles
-to place at the head and feet of death!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The beef-eaters, having reached the apartments appointed
-for their use, had heard the disturbance in the
-hall, and expecting trouble, had already lighted the
-candles. With three of these they now came forth.
-The hall would have been light enough had it been in
-communication with the outside world and the twilight,
-but as it was, it was nearly dark.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I grieve for your mother,” sneered the stranger,
-whose sword could be heard backing out of its scabbard.
-“You must be young to be so spendthrift of
-your life.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“On the contrary, you will find what a miser I am,
-even as to the drops of my blood,” said Adam. “No
-one ever yet accused the Sachem——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>“The Sachem!” interrupted the other voice.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Halberd, who had sheltered the candle he bore with
-his hand, now threw its light on the face of the man
-near by him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Shatter my hilt!” exclaimed young Rust,
-“Wainsworth!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Odds walruses!” said the man addressed as
-Wainsworth, “what a pretty pair of fools we are. By
-gad, Adam, to think I wouldn’t know you by your
-voice!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam had leaped forward, while his sword was
-diving back into its sheath. He caught Wainsworth
-by the hand and all but wrung it off.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Bless your old soul,” he said, “why didn’t you
-say who you were?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I was kept busy listening to you telling me who
-and what I was,” Wainsworth assured him, good-naturedly.
-“I never heard so much truth in all my
-life.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I never thought to be so incontinently found out
-myself,” Adam confessed contritely. “But as long as
-I have found you, I feel as good as if I had fought a
-good fight and wiped my blade. Indeed, Henry, I am
-tremendously glad to see you. How did you get here?
-When did you come? What a blundering fool I was!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Come in, come in to my castle,” said Wainsworth,
-turning back to the apartment he had been quitting
-when knocked over. “Bring in your friends. You
-shall all share in my dinner. I’m a ship, burdened
-with news for cargo to be unloaded. Come in here;
-we’ll talk all night.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But I am due at a dinner already, with my beef-eaters,”
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>said Rust. “I have been delayed past all
-reason now, but——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You weren’t delayed by our duel of words, I
-trust?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, no, but I have kept our host waiting, nevertheless.
-I shall be back before the night’s worn
-through, however, and then I am yours till breath fails
-me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Haste away then, Sachem Rust, for the sooner you
-are gone the sooner I shall see you returned; and I
-shall consume myself with impatience till I can tell
-you of the sweetest plight mortal man ever got himself
-tangled in. I’ve got to tell you, for no one else on
-earth would answer. Begone, then. Good-by, and
-hasten back.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam bade him au revoir, for he felt that already
-William Phipps must be thinking him sadly remiss and
-ungracious.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Preparations as to evening dress were soon completed.
-They consisted in a brisk wash of face and hands for
-the trio, not one of the party being endowed with a
-second suit of clothing. Thus they were upon the
-road, walking soberly, though diligently, toward the
-Captain’s residence, before the twilight had begun to
-fade.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER III.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>’TWIXT CUP AND LIP.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>With</span> appetites still further whetted by their various
-diversions, the comrades were hardly made happier
-when Adam found that once more the many years’
-growth of Boston town confused him. It was something
-of a walk to the Phipps’ domicile from the Crow
-and Arrow the best one could do. With devious windings
-added, it became the next thing to provoking.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Aha, at last I know where we are,” said Adam,
-finally. “These streets are as bad as London’s. But
-ten minutes more and we shall be at the board.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“If this is not so,” said Halberd, gravely, with a
-memory of seeing Adam part with the last money
-which they possessed, “it would be a kindness to let
-us lie down and perish here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“This is a most unlikely-looking street,” added
-Pike, dolefully.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What do you know of Boston streets?” inquired
-Adam, who had a doubt or two of the place himself.
-“Good beef-eaters, if you weary, wait here for a moment,
-till I can run a little along this road, to see
-where it leads. If it is right I will presently whistle;
-if wrong I can the sooner return.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The beef-eaters with one accord sat down upon a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>block of stone, while their leader strode hastily up a
-passage which was in reality an alley, at the rear of a
-number of residences. With a hope that he would soon
-emerge into a street which he thought should be in the
-neighborhood, Adam almost ran. Thus he disappeared
-about a turn of the lane.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He had gone less than twenty rods when he found
-himself approaching a small assemblage of boys, who
-were yelling, in suppressed voices, and gathering stones
-which they were throwing with wild aim into a corner,
-where the coming darkness had already formed a
-center of shadows. Rust was well among these young
-scamps before they were aware of his presence. One
-urchin had by this secured a long stick with which he
-advanced, the others making room to let him through,
-to poke and jab at something which the lads had evidently
-driven to bay where it could not escape. Yet
-so afraid did the young rogues appear to be that this
-something would yet fly upon them and do them great
-harm, that Adam walked at once among them, touching
-one upon the shoulder.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The witch!” screamed this lad, as if the devil
-himself had clutched him. With yells of terror all
-the boys scudded swiftly away, for a matter of twenty
-feet, and then turned about to look at Rust. Seeing a
-man merely, they were reassured. It is a singular and
-doubtless a fortunate matter that there was never such
-a thing conceived as a male witch.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What have you here?” said Adam, pleasantly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“A witch’s cat!” cried one of the boldest youths,
-re-approaching. “We drove it in the corner to stone
-it to death!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>Now Adam had a lingering fondness for cats, from a
-time not many years past.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“A witch’s cat?” he repeated. “What nonsense!
-What harm can a poor cat do to big healthy boys like
-you? There are no witches, you young varlets.” He
-went into the corner and peered about eagerly, to find
-the dumb victim of the mad superstition then subtly
-growing in that Massachusetts colony.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“There was a witch and she ran away, screaming!”
-scolded back the bold spokesman of the group of boys,
-now gaining courage to edge nearer. “She ran away
-through this garden!” He pointed to a rear yard,
-leading off the alley to a house not far distant.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“She made me cough up pins and needles,” asserted
-another young liar, glibly. “And a monster black
-monkey with cock’s feet followed her when she ran.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“He’s a prince of the powers of air himself,” whispered
-another lad, in awe-stricken tones.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam had found the cat, a middle-aged animal,
-frightened, hurt, soiled, but intelligent, since it knew
-it was being protected at last. He lifted it forth from
-its small retreat, finding it to be a heavy, black-and-white
-specimen, too inoffensive to scratch and claw,
-even in its terror.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You young——” he started to say.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Here she comes! Here she comes!” yelled one of
-the lads, interrupting. “Two of them! Run for your
-lives!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The self-scared young cowards, screaming like so
-many demons, darted down the alley as fast as their
-legs would let them go. Adam looked where one had
-pointed and beheld, indeed, two female figures coming
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>on a distracted run through the near-by yard, toward
-him as he was standing with the cat in his arms.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Although the first veil of darkness was already drawn
-through the air, Rust could see that they were two
-young women who were coming. The one who led, he
-then noted, was a plain, but a sweet, wholesome-looking
-girl, who was evidently much excited. He stepped
-forward toward her, with the cat, divining it was the
-animal she had come for, and so for the moment he
-neglected to glance at the second young woman.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When he did look at her she was not far and he
-caught his breath quickly. “Shatter my hilt!” was
-the thought that leaped into his brain, “they do have
-young witches here after all!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Advancing to the middle of the alley he made a profound
-bow, as the foremost girl came pantingly from
-the garden gate. The girl, seeing him now for the
-first time, halted abruptly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Good evening,” said Adam, “may I have the honor
-of restoring your pet? He is excellently well behaved
-and, I trust, not seriously hurt.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The girl walked timidly toward him. Her face
-flushed rosy red with pleasure and confusion. Her
-companion, having been caught on a rosebush, in the
-garden, was delayed and was stooping to disentangle her
-skirt from the thorns.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, sir, you are very kind,” stammered the girl
-confronting Adam. “I thought they would kill him.
-He isn’t mine, but I also hold him——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The second young lady now came hastily out at the
-gate. Adam had been too polite to look past number
-one, in search for the one he thought so witching, but
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>now his heart bounded to see her coming. She ran
-precipitately at him, breaking in upon her companion’s
-speech.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, Standing-Panther,” she cried, impetuously,
-“my own dear, darling love, why did you ever come
-out to such a place?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She plucked her pet from Adam’s arm in one swoop.
-Rust, at the old name, which he had buried with
-memories that sorely harrowed his soul, dropped his
-hat, which he had doffed, and raising his hand to his
-cheek in wonder, stared at the girl before him with
-widened eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“At—at your service, Miss—Mistress Gar—Mistress
-Merrill,” he stuttered.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde, a vision of beauty distraught, suddenly looked
-up in his face. Frank amazement was depicted in her
-glorious eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I beg—your pardon,” stammered Adam, “I see
-you were speaking to your cat, and not to me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You!—Adam!—Mr.—Mr. Rust!” she exclaimed.
-A red-hot blush surged upward, flooding her face, her
-neck and even her delicate ears. “Not Little-Standing—Oh
-dear me! Why, Prudence, what did I say?
-It—it isn’t really——” she stopped in confusion.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Adam Rust, Kneeling Panther at your service,”
-supplied the rover. He made a bow that was truly
-splendid, with a long sweep of his hat and a touch of
-his knee on the pavement, that for sheer grace could
-not have been equaled in Boston. “Miss—Mistress
-Merrill, you have not quite forgotten that you commissioned
-me to bring you something from Hispaniola?”
-he added.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>“But you—but you have grown so,” said Garde,
-still as red as a rose. “And to meet like this—that
-was such a long time ago. I—I thank you for saving
-my cat. I—we—Prudence, you must thank Mr. Rust.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Prudence, on whom Adam had scarcely looked, since
-seeing Garde, had been standing there looking at Rust
-with a sudden-born love in her eyes that was almost
-adoration. She had developed, out of the Puritanical
-spirit of the times, a control of her various emotions
-that Garde would never possess. Therefore she had
-herself in hand at a second’s notice.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I have thanked Mr. Rust,” she answered, quietly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde was stealing a look at Adam the second he
-turned in politeness to Prudence.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“This was no service at all,” he said. “Pray expend
-no further words upon it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, Adam, I am so glad——” burst from Garde’s
-lips impetuously, but she checked her utterance the
-instant his glance came flashing back to hers, and
-added. “I mean, Mr. Rust, I am so glad the cat
-wasn’t hurt, and, Prudence, we must surely return to
-the house at once.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This was not at all what Garde had started to say,
-nor what she wanted to say; but though it was the
-same Adam, quite to her heart’s satisfaction, yet he
-was now a man, and a maidenly diffidence shamed her
-riotous gladness, and—Prudence was present.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But,” said Adam, fumbling in a pocket over the
-region of his heart, “the trinket I brought you from
-Hispaniola?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, marry, it has kept so well all these years,” said
-Garde roguishly, “surely it must still keep till—surely
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>anyway till daylight. Really, sir, we must thank you
-again and return before it is actually dark.” She gave
-him one look which, had he been a woman, he would
-readily have interpreted, but being a man, somewhat
-of its significance was lost upon him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But now I know I have kept it too long already,”
-he insisted, still tugging at the stubborn pocket.
-“Surely——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It will be the riper for keeping a little longer,”
-said Garde, almost impatient with him for not seeing
-that she wanted to receive it only when they two were
-alone together. “We thank you once more, for saving
-Little-Standing-Panther, and so—good night,”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But when—what day?—to-morrow?” cried the
-eager rover. “When may I give it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh stupid!” said Garde to herself, almost vexed at
-his lack of understanding and tact. Aloud she called
-back, “Did you say good night? Prudence, say good
-night again to Mr. Rust.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Prudence called good night once more, this making
-her third time, and Adam was left there in the alley
-alone. He went to the gate and, leaning over it, clutched
-two of its pickets in his hands, as once before he had
-done to another gate, and stood there gazing ardently
-into the gathering darkness.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At length, with a heavy sigh, of joy and impatience
-blended, he strode a little down the lane. Then he
-strode back. So, up and down he paraded, for fifteen
-minutes. At the end of this time he suddenly bethought
-him of the beef-eaters and the dinner at William Phipp’s.
-He then hastened, tardily enough, back the way he had
-originally come.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>Eager to find his companions, yet completely scatterbrained
-by the meeting with Garde, the sight of her radiant
-beauty, and the chaos of plans for seeing her again at
-daylight, which were teeming in his head, he fairly fell
-over the outstretched feet of his faithful followers
-before he saw them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They were still sitting upon the block of stone. They
-had interlocked their arms, for mutual support, and
-then had fallen fast asleep, worn out with the long day
-and made weak by a longer fast.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Good old beef-eaters,” said Adam, affectionately,
-and gently shaking them by the shoulders, he aroused
-them, got them on their feet and guided them out of
-the alley. By great good fortune, he came to a land-mark
-he remembered from his short sojourn in Boston,
-years before. With this as a bearing, he made good
-time to the Captain’s house. They met William Phipps
-at the gate, going forth to hunt them up.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“We have sauntered along,” said Adam, carelessly,
-“for such air as this is a tonic to the appetite.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER IV.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>THE OPENING OF A VISTA.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>For</span> a man who had taken so much tonic, Adam had
-but indifferent relish for the savory and altogether comforting
-little dinner which Goodwife Phipps had kept
-all warm and waiting for the coming of her guests. His
-head was filled with love and with altercations between
-hope that Garde had meant this and fears that she
-might have meant that, and with conjuring up all her
-speeches and glances, till he could hardly have told
-whether he was afoot or horseback.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But if their leader neglected his opportunities, the
-beef-eaters made good the reputation for three, as
-swordsmen with knife and fork. Fortunately Goodwife
-Phipps had provided amply. But a fowl became a
-glistening skeleton; a hot meat-pie was represented at
-last by a dish that yawned like an empty chasm; a
-pyramid of Indian maize became a scattered wreckage
-of cobs, and potatoes, bread and pudding vanished into
-mere memories of what they once had been.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam, although he said nothing, talked like an
-auctioneer, during the meal, to divert what he could of
-the attention which his retinue perforce attracted to
-their appetites. This innocent ruse was not lost on
-the charming little wife of William Phipps. She was
-a sweet little woman, plump, black-haired, brown-eyed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>and gifted by Nature with much vivacity, in her wit
-and in her engaging manners. She was older than her
-husband, having been the widow of one merchant Hull,
-when she and the Captain wedded. They were a happy
-couple, being indeed un-Puritanly joyous in their
-partnership. She had taken a great liking to Adam,
-when Phipps first brought him home. Now that he
-was a man, she liked him none the less, yet she saw
-that he would always be a big, straightforward boy. She
-watched him now with pleasure, listening to his quips
-and sallies of nonsense, and nodding motherly at his
-evident concern for his two forlorn beef-eaters, so obviously
-attached to him by ties of affection.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The dinner being at length come to an end, with
-great satisfaction to all concerned, Adam counseled the
-expanded beef-eaters to fare to the Crow and Arrow,
-lest in their absence anything befall to prevent their
-occupancy of the selected apartments. As nothing was
-to be had to drink where they were, the worthy two
-were glad to act upon his suggestion. Accordingly
-Adam and his hosts were left to themselves, whereupon
-they fell upon a banquet of narrative and reminiscence
-forthwith.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Now, Adam, tell us all about where you have been,
-and what you have done, and all about everything,”
-said Mrs. Phipps, putting her plump elbows on the
-table, which she had swiftly cleared of the dinner
-wreckage. “Just begin at the day you left, with William,
-and tell us all there is. But tell us first, have you
-fallen in love? Of course you must have, but I do
-hope you will like one of our own girls best.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I fear you would have me begin at the last end first,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>after all,” said Adam, thinking how recently he had
-fallen victim to Eros. “My tale is brief and of no interest.
-William bade me cultivate the society of gentlemen,
-when he sent me to England. Well, I had fencing
-and fiddling of an Italian nobleman; I have fought
-with holy friars and princes; I have sworn strange
-oaths with prelates and bishops; I have danced with
-nuns and duchesses; I have ridden to hounds with curs
-and Kings. If I have not learned drinking, gambling,
-love-making, dueling, swearing and sundry other pretty
-accomplishments, then beshrew me for a clod and call
-the court no place for schooling. I am richer than I
-was, since I may look up at any moment and see you
-both at a glance. By the same token I am happier.
-As to my heart, I’ll take oath I left it in Boston. And
-there you have me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, this sounds very naughty indeed,” said Mrs.
-Phipps.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I never counseled you to apprentice yourself to
-the devil,” said Phipps. “You were first to learn
-navigation, of some——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, of that I neglected to speak,” interrupted the
-rover. “William, you will never make an anchor out
-of sea foam, nor a solid ship’s master out of me, else
-my first or my last preceptor would have finished me
-off roundly.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Who was your latest chief?” the Captain inquired.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Captain William Kidd,” said Adam, “a generous
-friend, a fearless and skilful seaman, and as bold a
-fighting man as ever clutched a hilt. I met him at
-Barcelona, shipped with him for Bristol, fell in with
-my beef-eaters, got rid of my money and pushed my
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>sword through a pup—Lord Something-or-other——and
-was still in time to catch Captain Kidd at Portsmouth
-for New York. But I can’t bark enough for a sea-dog,
-as Kidd was good enough to tell me himself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>William Phipps nodded and nodded. Outwardly he
-was calm enough; inwardly he stewed with heat. Adam
-had but added fuel to the fever of unrest and thirst for
-adventure with which he had been born. He was not
-jealous of all that his protégé had accomplished ahead
-of himself—indeed, he had furthered the lad’s advancement,
-at the expense of his own sense of bereavement
-when he and Adam parted,—but he was consumed
-with impatience to be hewing at the great career for
-which he had from boyhood felt himself destined. A
-light of determination burned in his eyes. He saw
-that the boy before him had utterly outstripped him—the
-boy to whom he had imparted all his own meager,
-self-acquired education. Not for a moment did he regret
-that from Hispaniola he had sent the lad to England,
-with a fellow-captain, nor would he for any price
-have stripped his protégé of one single experience, but
-his mouth grew dry with the lust for adventure that
-was glowing within him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>His wife saw these indications. She understood what
-was passing in his mind. Before she had even sighed
-to herself, as a woman must, who feels herself on the
-brink of a separation from one she truly loves, she consented
-mentally to what she knew he would presently
-suggest. What she was thus prepared for, came sooner
-than she had expected it might.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Adam,” said Phipps, somewhat huskily, “I have
-been waiting for something—I never knew what—to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>come along and start me off after the fortune I have
-promised to get for the wife.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You are fortune enough for me, dear,” Mrs.
-Phipps interposed, in spite of herself. “I should be
-satisfied to live like this forever.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I know,” said the Captain, “but I promised you
-should have a fair brick house in the Green Lane, to
-the north, and I mean that you shall have it. Adam,
-you are the something I have been waiting for, but
-what with my worrying, over thinking you probably
-dead, I have never realized the truth till this night.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And what may it be my privilege to do?” said
-Adam.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Go with me to recover a fortune, sunk in a wreck.
-She rests on a reef in the Bahamas, in a few fathoms
-of water. She was laded with gold and went down
-with every ounce. I’ve got the maps, and now that I’ve
-got you, bless your heart, we can sail in a week!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And how have you learned of this sunken treasure?”
-said Adam, who for some reason appeared not
-at all boyishly eager to set off on this new adventure.
-“Has somebody given you this tale and the maps as
-the price for a well-built brig?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I had the information from a Spaniard, who died
-at my ship-yard,” said Phipps. “He was the sole
-survivor of the wrecked vessel. I gave him work. He was
-grateful. Death seized him suddenly, but before the
-end came, he told me his tale, he said, as a measure of
-gratitude, directing me to feel in his pockets for the
-maps, which I did. I have waited for what I now am
-certain was your return.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well,” said Adam, thoughtfully, twisting the ends
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>of his small mustache, “you couldn’t easily have paid
-me a greater compliment, I am sure; but, my dear
-friend, you place me in an awkward position.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Awkward position? What awkward position?”
-said Phipps. “Here you are a good swordsman, a man
-of some knowledge, and the companion I would select
-of all the men I know.” Here Adam bowed solemnly.
-“Now what is to hinder us from making this venture
-together? What do you mean by this awkward position
-business?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I mean,” said the rover, “that I seem to serve no
-better purpose, the moment I return to Boston, than to
-separate you two good people. Now I am sensitive
-about a thing like that. I don’t like to be the cause of
-such a separation.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What nonsense, you——” started the Captain.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I prepared my mind for William’s adventure, long
-ago,” interrupted Mrs. Phipps. “If he doesn’t go with
-you, he will go with some one else. And as long as he
-is bent on going in the end, I should feel so much better,
-Adam, if you were with him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam bowed to them both, again. He was glad to
-do this, as he was, in point of fact, somewhat confused
-as to what to say.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“There, you young rascal,” said Phipps, “that
-knocks away your shores and you are launched before
-you know it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But,” suggested Adam, with an air of great solicitude
-for his friend’s interests, “do you really think any
-wild-goose chase of this description could be as solid
-and certain and wholesome as the ship-building business?
-Would I be justified in encouraging you, Captain
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>Phipps, to leave your established business for such
-a wild——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Wild?” interposed Phipps. “You—you—now
-look here, what do you mean—you, by your own
-accounts, the wildest young scamp afloat? Wild? As
-if anything could be too wild for you. There is something
-at the bottom of all this. Now out with it!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Why, William!” said Goodwife Phipps, “where
-are your eyes? Why, Adam must have a sweetheart in
-Boston!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Rust flushed hotly. His eyes would not, for all his
-pulling at them, refrain from dancing. He conjured
-up an immediate fit of coughing, and therefore held a
-handkerchief before his face.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Phipps looked at him suspiciously. “Is that what
-ails you?” he demanded. “Is that why you are so
-hot to remain here in Boston?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Now I leave it to you both, as two good, sensible
-people,” said Rust, artfully, “how could such a catastrophe
-have happened? I left Boston seven years ago,
-while a mere cub, and I have been here now less than
-that many hours. Do you think that between sunset
-and my coming here I could have saved some fair
-angel’s life—or the life of her—her—well, say her pet
-panther? Does that seem likely, or reasonable,
-say?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I wouldn’t dare trust you not to be saving a dozen,”
-grumbled Phipps. “When a man has associated with
-gentlemen, you never can reckon on his conduct.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Of course it does seem absurd, Adam, I admit,”
-said Mrs. Phipps, who was enjoying the conversation
-mightily. “I had to make some suggestion. And—oh,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>why, perhaps some young lady has recently arrived
-here from the old country. Is that it, Adam?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I give you my word of honor that no young lady
-has come to Boston, since I went abroad, for whom I
-care a brass farthing,” Adam assured his hostess. “The
-further you go in this, the more innocent you will find
-me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Then are you turned lazy, or what is it that ails
-you,” inquired the Captain, “that you fail to leap, as,
-by my word, I had thought you would, to embrace this
-opportunity?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, oh, poor dear Adam,” said the Captain’s wife,
-interrupting any answer Rust might have been framing,
-“perhaps I know what it is, at last.” She went to her
-husband quickly and whispered something in his ear.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Hum!” said Phipps, who was inclined to be a bit
-short with his protégé for his many equivocal answers,
-“Why couldn’t he say so at once? See here, Adam,
-what’s all this rigmarole about your pride? If you
-haven’t got any money, what’s the odds to me? Who’s
-asking you to furnish any funds? I’ve got the brig
-and I’ve got provisions and arms in plenty. If that is
-what ails you, drop it, sir, drop it!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam, willing to share another’s money as readily
-as he would give his own last penny to a friend, had
-thought of nothing half so remote as this to offer as an
-excuse for remaining in Boston, under the same sky
-with Garde. But now that it was broached, he fathered
-it as quickly and affectionately as if he had indeed been
-its parent.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I had hoped it would not be unreasonable for me to
-crave a few days’ grace before giving you my answer to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>your generous proposition,” he said, “for I am not
-without hopes of replenishing our treasury at an early
-date.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But in the meantime——” started Phipps.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Dearest,” interrupted his wife, with feminine tenderness
-of thought for any innocent pride, “surely you
-have no mind to sail to-night? And there are so many
-things for Adam to tell.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Captain, who had been drawing down his brow,
-in that serious keep-at-it spirit which through all his
-life was the backbone of his remarkable, self-made success,
-slacked off the intensity of his mood and smiled
-at his wife, indulgently. He loved her and he loved
-Adam above anything else in the world.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Get you behind me, golden treasure,” he said, with
-a wave of his big, wholesome hand. “Adam, I would
-rather hear you talk than to pocket rubies.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I must be cautious lest I bankrupt myself by telling
-all I know this evening,” said Adam. “Indeed,
-dear friends, it grows late already. I must set my beef-eaters
-the good example of keeping seemly hours.” He
-arose to go before the sunken treasure topic should
-again break out, with its many fascinations and pitfalls.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>His hosts protested against his leaving, yet they
-presently discovered that the hour was, as he said, no
-longer early. He therefore departed and wended his
-way through the now deserted streets, toward the Crow
-and Arrow, his heart bounding with joyousness, his
-brain awhirl with memories of everything of the evening,
-save the discussion of the sunken treasure.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER V.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>A WEIGHTY CONFIDENCE.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>At</span> the tavern, when Adam entered, Halberd had
-succumbed to a plethora of comfort, which had followed
-too soon on the paucity thereof, which had been the
-program of the three for many weeks. He was snoring
-fiercely in a corner. Pike, on the other hand, was
-inflated with life and activity of speech. He was
-bragging eloquently, not only of his own prowess, but
-also of that of Halberd and Adam as well.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam heard the end of a peroration of self-appraisement
-in which the doughty Pike announced that one of
-his recent feats had been the slaying of two murderous,
-giant pirates with his naked fists.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Among the sailors, dock-hands and tavern-loafers
-who made up the auditors who were being entertained
-by these flights of narrative, was a little, red-nosed,
-white-eyed man of no significance, who now stood up
-and removed his coat.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“If you would like to have a bit of fun with me,”
-said he. “I’ll play one of those pirates, till we see
-what you can do.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Pike looked at him ruefully, rubbing his chin while
-thinking what to answer to this challenge. He then
-waved his hand, grandly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Good sir,” he said, “the Sachem, my honored associate,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>has such an appetite for these encounters that
-until he shall be satisfied I would have no heart to deprive
-him of such good material as I can see you would
-make for a fight. Doubtless I can arrange for him to
-do you the honor you seek, after which I shall be pleased
-to weep at your funeral.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I would rather fight with him than you,” said the
-would-be belligerent, “but before he comes, if you would
-like to have your neck broken——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Satisfied that this business had gone far enough,
-Adam strode into the tap-room, where the jovial spirits
-had congregated.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My friends,” he interrupted, “you can put your
-necks to better purpose by pouring something down
-them. Landlord, attend my guests. Pike——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But the pirate-exterminator had fled, first edging to
-the door, at the appearance of his chief, and then
-clattering up the stairs to the rooms above with a noise
-like cavalry in full retreat.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But if you would like to fight,” started the accommodating
-manikin, still in process of baring his drum-stick
-arms, “why, Mr. Sachem——” but he was not permitted
-to finish.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Leave off the gab,” said a burly sailor. Clapping
-his private tankard—a thing of enormous dimensions—fairly
-over the little head of the challenger, he snuffed
-him completely and suddenly lifted him bodily to the
-top of the bar, amid the guffaws of the entire company.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Rust lost no time in arousing Halberd, whom he
-herded to the apartments aloft with brief ceremony.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Wainsworth, who had been sitting up in his room,
-writing letters while he waited for Adam’s return, now
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>heard his friend coming and opened his door to bid him
-welcome. With another big hand-shake, and a smile
-over their recent mis-encounter, the two went into the
-lighted apartment, Wainsworth closing the door behind
-him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It’s a wonder you find me anything more than a
-small heap of ashes,” said Wainsworth, “for I have
-fairly burned and smoked with my eagerness to see you
-back.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I can smell the smoke,” said Adam. “How very
-like tobacco it is. And now that I am here I presume
-you are quite put out.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You are not in love or your wits would be as dull
-as mine,” his friend replied. “But sit down, sit down,
-and tell me all about yourself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I thought you wanted to do the telling.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, I do, confound you, but——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What’s all this?” interrupted Adam. He had
-caught sight, on the table, of two glittering heaps of
-money, English coins, piled in two apparently equal
-divisions on the cloth.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That? Oh, nothing, your share and mine,” said
-Wainsworth, taking Adam’s hat and sweeping one of
-the heaps into its maw with utter unconcern. “Stow
-it away and be seated.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, but——” started Rust.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Stow it, stow it!” interrupted Wainsworth. “I
-didn’t bother you with buts and whyfores when you
-divided with me. I have something of more importance
-to chat about.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“This is ten times as much as I gave to you,” objected
-Adam, doggedly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>“You gave me ten times more than you kept yourself,
-when it meant ten times as great a favor. I am
-mean enough only to divide even,” answered Wainsworth.
-“Say anything more about it, and I shall pitch
-my share out of the window.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As a matter of fact, Rust had impoverished himself
-for this friend, when in England, at a moment most
-vital in Wainsworth’s career. He had no argument,
-therefore, against accepting this present, much-needed
-capital. He placed the clinking coins in his pocket,
-not without a sense of deep obligation to his friend. It
-made one more bond between them, cementing more
-firmly than ever that affectionate regard between them,
-on the strength of which either would have made a
-great personal sacrifice for the other. No sooner, however,
-had Adam cleared his hat and weighted his
-clothing with the money, than he realized that the only
-good argument he had possessed to oppose to Captain
-Phipps’ scheme to take him away from Boston, namely,
-his poverty, was now utterly nullified. He started as if
-to speak, but it was already too late. If the Captain
-found him out, what could he say or do?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Now then,” said Wainsworth, “we can talk.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I am an empty urn, waiting to be filled with your
-tales and confessions,” said Adam.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Wainsworth settled back in his chair and stroked his
-small imperial, hung on his under lip. “Yes, we can
-talk,” he repeated. He sat upright again, and once
-more leaned backward. “I don’t know where to begin,”
-he admitted.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You might start off by saying you’re in love.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Who told you I’m in love? I haven’t said so.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>You’d be in love yourself, if ever you had met her.
-She’s a beauty, Adam! She’s divine! She’s glorious!
-Odds walruses, you’d be clean crazy about her! Why,
-you would simply rave—you couldn’t be as calm as I am
-if you knew her, Adam! She’s the loveliest, sweetest,
-most heavenly angel that ever walked the earth! Why,
-I can’t give you an idea! She,—she, she just takes
-your breath! There is nothing in Boston like her—nothing
-in the world. Why, man, you couldn’t sit still
-if you had ever seen her!” He got up and paced the
-room madly. “You could no more sit there and tell
-me about her as I am telling you than you could drink
-the ocean!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, I suppose I couldn’t.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Of course you couldn’t. I’m an older man than
-you are—a whole year older—and I know what I am
-talking about. You would go raving mad, if you saw
-her. She is the most exquisite—Adam! She’s peerless!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Then you are in love?” said Adam. “Up to this
-last moment I thought there might be some doubts
-about it, but I begin to suspect perhaps you are.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Love? In love? My dear boy, you don’t know
-what love is! I adore her! I worship her! I would
-lay down my life for her! I would die ten thousand
-deaths for her, and then say I loved her still!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That would be a remarkable post-mortem power of
-speech,” said Adam. “And I suppose she loves you
-as fervently as you love her.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Of course she does—that is,—now, now why would
-you ask such a silly question as that? A love like mine
-just reaches forth and surrounds her; and it couldn’t
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>do that if she didn’t—well, you know how those things
-are.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, certainly. If she loves you and you love her,
-that makes it complete, and as I am a bit tired, and
-this leaves no more to be said——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But there is more to be said! Why don’t you ask
-me some questions?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Silly questions?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No! Of course not! Some plain, common-sense
-questions.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, then, is she beautiful?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Odds walruses, Adam, she is the most beautiful
-girl that ever breathed. She surpasses rubies and diamonds
-and pearls. She eclipses——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Ah, but is she lovely?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Lovely?—She’s a dream of loveliness. I wish you
-could see her! You would throw stones at your grandmother,
-if you could see how lovely she is. Lovely!—Can’t
-you invent some better word—something that
-means more? Lovely doesn’t express it. Go on, go
-on, ask me something more!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, well, is she pretty or plain?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“She is most radiantly beautiful.—Look here, Adam,
-you think I am an ass.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My dear old fellow, I didn’t stop to think.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You are making fun of me!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Impossible, Henry. You told me to ask you some
-simple questions. Does she live here in Boston?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“She does, of course she does, or I shouldn’t be here,
-should I? She lives here and Boston has become my
-Heaven!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, well, thanks for your hospitality. Let’s see,—is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>she beauti—but I may have asked that before.” He
-yawned and rubbed his eyes to keep them open. “Oh,
-I do think of another. What is her name?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Her name?” chuckled Wainsworth, walking up
-and down in an ecstasy of delight. “Her name is the
-prettiest name in the universe. It’s Garde—Garde
-Merrill—Garde! Oh, you just love to say Garde, Garde,
-Garde!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam started, suddenly awake and alert. He passed
-his hand across his eyes stiffly. His face became as
-pale as paper. Wainsworth was still walking restlessly
-up and down, intent on his own emotions.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It’s a name like a perfume,” he went on. “Garde,
-Garde. You can’t think how that name would cling
-to a man’s memory for years—how it rings in a man’s
-brain—how it plays upon his soul!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam was thinking like lightning. Garde!—She
-loved Wainsworth—he had said so. It was this that
-had made her appear so restrained, unnatural, eager to
-return to the house. This was why her answers had
-been so evasive. The whole situation broke in on him
-with a vividness that stunned his senses.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A mad thought chased through his brain. It was
-that, if he had spoken first, this moment of insupportable
-pain could have been avoided, but that Wainsworth
-having spoken first had acquired rights, which he, as
-a friend, loving him dearly, would be bound to respect.
-He thought of the money he had just accepted from
-this brother-like friend. He saw the impossibility of
-ever saying to Henry that he too loved Garde Merrill—had
-loved her for seven years—had heard her name
-pealing like the bell of his own very being in his soul!
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>But no—he couldn’t have spoken! He knew that. He
-would never dare to say that she loved him, in return
-for the love he had fostered for her, these seven years.
-No, he could not have spoken of her like this to any
-soul, under any circumstances. To him her name was
-too precious to be pronounced above a whisper to his
-own beating heart. He did not realize that, by that
-very token of her sacredness to him, he loved her far
-more deeply, far more sublimely than could any man
-who would say her name over and over and babble of
-his love.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He only knew that his brain was reeling. He could
-only see that Wainsworth, for whom he would have
-sacrificed almost anything, was all engrossed in this
-love which must mean so much. He only realized that
-all at once he had lost his right to tell this dearly beloved
-friend the truth, and with this he had also lost
-the right, as an honorable comrade, to plead his own
-soul’s yearning at the door of Garde’s heart.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Wainsworth, in his ecstatic strolling and ringing of
-praises, was tolling a knell for Adam, saying “Garde”
-and then “Garde” and again presently “Garde,” which
-was the only word, in all his rapid talk that reached
-the other’s ears.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam arose, unsteadily. Wainsworth had not observed
-his well-concealed agitation.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I—must be going,” said Rust, huskily, turning his
-face away from the light. He tried to feign another
-yawn. “I am no longer good company. Good night.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What, going?” said Henry, catching him affectionately
-by the shoulders. “Ah, Adam, I suppose I
-am a bit foolish, but forgive me. You don’t know
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>what it is to love as I have learned to love. And, dear
-friend, it has made me love you more—if possible—than
-ever.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Good night, Henry,” said Adam, controlling his
-voice with difficulty. “Good night—and God bless
-you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Say ‘God bless Mistress Garde Merrill’—for my
-sake,” said Henry.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam looked at him oddly and repeated the words
-like a mere machine.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER VI.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>PAN’S BROTHER AND THE NYMPH.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>Adam</span> returned to his room attempting to pucker his
-lips for a careless whistle which failed to materialize.
-He had evolved a rude but logical philosophy of his
-own for every phase of life; but what philosophy ever
-fooled the maker thereof, with its sophistries?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The beef-eaters were snoring so ominously that Adam
-was constrained to think of two volcanoes threatening
-immediate eruptions.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Poor old boys!” he said to himself. There was no
-particular reason for this, save that he felt he must
-pity something, and self-pity he abhorred. He was trying
-not to think of the one companion that always
-drew his emotions out of his reluctant heart and gave
-them expression—his violin.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Standing in the middle of the floor, without a light
-in the room, he reasoned with himself. He said to his
-inner being that doubtless Wainsworth loved her more
-than he did anyway; that he, Adam, having carried
-away a boyish memory, which he had haloed with
-romanticism for seven years, could not call his emotions
-love. Moreover, he had as yet only seen her in
-the dark, and might not be at all attracted by her true
-self in the daylight. Naturally, also, Wainsworth had
-as much right in the premises as any man on earth, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>no man could expect a girl to remember a mere homely
-lad for seven years and know that he loved her, or that
-he thought he did, and so reciprocate the affection and
-calmly await his return. Clearly he was an absurd
-creature, for he had fostered some silly notion in his
-heart, or brain, that Garde was feeling toward him, all
-these years, as he felt toward her. It was fortunate he
-had found everything out so soon. The thing to do
-now was to think of something else.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>All the while he was thus philosophizing, he had a
-perfect subconsciousness that told him the violin would
-win—that soon or late it would drag his feelings out of
-him, in its own incomparable tones. He only paused
-there arguing the matter because he hated to give in
-without a fight. That violin always won. It must
-not be permitted to arrogate to itself an absolute
-mastery over his moods.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Presently, beginning to admit that he would yet
-have to tuck the instrument under his chin, whether or
-no, he worked out a compromise. He would not play
-it, or sound it, or fondle it in the town. If it wanted
-to voice things and would do it—well, he would carry
-it out into the woods.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Feeling that he had, in a measure, conquered, Rust
-stole silently across the apartment to the corner in
-which he had placed the violin with his own loving
-hands, lifted the case without making a sound and
-crept out as if he had been a thief, pressing the box
-somewhat rigidly against his heart.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He reached the street without difficulty. The town
-was asleep. A dog barking, a mile away, and then a
-foolish cock, crowing because he had waked, were the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>only sounds breaking over all Boston. The last thin
-rind of the moon had just risen. In the light it cast,
-the houses and shadows seemed but a mystic painting,
-in deep purple, blacks and grays. Silently as Adam
-could walk, these houses caught up the echo of his
-footfalls, and whispered it on, from one to another, as if
-it had been a pass-word to motionless sentinels.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He came to the Common, discerning Beacon Hill,
-dimly visible, off to the right. With grass under foot
-he walked more rapidly. Past the watch-house and the
-powder-house, in the center of the Common, he strode,
-on to Fox Hill and then to the Roxbury Flats, stretching
-wide and far, to the west of the town.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Being now far from all the houses, alone in an area
-of silence, Adam modified his gait. He even stood
-perfectly still, listening, for what he could not have
-heard, gazing far away, at scenes and forms that had
-no existence. Night and solitude wrought upon him
-to make him again the boy who had lived that free,
-natural existence with the Indians. His tongue could
-not utter, his imagination could not conceive, anything
-concrete or tangible out of the melancholy ecstasy
-which the night aroused in his being and which seemed
-to demand some outward response from his spirit. He
-felt as if inspiration, to say something, or to do something,
-were about to be born in his breast, but always
-it eluded him, always it was just beyond him and all
-he could do, as his thought pursued it, was to dwell
-upon the sublimity breathing across the bosom of
-Nature and so fairly into his face.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He had come away without his hat. Bareheaded, at
-times with his eyes closed, the better to appreciate the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>earth in its slumber, he fairly wantoned in the coolness,
-the sweetness and the beauty of the hour. Thus it
-was past three o’clock in the morning when at length
-he came to the woods.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Man might build a palace of gold and brilliants, or
-Nature grow an edifice of leaves all resplendent with
-purples, reds, yellows and emeralds, but, when night
-spread her mantle, these gems of color and radiance
-might as well be of ebon. It is the sun that gilds,
-that burnishes, that lays on the tints of the mighty
-canvas; and when he goes, all color, all glitter and all
-beauty, save of form, have ceased to be.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam saw the trees standing dark and still, their
-great black limbs outstretched like arms, with upturned
-hands, suppliant for alms of weather. There was something
-brotherly in the trees, toward the Indians, Adam
-thought, and therefore they were his big brothers also.
-He had even seen the trees retreating backward to the
-West, as the Red men had done, falling before the
-march of the great white family.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>If Nature has aught of awe in her dark hours, she
-keeps it in the woods. The silence, disturbed by the
-mystical murmuring of leaves, the reaching forth of
-the undergrowth, to feel the passer-by in the depth of
-shadows, the tangled roots that hold the wariest feet
-until some small animal—like a child of the forest—can
-scamper away to safety, all these things make such
-a place seem sentient, breathing with a life which man
-knows not of, but feels, when alone in its midst.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>To Adam all these things betokened welcome. His
-mood became one of peculiar exultation, almost, but
-not quite, cheer. As a discouraged child might say,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>“I don’t care, my mother loves me, anyway, whether
-anybody else does or not,” so Adam’s spirit was feeling,
-“If there is no one else to love me, at least I am
-loved by the trees.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>With this little joy at his heart, he penetrated yet a bit
-further into the absolute darkness, and sitting down
-upon a log, which had given his shins a hearty welcome,
-he removed his violin from its case and felt it over
-with fond hands and put its smooth cheek against his
-own cheek, before he would go on to the further ecstasy
-which his musical embrace became when he played to
-tell of his moods.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Now something jolly, my Mistress,” he said to the
-instrument, as if he had doubts of the violin’s intentions.
-“Don’t be doleful.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Like a fencer, getting in a sharp attack, to surprise
-the adversary at the outset, he jumped the bow on to
-the strings with a brisk, debonair movement that
-struck out sparks of music, light and low as if they
-were played for fairies. It was a sally which soon
-changed for something more sober. It might have
-seemed that the fencer found a foe worthy his steel and
-took a calmer method in the sword-play. Then a moment
-later it would have appeared that Adam was on
-the defensive.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As a matter of fact, it was next to impossible for Rust
-to play bright, lively snatches of melody, this night,
-try as he might. The long notes, with the quality of
-a wail in them, got in between the staccato sparkles.
-When Adam thought of the Indians, their minor compositions
-transmitted themselves through his fingers
-into sound, before he was aware. He had braced himself
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>stiffly on philosophy all the way to this forest-theater,
-but to little avail. He presently stopped
-playing altogether.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“If he loves her and she loves him,” he told himself,
-resolutely, “why, then, it is much better that two
-should be happy than that all three should finally be
-made miserable by some other arrangement, which a
-man like me, in his selfishness, might hope to make.
-It’s a man’s duty, under such circumstances, to dance
-at the wedding and be a jolly chap, and——hunt around
-for another girl.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He attacked the violin again, when it was apparently
-off guard, and rattled off a cheerful ditty before the
-instrument could catch its breath, so to speak. Then
-a single note taunted him with a memory, and the
-violin nearly sobbed, for a second, till the jig could
-recover its balance. The strings next caught at a laggard
-phrase and suddenly bore in a relentless contemplation
-of the future and its barren promise. The
-brighter tones died away again. So went the battle.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Trying his best to compel the violin to laugh and
-accept the situation, while the instrument strove to
-sigh, Adam played an odd composition of alternating
-sadness and careless jollity, the outpouring being the
-absolute speech of his soul.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He played on and on. Inasmuch as his philosophy
-was as right as any human reasoning is likely to be,
-Adam’s more cheerful nature won. But the victory
-was not decided, no more than it was permanent. Yet
-he was at last the master of the situation.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Heedless of the time as he had been, in his complete
-absorption, Rust had not observed the coming of morning.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>Nevertheless the sun was up, and between the
-branches of the trees it had flung a topaz spot of color
-at his feet—a largess of light and warmth. Without
-thinking about it, or paying any attention to it, Adam
-had fixed his eyes on this patch of gold.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Suddenly his senses became aware that the spot had
-been blotted out of existence. He looked up and beheld
-a vision of loveliness—as fair a nymph as ever enjoyed
-a background of trees.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was Garde.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER VII.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>THE MEETING IN THE GREENWOOD.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>With</span> her glorious mahogany-colored hair loose in
-masses on her shoulders, with her eyes inquiring, and
-her lips slightly parted as she stole forward, thrilled
-with the exquisite beauty of Adam’s playing, in such
-a temple of perfect harmonies, Garde appeared like the
-very spirit of the forest, drawn from sacred bowers by
-the force of love that vibrated the instrument’s strings.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>No bark of pine tree was browner than her eyes;
-no berries were redder than her lips, nor the color that
-climbed upward in her cheeks, the white of which was
-as that of the fir beneath its outer covering. As some
-forest dryad, maidenly and diffident, she held her hand
-above her heart when Adam looked up and discovered
-her presence.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The man leaped to his feet, like one startled from
-sleep. It almost seemed as if a dream had brought
-him this radiant figure. No word came, for a moment,
-to his lips.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Why—it’s you!” said Garde.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Garde!—Miss—Mistress Merrill!” said Adam,
-stammering. “By my hilt, I—the—the wonder is ’tis
-you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Not at all,” corrected Garde, recovering something
-that passed for composure. “I come here frequently,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>to gather herbs and simples for Goody Dune, but for
-you to be here, and playing—like that——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes,” agreed Adam, when he had waited in vain
-for her to finish, “perhaps it is an intrusion. You—you
-came away from the town early.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Why did you come here to play?” she asked.
-Her own nature so yearned over the forest and things
-beautiful, her own emotions were so wrought upon by
-the sublimity of earth’s chancels of silence, that she
-felt her soul longing for its kindred companion, who
-must be one reverent, yet joyous, where Nature ruled.
-She wanted Adam to pour forth the tale of his brotherhood
-with the trees and the loneliness of his heart, that
-would make him thus to play in such a place and at
-such a time. While she looked at him, the love she
-had fostered from her childhood was matured in one
-glorious blush that welled upward from her bosom to
-her very eyes themselves.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam had looked at her but once. It was a long
-look, somewhat sad, as of one parting with a dear companion.
-In that moment he had known how wholly
-and absolutely he loved her. His pretended doubts
-of the night before had fled as with the darkness.
-The daylight in her eyes and on her face had made him
-henceforth a sun-worshiper, since the sun revealed her
-in such purity of beauty.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the great delight which had bounded in his breast
-at seeing her there, he had momentarily forgotten his
-conversation with Wainsworth. When she asked him
-why he had come to the woods, he would fain have
-knelt before her, to speak of his love, to tell of his anguish
-and to plead his cause, by every leap of his heart,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>but he had remembered his friend and his old Indian
-schooling in stoicism gathered upon him, doubtless for
-the very presence of the firs and pines, so solemn and
-Indianesque about him. He put on a mask he had
-worn over melancholy often.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Why, I came here for practise, of which I am sadly
-in need,” he said. “When once I played before King
-Pirate and his court of buccaneers, I was like to be
-hung for failing, after a mere six hours of steady scraping
-at the strings. If you came for simples, verily you
-have found a simple performer and simple tunes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde was painfully disappointed in him. His flippancy
-had, as he intended it should, deceived her.
-She shut that little door of her heart through which
-her soul had been about to emerge, ready to reveal
-itself to and to speak welcome to its mate. She did not
-cease to love him, emotional though she was, for love
-is like a tincture, or an attar,—once it is poured out,
-not even an ocean of water can so dilute it as to leave
-no trace of its fragrance, and not until the last drop
-in the ocean is drained can it all be removed or destroyed.
-No, she was pained. She desired to retreat,
-to take back the overture which, to her mind, had been
-a species of abandon of her safeguards and so patent
-that she could not conceive that Adam had failed to
-note its significance. Yet she gave him up for a soulless
-Pan reluctantly. That playing, which had drawn
-her, psychically, physically, irresistibly to his side,
-could have no part with things flippant. It had been
-to her like a heart-cry, which it seemed that her heart
-alone could answer. And when she had found that it
-was Adam playing—her Adam—she had with difficulty
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>restrained herself from running to him and sobbing
-out the ecstasy suddenly awakened within her. The
-memory of the music he had made was still upon her
-and she was timidly hopeful again when she said:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“How long have you been practising here?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam mistook this for a little barb of sarcasm. His
-mind was morbid on the subject of Wainsworth and of
-Garde’s evasiveness of the evening before. He put on
-more of the motley.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Not half long enough,” he said, “by the violence
-I still do to melody; and yet too long by half, since I
-have frightened the birds from the forest. There is
-always too much of bad playing, but it takes much bad
-practising to make a good performer. I am better at
-playing a jig. Shall I try, in your honor?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Thank you, if you please, no, I would rather you
-would not,” said Garde. It was her first Puritanical
-touch. If she had given him permission to play his jig,
-very many things might have been altered, for Adam
-would have revealed himself and would have opened her
-heart-doors once again, such a mastery over everything
-debonair in his nature would the violin have assumed,
-with its spell of deeper emotions, inevitable—with
-Garde so near.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam laughed, well enough to appear careless. “I
-commend your judgment,” he said, “though I have
-always thought, even after last night,—ah, by the way,
-where is your companion, Mistress Prudence somebody?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He had parried his own tendency to get back to the
-tender subjects and memories flooding his heart, but
-not in a manner to gladden Garde. Indeed, the ring of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>artificiality in everything he said made her less and less
-happy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Her name is Prudence Soam. She is my cousin,
-and she is at home,” said Garde, quietly. “If you
-would care to see her again, I will tell her of your wish.”
-She could readily understand how any one might like
-Prudence, knowing what a sweet, good girl her cousin
-was, but it caused her an acute pain to think she had
-cherished the image of Adam in her heart for seven
-years, only to find now that he had been inconstant.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She suddenly thought of the meeting of the evening
-before. Adam’s willingness to present her—in the presence
-of Prudence—with that something which he had
-brought her from his first trip to Hispaniola, appeared
-to her now in a light, not of his stupidity, but of his
-deliberate intention to show her that he had not preserved
-a sacred dream of their childhood friendship, as
-she had so fondly hoped he had. She even wondered
-if he might not have seen, known and cared for Prudence
-before. She concluded that he cared for Prudence now,
-and certainly not for herself. Then she thought he
-might think of that something, which he had wished
-so to give her—that something from Hispaniola,—and
-she feared he might present it to her now. This would
-have been too much to bear, under the circumstances.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam was indeed thinking on this very subject, but
-Wainsworth—his friend—arose like a specter in his
-meditations, and all that Garde had said had confirmed
-him in his belief of her coldness to himself, so that he
-preferred to seem to forget the trinket, which would
-have been at once the token of his love and constancy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Mistress Prudence Soam,” Adam repeated, replying
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>to Garde’s last remarks. “Indeed I should be but a
-sorry clod, not to wish to see her again. Does she also
-come searching for simples?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No,” replied Garde, a little dully. “But I thank
-you for reminding me that I must set about my task.
-Therefore I must bid you good day.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam thought something would snap inside his breast.
-There was the sunlight, streaming through the aisles
-of the trees; there was Garde, whom he loved beyond
-anything of earth, setting off alone when he should be
-at her side, culling her herbs, touching her hands as
-he gave her the aromatic leaves that he too knew so well,
-and looking into Paradise through her eyes, that had
-so danced when first he knew them. But what of
-Wainsworth? What of the honor of a friend to a
-friend?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Good day,” he echoed, with a mock gaiety that
-struck painfully on the ears of both. “I trust your
-quest will be as successful as I could wish your life to
-be happy.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He hesitated a moment, for it was hard to part thus.
-Garde had hoped he might volunteer to go along and
-carry the tiny basket she held on her arm, for a woman’s
-love can never be so discouraged as not to have a new
-little hope every other moment that something may
-happen to set matters aright in spite of all. But Adam
-did not dare to prolong this test of his honor to Wainsworth.
-He felt that his head was reeling, but with a
-stately bow he took a final, lingering look at the sweetest
-vision he had ever seen, and started away.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde, steadied by her pride, returned his bow and
-walked further into the woods.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>Adam felt that he must pause and turn; that the
-“Garde!” that welled up from his heart would burst
-through his lips in spite of all he could do. With his
-violin clasped beneath his arm, however, he conquered
-himself, absolutely, and never so much as turned about
-again to see where the wood-nymph had gone.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But Garde could not so slay her dearest impulse.
-She turned before she had gone ten steps. Looking
-back, she saw Adam, bareheaded, crowned by his golden
-ringlets,—through which the sunbeams were thrust
-like fingers of gilt,—trailing his sword, clutching his
-violin, striding off in his boots as lithely as a panther
-and bearing up under his faded brown coat as proudly
-as a king.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, Adam!” she said, faintly, but he was already
-too far away to hear the little wood-note which her
-voice had made.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He disappeared. She knew he would soon be clear
-of the trees. Reluctantly at first, and then eagerly,
-though silently, she flitted along from tree to tree,
-where he had gone, till at length she came to the edge
-of the forest.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam, heavy with Wainsworth’s gold, was walking
-less buoyantly now. He was far out on the flat, heading
-southward, not exactly toward Boston. Garde
-watched him yearningly, going, going and never once
-looking backward to where he had left her.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She could bear no more. She sank down on the
-moss at the foot of a tree, and leaning against the
-gnarled old trunk, she covered her face with her hands
-and cried, heart-brokenly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Had she watched but a moment longer, she would
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>have seen Adam halt, slowly turn about, and with his
-hand at his lips gaze toward the woods steadily for
-fully a minute. Then with a slow gesture he waved a
-kiss back to where she was and once more went upon
-his way.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The man had no mind to walk through Boston in
-daylight, with his violin naked in his hands. Keeping
-therefore southward, he came at length to the upper
-part of the harbor. Here he engaged a boatman with
-a sloop to convey him down to the ship-yard of Captain
-William Phipps.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The worthy ship-builder soon made him welcome.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“William,” said Adam, “I have replenished the
-treasury, as I said I might, and I have made up my
-mind to join you in your treasure-hunting expedition.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER VIII.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>PAYING THE FIDDLER.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>Assume</span> a cheerfulness, if you have it not, and it
-may presently grow upon you. This happened to Adam,
-so that when he left Captain Phipps, to return to the
-tavern for his breakfast and to seek out the beef-eaters,
-his mood was almost volatile again. There is much
-virtue in having something other than one’s troubles
-to think upon. The sunken treasure afforded Adam a
-topic.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He made his way to his apartments in the Crow and
-Arrow by the stairs at the rear. He found the rooms
-empty. Beef-eaters, bag and baggage were gone. Even
-the violin-case was not to be found.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Somewhat surprised that his faithful followers would
-so desert him, or at least move the family habitation
-without consulting their comrade, and on notice so
-brief, Rust knocked on Wainsworth’s door, to ask
-him if he had seen anything of the worthy Pike and
-Halberd. But Wainsworth too was out.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Upon proceeding post haste down to the tap-room,
-Adam broke in upon a scene of armistice, after a first
-shock of war. Standing at bay, with drawn swords,
-the shabby chattels of the trio in a corner behind them,
-were the beef-eaters, confronting and defying the landlord
-and several valiant citizens, in the midst of whom
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>was the small individual who had so much desired to
-fight, on the previous evening, and who was now
-haranguing the opposing forces volubly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Here comes the master-vagabond now!” he cried,
-the moment Adam appeared in the room. “Now,
-sirs, for your proof that you are not a pack of wandering
-beggars and braggarts!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“At last!” cried Halberd and Pike, together, coming
-quickly forward to grasp their comrade in arms by the
-hands.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“We have defended your good name and possessions!”
-said Pike.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“We have flung the lie into the teeth of these
-varlets!” added Halberd. “You have come in good
-time.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What’s the meaning of all this business?” demanded
-Adam, of the assembled company.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Every one started to talk or to shout at once. Adam
-heard such things as:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“They have called you and us a lot of penniless
-beggars and pirates!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What are you but a swaggering bully?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You are a fiddling limb of Satan!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The landlord said, more moderately, “I did but
-desire to protect my house in its good repute.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The fierce little white-eyed man waved both his fists.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“These dogs,” he snapped to Adam, “have boasted
-that you are loaded down with gold!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, they mentioned gold,” said the landlord,
-tentatively.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Gold?” said Adam. “Is it a crime to have no
-gold? How much gold would you see?” he pulled
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>his two hands from his pockets and scattered heaps of
-yellow sovereigns on the table.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The beef-eaters nearly collapsed with amazement, at
-the sight of this wealth. The landlord fell to rubbing
-his hands with ecstasy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You unseemly traducers of fair gentlemen,” he
-said, with virtuous indignation, to the belligerents
-behind him, “how dare you come here to insult and
-to villify my guests?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“He probably stole it,” cried the incorrigible little
-white-eyed terrier. “He has naught to do but to
-make God-fearing men——and his betters, at that—dance
-against their will in the public streets!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Ah,” said Adam, striding forward and purposely
-bending with great show of looking down to where the
-little man was standing, “so you have come to pay the
-fiddler for the sport which your friend enjoyed yesterday
-evening? How little he reckons my fiddling
-worth. This is so sad that nothing short of a breakfast
-can console me. Landlord——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Braggart! knave!” cried the little man, interrupting.
-“I offer to fight you again! You dare not
-fight!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The smaller the dog the rarer the punishments and
-the larger the arrogance.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Shatter my hilt!” said Adam, “you and another
-gnat would devour me whole.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Without warning, and yet gently, Rust took him by
-the collar, twirled him about so that he could lay his
-other hand on the trousers of the midget, and hoisting
-him off his feet, though he kicked and made a disturbance
-with yelling and raving, carried him at once to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>the open window of the tavern and dropped him out,
-on the sidewalk beneath.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Three or four partisans, who had backed up little
-white-eyes and the landlord, now edged toward the
-door. Adam made one motion in their direction and
-they got out with becoming alacrity.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Lock that door till we have had our breakfast,” Rust
-commanded.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The landlord had no more than complied, than the
-little rat, dropped from the window, came banging
-against the barrier on the outside, demanding admittance
-vociferously.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Who is yon whiffet?” Adam asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“His name is Psalms Higgler,” laughed the landlord,
-with fine hypocrisy. “How bravely you served him,
-and rightly too.” He rubbed his hands gleefully.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And his friend who sent him hither, he that danced
-so divertingly, what may be his name?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Isaiah Pinchbecker, you doubtless mean. And
-what will you have for breakfast, sire?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I will have you carry my bales of merchandise back
-to my apartments,” said Adam, who did not propose to
-move out of the house until he felt inclined, preferring
-to remain there and command respect for himself and
-the beef-eaters, even while he knew that the landlord
-had joined the miserable snappers at his heels. “And
-look to it you move smartly and return to order something
-to eat.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The landlord, spurred by the sight of the gold, and
-eager to make all possible amends for the errors of
-judgment he had committed, staggered up the stairs,
-panting like a grampus.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>Adam now turned to his comrades, who recited three
-times over the incidents of the morning, which consisted
-chiefly of the charges made by Psalms Higgler,
-evidently at the instigation of Pinchbecker—the nimble-footed—and
-which had so nearly culminated in their
-expulsion from the tavern.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Tempest in a teapot as it had been, the business was
-an indication of feelings which went as deep as politics,
-in which the whole colony had been simmering for
-years. Moreover, the incident was not yet concluded.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The same year which had witnessed King Philip’s
-war, at the close of which Adam had gone away, one of
-the greatest mischief-makers with whom the Colonists
-had ever been called upon to deal, Edward Randolph,
-had come to Boston with a design to despoil the colony
-of its charter. He had worked openly, in some directions,
-secretly in others. He had enlisted malcontents,
-dissenters-from-everything, hypocrites and men with
-private greeds, in his Tory following. Among these
-were Pinchbecker, his friend, the landlord of the Crow
-and Arrow, Psalms Higgler and many others of their
-ilk.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Now Pinchbecker came under the category of hypocrites.
-He assumed the Puritans’ manners, speech and
-customs, and did, in fact, despise some of the looser
-habits of the Royalists, though he was their willing
-tool, working for future favor and gain. He had therefore
-felt himself sorely aggrieved when compelled to
-his dance, in a public highway, and having first egged
-on his little terrier, Psalms, had then repaired to
-Edward Randolph, himself, for redress of his wrongs.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Randolph, thinking he smelt a bluff and ready Tory
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>lot, in Adam, and his company, found occasion to visit
-the tavern without delay. He arrived while Rust and
-the beef-eaters were still at their breakfast. He entered
-the house at the rear and ordered a drink at the bar.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Motioning the landlord to silence, that worthy being
-much astonished to see him so early, Randolph presently
-turned about, as if he had not before observed the
-trio at table.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Gentlemen,” he said, “I drink ill when I drink
-alone; will you not permit me to order something in
-which you can join me?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam looked up. “Thank you,” he said, “it is our
-misfortune to have ordered, just as you were coming in.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The misfortune is mine,” insisted Randolph. He
-drank alone.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Rust had taken in the visitor’s details at a glance.
-The man was of medium size and nervous temperament.
-He had a great brow, heavy with perceptive faculties,
-at the expense of those of reflection. His eyes were
-deep-set, round, intense and close together, the nose
-that divided them being as thin and curved as a beak.
-His lips were thin and tight-shutting. He looked like
-a human bird-of-prey.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“By your dress and manner you are recently from
-England,” said the man, sauntering leisurely toward
-Adam, when he had smacked his lips and set down his
-mug.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“By your courtesy,” said Adam, “you are a student,
-curious to know your fellow-beings.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Randolph laughed. “Curious?” said he. “You
-do me wrong. I care neither who nor what a gentleman
-is, so long as he is witty and blest with humor. Your
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>repute and the tale of your love for dancing have preceded
-you, sir. I confess I was tempted to come here
-and see you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I beseech you for an opportunity to say that I was
-merely charitable,” said Rust. “I ordered the dance
-to amuse my beef-eaters. Perhaps you are a dancer
-yourself?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Randolph bit his lip. He was not getting on to his
-liking. He smiled, however, and said:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I have few graces, after I have mentioned a sense
-of admiration——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And blandishment,” put in Adam, who frankly disliked
-the man.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Say appreciation, rather,” corrected Randolph. “I
-have had a hearty laugh over that dance. I wish I had
-been there to see it; such merriment is so rare in
-Massachusetts.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Nearly as rare as introductions between gentlemen,”
-Adam answered.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He tipped up his mug and drank the last of his brew
-carelessly. Randolph turned red with anger. His gray
-eyes looked like cold fire, yet he was still unwilling to
-accept defeat in his effort to find out the bent of Adam’s
-political views.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“We live in a time when the stoutest friends and
-companions in good causes might be lost to each other
-by formality,” he said, with a smile doing its best to
-bend his features. “I must beg your pardon, if I
-seem——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He was interrupted by the entrance, at this moment,
-of William Phipps, who came in at the door which the
-landlord had quietly unbolted.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>“What, Adam, not yet done with eating?” he called
-out, bluntly. “Come, come, I have been waiting this
-long time for you and your friends to have a look over
-the brig.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“With you at once,” rejoined the rover.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He and the beef-eaters knocked over their heavy
-chairs and stools, as they arose from the table. Phipps
-looked at Randolph. The two men nodded, distantly
-and somewhat frowningly. Without so much as glancing
-at Randolph, Adam and his retinue walked to the
-door and so away, with the Captain.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Randolph needed no further intimation of Adam’s
-probable leanings, politically, than this obvious camaraderie
-with Phipps—who was a patriot as immovable
-and staunch as a rock fortress. He clenched his fists
-and ground his molars savagely.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Curse the young fool!” he said. “I’ll make him
-wish for a civil tongue to be hung in his head!”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER IX.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>A MATTER OF STATE.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>Mistress Garde Merrill</span>, having several hours before
-delivered her simples and aromatic leaves to old
-Goody Dune, just outside the limits of the town, stood
-looking out of the window, at her Uncle John Soam’s
-home, where she was visiting. Thus it was that she saw
-her grandfather, David Donner enter the gate. Two
-minutes afterward she beheld the unusual sight of three
-Governors come into the garden together.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The first was ex-Governor Leverett, that stern old
-Roundhead, the ex-Captain of Cromwell’s horse. At
-his side was Governor Winslow, up from Plymouth, on
-grave affairs. Behind them was an older man, and perhaps
-a wiser one, Governor Simon Bradstreet, still hale
-and hearty after fifty-three years of service to the
-colonies.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Bringing up the rear of the little procession was Henry
-Wainsworth, private secretary to Leverett. He looked
-toward the windows in the hope of seeing Garde, but
-that young lady stepped silently back into the shadows,
-for she had no desire to be seen.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Neither David Donner nor the other visitors came to
-the house, nor even to the front door thereof. It was
-a fine day, so that the garden seemed all smiles. A
-cow was mooing lustily and chickens were singing in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>their contentment. These sounds were interspersed
-with the hawing of a saw, and then with hammer
-strokes, these latter disturbances issuing from a newly
-constructed granary and cow-shed which John Soam,
-Garde’s uncle, had recently afforded.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>David Donner, who had known that he would find
-Goodman Soam in this shed, had tracked across the
-garden without ceremony. The governors and Wainsworth,
-having confidence that Donner knew what he
-was doing, followed where he led, to the center whence
-the clatter of industry proceeded.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The hammer-pounding had abated nothing, nor did
-it cease when the three grave citizens and Wainsworth
-had entered the house and ranged themselves silently
-beside David Donner, to whom they could not well
-speak for the din. They nodded to their friend, however,
-and looked up, like students of astronomy all of
-one mind, at Goodman Soam above them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>John Soam had never been reputed a carpenter of
-talent in Boston. However, here he was, standing on
-the head of a barrel and obviously completing the task
-of ceiling this room of the granary, for his head, shoulders
-and arms were out of sight, in the darksome region
-above the ceiling, while part of his body and his
-legs, below, moved in vigorous jerks as he pounded into
-place and nailed what appeared to be the last board
-but one which would be needed to complete the job on
-which he was so commendably engaged.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It seemed to his visitors that they had never before
-seen Goodman Soam in so tight an orifice as was the
-one from which he now protruded. They waited in
-patience for the nailing to cease, conversation being impossible
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>meantime. John was, by all reckoning, a
-thorough workman, for he drove home nail after nail,
-without ceasing for so much as a breath.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At length the board was secured to the carpenter’s
-satisfaction, for he ceased to hammer and could be
-heard to feel his work lovingly as he examined its
-beauties in the half light in which he had labored.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Good morrow, John Soam,” now said Governor
-Leverett, having first coughed behind his hand. “Here
-are several fellow-townsmen come to your place.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>John was seen to give a squirm. “Oh, good morrow,”
-said he, his voice muffled by the ceiling between him
-and his friends. “I have been doing a little work.
-Wait a moment, good friend, till I may gather my nails
-and tools.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The five good men waited, hearing John scramble the
-nails together with a few metallic clinks.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“We went first to your house, David,” said John Winslow
-to David Donner. “We came to see you and
-John Soam, as promised, on a matter of some gravity.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>John Soam now, upon making an effort to retreat out
-of the slender orifice which he had left when he nailed
-in his board, found his chest and shoulders thicker than
-his waist. He wriggled. This being of no avail to extricate
-him, he struggled. A convulsion of activity then
-seized upon him. He attempted to sit down, he dragged
-at himself, he began to do unseemly things. But he could
-not get out. He had hammered in his own head and
-arms, with many good nails in the board.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>His friends below him now overheard a sound which,
-in a simian, if simians talked at all, would have been a
-curse. John wrestled as if demons, expert in catch-as-catch-can,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>were restraining him up there in the attic.
-He kicked about, with a violence so great as to overthrow
-the barrel whereon he had been standing. For a second
-his two blind feet felt about for his whilom support
-in an agony of helplessness.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Goodman Leverett,” he then bawled, in tones of
-repressed emotion, “will you put back that barrel for
-a moment, till I may come down?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“If you will constrain your legs to seemly conduct,
-I will,” said the governor. He and David Donner
-having received a kick apiece, now reinstated Goodman
-Soam’s pedestal.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>John became quiescent for a moment. His friends
-shifted about, uneasily.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“May we help you in any respect, John?” inquired
-Winslow.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Are you fastened in?” added Simon Bradstreet.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Might we not pull him down?” suggested Wainsworth.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My friends, how many be you?” said the hot, muffled
-voice of John.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Five,” said one of the solemn governors. “Shall
-we give you a little assistance?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It would only be a little I should want,” said the
-carpenter, dropping the nails he had clung to in desperation.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The five gentlemen disposed themselves about John’s
-anatomy and pulled at his legs with united strength,
-grasping the cloth of his trousers for the purpose.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Enough! enough!” roared John, after a moment
-of hopeless pain and wriggling.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>His warning came belated. His trousers were of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>good stuff enow, but trousers have their limitations.
-They parted, slightly above the uneven line of gripping
-hands, and came away in ragged banners.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The five citizens were horrified. So was John. Two of
-the gentlemen, with the booty taken from their friend,
-fell heavily to the floor.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Dear me, this was most uncalled for,” said David
-Donner.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>John Soam tried to draw his legs up under his coat,
-vainly. He made terrible sounds of anguish, in his
-nakedness below and his loneliness up above the ceiling.
-His fellow-citizens, undecided as to whether they
-should go outside, for the sake of modesty, or remain
-and lend further aid to John, looked at one another inquiringly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“John,” then said Leverett, somewhat sternly,
-“would you council us to get an ax and knock out
-the board you have hammered into place?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes,” bawled the carpenter, “there be two axes in
-the corner. Let them both be employed!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I have chopped down a tree in my youth,” said
-David Donner.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He therefore took one of the axes, while Governor
-Winslow took the second.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They were then at a loss to reach the ceiling, wherefore
-it became necessary for the good men to build up a
-platform, of boxes and boards, while John Soam’s legs
-tried to hide, one behind the other.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The platform being hastily constructed, the ax-men
-mounted and began to swing ill-directed blows upward
-at the stubborn board which the carpenter had hammered
-in so thoroughly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>No more than three blows had been delivered when
-John made protest, howling lustily for the purpose, as
-the ax-men failed at first to hear him, while busy with
-their work of salvation.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It jars me rudely,” he roared out, unable wholly to
-repress his feelings. “It’s hellish.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Ahem,” said Governor Leverett. “What would
-you council us to do next, friend Soam?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Saw the board,” counseled John. “It was a rare
-good fit, but it had best be sawed.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The platform was now changed and one after another
-the five citizens plied the saw, for the board was wet,
-and to saw above one’s head is irksome in a high degree.
-Yet at length the cut was made, at one end,
-and those below could thrust the imprisoning plank
-upward. Being still stoutly nailed at the further end,
-the board scraped off some buttons, erstwhile sewn to
-John’s waistcoat, and it otherwise harassed him before
-it was high enough to permit the carpenter to emerge
-from his attic. He appeared at last, however, red of
-countenance and in a fine condition to do some private
-blaspheming, had the opportunity been present for the
-exercise of this, man’s inalienable function. His friends
-were immeasurably relieved to see him, safe.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Friend John,” said David Donner, “we have come
-hither on matters of state. When you are rehabilitated
-we shall, I believe, be glad of your further counsel.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER X.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>TO FOIL A SPY.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>His</span> friends, forming a hollow square, now escorted
-John to the house at a quick walk. He disappeared
-like a Jack into its box, when the door was finally
-opened, while the grave citizens entered the parlor and
-awaited his return. Clothed decorously once more, he
-was presently with them again, when the council of
-five, with Wainsworth sitting near, drew up to the
-heavy, oaken table.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They now listened to Governor Winslow, who had
-journeyed from Plymouth for this meeting.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I have begun to lose hope,” he said, “that we
-shall be able to postpone much longer the day of evil.
-We thought our charter was threatened ten or twelve
-years ago and we have held it by sheer power of procrastination
-and tactics of elusiveness, but Randolph
-has been with us here in Boston for seven years, and the
-harm he did to our independence in seventy-six has
-been accumulating interest in trouble for us, one might
-say, ever since. He has mastered our methods; he is
-closing in upon us every day. It is now a desperate
-case, requiring a desperate remedy. The only question
-is, what means can we undertake to offset some of the
-ill repute in which he has caused King Charles to hold
-us, and to nullify his further machinations.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>“It would not be safe, would it, to expel the man
-Randolph from the colony?” said Leverett, who had
-first coughed behind his hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh no,” said Donner.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Such an action would precipitate difficulties with
-the King,” added Simon Bradstreet.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And we would not dare to restrain him from further
-evil work?” John Soam inquired.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>His friends shook their heads.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“We know well enough that he has gathered much
-testimony from persons willing to swear falsely, as to
-the grants to Gorges and Mason, in Maine and New
-Hampshire,” said David Donner. “Might we not go
-over this same ground and procure true, sworn testimony
-and statements from more credible persons, with
-which to refute him?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That would have been well advised seven years ago,”
-said Bradstreet, who had a way of tweaking his own
-nose when he began to speak, “but at that time we
-were still engrossed with, and alarmed by, the war with
-King Philip, and moreover we knew nothing of Randolph’s
-methods. It would have done well then, but
-now it is too late—much too late—for that sort of
-work.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I have thought upon the matter long and seriously,”
-said Winslow. “I can see no way so good as to send
-an agent from among ourselves to England, to intercede
-with Charles and to plead our cause personally at
-the Court, day after day.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>David Donner knew what was coming. He glared
-at an imaginary Stuart family.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>John Soam said: “I can see the wisdom of such a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>course. I consider that when Goodman Simon Bradstreet
-went to London before, he did this colony great
-service. That was—let me see—why, twenty-three
-good long years since. Are you of a mind to go once
-more, Friend Simon?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I am an old man,” said Bradstreet, tweaking his
-nose with extra vigor. “A younger wit would be of
-far more service.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>With his four score of years on his head Simon Bradstreet
-yet did injustice to his immortal youth and
-energy. The council knew that it was the gall and
-wormwood which he had manfully swallowed, twenty-three
-years before, when he went to Charles the Second
-to congratulate him upon his restoration to the throne,
-that wrought upon him now more than did the infirmities
-of age.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“If we prove successful in finding an agent from
-among us, Friend Soam,” said Winslow, “will you be
-one with us to find money for his pilgrimage?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And whom would you have in mind?” John
-cautiously replied.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The governors turned with one accord to David
-Donner.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“They have asked this service of me,” said David.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Leverett said: “There is no one else so free, so
-gifted and so bountifully supplied with knowledge of
-these colonies. Nor is there any one among us whose
-comprehension of the intrigues and artifices employed
-by Randolph is so reliable.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“We have none among us more diplomatic and
-logical and yet adherent to the cause of truth,” added
-Winslow.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>“I feel sure, David, you are the fittest man in
-Boston for this important undertaking,” John Soam
-said, gravely.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And we could count on you to furnish some of the
-necessary funds, if Donner will go, could we not?”
-asked Winslow, striking while the Soam iron was hot.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You may, to be sure,” John responded, more slowly.
-“But David has not yet indicated whether he will
-undertake this mission or no.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This was, indeed, the crucial point. Strict old
-Puritan that he was, despiser of ostentations, father
-already of that spirit of independence and Americanism
-being sown broadcast in New England, David Donner
-had already made many a wry face over the prospect
-of serving the colony by an expedient so bitter as he
-conceived this present task to be.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I have debated this matter, since I had my first intimation
-of what to expect from Governor Winslow,”
-he said, pursing up his mouth as if he were about to
-swallow a brew of hoarhound. “I am not a young
-man myself. I may never return to this land. But—if
-it is the prompting of your wisdom to send me, I
-cannot refuse to serve this colony and these earnest,
-toiling people.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Of the joy which his colleagues felt there was no sign
-apparent. For that matter, they would be as sad at
-losing Donner from their circle as they would be glad
-to send him on his mission. Their lives were made up
-of joyless duties, woven as a woof through a warp of
-joyless worship.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But among his hearers there was Wainsworth, and
-he was glad, not so much to have the severe old man
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>going abroad, as to know that Mistress Garde Merrill
-would now in all probability remain permanently with
-John Soam and his wife, who were good-natured,
-affectionate people. Indeed Mrs. Soam was a natural
-woman, more delighted when she was fostering or encouraging
-a mating, ’twixt youthful hearts, than she
-was when kneading dough into loaves that looked like
-fat, dimpled babies, and this is saying more than might
-readily be supposed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thus when, soon after, the meeting had broken up
-and the Governors had stiffly departed, it was but
-natural that Henry should discover, innocently enough,
-that he had left a bundle of papers behind. It was
-quite as natural, also, that upon returning and purposely
-knocking at the door of the family living-room, whereas
-the papers should have been still in the parlor, he should
-be admitted by Goodwife Soam and asked in most cordially,
-and sent with Garde to look for the truant
-documents.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER XI.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>DANGEROUS TRIBUTES.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>Eloquent</span> as Wainsworth had proved himself, in the
-presence of Adam, he was but an indifferent love’s-man,
-now that he found himself alone with Garde.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I wanted to come back for—for the papers,” he
-stammered.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes,” said Garde, whose spirit of elfishness Henry
-always aroused, “they would soon have missed you
-sorely.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Would they—What, papers?—Oh, you are making
-fun of——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I am making a search to find them,” interrupted
-Garde. “Here they are. I am so sorry they have
-detained you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Thank you—oh, thank you,” said Henry, still
-stumbling confusedly. “It is such a lovely day I
-thought I should like to come back and—and—and see—if
-I had really left them here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, such a lovely day would make any one wish to
-do the same thing,” said Garde, gravely. “Now that
-you have them, you must be very happy again.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, oh yes—no, no, the papers haven’t made me
-happy.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Then I am sorry you are sad,” said Garde. “Perhaps
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>the lovely day outside will make you feel more
-joyous again.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But I am not sad,” protested Henry, getting momentarily
-redder. “I wanted to say—I wanted to
-come back——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, you did say so, to get the papers.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No—yes!—but I wanted to say——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That you had left them, because it was such a
-lovely day?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, of course, but—no, no, I wanted to say—church!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, they are church papers, Mr. Wainsworth?”
-asked Garde innocently.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, I—I wanted to say it is such a lovely day——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You have said so many things that you may have
-mentioned the day before.” Garde’s eyes were dancing,
-but he had hardly dared to look at her face, lest his
-tongue should fail him utterly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He now fixed his attention on the table with all his
-power of will.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I wanted to say, if the Sabbath is a lovely day, like
-this, may I not walk to meeting with you and David
-Donner?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Piqued somewhat by the way Adam had treated her,
-Garde instantly saw a possible opportunity of arousing
-Adam’s jealousy. He would doubtless attend meeting.
-He might see her with Henry. As Prudence would
-also be there, with her father, there might be further
-developments.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“If it is a lovely day, Mr. Wainsworth,” she answered,
-“I think Granther Donner will be glad of
-your company, but if it is not a lovely day, Granther
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>and I will have to get along as best we may, alone, I
-suppose.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, I meant any sort of a day!” cried Wainsworth,
-desperately. “If the Sabbath is any sort of a day. I
-only said if it was as lovely as to-day because any day,
-would be a lovely day, if——” and there he stuck.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“If it were as lovely as to-day,” Garde supplied.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes,” said Henry, hopelessly. “Then—then that
-is settled?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Do you mean the weather? It ought to be settled,
-I should think.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, I mean that I am to go with you and David
-Donner to meeting, no matter what sort of a day it is.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I think Granther will be glad of your company,”
-said Garde again. She led the way back to the living-room
-before Henry could frame any more of his tumble-down
-speeches.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Prudence and her mother were both here, now, and
-both looked up to smile at Wainsworth, whom they had
-grown to like for his evident sincerity. Mrs. Soam
-was a pleasant woman, with a double chin from which
-it seemed all manner of comfortable little chucklings of
-good-nature took their start. She should have been
-the mother of several boys, for she liked nice boys and
-felt a sense of motherhood over all she knew. Prudence
-was not at all like her mother. Her face was
-small and serious. She spoke with a quaint drawl.
-Although quite as old as Garde, she appeared so unsophisticated
-and childish, so quiet and unassertive
-that no one would have looked to find womanly emotions,
-in her breast.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, Henry,” said Mrs. Soam, who always called
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>“her boys” by their first names, “how have you been
-and what have you been doing? Have you heard from
-England recently? How was your mother, when you
-heard?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“She was quite well, thank you,” said Henry, who
-could talk to Garde’s aunt without confusion, “but I
-have not heard from her recently. Oh—I nearly forgot—I
-have heard from England, in a manner. That
-is, a friend I knew there, arrived in Boston only yesterday.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes? And who was that?” said Mrs. Soam.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde had started to go up-stairs to her own apartment,
-which she shared with Prudence, but she halted
-at the door and came back, for Wainsworth said:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“His name is Adam Rust.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde and Prudence both took up some knitting and
-began to ply the needles, over which their eyes were
-bent, intently.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes,” said Mrs. Soam, encouragingly. “Is he a
-Puritan?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t know,” said Wainsworth, frankly. “I
-think perhaps he is. At any rate, he belongs here, I
-feel sure. But wherever he belongs, or whatever he is,
-he’s a splendid fellow. I was riding to hounds when
-we met. My horse threw me, and my foot was caught
-in the stirrup. I was being dragged when Rust stopped
-my run-away horse. He is one of the most superb horsemen
-I ever knew.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Why, do you mean that he saved your life?” inquired
-Goodwife Soam. “It must have been a terrible
-moment.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I haven’t much brains, but I was about to lose what
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>I had,” said Wainsworth, generously. “He came in
-the nick of time. And afterwards, when I happened to
-be a bit short of funds—as a man will, you know,
-sometimes—why, he loaned me nearly every penny he
-had in the world!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Was that not most improvident?” said the listener.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, I suppose it was. You know, you wouldn’t
-call him exactly provident. He is too good-hearted
-a fellow to be that, you know. He is one of those
-fellows you can tell anything about yourself. I tell
-him everything.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He looked up at Garde, as he said this, wishing he
-could tell her the half that he had confided to Rust.
-She never lifted her eyes, however, from her knitting.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And what did he tell you of your mother?” asked
-Mrs. Soam.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, nothing. He never knew the mater.”
-Henry tried to think what Adam had told him. “He
-just—well, told me of a few general matters.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde listened eagerly, almost breathlessly, dwelling
-on every word concerning Rust, but her aunt returned
-once more to the subject of Wainsworth’s mother and
-no more was heard of Adam, for Henry presently bade
-them all good day and proceeded to follow, belated as
-he was, where his chief had gone, at the close of the
-meeting.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When he disappeared, Garde dropped her knitting
-and went quietly up the stairs, for the purpose of being
-alone, to think.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER XII.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>HOURS THAT GROW DARK.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>Captain William Phipps</span> was as eager as a boy, now
-that he had definitely settled on the purpose which
-had for its object the quest of the sunken treasure.
-Therefore he and Adam and the beef-eaters worked unceasingly
-to prepare the brig, “Captain Spencer,” for
-the cruise to the Bahamas.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>What with provisioning the craft, enlisting more
-trustworthy men for the voyage and refitting a somewhat
-depleted and inefficient arsenal, Phipps waxed
-brusque and impatient. He had desired to get away
-from Boston not later than Saturday afternoon, but as
-the tasks before them had been tackled by Adam and
-the rest of them on Friday morning, the worthy Captain’s
-ambition to be on the sea on the Sabbath—a day
-for which he had little liking—was vain. Saturday
-night therefore approached and Phipps fumed, for he
-could not so outrage the Puritans’ sense of things
-Godly as to sail on Sunday, wherefore the departure
-had perforce to be postponed till Monday morning.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam, with an exaggerated sense of honor, had
-resisted the longing to go by night to that same alley in
-which he had rescued Garde’s cat and met that young
-lady with Mistress Prudence Soam. He spent the time
-with his beef-eaters and with Wainsworth, making
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>merry for these music-hungering friends on the violin,
-which now seemed to him more than ever the one thing
-left him on which to concentrate the love of his affectionate
-nature.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>On Sunday morning Captain Phipps betook himself
-to his brig, as she lay in mid-stream, to pother about
-by himself, while Adam dutifully escorted Goodwife
-Phipps to meeting, at South Church, which was nearer
-than the old church and more popular as well.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was a solemn, black procession of Puritans that
-walked decorously to meeting in the sunlight. The
-day was one of almost unseemly beauty, for Nature was
-fairly barbarous in the colors which she wore like jewels.
-There was riotous gladness in the breeze that tipped
-back the bonnets from many a pretty face, to let the
-sun have a look at peach-bloom cheeks; there was
-a deviltry in the warmth that the girls felt first at their
-ankles, where thin stockings only protected them; and
-there was a twitter and chirrup of birds in the air.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In their homely black and their stiff white collars,
-the men were as solemn as posts. No bells sounded,
-either from afar, with mellowed pealings, nor nearer
-with persistent nagging. Men, women and children
-alike walked with their eyes steadfastly fixed on the
-ground.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>However, there were two pairs of eyes less meek.
-They were Adam’s and Garde’s. It therefore came to
-pass that each discovered the other, before the church
-portals were reached. Garde’s heart began to beat as
-if it were knocking to call Adam’s attention. Adam’s
-hammered as if it were forging more fetters to bind him
-tighter in his love.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>Garde, with her grandfather and Wainsworth, preceded
-Rust and Mrs. Phipps into the sanctuary. Adam
-followed eagerly, and yet as one about to enter a prison.
-He had seen Wainsworth, but Henry, in his ecstasy, had
-contented himself with looking devotedly at Garde’s
-little shoes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Inside the church, Garde sat somewhat toward the
-back, while Adam, with the men, occupied a bench at
-the side of the building from which he could see Mistress
-Merrill’s profile perfectly, as often as he dared to
-look in her direction.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde, with much resolution, permitted herself not
-so much as one tiny flicker of a glance toward Adam,
-all during the time of service. She felt him looking at
-her, however, from time to time, and rejoiced that her
-little ruse to make him stirred up and mayhap jealous
-was succeeding. The flush of maidenhood’s beauty
-which had mounted to her cheek, the moment she
-found that Adam was near, remained throughout the
-morning.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Later to church than any other, a man, alone, and
-none too reverent, entered the door and took a seat
-on the side, from which he could scan many of the faces
-in the place. It was Randolph. He had come there
-for the sole purpose of looking about him, his reasons
-being various, but none of them Godly. He shut his
-mouth grimly at beholding Adam present, but when his
-gaze finally rested on Garde, all the more radiantly
-beautiful for the simplicity of her dress, it became fixed,
-first, then covetous, and finally passionate.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was not until the meeting was finished that Garde
-ventured to take a sly glance at Adam. Her gaze met
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span>his. She saw and comprehended, then, such a fathomless
-sadness in his look, before he could drop his gaze,
-that she was instantly most penitent over what she had
-done.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was the same look she had seen in his eyes that
-day when he had marched as a captive, at the end of
-King Philip’s war—a look she never had, and never
-could, forget.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As for Rust, he had confirmed to his satisfaction, all
-that Wainsworth had told him. If he had not been
-convinced before and ready to renounce his own hopes,
-he was quite persuaded and determined now. He
-thought how fortunate it was that Phipps had the brig
-all ready to sail on the morrow. It was very much better
-to end the matter with the smallest possible delay.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He spent the afternoon with Phipps and the beef-eaters
-on the ship. To his credit, he made himself an
-agreeable and cheerful companion. Indeed, what with
-the songs he had sung for Wainsworth and the others,
-and the spirit of his raillery, boasting and readiness to
-fight or to fiddle, he had succeeded in deceiving them
-all as to the nature under his waistcoat.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Yet when the night was come and the magnet which
-had been drawing and drawing him to that alley, sacred
-to the memory of Garde’s cat, once more exercised its
-influence, more powerfully than ever, he became a
-restless creature.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It has been said that man justifies himself in whatsoever
-he does. Adam thought he needed justification
-for desiring to go once, just once, into that alley,
-wherefore he prepared his mind with several excuses.
-Armed with these he at length slipped away from the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span>Crow and Arrow and found his way to the rear of
-that house into which he had seen Garde and Prudence
-disappear, on that memorable first night in
-Boston.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Had Rust come to this trysting-place at the same
-hour on the two previous evenings, he would have met
-Mistress Merrill face to face. Garde, in her impulsive
-eagerness to see him again, had waited for little debating
-before she slipped from the house, to see if he
-might not have come to deliver that certain trinket
-from Hispaniola. Her cousin Prudence, more diffident,
-had desired to come forth also, but she had
-lacked Garde’s readiness of execution and courage.
-However she had not lacked the incentive, and as no
-maiden is utterly awed, in the presence of a tender
-passion, Mistress Prudence had at length steeled her
-heart, and to-night she came tripping diffidently forth,
-not long after Adam’s arrival on the scene.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>So silently had Prudence come that Adam, who
-might have arranged otherwise, suddenly found himself
-confronted, before he had made up his mind whether
-he wished any one might appear or not.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Why, good evening, Mr. Rust,” said Prudence,
-with a little gasp at her own daring, “why, I was just
-walking in the garden and couldn’t think who it might
-be, here by the gate. Why, how strange we should
-meet!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam had said good evening, waving a salute grandly
-with his hat, the moment Prudence had spoken, for he
-had realized instantly that she was not Garde and his
-presence of mind had risen to the occasion without
-delay.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span>“I—wandered up here looking, for—for distressed
-cats,” said Adam.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, did you?” said Prudence, innocently. “That
-was real noble.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam hated to have anything he did called noble.
-He therefore hastened to do penance, in a measure, for
-his slightly inaccurate statement.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I am bound to confess,” he added, “that I did
-have a faint hope that I might see either you or Mistress
-Merrill—or both—to say good-by, for to-morrow I am
-off again, for a jaunt on the sea.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Going away?” echoed Prudence. “Oh, why,
-Garde might be disappointed, not to see you and say
-good-by.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam thought this was sweet of Prudence, as indeed
-it was. He could have mentioned some disappointments
-himself, but he refrained from doing so. He
-thought, in a somewhat bitterly philosophical vein, that
-perhaps it was better as it was, better that he should
-not see Garde again, under the circumstances.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You are very kind,” he said. “Perhaps it would
-not be asking too much of you to get you to take a
-small packet—in fact, I have presumed to provide myself
-with two little packages, which I trust you and
-Mistress Merrill will receive, merely as tokens of a
-rover’s amusement in the little event of a few evenings
-ago, and of a pleasant memory which the episode will
-furnish for otherwise lonely moments.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He had indeed made up two small parcels, intending
-behind the ruse of making a small gift to both Garde
-and Prudence, to bestow thus the present to Garde
-brought from Hispaniola and long delayed as to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span>delivery. He therefore took these carefully wrapped
-trinkets from his pocket and held them forth.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“If I might prevail upon your good nature,” he said,
-“to accept this one and to give this other into the
-hands of Mistress Merrill, I should be grateful to you
-for the favor.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Fate takes obvious delight in making her weavings
-complete. It was inevitable that Garde should come
-out to that garden gate, while Adam and Prudence
-were talking there together, and that she should therefore
-see Adam, presenting something to her cousin,
-and should at once proceed to place an erroneous construction
-on the situation. Angered, humiliated and
-hurt, she fled back to the house, as Prudence was accepting
-the proffered trinkets and regretfully bidding
-Adam Rust good-by.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was hardly feasible so to conceal herself in the
-house that Prudence would be long in searching her
-out, when at length that quiet and pleased young lady
-came back to the house, hence Garde accepted Adam’s
-present before she exactly comprehended what she was
-doing.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Prudence, having performed her duty, when the gift
-had passed to its rightful owner, hastened away to open
-her own packet, in privacy. She found an old Spanish
-doubloon in the bit of paper, and though a trifle disappointed
-that she did not discover an accompanying
-inscription, was nevertheless gladdened to the very core
-of her being.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde, rebellious and ready to weep with conflicting
-emotions, which had not been assuaged by hearing
-Prudence tell how innocently she had happened to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>meet Mr. Rust, felt like flinging Adam’s gift upon the
-floor and stamping it flat with her lively little foot.
-But the tenderness of the love she had fostered so long,
-and the slight hope to which she still clung, combined
-with her natural curiosity, proved too strong for resistance.
-She opened the neatly tied and folded paper.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Inside was a golden brooch of exquisite workmanship,
-a treasure absolutely irresistible to any beauty-loving
-young woman. But her gaze flew to a secondary
-little wad of paper, folded as a note. This she tore
-open with nerveless fingers.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“From Hispaniola,” Adam had written, simply.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Under this he had penned a quatrain of rather obscure
-meaning and weakly versification:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c022'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“It always haps, when there are three,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>But two can bide in unity;</div>
- <div class='line in1'>That two may long their gladness keep,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>The third should bury sorrow deep.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c023'>Garde read these lines and then read them again,
-more puzzled by the second perusal than she had been
-by the first. She began then to feel wounded. She
-was ready to cry. The brooch had made her heart
-bound with joy. Then she remembered that Adam
-had procured it for her years before, since when his
-affections might have been transferred, his ideals might
-have been altered and the sense in which he gave it
-her might have been reduced to something utterly unromantic.
-He might indeed have given it to her only
-because of his desire to keep a foolish promise made in
-his boyhood.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The lines were not an explanation of his conduct.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>If they meant that she was a third party, interfering
-with the happiness of himself and Prudence, then the
-unkindness of it all was not the full depth of its possibilities—it
-was impudent, arrogant and fairly hateful,
-in that light.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>On the other hand, could it be possible that Adam
-did not mean that she was such a third party as the
-lines indicated, and if so, what did he mean? Was he
-himself such a third party? This appeared impossible
-on the very face of it, for not only was Garde not
-interested in, and happy with, some other person, but
-if she had been, Adam could not possibly have known
-it, and certainly, in the two times they had met, she had
-given him no reason for supposing that anything of the
-sort could exist.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was too much for her wearied brain to cope with.
-She had puzzled over Adam’s conduct every moment
-since their meeting in the woods, till she could think
-no more. There was the beautiful brooch, and here
-were these ominous, enigmatical lines. All she knew
-was that she was very unhappy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam, in the meantime, made progress back to the
-tavern as if he were all but becalmed and had no more
-than steerage way at the best. He had only one thing
-to be glad about, and that was that his beef-eaters
-would not be at the Crow and Arrow to meet him.
-They had already taken up quarters on the brig.
-There Adam expected to join them, with the last of
-his worldly goods, when he should have taken final
-leave of Wainsworth.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When he reached his solitary apartments, however,
-he was sorry the faithful old beef-eaters were not there
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span>to give him welcome, for the place was dark and cheerless.
-He lighted his candle and looked about the
-room with melancholy interest.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Presently his attention was attracted to a number of
-bright spots on the floor, irregular patches, from which
-the light was reflected somewhat dully. Candle in
-hand he walked toward the corner where these glittering
-objects were strewn about. With a sudden misgiving
-he noted that his violin case had been brought
-out from the place of concealment in which he had
-carefully kept it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Bending forward, with one hand poised in an attitude
-of arrested action, he stared at the litter on the
-floor, his face becoming colorless as he stood there,
-numbed. A low moan came from between his lips—such
-a sound as he had made in his sleep, as he once
-lay curled up at the foot of the stake on which King
-Philip’s head was impaled.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The fragments on the floor were the scraps and
-litter of his violin. There was not one piece as large
-as three of his fingers. Isaiah Pinchbecker and Psalms
-Higgler had taken their revenge.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Slowly Adam knelt down and gathered the bits of
-wood in a little heap, lovingly. He was not enraged.
-A lover who finds his sweetheart murdered cannot at
-first be filled with anger. Adam gathered every little
-scrap and splinter. He tried to fit little fragments
-together; he tried to efface heel-marks and bits of
-boot-grime from some of the pieces, as if he searched
-for features which he loved.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It seemed as if he could not realize that the violin
-was actually destroyed. He looked away from it and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>then back at the small heap beneath his hands, like
-one half expecting to wake from a dream and find
-everything as it had been before something unthinkable
-occurred.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Perhaps a woman who had given to her child, willingly
-and absolutely, the mastery over her every emotion,
-thought and hope, and who had come upon the
-body of that child, slain and mutilated, could have
-understood what lonely Adam Rust underwent.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>For like such a woman, conceiving a fear that the
-despoilers might return and rob her even of the body
-of her child, the man presently, in a fever of excitement,
-took every patch, shred and chip of the red wood
-and hiding it carefully inside his waistcoat, dropped
-himself down from the window to the earth and went
-away in the darkness, like a wild thing pursued.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER XIII.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>A KISS DEFERRED.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>Garde</span>, when she had questioned her cousin Prudence,
-until there was little or nothing concerning
-Adam’s visit and farewell at the gate which she did not
-know, was still far from being certain of anything in
-connection with the whole predicament.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>One thing, however, gave her a small measure of
-comfort. This was that her brooch was much more
-beautiful than the Spanish doubloon Adam had given
-to Prudence. Yet this comfort grew cold as she reflected
-that even if Adam did possibly like her as much
-as he did Prudence, he had written her those incomprehensible
-lines about burying sorrow, and he had
-gone away, she knew not where, or in what manner,
-without even giving her an opportunity of bidding him
-God-speed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Mistress Merrill was not impulsive and nimble-witted
-without having resources at command, when occasion
-demanded. She was up ahead of the ordinary lark, on
-Monday morning, making straight for the home of old
-Goody Dune, for whom she frequently gathered
-simples.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Goody Dune had not contented herself in life with
-simples only. She had gathered complexities of wisdom
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>and the things abstruse in life, for many a year. She
-was a wrinkled old woman whom children, kittens,
-dogs, horses and all things guided by instinct always
-sought in friendship at once. Anyone with patience
-enough to reconstruct her face on the lines it must
-once have worn, in her youth, would have found personal
-beauty still indicated in the old woman’s countenance.
-Her eyes still ensnared pretty lights of humor;
-her lips were still of that soft texture which in youth
-is so charming and in old age too flexible over vacancies
-where teeth are gone. Her hair was plentiful and so
-entirely gray that one might have looked at it closely
-and then have said: “Yes, the black ones seem to be
-coming; they will soon be getting quite thick.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Never yet had Garde been able to get to Goody’s
-house sufficiently early to knock on the door. Goody
-always opened it to receive her. And always the old
-woman’s great black cat stood up, on top of the tall
-clock, on which she had been lying but the moment
-before, now arching her back and stretching, to add
-her welcome to that of her mistress.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The room never had ceased to have its fascinations
-for Garde, since the first time she had seen it, in her
-childhood. The small bags, which hung from the
-rafters, along with pendants made of herbs, roots and
-bulbs, might have contained gold and precious gems,
-for all that Garde knew to the contrary, while the dark
-cupboard and the great chest increased the possibilities
-of the place, which would have been so grand to rummage
-in, had it not been for the brass warming-pan, so
-terribly like a watchful moon, forever looking down
-from the wall. Then lastly, and mostly, in some
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>particulars, there was Rex, the jackdaw, a veritable
-concentration of all the dark arts and wisdoms extant.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Good morning, my dear,” said Goody, as Garde
-entered, breathless with her haste, “you have come to
-see me early.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“She’s in love,” said the jackdaw, gravely.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, dear me!” gasped the girl.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Rex, you wicked one,” expostulated Goody, mildly.
-“Never mind, my dear, he found you out that morning
-last week.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This was the truth for Goody had said these very
-same words, several times, in the presence of Rex, no
-more than five minutes after Garde had gone, that day
-when she and Adam had met in the forest.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But I—oh, Goody, Rex is really wicked,” said
-Garde. “But I do so need you to tell me something.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Who doesn’t,” answered Goody. “What a pity it
-would be if I could never save anyone in the world
-from some little pain, or some mistake, and yet”—she
-shook her head, smiling half sadly—“how few
-human beings are willing even to listen. They must
-all burn their fingers and learn for themselves.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Fools!” said the jackdaw, “fools, fools, fools.
-I’m a fool myself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Fortunately Garde was not unaccustomed to these
-interruptions on the part of the knowing bird, so that,
-although he always made her pause and look at him,
-as if she expected to see how he did it, when he spoke,
-she was now enabled to tell Goody her troubles with
-quite as much rapidity as coherence.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She held back nothing. She told all about her
-original glimpse of Adam in the Plymouth procession,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>of their meeting, her immediate regard for him, then
-and there, the long fostering of her affection, and the
-events of the days just past. This done, she produced
-her slip of paper, on which Adam had written his
-mediocre verse, and laid it before the wise woman to
-be deciphered.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Goody read the lines several times. “How old are
-you now, my dear?” she asked, and then she added,
-“It hasn’t anything to do with your worries; it is only
-for my own foolish gratification that I ask.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I am eighteen,” said Garde.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, I should have been puzzled myself, at eighteen,”
-said the old woman. She looked into vacancy,
-for a moment, dwelling on some fond memory that
-brought her sad smile to her withered lips again.
-“But you need not be worried. He loves you, dear,
-as indeed he should, but for some reason or other he
-believes you care for somebody else, and he is therefore
-taking himself away. Believing as he does, he is certainly
-right, as well as brave, in going away.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But I don’t love—like any one else,” protested
-Garde. “And I don’t see how or why he ever got
-such an idea into his head. He doesn’t know anybody
-that I know. He went to meeting with Mrs. Phipps—Oh!
-oh—Mr. Wainsworth!—He does know Mr. Wainsworth.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, dearie, and does Mr. Wainsworth seem to
-fancy you, or anything of that sort?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And Mr. Wainsworth told us he had seen Adam,
-and that he told him everything,” said Garde, thinking
-for herself and musing aloud. “Oh, dear me!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, dear me!” said Rex, derisively.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>“And do you know where your Adam is going, and
-when?” inquired Goody. “Those ought to be your
-main considerations now.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Why, to-day,” answered Garde. “But I don’t
-know where, or anything else about it. What shall I
-do? If he goes away like that, I may never see him
-again!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Did you say he went to meeting with Goodwife
-Phipps?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes,—yes, I saw him myself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Then you can be almost certain that he is off somewhere
-with Captain William Phipps, for a more restless,
-sea-hankering man never lived and remained so
-good as Captain Phipps.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, I might have thought of that!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Then you ought to be able to think of something
-to do this very morning,” said Goody, a little, pretty
-color burning up in her wrinkled cheeks. “It is still
-early, and you have good stout legs.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde suddenly jumped up and kissed her.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Good-by!” she said. “Oh, thank you, thank
-you, so much! But—haven’t you something I can
-take to—to Captain Phipps?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Goody immediately supplied her with a small package.
-“Take him this tea,” she said. “No sailor
-should ever go to sea without it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde sped away, as if on the wings of impulse.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“She’s in love! she’s in love!” screamed the jackdaw,
-hilariously. As she ran, Garde could hear him
-clapping his wings against his body, in noisy applauding.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Running and walking alternately, by the quieter
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>streets and lanes, meeting no one on her way, Garde
-finally arrived in sight of the ship-yard belonging to William
-Phipps. Her first impulsive thought had by now
-had time to abate somewhat and give place to a more
-sober reflection. Mistress Merrill began to wonder
-what she would say, if she did manage to see Adam
-Rust. It had been by a swift inspiration, almost an
-instinct of a maidenly young woman, that she had
-provided herself with an excuse for racing to this place.
-No modest girl could bear the thought of seeming to
-run after a man, or to say anything bold to him, or
-anything calculated to show that she held herself in
-any way other than proudly aloof, where he must bring
-his love, if he would sue for her favor.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She thought of all this as she went. She also began
-to think that perhaps Goody Dune might be mistaken.
-If Adam were found and he did not love her after all,
-not for all the world would he get one sign from her
-that she loved him or cared for him one tiny bit, or
-cared whether he went or remained.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She was breathless, rosy as a cherry and excited.
-Her hair had fallen down and the plaits had loosened.
-It hung about her face and nestled against her creamy
-throat like strands of ebony, richly copper-plated. Her
-dark eyes were flashing; her lips were parted, revealing
-her teeth like little white soldiers in a row. As she
-ran, her skirts whipped upward, in curves, about the
-roundest and trimmest ankles imaginable.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She now observed a small boat, approaching the
-landing. Out in the stream the sails of the “Captain
-Spencer” were rising like clouds. Garde then discovered
-the figure of a tall man, who had been sitting on a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span>heap of logs, for he arose and went toward the dory,
-which had evidently come from the ship to fetch him.
-She recognized familiar outlines and the drag of the
-sword which the man was wearing.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Adam!” she cried. “Oh, Adam, wait!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But she was still too far away to be heard. Adam
-continued leisurely walking toward the landing. Then
-the sailor who had rowed ashore for Rust, saw the picturesque
-figure coming toward them so swiftly, and
-pointed her out to Adam.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Rust was puzzled for a moment. Then he knew it
-was Garde. His heart turned a double somersault in
-his breast. He felt himself grow red to the tips of his
-ears. He walked toward the girl as one uncertain of
-what is expected of him next.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde stopped running, when some distance away,
-and came on more slowly, brushing a wisp of hair from
-her face. Suddenly afraid of what she had done, uncertain
-of what she would or could say, to explain her
-presence so that he would think no less of her than before,
-she was glad he had not heard her call out his
-name, but she was tremendously excited. Her eyes
-shone like brown jewels. Her bosom was heaving
-rapidly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Why—good morning, Mistress Merrill,” said
-Adam.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh—it is you—Mr. Rust!” said Garde, in the
-surprise which a woman can feign on a second’s notice.
-“Why, I thought—why, good morning. I thought I
-might find Captain Phipps here, and Goody Dune
-wished me to give him this tea, and she heard—she
-heard he was going away this morning.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span>“Oh! thank you, very much,” said Adam, a little
-thickly, in his tremendous excitement, which he was
-endeavoring to restrain. “Goody Dune was very
-thoughtful, and you were kind to come.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But Goody didn’t tell me I should find you here,”
-said Garde, truthfully enough. She had never felt so
-stirred in her life. But outwardly she was beginning
-to be calm. “You told Prudence you were going
-away. Can it be possible that you are going with Captain
-Phipps?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, this morning,” said Adam.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Then there was a silence for a moment. Garde
-hardly knew what to say next. If she should make the
-slightest advance and he should receive it coldly, or
-derisively, or without understanding, she would die of
-mortification. The pause became dreadful to bear—to
-them both.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I got—Prudence gave me the brooch—from Hispaniola,”
-Garde stammered, presently.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam saw it. It was rising and falling like a little
-golden ship, on her bosom. He felt himself somewhat
-at sea. If he could only have blurted out that he loved
-her—if it had not been for Wainsworth, what a moment
-this would have been!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I am glad you like it,” he said.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde felt that there was little encouragement in
-this remark. “You will not forget to give the tea to
-Captain Phipps, will you?” she said. “I think I must
-now return.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I wish you had brought this tea down here for
-me!” said Rust suddenly, no longer answerable to his
-loyalty to Wainsworth.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>Garde had wished he would say these very words.
-She had rehearsed the answer she would make if he did.
-Her heart, had it been a bird beating its wings, could
-not have fluttered more wildly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“If I had come down here to see you, it would only
-have been to tell you that you have made some mistake,”
-she said, averting her gaze from his and looking
-on the ground.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam trembled, uncontrollably, violently. She saw
-it in his hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Do you mean——” he said.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes,” said Garde, raising her eyes to his frankly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Then I can love you! I do love you! I’ll come
-back here and marry you, sweetheart! I shall love you
-and tell you I love you and love you!” he burst forth
-passionately. “My little Garde! my love! my sweetheart!—my
-little wife that I shall have and love till my
-heart is full!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde gasped for breath in the whirlwind of his
-words, that swept her fairly off her feet. Her hand
-had been on a post, where she had been picking away
-little particles of bark. Adam took it. His big hand
-encompassed it all about. She felt his soul rush to his
-fingers, to meet the throbbing of her own emotions.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, Adam!” was all she could say for a moment.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Garde!” he replied, “my Garde—my love! Why
-didn’t you tell me about it before?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You—you were the one,” she said, somewhat regaining
-her footing. “You were going away without
-even saying good-by.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I thought——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, you thought such silly things,” interrupted
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_130'>130</span>Garde, impulsively, yet joyfully. “You thought I
-could like somebody else, and that is why you were going
-away—without even asking. And I don’t know
-why you ever came to see me the first time and made
-me name my cat Standing-Panther, if you were going
-to think such things as that.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam laughed. It was a sudden bubbling over of
-his spirits. He was the bright-eyed, joyous boy again,
-all at once.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Poor Henry—poor Henry!” he said, with irrepressible
-mirth and gladness. “But he never loved you as
-I love you, sweetheart! He couldn’t! I love you so
-that I would cut down an army to get you and run away
-with you here in my arms though all the demons of
-earth should follow!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh but, Adam—you mustn’t!” said Garde, as Rust
-was about to demonstrate the ardor of which he had
-spoken.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What, sweetheart, not one little kiss?” he said.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Why, no, of course not, Adam,” she answered him,
-blushing prettily.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Aren’t we betrothed?” he demanded.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I have not said I will marry you, have I, Adam?”
-she said, roguishly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But you shall, sweetheart. I love you so much
-that you can’t help it! I love you so it seems as if I
-shall explode! I love you, dear! Do you hear me say
-it? I love you! I love you, Garde. You do love me,
-sweetheart—just a little?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, I—love you a lit——,” Garde was saying.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“A-d-a-m R-u-s-t.——come—aboard!” came a great
-voice across the harbor, from the brig out in the stream.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>“Beg pardon, sir, the Capting’s calling,” shouted
-the sailor, who had rowed ashore for Rust.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam waved him a dumb reply. “Then you will
-give me one little kiss, for good-by, sweetheart?” he
-begged.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No—it’s too soon,” said Garde. “Besides——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But I am going away,” interrupted Adam. “And
-I have loved you seven years!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, you are not going away now—not now, when
-we have just found out there was some mistake?” said
-Garde.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I have promised to go, and therefore I must,” said
-Adam. “And I have to go and get that fortune now,
-so that I can come back and marry you, sweetheart! I
-must keep my promise to Captain Phipps.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But you won’t stay away for seven years again, will
-you, Adam?” inquired Garde, looking at him wistfully
-and candidly now, with all her love in her eyes. “If
-you do——” she left the sentence unfinished.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, I will not,” Adam assured her. “But if I remained
-away for fifty years, I should love you and love
-you still. And will you love me, dearest, as long as
-that?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, I shall love you longer than that,” answered
-Garde. She was not impulsive now, but her manner
-was sweetly earnest, therefore it was more beautiful
-than all her other beauty. “I shall always love you
-now, Adam,” she added. “It seems to me as if I always
-had.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>William Phipps roared across the water once again.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam’s less tumultuous, more enduring love, came
-into his eyes. He thought the caress of her long look
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span>was sweeter than the kiss Garde might have given
-him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I shall have to go,” he murmured. “God bless
-you and keep you, sweetheart. Good-by, dear Garde.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Good-by, Adam,” said Garde. “I shall pray for
-your swift return.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He swept her little hand to his lips for a second and
-then strode away.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde placed her other hand over the tingling fingers
-he had kissed, as if to prevent the caress from escaping.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As he went out over the water, she waved her tiny
-handkerchief to him, and permitted two warm tears to
-trickle down her face.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam’s memory of her was of her pretty, brown figure,
-seen from afar, and the look in her eyes, which he
-felt that no space could dim in his vision.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_133'>133</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER XIV.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>OVERTURES FROM THE ENEMY.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>Against</span> his long journey across the Atlantic, David
-Donner made preparations that consumed no small
-amount of time. A sufficient quantity of money had
-been subscribed by the patriots who were so concerned
-for the charter, but this was one of the least important
-details of Donner’s contemplated venture. As a matter
-of fact, the Puritans had acquired the arts of procrastination
-patiently and laboriously, for this had proved
-their most efficient weapon of defense, in those days of
-struggling against the Stuart dynasty, and therefore
-the cream of the putting-off science permeated the very
-being of David Donner. He nursed his preparations
-till they grew and flourished.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Two ships bound for England sailed without him.
-He was quite calm as he contemplated further events
-of a like nature. At length his fellow-citizens, eager
-to have him at his work, expostulated with him, mildly.
-His answer astounded them all. He said he had reasons
-for believing that Edward Randolph was beginning to
-feel inclined toward more kindliness of spirit with
-regard to the Colony and the men who had built it
-there in the wilderness. Randolph had made overtures
-of friendship to him. He appeared to be a more
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_134'>134</span>agreeable person than any one of them had heretofore
-believed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Randolph, indeed, was fairly wooing the old man’s
-regard. He had begun by nodding, pleasantly, when
-he and Donner passed in the streets. He had followed
-this up by halting at Donner’s gate and admiring his
-flowers, for which the old man had a secret passion.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“If I could dissuade him from his evil purposes,”
-said David to his colleagues, “if I could win his favor
-for the charter, and so enlist his services with us,
-instead of against us, I should be of vastly more service
-to Massachusetts by remaining here than I could be if
-I were to go to the Court of Charles.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Nevertheless the governors held the promise of David
-Donner sacred. He would go as agreed, unless he
-could shortly furnish something substantial as a result
-of this coy flirtation of Randolph’s to gain his good
-opinion.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It had been observed that Randolph had been a regular
-attendant at South Church for several Sundays.
-This new departure of his had been at first regarded
-with suspicion. Coupled with his attention to David,
-however, it began to look honest and therefore hopeful.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Grandfather Donner was pothering about in his
-garden, on one of these mornings, when Randolph
-paused at the gate, as he had frequently done, and
-asked leave of the old man to present him with a small
-rose-tree, having even then a beautiful rose upon it, to
-plant in some sunny corner of the place.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>No olive branch of peace could have opened Donner’s
-heart more effectually than did this simple matter.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span>“Come in, friend,” said he. “Come in.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It has always seemed a pity to me,” said Randolph,
-“that men whose political ideas may happen to differ
-should not be friendly in other particulars, with no
-more thought of their daily affairs than they would
-have of the clothing upon their backs.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Just so,” said David, who thought the time propitious
-for missionary work at home, “but I should
-think, however, that with your youth and earnestness
-you might have a great future before you, as one of us,
-working as we work, hoping as we hope, and helping to
-build this new commonwealth on a rock of solidity and
-unity.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I have thought of that,” said the heavy-browed
-visitor. “But how would a man proceed to accomplish
-a result so remote from one like myself?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Would you plant it here, or next to the wall?”
-said David, holding the rose-tree in his hand and looking
-about for a suitable place in which to tuck its
-roots.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I would plant it here, by all means,” said Randolph.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Donner began to dig in the earth with a knife.
-“Well,” said he, “I should say you would do best to
-get married and adopt our ways, and labor with us to
-maintain our government and rights.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Randolph’s deep-set eyes gleamed with satisfaction.
-He said: “You may not be surprised to know that I
-have had such an ambition as this. Could I look for
-your encouragement and support, if I entertained the
-idea of marrying, here among your people, and making
-my life with your lives?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span>“Why, to be sure, friend. I would be the first to
-welcome the attachment of your heart and your interests
-among us. And have you looked with favor upon
-some one of our young women?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Randolph noted with pleasure that the rose-tree was
-firmly planted and the earth about it patted and pressed
-down almost affectionately. “It would hardly be fair,”
-he said, “to give one flower, only to ask for another.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Would you have some of my poor flowers?” said
-the old man, innocently. “Why you shall, then, anything
-you like.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I spoke of my hopes that I have dared to entertain,”
-said the visitor. “I referred to the fairest flower in all
-Boston, indeed in all Massachusetts.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Donner looked up at him quickly. He rose to his
-feet, having been down on one knee to plant the rose.
-“Have I understood you aright?” he said.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It has slipped from my tongue unguardedly,” said
-the younger man. “Your encouragement of my hopes
-led me to this confidence. But I feel I can speak to
-you almost as if you were in the attitude of a father.
-I can come to you where I could not come to any other
-man in Boston. I have seen Mistress Merrill, in the
-simplicity and piety of her life, and this has made me
-wish to become one of you, working with you and living
-your lives. Can you not encourage me so far as this?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>David Donner was all but rendered speechless. Such
-a thought as that Garde had grown up and blossomed had
-never entered his mind. But not only to find that this
-was so, but also to have Edward Randolph—the enemy—desiring
-this alliance, this was more than he could
-think of, for a moment. He had egged the man on,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_137'>137</span>while he had some vague idea of some other young
-woman in mind—some other man’s daughter, or granddaughter,—he
-had been ready to abet such an arrangement,
-gladly, for the good of the colony, but to find
-that it was Garde that Randolph wanted—this was
-indeed a bolt from a clear sky.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Friend,” he said, finally, “I shall have to think
-this over.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I feared it would sound abrupt,” said the visitor,
-“yet it is not a sudden fancy with me. It has been
-my constant thought for many weeks. I have even
-foreseen difficulties. I have worked so many years
-apparently against the interests most dear to the
-colonists.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Donner nodded at him, for this sounded frank. But
-the old man’s thoughts were afield, wandering, for the
-proposition came home to him with tremendous significance.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But,” resumed Randolph, “any man can conceive
-that an agent must do, to the best of his ability, that
-which he honestly believes to be his duty, howsoever
-unpleasant the task imposed upon him may finally appear.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“True,” said David, still vaguely.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I have done my work as well as I could,” the man
-went on. “I have accumulated matter of vast significance.
-I am almost sorry that I have done so thoroughly
-well, the task appointed me, and still all this work
-might make me the better fitted for citizenship among
-you, if I follow out your suggestion.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Donner was not insensible of the threat which this
-artful speech implied, the threat that all this accumulated
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_138'>138</span>matter and knowledge would be used against
-the colony and the charter, if this man were not made
-one of their number. But Garde was not to be lightly
-weighed in the balance. Randolph’s frankness partially
-disarmed the old man; and the life of the charter, he
-felt, was the life of their independence, their manhood,
-their very being. The tiny roots and tendrils of American
-patriotism grew from the very hearts of those
-early fathers of liberty.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“This is a matter which would much concern
-Mistress Merrill,” said Donner. “I made the error of
-trying to coerce her mother. I shall never coerce
-Garde.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I trust not,” replied his guest. “And yet I hope
-you will think upon the matter and mayhap speak to
-Mistress Merrill in this regard, for although I am in a
-conflict, ’twixt my duty to my King and the high regard
-which I have been constrained to place with you
-and your people, through Mistress Merrill, yet I fear
-I am eager to be remiss with Charles, rather than a
-traitor to my own heart.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I will think upon it,” said David, slowly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Randolph thanked him, spoke of the rose again and
-went his way. He was a gardener himself, and having
-planted his seed, knew enough not to dig it up to see if
-it had yet begun to sprout.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>David Donner sat down to think, not of Garde and not
-of all that Randolph’s visit signified, but of Garde’s
-mother and his harshness when her heart had burgeoned
-with aspirations for itself, and of the pain and wretchedness
-he had brought to all concerned. He thought of
-the mad little elopement into which he had driven his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_139'>139</span>daughter, which had ended so disastrously to the honest
-but poverty-overtaken father of her child. Then he
-thought of the home-coming, the birth of Garde and
-the death of the forlorn little mother. He could hear
-again her faint words of forgiveness; he could see again
-her wan smile on her faded lips; he could still feel the
-weak, white hands that raised to slip themselves about
-his neck and which, when he had put them down, he
-folded on her breast, still forever.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I have never coerced little Garde,” he said aloud,
-“never, Ruth, never.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER XV.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>LOVE’S INVITING LIGHT.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>Something</span> had happened to Mistress Garde Merrill,
-even as far back as upon that first Sunday at Meeting,
-when Adam had been beneath the South Church roof,
-where she could see him from the corners of her eyes.
-Love had left its sign-manual upon her. She had
-suddenly become illumined from within, by her heart’s
-emotions, so that she appeared to shine from afar, in
-the somewhat gray and unjoyous lives of the Puritan
-young men about her.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thus it was that, in addition to Randolph, who attended
-the service solely for the purpose of feasting his
-eyes upon her beauty, there was always Wainsworth,
-who heard nothing of the Meeting’s cheerless proceedings.
-And there was also young Piety Tootbaker, who
-knew not at which shrine he was worshiping, from
-Sunday to Sunday.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde was half the time at her uncle, John Soam’s.
-This fact increased the facilities for the young men to
-seek her presence, for the Soams were life-loving people,
-in spite of their Puritan conformity to the somewhat
-melancholy and smileless practices of the day. Moreover,
-John Soam, who thought himself something of a
-farmer, as well as a carpenter and Jack-of-all-genius,
-not infrequently impressed the would-be suitors into
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_141'>141</span>various duties with which he was amusing himself about
-his place.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Piety Tootbaker was a fat young man of modest wealth
-in his own right, his father having died leaving Piety
-his sole heir. He was a heavy lump, who came often
-and said next to nothing, so that his intentions might
-have lain anywhere between Prudence, Garde and the
-family cow, for aught that any one could ascertain
-definitely. He was John Soam’s easiest prey, when the
-farmer or carpenter, as the case might be, was seized
-with a desire to work.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Randolph contented himself with courting David
-Donner. He felt no small contempt for Wainsworth
-and Tootbaker, whose movements he was stealthily
-watching. He had placed his reliance on power always,
-and with complete success. The present was no time
-to alter his usual tactics.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Grandfather Donner, left alone with his thoughts,
-arrived at no conclusions rashly. He went systematically
-to work on his friends, to get from each an expression
-of belief that Randolph, if he would become
-one of them, working for instead of against them,
-would be a valuable factor for the preservation of the
-charter. This opinion he readily secured, especially as
-he gave no hint, as yet, of the method by which Randolph’s
-conversion was finally to be accomplished.
-Indeed so much promise could his friends discern in the
-securing of an end so commendable, that David Donner
-began to justify himself in the thought of aiding this
-matter with all reasonable power. He encouraged
-the growth of a better opinion of Randolph, in his own
-mind. He argued the man’s case with his friends, with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_142'>142</span>fanatical insistence, until they perforce admitted virtues
-in Randolph’s disposition, heretofore quite overlooked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thus he wrought upon himself until, mentally, he
-accepted the ex-enemy as his grandson-in-law, to whom
-he was willing to extend his welcome, if not actually his
-love. With this development of the case, his dislike
-for the journey to England increased, while, far from
-abating, his concern for the charter grew the more
-active, as he dreamed of preserving it here at his own
-home.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>His state of mind was not a thing at which he arrived
-immaturely. The proposition had come to him with
-something of a shock. He had never contemplated
-Garde’s marriage at all. She was still a child to him,
-or at least, she had been, up to the moment when
-Randolph spoke. Not the least difficult of his tasks
-with himself had been that of compelling himself to
-admit that Garde had actually arrived at the threshold
-of womanhood—that she was marriageable. This having
-been finally accomplished, Randolph had half won
-his battle.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As long as Garde would presently desire to marry, then
-why not Randolph, especially as such an alliance would
-be of such tremendous political significance? Yet he
-continued still to tell himself that Ruth’s child should
-not be coerced in any direction whither she was not
-counseled by her heart and her own inclination to proceed.
-He could see no reason, however, why she should
-entertain any notions which might be at variance with
-his own. Nevertheless it was not without emotion
-that he finally summoned Garde to the interview in
-which he meant to broach the proposition.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_143'>143</span>“My child,” he began, “I have desired to have a
-talk with you, which bears upon matters of some
-importance to you and of vast significance to the
-state.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, Grandther,” said Garde dutifully, and she sat
-down with her knitting. “I suppose you are going to
-England at last.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That remains to be seen,” said David. “The need
-for something to be done is great. No loyal soul in all
-our commonwealth could wish for aught but a chance
-to serve this colony in her present straits. Have you
-great love for Massachusetts and her people, Garde?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Is not love a passion?” she answered, without raising
-her eyes from her work.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Love of one’s country is not an unseemly passion,”
-said her grandfather.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Then I have for Massachusetts a seemly regard,”
-said Mistress Merrill, who had given all her love elsewhere.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And could you sacrifice somewhat of your personal
-thoughts, and mayhap desires, for the colony? Could
-you be a little patriot in the hour of your country’s
-need, my child?” asked the old man, his look intent
-upon her face.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde thought he doubtless referred to his projected
-trip abroad. She was inclined to believe that she could
-endure the personal sacrifice of living with the Soams
-during his absence.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I should try to be dutiful,” she answered.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>David Donner felt his old heart knocking on his ribs.
-It was a moment of much intensity for him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You have always been a dutiful daughter,” he said.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_144'>144</span>“Have you ever had a thought, child, of the womanhood
-come upon you, and that mayhap you will one day
-become a wife now, and be as other women, a child no
-longer?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Any young woman would think on these matters
-by nature,” replied Garde, sagely. “But I have
-thought of nothing to occur soon, as to such a matter.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, no, to be sure,” said David, nervously. “Yet
-I have desired to speak with you upon this subject, for
-an estimable young man has asked me to do this in his
-favor.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde, who had believed his thought anywhere but
-here, looked up at him quickly. She saw the old man’s
-face drawn and eager, his eyes bright with the flame of
-incipient fanaticism. She was wholly at a loss to understand
-him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“A young man?” she repeated. “Some one has
-spoken to you thus of me?” For a moment her
-thought ran wildly to Adam. Could it be possible that
-he had returned and spoken to Grandther Donner
-already?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Donner cleared his throat. He was pale, for he had
-not come to this moment without some violence to his
-own conscience.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My child,” he said, a little huskily, “a great opportunity
-is offered to you to render a vast service to your
-country—to Massachusetts. Edward Randolph, who
-has long been against us, has come to me with an earnest
-desire to become one of us, working with us and not
-against us longer, and asking your hand in marriage,
-to cement the unity of his interests and hopes with
-ours. He appears to be an earnest, sincere man, at last
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span>heartily in sympathy with our struggles, and worthy of
-good citizenship among us. I have told him I would
-speak to you upon this matter, Garde, and take him
-your answer.” He paused and mopped his forehead
-with his handkerchief.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde could hardly believe her ears. She looked at
-her grandfather oddly. The color left her cheeks, for
-a moment, only to rush back in a flood at thought of
-Adam and the betrothal, to her so sacred. She had no
-thought whatsoever, during that interval, of the colony,
-or of patriotism, or of anything save what this proposition
-meant to Adam and to her. As for Randolph, she
-know him only by sight, and her instinct had prompted
-her to shun him, if not to loathe him. Her impulse
-was to start to her feet and cry out a shrill repudiation
-of the man’s offer. But the sight of Donner’s face
-awed her. She had never seen him look like this before.
-She remained seated. She resumed her knitting.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But I do not even know Mr. Randolph,” she said,
-mildly. “I have not been taught to trust or to respect
-him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But if we have done him injustice,” said David,
-eagerly, “surely we must welcome an opportunity to
-correct it. He has worked against us, it is true. He
-could overthrow our charter, but he chooses rather to
-become one of our number. If I go abroad, I may fail
-at the Court of Charles. If we can save our charter
-here at home, it will be the grandest thing we have ever
-done. And you can do it, my child—you can do this
-great thing! You will, I feel you will!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde was a little terrified. The old man’s anxiety
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span>was almost dreadful to see. Had he been laying bare
-a steel crow-bar in his nature, she could not have comprehended
-more thoroughly the stubbornness which she
-felt opposition to him now would discover in her grandfather.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“This comes to me so suddenly,” she said, “that I
-cannot at once think upon it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But you can think what it means to the colony!”
-said the man, passionately. “You would wish to save
-the charter! Mr. Randolph has become my friend. I
-have found that my former estimate of his character
-was false. He can take away our charter in a moment—his
-work is done. But he also can save us! He
-shall save us! Are you a daughter of this commonwealth—a
-daughter of a patriot? You can save the
-charter. Oh, what a glorious honor! You will let me
-take your answer back?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde’s color had gone again, not to return. This
-was a moment that frightened her heart. No one could
-have lived there as she had done and not be saturated
-with the hopes and fears of the colonists, not be trembling
-for the government, the independence, the manhood
-they had builded up on those stern rocks. In
-her first baby utterances she had lisped the word
-“Charter.” For ten years their charter had been their
-Holy Grail to those American men and women of Massachusetts.
-The air was pregnant with patriotism.
-The Charter had hung trembling in the balance month
-after month, ever since Cromwell’s son had abdicated
-the English throne and Charles had sat in power once
-again. Garde could not have been the true daughter
-of America she was, had she not thrilled first with the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_147'>147</span>possibilities of this fateful moment, before her soul shivered
-at the price she would have to pay to perform this
-splendid-seeming deed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Sense of duty had been bred and ingrained in the
-children of that hour. It held a sway well-nigh incredible
-in youthful minds. It fell athwart Garde’s
-thought with appalling weight. And yet her soul
-leaped to Adam’s arms for protection, as her heart
-bounded to his with love. She felt as if she could
-crash through the window and run away, to the woods,——anywhere,
-to escape even the contemplation of this
-thing. Had it not been for her knitting she felt she
-must have done something dreadful. As it was she
-seemed to tie herself into the pattern—the wilder self—and
-so to gain a sense of calmness.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I could hardly answer this so soon,” she said.
-“Haste first leaves no time for thought after.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Thought, child?” demanded the old man, on whom
-her calmness acted as her mother’s had before her.
-“Can you wish to hesitate, when the whole state
-stands breathless for your answer?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And did you hold me so lightly that you said, ‘Yes,’
-the moment this was presented to you?” said Garde.
-“Grandther, I was but a young girl this morning.
-What has a moment done to make me such a woman as
-this?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But our charter—our government—our liberty,
-child!” cried David, raising his two shaking hands
-above his head. “You can save them all!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And is it so light a matter for me to become the
-mother of our liberty?” said Garde, on whom the spirit
-of wisdom had strangely descended, no doubt from
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span>Goody Dune. “Grandther, you would wish to think
-of this yourself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She had risen from her seat. She faced her grandfather
-and he saw her eyes nearly on a level with his
-own. A look of her mother, sad, appealing, forgiving,
-played intangibly across her face. The old man’s look
-seemed to follow its transit. He passed his nervous
-fingers along his brow. The fire died away in his eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Then think it over,” he said, huskily. “Think it
-over, my child, think it over. I will not coerce your
-decision. No, I’ll not coerce her, Ruth, no, no, I’ll
-not!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He moved to the door, as one in a dream, and left the
-room.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER XVI.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>GARDE’S LONELY VIGIL.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>David Donner</span> was not to be deterred for long, by
-the shadow of a memory which he had seen flit like a
-ghost of his past, across Garde’s features. He was arriving
-at that age when a man’s memory is not so strong
-as in years past and when the events of the day at hand
-seem therefore the more important. He fretted under
-his promise to go abroad, desiring this to be abrogated
-by his fellow-colonists, and this could only be done
-when he should persuade them that the charter would
-be saved, or at least his country better served, by his
-remaining where he was. He had not as yet spoken to
-his colleagues of Randolph’s proposition. He was waiting
-for Garde to give him her answer.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The girl watched the old man narrowly, to see how
-long she could wait, for her answer was no more ready
-after a week than it had been on the first day. This
-was not entirely because her affections were placed elsewhere.
-She was a little patriot, otherwise her love for
-Adam would have prompted her reply at once, and
-from hot lips. She was undergoing a genuine struggle
-with herself. If it were true that she could save the
-charter, should she permit her own happiness or Adam’s
-to stand before the happiness and rights of all the
-Massachusetts people? Had not Adam himself written
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span>that when there are three and only two could be happy,
-the one, representing the minority, should suffer sorrow,
-that the greater number might preserve their joy?
-Then, when she and Adam were only two, how much
-more they should endure sorrow, when all the people of
-that colony weighed against them in the question.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>No, it was not a simple matter in which her own desires
-could speak out above the clamor of duty. And
-yet, she could not feel the truth of Randolph’s position
-and promise. Suppose he had not the ability, so to
-save the charter as her grandfather believed he would.
-Suppose, having the power, he should prove dishonest,
-when once he had won his desire. What was there in
-a wife to tie him to his obligation? If politics had
-prompted him to go so far, would they not continue to
-prompt him further, after the marriage had given him
-his way? To sacrifice herself and Adam was to Garde
-a mighty thing. She was capable of any heroism, but
-her mind and her nature exacted that it be not specious.
-No travail of motherhood ever gave a more acute or
-prolonged agony than was Garde’s portion as she strove
-to give birth to a wise and right resolution.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Her grandfather, in the meantime, waxed more and
-more impatient. It had been his habit from early manhood
-to have his own way. In avoiding precisely the
-difficulties into which he had fallen with Garde’s mother,
-he felt that he was on the safe side in his promise not
-to coerce his grandchild. This gave him the greater
-latitude in which to bring pressure upon her from what
-he conceived to be another standpoint. Yet that repression
-of his feelings and passions which he had
-practised for long among the Puritans, made him more
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>patient with Garde’s indecision than would otherwise
-have been the case. He became childishly eager, more
-than harshly insistent, in this frame of mind. He
-coaxed her many times in a day, to see what her bravery
-and loyalty could do.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Christmas and New Year were long past, and still
-Garde had made no decision. In the spring, when she
-could make no more excuses for delaying, she told her
-grandfather how gladly she would comply with his
-wishes, if only she could know, absolutely, that Randolph
-would keep faith with the colonists and secure
-them their charter against all need for anxiety. This
-was her honest word. It came from her heart as if
-every word had been jagged, leaving her wounded and
-all but ill.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Let Mr. Randolph prove that he will work for our
-good with the King,” she said. “Let him secure us
-but one year of ease from this constant worry—let him
-show us a year of the favor he can win from Charles,
-and then I shall be content. This is not much that I
-ask. If his heart is so set upon me as he says, surely
-he could wait this time and do these things. A true
-regard could wait for as many years as Jacob served for
-Rachel.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>With this decision, which he regarded as a binding
-promise, and which he represented to Randolph as a
-betrothal, David Donner had to be content. Randolph
-could not, without betraying intended perfidy, object
-to conditions so wisely conceived. Argument was precluded.
-Grimly shutting his jaws, the man consented
-to the arrangement, for else he must have abandoned
-his quest altogether.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>As the months wore on, he went regularly to South
-Church, there to sit out the service, which he detested
-like poison, for the purpose of fixing his eyes upon
-Garde, as if he had been a beauty-vulture, only to be
-satisfied by gazing upon her until he was all but self-hypnotized.
-As for Garde, conscious as she was that
-the man thus stared in her direction, she never so much
-as once gave his eyes an answering glance. She did
-not love him; there should never be any pretense,
-come what might, that she did. Her thoughts and her
-heart beats were true to Adam, and so should remain
-to the end.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>David Donner told his colleagues in triumph of what
-he had done, of the answer Garde had made and of the
-hope they had for the future. He had justified himself
-in remaining in Boston.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The measure of the power wielded, even at the throne
-of England by Edward, Randolph could never have been
-estimated in Massachusetts, but month after month
-slipped away while the charter remained intact and the
-men of that anxious colony breathed with a sense of
-relief which none had felt before, in nearly a score of
-years.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde, with what hope her year’s respite inspired,
-began her lonely wait and watch for Adam’s return.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER XVII.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>A NIGHT ATTACK.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>The</span> night was a thing of perfection, on the sea.
-The moon rode aloft and its light danced merrily on the
-tips of the waves. A smart breeze pouted the sails on
-the “Captain Spencer” till she plowed her way like a
-skimming albatross through the phosphorescence of the
-southern field of ocean.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>On deck the beef-eaters, Adam and William Phipps,
-with the mate and a jovial boatswain, were in high
-spirits. They were nearing their goal, after a run
-which would have awakened some sort of a rollicking
-devil in a deacon. Captain Phipps had felt a spell of
-bubbling coming upon him for days. It always did, the
-moment he dropped Boston out of sight, over the green,
-serrated edge of the riotous Atlantic. Therefore he
-had broken off the neck of a bottle of good, red juice,
-which had lain for a year in the hold of the brig, and
-this liquified comfort had circulated generously.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The beef-eaters, arm in arm, were now spraddling
-about the deck in a dance of which Terpsichore had
-never been guilty, even in her A B C’s of the art. The
-boatswain was furnishing music from a tin pipe, the
-one virtue of which was that it was tireless.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At length he altered the tune, or at least, so he said,
-and after a bar or two of the measure had lost itself in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span>the sails and shrouds, Adam cleared his throat for a
-song.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c022'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in2'>“In the Northern sea I loved a maid,</div>
- <div class='line in4'>As cold as a polar bear,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>But of taking cold I was not afraid—</div>
- <div class='line in8'>Sing too rel le roo,</div>
- <div class='line in8'>And the wine is red—</div>
- <div class='line in2'>For a kiss is a kiss, most anywhere,</div>
- <div class='line in4'>When a man’s heart goes to his head.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Ho! the heart of a man is an onion, boys,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>An onion, boys, with a shedding skin.</div>
- <div class='line'>And it never gets old, for you off with its hide,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>When you meet a new love, and it’s fresh within!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in2'>In the southern sea I loved a lass,</div>
- <div class='line in4'>As warm as a day in June;</div>
- <div class='line in2'>And oh that a summer should ever pass—</div>
- <div class='line in8'>Sing too rel le roo.</div>
- <div class='line in8'>And the wine is red—</div>
- <div class='line in2'>For my summer, my lads, was gone too soon,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>With a man’s heart gone to his head.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Ho, the heart of a man, etc.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in2'>In the Western seas I loved a miss,</div>
- <div class='line in4'>As shy as the sharks that swim;</div>
- <div class='line in2'>And it’s duties we owe to the art of the kiss—</div>
- <div class='line in8'>Sing too rel le roo,</div>
- <div class='line in8'>And the wine is red—</div>
- <div class='line in2'>If a maiden so shy should be took with a whim,</div>
- <div class='line in4'>And a man’s heart gone to his head.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Ho, the heart of a man is an onion, boys,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>An onion, boys, with a shedding skin.</div>
- <div class='line'>And it never grows old, for you off with its hide,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>When you meet a new love, and it’s fresh within!”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c023'><span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span>There were more of these verses, one to fit every sea,
-of which there be more than seven, as the song proved.
-The beef-eaters and Captain Phipps joined in the
-chorus, for the boatswain gave it a rare flavor of
-music.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At the wheel, the second mate had jammed a marlin
-spike between the spokes, to hold the brig on the
-wind, and sitting cosily down had gone fast asleep.
-The lookout aloft had become absorbed in the singing,
-to which he was bending every attention. In the midst
-of a chorus, which might and might not have been the
-finale of Adam’s ditty, there was a sudden alarm that
-rang from one end to the other of the brig, and all too
-abruptly a black hulk of a ship, with never a light,
-came sizzling the brine in her speed, the length of a
-few anchor-chains away, and made for the “Spencer”
-with dire intent.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The music ceased as if it had been cut off with a
-knife. Scuttling swiftly to the side of the ship and
-then bawling orders, and chasing to the armory in hot
-haste, Phipps, Adam and the others yelled that a pirate
-was upon them. The words, like an incantation of
-marvelous potency, summoned men like so many
-gnomes, from hatches, companion-ways and fo’castle,
-on the instant.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The brig’s deck suddenly swarmed with its own
-men, running hither and thither, shouting, stumbling,
-swearing, while Phipps and Rust came darting back
-with arms full of cutlasses, pistols and muskets,
-gathered helter-skelter, and now thrown with a great
-clatter upon the planking.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Scrambling here to arm themselves, the sailors heard
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>a crunch, felt the brig shudder beneath their feet and
-beheld half a dozen iron hooks come flying over the
-gunwale from the pirate, and saw them jerk snug up to
-the rail, as the raiders pulled taut on the lines that
-quickly lashed the two vessels together.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A black cascade of men came leaping from the pirate,
-landing heavily on the “Spencer’s” deck. Their pistols
-blazed yellow exclamation points of fire, as the men
-struck on their feet, and then with a clash of steel on
-steel, Rust, Phipps and half a score of sailors rushed
-upon the invaders and a mad scuffle and melée ensued.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Rust was conscious of a few things about him in the
-confusion. He thought how cold the naked blades
-looked, slashing in the moonlight; he heard the yells
-and curses against the background of a slapping sail
-that was making a sound like a weird alarm; he felt
-the strength of the big rascal, who was cutting at him
-with that brute force and disregard for skill which is so
-deadly to engage. He thought the fellow would slice
-his saber in two. He lost no time in feinting. The
-brute of a buccaneer lurched forward to sweep his
-blade clean through Adam’s body and then suddenly a
-moonbeam seemed to cleave its way through the
-ruffian’s neck. He dropped his sword and spun around
-with his head lolling sideways and went down.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam rushed to the taff-rail. The pirate ship was
-straining at the ropes by which her hooks secured the
-two black hulks together. Smiting these taut ropes
-with mad fury, Rust saw the pirate drift away and the
-gulf of water widen between the two vessels, while the
-scoundrels aboard the robber-ship yelled a discordant
-chorus of curses.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>Then back into the fray, the din of which was rising,
-as wounded men smarted and yelled and rushed upon
-one another anew, like snarling wolves, Adam darted,
-pistoling a creature who came running upon him and
-then heaving him overboard as the fellow writhed on
-the planks.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The sailors of the “Spencer” had somewhat the
-best of the conflict, which was a match in scuffling
-hotly all over the deck. Less than a dozen of the
-pirates had been able to leap aboard before the vessels
-were apart, and their bawlings for help to their ship
-had been rendered vain, for the moment, by Adam’s
-prompt action in cutting the lines. However, the sea-scoundrels
-were versed in fighting, where the sailors
-were merely rough-and-tumble sons of Cain whose rage
-was their principal accoutrement. They were at their
-adversaries, hammer and tongs. They were wrestling
-with some, hacking at others, swearing at all. It was
-a small pandemonium in which it was next to impossible
-to distinguish friend from foe.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Phipps, like the woodsman from Maine that he was,
-hewed his way from one group to another, shouting to
-his men, hoarsely. The beef-eaters, as inseparable as
-when they were dancing, chose but one man between
-them, and one such they peeled to a horrid core, as
-the demon rushed upon their sharpened weapons.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam stepped in a crawling line of gore, its head
-silver-tipped in the moonlight, and slipped till it
-wrenched him to hold his footing. He saw the sailors
-crowding three of the pirates to the rail and, joining
-them, battered the cutlasses from their fists and helped
-to hoist them bodily over and into the sea.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_158'>158</span>The din had hardly abated anything of its volume.
-The scene was one of the maddest activity. But the
-robbers not already done for, were now at bay against
-the masts, the capstan or the rail. One tripped backward
-over a coil of rope. The next instant he was
-screaming help and murder at the top of his lungs.
-This he continued even after a dreadful rattle and
-spluttering came in his voice.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Over the reddened decks one or two wounded creatures
-were crawling, one wiping gore from his face
-and flinging it off his fingers. Swords and pistols lay
-about. One dying human was lying on his side,
-with his arm extended and his index finger slowly
-crooked and straightened and crooked again, as if he
-beckoned to death to come more quickly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The sail began to slap at the mast again, as the brig
-swung bow on in the wind and stopped in stays. The
-croaked curses of the pirates, on their ship, which was
-now again drawing swiftly toward the “Spencer,” made
-Adam and Phipps suddenly run to the brig’s brass gun,
-which was looking dumbly forth toward the pirate.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Rust had filled his pocket with loose powder. The
-cannon was already loaded. He poured a small pyramid
-of powder on the vent and he and Phipps, with
-the combined strength of two giants, slewed the piece
-around till a ball from the pirate could have been tossed
-into its yawning muzzle.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>From the galley, the cook came running with blazing
-coals on a shovel. He had been watching the gun.
-The pirate missed her mark. She came up in stays, just
-as the “Spencer” got again on the wind. The bows
-of the robber-craft were almost in touch with the brig.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_159'>159</span>Adam saw that the cannon would fail to sweep the
-pirate’s decks—that the shot would be practically
-wasted, if it went at the gun’s present elevation. With a
-sudden impulse he leaped astride its smooth, brass nose
-and bore it down, depressing the muzzle toward the
-water, just as the crazy cook turned his shovel upside
-down on the primed vent.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There was suddenly a deafening roar. The concussion
-shook every man’s feet from under him. The gun
-leaped backward, like a bucking horse, and Rust went
-sprawling on the decks, for he had been left abruptly,
-with no support beneath him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The shot tore a hole in the pirate the size of a hogshead,
-squarely on her water-line, in her starboard bow.
-She came about in the wind and the sea rushed into
-her hold in a torrent.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A dreadful silence ensued when the air was clear of
-the detonation. Then a moan from a dying wretch on
-the “Spencer’s” deck seemed to touch into being a
-chorus of yells from the doomed pirate, where the
-murderous crew found themselves armed to the teeth
-and yet sinking, defenseless, into the very jaws of
-death. Their sails slackened again and shook with a
-sound as of funeral shrouds.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The “Spencer” scudded away into the boulevard of
-silver which the moon was paving with its light. The
-sinking pirate gathered the cannon’s smoke about her
-and settled swiftly, but not in silence, into the grave
-that fitted so snugly about its body.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_160'>160</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER XVIII.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>THE GLINT OF TREASURE.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>The</span> brig “Captain Spencer,” came duly to her goal at
-the green Bahamas. What with wounds received from
-the pirates, who had called so unceremoniously, and
-from sea-sickness, which they always had, the beef-eaters
-were glad of the sight of land. Phipps and Rust
-were filled with rejoicings by reason of the dreams they
-had of thrusting a naked arm apiece into the sea and
-fetching up handfuls of gold with which to return to
-two sweet women in Boston.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>All hands were presently doomed to disappointment.
-Phipps learned that his treasure-ship was indeed a fact,
-but that she was small, both in tonnage and her burden
-of Spanish coins, that she lay in many fathoms of
-water and that, indeed, she was scarcely worth serious
-attention.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Phipps was, however, a popular man at these bits of
-jeweled land in the emerald sea. He had traded there
-on several occasions, making friends always. Thus it
-came that a hobbling old salt, whom he had befriended
-in a scrimmage, consoled him with the information of
-a large treasure-ship, sunk somewhere in the neighborhood
-of Hispaniola. He resolved at once to pursue
-this matter to the end, for which purpose the “Captain
-Spencer” would be wholly inadequate, as the Spanish
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_161'>161</span>Main was as filled with pirates as the sky may be of
-buzzards over dying caravans.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>With the approval of the entire party, the brig was
-now headed for England, Adam and Phipps feeling
-confident of their ability to secure a larger ship for
-their enterprise.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>On familiar soil when the “Spencer” at length
-came to anchor, off the tower of London, in the
-Thames, Adam had little difficulty in finding a market
-for the brig. With the proceeds of the sale in his
-pockets, William Phipps, under Adam’s tuition, blossomed
-out as a gentleman of no little personal attractiveness.
-Adam, as one born to the purple, donned a
-handsome attire and swaggered with all the elegance
-of a prince.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He was soon in the midst of his former acquaintances,
-with one of whom he fought a duel at the end of the
-first week, requiring his vanquished foe, who was only
-sufficiently wounded to be satisfied, to kneel in humility
-and to wipe the victor’s blade clean of his own red
-juice, on the hem of his coat.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Rust until now had never had occasion to regret the
-disfavor in which Charles Stuart held him, since a certain
-distinguished lady had declared the “Sachem” to be
-vastly more entertaining than his Majesty with ready
-narratives. However, he was undismayed, for with
-James, fated so soon to be king, he was amazingly
-friendly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>William Phipps, for his part, needed but one introduction
-and no recommendation. Above all things
-temporal, James reveled in naval adventure. Blunt,
-gallant Captain Phipps appealed to him instantly. The
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_162'>162</span>tale of the treasure-ship set him aflame with eagerness
-to go with this adventurous company to the western
-Indies, where he could readily picture himself, Phipps
-and Adam fighting their way to the rotting strongholds
-of the Spanish galleon, sunk there half a century before.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>With an alacrity which was of a highly complimentary
-character to Phipps and Rust, the Prince procured a
-fine vessel, the “Rose-Algier,” with a crew of ninety-five
-men and an armament of eighteen guns, and gave
-her into the trust of his friends for their enterprise.
-It was agreed that inasmuch as he thus found the ship
-and the expenses of the venture, he should have ninety
-per cent. of whatsoever treasure should be recovered,
-Phipps declaring for himself and Adam how contented
-they would be with the remaining one-tenth.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Late in the year, which was 1684, the “Rose-Algier”
-bore away for Hispaniola, Phipps, Adam, and
-the faithful beef-eaters, whom seasickness nor peril
-could drive from Adam’s side, soon beginning to wonder
-what manner of crew it was with which they had
-shipped. A few weeks later, King Charles the Second
-died. James ascended the throne. Thus the treasure-seekers
-were backed by the English monarch and his
-government.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A sunken ship has frequently proved to be a small
-thing, and the ocean a large one, to the seeker, eager for
-its cargo. The “Rose-Algier” dipped into all manner
-of harbors and her master asked all manner of people
-all manner of questions, to no avail. The months
-slipped by, in this tedious occupation, the crew grew
-weary of a voyage so profitless and so entirely unpromising.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_163'>163</span>The grumblings of mutiny have a way of keeping below
-decks, where they simmer volcanically. Nevertheless
-the beef-eaters heard something of the discontent
-in the fo’castle, where the ruffians of the crew were for
-seizing the vessel, running up the black flag and turning
-pirate forthwith. The Rose was a swift, great bird
-upon the waves, she was armed to the teeth, she was
-well provisioned. What more could be desired for buccaneering?
-And piracy paid its disciples handsomely.
-Spain and France, particularly, had a hundred argosies
-in constant flight between the West Indies and
-home. Gold was the commonest burden of all. Your
-pirate was a dare-devil, whose life was reputed to be one
-long round of adventure, drinking and looting. All
-pirates either died happy or hung, and anything was
-better than this pothering about in a good ship, seeking
-for treasure that was sunk admittedly, while millions of
-treasure was afloat and nearly all to be had for the asking.
-With precious few exceptions the crew agreed
-that this was true enough for every practical purpose.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_164'>164</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER XIX.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>MUTINY.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>Fortunately</span> mutinies frequently come to a head
-prematurely. On the “Rose” a jealousy hatched between
-rival factions of the plotters, so that before they
-were any of them in actual readiness, one faction, in
-order to be ahead of and therefore in command over
-the other, rushed upon the quarter-deck one night
-and made a sudden descent on Captain Phipps, who
-happened for the moment to be there alone.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Phipps became renowned for his presence of mind
-and courage. On this occasion he promptly knocked
-down three or four of the ruffians, and then with a
-loaded revolver and a handy marlin spike, he awed the
-others into submission before the alarm had even time
-to spread. The malefactors being summarily placed in
-irons and thrown into the hold, the insurrection below
-decks retired into the dark corners, to knit itself anew
-into shape.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The sailors now recognized the necessity for uniting
-their forces. Moreover, the faction which had been
-less precipitate, gained the confidence of those half-coward,
-half-demon followers, or human jackals, who
-were willing to urge the lions of the fo’castle on to
-strike the blows of death, content if they could then
-sneak upon the scene for a feast of remains. Thus a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_165'>165</span>better plan was laid, while the mutineers dissembled
-and lulled even the suspicious Phipps into a sense of security
-that he had not possessed before the overt outbreak,
-which he had been able to quell single-handed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The plotters found no opportunity of effecting their
-designs for several weeks. At length, however, Phipps
-steered his vessel into a tiny harbor, bitten by the sea
-into the side of a small, uninhabited island, which was
-even minus a name. This he did for the purpose of
-reshipping the stores, in the hold, a recent storm having
-shifted this cargo until the “Rose” listed to port
-dangerously, and leaked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The crew, in silence and obediently enough, constructed
-a bridge to shore and carried the stores to
-land, heaping them up in piles, on the beach.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The unlading being accomplished, the crew desired
-permission to rest in the shade of the near-by woods.
-This was granted. Once in retirement here, they conceived
-a plan without delay whereby the ship should
-fall into their hands that night.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Already they had managed to purloin a complement
-of arms. They had knives, a few pistols, hatchets and
-several cutlasses. The stores being ashore, the ship
-was at their mercy. Their plan was simple enough.
-They would remain away from the shore until seven
-o’clock, when they would proceed to the ship in a
-body, overpower Phipps, Rust, the beef-eaters and the
-few other faithful souls on board, seize the “Rose”
-and leave her captain and his friends on the island, to
-starve. There was but one element lacking—the
-ship’s carpenter. The “Rose” having sprung a leak,
-in the storm, was regarded by the sailors as no longer
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_166'>166</span>seaworthy, until the carpenter should put her right.
-He therefore became a necessary adjunct to their
-numbers.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The carpenter, on being summoned to appear among
-them by the crew, listened to their plan with horror.
-However, he was not a coward and he had his wits
-about him. He nodded as if in approval of the plan,
-the more readily, perhaps, as he was threatened with
-death if he dared refuse to become one of the murderous
-gang. Then he informed them that some of his
-tools he would much require, to further the plot.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He was sent aboard the ship, with a guard beside
-him, who had undertaken to see that he permitted no
-leakage of the crew’s little game into the ears of the
-Captain. However, this carpenter was a man of resources.
-He was suddenly overpowered by illness, on
-which pretense he went below. Then, breaking into a
-run, he came to the Captain’s cabin, where Adam was
-singing the song of his loves. Bidding Rust to continue,
-as if nothing was happening, he swiftly communicated
-his news to William Phipps.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Go back at once and pretend to assist in their deviltry,”
-commanded Phipps. “Make no sign of anything,
-save compliance with their wishes, and leave the
-rest to me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The carpenter rejoined his guard so soon that they
-were entirely satisfied. They conveyed him ashore, with
-his tools, and joining their mates again, waited with
-what patience they could muster, for the fateful hour
-of seven to arrive.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Phipps had now two hours in which to prepare to
-defend the ship. Unfortunately some of the guns had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_167'>167</span>been landed with the stores. Adam volunteered to
-draw the loads from these, and this he accomplished,
-with highly satisfactory speed. But it would have
-been the work of hours to re-transfer the stores to the
-hold, hence they were left on shore to themselves.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>With close on ninety armed, desperate brutes against
-them, the handful of men on the “Rose” were hardly
-in an enviable position. The first thing they did was
-to remove the bridge which had been constructed between
-the ship and the shore. The remaining guns on
-board were then dragged and slewed around till they
-covered the approach from the woods, by which the
-mutineers would be obliged to come. There was
-nothing to be done, then, but to wait.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The crew were not disappointing. They appeared
-duly, their savagery whetted to a fine edge by the
-burly ruffian who had assumed command of their force.
-Phipps had prepared his speech. He hailed the men,
-in his big, gruff voice and commanded them to halt
-where they were, on pain of instant annihilation.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Go near the stores,” he cried, “and I will blow
-you in splatters against those trees!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The cowed scoundrels edged back toward the woods.
-All the muttered threats of their leader, of what he
-would do if they refused to charge, were empty to the
-wretches who could look into the chasm-like mouths
-of a dozen guns. There courage oozed out of their
-veins. They were already defeated.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Phipps, aware that a similar number of dummies
-would be equally dangerous, now, had his faithful followers
-run out the bridge again and bring aboard the
-stores, without which it would have been madness to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_168'>168</span>sail. This work consumed no small amount of time.
-But it was finally concluded.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Now then,” said Phipps, when the situation was
-all in his favor, “I shall pull up anchor and leave you
-rogues to the fate you had prepared for me. You can
-stay here and starve and rot!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This brought the mutineers to tears, and to pleading
-on their knees. They were willing to come to any
-nameable terms, if only he would spare them this terrible
-fate. They threw down their arms, in token of
-absolute surrender, begging quarter of any description.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Inasmuch as so large a vessel could not have been
-sailed without a crew, Phipps received them back, the
-ring-leaders in chains, and doubled the vigor of his
-mastery.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But, Adam,” he said, “it’s no use with these
-scoundrels. They will drive me back to England yet,
-with none of the treasure.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Distrustful of the brutes he had between decks,
-Phipps now sailed for Jamaica, where he quickly discharged
-nearly every man Jack of his mutinous crew
-and took on a new lot of sailors. This was not a matter
-of a few days, it required nearly a fortnight of time,
-Phipps being exceedingly particular as to the men he
-selected. In the meantime two things occurred which
-gave no little anxiety to the treasure-seeking captain.
-Rust fell ill, with an attack of tropical fever, and a
-letter arrived from Goodwife Phipps in which she
-begged to know if her lord and master were still alive,
-and if so, would he not speedily return to Boston and
-give no further heed to fortune’s beckoning.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>William Phipps had seen men sicken and die in these
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_169'>169</span>latitudes. Adam, attended faithfully by the beef-eaters,
-took the fever lightly, as he seemed to take
-everything of life. Nevertheless he was weak, when
-the heat had somewhat abated in his body, and in no
-fit condition to remain in the tropics.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Adam,” said the Captain, gravely, having schooled
-himself for a day and night together for this moment,
-“I have about concluded that the ‘Rose’ is no longer
-fit for this service. I shall return to Hispaniola, but
-unless I shall make out the galleon in a few weeks, I
-shall sail again to England, for a newer ship.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“All right,” said Adam. “I shall be ready this
-afternoon.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well,” said Phipps, hemming and hawing, “the
-fact is, Adam, you are quite unfit to remain about these
-islands. Besides, I should be glad of a messenger to
-send back to Mrs. Phipps in Boston. I would suggest,
-therefore, that you return thither, on a frigate, sailing
-to-morrow morning, and if it chance that I go to England
-and again return to Hispaniola, you could meet
-me here and help me to find the treasure.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Rust seemed to hesitate before making his reply.
-He was sure there was a treasure for him in Boston,
-but he had begun to have his doubts as to the sunken,
-or any other sort of available, gold in the Spanish Main.
-Yet he did not wish to appear eager to abandon the
-quest, and his heart was above all else loyal to Phipps.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“If I should, by great good fortune, discover the
-treasure,” continued the Captain, “you shall suffer no
-loss for your absence, for your services have been ten
-times over rendered already.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Much as he was affected by the friendship which
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_170'>170</span>prompted Phipps to assure him of this, Adam was not
-in the least concerned with thoughts of the treasure,
-nor influenced by this generous plan which his friend
-had formulated. But being a reasonable being, in some
-directions, and being perhaps unreasonably inclined in
-others, as for instance, toward Massachusetts, he saw
-the wisdom of the Captain’s arrangements, and therefore
-bade his friend an affectionate farewell, on the
-following day, and sailed for the north, with the beef-eaters
-close at his heels.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_171'>171</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER XX.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>GARDE’S EXTREMITY.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>Had</span> prayers been able to reach him and summon
-him back to Boston, Adam would have been there long
-before the fever overtook him at Jamaica. Garde,
-more alone than she had ever been in her life, had appealed
-to the stars, to the wind, to the tides of the sea,
-to convey her yearnings to Adam and to bid him hasten
-to her side. She was alone because she, only, distrusted
-Randolph. She was alone because she felt no longer
-the slightest companionship with her grandfather, because
-even Wainsworth and Tootbaker respected the
-provisional betrothal she had made with Randolph and
-because not to Prudence nor even to Goody Dune had
-she felt she could confide her cares and the breaking of
-her heart, under the present painful circumstances.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Her distrust of Randolph had grown, despite the fact
-that, in a measure, the threats against the charter had
-ceased and a pseudo peace contented the patriots with
-the thought that their difficulties had been finally remedied
-by the alliance to which they all now looked
-forward with abnormal interest and confidence.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde had maintained her right of immunity from
-the attentions of Randolph, consistently and steadfastly.
-She had never given him the single glance, at
-Meeting, or elsewhere, for which he was becoming
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_172'>172</span>crazed. The light of malice that burned in his eyes
-was a thing that Garde felt, occultly. It was a threat
-to break her will, some day; it was tigerish in its animal
-hunger. No creature of prey ever lay in wait for its
-victim more ready to pounce, to overpower and to drag
-away to its den the coveted object of its greed and
-passion.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But the months had winged heavily away on their
-somber-colored pinions, and the moment for which
-Garde had hoped, when she set the one year’s time of
-probation had never come—the moment of Adam’s return.
-The second Christmas, so joyless with the Puritans,
-was far off, with the other departed days of
-winter. The snow had melted; the tender shoots of
-grass were returning, in hordes, like little green armies;
-the first buds were breaking the cold, dank soil and
-peeking forth, while still close wrapped, as if to say:
-“Is it time?” And only Garde would have pushed
-them back, only Garde, usually so joyous in the returning
-of warmth and beauty, would have held to the edge
-of the mantle of snow, to retain it where it lay.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Her heart was beating like a lead clapper, that tolled
-against the bell of her soul, day and night, for the fear
-that was on her of the coming week, when her
-year of respite would end. Already her grandfather
-looked at her with fanatical eagerness in his eyes, and
-rubbed his shaking hands with delight. He had no
-eyes to see that she was pale, that she started at sounds
-as she had never done before, fearing that Randolph
-had come a few days too soon, to claim and to carry
-her off. The old man’s one idea was the safety of the
-charter. To secure this, no sacrifice could have been
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_173'>173</span>too great. But as a matter of fact, David Donner had
-no conception of the sacrifice which he was requiring.
-Such zealots rarely have.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In despair, three days before her dreaded hour should
-arrive, Garde hastened like a child, afraid of an ogre,
-to Goody Dune. The evening was cold, for the sky
-was overcast, the wind was blowing from the north and
-a few scattered speckles of snow flew spitefully through
-the air.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“B-u-h-h—it’s cold! B-u-h-h—it’s cold!” said the
-jackdaw, when Garde came in at the door. The bird
-was echoing the past winter’s history of what poor old
-Goody had suffered, alone in her hut.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, dearie,” said the old woman, who was evidently
-making preparations to go out, on some mission
-of her own, “you look as if you too are in need of some
-of the simples you gathered in the summer.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It is nothing simple that I need,” said Garde. “I
-have come for wisdom and help. Oh, Goody, I don’t
-know what I shall do. I wish so I had come to you
-sooner!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You must stop trembling first,” said Goody.
-“Here, take this cup of tea. It is going to be a bitter
-night.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She had prepared the drink for herself, to fortify
-her meager warmth of body against the wind, into
-which she expected to go on an errand, presently.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It is not from the cold; it is inside that I am
-trembling,” confessed the girl. But she took the cup,
-obediently. “If you can do nothing to help me, I could
-wish the cold would never let me go back to my home!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“There, there, drink the tea,” said Goody, after
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_174'>174</span>giving her one penetrative glance. For young women
-to feel that terrible demi-mania of desiring self-destruction
-was not new to Goody Dune. She had gone through
-the stages herself. She knew almost exactly the conditions
-which universally promote the emotion in the
-young of her sex.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I know that Adam has never returned,” she said,
-slowly. “You have had no word, even. I have seen
-that in your eyes. But, dear me, have you no abiding
-faith and hope, child? In the spring——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh it isn’t that, Goody!” broke in Garde. “I
-could wait—I could wait for him fifty years, patiently—yes,
-patiently. I love him. But you don’t know
-what has happened. I have never told you. What
-was the use! They made me promise;—and if Adam
-knew—he might never come back. No—he would not
-come back. And I love even the very places where his
-shadow fell, in the forest—and the log he was sitting
-on. I love the gate where his hands rested—I love
-everything he ever touched!” Her hands pressed upon
-her bosom, where, beneath her frock, she wore the
-brooch from Hispaniola.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Goody had never seen her in such a mood. She had
-never heard such passion from her lips. But by the
-memory of her own heart-break, she caught at the
-sinister cry of something promised.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And have you given yourself in promise to somebody
-else?” she asked, quietly, but somewhat severely.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Grandther forced me. What could I do?” said
-Garde, feverishly. “What could anybody do, with the
-charter being taken away? If I could save it, I ought
-to save it! But he will never, never keep his word!
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_175'>175</span>He is deceiving them all,—I feel it! I know it! He
-is a wicked man! But you will tell me what to do.
-You must tell me what to do!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Sit down, dearie,” said the old woman, calmly.
-“You must tell me all about it. I cannot prescribe,
-even simples, until you let me know what you are driving
-at, you know. Now who is this he, through whom
-you are to save the charter?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t know how it ever happened,” said Garde.
-“He was always known to be the enemy of the colony,
-but he did something to Grandther, who has never
-been the same man since Mr. Randolph——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Edward Randolph!” interrupted Goody, with a
-sudden vehemence, the like of which she had never before
-betrayed to Garde. “Did you say Edward Randolph?
-Have you promised to marry him, to save the
-charter? There, there, sit down and tell me your
-story, quietly. Only, do make haste.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde wondered, momentarily, at the old woman’s
-abrupt outburst. It served to give her a new hold on
-herself, for it broke her own morbid thought and excitement.
-She told Goody what had happened to mar
-her happiness almost before Adam’s kiss had ceased to
-burn on her fingers. She told it brokenly, incoherently,
-for she knew all the details of the story so vividly that
-she could not realize that Goody was not also in possession
-of the entire fabric of thoughts and struggles
-which had brought about her grandfather’s cherished
-end. However, Goody Dune was a woman, and quick-minded
-and astute at that. She patched as rapidly as
-Garde gave her the irregular fragments of the tale.
-She had shut her mouth tightly at the end of her own
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_176'>176</span>outburst, and it seemed to Garde her lips had grown
-harder since. Her eyes were certainly snapping crisply.
-Goody was aroused.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Come with me,” she presently said, interrupting
-Garde’s outpourings again. “When you came I was
-starting to go where it would be well for you to follow,
-before the hour grows later.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But, Goody, won’t you tell me what to do?” said
-Garde, in anguish.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You will know what to do, when you go home,”
-said the old woman, somewhat grimly. “I know
-Edward Randolph by his works.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She led the way out into the gathering twilight without
-further delay. Garde shivered a little, as the cold
-wind struck her again, but she followed, eagerly, with
-wonder in her heart and a little awe of Goody, in her
-tortured mind. What could the old woman mean?
-Where could she now be hastening?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Goody proceeded with a straightness that argued
-familiarity with the route, and fixity of purpose in her
-mind. She went by alleys that led down toward the
-water, where fisher-folk had builded little shanties on
-the rocks above the roar of the harbor breakers.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I am taking you to see another young woman,” she
-said. “She was pretty too, and she had no parents.
-Her mother died five years ago, and her father, James
-Hodder, was lost in the storm, last spring. She was
-an easy prey, you see. Poor Hester! and only fifteen.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde looked at the old woman in wonder. All this
-half muttered preface to something coming, served to
-make her heart beat so hard that she could hear it,
-painfully.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_177'>177</span>“What is it about her?” she asked, breathlessly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Goody made no answer. She had reached the door
-of one of the huts, and pushing it open she entered,
-Garde, pale and large-eyed, close behind her.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Ned—oh Ned!” came a half sob, half chortle of
-joy from somewhere in the darkness of the place.
-Garde felt shivers go down her entire form.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Not Ned yet, my love,” said Goody, in a voice so
-cooing that Garde hardly knew it. “Presently, dear,
-presently. He is sure to come back to-night. Dear
-me, we must have a light and see how we’re doing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde had heard a little moan which Goody’s cooing
-had not sufficed to smother. Then there had been
-the sound of a stifled sob. Goody went to the dying
-embers in the chimney-place, to get a light for a tallow
-dip on which she had put her hand with unerring
-familiarity with the furnishings of the place. The
-voice, with tears and patience in its syllables, came again:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“He will come—back, to-night? He—didn’t come—last
-night. He hasn’t—come for a—week.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh yes, he will surely come to-night,” crooned
-Goody, at the fireplace. “But how is the little
-dollie?” Garde was leaning back against the door,
-heavily. Her eyes were staring into the utter darkness
-with which the place was filled. She felt the presence
-of a woman on a bed of motherhood. She was
-ready to sink on the floor, with terrible apprehensions.
-The woman on the bed made some heroic effort to calm
-herself, and to answer Goody’s question.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“She’s sleeping,” she said. “She was so cold, but
-I have got her warm again.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The tallow dip now flared. Goody shielded it cautiously
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_178'>178</span>as it sputtered and then she arose to her feet.
-Between her fingers the light spread, throwing great,
-grotesque shadows of her hand on the walls, in one
-direction and a larger adumbration of her head in the
-other. Garde saw the couch, which she had known
-was in the corner. She also saw a white face, too thin
-to be pretty, and all of a soul’s being and anguish concentrated
-in two great eyes. Her own eyes were blazing
-with the emotions by which she was possessed. As
-if there had been some great affinity between them, the
-young woman on the couch was looking at Garde the
-moment the dip illumined the room.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Who’s that?” said the startled Hester on the couch.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“A friend, a friend, dear,” said Goody. “I brought
-her to see you. She knows Edward.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“She—she knows Ned?” said the wasted young
-mother, raising herself up, abruptly. “Let me see her.
-Oh, oh,—you are so pretty! But you won’t take him
-away from me—you won’t take him, please? He does
-really love me—he didn’t mean what he said. He must
-love me, now. He hasn’t seen our little baby, or he
-would love me more than anything in the world. You
-wouldn’t take him away from me—now?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As Hester sat there, propped up by one thin, white
-arm, brushing her hair from her face and leaning
-eagerly toward her visitor, Garde could only put her
-hand to her cheek and shake her head. Her bosom
-rose and fell in the agitation which was shaking her
-whole being.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, I am so glad—oh, I knew you wouldn’t,” said
-the girl on the couch. “You couldn’t have the heart,
-could you? See—see!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_179'>179</span>Weakened as she was, she made a great effort to rally
-her strength and dragged a little bundle forth from between
-the blankets and her own throbbing bosom, where
-she had kept it partially warm. She was stifling sobs
-all the time she was speaking. Her nerveless fingers
-sought in the folds with instinctive tenderness, to uncover
-a tiny face, as immobile as marble. “It’s our
-little child,” said the mother. “She looks so like him.
-He would have to love me now—you see he couldn’t
-help it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Goody took the babe in her arms. Garde saw everything.
-She saw the tidy poverty of the hut. She saw
-the ghost of the girlish beauty, which this abandoned
-mother had once possessed. She saw the young creature
-tuck in, next her bosom, ecstatically, a worn-out
-stocking—a man’s stocking.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde wanted to flee, but Goody brought her the babe—a
-little doll indeed. Goody took her hand, for Garde
-seemed stricken with helplessness, and placed it lightly
-on the tiny, white face of the child. The girl drew it
-away with a shudder. The babe was dead.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Go home, dearie,” said Goody, in a croon. “You
-will know what to do. God makes few of the marriages
-laid at His door, but He does make some of these.
-Hester has a right to believe He made her a wife—else
-why a mother?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde opened the door and ran out, glad, oh so glad
-it was cold!</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_180'>180</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER XXI.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>RANDOLPH’S COURTSHIP.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>Garde</span> fled home as if some unthinkable fate were in
-pursuit. She was haunted by the look she had seen in
-the eyes of that girl-mother, back in the hut. She
-could hear the young thing still begging her not to rob
-her of the man who had taken her all and given her an
-ineradicable shame in exchange.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Yet beneath every other emotion, Garde felt a sense
-of exultation. The estimate of her instinct was confirmed—Randolph
-was perfidy itself. Not a soul among
-the Puritans, she believed, could do aught but support
-her against this man. And if only she could wrench
-herself free, how gladly would she welcome the penance
-of waiting years for Adam, in payment for her act,
-which she felt was disloyalty, in consenting to the provisional
-betrothal into which she had been forced!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Her grandfather now would have to be the first to
-protect her from the dread fate which had come so near,
-she thought. To confuse politics and the personal affairs
-of her narrow life is the privilege of the sex to which
-Garde belonged. She planned, as she darted through
-the wind-swept streets. She would tell it all to
-Grandfather Donner, and then he should save her the ordeal
-of meeting Edward Randolph in any manner whatsoever.
-She gave no thought to the charter, nor to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_181'>181</span>what the man with the power he wielded would do in
-revenge to their liberties, now that he would find himself
-baffled, at the end of his term of waiting.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She yearned for Adam. She could tell him, now,
-what she had been driven to do, whereas before this
-she had always wished him to come, yet had shrunk
-from the thought of confessing what she had permitted
-to be done. Yes, she could lay it all bare before him
-now, and fairly scourge herself with her own reproaches,
-joyously. What an exquisite pleasure it would be to
-ask his forgiveness thus, and not at first receive it, and
-then at last be taken home to his arms and his love!
-For her thoughts, her heart-beats, her soul’s longings
-had all been constant to him, and to him alone. She
-would like to tell him all this. And she would let him
-kiss her, now. For through what hours had she wished,
-when she had thought they might never meet in that
-way again, that his kiss had been placed upon her lips
-that day of their parting. She almost frightened herself
-with the thought of how that one kiss on her fingers
-might have been his only kiss. But the next moment
-she tingled with ecstasy, to think she was free and that
-some day he would come back, and then she would
-know how to love him and to cherish him as never
-before she could have known.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thus glowing one moment, with love’s own reveries,
-and chilling the next, with sudden reminders of what
-had just been and what might still be, she reached her
-grandfather’s house, where she had been staying with
-the old man for the past year, with only rare visits to
-the Soams. She went in by the kitchen door. This
-apartment being dark, she passed through to the dining-room,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_182'>182</span>which was lighted but unoccupied, hence she continued
-on to the parlor, where she fancied she heard
-voices. Entering here, she could have fallen to the
-floor in sheer astonishment and fright.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She found herself confronting her grandfather and
-Edward Randolph himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Ah, here she is, you see,” said David Donner, rubbing
-his hands together, delightedly. “I thought she
-couldn’t be far away. My child, Mr. Randolph has
-come to have a little chat. Natural enough, I should
-think.” He chuckled with pleasure, adding: “Dear
-me, I mustn’t forget to cover my rose, on a night like
-this.” With fatuous smiles, that ill suited his grim old
-visage, he quitted the room, in a sprightly, playful
-manner, and left Garde facing Randolph, alone.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Good evening, Mistress Merrill,” said the man,
-fastening the hungry gaze of his deep-set eyes upon her
-face. “I am glad to see you looking so well.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Good evening, sir, and thank you,” said Garde, in
-a voice scarcely audible. She had become suddenly
-pale. She trembled. She looked at the man as one
-fascinated by a baleful point of light.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It seemed but reasonable that I should call and see
-you, since our betrothal is so soon to end in our marriage,”
-said Randolph, moving slowly toward her, as if
-to prolong his own anticipation of standing where he
-could reach her at last. “I have been very patient,
-have I not, my pretty sweetheart?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You—have been very—patient,” echoed Garde,
-helplessly and panting like a spent doe, to catch her
-breath.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And I have kept my word,” he went on, still slowly
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_183'>183</span>approaching. “Massachusetts has her charter, and
-now—I have my wife.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He put out his hand, like a talon, to clutch her fast.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>One convulsive shiver seemed to break the spell which
-had held Garde enthralled. She leaped away, her eyes
-blazing, her lips quivering, her frame shaken with
-emotion.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No!” she cried. “No! Don’t touch me! Keep
-away! I loathe you! I know what you are! Keep
-away,—I can’t bear you!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What’s this?” said the man, scowling, till his
-great brow threw a sinister shadow as far down as his
-cheek bones. “Have a care, my dear Garde. We
-made our bargain a year ago. This is no time
-for kittenish pranks. Come back here where you
-were.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>His tone was authoritative. The gleam in his eyes
-was a warning against disobedience. But Garde could
-be no further frightened than he had made her by his
-mere presence. She stood there, alert for the first
-sign which would send her running, if need be, to jump
-through the window.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I shall never touch you, nor go near you!” she
-said. “There is no bargain between us. I would
-rather die than to be your wife! I know what you are,
-I say. I have been to Hester Hodder’s, to-night! I
-have seen her. I know what you are!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Randolph took hold of his lip and pinched it viciously.
-He glared at the girl in silence, for a moment.
-“This has nothing to do with me,” he said. “You
-have made some mistake.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I made a terrible mistake when I first submitted to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_184'>184</span>this loathsome plan,” said Garde, gaining courage as
-she spoke. “I always distrusted you, despised you.
-Do you think I would trust a man to save our charter
-who wouldn’t save a woman’s honor—who would do
-what you have done? You may go—you may go away!
-I loathe you! I scorn you! Oh, I have found you out
-in time!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“This is silly talk, Mistress Merrill,” said the man.
-“I know nothing of your Hester Hodder.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde made a gesture expressive of disgust and impatience.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But all this has no bearing on anything one way or
-the other,” Randolph continued. “You must not forget
-that I have as much power over the charter and the
-colony as ever—in fact, more. I have become the
-friend of these people, but you can make me their
-enemy with a very little of your nonsense. Come, now,
-let us be two sensible beings and not begin our union
-by quar——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“If you have had any power to do us injury,” interrupted
-Garde, “we will find it done. You wouldn’t
-dare to trust yourself. I have a fear, such as I never
-had before, of the harm you have doubtless done this
-colony, darkly, in the year just passed.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde had a way, fairly uncanny, of saying terrible
-truths, as if from some sort of inspiration, which came
-upon her unawares. Randolph had his pockets full of
-documents, at that moment, which lay there like a mine
-of explosives, ready to shatter the charter and government,
-almost at his whisper of command. His mind
-could conceive of nothing so exquisite in treachery, to
-these people that he hated, and in vengeance against
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_185'>185</span>Garde, for the attitude she had always assumed toward
-him, as to marry her first and then to destroy the charter
-afterward. This had been his dream for more than the
-year. He had waited for its climax as patiently as a
-cat will wait before a hole till the mouse shall reappear.
-Garde’s words were as so many poignards, only that
-they failed to strike him in a fatal spot. They stung
-him to greater fury than he had ever felt and to a hotter
-determination to humble the girl and to reduce
-Massachusetts to abject servility and despair.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The man saw that this was an ill time to threaten
-Garde. She was not made of the wax which his sophistries
-had substituted for the metal once in David Donner’s
-composition.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You have entertained some strange ideas of me,
-Mistress Merrill, for which I am at a loss to account,”
-he said, more quietly. “I feel sure we merely misunderstand
-each other. Have I not shown, for a
-year, that my one wish is to prove myself a staunch
-friend of these good people and worthy of your esteem?
-I am willing to do anything further, if you can think
-of anything you would like to suggest, before we are
-married.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“We shall never be married,” said the girl, self-possessed,
-now, and calm enough to be fairly judicial. “If
-you wish to win my respect, go and marry Hester Hodder,
-and let your child not be buried in shame.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The man winced, but not visibly. He took his lip in
-his fingers again and pinched it till it was white. He
-realized that in her present frame of mind, Garde was
-utterly incorrigible. He only made matters worse by
-remaining where she was. He knew of a trick worth
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_186'>186</span>two of prolonging this interview. Yet he must retire
-in good order.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I must tell you once more,” he said, “that I know
-nothing about this person of whom you speak. I regret
-that something has prejudiced your mind against
-me, especially when you insist upon doing me this
-wrong. Let me say good night, for I am sure I shall
-find you in an altered mood to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Good night,” said Garde, icily.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The man smiled and went out, closing the door as if
-it had been the bars of a cage, which he had dared to
-enter, at the risk of frightening his prey to death.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He went out into the garden and called to David
-Donner.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_187'>187</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER XXII.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>DAVID’S COERCION.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>David Donner</span> came in from that interview in the
-garden an angered fanatic. The bitter cold of the
-night had entered into his soul, with all the heaped-up
-threats which Randolph had hurled at his head.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>These threats had not been fired at David loudly nor
-fiercely. Randolph had told him of Garde’s insubordination,
-of her charges and of her repudiation of her
-promise. He had shown that whether her allegations as
-to Hester Hodder were true or false, they had nothing
-to do with Massachusetts politics. He had then opened
-up with his main battery—a recital of the power he had
-steadily accumulated, during the past year, and of
-his intention to use it, immediately, if Donner and
-Garde now failed in the slightest particular to keep
-their share of the bargain.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Donner became nearly crazed. For a year he had
-dwelt with fondness upon the topic of the charter and
-of how he had saved it, until nothing else could get
-foothold in his mind. Indeed he had become mildly
-insane upon the subject. He had counted the days,
-and finally the hours waiting for the final ratification
-of the contract with Randolph, whose influence with
-King James had exceeded even that which he had exercised
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_188'>188</span>when Charles sat upon the throne. To reflect
-that now, at the eleventh hour, the mere whim of a silly
-girl could destroy this whole fabric and sweep away
-their jealously guarded liberty and independence, at a
-single breath, nearly made a maniac of the old man.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Hester Hodder was as nothing. A hundred such
-women, with their dead babes, would have been as
-nothing, compared to the safety of the charter. What
-had Garde been born for, if she was not to save the
-day, when her promise was made and when she alone
-stood between ruin and the colony? What was her
-girlish folly, that it should stand in the path forbidding
-the colony its existence? What should be her
-very life, when the matter against it weighed so
-ponderously?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thinking what his compatriots would say, if they
-should learn of this latest turn of affairs, Donner wrung
-his hands in agony, and then clenched them in rage.
-For twenty years the charter had fluttered between life
-and death. For the last year it had gained in strength
-till it seemed that all danger had passed. No religious
-fanaticism, no zeal of inquisitions ever possessed a
-man’s soul, heart and brain more thoroughly than his
-patriotism possessed Grandfather Donner.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When he went into the house, his trembling, bony
-hands were as cold as those of a skeleton. He was half
-crying, with his utter vexation and fear for the charter,
-and yet he ground his teeth, in his anger and stubborn
-determination to compel his grandchild to adhere
-to her promise. When he came to where Garde
-was awaiting his return indoors, she mistook the mad
-light in his eyes for righteous indignation at Randolph’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_189'>189</span>perfidy, of which she believed he had become
-apprised.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, Grandther,” she said, running trustingly toward
-him and beginning already to cry, from her stress
-of emotions. “I am so glad you have come back to
-protect me!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Protect you? Protect you?” he almost screamed,
-clutching her by the shoulders, so fiercely that the cold
-and the pain which he caused seemed to penetrate her
-through and through. “What madness have you committed?
-What have you done? The charter,—the
-charter—the charter!—you shall save the charter! Do
-you hear me? You shall keep your promise and
-save the colony!” He shook her till the girl was
-gasping. She could think of nothing but a hideous
-nightmare.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, he hasn’t told you, Grandther,” she cried. “If
-you knew the truth you would turn him from the door!
-I have seen poor Hester and her baby. I cannot bear
-to think of him—I should die!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You—you—you traitor!” stammered the old man,
-in his mania. “You—you betray the colony! You
-are mad, mad! You promised. You made your own
-conditions. You have deceived me. You would play
-us false, now—now, when our liberties are taking heart.
-But you shall not! What? You come home here
-with this silly story, you—you, the daughter of a
-Donner—and ready to tear up the charter for your
-silly notions. No—no! no! no!—you shall marry
-this man! You shall keep this your bargain! The
-charter—you shall save the charter!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, but, Grandther, the story is true,” said Garde,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_190'>190</span>wringing her hands. “He is the one that is false. And
-I thought you would hold me too precious for such a
-thing as——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Enough!” commanded the crazed old man. “My
-word—the colony’s word—has been given. The bargain
-shall be kept. This has gone too far already. To
-think that for one moment you would so jeopardize the
-charter! I am stricken with shame at your want of
-honor at this crisis of our liberties!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde still failed to believe she heard her grandfather
-correctly. She still hoped his impatience would abate
-sufficiently for her to tell of what she had seen. It
-could not be possible that a Puritan, so high-minded
-and strict for moral conduct, could know what she
-knew and still insist upon this infamous marriage. To
-her, at that moment, it was virtue and honor that were
-all important to be saved, the charter and the colony
-that had become insignificant.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“If you had touched that little dead baby,” she said.
-“If you had heard Hester begging, Grandther—oh,
-you would have kept your promise,—you would never
-coerce me in this terrible——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Stop! stop!” cried Donner, madly, angered
-almost beyond control by this appeal, which was so
-unbearably remindful of her mother. “I have not
-coerced you, never! You made your promise freely.
-The honor of the colony, and more than that, the
-safety of the charter, now hang upon your faith in keeping
-your own agreement. And you shall keep it—for
-the family pride—for the colony’s good name! This
-story—what is the woman?—what is her child?—what
-is anything, when our liberty and independence tremble
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_191'>191</span>in the balance? No more—I’ll hear no more of
-this,—not a word!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde brushed a wisp of her red-black hair from her
-forehead. Her great brown eyes were fastened wide
-open by amazement. Her lips alone contained any
-color. How red they seemed against the white of her
-oval face! Her eyebrows seemed like two curved black
-brands on her brow. She looked at her grandfather in
-silence. It was positively incredible that he had said
-what she had heard, she thought. If Hester and her
-child and “everything” were held of so little worth,
-why—what of herself? Had it come to this? Was it
-admittedly and shamelessly a sacrifice of her very soul,
-to a creature only waiting to have his way first before
-destroying the charter later?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>To the pure, natural mind of the girl, Randolph had
-become as translucent as water, in his plotted perfidies.
-It appeared impossible that any man could still believe
-in his lies. She would have spoken of this, but the
-sight of the fanatical old man before her, sealed her
-lips. She recognized the light in his eyes at last. At
-any other moment her pity would have fluttered forth
-to him, yearningly, her little mother instinct would
-have taken her on the wings of concern to smooth the
-care-channeled wrinkles from his brow, but now all
-these tenderer emotions had fled away, in fear and awe.
-She said nothing further. There was nothing left to
-say, nothing that would have any weight against
-mania. At length even her gaze fell before the wild
-look with which David Donner confronted her, insanely.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Now then,” said the old man, at length, in a voice
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_192'>192</span>made raucous by his recent passions, “you may go to
-bed and prepare your mind for obedience.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Good night, dear Grandther,” said Garde, by force
-of habit, and with nothing more, she passed from the
-room.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_193'>193</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER XXIII.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>GOODY’S BOY.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>The</span> right of Spring to exercise idiosyncrasies of
-weather was conceded, doubtless, by the first man.
-Spring is well known to be female, for this very proclivity
-of changing her mind as to what she will do
-next. Having been a spitfire nearly all night, Spring
-smiled in the morning, as balmy as if she had caught
-the fancy of some tropical zephyr, that hastened rashly
-northward to catch her for a kiss.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The first ray of the sun found itself entangled in the
-hair of Mistress Merrill. Garde had not slept during
-the night. She had not gone to bed, nor had she prepared
-her mind for obedience to her grandfather’s
-commands. She had spent the hours sitting at the
-window, waiting for the morning.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She now sped swiftly through the unawakened streets,
-a prey to a sense of fear that she was being pursued.
-From time to time she cast a quick glance across her
-shoulder, but there was no one following. There was
-hardly a sound, save that a few birds—hardy little
-scouts, ahead of the northward-creeping caravan of
-summer—twittered and set up rival centers of melody
-in the trees.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There was no hesitation in the girl’s footsteps. She
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_194'>194</span>knew where she was going. Goody Dune’s was the
-only place where she could go, with her present resolutions.
-She had come to a logical conclusion, as to
-what was now to be done, shortly after leaving David
-Donner. Her mouth was firmly set, where determination
-had come to abide.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As always, she found Goody stirring about, with her
-door wide open, when she came to the tidy little home.
-Goody beheld her coming before she reached the gate.
-Peering into her face knowingly, the old woman gave a
-little shake to her head. She was adept at deciphering
-the hieroglyphics which human emotions write upon
-brows and lips and eyes, especially in the faces of the
-young.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“So your grandfather insists and you are going to
-run away?” she said, as Garde came eagerly up the
-garden path to the door.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes,” said Garde, in some awe of the wise old
-woman and her means of acquiring knowledge, “and I
-want you to help me,—oh, you must help me—just as
-fast as you can! How did you know?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I could see that you were deeply troubled, and I
-know exactly what a girl like you would do,” said
-Goody. “I was the same kind of a girl, once, myself.
-Now tell me, first, where are you going.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t know,” said Garde, “I think to Plymouth,
-to my aunt Rosella.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You would do well to make up your mind on that
-point,” said Goody. “And how are you going, shall
-you sail, or ride, or walk?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, I shall run,” said Garde.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“If you walk it will last longer,” said the old woman,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_195'>195</span>with just a suspicion of a smile. “Then, those two
-points being settled, have you brought anything to eat,
-in your pocket?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No—no, I didn’t wait for anything. I shan’t want
-anything to eat for days. I don’t feel like eating, and
-I don’t know when I ever shall.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And no blankets to sleep in?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh no, Goody, how could I?” said Garde.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Let me see; it is something like forty or fifty miles
-to Plymouth,” Goody mused. “Have you thought how
-it would look if a young woman were seen, running
-night and day for sixty miles? You know many people
-walk from Plymouth here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes,” said Garde, eagerly. “That is the only
-trouble. I want you to do something for me, or tell
-me what to do. Everybody would see a girl and if
-Grandther were told, he would have me caught and
-brought back—and I would rather die!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Goody laughed at her now, more than half gaily.
-Her own eyes twinkled with delight over the venture.
-“What would be the good of all the things my friends
-have given me, all these years, if I did not use them at
-such a time as this?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, have you got anything I could really use?”
-Garde responded. “What is it? What can you do?
-I mustn’t wait,—they will catch me, just as sure as the
-world!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Not if I make you invisible,” chucked Goody. She
-dived into a chest she had opened and began to paw, in
-an orderly manner, at a heap of clothing which the box
-contained. She presently drew forth a complete suit of
-clothing for a boy. “There,” she continued, “go into
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_196'>196</span>the next room and put those on, as fast as ever you are
-a mind to.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Those?” said the astonished Garde. “But these
-are——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, I know. They will make you invisible—as a
-girl. Do you wish to be seen? If not, go and put
-them on and let me get at something else. We still
-have other fish to fry.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But——” started Garde, when Goody pushed her
-into the next apartment.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Goody continued to rummage in the chest, producing
-a hat, much the worse for age, a pair of stout shoes, a
-stick and a large, red handkerchief. Into this handkerchief
-she knotted a number of slices of bread, some
-pickles and some cold meat. She then secured it on
-the end of the stick, and dropped inside it a little wad
-of money, tied in a parcel by itself.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde now returned, blushing as red as a rose and
-bending her legs inward at the knee most shyly,
-although anything prettier could hardly be conceived,
-and there was no one present save the old woman to
-look, anyway.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh dear me!” said the jackdaw. “Oh dear me!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Stand up stiffly on your pins,” commanded Goody.
-“You are not invisible as a girl at all. Come, now, be
-a man.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But—Goody——” gasped Garde. “I—I really
-can’t——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, you can. You must,” corrected the old
-woman. “Or else you can give up running away
-altogether.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh no, no!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_197'>197</span>“Then do as I tell you. Feet more apart, knees
-stiff. That’s better.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But, I feel—I feel so—so cold.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Where, in your face? Nonsense. Now try on
-this hat.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Goody adjusted the hat. It was much too small to
-cover all of Garde’s glorious hair.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“This will have to come off,” said the old woman.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh!” was all Garde could reply.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It did seem a pity, but the business in hand was
-altogether grim. The scissors snipped briskly. The
-hat presently covered a quaint, pretty head with close-cropped
-locks. Garde caught the gleam in Goody’s eyes,
-for Goody could not but admire her for a most handsome
-and irresistible boy, and again the blushes leaped
-into her cheeks, and those tell-tale knees began to try to
-hide one another.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Goody shook her head. “Any one would still know
-you for Garde Merrill,” she confessed, “whether they
-had ever known you before or not.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Then what shall I do? I might as well go back
-to my own clothes,” said the girl eagerly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You remain where you are,” instructed her mentor.
-“If you are going to run away successfully, you must
-muster up your courage. But perhaps you prefer to go
-back to——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No! I’ll——do anything,” interrupted Garde. A
-sudden horror of the thought of going back, or of being
-caught and taken back, to Randolph and all the rest of
-it, put good steel into her shoulders and some also into
-her legs. “Please make haste and let me be starting,”
-she added. “They may be coming at any moment!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_198'>198</span>Goody lost but little time in thinking. She produced
-a cup, from her shelf of decoctions, and dabbling her
-finger into its contents she proceeded to stain the girl’s
-face a rich brown color, which made her more handsome
-than ever, if possible, but which masked her so
-completely that her own reflection would not have
-known her. The brown stuff went into her pretty ears
-and all around her plump pretty throat and even on top
-of her eyelids as they were closed, for Goody was something
-of an artist. When she had finished, she regarded
-her work critically.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The angel Gabriel wouldn’t know you now, himself,”
-she said. “When you wish to get it off, use vinegar.
-Take your stick and your little pack, put it over
-your shoulder, so, and now you are ready. Would you
-like something to eat before you go?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh no,” gasped the girl, frightened half out of her
-wits, at the prospect of going forth into the world with
-two pretty, visible legs to walk withal. “I—I couldn’t
-eat anything. I—wait a minute. I—I think I would
-like a little drink of water.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Goody gave her a dipper full, of which she took one
-miniature sip.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Do I—do I look—terrible?” she faltered.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You look like a farmer’s boy—a lout of a country
-lad,” said Goody. “So, good-by, young man. My
-last word is, forget you have got any legs, or you will
-surely be detected.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Legs!” said the jackdaw, glad of a new word.
-“Legs! Legs!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I couldn’t—wear anything—over them, could I?”
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_199'>199</span>said Garde, timidly, having jumped when Rex croaked
-so suddenly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You can wear a wedding gown over them, if you
-prefer,” said the old woman, grimly, and suggestively.
-“I really expected you to do better than this.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well—I will!” said the poor child, resolutely.
-“Good-by, dear Goody. I shall always love you, more
-than ever, for this.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Goody kissed her, as she bent affectionately forward,
-and patted her motherly on the back. “That’s a good
-boy,” she said.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She opened the door and Garde went forth. The
-open air made her conscious of her attire instantly.
-But she did her best, shy and unboyish as the effort
-was.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, I forgot to ask,” she said, glad to get one more
-moment in which to get ready. “How is Hester?
-How was she when you saw her last?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Goody’s face darkened. “I saw her the first thing
-this morning,” she said. “Some one must have called
-last night, after I left. Hester is dead.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER XXIV.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>A GREENWOOD MEETING.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>Adam Rust</span>, sailing northward, grew more and more
-hearty once again with every day, although his pulse-beat
-quickened almost hourly, with a fever of impatience
-which began to fasten itself upon him. He was
-quite himself again, long before the ship arrived at the
-port of New York. But the beef-eaters were a sorry
-pair, for the sea still took its revenge upon them for
-Adam’s total disregard of its powers, and the passage
-had been exceptionally rough.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was no more than natural that Pike and Halberd,
-on arriving as far as New Amsterdam, should desire to
-have done with the boisterous Atlantic. Adam, on the
-other hand, was in such a fever to go on to Boston that,
-had no ships been available, and no other means possible,
-he would have been tempted to swim. As it was,
-there was no vessel putting for the north to any point
-beyond Plymouth for a week, so that Adam determined
-to sail that far and either to catch another captain
-there, who would convey him onward, or to walk the
-remaining distance alone.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The beef-eaters, seeming absolutely in need of a rest
-from their adventures on the water, reluctantly saw
-the “Sachem” depart without them, they in the meantime
-remaining with Captain William Kidd, at his New
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_201'>201</span>York home, expecting to go on to Boston with him
-later. This had been the first time that Rust had been
-more glad than otherwise to be for a brief season without
-his faithful followers. But never before had the
-conditions of his going to Boston been the same.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thus, on a fine day in April, Adam found himself
-landed in the old town, of which he had no pleasant
-memories. He would have confined his inspection of
-and visit to Plymouth to the docks, had not a hurried
-tour of inquiry elicited the information that no vessels
-were due to sail to Boston for two or three days. To
-remain in the place for such a time as that was not to
-be thought of on any account.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Providing himself with a small parcel of food, at one
-of the taverns, Adam was soon striding through a street
-of the town, which he remembered vividly as one
-wherein he had walked on a former occasion, as a captive
-boy, in a procession of fanatical Puritans. The
-memory was far from being pleasant.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He would have avoided the place, had he known his
-way sufficiently well, but before he knew it was so
-very near, he had come to that square in which
-the stake with King Philip’s head upon it had once
-been set.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He looked at the plain surroundings of the locality
-with a reminiscence of melancholy stealing upon him.
-He fancied he saw the precise spot where the stake had
-stood. It brought back a flood of memories, of his
-days spent with the Wampanoags, his companionship
-with King Philip, the war and then the end. The
-sequent thought was of his first glimpse of Garde, held
-in her grandfather’s arms and looking across the bank
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_202'>202</span>of merciless faces with a never-to-be-forgotten sympathy
-in her sweet, brown eyes. Dwelling then in fondness
-upon the recollection of his first meeting with William
-Phipps, the rover felt that, as his last sadness here had
-been an augury of better times to come, so this present
-moment might presage a happiness even greater. With
-this comforting thought to spur him on to Boston, he
-quitted the square and was soon leaving the outskirts
-of Plymouth behind him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Spring seemed to be getting ready for some great
-event. She was trimming herself with blossoms and
-virgin grass, and she was warm with all her eagerness
-to make herself lovely. Adam opened his mouth to
-breathe in the fragrance exhaled by flirt Nature. He
-walked swiftly, for there was resilience under foot as
-well as in his being.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“If Garde were somewhere near, the day could
-hardly be lovelier,” he said, half aloud. “She must
-be breathing in this direction.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>His glance was invited here and attracted there.
-Wherever it rested, Nature met it with a smile. Adam
-felt like hugging a tree, yet no single tree was that
-elusive spirit of Nature which he so longed to clasp and
-to hold in his arms. But if he was mocked by the
-ethereal presence of beauty too diffuse to be held, by a
-redolence too subtle to be defined, and by bird notes too
-fleeting to be retained, yet he was charmed, caressed,
-sublimated by the omnipresence of Nature’s loveliness.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At noon he was ten good miles from Plymouth and
-trailing his sword through a wood, where one could
-feel that some goddess of intangible and exquisite entity
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_203'>203</span>had just escaped being seen, by fleeing into the
-aisles of the trees, leaving an aroma of warmth, pine-breath
-and incense to baffle bees behind her. Where a
-little brook tinkled upon pebbles, for cymbals, he got
-down on his knees and had a long drink. Hearing
-voices, where some party seemed approaching, he arose
-and went forward, presently coming to a cross-road in
-the forest, where he beheld a scene that aroused his
-momentary indignation.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It amounted to little. Three young country clods
-had evidently been pursuing a fourth young fellow, who
-was scarcely more than a boy, and shorter than any in
-the group, and now, having come up to him, at the
-cross-roads, had “cornered” him up against a tree and
-were executing something like an Indian war-dance
-about him, as he stood attempting to face all three
-at once.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They began to yell and to run in at their captive,
-who was striking at them awkwardly and not more than
-half-heartedly with a stick, in order, apparently, to
-prevent them from snatching away his hat. It was entirely
-too unequal, this sham combat, to accord with
-Adam’s notions of fair play. He started to run toward
-the group.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Here!” he shouted. “Here, wait a bit,—I’ll take
-a hand, to make it even.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The youth against the tree saw him coming before
-the others were aware of his presence. When Adam
-shouted, however, they turned about quickly enough,
-and yelling in added delight at being chased, they made
-off briskly, running back on the cross-road, the way
-they had come.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_204'>204</span>Adam strode more leisurely toward the boy who
-remained leaning, in obvious confusion of emotions,
-against the tree. He saw a remarkably handsome,
-brown-complexioned youth, with delicate features, large
-eyes, that gazed upon him in wonder, and exquisitely
-rounded legs, one of which was nervously bent inward
-at the knee.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was Garde.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Fortunately she had seen him before he came close.
-Therefore the little involuntary cry of gladness which
-had risen to her lips, had been too faint for him to
-catch, at a distance. Then in the moment when her
-persecutors had been scampering away, she had grasped
-at the opportunity to control her emotions to the extent
-of deciding, in one second of timid and maidenly
-thoughts, that never, never would she reveal herself to
-Adam, if she could help it, while dressed in these awful
-garments. She must act the boy now, or she would
-perish with mortification. Luckily the blush that leaped
-to her cheeks was masked by Goody’s brown stain.
-Nevertheless she panted with excitement and her bosom
-would not be quiescent.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Good morning,” said Adam, coming forward and
-doffing his hat, which he felt that he must do to a
-youth so gentle and so handsome. “You were making
-a very pretty fight, but it lacked somewhat of vigor.
-The next time, slash this way, and that way; guard
-against assault with your other arm, so, and do your
-cutting at their heads.” He had drawn his sword with
-which to illustrate, and flourished it lustily at the imaginary
-enemy, after which he added: “Now then,
-who are you any way, and where are you bound?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_205'>205</span>“Good—good morning,” faltered Garde, in a voice
-scarcely more than audible. “I am—I am not used to
-fighting.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, I should say not,” said Adam, trying to make
-his voice delicate and sweet, in imitation of hers.
-“You must speak up, boy, the same as you would fight,
-roaring thus: ‘What ho, varlets!’ on your right, and
-‘Have at you, knaves!’ on your left. Shatter my hilt!
-I haven’t seen so girlish a boy since Will Shakspeare’s
-play. Stand out here and let us get acquainted, for I
-think I shall like you, though you do fight and roar so
-ill.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Immensely relieved to find that he did not suspect
-her identity, Garde summoned all the courage which
-ten days away from home had sprouted in her being.
-Moreover, she knew that if the deception was to be
-made successful, she must act her part with all her
-ability. She therefore left the tree, against which she
-had continued to lean and stood forth, with what bravery
-she could muster.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And who may you be?” she managed to inquire.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Ha, that’s better,” said Adam. “Don’t be afraid
-to speak up. A dog that barks at once seldom has need
-to bite. And you have the making of a man in you
-yet. You could be taller, but let that pass. You have
-fine, sturdy legs; your eye is clear. Why, you have
-nothing to blush for. What ails the lad?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The red beneath the brown stain was too ardent to be
-hidden. Garde’s gaze fell before his admiring look.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You—haven’t told me your name,” she faltered,
-heroically striving to stand stiffly and to conjure a voice
-to change the subject withal.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_206'>206</span>“So I haven’t,” Adam agreed. “I asked you for
-yours first, but no matter. I am a mad lover, on my
-way to Boston. My name is Rust, with a spice of the
-old Adam thrown in. If you are going in the same
-direction, I shall be glad of your company.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde was going in the same direction. She had
-never reached so far as Plymouth. Footsore and weary,
-she had trudged along, going less than ten miles a day,
-stopping at night with the farming people, the wives of
-whom she had found most kind, and so at last had arrived
-at a farm near by these cross-roads, unable to go
-any further. She had therefore rested several days, and
-only this very morning she had learned, by word from
-another traveler, that David Donner, suddenly afflicted
-by the double woe of finding her gone and himself
-cursed by Randolph, who had immediately set in motion
-his machinery for depriving Massachusetts of its charter,
-was on his back, delirious and ill, perhaps unto
-death.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She was going back, all contritely, yearning over the
-old man, who had taken the place of her parents for so
-many years, and weighted down with a sense of the
-wretchedness attending life. It was not that her resolution
-to escape Randolph had abated one particle of
-its stiffness, that she was turning about to retrace her
-steps, it was merely that her womanly love, her budding
-mother-instinct, her loyalty and gratitude for her grandfather’s
-many years of kindness and patience,—that all
-these made no other thought possible.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>And now to learn that Adam was traveling to Boston
-also, that she should have him for her strong protector
-and comrade, this filled her with such a gush of delight
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_207'>207</span>that she with difficulty restrained herself from crying,
-in joy, and the tendency to give up and lean upon his
-supporting arm.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At sight of him, indeed, before her mortification had
-come upon her, for the costume, in which it seemed to
-her she would rather be seen by any other person in the
-world than Adam, she had nearly run to his arms and
-sobbed out her gladness. It would have been so wholly
-sweet to obey this impulse. Her love for the big, handsome
-fellow had leaped so exultantly in her breast, again
-to see him and to hear his voice, when she had been so
-beset with troubles. But she had denied herself splendidly,
-and now every moment strengthened her determination
-to play her part to the end. Yet what joy it
-would be to travel back to Boston, through the greenwood,
-by his side.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>And being not without her sense of humor, Garde
-conceived many entertaining possibilities which might
-be elicited from the situation, the standpoint of man
-to man being so wholly different from anything heretofore
-presented to her ken.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes,” she said, in answer to Adam’s last remark,
-“I am going to Boston—or near there,—but you may
-find that I cannot walk fast, nor very far, in a day.
-My walking will doubtless prove to be like my fighting.
-So that if you are so mad with—with love, and so eager
-to hasten, perhaps——” and she left the sentence unfinished.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well,” said Adam, pulling his mustache smartly,
-“I confess I am a bit hot on foot, and so you would be,
-young man, if by any good fortune you knew my sweetheart,
-yet I like you well enough, and my lady has such
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_208'>208</span>a heart that she would counsel me to go slower, if need
-be, to lend any comfort or companionship to a youth so
-gentle as yourself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I am sure she would,” said Garde, readily enough.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Are you, though? One would think you knew
-her,” said Adam. “Don’t plume yourself on this
-matter so prematurely. Come, let us start.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“One moment, please, till I can tie my shoe,” said
-Garde, who felt such merriment bubbling up in her
-heart that she was constrained to bend downward to the
-ground quickly, to hide her smiles.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam stood waiting, glancing around at the woods,
-wondering which way his heart had flown, on its lightsome
-wings, in that temple of beauty. Garde looked
-up at him slyly. He was dressed in great brown
-boots, that came above his knees, brown velvet trousers,
-a wine-colored velvet coat, with a leather jerkin over
-it, sleeveless and long enough to reach to the tops
-of his boots, almost, and on his head he wore a large
-slouch hat, becoming and finishing to his striking
-figure.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde was looking at the back of his head rapturously
-when he started to turn, to see why she made the tying
-process so deliberate.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I am ready,” she said, cheerily, springing to her
-feet. “Is this the road?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“By all the promptings of my heart, it is,” said
-Adam. “But, by the way, you have not yet told me
-your name, my boy.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh,—why—why my name is—John Rosella.” She
-had thought of her aunt’s first name, on the spur of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_209'>209</span>the moment, and John had been the simplest and first
-thing which had popped into her head.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“John Rosella,” repeated Adam. “It sounds like
-Spanish. That would account for your dark complexion.”
-He looked at her critically. “Yes, you are a
-nice, gentle boy. Have you ever been in love?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“With—with a girl? never!” said Garde, trembling
-with delight and fear of being detected, especially if
-she answered too many questions. “Do tell me all
-about your lady—lady love.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That’s a bit too precious to tell to any man,” Adam
-assured her, gravely. “And yet, you are so nearly like
-a girl that I can almost tell you about her.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What is her name?” asked Garde, catching her
-breath in little quick gasps.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Her name? Ah, I hardly tell it to myself, often.
-But her name would sound sweet in these woods. Her
-name is—now, mark you, don’t you ask me to repeat it
-again. Never mind her name, anyway.... Well,
-it’s Garde. You will have to be contented with that.
-Ah, but she is the sweetest, most beautiful little woman
-in the world. Her loveliness goes all through, the same
-as beauty is everywhere in these woods. It’s her nature
-to be lovely.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>His voice became an utterance of melody. It seemed
-a part of the forest tones. He had taken off his hat,
-for in his mind Garde stood before him, a smiling
-dream, even as Garde actually walked beside him, a
-smiling reality.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Is she tall?” said Mistress Merrill.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, somewhat taller than you,” said Adam, “Being
-gentle and likeable you might make one think upon her,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_210'>210</span>but her voice is sweeter than yours, and, well—she is a
-girl, and you are merely girlish.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Have you loved her long?” said Garde, again casting
-her gaze upon the ground, as she walked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Years!” said Rust. “I have loved her all my life,
-for I never began to live till I saw her first, and I loved
-her the moment I saw her.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And does she love you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Ah, now you approach forbidden ground. It would
-be a sacrilege for me to prate—even here in these woods—of
-her sweet thoughts. I have told you too much already.
-You are a very devil of a boy, to have gotten so
-much from me, touching on this subject. I’ll be sworn,
-I don’t know why I have let you draw me out like this.
-But I stop you here. It is no concern of yours whether
-she likes me or not.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh,” said Garde. Then she added slyly, “I should
-think she would.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I thank you and warn you, in a breath, young
-man,” Adam replied. “You have gotten the best of
-me already. Let good enough alone.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde loved him the more for the sacredness in which
-he held her name and the inclination of her heart. She
-loved him for the modesty which crept into his speech
-and deportment when least expected. Loving him
-thus, so fully, and in this realm, so made for the growth
-of tender passions, she found it difficult to cease her
-questions. It was so wholly delightful to hear him
-repeat, again and again, how he loved her. She was,
-however, obedient by nature, and now cautious by circumstance.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Perhaps you will tell me of your travels,” she said,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_211'>211</span>this subject being next in importance to hearing of his
-great affection. “I am sure you could relate much of
-interest, if you are so minded.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And how shall you know I have traveled?” said
-the man.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Why—” Garde found herself confused, having
-thoughtlessly spoken on a matter of which she did
-actually know, yet of which she must seem to be in
-ignorance. “Why—I would know this from your appearance—your
-dress, to which the young men here
-are not accustomed. Have you not recently come from
-over sea?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I have,” said the rover, satisfied with her answer.
-“I went away seeking my fortune—which still remains
-to be sought.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, well, never mind,” said Garde, who for the
-moment was his partner, to share all his disappointments.
-“I mean—I mean you don’t seem to mind,”
-she added. “I should like to hear you tell about your
-adventures.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam, who felt that he could talk to this boy by the
-hour, was nothing loath to narrate his wanderings, the
-more especially as he had always found it difficult sufficiently
-to praise his friend William Phipps. Therefore,
-as they walked onward together, Garde thrilling
-with her love, and turning her eyes fondly upon him,
-whensoever he was unaware, Adam told and retold of
-the fights, the hopes, the storms, the success in England,
-and the illness which had finally given him his
-leave to go home to his sweetheart.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>No lover of Nature ever lingered more fondly over
-the sighs of trees, the fanning by of fragrant zephyrs,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_212'>212</span>or the love-tales sung by the birds, than did Garde on
-his every word. And, inasmuch as she could not cling
-to his arm, when he recited the perils through which he
-had come, she artfully coaxed him back to declarations
-of love for his sweetheart, from time to time, to give
-some satisfaction to her yearning.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_213'>213</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER XXV.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>LOVE’S TRAPS FOR CONFESSIONS.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>Some</span> time before nightfall, the two having shared
-their luncheons together and wandered on, through
-the delightful patches of sunlight, slanting through
-the trees, they came upon one of the farms where
-Garde had already tested the hospitality of the good
-people residing by the highway.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Here, by a little dexterity, and through Adam’s
-generosity toward the delicate boy, to whom he had
-taken such a fancy, Garde occupied the spare apartment
-she had made her own when headed in the other
-direction, and Adam contented himself in the hay-loft
-of the barn.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the morning they were up betimes, to greet another
-smiling sun, and so resumed their leisurely
-journey toward the north. At noon they halted as before,
-and made a meal of the stock of bread and other
-provisions they had been able to secure at the farm-house.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde sat upon a mossy bank, while Adam reclined
-on a stone, somewhat below her woodland throne.
-Adam looked at her so long and so steadfastly that she
-grew most uneasy, lest he were about to pierce her
-disguise.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_214'>214</span>“What are you looking at?” she said, with an
-attempt to be boyishly pert.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I was looking at your legs,” said Adam, frankly.
-“They are uncommonly symmetrical, but a shade too
-pretty for a boy.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde immediately bent the plump objects of interest
-underneath her and sat on her heels.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You find a great deal of fault with me,” she said,
-a little vexed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It’s because you have faults, as a boy,” Adam told
-her, honestly. “You know, my lad, you could be a
-bit sturdier and none the worse. And yet, I like you
-immensely as you are. Perhaps if you were changed,
-you would lose some charm and spoil it all. I shall have
-to let you be, and content myself with you as you are.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, thank you,” said Garde, already smiling at
-him again, to herself. “Then please make no more
-remarks about me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“About your legs? Well, I won’t, since you appear
-so sensitive about them. Mind you, they will do well
-enough, after all.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Shall we go on?” Garde asked him. She was a
-little weary and would have been glad of further rest,
-but she found she was much more comfortable when
-they were walking side by side.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam was up at once, for walk they never so fast, he
-felt he could by no means come up with his thoughts
-and desires, which had run so far ahead of them always.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Never mind what I say,” said he, as they resumed
-the onward march. “I have to have my say out,
-when I think it. And you know you do puzzle me
-constantly.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_215'>215</span>“I don’t see why, or how,” said Garde.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It’s because I seem to think I have seen you somewhere
-before. And yet I know that is impossible,
-hence I am driven to think of your girlishness, for an
-explanation.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde said: “I think this is very much in your
-imagination, Adam Rust.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Not a bit of it,” corrected her comrade. “You
-were patterned for a girl, my boy, depend upon it.
-There was some mistake, or some bit of trickery, when
-you became one of us. Why, a man couldn’t even
-think a little oath, in your presence.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Then is it not better that I was raised somewhat
-after the manner of girls?” said Garde, complimented
-as much by the reverent tone in his voice as by what he
-had said. “Does not the rearing I have known serve
-some good purpose, if what you say is so?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“By my faith, yes. But then you do admit that
-you were treated in your younger days, somewhat as a
-girl?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I hope it is no shame to confess this is so,” she
-answered, looking down on the ground to hide the
-dancing of her eyes. “I was treated somewhat in this
-manner and I was even dressed as a girl, at times.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Ah, that accounts for your bashfulness and so
-forth. But you need not blush for this. Bless your
-heart, a man’s the better for it, if he has something of
-the woman in his heart—and even in his hand.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I am glad to hear you say so,” murmured the girl.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, yes, it’s all right,” said Adam magnanimously.
-He looked at her with frank admiration. “Only it is
-something of a pity you were not a girl, you know.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_216'>216</span>“Oh. But why?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Because you would be such an one as a man could
-love.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But not you, Adam Rust. You have said you love
-a sweetheart already.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I do—mightily! But if you were a girl I would
-enjoy finding a man worthy to love you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But this is unseemly. You forget that I am a
-boy.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, for some reason or other, it is easy to forget
-that. But I was merely supposing. Say that a man
-had come along when you were dressed as a girl—why,
-what then?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What then indeed,” said she, with some spirit,
-“would you have talked like this to me, of—of love?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, I wouldn’t,” said Rust, stoutly enough. “It
-would then have been quite another matter. As it is,
-you play the deuce with my brain and fancy. I start
-in to talk to you as man to man, and then I think you
-are almost better fitted to be a girl—and you admit
-you were raised somewhat in that manner, so what can
-one expect?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, what if your sweetheart heard you speaking
-thus?” said Garde, who was enjoying the situation
-the more for the very danger of it. “Should you like
-to have her hear you telling me I should have made a
-girl that a man could—could love?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You being a boy, why not?” Adam made answer.
-“Ah, she is too present in my thought and feeling for
-me to say anything I would be loth for her to hear.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They had arrived at the edge of a brook which was
-somewhat swelled by the snow, back on the hills, melting
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_217'>217</span>in the genial warmth of the sun. It was nothing
-for Adam to stride across, stepping from rock to rock,
-but Garde hesitated, her femininity uppermost in a
-moment, despite her utmost efforts to be boyish.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Here, give us your hand,” said big Adam, turning
-back to help her over. “Now, then, jump!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thrilling with the delight of his warm, strong fingers
-closing so firmly on her own, Garde came across the
-brook in safety and then reluctantly released her grip
-from his.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam had not escaped unscathed from this contact
-of love, with which she was fairly thrilling. He looked
-at her oddly, when they were safe again on the further
-side. Garde caught her breath, in fear that she had
-betrayed herself at last, in that moment of weakness.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You are too much for me, John,” Adam admitted,
-shaking his head in puzzlement. “You are a strange
-boy.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I thought it was all explained,” Garde replied,
-anxious to get him quieted on the subject. “How far
-should you say it is to Boston?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I think I begin to work it out a little,” the man
-went on, musingly. “It’s because you remind me of
-some one I have known.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Do I?” said Garde, half afraid of her question.
-“Of whom?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t quite know,” he confessed, looking at her
-earnestly. “And yet I ought to be able to tell. It
-was some one I liked, I am sure.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“As much as you did your sweetheart?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam seemed not to hear this question. “Your
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_218'>218</span>complexion,” he resumed, “makes me think of a sweet
-maid I knew at Jamaica.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And yet your eyes are like those of a lovely French
-damsel that I met, one time.” Here he sighed.
-“Your hands bring back a memory of a charming
-Countess at the court of Charles. Some of your ways
-make me think of a nice little Indian Princess I once
-knew; while your ankles—but you don’t care to hear
-about your ankles.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde was duly shocked. She knew not what to
-think of Adam, who was revealing such astonishing
-epochs in his life. This was terrible. Yet she wished,
-or almost wished, he had gone on, just a little further,
-though she dared not encourage him to do so, right as
-it might be for her to know it if his heart had strayed
-elsewhere, at any time during his absence. She was
-alarmed, curious, piqued. She forgot that she was a
-boy to whom he had spoken.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It seems to me,” she presently answered, “that I
-remind you of nothing but the ladies and maids of these
-countries where you have traveled.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, you don’t remind me of the lads, that I admit,”
-said Adam.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde made up her mind to profit by the occasion.
-She piled her little courage up to the top-most mark.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And who was the little maid of Jamaica?” she
-asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, she was as sweet a little thing as ever prattled
-Spanish,” Rust replied, with a reminiscent look in his
-eyes. “You would have liked her, I know.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde entertained and reserved her own opinion on
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_219'>219</span>that point. “Well—did she like you?” she asked,
-indifferently.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh yes, she said she did, and I am sure you could
-depend upon her to tell the truth. She used to like to
-sit on my knee, dear little thing!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde gasped. It was fortunate that Adam’s mind
-was occupied with memories. His perfidy was coming
-forth finely. She knew not whether she wished to cry
-or to stamp her foot in anger. She controlled her impulses
-heroically.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“About how old was she?” was her next question.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Three, I should say,” said Adam. “She was a
-pitiful little thing, more than pretty. In a way she
-made me think of Garde, so I couldn’t help but like
-her.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde was flooded, all through her being, with feelings
-of love and penitence. To think that she had entertained
-for a moment a notion that Adam—and
-yet, stay, there were the others,—dames and countesses.
-They could not all have been mere tots of children.
-Then she wondered if it were fair, thus to try to trap
-the poor fellow and take advantage of him, to make him
-confess these subjects as to another man. Of course for
-his own good it might be better to let him tell. And
-she would understand him so much more thoroughly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Was the French damsel only three also?” she summoned
-courage to inquire.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh dear, no. She was three and ninety, but still
-sprightly in the minuet and with eyes that could easily
-have lighted the sun again, had he chanced to go out.
-I shouldn’t have been sorry to have her for a mother—except
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_220'>220</span>that I flatter myself I had a better one—once
-upon a time.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde would have felt like a coward indeed, had she
-desired to ask him of any of the others. Having done
-him a little measure of injustice, she made it up to him
-by loving him the more, now that she found him so innocent.
-Nevertheless she had ears to listen with when
-he volunteered some information about the countess he
-had seen and admired at the court of Charles.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It turned out, however, that he had merely seen her
-safely married to one of his royal friends, for whose
-happiness he had the most sincere of wishes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde felt her spirit of daring and merriment return.
-It was so tempting to play around the point of her identity
-that she could not altogether resist the impulse of
-her nature, to keep him talking.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I seem to be happy in reminding you of many persons,”
-she said. “But I think I would rather remind
-you of some one else. Since you claim to be so much
-in love, it would compliment me more if I could remind
-you of your Mistress Garde.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Maybe you would,” said Adam, “only that I am
-getting so near to Boston that such a reminiscence, in
-a boy, would be sheer impertinence.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_221'>221</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER XXVI.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>A HOLIDAY ENDED.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>Having</span> the fortune to be overtaken by a good-natured
-farmer, who was trotting his horses northward,
-along their road, from a trip to market, the travelers
-got the benefit of a lift that landed them within a few
-hours’ walk of Boston. However, as the farmer’s journey
-ended where there were no accommodations, and
-there was still another hour of light, which would suffice
-to bring them to a small hostelry, where Garde
-knew she could make such arrangements as she desired,
-they tramped onward as before.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>With every step that brought them further toward
-their destination Adam waxed more and more impatient
-to hurry, while Garde found her courage and her
-footsteps lagging.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She had momentarily forgotten her troubles, in the
-joy of being with Adam, strolling for hours through
-the vales of peace and loveliness, but now her tribulations
-returned, with compound interest. She yearned
-over her smitten grandfather, yet she feared for what he
-might do, when he should see her again within his reach,
-for if he had been well-nigh insane when she saw him
-last, how much more violent he might now have become.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She trembled likewise at the thought of Randolph,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_222'>222</span>and the measures of revenge which he might adopt,
-backed by the power which was sufficient to uphold or
-to overthrow the charter. From these meditations she
-was tempted to fly to Adam’s arms and implore his protection.
-It afforded her infinite relief to think that he
-would at least be near. If the worst came of her returning,
-she would manage to go to him, by some
-means, she was certain, and under the stress of circumstances
-she would not be deemed immodest in beseeching
-his protection, for which purpose she would consent
-immediately to become his wife.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Eager to justify herself in what she had done, refusing
-to believe that honor had been as nothing and Randolph’s
-promises all important, she framed many introductions
-to the subject, before she could finally begin
-to question her fellow-traveler upon it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She then began by reciting to him somewhat of the
-news of Boston town. She told of the fear for the
-charter, which had become a mania with the older
-patriots, of the baleful power of Randolph and of the
-culminations which at last he was beginning to work
-against the colony. Adam waxed so wroth against
-Randolph, whom he remembered distinctly, that she
-was much encouraged to go on with a hypothetical case
-which she soon invented.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She dared not connect the name of Randolph directly
-with her story and questions, lest Adam, when he
-arrived in Boston, should learn more, concerning the
-whole wretched business, and know it was she who had
-undergone the ordeal. Also it required a great concentration
-of her courage, backed by repeated assurances to
-herself that Adam thought her a youth, before she
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_223'>223</span>could approach the subject in any manner whatsoever.
-Yet she knew she would have no such opportunity to
-speak to him again with anything like the freedom
-which was now possible, and Goody Dune had made
-her a sensible young woman.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Suppose,” she finally said, “that a man who had
-influence with the King threatened to use all his power
-against the colony and its charter, if some young girl
-should refuse to become his wife. Would it be her
-duty to marry the man?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That would depend on her spirit of patriotism,”
-said Adam. “If she believed she could save the colony
-from a grave danger, it seems to me she ought to do
-so.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes—I think so too,” said Garde, honestly. “But
-suppose she found out that the man had been very
-false.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“In what manner?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well,—that he had deceived another young woman.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Do you mean betrayed some other young woman?”
-said Adam bluntly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde averted her gaze and answered: “Yes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, suppose this was so, then what is your question?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The question is, what do you think the first young
-woman should do then—after she found out that—that
-this was true?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That would depend again on the particular young
-woman,” said Rust, who believed he was speaking as
-man to man, and who knew that when women are
-betrayed it is not always the fault wholly of the male-being
-in the case. “If she wanted to save the charter,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_224'>224</span>or anything of that sort, I don’t see how this would
-alter the case particularly.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You wouldn’t excuse the man?” said Garde, turning
-pale under her brown stain.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam had in mind a painful incident which had
-occurred in the life of a friend of his in England. “I
-might,” he answered. “Possibly a great deal could be
-said in defense of the poor devil, in some way or
-another.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But,” insisted Garde, somewhat desperately, “if
-you were a girl you wouldn’t marry such a man?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“If I were a girl and I loved him,” said Rust, still
-thinking of the case of his friend, “why—I think
-perhaps I should.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But if you hated and loathed him?” Garde almost
-cried.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, that is quite a different matter. If hate
-entered in, I should welcome any excuse to get away.
-In the actual case of which I was thinking, it seems to
-me the girl ought to forgive——But I had forgotten
-all about the element of the charter, which we were supposing
-was to figure in the case.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde cared for nothing further about the discussion.
-He had justified her, at least partially. She had
-always felt that Randolph would have betrayed the
-colony, even had she sacrificed herself and Adam, to
-marry him, as her grandfather had desired. She was
-now a little troubled that Adam could think so nearly
-as her grandfather had done; that he could really condone
-such a terrible dishonor in a fellow-man. Had it
-not been that, under cover of her present disguise she
-had proved how true and good her Adam was, she would
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_225'>225</span>have been pained and perhaps worried by his latitude
-of thought. She had to finish the subject, so she
-said:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“If she—this girl—not only hated the man, but felt
-sure he would not keep his promise to do good for the
-charter, but would deceive her and every one else, just
-as he had deceived the other girl—then what ought she
-to do?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It would be high time, under those circumstances,”
-replied her companion, “to refuse absolutely, or to
-ship on the first departing vessel, or to do anything else
-that would be quick and to the point.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That is just what I think,” said Garde, now well
-satisfied.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It’s more important for us, my boy, to think of
-what we shall do when we arrive in Boston, to-morrow,”
-Adam now remarked. “By the way, do you know
-anybody there?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde hesitated before answering. She had to be
-clever. “Nobody there will know me when I get
-there,” she said, “unless it is some one I might once
-have known.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Rust did not analyze the ambiguity of this reply. He
-was engrossed with other reflections.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Have you got any money?” he asked her next.
-“Because if you haven’t you can have the half of mine,—not
-much to speak of, but enough to feed you and
-put you to bed. I hope to get into some better tavern
-than the Crow and Arrow.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Thank you,” said Garde, looking at him slyly with
-a tender light of love in her eyes, “I think I have
-enough for a time.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_226'>226</span>“If we stop at the same tavern, and have our meals
-served together, it will cost you less,” Adam informed
-her practically, “and besides, I have grown so fond of
-you, my boy, that I should be sorry to lose sight of you,
-in the town.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But the sooner you lose sight of me, the sooner you
-will see your sweetheart,” said Garde, with difficulty
-restraining her lips from curving in a smile.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Ah, but I shall wish her to know you,” said Adam,
-generously. “For to no one else save you have I ever
-been able to talk of my love for her sweet self, and this
-is something of a miracle. As I think upon it, you do
-remind me of her often, by your voice, though it is not
-so sweet as hers, as I may have said before, and by
-other tokens, which I am at a loss to define. But
-because of these things, I would fight for you, and with
-her sweet approval.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I am sure of it,” said Garde. “I trust you will
-have great joy when you find her again. And you may
-tell her for me, if you will, that——well, that she should
-love you with her whole soul,——but she does already, I
-am sure.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You are a kind as well as a gentle boy,” said Adam
-to her gravely. “I am glad it could be no matter to
-her for me to like you so exceedingly, you being a boy,——but,
-boy, you do bedevil my brain with your girlish
-ways. I shall never explain you, I’ll be sworn.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Here is where we turn, for the night’s rest,” Garde
-replied, avoiding the puzzled look which Rust directed
-to her face. “We have had a pleasant journey of it
-together. I shall never forget it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Let’s wait till it’s finished before we sum it up,”
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_227'>227</span>said Adam. “To-morrow we have a few more hours,
-ere we reach the town, and these may be the pleasantest
-of all.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Yet when the boy said good night to him, after their
-supper, he felt a strange sense of loss for which he was
-wholly unable to account.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the morning the matter was somewhat explained.
-The boy had arisen before the sun and gone on her way
-without him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was not without a little pang in his heart that the
-rover trudged onward, alone.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_228'>228</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER XXVII.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>IN BOSTON TOWN.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>Garde</span> fairly ran, when she made her early morning
-start. She had not been able to think of any other
-solution of the problem of getting back to her own
-proper sphere without permitting Adam to become
-aware of the whole situation. She had not come to her
-resolution to cope with the difficulty thus without many
-little sighs of regret and a few little fears of what might
-be the consequences. Nevertheless, she had seen the
-necessity of prompt action, after which she had felt a
-desire only for haste. She was, however, buoyed up
-by the glad thought that Adam would not be long behind
-her, in his march to town, hence she would soon
-be seeing him there, under circumstances which would
-make it possible to accept his love and to lean upon
-his strong, protecting arm.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The sun was no more than an hour up in the sky
-when she came to the outskirts of Boston and ran
-quickly on to Goody Dune’s. Goody was not at all surprised
-to see her thus returning. Indeed she had looked
-to see her back at least a week earlier. The old woman,
-preparing against this moment, had plaited the long locks
-of hair which Garde had been obliged to leave behind,
-and these she helped the truant to wind upon her head,
-with some semblance of natural growth, an effect which
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_229'>229</span>she heightened by providing a small lace cap, which
-made of Mistress Merrill a very demure-appearing little
-person.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The brown stain rapidly succumbed to Goody’s treatment
-with vinegar. Garde emerged from the mask as
-rosy and cream white as an apple, for the open air and
-the days with Adam had wrought such evidence of
-health and happiness upon her that not the dread of
-what she might discover at home, nor any excitement
-of being in the land of her enemy, could make any paleness
-in her face of more than a moment’s duration. She
-was too excited to eat, although Goody tried to urge
-her to take even a cup of tea, and so she went on to
-her grandfather’s house, and let herself in, at the rear.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As Granther Donner’s sister had passed away a number
-of years before, he had been left quite to himself
-when Garde decamped. But when his illness came so
-suddenly upon him, Mrs. Soam and Prudence, both
-persuaded that Garde was almost, if not entirely, in the
-right, appeared dutifully at his bedside as ministering
-angels.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thus Garde, upon entering the kitchen, found her
-Aunt Gertrude engaged in preparing a breakfast. The
-good lady was startled.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Why—Garde!” she gasped. “Oh, dear me, is it
-really you? Child, where have you been? Oh, David
-is very ill indeed. I am so glad you have come home!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I came because I heard he was ill,” said Garde, who
-was more calm than might have been expected. “I
-didn’t know you were here. It was real good of you to
-come, dear aunty. I suppose you will scold me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It was all a terrible thing,” said her aunt, “but
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_230'>230</span>John says he thinks Mr. Randolph meant to take away
-our charter anyway.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, I am sure of it!” cried Garde, so glad to hear
-of a partisan. “If I hadn’t believed that, I don’t
-think I should ever have run away. Oh, thank you, so
-much, dear aunty! I am so glad. God bless Uncle
-John! I knew I was right!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But your uncle and all of us are very sad,” her
-aunt proceeded to add. “They don’t think we will
-have the charter through the summer. It is a terrible
-time, but they all say that Randolph must have been
-getting ready, or he couldn’t have done so much so
-quickly. It is a sad day for Massachusetts. But, there,
-run in and see David, do,—but, dearie, don’t be surprised
-if he doesn’t seem to know you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the dining-room Garde and Prudence met, a moment
-later.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Good morning, Garde,” said the cousin, without
-the slightest sign of emotion.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde kissed her, impulsively. “Oh, I am so glad
-to see you, dear!” she said. Indeed love had so wrought
-upon her that she felt she had never so cared for any
-one before as she did for all these dear ones now.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She hastened on to her grandfather, and Prudence
-was left there, looking where her cousin had gone and
-solemnly wishing she also might do something emotional
-and startling.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But a few hours only sufficed to reduce the spirit of
-wildness and youthful exhilaration which Garde had
-brought with her back from the road in the forest. To
-hear the old patriot raving, childishly, and crying and
-praying over the charter and over Garde as a baby,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_231'>231</span>which was the way he seemed to remember his grandchild,
-was a thing that rent her heart and drove all joy
-from the life of care into which she came, in her mood
-of penitence and quiet.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The days slipped by and became weeks. Prudence
-returned to her father at once. Goodwife Soam remained
-to help Garde over the crisis, and then she too
-left the girl with the stricken old man, who had become
-a prattling child, on whom the word “Charter” acted
-like a shock to make him instantly insane against his
-daughter’s child.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the meantime Adam Rust, having come to Boston
-in a moment when excitement, despair and bitter feeling,
-such as the town nor the colony had ever known
-before, and which completely altered the Puritan people,
-had heard a garbled story of Randolph’s perfidy
-and his attempt to marry Garde which made his blood
-boil. Fortunately the fact that Garde had run away
-had been kept so close a secret, that more persons had
-heard how devotedly she was attending David Donner
-than knew any hint of her escapade. Adam having
-first paid his respects to Mrs. Phipps, to whom he delivered
-the Captain’s messages and letters, had found
-himself apartments in a tavern quite removed from the
-Crow and Arrow, where he had been able easily to avoid
-all his former acquaintances of Boston. He might
-have desired to search out Wainsworth, but Henry was
-away at Salem. Randolph, of whom Adam naturally
-thought, had betaken himself to New York, there to
-conclude some details of snatching the charter from
-the colony of Massachusetts.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Once settled, Adam lost no time in searching for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_232'>232</span>Garde. Thus he was soon made aware of the state of
-the Donner household, into the affairs of which it would
-have been anything but thoughtful and kind to obtrude
-his presence. With a courteous patience he set himself
-to wait for a seemly moment in which to apprise Garde of
-his reappearance. He told himself that, as she had no
-intimation that he had returned to Boston, it would be a
-greater kindness to keep himself in the background,
-until her trials should be lessened.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Naturally all these various matters had somewhat
-obliterated from his mind the thoughts of the youth
-with whom he had traveled from the environs of Plymouth.
-While he was curbing his spirit and his too
-impatient love, a message arrived, in care of Goodwife
-Phipps, from Captain William Kidd, to the effect that
-the beef-eaters, far from recuperating after their voyage,
-had become seriously ill, and were begging each day
-for the “Sachem.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Rust had been contemplating the acceptance of an
-offer from Mrs. Phipps to assume command at the ship-yard,
-the foreman in charge being then arrogating powers
-unto himself which were not at all quieting. Adam
-reflected that if he took this place he could settle down,
-marry his sweetheart presently, and become a sober
-citizen.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>With the advent of the message from the beef-eaters,
-he was completely at a loss to know what to do. He
-yearned over these faithful companions, whose affection
-had been repeatedly demonstrated, under circumstances
-the most trying. If they should die while
-he remained away, selfishly denying them so little a
-thing as his presence, he would never obtain his own
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_233'>233</span>forgiveness. Yet he could not go to New York, or
-any other where on earth, without first having at least
-seen Garde. Indeed he reflected now that mayhap it
-had been a mistaken kindness for him to remain away
-from her side so long. Should he not have gone to her
-long before, and offered what service he could render
-in her trial?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As a matter of fact he had been kind as it was, for
-Garde had hardly enjoyed a moment in which to do so
-much as to think of love and her lover. Her grandfather
-had occupied her attention day and night.
-She had stinted him in nothing, else with her spirit of
-penitence upon her—for all that she had helped to
-hasten upon him—she could never have had any peace
-of mind nor contentment in her soul.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But at last, when the old man was out of danger,
-sitting in his chair by the hour, she had time to think
-of Adam again and to wonder why it was that he had
-never attempted to see her. She answered herself by
-saying it was better that he had not done so, but then,
-when she suddenly thought that he might have heard
-all manner of wild stories, and might indeed have gone
-away, angered and not understanding the truth, she
-yearned for him feverishly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As if the message of her love flew unerringly to him,
-Adam suddenly, in the midst of thinking of going to
-the beef-eaters, determined to see his sweetheart, cost
-what it might.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_234'>234</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER XXVIII.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>LOVE’S GARDEN.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>After</span> nearly a week of rain and dull, gray skies, the
-weather was again entrancing. The warm, soporific
-breeze which played through the house lulled Grandther
-Donner off to sleep, as he sat in his chair, staring at
-vacancy and rubbing his thumb across the ends of his
-fingers.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde, responding to the mood of coming summer,
-could not resist the impulse to go out into the garden,
-which to her would always be associated with her childish
-meeting with Adam Rust, and which therefore now
-made of her yearning to see him a positive force.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thus it doubtless appeared to her as an answer to
-her longing when she felt a presence and glanced up at
-the gate, to see him standing there, as he had so many
-years before, with two of the pickets clasped in his
-big, strong hands.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Her heart gave a leap that almost hurt, so suddenly
-did it send the ecstasy bounding through her veins.
-Yet so sublimated was the look on Adam’s face, as,
-with parted lips and visible color rising and falling in
-his face, he gazed at her, steadfastly, and as one entranced,
-that she went toward him as slowly as if
-walking might disturb the spell.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>One of her hands, like a homing dove, came up to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_235'>235</span>press on her bosom above her heart. She was pale, for
-the cares of those weeks had bleached the rose-tints
-from her cheeks. Nevertheless, the moment painted
-them with vestal flames of love’s own lamp, as she
-looked into Adam’s eyes and saw the tender passion
-abiding there.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Adam, I prithee come in,” she said, in a soft
-murmur, unconsciously repeating what she had said
-when first he had leaned upon this gate.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As one approaching something sacred, Adam came
-in and took her two hands in his. He raised them
-slowly to his lips, and then pressed them together
-against his breast.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Garde,” he said, almost whispering. “Garde.
-My little Garde.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, Adam,” she answered.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They looked at one another and smiled, she through
-shining tears. Then they laughed, for there were no
-words, there was nothing which could absolutely express
-their overflowing joy, but their laughing, which
-was wholly spontaneous, came the nearest.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, I have been so afraid this moment would
-never come,” said Garde, presently, when she could
-trust herself to speak. “It has been such a long, long
-time to wait.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I love you. Garde, dearest, I love you,” said
-Adam. “I love to say that I love you. I could say
-it all day: ‘Garde, I love you. Garde, I love you,
-dear, and love you.’ I have told every star in the
-heavens to tell you how I love you, dear. But I would
-rather tell you myself. Let me see you. Let me look
-at you, sweetheart.” He still held her hands, but at
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_236'>236</span>arms’ length away, and looked at her blushing face with
-such an adoration in his eyes as she had never beheld.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Indeed, Adam’s passion had swept her from her feet.
-It possessed her, enveloped her form, held her enthralled
-in an ecstasy so profound that she gasped to catch her
-breath, while her heart leaped as if it were pealing out
-her happiness.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They were standing thus, oblivions of everything,
-when a sour-visaged Puritan, passing by the gate, halted
-a moment to look at them malignantly. It was none
-other than Isaiah Pinchbecker, the scolding hypocrite
-who had danced to Adam’s fiddling, several years before.
-He suddenly gave himself a nudge in the ribs.
-His eyes lighted up with grim satisfaction. He had
-recognized the rover, and with news in his narrow
-head he hastened away, prodding himself assiduously
-as he went.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the meantime, Grandther Donner, whose naps
-lasted hardly as long as forty winks, had awakened.
-He started from his sleep as if he had suddenly caught
-himself neglecting to watch the charter. Glancing
-hastily about the room, he missed Garde at once. In
-his brain, two cells had broken their walls so that their
-substance commingled, till Garde and the charter seemed
-at times the same, and always so interlinked that he
-dared not let her go a yard from his sight.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He tottered to his feet, and rubbing his thumb
-diligently across the ends of his fingers, went out at
-the open door, toward his grandchild, guided by some
-sense which in an animal is often highly developed.
-He came upon the scene in the garden just as Adam,
-after looking his heart full, nearly to bursting, had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_237'>237</span>drawn Garde close again, to kiss her hands in uncontainable
-joy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At sight of Adam’s costume, which was not a great
-departure from that of the Royalists of the day, in
-contradistinction from that of the Puritans, David
-Donner flew into a violent rage. He raised his two
-palsied hands above his head and screamed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Garde!” he cried, “Garde! Kill that man—Kill
-him!—kill him! The charter! The King’s
-devil! Kill him! He’s ripping the charter to pieces
-with his teeth!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He came running toward them, clawing his nails
-down across his face till he made his pale cheeks bleed,
-and tore out little waving filaments, like gossamer, from
-his snow-white hair. Almost at their feet he fell full
-length, where he struck at the soil and dug in his
-finger nails, frantically, all the while making terrible
-sounds in his paroxysm, most dreadful to hear.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam and Garde had started, he merely alert in the
-presence of the unexpected, she in a fear that sent the
-color from her face so abruptly that it seemed she must
-swoon at once. She uttered one little cry, clung galvanically
-to Adam’s fingers for a second, and then bent
-quickly down to place her hand on the old man’s
-head.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>His delirious fury lasted but a moment. It then
-subsided as quickly as it had come, leaving him limp,
-exhausted, dull-eyed and panting like some run-down
-animal. A more pitiable sight than he then became, as
-he began to weep, shaken by the convulsive sobs which
-sometimes possess the frame of a man, Adam hoped he
-should never be obliged to witness.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_238'>238</span>Well as he understood that the sight of himself had
-precipitated this painful episode, Adam was also now
-aware that the old man, for the moment, saw and comprehended
-nothing. He therefore lifted him tenderly
-up in his arms and carried him into the house, placing
-him gently down on a lounge which he readily saw had
-been recently employed for the old man’s couch.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde had followed, her hands clasped together, the
-look of a tired mother in her face, making it infinitely
-sweet and patient.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Garde, dear, forgive me,” said Adam. “I came
-too soon to see you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh Adam!” she said, sadly. “In a few days, a
-week, dear, he is sure to be better.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Is there anything I can do?” said Adam, from
-the depths of his distress and sympathy and love.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, he is coming back to himself. Go, Adam,
-please,” said Garde, “don’t wait, dear, please. Come
-back to the gate, this evening.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam went without so much as waiting to say good-by,
-for Garde had turned to her grandfather quickly,
-and anything further he might have said he abandoned,
-when David feebly spoke.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Depressed by the whole affair immeasurably, Adam
-was still too exalted by love’s great flight to dwell for
-long upon old Donner’s mania. His worries for Garde,
-in her tribulations, however, were strewn like sad
-flowers of thought through his reverie. He longed to
-help her, yet he knew how utterly impossible such a
-thing would be.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Walking aimlessly, he came before long to the harbor
-shore. The melted emerald and sapphire, which the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_239'>239</span>sea was rolling against the rocks, with sparkles of captured
-sunlight glinting endlessly through and upon
-the lazy billows, gave him the greatest possible sense
-of delight. He sat down on a rock where the green
-velvet moss had dried like fur, after a wetting.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>No king on a throne ever detected more evidences
-of the world’s gladness than did the rover, thinking
-away the hours of that balmy afternoon. He forgot
-all about dinner, when the sun went down, and he had
-nearly forgotten old man Donner, when at length he
-started to his feet, in the twilight, in love with the
-evening for having come so soon, although half an
-hour before he had been thinking the day would never
-end.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He was soon at the gate in front of Donner’s house,
-listening, watching the darkened windows, holding his
-breath as every fragrant zephyr trailed its perfumes by,
-thinking Garde was coming, preceded by the redolence
-attendant on her loveliness.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But he had many such breathless moments of suspense,
-in vain. Evening glided into the arms of night.
-The hours winged by, on raven wings, and still no
-Garde appeared. Adam paced up and down, restoring,
-time after time, the picture of Garde as he had
-seen her, during those precious few moments before
-the interruption.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He was not conscious of the flight of time. He was
-well content to be near where his lady was and to wait
-there, knowing that she knew he was waiting, thinking
-of her, as he knew she was thinking of him. He
-clasped his hands back of his head; then he folded his
-arms, the better to press on his heart; then he stopped
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_240'>240</span>and tossed kisses to the silent house, after which he
-again walked back and forth, pausing to listen, and
-then going on as before.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At length, near midnight, he stood looking up at
-the stars, completely absorbed in a dream he was
-fashioning to suit himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There was a faint flutter.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Adam—oh, are you there?” said a sweet voice,
-subdued and a bit tremulous. “Oh, I am so glad you
-didn’t go away, discouraged.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam had turned about instantly, a glad sound upon
-his lips. In one stride he reached the gate and caught
-her two trembling hands where they rested on the
-pickets.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Dearest!” he murmured to her joyously. “At
-last!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I can only stop a minute, Adam,” said Garde, who
-was quaking a little, lest her grandfather wake and
-come again into the garden. “He has been very restless,
-and he wouldn’t go to sleep, and he wakes up so
-easily! But I couldn’t let you go away like that. And
-I have tried to come out five times, but he woke up
-every time, and now I must say good night, Adam,
-and run right back at once.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, but I love you so,” said Adam, illogically. “If
-you must go, though, you must. I know I can never
-tell you how much I love you, dearest.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, Adam!” she said, expressing more than he
-did, poor fellow, in all his protestations. “Oh, dear!
-I really must go, Adam. But in about a week I am
-sure he will be much better.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Shan’t I see you for a week?” said he.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_241'>241</span>“It might be better not,” she answered, “if we could
-wait.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I could go down to see my poor old beef-eaters, I
-suppose,” Adam mused.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In relating his travels, on the road, he had told Garde
-of the beef-eaters, so that now, although she said nothing
-to betray herself, she understood what he meant.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And then you’ll come back, as soon as you can, in
-a few days, or a week?” she asked. “Oh, dear—it is
-too bad. But, Adam, I must not remain another single
-minute. I must say good night, dear, and run.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam had remained on his own side of the gate,
-retaining her hands, which he had kissed repeatedly,
-till they fairly burned with their tingling. He now
-reached over the gate and took her sweet face between
-his two big palms.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Good night, dearest little love,” he said, and slowly
-leaning forward, he kissed her, once—then he kissed her
-three times more.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She started slowly away, looking back at him
-lovingly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, Garde!” he whispered.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She stopped and came fluttering back to meet him.
-He had let himself in at the gate with one quick movement.
-He took her home to his arms and held her
-in breathless joy against his throbbing heart. With
-love in her eyes her face was turned upward to his
-own.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My Adam!” she said, with all the fervor of her
-nature.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My love! My darling!” he responded.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He kissed her again. It was a warm, sweet kiss that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_242'>242</span>brought their very souls to their lips. Then he dropped
-down on his knee and kissed her hands and pressed
-their fragrant palms against his face.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My love!” he said. “My own love!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She nestled in his arms yet once again. She gave
-him the one more kiss that burned on her lips to be
-taken, and then she fled swiftly to the house.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_243'>243</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER XXIX.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>THE ENEMY IN POWER.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>Adam</span> found his faithful beef-eaters on the verge of
-the grave. The miserable old rogues had no better
-sense than to be pining to death like two masterless dogs.
-They had been ill enough, in all conscience, and even
-somewhat mentally disordered, but there had been no
-sufficient grounds for the pair to believe themselves
-abandoned by their “Sachem,” and there had been absolutely
-no excuse for them to refuse to eat.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>However, the rascals nearly “wagged” themselves to
-pieces when Rust was finally beside them, and the way
-they laughed was most suggestively like the glad whimpering
-of two dumbly loving animals expressing their
-joy. Adam would have scolded the two for having
-brought themselves to such a condition of weakness
-and bones, only that he had not the heart to do this
-justice to the case.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There was, however, no such thing as getting the old
-fellows back on their pins in a week, nor yet in two,
-nor three. They even hesitated, after he had come,
-between running backward toward their long sleep and
-coming along with him to vales of renewed health.
-They were like affectionate creatures divided between
-two masters. The grim visitor had come so near to winning
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_244'>244</span>them both, with his beckoning, that they appeared
-to think it their duty to die.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam, however, was a persuasive force. He had won
-them away from themselves before; he won them again
-on this occasion. Captain Kidd, a braw Scotsman,
-who ordinarily dropped his native dialect, having little
-affection for his country, his father having suffered tortures
-for becoming a non-conformist clergyman, felt he
-must needs relapse into something barbaric to express
-himself on the beef-eaters.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Of all the twas that ere twad,” said he, “you’re
-muckle the strangest twa.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>By this he meant to convey that of all the couples
-that ever mated, the two old rascals were the oddest
-pair.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The convalescence being a slow affair, Adam was
-obliged to give up all thought of returning immediately
-to Boston. Yet so hopeful was he that every day
-would perform some miracle of restoring the strength
-to the muscles and the meat to the bones of his retinue,
-that it was not until he had been away from Garde
-for more than three weeks that he finally wrote to tell
-her of why he had failed to return. But the letter, for
-some unknown reason, was never delivered.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At length, however, what with the fulness of summer
-come upon them and the hope which Adam had
-inspired in their breasts, the beef-eaters became padded
-out to the fulness of their old-time grandeur, and once
-more swaggered about and bragged of their prowess.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam’s money had, by this time, dwindled down to
-a sum which was not at all difficult to transport from
-place to place, nor even from pocket to pocket. Having
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_245'>245</span>no heart to put the retinue on shipboard, to convey
-them to Massachusetts, he sacrificed nearly his
-last bit of coin to secure them passage, by coach and
-wagon, from Manhattan to Boston. This left him
-either one of two expedients for himself. He could
-walk, or he could make shift to secure a passage by
-vessel, giving work as payment for the favor. He
-argued that once in Boston he would accept the position
-offered by Goodwife Phipps at the ship-yard, and
-hither also would he take his followers, so that by honest
-toil they might all be happy and continue their time-sealed
-companionship, and desert the rolling-stone business
-as an occupation.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was not without misgivings that the beef-eaters
-accepted this arrangement. But being obedient things
-that would willingly have gone into fire, or the sea itself,
-at Adam’s command or wish, they meekly bade him
-a temporary adieu and saw him depart before them, a
-ship being several days ahead of the coach in point of
-time for departing.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the meantime, history had been making fast in
-Boston. The crafty Randolph, whose coup had long
-been prepared, had returned from New Amsterdam,
-bearing a commission from the King of England
-declaring the charter null and void and delegating upon
-him power to form a new provisional government for
-the colony of Massachusetts. Great tracts of territory,
-comprising New Hampshire, Maine and other areas,
-were lopped off from the province at one fell blow.
-Randolph created Joseph Dudley provisional governor,
-Dudley having long been seeking his favor, against this
-final moment of changes. The courts fell into the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_246'>246</span>hands of the newly-elected power. The soldiers, constabulary,
-everything assumed an ultra-English tone
-and arrogance. The people clenched their fists and
-wrought their passions up to a point where rebellions are
-lighted in a night.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Yet Boston was a loyal town, obedient to its liege
-lord and nearly as eager to serve him and to do him
-homage as it was to preserve its liberties and the independence,
-which gradual development had created and
-long usage had confirmed as inalienable, in the belief
-of all the patriotic citizens. Stoughton and Bradstreet,
-beholding the revolutionary tendency, which would
-have plunged the colony most unwisely into a sea of
-trouble, submitted to the new order of things, which
-for long they had seen coming, inevitably, out of the
-malignant spirit in which the Stuart dynasty had
-always desired to govern these non-conformist hard-heads.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There were many creatures in Boston swift to join
-the Tory party, under Randolph, for the plums of
-official recognition. Thus this party rapidly assumed
-considerable dimensions, and therefore power, to add to
-that of which the King himself was the fountain-head.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Boston at that time was a prosperous town of something
-more than six thousand souls. It was substantially
-built, if crookedly, for the most part of wood. Yet
-there was a fair sprinkling of brick houses along its
-cow-path streets, and a few were of stone, which, in
-several instances, had been brought to this undeveloped
-land from England. The town was distinctly English,
-both as to customs and thoughts, but the seeds which
-hardihood had sown, were to grow the pillars of Americanism—synonymous
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_247'>247</span>with a spirit of Democracy sufficient
-to inspire the world!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Naturally Isaiah Pinchbecker became a master-jackal
-under the new régime. Psalms Higgler, the lesser
-light of lick-spittling, became, by the same token, a
-lesser carnivora, but no less hungry to be feeding on
-the foe-masters of the recent past. And Pinchbecker,
-having found Adam in the town, was alert to find him
-again.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Yet not even Pinchbecker, with his knife-edge mind,
-devoted to evolving schemes of vengeance, could have
-comprehended the tigerish joy with which Randolph
-remembered Adam Rust, from that morning in the
-Crow and Arrow, and with which he now put two and
-two together, to arrive at Adam’s relationship with
-Garde Merrill.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Randolph was a subtle schemer, never fathomed by
-the Puritans, against whom he displayed such an implacable
-hatred. He was far too wise ever to appear as
-the point, when a thrust of revenge was to be delivered.
-He never for a moment relaxed his obsequious demeanor,
-nor his air of injured guiltlessness. Like all men of
-power, he had much material, self-offered, from which
-to choose his henchmen. He had chosen Pinchbecker
-wisely, for a hypocrite, a fawner, and an arrant knave
-who could work endless harm, in an underhanded
-fashion. But for his more aggressive employment he
-attached to his service a great, burly brute, with a face
-like a mastiff’s, an intelligence like a sloth’s, and a
-courage like that of a badger. This masterpiece of
-human animalism responded to the name of “Gallows,”
-for once a man had been hanged on his back, as in early
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_248'>248</span>English-Irish usage, and of this he was matchlessly
-proud.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam arrived in the midst of that first elation
-of Randolph and his following, the like of which
-is frequently the cause of reaction so violent as to quite
-reverse the fates themselves. But although the Puritans
-hated Dudley, almost more than Randolph, for
-traitorously joining the party of destruction, their
-growlings checked nothing of the all-importance which
-the creatures in power felt and made their fellow-beings
-feel. A spirit of sullen brooding settled on the people.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Unaware that Rust had been away from Boston,
-since he had seen him that day in Donner’s garden
-with Mistress Merrill, Pinchbecker had been seeking
-for him diligently, ever since Randolph’s return. But
-believing that his quarry would be found eventually in
-the vicinity of the Crow and Arrow, his field of investigations
-was narrow.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It had naturally happened, however, that Adam had
-quite forgotten to tell the beef-eaters of his change of
-abode in Boston. They would therefore proceed to
-the old tavern immediately upon their arrival. He
-thought of this before he landed. Having come ashore
-at twilight, he made it his duty to stroll to the Crow
-and Arrow, for the purpose of leaving a message for
-Pike and Halberd, when at last they should come to
-the town.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_249'>249</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER XXX.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>A FIGHT AT THE TAVERN.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>It</span> was a quiet time of the day, in a quiet part of the
-city. Adam discerned one or two individuals only and
-was not concerned with noting that he was suddenly
-preceded by a noiseless person, who hastened ahead of
-him to the tavern. The rover was much more occupied
-in observing the beauties of a horse that stood hitched
-to a post across the way from the public house.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The animal, a fine bay, imported from England, was
-the property of one of Randolph’s followers, a drinking
-young dandy with questionable ambitions and many
-extravagant tastes. Charmed by the horse’s impatience,
-as evinced by his pawing at the ground, Adam was
-tempted to get astride his back for a gallop.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>However, after standing for a moment on the sidewalk,
-while his gaze caressed the champing animal, he
-turned and passed on into the tavern. Desiring to conclude
-his business as speedily as possible, he was somewhat
-annoyed to find the way to the bar, in front of
-the landlord, completely blocked by a great hulk of a
-creature, with a sword loosely girt about his loins, and
-two or three others, of whom the rover took less notice.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“By your leave,” he said, politely, not yet suspicious
-of the odd silence which had fallen on the company at
-his entrance, “I would like to get to the——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_250'>250</span>“What!” roared the big lout, whom he had slightly
-touched upon the arm. “Who the devil are you?
-Keep your hands off of me, you fool!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The person on whom Adam looked was Gallows,
-whose face, florid almost to being purple, was so
-savagely contorted as to comprise an insult in itself.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My cross-eyed friend,” retorted Adam, whose temper
-had risen without delay, “have done looking at yourself,
-if you would see no fool. If you will tell me which
-hand I put on you, I’ll cut it off, else I may live to see
-it rot!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The company had turned about at once. Pinchbecker
-was there, with his satellite, Psalms Higgler, the
-little white-eyed scamp that Adam had once dropped
-from the near-by window. The foppish young Englishman,
-who owned the horse outside, was likewise in the
-party. They all saw the burly Gallows turn to them
-hopelessly, befuddled by Adam’s answer.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You be a fool!” he roared again, his eyes bulging
-out of their sockets in his wrath, “and I be the fool-killer!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The company guffawed at this, the monster’s solitary
-sally of wit.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You are a liar by the fact that you live,” said Rust.
-“Bah, you disgust me with the thought of having the
-duties, which you have so patently and outrageously
-neglected, thrust upon me. Begone. There’s no fire
-to roast a barbecue, if I should be minded to spit
-you!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The creature looked again at his fellows, who had
-obviously egged him on.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“He insults you right prettily, good Gallows,” said
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_251'>251</span>the dandy, who was himself a rascal banished from his
-own country. “But he dare not fight you, we can see
-it plainly.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“With you thrown in, I dare say there might be a
-moment’s sport in a most unsavory blood-letting,” said
-Rust, whose hand went to his sword-hilt calmly. “I
-should want some fresh air if I stuck either one of you
-carrion-fed buzzards.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Gallows knew by this that it was time to draw his
-blade. “You be a fool and I be the fool-killer,” he
-roared as before, this being his best hold on language
-to suit the occasion. Only now he came for Adam like
-a butcher.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Outside—go outside, gentlemen!” cried the landlord
-excitedly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Go outside!” said the voice of some one who was
-not visible. It was Randolph, concealed in the adjoining
-room and watching the proceedings through a
-narrow crack, where he had opened the door.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Go on out, and I’ll fight you!” bellowed Gallows.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“After you,” said Rust, whose blade was out and
-being swiftly passed under his exacting eye. “Go out
-first. You will need one more breath than I.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The brute obeyed, as if he had to do so and knew it,
-receiving Adam’s order like the clod he was.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The other creatures made such a scrambling to see
-the show, and otherwise evinced such an abnormal interest
-in the coming fight, that Adam had no trouble in
-divining that the whole affair had been prearranged,
-and that if he did not get killed, he would be arrested,
-should he slay his opponent. He concluded he was
-something of a match for the whole outfit.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_252'>252</span>“Have at you, mountain of foul meat,” he said, as
-he tossed down his hat. “What a mess you will make,
-done in slices!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The young dandy laughed, despite himself, from his
-place by the door.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Gallows needed no further exasperations. He came
-marching up to Rust and made a hack at him, mighty
-enough and vicious enough to break down the stoutest
-guard and cleave through a man’s whole body as
-well.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Rust had expected no less than such a stroke. He
-spared his steel the task of parrying the Gallows’ slash.
-Nimbly leaping aside, he made a motion that had something
-debonair in its execution, and cut a ghastly big
-flap, like a steak, from the monster’s cheek.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The fellow let out an awful bellow and ran at his
-opponent, striking at him like a mad Hercules.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Spare yourself, fool-killer,” said Adam. He dared
-to bow, as he dodged a mighty onslaught, in which
-Gallows used his sword like a hatchet, and then he
-flicked the giant’s ear away, bodily, taking something
-also of his jowl, for good measure.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The great hulk stamped about there like an ox, the
-blood hastening down from his face and being flung in
-spatters about him. Adam next cut him deeply in the
-muscle of his great left arm.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I warm to my work,” he said, as he darted actively
-away and back. “Gentlemen, is your choice for
-a wing or a leg of the ill-smelling bird?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The dandy, fresh from England, guffawed and cried
-“Bravo!” He had been born a gentleman, in spite of
-himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_253'>253</span>The fight was a travesty on equality. The monster
-was absolutely helpless. He was simply a vast machine
-for butchery, but he must needs first catch his victim
-before he could perform his offices. He was a terrible
-sight, with his great sword raised on high, or ripping
-downward through the air, as he ran, half blinded by
-his own gore, to catch the rover, who played with him,
-slicing him handily, determined not to kill the beast
-and so to incur a penalty for murder.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The creatures inside the tavern, appalled by the exhibition
-they had brought about, saw that their monster
-was soon to be a staggering tower of blood and wounds.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Don’t let him get away! Kill him! Kill him!”
-said the voice of Randolph, from behind the others.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam heard him. He saw Pinchbecker shrink back
-at once. Psalms Higgler, however, glad of an excuse
-and ready to take advantage of a man already sufficiently
-beset, came scrambling out. The foppish gentleman
-was too much of a sport to take a hand against
-such a single swordsman as he found in Rust.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Aware that he was to have no chance, and convinced
-abruptly that these wretches had plotted to kill him,
-Adam deftly avoided Gallows, as the dreadful brute
-came again upon him, and slashing the fellow’s leg
-behind the knee, ham-strung him instantly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Roaring like a wounded bull, the creature dropped
-down on his side, and then got upon his hands and
-knees and commenced to crawl, wiping out his eyes
-with his reddened hands.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Unable to restrain his rage, and fearing his intended
-victim would yet avoid him, Higgler being already at
-bay and disarmed, Randolph came abruptly out from
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_254'>254</span>the tavern himself, pistol in hand, to perform the task
-which otherwise was doomed to failure.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Call the guard!” he cried. “Call the guard!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam had been waiting for some such treachery. He
-cut at the pistol the second it rose, knocking it endways
-and slicing Randolph’s arm, superficially, from
-near the wrist to the elbow. He waited then for nothing
-more.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Across the road, before any one guessed his intention,
-he was up on the back of the horse, before the yelled
-protest of the English gentleman came to his ears.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Gentlemen all,” he called to the group, “good
-evening.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Clapping his heels to the ribs of the restive animal,
-he rode madly away, just as Isaiah Pinchbecker, with
-half a dozen constables came running frantically upon
-the scene.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_255'>255</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER XXXI.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>A REFUGEE.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>Irresponsibly</span> joyous, thus to be in a saddle, on a
-spirited horse, Rust was soon dashing across the common
-and turning about like a centaur, for ease and
-grace, glanced back to see who might be joining in the
-race. His naked sword was still in his hand. It was
-red from point to hilt. He wiped it on the horse,
-thereby causing the animal to plunge and to run in a
-frenzy of nervousness.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam chortled. The affair from beginning to end,
-from his present standpoint, appealed to his sense of
-humor. The consequences of his adventure would be
-presented to his mind soon enough. He merely knew
-now that he had won out of a tight corner, as a gentleman
-should, that a glorious animal was bounding beneath
-him and, that sweet night air came rushing upon
-him as if it opened its arms to receive him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Aware that he would soon be pursued, and mentally
-acknowledging that the horse was not his own, he rode
-to a farm-house about a mile or so out from the town,
-and there dismounted. Reluctantly he said farewell to
-the charger, bidding the farmer have the animal returned
-to Boston in the morning, with his thanks and
-compliments. For the service he presented the wondering
-man with a piece of silver, the last he had of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_256'>256</span>small amount left him after paying the fares of the
-beef-eaters up to Massachusetts.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Coolly inviting himself to have a bite of the farmer’s
-scanty supper, he bade the man good night, about five
-minutes before the mounted constables came riding
-hotly to the place. He even heard them, when they
-left the farm and began to scour the woods to jump
-him up. At this he smiled with rare good humor, confident
-of the powers of superior wood-craft to baffle
-anybody or anything in all Massachusetts, save alone
-an Indian.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Understanding all the delighted chucklings of the
-forest as he did, he felt at once secure among the trees,
-as one of the family. Moreover he loved to be wandering
-in the woods at night. He continued to walk, on
-and on, beginning to wonder at last what he really intended
-to do. Then, at the thought of Garde, who
-might be expecting to see him, and whom he very much
-desired again to see, he waxed somewhat impatient with
-this enforced flight from the town where she was.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The more he thought upon it, then, the more impossible
-it seemed for him to return. Against Randolph,
-enthroned in power, and against all his wretched
-disciples, he could not expect to breathe a word which
-would avail to get him justice. It would be sheer
-madness to make the attempt. The creatures would
-charge him with all the crimes on the calendar, and,
-swearing all to one statement, would convict him of
-anything they chose. The whole affair had been
-planned to beat him, or worse, and to a galling extent
-it had quite succeeded. He was balked, completely
-and absolutely, in whatsoever direction his meditations
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_257'>257</span>turned. To try to see Garde would be fairly suicidal.
-Not to see her, especially after his promises, would be,
-to a man so much in love as he, a living death.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>And again, the beef-eaters. What was to become of
-his faithful retinue? They would arrive there, only
-to find that he had again deserted them, leaving them
-wholly at the mercy of Randolph and his jackals. These
-demons would not be slow at recognizing who and
-what Pike and Halberd were, from episodes of the past.
-The two would go straight into the lion’s mouth, at
-the Crow and Arrow.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He thought at first of going to Plymouth. He could
-write to Garde from there, he reflected, and also to
-Halberd and Pike. But he soon concluded that this
-would be to walk merely into the other end of the
-enemy’s trap, for no good or comforting purpose.
-New York presented itself as a jurisdiction where Randolph’s
-arm would have no power to do him harm.
-But New York was a long way off. If he went there,
-not only would he miss seeing Garde, but he could not
-warn his retinue in time to keep them out of Randolph’s
-clutches.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The business was maddening. He began to think,
-as a consequence of dwelling on the hopelessness of his
-own situation, that Randolph would be aiming next at
-Garde herself, in wreaking his dastardly vengeance for
-his past defeats. This was intolerable. He halted,
-there in the dark woods, swaying between the good
-sense of hiding and the nonsense of going straight back
-to the town, to carry Garde away from the harpies,
-bodily.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A picture of old David Donner, stricken, helpless, a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_258'>258</span>child, arose in his mind, to confront him and to mock
-his Quixotic scheme. He could not carry both Garde
-and her grandfather away to New York, nor even to
-the woods. He was penniless. This was not the only
-obstacle, even supposing Donner would consent so to
-flee, which was not at all likely.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was also certain that Garde would not permit him
-to carry her off and leave the old man behind. But at
-least, he finally thought, he could go back to the town
-and be near, to protect her, if occasion should require
-a sword and a ready wit. Could he but manage to do
-this—to go there secretly and remain there unknown—he
-could gather his beef-eaters about him and together
-they could and would combat an army!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But how to go back and be undetected, that was the
-question. In the first place he despised the idea of
-doing anything that did not smack of absolute boldness
-and fearlessness. Yet Boston was a seething
-whirlpool of Randolph’s power, at this time. Simply
-to be caught like a rat and killed like a pest would add
-nothing of glory to his name, nor could it materially
-add to Garde’s happiness and safety.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Driven into a corner of his brain, as it were, by all
-these moves and counter-moves on the chess-board of
-the situation, he presently conceived a plan which
-made him hug himself in sheer delight.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He would simply disguise himself as an Indian and
-go to town to make a treaty with Randolph, the Big-man-afraid-to-be-chief.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This so tickled his fancy that, had an Indian settlement
-been near at hand, he would have been inside his
-buckskins and war-paint and back to Boston ahead of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_259'>259</span>the constables themselves. In such a guise, he told
-himself, he could manage to see his sweetheart, he
-could get his beef-eaters clear of danger, baffle his foes,
-and arrange to carry both Garde and her grandfather
-away to safety.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But the first consideration was, where should he find
-an Indian? He was aware that the Red men had been
-pushed backward and westward miles from the towns
-of the whites. It was years since he had roamed
-through the forests and mountains——years since he had
-known where his old-time, red brothers built their
-lodges. There could be but one means of finding a
-camp, namely: to walk onward, to penetrate fairly to
-the edge of the wilderness beyond.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Nothing daunted by the thought of distance, he
-struck out for the west. Like the Indians themselves,
-he could smell the points of the sunrise and sunset,
-unerringly. With boyish joy in his thoughts, and in
-the dreams he fashioned of the hair-breadth events
-that would happen when he arrived in the town in his
-toggery, he plodded along all night, happy once more
-and contented.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_260'>260</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER XXXII.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>A FOSTER PARENT.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>Adam</span> covered many a mile before the morning.
-Mindless of his hunger, spurred by the thought that
-he must soon be back in Boston, he felt that the further
-he went the more he must hasten. Thus he
-marched straight on till noon.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He rested briefly at this time, filled his craving
-stomach with water, and again made a start. In fifteen
-minutes he came upon a clearing, at the edge of a little
-valley where up-jutting rocks were as plentiful as
-houses in a city. Pausing for a moment, to ascertain
-the nature of the place, and to prepare himself against
-possible surprise, he presently approached a small log
-hut, of more than usually rude construction.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There appeared to be no signs whatsoever of life
-about the place. No smoke ascended from the
-chimney; there was no animal in sight, not even so
-much as a dog.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam glanced hurriedly about the acre or so of land,
-beholding evidences of recent work. A tree had been
-felled, not far away, within the week. In a neat little
-patch of tilled soil, green corn stood two feet high and
-growing promisingly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Going to the cabin-door he knocked first and gave it
-a push afterward, for it was not latched, although it
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_261'>261</span>was nearly closed. There being no response from the
-inside, he entered. The light entered with him. It
-revealed a strange and dreadful scene.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>On the floor lay a man, dressed, half raised on his
-elbow, looking up at the visitor with staring eyes, while
-he moved his lips without making a sound. A few
-feet away sat a little brown baby-boy, clothed only in
-a tiny shirt. He looked up at big Adam wistfully.
-Strewn about were a few utensils for cooking, a bag
-which had once contained flour, the dust of which was
-in patches everywhere, and an empty water-bucket and
-dipper, with all the bedding and blankets from a rude
-wooden bunk, built against the wall.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In amazement Adam stood looking at the man. In
-the haggard face, with its unkempt beard and glassy
-eyes he fancied he saw something familiar. Memory
-knocked to enter his brain. Then, with a suddenness
-that gave him a shock, he recognized a man he had
-known in England—an elder brother of Henry Wainsworth,
-supposed to have died years before—drowned
-while attempting to escape from an unjust sentence
-of imprisonment for treason.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Wainsworth!” he said, “good faith! what is the
-meaning of this?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The man sank back on the floor, a ghost of a smile
-passing across his face. He moved his lips again, but
-Adam heard not a word.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Bending quickly down, he became aware that the
-man was begging for water. He caught up the bucket
-and hastened forth, presently finding the spring, to
-which a little path had been worn in the grass.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Back at once, he placed the dipper to the dried-out
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_262'>262</span>lips and saw this fellow-being drink with an evidence
-of joy such as can only come to the dying. Wainsworth
-shivered a little, as the dipper left his teeth, and jerked
-his hand toward the silent child, sitting so near, on the
-floor. Adam comprehended. He gave more of the
-water to the small, brown baby. It patted the dipper
-with its tiny hands and looked up at him dumbly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What in the world has happened here?” said
-Rust.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Making a mighty effort, the man on the floor partially
-raised his head and arms. He looked at Adam with a
-hungering light in his eyes. “I’m—done—for,” he
-said, thickly and feebly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam hustled together the blankets on the floor and
-made a pillow, which he placed for Wainsworth to lie
-on. “Shall I put you into the bed?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The man shook his head. “I’m crushed,” he said,
-winking from his eyes the already gathering film that
-tells of the coming end. “Tree—fell—killed the—wife.
-I—crawled—here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam looked at him helplessly. He knew the man
-was dying. He felt what agonies the man must have
-suffered. “Man!” he said, “can’t I get you something
-to eat?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Wainsworth waved his hand toward the wreckage
-strewed on the floor. “Nothing—here,” he said.
-Then he made a great effort, the obvious rally of his
-strength. “Save the—boy,” he implored. “Give him
-a—chance.... Don’t—tell—about me. I married—his
-mother—Narragansett—God bless—her.... Give—him—a—chance....
-Thanks.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As he mentioned the child’s mother, his eyes gave up
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_263'>263</span>two tears—crystals, which might have represented his
-soul, for it had quietly escaped from his broken body.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam, kneeling above him, looked for a moment at
-his still face, on which the shadow of a smile rested.
-Then he looked at the little, brown youngster, half
-Narragansett Indian, gazing up in his countenance with
-a timid, questioning look, winking his big black eyes
-slowly, and quite as deliberately moving his tiny toes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was not a situation to be thought out nor coped
-with easily. To have found any human being in this
-terrible plight would have been enough, but to have
-found Henry Wainsworth’s brother thus, and to have
-him tell such a brief, shocking story, and make of his
-visitor all the things which Adam would have to become
-at once, was enough to make him stand there wondering
-and wondering upon it all.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You poor little rascal,” he said to the child, at last.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He selected a shovel and a pick, from some tools
-which he noted, in a corner, and laying aside his sword,
-he went to work, on the preface to his duties, out by
-the patch of corn where he found the pretty, young
-Indian mother, clasped and held down to earth in an
-all too ardent embrace, by an arm of the fallen tree.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When he had padded up the mound over the two
-closed human volumes, he was faint with hunger. He
-carried the tools again to the house, and stood as before,
-looking at the baby-boy, who still sat where he had left
-him, on the floor.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, I suppose you are hungry, you little brown
-man,” he said. “I must see what there is to be had.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There was little opportunity for extended explorations.
-The one room had contained the all of Wainsworth and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_264'>264</span>his Narragansett partner. Rust soon found himself
-wondering what the two had lived upon. What flour
-and meal there had been, the man, despite his two
-crushed legs, had pulled down, from a box-like cupboard,
-on the wall, together with a bit of dried meat. Of the
-latter only a dry fragment remained, still tied to a
-string, while of the meal and flour, only the empty bags
-gave evidence that they once had existed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There was no way possible for Adam to know that in
-the forest, not far away, the lone woodsman had set his
-traps, for squirrels and rabbits, nor that fifteen minutes’
-walk from the door a trout stream had furnished its
-quota to the daily fare. He only knew that there was
-nothing edible to be found here now. There was salt,
-a bit of grease, on a clean white chip of pine, and a half
-gourd, filled with broken-up leaves, which had doubtless
-been steeped for some manner of tea or drink.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Partner,” he said, to the child, “someone has
-been enforcing sumptuary laws upon us. I hesitate in
-deciding whether we shall take our water salted or
-fresh.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>With his hand on the hilt of his sword he regarded
-the youngster earnestly. Nothing prettier than the
-little naked fellow could have been imagined, howbeit
-he was not so plump as a child of his age should be, for
-the lack of nourishment had already told upon him
-markedly. Adam felt convinced, from various indications,
-that the tree which had done its deadly work
-had fallen about a week before, and that Wainsworth
-had not been able to do anything more than to crawl to
-the cabin, to die, neither for himself or the child.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>For a time the rover wondered what he must do.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_265'>265</span>His own plans had nearly disappeared from his mind.
-He reflected that a child so brown as this, so obviously
-half a little Narragansett, would be ill received by the
-whites. The Indians would be far more likely to
-cherish the small man, according to his worth. He
-therefore believed the best thing he could do would be
-to push onward, in the hope of finding an Indian settlement
-soon. There were several reasons, still remaining
-unaltered, why it would be wiser not to take the
-child to Boston.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, our faces are dirty, partner,” he said, at the
-end of a long cogitation, in which the baby had never
-ceased to look up in his countenance and wink his big
-eyes, wistfully. “Let’s go out and have a bath.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He took the tiny chap up in his arms and carried him
-forth to the spring. Here, in the warm sunlight, he
-got down on his knees in the grass, bathed his protégé,
-over and over again, for the pleasure it seemed to
-give the child and the joy it was to himself, to feel the
-little wet, naked fellow in his hands.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The sun performed the offices of a towel. Without
-putting his tiny shirt back upon him, Adam rolled the
-small bronze bit of humanity about his back, patting
-his velvety arms and thighs and laughing like the
-grown-up boy he was, till the little chap gurgled and
-crowed in tremendous delight. But it having been
-only the freshness of the water, air and sunlight which
-had somewhat invigorated the baby, he presently appeared
-to grow a little dull and weary. Adam became
-aware that it was time to be moving. He washed out
-the child’s wee shirt and hung it through his belt to
-dry as they went. Then taking a light blanket from
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_266'>266</span>the cabin, for the child’s use at night, he left the cabin
-behind and proceeded onward as before.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He walked till late in the afternoon without discovering
-so much as a sign of the Indian settlement he was
-seeking. By this time his own pangs of hunger had
-become excruciating. It was still too early in the
-summer for berries or nuts to be ripe, and the half
-green things which he found where the sun shone the
-warmest were in no manner fit to be offered to the child,
-as food.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Arriving at another small valley, as the sun was dipping
-into the western tree-tops, the rover sat down for
-a rest, and to plan something better than this random
-wandering toward the sunset. He had chuckled encouragement
-to the child from time to time, laughing
-in the little fellow’s face, but hardly had he caught at
-the subtle signs on the small face, at which a mother-parent
-would have stared wild-eyed in agony.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Now, however, as he sat the tiny man on the grass
-before him, he saw in the baby’s eyes such a look as
-pierced him to the quick. For a moment the infinite
-wistfulness, the dumb questioning, the uncomplaining
-silence of it, made him think, or hope, the child was
-only sad. He got down on all fours at once.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Partner,” said he, jovially, “you are disappointed
-in me. I make poor shift as a mother. Do you want
-to be cuddled, or would you rather be tickled?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He laid the little chap gently on his back and tried
-to repeat the frolic of the earlier hours. He rolled the
-small bronze body in the grass, as before, and petted
-him fondly. But the baby merely winked his eyes.
-He seemed about to cry, but he made no sound.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_267'>267</span>Adam’s fingers ceased their play, for the joy departed
-from them swiftly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Maybe you’re tired and sleepy,” he crooned.
-“Shall I put on your shirt and sing you a little Indian
-lullaby? Yes? That’s what he wants, little tired
-scamp.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He adjusted the abbreviated shirt, awkwardly, but
-tenderly, after which he held his partner in his arms
-and hummed and sang the words of a Wampanoag
-song, which he had heard in his boyhood, times without
-number. The song started with addresses to some
-of the elements, thus:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c022'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Little Brook, it is night,</div>
- <div class='line'>Be quiet, and let my baby sleep.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Little wind, it is night,</div>
- <div class='line'>Go away, and let my baby sleep.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Little storm, it is night,</div>
- <div class='line'>Be still, and let my baby sleep.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Little wolf, it is night,</div>
- <div class='line'>Howl not, and let my baby sleep.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c023'>and after many verses monotonously soothing, came an
-incantation:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c022'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Great Spirit, I place my babe</div>
- <div class='line'>Upon the soft fur of thy breast,</div>
- <div class='line'>Knowing Thou wilt protect,</div>
- <div class='line'>As I cannot protect;</div>
- <div class='line'>And therefore, oh Great Spirit,</div>
- <div class='line'>Guard my child in slumber.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c023'>Adam sang this song like a pleading. But his little
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_268'>268</span>partner could not sleep, or feared to sleep. Then the
-rover looked at the tiny face and realized that the child
-would soon be dying of starvation. At this he started
-to his feet, abruptly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He had undergone the pains of hunger often, himself;
-he was not impatient now with the pangs in his
-stomach, nor the weakness in his muscles. But he
-could not bear the thought of the child so perishing,
-here in the wilderness.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He saw poor Wainsworth again, and heard him beg
-that the child be given a chance. He thought of the
-man’s shattered life, his escape from persecution, his
-isolation, in which he had preferred the society of his
-Indian wife and child to association with his kind.
-Then he blamed himself for coming further into this
-deserted region, when he knew that by going back, at
-least he could find something for the child to eat—something
-that would save its life!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But he could not forget that he himself was a refugee.
-Wrongly or rightly, Randolph was still on his
-track. Nothing in his own case had been altered, but
-the case was no longer one concerning himself alone.
-He took the child on his arm, where he had carried
-him already many miles, and faced about.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Partner, let them take me,” he said. “I wish
-them joy of it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He started back for Boston, for in the child’s present
-extremity, the nearest place where he could be sure of
-finding food was the only one worthy a thought.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_269'>269</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER XXXIII.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>REPUDIATED SILVER.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>Sometime</span>, along toward the middle of the night,
-Adam tripped, on a root which lay in his path, and in
-catching himself so that his small partner should not
-be injured, he sprained his foot. He proceeded onward
-without sparing the member, however, for he had begun
-to feel a fever of impatience.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>His foot swelled. It finally pained him excessively,
-so that he limped. He wore away the night, but when
-the morning came, he was obliged to snatch an hour of
-sleep, so great was the sense of exhaustion come upon
-him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>His face had become pale. With his hair unkempt,
-his eyes expressive of the fever in his veins and his
-mouth somewhat drawn, he was not a little haggard, as
-he resumed his lame, onward march. The child in his
-arms was no burden to his enduring strength, but as a
-load on his heart the little chap was heavy indeed.
-Sleeping, the miniature man appeared to be sinking in
-a final rest, so wan had his tiny face become. Waking,
-he gazed at Adam with such a dumb inquiry ever
-present in his great, wistful eyes, that Rust began to
-wish he would complain—would cry, would make some
-little sound to break his baby silence.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_270'>270</span>They were obliged to rest frequently, throughout the
-day. Try as he might, Adam could not cover the
-ground rapidly. Whenever he resumed walking, after
-sitting for a moment on a log, or a rock, he found his
-foot had become so bad that, in the late afternoon, he
-gave up halting thus altogether.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The twilight came upon him, then the night-fall.
-At last, with a smothered cry of delight on his lips, he
-saw the gleam of a light. He had come to the farm-house
-where he had stopped to return the English
-dandy’s horse and to eat his last supper. Thinking
-thereby to disguise himself, even if only slightly, he
-halted, threw off his leather jerkin, sword and coat,
-turned the latter inside out and concealed his weapon
-and outside garment in the brush. Thus altered in
-appearance, he dragged his aching foot across the space
-between the woods and the house, where he knocked
-upon the door and entered.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Who’s there?” cried the farmer, in a fright which
-recent events had instilled in his being. He was a
-shaking old bachelor, suspected by many who knew
-him of being a miser with a great horde of gold on his
-premises.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam was confronted by the man, as soon as he
-stepped across the threshold.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Food, man,” he said, hoarsely. “Food, or this
-child will die!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The man recognized him instantly. He fairly
-quaked with dread.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Go out! Go out!” he cried. “I’ve no food
-here—I’ve nothing here!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Peace!” commanded Adam. “Bring me forth
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_271'>271</span>something to eat for the child, you knave, or I shall
-find it for myself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He looked terrible enough to execute a much more
-dreadful threat. The farmer retreated before him,
-cringing and whining.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I have nothing, or you should have it,” he said,
-with a whimper. “My neighbors—ten minutes’ walk
-up the clearing—go to them. They have plenty, and
-I have nothing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam remembered the scantiness of the fare he had
-tasted here before. Nevertheless it had been food, and
-anything now might save his little partner’s life.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Then you go, friend,” he ordered. “Make
-haste and bring me what you can, from your neighbors’!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The man seemed about to refuse. He changed his
-mind abruptly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I’ll go. I’ll go!” he hastened to say, and without
-his hat, or waiting for anything further, he hobbled
-out at the door and was gone.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Rust lost no time in ransacking the cupboard. To
-his unspeakable disappointment he found that the man
-had not spoken wide of the truth. There was as little
-here, in the way of a few gnawed crusts of bread and a
-rind of cheese, as might well stand between nothing
-and something to eat and to feed to a starving child.
-His heart sank within him. But then he thought that
-inasmuch as the farmer had told the truth about his
-larder, he would be the more likely to have spoken
-correctly about the neighbors. He would soon be back
-with something fit for the wee Narragansett.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam looked at the baby-boy compassionately. The
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_272'>272</span>little fellow was awake, looking up, winking slowly,
-asking his dumb, wistful question with his eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam patted him softly while he waited. “I’m a
-wretched mother, little partner,” he said. “But we’ll
-soon have you banqueting, now. Can’t you speak up a
-little bit? Don’t you want to give old Adam just one
-little smile? No? Well, never mind. Little man is
-tired.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He had placed his charge in a chair. Soon growing
-impatient, he limped about the room, crunching a crust
-of bread in his teeth, abstractedly. Unable to endure
-the suspense, he went again to the cupboard and threw
-everything down, in his search for something fit for the
-child. There was nothing more than he had seen before.
-He went to the water pail and drank, for his
-mouth had found the crust a poor substitute for food.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Yet no sooner had he sipped the water than a sense
-of the deliciousness of the dry bread pervaded his being.
-He ran to gather up the other crusts at once and
-limped to the child in a frenzy of gladness.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Here, little man,” he said, kneeling down on the
-floor. “If you can only chew that up and then take a
-sip of water, you will think the King’s kitchen has
-opened.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He gently thrust a small piece of the rock-hard bread
-between the little chap’s lips, where, to his intense disappointment,
-it remained.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Can’t you chew it?” he said. “Just try, for old
-Adam.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The child was too weak to do anything but wink.
-Its appealing gaze was more than Adam could stand.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What can Adam do for the little man?” he said.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_273'>273</span>He limped painfully back and forth again. The
-farmer should have returned before this. What could
-be keeping the wretch? The rover saw that the little
-life was fluttering, uncertainly, not yet sure of its wings
-on which to fly away.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I have it!” he cried, in sudden exultation.
-“Bread and water!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He hobbled across the room, snatched up a cup,
-crunched a fistful of crusts in his hand, put them in his
-cup and filled it half to the top with water. Then
-he stirred the hard pieces with his finger and crushed
-them smaller and padded them up against the side of
-the vessel, working the mass softer in feverish haste.
-Impatient to get results, he put the cup to the baby’s
-lips.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Drink,” he coaxed. “Take a little, like a good
-partner. Can’t you take a little weeny bit?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Groaning, thus to find the small Narragansett so
-weak, he hobbled about to find a spoon, with which he
-came hastily limping back. To his joy then, he saw a
-little of the slightly nutritious water disappear between
-the silent lips. He crooned with delight, hitched himself
-closer and plied his spoon clumsily, but with all the
-patience of a woman.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The child began to take the nourishment with interest.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam was happy in the midst of this new-found
-expedient, when the door behind him was suddenly
-thrown open, violently, and in burst half a dozen
-constables, armed to the teeth and panting wildly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Give up! I arrest you in the name of the King!”
-cried the foremost of the men. He presented a pistol
-at the head of the kneeling man. “Take him!” he
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_274'>274</span>screamed to his following, and before Rust could so
-much as rise, on his wounded foot, he was suddenly
-struggling in a mass of men who had fallen upon him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He got to his feet. He knocked three of the constables
-endways. But his strength was gone quickly,
-so long had he been famished, and so far had he taxed
-his endurance. They overpowered him, making a noise
-of mad confusion. They threw him toward a chair.
-He made one cry of anguish and protest. Three of the
-scrambling clods fell together upon the little partner,
-and when they arose, his little heart had ceased to beat.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The farmer-miser now came worming his way through
-the door. He was laughing like a wolf.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You’ve got him!” he cried. “I told you! I told
-you! Heh, heh, heh. I’m not in league with thieves
-and murderers. Here, here, take your silver! I’ll
-none of your silver!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He took from his pocket the coin which the rover had
-paid him to take back the Englishman’s horse and
-threw it hysterically down at Adam’s feet.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_275'>275</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER XXXIV.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>LODGINGS FOR THE RETINUE.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>The</span> beef-eaters arrived in the afternoon of the same
-day that Adam was arrested. Alighting from the coach,
-they did exactly what he had feared they would. They
-wended their way promptly to the Crow and Arrow.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Randolph and his henchmen, having missed their
-intended prey, at their first attempt, were engaged
-elsewhere in the town, attempting to make good their
-failure. Believing Rust would return and attempt to
-see Mistress Merrill, Randolph kept one or two of his
-creatures in the vicinity of David Donner’s house day
-and night. But Gallows, being for the time totally disabled,
-had been domiciled at the tavern, in a small
-apartment off the tap-room, where he spent many hours
-of the day roaring out his exceeding displeasure at the
-turn of events and the consequences thereof, into which
-his friends had brought him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Pike and Halberd appeared at the inn when the place
-was all but deserted. Naturally the tavern had become
-popular with the Royalists, but it had been gradually
-falling into disfavor with sailors and dock hands for
-several years.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Striding haughtily into the place, the beef-eaters
-accosted the landlord familiarly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_276'>276</span>“My good fellow,” said little Pike, “be kind enough
-to let the Sachem know that we have arrived and wait
-upon his pleasure.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And assure him of the excellence of our health,”
-said Halberd.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t know what you mean,” said the landlord,
-eying the pair suspiciously and cudgeling his brains to
-remember where and when he had seen them before.
-“I have no Mr. Sachem in the house.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“He has no Mr. Sachem in the house,” said the
-beef-eaters, in chorus, turning to one another with
-raised eyebrows and indulgent smiles.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“This surpasses belief,” said Halberd.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My good friend, you mistook what we said,” added
-Pike. “We are inquiring for The Sachem—not Mr.
-Sachem, but The Sachem.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t know the Sachem,” said the landlord,
-frowning upon the guests. “What do you want?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“He don’t know the Sachem!” said the comrades,
-again in chorus. They looked perfectly incredulous.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Then I pity you for your loss,” Pike remarked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But if he is not at this house, where is he?” asked
-Halberd.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Tell us where to find him and we will burden you
-with wealth,” Pike added, grandly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The landlord began to be certain they were crazy.
-“How should I know who it is you seek?” he
-asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Water! fetch me water!” roared Gallows, from
-the adjoining room.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What disturbance is this?” Halberd wanted to
-know. He strode to the door and looked in at the mountain
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_277'>277</span>of meat, propped up in bed, poulticed and patched
-past all semblance to himself. “Friend,” Halberd said
-to him, boldly, “your voice needs bleeding.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Ha!” bellowed Gallows, “you be a fool and I be
-the fool-killer! Let me get——Howtch!” He made
-this latter exclamation on attempting to rise from his
-lair.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Halberd and Pike both fell to the rear a step, at the
-awful voice of the brute, but no sooner did they see him
-sink helplessly down on the couch than they laughed
-in eloquent scorn.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I should enjoy nothing better than to slay something
-large, before dinner,” little Pike remarked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Tut. This is my recreation,” said Halberd.
-“Come forth, friend, till I warm some cold steel in
-your belly.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Leave be!” commanded the landlord, coming forward
-to shut the door between the rooms, and flapping
-his apron at the belligerent beef-eaters. “Let me
-know your wants, if you have them, and if not, be off
-about your business.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Sensibly spoken,” said Halberd. “All we desire of
-you is that you let the Sachem know we are come.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But I said I didn’t know this Sachem!” cried the
-exasperated boniface.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“True, true,” said Pike. “But it seems too monstrous
-to be so.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But,” put in Halberd, “you must remember that
-wealthy young nobleman, who paved our way with
-gold, when we were with you a number of years ago.
-Surely you cannot yet have spent what we scattered in
-your house?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_278'>278</span>“And you will certainly remember the drubbing we
-gave those varlets, with the flat of our swords, here in
-this very room—some dozen of the fellows there were
-in all,” added the other of the pair. “They dared to
-insinuate that we were beggars—aye, beggars, forsooth!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The landlord remembered them now, clearly enough.
-He restrained himself from calling them vile names,
-by making an effort truly heroic.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, to be sure, I do recall it now,” he said, cunningly.
-“I believe your Sachem did even call here, to
-ask if you had come. Yes, yes. I think he said he
-meant to return here this afternoon again. Was he not
-a tall, noble-looking gentleman?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Like a king,” said Pike.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“With a manner like this,” added Halberd, strutting
-and swaggering across the room. “He should have
-walked in over several prostrate forms, in the manner
-of a prince and our associate.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The same, the very same,” agreed the landlord.
-“He is certain to be here within the hour. Sit down,
-gentlemen, and let me serve you, and then I shall be
-honored to have a look about, myself, to see if I may
-not find him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Said like a scholar,” Halberd assured him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“We do this honor to your house for his sake,” Pike
-added.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The two sat them down and the landlord hustled
-them out the vilest drink he could draw, tampered
-with, as it was, to add some crude substance, the effect
-of which on the brain was overpowering. The fellow
-saw the beef-eaters drinking and waited for nothing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_279'>279</span>more. He scampered away from the rear of his place,
-as fast as his limbs could convey him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Fifteen minutes later a small army of constables
-arrived, captured the two brain-fuddled beef-eaters
-without the slightest resistance and carried them off to
-the sumptuous apartments of the city jail. There, with
-aching heads and crestfallen countenances, they discovered
-themselves to be, when the baleful effects of
-their drink had somewhat abated.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“By my fighting hand!” said Halberd, “I’d not be
-sworn that we have not been tricked.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_280'>280</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER XXXV.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>GARDE OBTAINS THE JAIL KEYS.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>Unbeknown</span> to his retinue, Adam was accommodated
-in the same jail where Pike and Halberd had been
-landed while the evening was still comparatively young.
-The body of the little Narragansett, brutally snatched
-from Adam’s arms, had likewise been brought into
-Boston.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Randolph had lost no time in having Rust examined
-and declared a prisoner of the state, charged with a
-whole category of crimes against the peace and dignity
-of the King. To all of this, and to nearly all of their
-questions, Rust had made no reply whatsoever. He
-realized the uselessness of pitting his one voice against
-those of half a dozen perjured rascals, who came about
-him the moment it was known he had finally been
-taken, ready to swear to anything which would be
-likeliest to jeopardize his life.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thus, before half-past eight that night, the whole of
-Boston was wagging its tongue over an astonishing
-story, instigated at once by Edward Randolph. This
-dangerous, blood-thirsty rascal, Rust, had been taken
-in the forest, whither he had fled to join his Indian
-wife, and in his struggles to avoid arrest he had slain
-his half-Indian child.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This was the indictment, mildly expressed, that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_281'>281</span>reached the ears of Garde Merrill concerning her lover.
-She was simply appalled. It was unbelievable, it was
-monstrous. She scorned to think it could possibly be
-true. And yet, if he had been in Boston several days
-before, as the story had it, why had she known nothing
-about it? The whole thing had been a gross fabrication.
-He could not have been in the town and going to
-a tavern to mix in a horrid brawl. He would certainly
-have come to see her immediately on his arrival. He
-had promised to return in about a week from a visit to
-the beef-eaters.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When she got as far as that, she suddenly tried to
-stop thinking. He had been gone many weeks instead
-of the one; the beef-eaters had not been with him
-when he had the alleged fight, nor when he was captured,
-and he had mentioned to her, on their walk
-from Plymouth, that he had once stopped at the Crow
-and Arrow, where the brawl was reported to have taken
-place.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Nearly frantic with the terrible thoughts in her
-head, Garde hastened to John Soam’s to get what she
-could of sober truth, which John would have as no one
-else might in the town.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She was mentally distraught when she came to her
-uncle’s. She had carried a dish belonging to her aunt
-Gertrude, to make an excuse for her late evening visit.
-She was more glad than she could have said that Prudence
-was away, for her cousin knew something of her
-feeling for Adam.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde, having been made welcome, had no need to
-ask questions. John Soam was telling the story of the
-night with countless repetitions. His wife cross-examined
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_282'>282</span>him in every direction which her womanly ingenuity
-could suggest.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thus Garde discovered that it was undeniably true
-that Adam had been in town several days before; that
-he had been engaged in a terrible fight, in which he
-had inflicted grave injuries on Randolph and one of
-his “peaceable officers”; that he had then escaped
-back to the woods, from which, it was alleged, he had
-emerged solely for this fighting, and that, when captured,
-he had a half-Indian child in his possession.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>John Soam had seen the body of the child himself.
-He had heard the examination, in his capacity of clerk
-to the court and magistrates. Rust was lame, he said,
-and he was a sullen man, who had returned no answers
-but such as cut wittily. He had not denied that the
-child was his own. He had absolutely refused to say
-whose it was and how he came to have it. He had
-come to the farmer’s house, at the edge of the woods,
-for purposes of robbery. There was every reason to
-believe that he had consorted with the Indians, and
-that the child was his. It was a pretty child, but
-many thought it looked as if it had been shockingly
-abused. There could be no doubt that, when he had
-found himself being taken, he had profited by the confusion
-to slay the little half-Indian boy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde’s horror grew as she listened. She remembered
-terrible things that Adam had told her when he
-believed her a youth. He had excused Randolph’s
-conduct with Hester Hodder, hinting broadly that, in
-a case he had in mind, he thought another young
-woman—in this instance Garde herself—ought to forgive
-such a treachery to honor. He had even mentioned
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_283'>283</span>that she, when dressed as a boy and browned,
-reminded him of a young Indian woman whom he had
-known and liked. He had lived with the Indians as a
-boy; he had gone back to them as a man.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>All those other dreadful half-confessions, in this new
-light, looked no longer innocent—the French damsel,
-the Countess, and the others. He had deceived her
-about going to New York to see the beef-eaters, she
-told herself, in agony. He had gone to the forest instead.
-And God only knew what things he had done
-in those silent woods! Had he abandoned the mother
-of his child, as Randolph had done——or had he committed
-something worse? for Hester, in the similar
-instance, had died so strangely.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At least it was plain that before Adam could marry
-again he would be obliged to abandon that Indian
-woman. And what if she were Indian? Was she less
-a woman? Would she suffer less agony? Garde
-thought of Hester, and of how the wild young thing
-had begged her not to take away the man who had so
-cruelly wronged her. The picture was almost more
-than she could bear. The whole affair fell upon her
-heart with a weight that crushed her happiness into a
-shapeless, dying thing. In whatsoever direction she
-turned, Adam’s own actions and words confronted her
-with the blank wall of hideous truth.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She knew now why, after he had walked all the way
-to Boston at her side, he had failed to appear at
-Grandther Donner’s, for days and days. She saw it
-all, plainly—horribly plainly. It was so absolutely unescapable.
-And yet, he had seemed so honest; he had
-spoken so of love; he had so convinced her heart and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_284'>284</span>her soul of his purity, nobility and worth! She loved
-him still. She could not avoid this. It had grown up
-with her; it had become a part of her very being. She
-would love him always, but—she could not become his
-wife—not after this—never! The thought of such a
-thing made her shiver. His perfidy was almost greater
-than Randolph’s—as an Indian woman would have
-been so much more innocent and trustful than even
-Hester.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Her heart cried. “Oh!” and yet again, “Oh!” in
-its anguish. If he had only left some little loophole
-for doubt—if he had only denied their accusations—if
-only he had not said those terrible things to her, upon
-the highway, perhaps——“No, no, no, no,” she cried,
-in her soul; this was compromising with loathsome dishonor.
-Far better it was that the awful truth was so
-indisputably established! It left her no ground for
-excusing his deeds, at the dictates of her unreasoning
-love! Yet, oh, it had been so sweet to believe in him,
-to love him without reserve, to trust her very soul in
-his keeping! She wrung her hands under the table,
-as she listened, with ears that seemed traitors to her
-love, to all that her uncle could add to the story.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She soon learned that Adam was Randolph’s particular
-prisoner; that there had been some old-time
-grudge between them, and that the crafty man of
-power would undoubtedly make an effort to hang his
-captive.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At this her womanly inconsequence was suddenly
-aroused. He might be guilty, but she had always
-thought him noble and good. She would never marry
-him, after this, but she would love him forever. He
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_285'>285</span>had been her idol, her king. He must live, for at
-least she had a right to keep enshrined in her heart the
-thought of him, pulsating heart to heart with her, as
-once he had. No! He must not be permitted to die—not
-like this—not in infamy—not at the hands of
-this monster of iniquity—this Randolph!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was not that she had the slightest hope that he
-could ever be the same to her again, or that she should
-ever wish to see him again, but at least he had a right
-to live, to redeem himself, partially, perhaps to suffer
-and to sorrow for his deeds. Indeed he must so live—he
-must so redeem himself for her sake—to justify the
-love and the trust she had given him out of her heart!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She felt that she should choke if she did not soon
-get out in the air. She wanted to run to the prison,
-hammer with her fist on the gate, demand admittance
-and set him free—free from Randolph’s clutches. But
-she knew this was madness. Her mouth grew parched
-and dry with her excitement, so tremendously held in
-control. How could she manage to get him free?
-Oh, if only she dared to tell her uncle John and get
-him to help her!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He had the duplicate keys to every door in the jail.
-He brought them home night after night and hung
-them up on—There they were, now! They hung
-there within reach of her hand! Her heart knocked
-and beat in her bosom, as if it were hammering down
-the barriers to Adam’s cell. She weaved dizzily, with
-the possibilities of the moment. Just to take those
-keys and run—that was all, and the trick would be
-done. He could go—and their love would be a thing
-of living death!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_286'>286</span>She meant to take those keys. The impulse swayed
-her whole being. She felt she would die rather than
-miss her opportunity. With clenched hands and with
-set jaws she arose to her feet.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I must be going home,” she said, with apparent
-calm. “Oh, what was that?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What was what?” said her aunt and uncle together.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Why—some noise, in the other room,” she said
-with a tremor easily simulated, in her excited state.
-“I am sure I heard something in there, moving!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Hum—let’s see,” said John.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It might be that I left the window open,” said
-Goodwife Soam.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The man took the lamp, opened the door to the adjoining
-apartment, and went in, followed by his wife.
-Garde, with a gasp, and a clutching at her heart, lifted
-the keys from their nail and dropped them into her
-pocket with a barely audible jingle. She followed her
-aunt a second later.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Why, it was—nothing, after all,” she said, weaving
-a trifle in her stress of emotion and nervousness. “But
-the window was up, as you said. I’m glad that was
-all. Good night.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Good night,” said John Soam and his wife, from
-the window which John was pushing down, and without
-waiting another minute, Garde let herself out and
-sped away in the darkness.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_287'>287</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER XXXVI.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>GARDE’S ORDEAL.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>How</span> to get the keys into Adam’s possession, now
-that she had them in her own, was the first question
-that presented itself to the mind of Garde. Her ruse
-at her uncle’s had been so quickly and easily planned
-and executed that she had almost fancied Adam freed
-already. Yet as she hastened homeward, filled with
-conflicting emotions of excitement, grief and despair,
-she soon comprehended that her task had not as yet
-really begun.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Could she only ascertain in what portion of the
-prison the rover was incarcerated, she thought it might
-be possible to convey him the keys through the window,
-provided he had one in his cell. Thinking of
-this, she naturally remembered the jailer’s wife, a poor
-ailing creature, who lived in the building, with her
-husband, and to whom Goody Dune had ministered,
-times without number, frequently sending Garde with
-simples to relieve her of multitudinous aches and pains.
-This was her cue. She could take her some of the
-herbs of which a plentiful stock had been collected in
-the Donner household, for the use of her grandfather.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Fortunately David Donner had so far progressed, if
-not toward recovery, then at least toward change, that
-he slept for hours, like a weary child, waking after
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_288'>288</span>dreamless slumber all pink and prattling. He was
-thus asleep when she came to the house. She was
-therefore soon on her way to the prison, her simples in
-a small basket, hung on her arm.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The hour was unusual for any one thus to be visiting
-the jailer’s wife, so that the good woman, when Garde
-came in, after knocking, was obviously surprised at the
-honor.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, Mrs. Weaver,” said the girl, hurriedly, “I heard
-you had been having trouble here to-day, and I knew
-how it always upsets you, and Goody had given me all
-these simples to bring, three days ago, so I thought I
-had better bring them to you the moment I knew you
-were being so worried.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was a fact that the jailer’s wife was invariably
-very much distressed when guests were thrust upon their
-hospitality. She always feared at first that they would
-get away, and afterward that they would not, as her abhorrence
-and then her sympathy came respectively into
-play. She also conjectured all manner of terrible
-things that might at any moment happen to Blessedness
-Weaver, her worthy husband. To-night she was
-particularly nervous, owing to the sudden increase in
-the jail’s population and the blood-freezing details and
-rumors afloat as to the nature of the company
-assembled under the roof of the building.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Dear me, lassie,” she said, in answer to Garde’s
-well-chosen speech, “do come in directly. I am that
-fidgety and poorly, the night! Lauk, lassie, but you
-are a dear, thoughtful heart, and I shall never forget
-you for this. And we have such terrible gentlemen,
-the night!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_289'>289</span>She always called the guests gentlemen, till she
-found out which way lay the sympathies of a given
-visitor, when they all became rogues, forthwith, if she
-found herself encouraged to this violent language.
-Later on, again, when her sympathies for their plight
-were aroused, they were restored to their former social
-appellations.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, I am so sorry for you!” said Garde. “I had
-heard of one prisoner; but could you have had more
-than one?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Lauk, yes,” said the woman rolling her eyes
-heavenward. “They took the principal rogue in the
-woods, I believe, but they captured his two brutal companions
-at the Crow and Arrow in the afternoon.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This was news to Garde. She recognized the beef-eaters
-from this vivid description. If Adam had his
-friends at his side, he must be much more contented,
-and they would all be planning to escape.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And so all three are under lock and key, safely together?”
-she said, innocently. “How fortunate!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh dear me, no,” corrected Mrs. Weaver. “The
-two taken by daylight are together in the southern
-exposure, while the last one was thrust in the
-dungeon. Oh Lauk, Mistress, but he is a terrible
-man!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde felt her heart sink, even though it never ceased
-for a moment to beat so hard that it pained her. Adam
-in a dungeon! How in the world could she ever manage
-to get the keys to him now? Dungeons, she knew,
-were under the ground; they were dank, death-dealing
-places, with moldy straw in one corner and with slimy
-rocks for walls. She could have cried in her sudden
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_290'>290</span>wretchedness of spirit, although it could never mean
-anything to her, whether Adam lived or died, in
-prison or out. However, she mastered herself splendidly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“A dungeon?” she said. “Oh, I didn’t know you
-had a dungeon here. It must be very deep down in the
-earth.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It’s a creepy place; oh lauk, it’s that creepy!”
-said the woman. “But it’s not so deep, dearie. It’s
-nine steps down. I’ve counted the steps many’s the
-time. But it is where we puts the monstrously wicked
-rogues, such as this bloodthirsty man! And it’s that
-dark, my dear—oh lauk, what a place to spend the
-night!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Of course it must be dark,” said Garde, suppressing
-her eagerness. “They couldn’t have a window in such
-a place as that.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Indeed we have, though; we’ve a window in every
-room in the place,” corrected the jailer’s wife, with
-commendable pride in the architectural arrangements.
-“Oh yes, it has its window, no bigger than my hand,
-lassie, and slanting up through the rock, but it’s a rare
-little light it lets in to the poor gentlemen down
-below!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I’m glad he—the prisoners here have some light,”
-said Garde, honestly, “but I don’t see where such a
-window could be.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It’s on the dark side of the house, night and day
-the same,” explained Mrs. Weaver. “It’s around on
-the dark side, where no one would find it in a month of
-Sundays, just about the length of my foot above the
-ground. Such a small thing it is, and the light it lets
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_291'>291</span>in is that little! Oh lauk, I’m feeling worse to be
-thinking upon it!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Then you mustn’t talk about it any more,” Garde
-assured her, sympathetically. “And I must be going
-home. I do hope the simples will make you better, and
-I’m so glad I came. I must say good night, for I suppose
-you will all be going to bed very soon.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I shall be there directly,” Mrs. Weaver informed
-her, “but dear me, Blessedness won’t be touching a
-pillow for an hour, and then he’ll sleep with his stockings
-on. He always does the first night with new
-rogues in the house. Good night, dearie, and God bless
-you for a sweet child.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde went out and walked slowly toward Grandther
-Donner’s. She had an hour to wear away, for
-she would not dare to be searching about the jail before
-the jailer at least retired to his couch.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The time was one of dread and chills. Her teeth
-chattered, not from any suggestion of cold in the night
-air, but from the nervous strain of this time of suspense.
-She had never been so frightened of any action in her
-life, as she was when at length she crept back to the
-prison, through the dark, deserted streets, and began
-to search about to find the tiny window of which Mrs.
-Weaver had spoken.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There were two dark sides to the building. One was
-constantly in the shadow of a tavern, which almost
-abutted against it, while the other was on the northern
-face of the building, in a narrow street. Garde went
-first to the northern exposure, for in order to get at the
-other shaded side, she would have been obliged to climb
-a low, brick wall.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_292'>292</span>Scarcely had she more than come to her destination,
-and begun her feverish search, before she heard the
-sound of distant footsteps, which rapidly approached.
-She crouched in a black little niche, in fear, with a
-violent commotion in her breast which threatened to
-drop her down in a swoon. Almost stepping on her
-toes, some pedestrian passed, leaving the girl so horribly
-weak that she shut her eyes and leaned against the wall,
-laboring to get her breath.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Nerved again by the things Mrs. Weaver had told
-her, she came out of her hiding-place, after several
-minutes, and feeling the cold rock-wall she passed
-eagerly along, shaking with her chill and fearing to
-breathe too loud, in the silence.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She was doomed here to bitter disappointment. The
-window was not to be found. She searched again and
-again, unwilling to give it up, but it was not there.
-She realized that she must climb the brick barrier, and
-try on the other side of the building.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She found the wall not difficult to surmount, but
-when she jumped down, on the further side, she
-struck on a heap of broken crockery, thrown out from
-the tavern.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She crouched down instantly, for the noise she had
-made attracted the notice of some one in the public
-house. A door at the rear of the hostelry was thrown
-open and a man looked out. He appeared to be looking
-straight at her and listening.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Must have been a cat,” he said, to somebody back
-in the house, and he disappeared and closed the door.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde could not have been any more wrought upon
-than the whole affair had made her already. She could
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_293'>293</span>not become calm. She could merely wait for moments
-of partial relief from overwhelming emotions.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thus in time she was creeping along again, feeling
-the dark stone as before and peering vainly and desperately
-into the shadows which lay so densely upon the
-whole enclosure. Hastily she traversed the whole
-length of the wall. She arrived at the far end, ready
-to sink down and cry in anguish. She had not discovered
-the window.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Back again she went, choking back hysterical sobs
-and bruising her delicate hands on the rough rocks, as
-she played with her fingers along that grim, dark pile.
-She failed again.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Sitting where she was, in the grass, which was growing
-rank in the place, she clasped her hands in despair.
-She would have to give it up. There was some mistake.
-There was no window.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Yet once more she would try. She could not give it
-up. The dungeon’s horrors and the terrible character
-of Edward Randolph made her fear that if the morning
-came before Adam was free, he would no longer
-have need for freedom, nor light.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Slowly, this time, and digging at the base of the
-stone-wall that rose above her, she felt down to the very
-roots of the grass, for the aperture which represented a
-window. To her unspeakable joy, her fingers suddenly
-ran into an absolute hole in the solid rock, in a matted
-growth of roots and grass, which had grown up about it!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She sank down, momentarily overcome with this discovery.
-It was too much to believe. She felt she was
-almost dying, so insupportable was the agitation of her
-heart. But she presently clutched at the grass and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_294'>294</span>tore it away in a mad fever of haste. She dug, with
-her fingers and her finger nails. She could smell the
-odor of the bruised grass, and then the wholesome
-fragrance of earth. She had soon uncovered a small
-square opening, no larger, as the jailer’s wife had said,
-than a good-sized hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>On her knees as she was, she bent her head down to
-a level with the hole and put her lips close to the opening.
-She tried to speak, but such a faintness came
-upon her that she could not utter a sound. She had
-worked with a tremendous resolution toward this end,
-and now the flood of thoughts of everything said and
-done that evening, came upon her and rendered her
-dumb, with emotion and dread.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Making a great effort she essayed to speak again.
-Once more she failed. But she waited doggedly, for
-the power she knew would not desert her in the end.
-Thus for the third time she mustered all her strength
-and leaned down to the window.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Adam,” she said, faintly, and then she waited,
-breathlessly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There was no response. There was not a sound from
-that tomb, the dankness of which she now began to
-detect in her nostrils.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Adam!” she repeated, this time more strongly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Some subterranean rustling then came to her ears.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Adam! Oh, Adam!” she said, in a voice that
-trembled uncontrollably.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Who’s that? Who’s speaking? Is it you, John
-Rosella?” came in a rumble from the dungeon.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She failed to recognize his voice, so altered did the
-passage from his place of imprisonment make it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_295'>295</span>“Oh, is that you, Adam—Mr. Rust?” she asked,
-trembling violently.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Garde!” he said, joyously. “Garde! Oh, my
-darling! Yes, it’s I. Where are you? What have
-you done?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde felt her strength leave her treacherously.
-Thus to hear the endearing names leap upward to her
-from that terrible place was too much to bear, after all
-she had learned.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Here—here are the keys,” she whispered down to
-him, haltingly. “And your friends—your two companions—they
-are also in the prison. I hope—I hope
-you can find your way out. I am dropping them down—the
-keys. Here they come.” She tossed the bunch,
-which she had taken from her pocket with nerveless
-fingers, and now she heard the metallic clink, as they
-struck the floor, come faintly up through the aperture.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam was starting to say something. She dared not
-wait to listen. Now that her task was done, she knew
-she would absolutely collapse, if she did not at once
-bestir herself to flee.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I mustn’t stop!” she said to him, a little wildly.
-“Be careful. Good-by,” and without even waiting to
-hear him answer, she arose, thrust a bunch of grass
-back into place over the opening, and hastened away.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_296'>296</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER XXXVII.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>RATS IN THE ARMORY.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>Adam’s</span> disappointment, when he got no more responses
-to the eager questions and blessings he breathed
-upward to his unseen sweetheart, was keener than all
-the anguish he had felt at being so foully imprisoned.
-He had caught up the keys, quickly enough, but when
-he failed to catch any more of her trembling words he
-felt more deserted and surrounded by the blackness
-than he had been in all this new experience. However,
-his heart was soon tripping with gladness.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At least it was Garde who had come to save him.
-Love was his guardian angel. He could face the world
-full of foes, after this. He grew impatient, abruptly,
-to get out of the dungeon at once and go to Garde—his
-brave, darling Garde!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Then he thought of the beef-eaters. He had fancied
-he heard their voices, as Randolph’s men had been taking
-him into the prison corridor. It had seemed impossible
-that they had already arrived and been apprehended
-till he remembered how many days it had been
-since last he had seen them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Having been asleep when Garde first called down to
-him, through the tiny air-passage, the rover was a
-little refreshed. But he was still nearly famished for
-something to eat, having been provided only with a dry
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_297'>297</span>chunk of bread, as large as his fist, and a jug of water.
-He was also quite lame, for he had not been able to do
-anything for his wounded foot.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Nevertheless he was alert, now, for his slumber of an
-hour had been profoundly deep and his constitution
-was one of great elasticity, rapidly responding to the
-most inconsiderable restorative influence. He hobbled
-about in his small den, finding the door without difficulty,
-after which he tried the lock with key after key,
-on the bunch, until he thought he had rejected all,
-when his high hopes came swiftly tumbling down.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The key to the dungeon had not been found among
-the lot on the ring!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In his weakened condition this apparent discovery
-was prostrating in its dire effect. He suffered more
-than he would have done had there been no attempt
-made to free him at all. He felt cold beads of perspiration
-break out on his brow. Hope for himself and the
-beef-eaters, snatched away almost as soon as given, unnerved
-him. Nevertheless he pulled himself together,
-to try every key in the bunch again.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The first one he handled entered the lock and threw
-back the bolt.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Cautiously swinging the door open, he suddenly
-started, at the sound of some one approaching in the
-corridor. In a second he was back in the dark hole
-and had locked the door again upon himself. Weaver,
-the jailer, making an unusual round of the premises,
-came down the dungeon-steps and tried the door.
-Satisfied that all was well, he proceeded onward to his
-bed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam lost little time in again starting forth. This
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_298'>298</span>time he locked the dungeon and took his bunch of keys
-with him. He climbed the nine steps, which the jailer’s
-wife had so frequently counted, and found himself in
-the corridor, which was lighted by a single lamp, which
-was small and odorous. Noting his bearings, he limped
-along toward the cell where he thought he had heard
-the beef-eaters talking.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There was no sound to give him guidance now, and
-there were several doors confronting him, behind any
-one of which his retinue might be locked. It was a
-matter presenting necessities for nicety in judgment.
-If he were to open the door on some wrong prisoner,
-the ensuing disturbance would be most unfortunate.
-Moreover, he did not know but what there might be
-guards galore in some of the jail-apartments. It would
-not do to call, or to whisper, for the sake of attracting
-the beef-eaters’ attention, for obvious reasons.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There was nothing for it but to open door after door
-till he found the faithful pair. Luckily the doors were
-numbered, and he found there were corresponding
-numbers on the keys. There being no choice, he unlocked
-the first door he saw. Shifting the bolt cautiously,
-he was presently able to listen for anything like
-a sound inside the cell.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He could hear nothing. The room was empty. To
-the next door he went, and repeated his simple experiment.
-This apartment proved to be, not a cell, but a
-place in which all manner of rubbish had been thrown.
-It also contained swords, pistols, some blunderbusses
-and other arms. The room, indeed, was the prison
-armory. Adam nodded at this discovery as being good,
-but it left him as far as before from his friends. Leaving
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_299'>299</span>this door unlocked, he went back in the other direction
-and tried again.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Listening now, as before, upon opening a second cell,
-he heard snoring. Better than this, it was snoring that
-he knew. He went in and nudged the retinue with his
-foot.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What, ho! Who knocks?” said Halberd, in a sleepy
-growl.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Be quiet,” said Adam. “Get up, the two of you,
-quickly. We are about to seek more commodious
-apartments.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The Sachem!” said Pike.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Who else,” answered Halberd. “Sire, I have been
-expecting this kindness these three hours.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You may expect to be hanged, in the morning, if
-you do not shut your mouth and come with me instantly,”
-said Rust.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I was dreaming of my wedding with a fair princess,”
-said Pike. “These are no days of chivalry,
-when a man will leave so sweet a damsel in so vile a
-place.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What have you done with your swords and side
-arms?” the Sachem demanded, in a whisper. “Did
-they take them from you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“They did. Else we had slain the whole score of
-rascals that took us,” said Halberd.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Make haste, then, till we arm anew,” instructed the
-rover.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He locked the door behind them and led the way to
-the armory at once. They had gone half the distance
-to the place when there came a clanking of opening
-doors, a rattle of scabbards, a rumble of muffled voices
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_300'>300</span>and the tramp of many feet, around in the angle of the
-corridor, leading to the outside world.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Quick! Quick!” commanded Adam, and darting
-forward, lame foot and all, to the armory-door, he opened
-it, thrust in the beef-eaters, with a word of admonition
-to beware of making a noise, and closed the barrier,
-only as Randolph and six of his creatures came tiptoeing
-down the passage and stopped fairly opposite
-where Adam was standing.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The rover reached out in the dark of the room they
-were in, as he braced silently against the door, and
-felt his hand come in contact with a sword, which he
-had noted when first he peered into the room. He
-could hear the men outside, whispering.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Weaver was with them, pale and frightened at what
-he knew these midnight visitors contemplated doing.
-He dared not make the slightest protest; his master
-stood before him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Here, is this the room above the dungeon?” said
-Randolph. He laid his hand on the knob, the inside
-mate of which Adam was holding.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, sir, this is the room, here upon the other side,”
-said Weaver. “It’s a few steps further along.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The private executioners, with their chief, were
-moving away, when one of the beef-eaters stepped upon
-something on the floor of the armory, making a sound
-that seemed terrific.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What was that?” demanded Randolph, quickly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“We have rats in the property chamber,” said
-Weaver, honestly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It sounded too big for rats,” said the voice of
-Psalms Higgler, whom Adam readily identified.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_301'>301</span>“We may look there if you like,” said the jailer.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Never mind the rats at present,” dictated Randolph.
-“Show us the room above the cellar.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The other door could then be heard to open and to
-close behind the visitors. Adam snatched up swords
-for three on the instant.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Here, take it—and not a word,” he breathed,
-thrusting a weapon upon each of his trembling companions.
-“If they come for us—fight!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Silently and slowly he reopened the door, having
-buckled a sword upon him. There came a light patter
-of footsteps on the corridor floor. Just as the rover
-was stepping forth, Psalms Higgler, who had not been
-satisfied with the theory of the rats, came gliding to the
-spot. He and Adam suddenly faced one another, a
-foot apart. The startled little monster stared wildly
-for the briefest part of a second and then would have
-fallen back, yelling like a demon to raise the alarm.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Pouncing upon him, without a sound, yet with the
-terrible strength and nimbleness of a tiger, Adam
-clutched him fiercely by the neck, with both his powerful
-hands, and choking back the yell already starting
-to the creature’s lips, lifted him bodily off the floor, to
-prevent him from kicking upon it, to raise a disturbance,
-and carried him, squirming and writhing, to the
-door by which the visitors had so recently entered.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Open the door! Open the door and get out!”
-ordered Rust of his followers, sternly, never for a moment
-relaxing his grip or his lift on Higgler. “Lift
-the bar! Lift it! There!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The door swung open. The beef-eaters sprang outside,
-trying both to go at once. The commotion they
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_302'>302</span>made rang through the building. Adam was after
-them swiftly, forgetting to limp, as he felt the outside
-air in his face.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Higgler by this was becoming absolutely limp.
-Adam dropped him on the ground, where he lay,
-barely left alive and unable to move or to speak.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam had the keys in his pocket, the largest one
-uppermost. This was the one to this outside door.
-He could hear the men inside running toward the spot
-and already shouting the alarm. He dared to lock
-the door, deliberately, and to pull out the key and put
-it again in his pocket. Then he calmly drew the borrowed
-sword from its scabbard, rammed its end smartly
-home, in the key-hole and snapped it off short, spiking
-the aperture completely.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Already the beef-eaters were running up the street.
-Psalms Higgler was drawing his breath in awful gasps,
-where he lay.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Good friend, farewell,” said Rust to him, cheerfully.
-“I shall be pleased to report you an excellent
-rat-catcher, at the earliest opportunity afforded.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He disappeared from Higgler’s ken in a twinkling
-and soon overtook his retinue, making good time for
-the country.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_303'>303</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER XXXVIII.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>LOVE’S LONG GOOD-BY.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>Aware</span> that his ruse in locking the jail upon his
-jailers would hold them only till they could think of
-taking off the lock and knocking out the sword-end,
-Adam was nevertheless determined upon going to David
-Donner’s residence, for the purpose of seeing Mistress
-Garde.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>With this purpose in view, and expecting his pursuers
-to be soon on a keen race for the open flats,
-which he had been known to cross before, in his successful
-escape to the woods, he led his retinue straight
-off at right angles from such a course, and brought
-them in fifteen minutes to the silent ship-yard of
-William Phipps.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Here, with small ado, they climbed the fence and
-struck across the enclosure, past the gaunt skeleton of
-a ship, growing on the ways, and so came to a quiet bit
-of water, at the private landing, where three small
-boats were moored in safety.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The trio were soon aboard the lightest skiff and rowing
-her westward, with silent, effectual strokes.
-Guided by the rover, the beef-eaters steered for the
-shore, and after a ten-minute pull Adam landed near
-the spot where he had sat upon a rock, waiting for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_304'>304</span>night, on the occasion of his last meeting with his
-sweetheart.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Wait for me here,” he said. “I shall not be long.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He was soon at the gate and then in the garden.
-There was not a sound to be heard. The house was
-dark. He raised a little whistle, as he slowly walked
-about the place, watching the windows intently.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde heard him. She was up. She had not had a
-moment of peace or freedom from dreadful suspense
-since arriving at the house, while waiting, listening,
-starting at all those uncanny sounds of stretching, in
-which a building will indulge itself at night. Greater
-unhappiness or despair she had never known, nor
-greater worry, fearing that Adam would come, and
-then fearing more that he would not.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When she heard him whistle, her heart seemed suddenly
-dislodged in her bosom. Her breath came
-laboredly. She opened the window in the kitchen,
-this room being furthest from her grandfather’s apartment,
-and saw Adam limp eagerly toward her.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Garde!—Sweetheart!” he said.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh—oh, you—you got away,” she faltered, faintly.
-“Here, I have—tied you up—a luncheon. Take it,
-please, and—and you had better go—at once.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“God bless you!” said Adam, stuffing the parcel
-she gave him inside his coat. “I have brought you
-back the keys. My Garde! My own blessed sweetheart.
-Oh, Garde, dearest, come out to me, just for a
-moment—just for one little good-by.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I—I cannot,” Garde said, fighting heroically against
-the greatest temptation she had ever known. “We
-must say——good-by, now, and I must——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_305'>305</span>“Yes, I know, dear,” he broke in impetuously, “but
-just for a moment, just——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He was at the window. He tried to take her hands,
-to draw her toward him. She shrank away with an
-action so strange that his sentence died on his lips.
-“Why, Garde,” he said, “can’t I even touch your
-hands?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She shook her head. He could barely see her, in the
-pale light which the stars diffused.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I—I must never see—never see you—again,” she
-stammered, painfully, “we must say—say good-by.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You must never——Garde—why—we must say—But,
-Garde, dear,—I don’t understand you. What
-does all this mean?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, please go—now,” she said. “That is all—all
-I can say. It must be good-by.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam was made dumb for a moment. He stared at
-her unbelievingly. He passed his hand across his
-brow, as if he feared his fasting and long-endured labors
-had weakened his mind.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What in heaven’s name has happened?” he said,
-as if partially to himself. “Am I Adam Rust? Are
-you Garde? Say good-by?——Dearest, has anything
-happened?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She nodded to him, forcing back the sob that arose
-in her throat. “Something—something has happened,”
-she repeated. For maidenly shame she could not
-broach the subject of the Indian child.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He was silent for a moment before replying.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But you came to-night and gave me the keys, an
-hour or so ago,” he said, in wonderment and confusion.
-“You did that?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_306'>306</span>“I—couldn’t—do less,” she answered, mastering her
-love and anguish by a mighty resolution.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Do you mean—you would have done the same for
-anybody?” he asked. And seeing her nod an affirmative
-he gave a little laugh. “I am crazy now, or I
-have been crazy before,” he told himself. “Something
-has happened. Something—Of course—it couldn’t
-help happening, in time. Some one has told you——I
-might have known it would happen.... And yet—you
-once said you could wait for me fifty years. And I believed
-it.... Well, I thank you. I have been amused.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>His broken sentences seemed to Garde to fill in the
-possible gaps of the story—to make his confession
-complete. But Adam had, in reality, stopped himself
-on the verge of accusing her of listening to the love-making
-of some one other than himself, in his absence.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She made no reply to what he had said. She felt
-there was absolutely nothing she could say. Her heart
-would have cried out to him wildly. When he spoke
-so lightly of the fifty years which she could have
-waited, she swayed where she stood, ready to drop.
-Almost one atom more of impulse and she would have
-thrown herself in his arms, crying out her love passionately,
-in defiance of the story of his perfidy. But
-her honor, her maidenly resolution, steeled her in the
-nick of time. Though her heart should break, she
-could not accept the gilded offer of such a love.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, Garde—sweetheart, forgive me,” said Adam,
-after a moment of terrible silence. “I have wronged
-you. Forgive me and tell me it is all some nightmare—some
-dreadful——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The night stillness was broken by the sound of men
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_307'>307</span>running swiftly up the street. Randolph had thought
-of the possibility of Adam’s visit to Mistress Merrill.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde heard and comprehended. Rust heard and
-was careless.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, go, Ad—Mr. Rust, please go at once,” pleaded
-the girl already closing down the window.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Garde! Garde!—not forever?” cried the man in
-a last despair.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Forever,” she answered, so faintly that he barely
-heard, and then the window came down to its place.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Limping back into the shadow, at the rear of the
-garden, Adam lay out full length on the ground, as
-two tiptoeing figures entered the gate and came sneaking
-silently about the somber house. He saw them
-make a circuit of the garden. One of them walked to
-within a rod of where he lay—therefore within a rod of
-death,—and then turned uncertainly away and retired
-from the place with his fellow-hound.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The rover heard them go on up the street, hurriedly
-making toward the woods. He came back to the place
-by the window, at last, and whistled softly once again,
-unable to believe that what he had heard could be so.
-There must be some explanation, if only he could get
-it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There was no response, partially for the reason that
-Garde had sunk down upon the floor, on the other side
-of the window, in a dead faint.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>His lameness fully upon him again, Adam hobbled a
-few steps away, halted to look back, yearningly, and
-then once more dragged himself off, to join the faithful
-beef-eaters, waiting in patience with the boat.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_308'>308</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER XXXIX.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>MUTATIONS.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>While</span> Garde, heart-broken, pale and ill, was restoring
-her uncle’s keys to their accustomed hook, in the
-morning, Adam and his retinue were taking a much-needed
-sleep in the woods.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Having recovered his own good sword and his leather
-jerkin, from the place where he had concealed them, on
-the evening of his capture, he had led the beef-eaters
-into a maze of trees where no one in Boston could have
-found them, and here he was doing his best to prove
-himself a cheerful and worthy companion, to share their
-natural distresses.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Refusing at first to eat of the luncheon provided by
-Garde, the rover finally yielded to the importunities of
-his companions, and thereby got much-needed refreshment.
-By noon they were far on their way toward New
-Amsterdam, their only safe destination. They kept
-close to the edge of the woods, as they went, remaining
-thereby in touch with the farms, on which they depended,
-in their penniless condition, for something to
-eat.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>By sheer perversity, Adam wore away his lameness.
-He bathed his foot often and he also wrapped it in
-leaves, the beneficent qualities of which he had learned
-from the Indians, years before, and this did as much,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_309'>309</span>or more, than his doggedness to make repairs in the
-injured tendons.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They were many days on this wearisome march which
-contrasted, for Adam, so harshly with that other stroll,
-to Boston, from Plymouth. On many occasions they
-went hungry for a day and a night together. But what
-with cheer and good water, they lost nothing of their
-health.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>With boots beginning to gape at the toes, and with
-raiment dusty and faded, they arrived, at last, at the
-modest house, at the corner of Cedar and William
-streets, in New Amsterdam, where Captain William
-Kidd resided with his wife. Here they were made
-welcome. On behalf of himself and his comrades, Adam
-presently secured a working passage to Hispaniola,
-where he meant to rejoin William Phipps, in the search
-for the sunken treasure. He could think of nothing
-else to do, and he had no longer the slightest desire to
-remain on American soil.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Prior to sailing, however, he wrote a long, detailed
-account of his finding the man and his Indian child,
-with all the incidents related thereto, which he forwarded
-straight to Henry Wainsworth. This concluded
-his duties. He only regretted, he said in his letter to
-Henry, that he could not apprise him of what disposition
-had been made of the body of the little man,
-Henry’s nephew, when the minions of Randolph took
-it in their charge.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This letter came duly into Henry Wainsworth’s possession.
-Having been aware, as no other man in Massachusetts
-was, that his refugee brother was living his
-isolated life in the woods, Henry was much overcome
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_310'>310</span>by this sad intelligence. He made what cautious inquiries
-he dared, with the purpose of ascertaining what
-had become of the little body. He then made a
-pilgrimage into the woods, stood above the grave which
-Adam had made, and then, taking a few worthless
-trinkets, as mementoes, from the deserted cabin, he
-came sadly away.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But not Henry’s sadness, nor yet that of Garde,
-served to do more than to signalize the sense of affliction
-which the citizens of the colony felt had come upon
-them. They had been a joyless people, with their
-minds and their bodies dressed in the somber hues suggested
-by a morbid condition of religious meditation,
-but at least they had enjoyed the freedom for which
-they had come so far and fought so persistently. With
-their charter gone, and the swift descent upon them of
-the many things which they had found intolerable in
-England, they were a melancholy, hopeless people indeed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But even as Garde’s sorrow typified that of her fellow-beings,
-so did the fortitude and uncomplaining courage,
-with which she endured her burden, typify the
-stolid suffering of the citizens of Massachusetts, in this
-hour of their first great “national” woe.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The summer ripened and passed. The autumn
-heralded the ermine-robed King Winter, with glorious
-pageantry. The trees put on their cloth of gold and
-crimson, and when the hoary monarch came, the millions
-of leaves strewed his path, and, prostrate before
-his march, laid their matchless tapestry beneath his
-merciless feet.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>During all this time Randolph had made no sign toward
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_311'>311</span>his revenge upon Garde, for the scorn with which
-she had cast him from her side. No petty vengeance
-would gratify his malignant spirit. The whole colony
-must suffer for this indignity, and Garde and her
-grandfather should feel his hand mightily, when all was
-ready. He prepared his way with extreme caution.
-He was never hurried. He laid wires to perform his
-mischief far ahead. Indeed he lingered almost too
-long, in his greed to prolong his own anticipation of
-what was to be.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thus in December of that year, 1686, the frigate
-“Kingfisher,” from England, brought to the colony
-their newly-appointed Governor, Sir Edmund Andros,
-who assumed the reins of power with an absolute thoroughness
-which left Randolph somewhat shorn of his
-capacity for working evil.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Andros, who had formerly been Governor for New
-York, for a matter of three years, was a person of commendable
-character, in many respects, but the policy
-which he had come to put into being and force was
-stupid, oppressive and offensive to the people he had to
-govern. Being the thorough Tory that he was, he enforced
-the policy with a vigor which brought upon him
-the detestation of the Puritans, who visited the errors
-he was ordered to commit upon his own less guilty
-head.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Puritans, in the extremes to which they had
-fled, in their separation from the English forms of worship,
-had adopted a rigid simplicity in which the whole
-fabric of ceremonials had been swept away bodily.
-They rang no bells for their divine service; they regarded
-marriage as a civil contract, purely; they
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_312'>312</span>observed no festivals nor holidays of the church; they
-buried their dead in stolid silence. They abhorred the
-English rites.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Governor Andros inaugurated countless ceremonies.
-That very Christmas the English party of Boston held
-high revel in the city. The Puritans refused to close
-their shops, or to join either in rites or merriment.
-They brought in their fire-wood and went about their
-business, grim-faced and scowling darkly upon the innovations
-come among them, with their fascinations for
-the young and their enchantment of the frivolous.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The offenses against their rigid notions increased
-rapidly. In February they beheld, with horror, the
-introduction of a new invention of the devil. One
-Joseph Mayhem paraded in the main street of Boston
-with a rooster fastened on his back,—where it flapped
-its wings frantically,—while in his hand the fellow
-carried a bell, on which he made a dreadful din as
-he walked. Behind him came a number of ruffians,
-blindfolded and armed with cart-whips. Under pretense
-of striking at Mayhem and the chanticleer, they
-cut at the passers-by, roaring with laughter and otherwise
-increasing the attention which their conduct
-attracted. This exhibition was thought to smack of
-Papacy and the hated days of Laud.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The church itself was invaded. There was as yet no
-Church of England in the town. Governor Andros
-therefore attended with the Puritans, at their own
-house of meeting, but to their unnameable horror, he
-compelled Goodman Needham, the sexton, to ring the
-bell, according to English usage.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Rebellion being impossible, the Puritans nursed their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_313'>313</span>grievances in sullen stolidity. They were powerless,
-but never hopeless of their opportunity still to come.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Taxation came as a consequence of the pomp in which
-the new Governor conceived it to be his right to exist,
-as well as the natural result of his glowing reports to
-England that the people could be made to disgorge and
-would not resist.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>To crown their heritage of woe, Edward Randolph,
-profiting by their already established fanaticism and
-ripeness for the folly, subtly introduced and finally
-fastened upon them that curse of superstitious ignorance,
-which was doomed to become such a blot upon
-their page of history—the “detection” of and persecutions
-for witchcraft.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_314'>314</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER XL.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>GOLDEN OYSTERS.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>Captain William Phipps</span>, when Adam left him at
-Jamaica, had returned, as he had said he intended, to
-the waters wherein the old Spanish galleon, with her
-golden treasure, was supposed to have sunk. He had
-met with a small measure of luck, for an old sailor had
-pointed out what he alleged to be the exact reef of
-rocks on which the galleon had split, half a century before.
-This spot was a few leagues to the north of Port
-de la Plata.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Having examined the place without success, Phipps
-had then discovered that his crew was not reliable and
-the ship not much better, in point of soundness. He
-had therefore headed for England, coming in due season
-to anchor in the Thames.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Undaunted by the failure which his enterprise had
-been, he sought out the King, reported what he had
-done, and requested the use of another ship and a better
-lot of men.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>James was amused and entertained. He commended
-the bold skipper on his courage and his tenacity of purpose;
-he believed his story. But he shook his head
-at the thought of furnishing funds and a new ship and
-crew for further adventures with pirates and mutineers
-in the Spanish Main.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_315'>315</span>However, at the Court, Captain Phipps had made
-influential friends. He was admired for his manly
-qualities; he was trusted as a man of exceptional integrity.
-The Duke of Albemarle, with several friends,
-agreed again to back the doughty Captain for the venture.
-They secured a new charter for the business
-from the King; they found a good staunch ship.
-Away went Phipps, with a hope so high that nothing
-could have served to suppress it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was when the captain arrived once more at Port
-de la Plata that Adam Rust and the beef-eaters joined
-him. The meeting was one in which the demonstration
-of a great and enduring affection between the two big
-men was the more affecting because of its utter simplicity
-and quietness. Adam was welcomed to his
-share in the new promise with that great spirit of generosity
-and justice which characterized everything that
-Phipps was ever known to do.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The preparations for a careful search were pushed
-ahead rapidly. A small, stout boat was built and
-launched, near the fatal reef, while the ship was anchored
-at some distance away, in less treacherous water.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Daily the small boat put forth and the reef was examined,
-but to no avail. It was found that the shelf
-of rock, which had broken the old galleon, ended so
-abruptly as to form a sheer drop of many fathoms,
-whereas a few feet away it was only a ship’s-hold distance
-from the surface. It was conjectured then that
-the galleon had struck, had filled with water and so had
-fallen over the edge of the submerged precipice,
-where she would lay forever, undisturbed by prodding
-man.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_316'>316</span>The search was at length abandoned as being futile.
-The small boat, being slowly rowed away, Adam beheld
-a plant, of many colors and rare beauty, growing on
-the reef below them, in the clear, emerald water. He
-requested a diver to fetch it up. The boat was halted
-and overboard went the man. He was soon seen
-spraddling like some singular creature, back up through
-the brine. He had fetched the plant and he told of
-having seen on the bottom the encrusted gun of some
-sunken vessel.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At Adam’s eager command he returned again to the
-spot and presently arose to the surface with an ingot of
-silver, slimy and dark, clutched firmly in his hands.
-The treasure was found!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Putting for the ship at once, where Captain Phipps
-was somewhat laboriously writing a long report of the
-second failure, the rover gave the almost incredible
-news, that set the whole ship afire with amazement
-and joy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The entire crew were speedily pressed into service.
-The work was prosecuted with vigor. Adam looked
-upon this treasure, coming so late into his sight and
-life, with a grim smile upon his lips and with scorn in
-his eyes. He saw the divers fetch up masses of bullion,
-first, then golden oysters, encrusted with calcareous
-matter, then broken bags bursting with their largess of
-Spanish doubloons, and finally precious stones, shimmering,
-untarnished, in the sunlight.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was a feverish time. Day after day went by and
-the boats were filled with fortunes. It seemed as if
-the more they took, the more they found. The gold
-on top hid gold underneath.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_317'>317</span>An old shipmate of Captain Phipps’ whose imagination
-the ship-builder had fired, months before,
-arrived from Providence. He was able so easily to fill
-his boat with gold that he went raving crazy and died
-in a lunatic asylum at Bermuda.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The provisions on the ship began to run low, before
-the examination of the sunken wreck was complete.
-Moreover the sailors, their avariciousness aroused by
-the sight of all these riches, which daily they were
-snatching from the sea, for other men to enjoy, grew
-restive and threatened to take a contagion of mutiny.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Treasure to the value of three hundred thousand
-pounds had been recovered, and much still remained
-untouched. Phipps determined to sail with what he
-had, planning to return to the field in the future. He
-enjoined silence and secrecy on all the sailors, but the
-word leaked out and adventurers gathering from far
-and near, the rotting galleon was despoiled of everything
-she had hoarded so jealously and successfully
-throughout the years.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Phipps brought his vessel in safety to England. The
-enormous success which had attended his efforts so
-aroused the cupidity of certain of the King’s retainers
-that they advised James to confiscate the entire treasure,
-on the ground that Phipps had withheld such
-information, on his former return, as would have induced
-the crown to finance the second enterprise, had
-the truth been told.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>King James, however, was too honorable a monarch
-to resort to trickery so infamous. Instead he commended
-the captain in the highest terms, made him
-an intimate of his court, knighted him Sir William
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_318'>318</span>Phipps and invited him to become an Englishman and
-reside with them there for the remainder of his life.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Phipps received his honors modestly. He was too
-patriotic to desert America and bluntly said so to his
-King. He and Adam received, as their share of the
-treasure, the one tenth agreed upon, amounting to
-thirty thousand pounds, of which sum all that the
-Captain could prevail upon Rust to accept was a third,
-a sum, the rover said, far in excess of the needs of his
-retinue and himself.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_319'>319</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER XLI.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>FATE’S DEVIOUS WAYS.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>At</span> Boston it was not a matter of many months before
-Henry Wainsworth and piety Tootbaker, having been
-made aware that Garde was no longer provisionally betrothed
-to Randolph, resumed their former hopes and
-attentions, as to attending Meeting and paying sundry
-little visits to the Soams, when Garde could be expected
-to be seen.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde had become a subdued little person, wishing
-only that she might not be seen by any one as she came
-and went on her simple rounds of daily life. Her
-grandfather had recovered so that once more he pothered
-about in his garden and read in his Bible and
-busied himself with prattle, more childish than wise.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The old man saw little of his compatriots. He lived
-as one only partially awake from a recent dread. He
-never discussed the colony’s politics, for his friends,
-when they came to see him, spared him the ordeal
-which invariably resulted from a mention of the word
-charter. On this topic he was quite mad. Almost
-galvanically, the word produced in his brain a mania,
-half fear, half fury, in which he seemed to conceive
-that Garde was the author of woes to which nothing
-could ever give expression. In such a mood, he was
-savagery itself, toward the patient girl.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_320'>320</span>Gradually, so gradually that she could not have said
-when the impression commenced to grow upon her, Garde
-discovered that Henry Wainsworth was exceedingly
-kind, thoughtful and soothing, in her joyless existence.
-There was something kindred in his own isolation, and in
-his very bashfulness, or timidity, for it kept him so often
-silent, when he was with her alone. She had always respected
-Henry. His patient devotion could not but touch
-her at length. It was not so much a flattery as it was a
-faithfulness, through all the discouragements she had
-given him always.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This line of thought having been awakened in her
-breast, she noted more of the little, insignificant signs
-which go to make up the sum of a man’s real regard—the
-regard on which a woman can safely rely as one to
-endure and to grow.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the soreness of her heart, it was almost sweet to
-think of Henry’s quiet attentions. It was calming.
-It lent a little spot of warmth and color to her otherwise
-cheerless life. She could never love him, as she
-had loved Adam—nay, as she loved him still,—but the
-dreariness of her present days might find relief in a new
-sort of life. Out of the duties, which as a housewife
-she would experience daily, surely a trust, an esteem
-for Henry, great enough almost to be called a love,
-would come, with the years.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She yearned to bury her sorrow. It was not a healthy,
-wholesome thing for any young woman to foster. She
-had enjoyed her day of love, yes—her years of love.
-She had felt like a widowed bride. To her, Adam’s
-kisses had been like the first sacred emblems of their
-marriage. She had not been able to conceive of permitting
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_321'>321</span>such caresses until she should feel that their souls
-were mated and their hearts already wedded. But it
-could never be the duty of a woman to mourn such a loss
-till she died. And then—this newly contemplated
-union would make her forget.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But, if she could encourage Henry toward this possibility
-of a union such as she thought upon, it would
-be her duty to be more cheerful, more living in the
-every-day hours that were, instead of dreaming sadly
-and morbidly upon her heart-break of the past.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was not with a sense of gratifying her own longing
-for happiness that she finally thought a marriage with
-Henry possible; there was a sense of combating her
-own selfishness in it. It was a selfishness, it was pampering
-the morbid in her nature, she felt, to continue
-indefinitely in a “widowhood” of Adam’s love. It
-must also be admitted that Garde was human, wherefore
-the element of pique was not absolutely lacking in
-her being. No woman would ever wish a man she had
-rejected to believe that she could not, or would not,
-marry elsewhere. She would wish to show that other
-opportunities were not lacking, as well as she would
-desire to have him know that her heart was not broken
-beyond repair.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Having spent at least a month upon these introspective
-and other meditations, Garde appeared to Wainsworth
-so much more bright and beautiful that there
-was no containing his emotions. The poor fellow nearly
-broke his neck, metaphorically speaking, in a vain attempt
-to ask her to become his wife, on the first occasion
-afforded, after he made his discovery of her alteration
-in moods and appearance.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_322'>322</span>It was of no use to screw up his courage. It would
-not stick. He determined to write what he could not
-utter, and then, when a moment should be propitious,
-to deliver his written declaration into her hand, to be
-read when he had fled the scene. To this end he composed
-an elegant and eloquent epistle.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>To avoid any possibility of making mistakes, Henry
-carefully deposited his letter in the pocket of the coat
-he always wore to Meeting. This pocket had been heretofore
-employed as a receptacle for things precious
-over which he desired to exercise particular care.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Having without difficulty obtained permission from
-Garde to walk at her side to church and back, poor
-Wainsworth lost appetite and sleep, while waiting for
-the fateful day. When it came, he was in a nervous
-plight which revealed to Garde the whole state of his
-mind. She felt her sympathy for him expand in her
-bosom till she hoped it would burgeon into love. Had
-he gone with her into her aunt Gertrude’s home, after
-the service, Garde would doubtless have helped to simplify
-what she was well aware he wished to say, but, alas
-for the timid lover, he dared not, on this occasion, so
-jeopardize his courage.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He knew that if ever he got inside the house and
-faced her, alone, he would not be able even to deliver
-his letter. But out of doors his nerve was steadier.
-Therefore, at the gate having fortified himself against
-the moment, he nervously drew from his pocket a good-sized
-packet of paper and put it shakingly into her hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I wish—I wish you would read—this letter,” he
-stammered. “Good-by. I—I hope you will read it
-quite through.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_323'>323</span>Garde looked at him compassionately. He was only
-made the more confused. He bowed himself away with
-a nervousness painful to see.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Poor Henry!” said Garde, with a little smile to herself.
-She knew what to expect in the document and
-vaguely she wondered if she would not feel more at
-peace when she had consented to become his wife.
-Her memory of words and looks, behind which the
-figure of Adam, the sad boy-captive, the love-irradiated
-champion of her cat, and then the melancholy violinist
-in the woods—this had all, of late, been more than
-usually strong upon her.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde’s cat had died within the week just passed.
-This event had served to open up old tombs, containing
-her dead dreams. She had almost caught herself wishing
-she had taken less to heart the story of Adam’s
-perfidy, or at least that she might never have heard the
-story at all. But when she had shaken off the spell
-which this past would persist in weaving about her, she
-was resolved to accept Henry Wainsworth, so that her
-duty might compel her to forget.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>With a half melancholy sense of sealing her own sentence
-of banishment from her land of bitter-sweet memories,
-she delayed the moment of unfolding Henry’s
-letter. When she found herself alone, she laid it down
-before her, on the table, and looked at it with lackluster
-eyes. But presently, then, having tossed off the
-reverie which was stealing upon her, she sighed once,
-heavily, and took up the papers with a resolute hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She opened the stiff sheets and bent them straight.
-She read “Dear friend,” and thought Henry’s writing
-had altered. Her eyes then sped along a number of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_324'>324</span>lines and she started with a new, tense interest in the
-document.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The letter she held in her hands was the one which
-Adam Rust had penned to Wainsworth, concerning his
-brother.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Why!” she presently said, aloud, “why—he
-couldn’t have meant—” yet Henry, she recalled, had
-asked her particularly to read all the pages through.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She had only made a start into Adam’s narrative, yet
-her heart had begun to leap till she could barely endure
-its commotion. She spread the sheets out before her
-on the table, with nervous fingers. She read swiftly,
-greedily. Her bosom heaved with the tumult of suddenly
-stirred emotions. She made a glad little noise,
-as she read, for the undercurrent of her thought was
-of a wild exultation to find that Adam was innocent,
-that she was justified in loving him now, as she had been
-justified always—that her instinct had guided her
-rightly when she had helped him to break from the
-prison.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Her eyes were widely dilated. Her pent-up emotions
-swayed her till she suddenly clutched up the sheets and
-crumpled them in joy against her bounding heart.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Adam!” she said, half aloud. “Oh, Adam! My
-Adam!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She bent above the letter again, crooning involuntarily,
-in the revelation of Adam made again his noble self
-by the lines he had written so simply and innocently
-here upon the paper. She was reading, but having,
-almost in the first few lines, discovered so much that
-her intuition had far out-raced her eyes, she was hardly
-comprehending the sentences that ran so swiftly beneath
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_325'>325</span>her gaze, so abandoned were her senses to the
-sudden hope and the overwhelming joy which the revelation
-compelled. She kissed the papers. She laid
-her cheek upon them, she surrounded them warmly
-with her arms.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She felt so glad that she had loved him in spite of that
-horrible story! Her soul leaped with exultation. She
-would not be obliged to marry Wainsworth, to forget.
-She would never forget! She would wait for Adam
-now—if need be till Judgment Day itself!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She kissed Adam’s writing again. She fondled it
-lovingly. It restored him. It gave her back her right
-to love him. It was too much to think upon or to try
-to express.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She had only half read it; the sense of the story had
-escaped her grasp. It had been enough that Adam was
-guiltless. Her breath came fast; the color had flamed
-to her cheeks. Her eyes were glowing with the love
-which she had welcomed home to her throbbing
-heart.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She had risen, unable to control herself, so abruptly
-and unexpectedly had the discovery come upon her.
-Now she sat down again at the table and read the letter
-more carefully. It was such a sad little story.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Unfortunately I sprained my ankle, and this delayed
-me,” she read, where Adam had written. She
-pictured him now, limping through the forest, with the
-little brown child, and her heart yearned over his suffering,
-his patience and his self-sacrifice in coming back to
-the cruel fate in store for him, there in Boston.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She thought of him then in the prison. She blessed
-the instinct of love which had made her go to his aid.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_326'>326</span>He was not an outlaw. He was not a renegade. He
-was her own Adam.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Then she thought of the moment in which she had
-sent him away. After all the heart-breaking trials he
-had already endured, she had added the final cruelty.
-She remembered how he had limped, when she saw him
-starting off, just before she had fainted at the window,
-that terrible night. Longing to call him back, now, and
-to cry out her love,—that had never died,—her trust,
-which should now endure for ever, and her plea to be forgiven,
-she fancied she heard him again saying: “Garde!
-Garde!—not forever?” and she felt a great sob rising in
-her throat.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, Adam!” she said, as if from the depths of her
-heart.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The hot tears, of joy and sadness blended, suddenly
-gave vent to the pent-up emotions within her. They
-rolled swiftly down across her face and splashed in great
-blots on the writing.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_327'>327</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER XLII.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>LITTLE RUSES, AND WAITING.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>When</span> she had recovered somewhat of her calm again,
-Garde found herself confronted by several difficulties
-with which she would be obliged to cope. In the first
-place she had ruined Adam’s letter to Henry Wainsworth,
-crumpling the sheets and permitting her tears to
-fall upon their surfaces, till no one save herself, aided
-by love, could have deciphered some of the sentences
-at all.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the second place, if Henry had really intended to
-ask her hand in marriage, as she could not avoid believing,
-there might be complications in that direction
-at an early date. She could only resolve, upon this
-point, that she must not, under any circumstances, permit
-Henry to make his proposal, either orally or through
-the medium of another letter.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As to this letter, from Adam to Henry, it was certainly
-of a private character, but Henry had asked her to read
-it, and now she could not have disguised the fact that
-she had done so. She could not see how she could possibly
-return it to Henry at all, under the circumstances.
-She could not bear to think of letting him see the evidence
-of her emotions, wrought upon it. Moreover,
-it was precious to her. She felt entitled to own it. To
-her it meant far more than it possibly could to any other
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_328'>328</span>person in the world. She resolved to make a fair copy
-of it, for Henry, while she herself would retain the
-original—in Adam’s own writing.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Her third proposition was the most vital of them all.
-She could not think of what she should do to repair the
-harm which she alone, after all, had done, when she
-sent Adam away with that little word “Forever!”
-How should she let him know of the infamous story
-which she had been made to believe? How should she
-convince him, even supposing she could reach him with
-a word, that the story had left no room in her mind for
-doubt of its truth? How could she manage to persuade
-him that she had loved him always; that she knew at
-last of the wrong she had done him; that she begged
-his forgiveness; that she should wait for him even longer
-than the fifty years of which he had spoken on that last
-agonizing night?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He might not forgive her, she told herself. It might
-be too late already. She knew not where he had gone,
-or what he had done. He too might have thought of
-marriage with somebody else—to try to forget.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As a result of her brain cudgeling, to know what she
-would do to make Adam aware that she had made a
-great mistake and desired his forgiveness, she determined
-to write him a letter. Having decided, she wrote
-at once. Had she waited a little longer, her letter
-might have been more quiet in its reserve, but it could
-not then have been so utterly spontaneous, nor expressive
-of the great love she bore him, kept alive during
-all those months of doubt and agony.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As it was, the little outburst was sufficiently dignified;
-and it was sweet, and frank. She told him that she had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_329'>329</span>read his letter to Henry, and that suddenly she had
-known of the great wrong she had done him. She
-mentioned that a dreadful story had been fastened upon
-him, with all too terrible semblances of truth and justice.
-She begged his forgiveness in a hundred runes.
-Finally, when she had finished, she signed it “Garde—John
-Rosella,” in memory of her walk with him through
-the woods, from near Plymouth to Boston.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Not without blushes and little involuntary thrills of
-delight did she add the name which confessed the tale
-of that wonderful walk, but she felt that Adam would
-know, by this very confession, how deep for him must
-be her love and trust and how contrite was the spirit in
-which she desired his forgiveness.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This epistle having at length been disposed of to her
-satisfaction, she made the fair copy of Adam’s letter to
-Henry and sent it to Wainsworth at once, with a short
-note of explanation that some moisture having fallen
-upon the original, making it quite illegible and indeed
-destroying it utterly, for his use, she felt she could do
-no less than to make this reparation. She likewise expressed
-the compliment she felt it was to herself that
-Henry had desired her to know of this sad affair in the
-life of his brother, but that she had been so affected by
-the tale that she must beg him not to permit her to
-read any further letters for some time to come.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This was a masterly composition, for poor Wainsworth
-destroyed the proposing epistle he had written at such
-infinite pains, and for a time, wholly abandoned any
-thought of speaking of marriage. He was exceedingly
-mortified to think he had made such a blunder as to
-give her the letter which he had guarded so cautiously.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_330'>330</span>Timidity settled upon him, especially as he noted another,
-altogether incomprehensible change in Garde’s
-demeanor, when next they met.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Having despatched her letter to Adam, Garde felt a
-happiness grow and expand in her bosom daily. She
-expected the wait to be a long one, till a letter, or some
-other manner of a reply, could come from Adam.
-Goodwife Phipps, of whom she had artfully contrived
-to get the rover’s address, had assured her of the very
-great number of weeks that elapsed between communications
-from William, in answer to the fond little flock
-of letters which she was constantly launching forth to
-the distant island across the sea. But when weeks became
-months, and time fled onward inexorably, with
-never a sign or a word in return for what she had written,
-she had many moments in which sad, vain regrets
-and confirmed despair took possession of her thoughts.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She was a resigned, patient girl, however, with her
-impulses curbed, for the sadness of the times, aside
-from her own little affairs, cast a gloom upon the colony
-which seemed to deepen rather than to promise ever to
-dissolve.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Her heart felt that the fifty years had passed many
-times over her head, when, after a longer time than
-Mrs. Phipps had mentioned as sufficient to bring even
-a delayed reply had passed, and nothing had come from
-Adam Rust. Garde watched for the ships to come, one
-by one, her hopes rising always as the white sails appeared,
-and then falling invariably, when no small
-messenger came to her hand. She lived from ship to
-ship, and sent her own little argosies of thought traveling
-wistfully across the seas, hoping they might come
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_331'>331</span>to harbor in Adam’s heart at last and so convey to him
-her yearning to hear just a word, or to see him just
-once again.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the meantime, she could not endure the thought
-that either Henry Wainsworth or Piety Tootbaker
-should even so much as think of her as if they stood in
-Adam’s place. She therefore went to work with all her
-maidenly arts, to render such a situation impossible, in
-the case of either of the would-be suitors.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thus she contrived to tell the faithful Henry that
-Prudence Soam was very fond of him indeed. For this
-she had a ground work of fact. She then conveyed to
-Prudence the intelligence that Henry was thinking upon
-her most fondly. This also began soon to be true
-enough, for Henry had been flattered, not a little, by
-the news he heard and did look at Prudence with a new
-and wondering interest. He likewise underwent a process
-of added intelligence in which he realized that
-Garde was not for him, howsoever much he might have
-dreamed, or would be able to dream in the future. It
-was remarkable, then, how soon the timid Henry and
-the diffident Prudence began to understand one
-another. Prudence, who had never had a sweetheart
-before, blossomed out with pretty little ways and with
-catching blushes and looks of brightness in her eyes
-that made her a revelation, not only to Henry but to
-Garde herself. And Henry became really happy and
-almost bold.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>For Piety, alas, there was no Prudence available.
-Garde racked her brains for a plan to fit the case of
-Tootbaker’s state of mind. At length, when John
-Soam began to talk to his wife about the colony patriots
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_332'>332</span>again desiring that money which had never been
-used to send David Donner abroad, for the purpose of
-sending somebody else, in the spring, Garde knew exactly
-what to do.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She would manage to send Piety Tootbaker away to
-England. She went to work in this direction without
-delay. Her success was not a thing of sudden growth.
-It took no little time and persuasion to fire Piety with
-an ambition to serve his country by going so far from
-his comfortable home and his equally comfortable
-wooing, in which he believed he was making actual
-progress.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>For their agent extraordinary, to plead their cause
-at the Court of King James, the colonists selected
-Increase Mather, a man at once astute, agreeable and
-afflicted with religious convictions which had every barnacle
-of superstition that ever lived, attached upon
-them. Piety Tootbaker was to go as his clerk and
-secretary.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The preparations for sending Mather abroad were
-conducted with no small degree of secrecy. Nevertheless
-Edward Randolph became aware of what was being
-contemplated, for his hypocritical Puritan agents were
-everywhere and in all affairs of state, or even of private
-business.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Permitting the scheme to ripen, Randolph waited
-until almost the moment for Mather’s sailing. He then
-swooped down upon the enterprise and attempted to
-arrest Mather, on the process of some sham prosecution.
-The patriots, incensed almost to the point of rebellion,
-played cunning for cunning. They delayed the departure
-of the ship, the captain of which was a staunch
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_333'>333</span>“American,” and then hustled Mather aboard under
-cover of darkness, and so sent him off on his mission.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>For a week after Piety had gone, Garde felt such a
-sense of relief that she almost persuaded herself she
-was happy in her long wait for Adam, or for a word
-which might finally come. But the months again
-began their dreary procession, and her fear that Adam
-was lost to her forever deepened and laid its burden
-more and more upon her heart.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Yet there came a day when, a ship having arrived in
-the harbor, and her hope having greeted it wistfully,
-only to flutter back to her own patient bosom again, a
-letter did actually come to her hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was not particularly neat; it looked as if it might
-have been opened before it came to her possession, but
-her heart bounded wildly when she saw it, and her
-fingers trembled as she broke it open to read its contents.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Then her joy vanished. The letter was from Piety
-Tootbaker. He announced, as if to break the intelligence
-to her frankly, that the voyage had made him so
-exceedingly ill that he had determined never to trust
-himself upon the billows again. He would therefore
-reside hereafter in England, which was “a pleasing
-countrie and much more merrie than Boston.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I shall never, never get an answer to my letter,”
-said Garde to herself, made sadder by the arrival of
-Piety’s letter, which proved that letters could actually
-come from over the sea. “He will never, never reply,
-I know.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She was not far mistaken, for Adam had never received
-her letter. It had fallen into the hands of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_334'>334</span>Edward Randolph, who had constituted himself censor
-of communications sent abroad from Massachusetts.
-Malignantly he was keeping those love-scented sheets,
-against the day of his vengeance.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_335'>335</span><span class='c018'>PART III.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER I.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>A TOPIC AT COURT.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>In</span> the midst of a gay throng, in the production of
-which the Court of King James lagged little, if any,
-behind that of his brother, Charles, Adam Rust and
-Captain Phipps were prime favorites. Sir William,
-who had adopted a cane, gave no promise that he would
-ever be at home with the disciples of the minuet and
-the hunt, while Adam seemed a very part of the social
-mechanism.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Richly dressed, ready with his wit and his sword,
-handsome, wealthy enough to attract the soft glances
-of dames of all ages and degrees, he was a puzzle to the
-blunt captain, who had marked a change that had come
-upon him between going home from Jamaica and coming
-back again to help in recovering the treasure.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Whitehall was ablaze with light and warmth, which
-were reflected from myriad sparkling jewels and from
-rosy cheeks. The King had disappointed his guests,
-nevertheless they were not at a loss to find amusement.
-Ready as ever to entertain, either with a song for the
-ladies or a duel with the men, Adam was pressed for a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_336'>336</span>roundel to fit the merry hour. He had found a glass
-which responded with a particularly musical tinkle to
-the tap of his finger. He held it up before the admiring
-company and rang it crisply. Catching the key
-from its mellifluous tintinnabulation he began his song:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c022'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Oh your jolliest girl is your cup of sack,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Your Mistress Sack, with her warm, brown eyes;</div>
- <div class='line'>She’ll love you, and never she’ll turn her back,</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Nor leave you a thought</div>
- <div class='line in4'>In her meshes uncaught,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>And never you’ll know if she lies.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in2'>“Then it’s drink, drink, drink,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>And you’ll never have need to think;</div>
- <div class='line in6'>And it’s fol de rol,</div>
- <div class='line in6'>And who has use for a brain?</div>
- <div class='line in2'>With your cup that loves your lip,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>You need fear no faithless slip,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>And your heart will never know the stabs of pain.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in2'>“Oh your languorous maid is your glass of wine,</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Your Lady Amour, with her ruby kiss.</div>
- <div class='line in2'>She suffers no rivals, or thinking—in fine,</div>
- <div class='line in6'>She owns all your soul</div>
- <div class='line in6'>And she takes for her toll</div>
- <div class='line in4'>A payment in dull-witted bliss.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>“Then drink, drink, drink, etc.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in2'>“Oh, your mistress for faith is your poison cup.</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Your poison cup, with its juice of death.</div>
- <div class='line in2'>She’ll hold you, ha! ha! till the Doomsday’s up,</div>
- <div class='line in6'>In her passion’s embrace,</div>
- <div class='line in6'>And so close to her face</div>
- <div class='line in4'>That you’ll never get time for a breath.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in2'><span class='pageno' id='Page_337'>337</span>“Then it’s drink, drink, drink,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>And you never of love need think;</div>
- <div class='line in6'>And it’s fol de rol,</div>
- <div class='line in6'>For who has use for a heart?</div>
- <div class='line in2'>With a cup that loves your lip,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>You need fear no faithless slip,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Nor feel the pangs of any pains that dart.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c023'>Not being at all certain that they knew what he
-meant, the company applauded with great enthusiasm.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But, my dear sir,” said a nobleman, with a head on
-him hardly bigger nor less wrinkled than a last winter’s
-apple, and a stomach as big as a tun, “you have not
-tasted a drink to-night. Demme, look at me, sir. I
-love my sack and my wine. I know nothing of your
-poison cup, and I have no wish to, demme. But, sir, I
-think you have no bowels for drinking.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My lord, you furnish the bowels and I will furnish
-the brains to know about drinking,” said Adam. “By
-my faith, no drink ever yet went to your head.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, sir! I’m proud of it, demme,” said his lordship.
-“I have drunk up a fortune, and where is it?—It’s
-gone.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Distill your breath and get it back,” suggested
-Rust.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What’s that? Demme, you are laughing at me,
-sir.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Never!” said Adam, decisively. “Above all persons
-you make me sober. Breathe toward our friend
-the Viscount. He has ever wished fortune to wing in
-his direction.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The Viscount? Where? Demme, yes. My dear
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_338'>338</span>old chap, how are you?” and turning, inconsequently,
-to a friend whose little eyes seemed to swim around in
-the florid sea of his face, his lordship was deserted by
-the rover. Sauntering through a cluster of friends who
-would have detained him, Adam approached a window,
-where he sat himself down on a miniature divan.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Here he had but a second to himself, for while somebody
-else was preparing to sing to the company, a
-beautiful little lady, with eyes that were fairly purple
-in their depths of blue, came and took the seat beside
-him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, Mr. Rust,” she said, “what a strange song
-that was. Why, but you know nothing of wine and
-sack, and poison. Oh, why did you say poison? That
-was dreadful. And why should you wish never to
-think of love? What has poor little love ever done to
-you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You must remember, Lady Violet,” said Adam,
-“that before I sang I had not seen you, to speak a
-word, during the entire evening.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Lady Violet blushed. “That hasn’t anything to do
-with anything,” she said.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam replied: “That makes me equivalent to
-nothing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It doesn’t,” the lady protested. “You mix me all
-up. I don’t believe you know anything more about
-love than you do about drinking.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Do you counsel me to learn of these arts?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, not of drinking—certainly not, Mr. Rust.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“If we eliminate the drinking, that only leaves the
-love.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, but I—I didn’t say that I—I don’t wish to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_339'>339</span>counsel you at all. You twist about everything I
-say.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And you twist about every man you meet,” retorted
-Adam.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, I do not!” she objected. “How rude you are
-to say so. I don’t even like all the men I meet, and if
-I did——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You mean, then, that you twist only the ones like
-myself, that you like.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t! I——You make me say things I don’t
-want to say.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Then I shall make you say that you love me desperately,”
-said Adam, complacently.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Mr. Rust!” she gasped. “I—I—I——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“If you are going to say it now, let me know,” Adam
-interrupted.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She was blushing furiously. She did love him, just
-about as Rust had described, but he had never guessed
-it and was merely toying with the one absorbing and
-universal topic of the court.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I—I am not going to say anything of the kind!”
-she stammered.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Then that proves my case,” Adam announced,
-judicially. “I cannot compel you to say anything at
-all that is not already at the point of your tongue.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You—you are very rude,” she said, helplessly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“So I have been told by Lady Margaret,” Adam
-confessed. “Here she is herself. Lady Margaret, we
-are having quite a discussion. Tell us, if a man tries
-to make a lady say she loves him desperately, is he necessarily
-rude?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A superb young widow, who was gradually emerging
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_340'>340</span>from her mourning black, and who had come to the
-gathering with her father, halted in front of the two
-on the small divan and looked them over.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Dear Lady Violet,” said the new comer, “your
-brother and Lord Kilkrankie are looking for you everywhere.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, thank you, so much,” said the confused little
-lady, and without waiting for anything further she
-jumped up and fled from the scene. She was vexed at
-and distrustful of Lady Margaret; but she could not
-remain and give her battle.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The second lady took Violet’s seat, calmly. “What
-have you been saying of love to that little, brainless
-child?” she said. “You haven’t been making love to
-her, surely?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh no,” said Adam, “I was occupying my time
-till you should come along and make love to me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You wretch,” she said, with perfect calm. “You
-wouldn’t know love if you saw it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Is it so rare at Court?” he inquired. “Perhaps I
-should spend my time better in looking at you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Don’t be silly,” she said. “But tell me, what is
-your opinion, really, of love.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It makes a poor fare for dinner, a poor coat in
-the winter, and a poor comfort when you are dead,”
-said Rust. “It tricks the clever; it’s the wandering
-Jew of emotions. If you wish me to do you an injury,
-bid me to love you forthwith.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Where have you learned, that you speak with such
-wisdom?” said Lady Margaret. “Surely not such a
-child as Violet——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You do yourself an injustice,” Adam interrupted.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_341'>341</span>“Adam,” she said, “this is the sort of thing you
-say to all the women.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And which of your friends would you ask me to
-neglect?” he asked. “A woman’s judgment is the
-one thing I lack.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You are a heartless wretch!” she announced.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“On the contrary, I am a wretch of a thousand
-hearts,” he corrected. “How long would you continue
-to love me if I had any less?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Adam! I don’t love you, and you know it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That leaves a vacancy in my life which I shall fill
-at once,” he told her. “Wait—perhaps I can catch
-the eye of the Countess.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Countess had one of the most catchable eyes
-imaginable. She came up immediately.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Margaret says she no longer loves me,” said the incorrigible
-Rust, “I shall give her place to you.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_342'>342</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER II.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>ILLNESS IN THE FAMILY.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>Sick</span> of the women, to all of whom he made love,
-openly, to avoid being thought serious by any; weary
-of the specious show, which failed to bring him the
-forgetfulness he craved, Adam left the assemblage
-early and went to search out the beef-eaters, at their
-humble quarters.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Improvidents that they were, Pike and Halberd had
-soon dispersed the not inconsiderable sum of money
-which Adam had divided between them, since which
-time he had provided the pair with their lodgings, keep,
-clothing and amusements.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The night being fine and the air soon reviving the
-rover’s livelier moods of delight in sheer existence, he
-found himself loitering along, stopping to look in the
-windows of the scattered shops still open for the tag-ends
-of the day’s trading. It was only the little knick-knack
-shops, old curio dens and lesser establishments
-that still had their lights aglow, but it happened that
-these were the particular ones in which Adam took an
-interest.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He stopped before one of the dingiest for fifteen
-minutes, carefully scanning a considerable collection
-of violins which the window contained. At length his
-eye lighted, he muttered something half exclamatory
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_343'>343</span>and went into the shop at once. The dealer knew him
-and nodded delightedly, glad to have him again in his
-place, as he had fully expected when he placed the
-rare old fiddle which Rust had seen, in his window.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam bought the instrument with all the eagerness
-of the confirmed connoisseur and went his way contented.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When he came to the tavern where the beef-eaters
-made their abode, he found little Pike dangerously ill
-with pleurisy and thinking of shuffling off forlornly
-into his next existence.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The one thing which alone could transform Adam
-Rust into the cheerful fellow he had been before his
-veneer of cynicism came upon him, was illness in his
-family. He refused to let his beef-eaters think of dying.
-They were his tie to everything he still held dear.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He pulled off his coat and went to work on Pike,
-whose spirits he raised with songs, raillery and cheer,
-and whose fever he lowered with teas and bitter drinks,
-which he steeped himself, from various herbs and roots,
-the specific qualities of which he had known from the
-Indians.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Court saw no more of the reckless Adam for a
-week. At the end of this time he had coaxed the faithful
-Pike to something like his former health again,
-when he announced his intention of going to Spain, to
-add to his growing collection of violins. He therefore
-said good-by to Sir William Phipps and went off with
-his beef-eaters both in charge.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Having learned that the Pyrenees afforded splendid
-possibilities for building up depleted health and
-strength, the rover domiciled himself and companions
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_344'>344</span>in a spot that was charmingly lonely. And William
-Phipps, when Adam’s first letter arrived, wondered
-vaguely what manner of violins his comrade was finding
-in the mountains.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_345'>345</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER III.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>FOILED PURPOSES.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>Increase Mather</span> met with a dignified and polite
-reception at the Court of the King, for Sir William
-Phipps, with all his influence and persuasiveness, prepared
-the way for the envoy extraordinary to approach
-the master of the colonies.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Sir William even constituted himself another champion
-of downtrodden Massachusetts, and added his
-importunities to those of Mather, to induce James to
-re-establish the rights and territory of the colony and
-to give it back its beloved charter.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“We love you much, Sir William,” said the King,
-with a firmness which was never to be shaken, “but
-we cannot accede to your wishes. Anything but this
-that you will ask shall be granted.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Disappointed, but never disconcerted, Sir William
-conferred with Mather, whom he was obliged to assure
-that nothing that either of them could say to him now
-would beget an alteration of King James’s decision.
-Mather, persistent, suave and convinced of the justice
-of his cause, determined to remain in touch with the
-Court and the King’s retainers, until sheer patience
-and persistence should win what persuasion could not.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Phipps, knowing only too well the disposition of the
-King, when once his word was passed, determined that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_346'>346</span>he could do more for his country if present in the
-colony than he could by remaining in London. Reminding
-the King that he had already granted him any
-other favor than the restoration of the colony’s charter,
-he announced his desire to be appointed Sheriff of
-New England.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Regretting to lose the hearty Captain from his company,
-James nevertheless kept his word by complying
-with Sir William’s request. The appointment was duly
-made and confirmed. Leaving Mather behind him,
-Phipps returned to Boston and set about the administration
-of his new-made duties, with more ardor
-than cunning, with more honesty than diplomacy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It is doubtful if William Phipps ever had a more
-aggravating experience, in all his adventures, with
-mutineers and pirates, than he underwent at the hands
-of Randolph and Governor Andros. He was not a man
-of finished education. Born in Maine, in a family of
-twenty-one children, he had been obliged to commence
-the round of shifting for himself at an early age. He
-had apprenticed himself to a ship-carpenter at eighteen
-and then had come to Boston four years later, when he
-went to work and taught himself to read and to write.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Hampered now, by this lack of early opportunities,
-insulted, and finding his most sincere efforts nullified
-and his plans constantly frustrated, by the delays and
-artifices of the council under Andros, he was made
-heartily sick of the whole situation.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>His return to Boston, however, was not marked entirely
-by chagrin and discouragement. He had his
-wife with him, and herein lay the greatest happiness
-which ever came into his eventful life. He built her
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_347'>347</span>the “fair brick house, in the Green Lane,” which he
-had promised, years before, and he endeared many of
-the staunch patriots, who beheld his efforts to help
-them, sadly, though with admiration.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Although Garde had never known how very intimate
-indeed had been the relations of Captain Phipps and
-Adam, yet she was aware that they had been much
-together. She had naturally learned, in common with
-all the inhabitants of Boston, that Sir William had
-found the treasure he had spent so many years in seeking,
-but she had never known that when she sent Adam
-away he had gone to Hispaniola to join the searching
-expedition. Therefore she was in ignorance of the fact
-that Adam was wealthy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But, after all, she was only concerned with Adam’s
-present whereabouts, and the reasons why, after all
-these months and months of waiting—it being now two
-full years since that last tragic meeting—he had never
-relented sufficiently to write, or to send her a word.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As time had gone on, she had become more and more
-convinced, either that Adam intended never to forgive
-her, or that he had married some one else and therefore
-could not, in honor, think longer upon her. Her belief
-inclined toward the first explanation. She confessed
-that she had done him a great wrong, especially
-as she had never even so much as permitted him to
-deny the story of the Indian child, but she argued that
-had she been in his place and forgiveness had been so
-earnestly implored, she could not have had the heart to
-refuse.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was the one little sad privilege left her, to make
-up her mind she would wait, till death, if need be,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_348'>348</span>patiently, lovingly, till Adam should one day know she
-loved him and that she was keeping herself sacred for
-his claiming. And if he never did come to claim her,
-still she would love him. If death came to take her,
-she would go to death as a bride would go to church,
-to wait the coming of her love.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the frame of mind which her vigil had begotten,
-fortified by her sense of maidenly pride and diffidence,
-it was utterly impossible for her to think of going
-either to Sir William Phipps, or to his wife, to ask for
-information concerning Adam. She was aware that
-the Captain doubtless knew of Adam’s whereabouts,
-his position in life and whether or not he was married,
-but if Adam chose to remain silent, disdainful and unforgiving,
-she would rather die than go to a stranger to
-ask about him, or to send him anything further, in the
-way of a word or a letter.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As a matter of fact, Garde had attempted to send
-another little letter, a year after the first one had gone,
-but it too had fallen into the clutches of Randolph.
-The creature had destroyed it, as containing nothing
-of importance to any of his machinations, for it merely
-asked the rover if he had received the first epistle.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thus Garde’s golden opportunity slipped away unused,
-and her life narrowed down, more and more, to
-the simple duties of taking what care she could of the
-white-haired old man, her grandfather, who rubbed his
-thumb across the ends of his fingers endlessly, although
-he was slowly being restored to his old-time activity of
-mind and body.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Utterly disheartened, by the futility of his desires
-and efforts to serve his country in his capacity of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_349'>349</span>Sheriff, Sir William Phipps was glad to receive a letter
-that came from Increase Mather, informing him that
-the time was drawing near for renewed labors to be
-attempted in England. Responding to this, he deserted
-his useless office and sailed for London in the
-midst of the winter season.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The opportunity of which Garde might have availed
-herself, to learn something of Adam, was gone. She
-knew not what she had done, or what she had lost.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Phipps came to England at a moment when epochs
-were fairly in the process of crystalization.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>King James, the last of Britain’s Roman Catholic
-monarchs, had been obliged to abdicate his throne and
-to flee to Ireland for his life.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_350'>350</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER IV.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>MAKING HISTORY.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>Unthroned</span> and uncrowned as he was, James, for
-some inexplicable reason, still entertained a wild idea
-that the colonies, the patriots of which he had taken
-no pains to endear to his cause or himself, would still
-remain loyal and contented to acquiesce in his dominion.
-He made all haste to communicate with Sir William
-Phipps, as a representative of New England whom he
-had always honored and esteemed. He offered to appoint
-the Captain his Governor of all New England,
-with plenary powers, in almost any direction, concerning
-the old charter and all.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Promptly and with the blunt wisdom which marked
-his course through life, Phipps refused the honor.
-Catholicism had never appealed to his sense of good
-government, and loyalty to the English throne, from
-which the colonies had their being, was deeply ingrained
-in his nature. Gratitude to James for past favors, to
-which he felt he was somewhat entitled, was a large
-quality in Sir William, but between gratitude and folly
-he drew a sturdy line.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>With Increase Mather, Phipps went to work at once
-at the Court of William of Orange, who with Mary ascended
-the British throne early in 1689. Intelligence
-as to the sinister machinations of Randolph and Andros
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_351'>351</span>leaked through the censorship, and came to Mather
-and the Captain. Their case was strengthened. The
-Prince of Orange was bound, by all the faith of his
-Protestant principles, to grant what release he might to
-the American colonies from the oppressors placed in
-power by the Stuarts.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The new King’s declaration of his sway was conveyed
-in haste to the American shores. It was taken overland
-from Virginia to Massachusetts. The spirit of
-the Puritans, which had simmered so long, began to
-make the sounds of boiling.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Andros, mighty in his sovereignty, arrested the messenger
-who had fetched the news, but the news had
-leaped from lip to lip, and the torch had been applied
-to combustible thought.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In March, John Winslow confirmed the declaration
-of the new monarchs. The people now gathered together
-their all-but-forgotten muskets and pikes.
-Against the flood-tide coming toward him, Governor
-Andros reared a barricade of threats. The frigate
-“Rose” was lying in the harbor, bristling with guns
-that showed like so many sinister, black fangs. Her
-decks were alive with soldiers. The Governor demanded
-the submission and disarmament of the people,
-on pain of death. He declared his intention of employing
-the cannon and arsenal of the frigate forthwith,
-if the angry disturbances did not immediately cease.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>On the 18th of April the patriots were prepared with
-their answer. The captain of the frigate, with nearly
-all of his officers, had come ashore, to hold a conference
-with Andros and Randolph. The Puritans suddenly
-swooped down upon them and captured every
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_352'>352</span>Jack of the lot. The frigate was thus put out of
-action at one clever stroke.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Now rolled the alarm of beaten drums through the
-martial city of Boston. In their old Indian-fighting
-regalia, the citizens swarmed from their houses into
-the streets. They set up their ensign on Beacon Hill,
-at the edge of the Common, they fired a signal gun for
-action, and falling upon Randolph and many of the
-council, which Andros had collected about him, they
-rushed them to jail and took possession of the town.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The proclamation of King William was read, with
-loud acclaim. The excited populace surged in the
-narrow, crooked highways. The leaders demanded of
-Andros that he surrender both his office and himself.
-The man refused and fled to his stronghold, whence he
-defied the patriots and continued to the last to declare
-his power, though like water now fast escaping from
-his grasp.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Surrounding their ex-master they made him a prisoner,
-not a refugee, and at length he gave in and was
-captured and sent to confinement, along with the
-others of his recent government.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>With an instinct for conventions, the citizens were
-soon assembled. Howsoever great had been their heat
-in their moment of rebellion and triumph, they were
-calm enough to be wise when the time arrived to declare
-for themselves. They reinstated Bradstreet and the
-Council of ’86. They declared the old Government in
-force and their former charter <i>ipso facto</i> restored,
-unimpaired by the interim of nearly three years of maladministration.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>William and Mary received the report of all these
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_353'>353</span>swiftly terminated proceedings with a favor which was
-not unblended with astonishment. Admiring the
-Protestant spirit, which it had become their own
-special province to uphold, they lost no time in confirming
-the entire course of actions, even to the temporary
-resumption of their old charter privileges and
-powers, by the patriots across the sea. And there, for
-a time, they were contented to permit the matter to
-rest. The affairs of England they had found so completely
-engrossing that they had no time to spare toward
-regranting a specific charter to Massachusetts.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Increase Mather, suspicions of privileges and liberties
-not absolutely signed, sealed and delivered, remained
-at his post, working continuously and sedulously to
-obtain that monarchical support and confirmation of
-the colony’s prerogatives which his many compatriots
-had sent him to secure.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Sir William Phipps, on the other hand, realized the
-busy state of mind in which William and Mary had
-been so abruptly plunged, and he therefore deferred
-further work with Mather for a time more suitable.
-Then, when he learned that the French Catholics in
-America had formed alliances with the Indians and
-were already overrunning the Protestant territory and
-committing daily depredations, he made up his mind
-once more to return to the field of action, in which he
-might be able to render more effective service than he
-could by remaining in England.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He arrived in the summer of that fateful year, ’89,
-and offered himself to Bradstreet at once. The period
-of warfare in which he thereupon engaged was one of
-great length and of much bitterness.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_354'>354</span>Alternating defeat and victory left the advantages
-with the French and Indians, so far as hopes of ultimate
-success were concerned. The colonists had to make
-such long, tedious marches that decisive victories for
-their arms were almost impossible. The enemy gained
-in confidence, audacity and numbers.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In despair the General Court finally offered two
-sloops of war, free, together with all the profits of
-plunder which might result from the enterprise, to
-any man who would undertake to reduce to ashes
-Penobscot, St. John’s and Port Royal, the seats of the
-French and Indian power. The offer attracted Phipps,
-who foresaw, in the execution of the task, an infinite
-amount of adventure and action.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He enlisted men for the undertaking. Yet matters
-grew worse with such alarming rapidity that before the
-enterprise could be placed in readiness for work, it became
-necessary to raise a small fleet of vessels prepared
-for war-like operations. Thus seven sloops and seven
-hundred men, under command of Sir William, sailed
-away to the North on their sinister errand.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Port Royal, secure and arrogant, in her fancied isolation
-from attack, was surprised and taken. The
-French were routed with great loss. The town was
-looted until hardly so much as a sauce-pan was left by
-the thorough-going warriors of New England. The
-plunder, while not enormously valuable, nevertheless
-was sufficient to help materially in meeting the expenses
-of the venture. But its indirect effect on the colonists
-was not so happy. Cupidity is so often the jackal that
-follows righteous indignation.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Puritans foresaw opportunities to punish the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_355'>355</span>enemy, at the enemy’s own expense. A second expedition,
-to go against Quebec, was planned, the patriots
-expecting in confidence that, like the first, it would
-surely succeed, if Phipps were at its head, and that the
-plunder would more than repay the initial expenses of
-the expedition.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Sir William, having expressed his doubts of the wisdom
-of this over-ambitious scheme, nevertheless commanded
-the fleet once more as it sailed away, eager for
-further conquest.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The enterprise was doomed to failure from the first.
-It dragged out interminably, it developed jealousies, it
-was ill-planned. Such a bedraggled, failure-smitten
-lot of lame-duck sloops returned to Boston that the
-council were simply appalled. They had expended so
-much of their meager hoard of funds on the venture,
-that the treasury was practically bankrupted.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Blame rained upon the head of Phipps, for not having
-succeeded against impossible conditions. Driven
-to extremities, by the woeful lack of plunder, the colony-fathers
-were obliged, for the first time in their
-history, to issue paper currency. The notes ranged in
-value from denominations of two shillings up to ten
-pounds.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Still an undimmed patriot, ready to serve his country
-in whatsoever direction an opportunity was afforded,
-Williams Phipps gave his gold for the colony’s bills,
-absorbing thus a very considerable sum. His example
-induced investments in the paper from all directions.
-Nevertheless the currency soon came tumbling down in
-value, till a pound in paper was worth less than three-fourths
-of its face.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_356'>356</span>The sailors, and other working people, lost heavily,
-in these times of trouble and weakened confidence.
-Yet eventually the money was all redeemed at par by
-the Massachusetts government.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Sir William, weary of being reviled for his pains, returned
-to England once again and resumed his labors
-with Increase Mather, to secure to the colony a definite
-charter.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_357'>357</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER V.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>OLD ACQUAINTANCES.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>Adam Rust</span> failed, even in the intricacies of collecting
-violins and the pursuit of health for the old beef-eaters,
-to find the depths of forgetfulness she sought,
-but which could not come to a nature such as his had
-always been. Indeed seclusion, away from the gaiety
-of Court and his fellow-beings seemed rather to develop
-the old, half-forgotten memories in his brain, whereon
-had once been shadowed the sufferings of King Philip,
-his Indian foster-father, and all his race of hunted
-people.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The beef-eaters, also, were not absolutely contented,
-away from their own country and the haunts wherein
-they were wont to brag, to drink and to swagger.
-Yielding at last to their importunities, Adam returned
-with the pair to London.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Once in the foggy capital again, he was soon pounced
-upon, by old associates, with whom he found it exhilarating
-once again to consort. A treatise on rare violins
-and their makers, over which he had labored and
-pondered for months, or even years, was now neglected.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He sharpened his wits, had a look at his sword and
-brightened up his disused tinsel of conversation. He
-soon began to believe the greatest forgetfulness, after
-all, is where the Babel of tongues is loudest, and that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_358'>358</span>the most absolute solitude is to be found in the midst
-of the largest throng.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The social functions of the new King were fewer, less
-brilliant and not to be compared, in point of popularity,
-with those of James. The Dukes, the Marchionesses
-and lesser lights were therefore constrained to make the
-more of their private parties. There was, in consequence,
-no stint of hunting, drinking and dancing—all
-as condiments poured about the omniprevalent piece de
-resistance—making love.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At the Duchess of Kindlen’s, Adam found the set he
-had known particularly well. He was welcomed back to
-their circle as a long-lost fixture without whose presence
-no one was at all able to explain how they had managed
-to go on existing. They fitted him back in his niche
-with a promptness which might have been flattering, had
-he not been aware that they wished merely to feed upon
-him as a new entertainer, or an old one refurbished.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He was not surprised to learn that Lady Violet had
-been married in his absence. He was duly informed
-of this event, which he described as an irreparable
-calamity in his life, by Lady Margaret, who was more
-of a brilliant blossom of feminine charm and enticements
-than even before.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But you, my dear Lady Margaret,” he said, “you
-have been true to my memory? You have never learned
-to love another?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I never learned to love you, Adam,” she said.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Then it must have been a matter of spontaneous
-combustion,” he concluded. “You always did manage
-your compliments adroitly.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Confirmed villain,” she answered, “a woman would
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_359'>359</span>be mad who loved such a bubble of flattering reflections
-as you have always been.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I was not accusing you of sanity,” he told her
-frankly. “I was merely inquiring whether or not you
-have learned to love somebody else, in my absence.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And if I had, what then?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I should wish to pause for reflection, before determining
-whether I should be more sorry for the other
-fellow or for myself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Fiend!” she said, mildly, “you shall never know.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Know what?—know where to place my sympathy?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You shall never know whether I have learned to
-love another, or not.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, neither will you—that one’s consolation.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But at least I shall know how I feel toward you,
-Adam Rust.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“So shall I,” said the cheerful Adam. “I have
-always known. If you should say you were dying, I
-should know you were dying to run away with me,
-forthwith. It’s not your fault, you can’t help it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I never dreamed of such a thing in my life!” she
-said.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Then you ought at once to consult a physician for
-a bad case of insomnia. I thought your eyes looked a
-bit weary.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You vile thing!” she answered. “Ted never said
-such a thing as that in his life.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Then you have been trying to learn to love Ted?
-I thought you had a faithless look about you—all except
-about your eyes. Alas, from the way you talk I
-know you must be married already to this Ted.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_360'>360</span>“I’m not!” she said, unguardedly. “I refused only
-to-night to set the day.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“This was a thoughtfulness toward me I had not expected,”
-said Rust, complacently. “But you are betrothed,
-and this was unkind.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Unkind to whom?” she demanded.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“To Ted—and to me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You will like Ted,” she told him, more artfully.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“At the other end of a duel, yes—immensely.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“He’s a terrible swordsman,” she said, to urge him
-on.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yet how poorly he fenced with you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What do you mean?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You won. You got him—poor devil.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Wretch! Ted at least would never pick on a
-woman.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“If it’s Ted Suffle,” said Rust, “I saw him pick on
-his teeth, to-night, and that is worse——in company.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“His tooth aches terribly!” said Lady Margaret,
-defending poor Suffle gallantly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“He indulges in too much sweets,” Adam remarked,
-unmoved. “Treat him the way you do me and he’ll
-soon be better.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I wish Ted could hear the way you talk to me,”
-she said.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“If he could hear the things you say to me, he would
-demand that duel quicker,” Rust responded. “Tell
-me something outrageous to say to the fellow, so that
-he will be obliged to challenge.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Nonsense,” she said, looking at him slyly, “don’t
-be silly. You wouldn’t fight a duel over me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Ah, but think what a lot of ladies would think me
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_361'>361</span>a hero,” he replied with enthusiasm. “And I might
-also be banished from the country. You can never tell
-where luck and lightning will strike next.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Go away, Adam,” she said. “You are perfectly
-monstrous.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I’ll go and have a look at Ted,” he answered,
-calmly. “If he is a gentleman he will probably insult
-me without delay.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>To Lady Margaret’s utter dismay and astonishment,
-he sauntered off at once and actually went to where
-Suffle was standing, and had himself presented.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I have asked for this honor,” he said, “the sooner
-to offer my best congratulations on your betrothal.
-Lady Margaret has told me a little about it. She is
-the happiest girl I have ever seen in all my life.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You are a good chap to say so,” said Suffle. “Do
-you know, I fancied I should like you, Mr. Rust, the
-moment I saw you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I should like to give you my friendship as a wedding
-present,” Adam told him, honestly, knowing at
-once that Suffle was a fellow he could really somewhat
-like. Then he added, more equivocally: “I have
-known Lady Margaret so long that I shall take great
-happiness in seeing the consummation of this happy
-event.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_362'>362</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER VI.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>JUGGLING WITH FIRE.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>Lady Margaret</span> was a beautiful woman. The next
-time he met her, Adam realized that this was true.
-He stood looking down upon her, where she sat on a
-low divan which was made to throw two persons very
-close together, and into which he had avoided squeezing.
-The young woman looked up at him winningly,
-a slumberous passion in her garnet-brown eyes. Her
-creamy white bosom rose and fell in a calm voluptuousness,
-the twin beauties of which were more than suggested.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Rust could not recall that he had ever seen shoulders
-more superb, nor a throat more delightfully round and
-built upward in curves to the perfect chin at the top.
-In contrast with her lustrously dark eyes and her almost
-black eyebrows, spanning her forehead with their
-dainty arches, her old-gold hair was an amazing crown
-of loveliness.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She had led him away from the company, “to look
-for Ted,” with an art which had for once deceived the
-crafty rover completely. Now, as he looked upon her,
-assuming a coldness it was utterly impossible to feel,
-and be a man, he noted a beauty in her bare arms
-which made him think of the perfect lines of a tiger’s
-paw. He could have suggested nothing to make them
-more splendid.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_363'>363</span>Indeed she was well-nigh matchless as a creation of
-nature and polite society. Her shimmering satin
-gown clung to her form as if ardently. Her pretty
-gold-slippered feet and her slender ankles, in red
-silk, open-work stockings, defied a glance to ignore
-them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Adam,” she said, smiling up at him archly, “I
-wish you were a girl—just for a few moments, you
-know.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You would suffer by the contrast between us,”
-said Rust.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You would know what a—what a bore he is,” she
-went on, regardless of his comment. “And it would
-serve you right.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You doubtless mean the King,” he replied.
-“Your expedients are cruel. Make anything out of
-me—a camel, if you like,—but not a girl.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I mean Ted,” she said, a little desperately. “You
-know I mean Ted. You know what a bore he is.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Then you have spoiled him since morning.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You have no right to be the only man who isn’t a
-bore,” she went on.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You’ll be telling me I am the only man you ever
-loved, in a moment,” he answered. “I can feel it
-coming.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And if I did,” she said with a passionate glance,
-“what then?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam was frightened, as he had never been before in
-his life. He took out his handkerchief and flecked a
-bit of dust from his boot, nonchalantly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I should advise you to be bled for fever,” he
-said. “And I should know the old affection you had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_364'>364</span>for me once had departed forever. Couldn’t you break
-my heart in some simpler way, dear Lady Margaret?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It was all your fault for going away,” she told him.
-“You knew I liked you before you went away.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh yes,” he responded gaily, “but I saw that your
-passionate love for me was waning, so I went away to
-kindle it over again.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Do be serious for a moment,” she murmured, vexed
-with his calmness and his raillery. “You know Ted
-is a dreadful bore.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Then since you have given him the love that once
-was mine, my cue is to become a bore instanter.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You would never know it, if I loved you madly,”
-she said, looking up into his face with her declaration
-centered in her eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, I would,” he corrected, placidly. “If you
-loved me madly you would tell me about it; you know
-you would.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Her breath came fast. Her bosom rose and fell
-rapidly. “You wouldn’t believe me if I did,” she
-said.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“If you told me you loved me madly,” said Adam,
-“I should know you didn’t. So please let me go on
-with my fond delusions.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She was silent a moment. He could feel her burning
-gaze on his face. “Adam,” she said presently,
-“do sit down.” She moved to make half room enough
-for him on the divan.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What, and make you stand?” he replied.
-“Never!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She placed her hand on the arm of the seat, where
-she knew his fingers would return when he had finished
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_365'>365</span>scratching at a tiny white speck on his coat-lappel.
-He observed her motion and thrust his fist in his
-pocket.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, I am dying,” she presently whispered, after
-another silence.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“How interesting,” Adam cheerfully commented.
-“What are you dying for, a glass of water, or a new
-set of diamonds?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You know what I am dying for,” she said, tremulously,
-in a voice hardly above a whisper. “You said
-if I were dying, you—you would know what for.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, did I?” Adam mused. He was pale behind
-his calm. His hands were perspiring, coldly. “Yes,
-of course. I said you would be dying to run away
-with me. And now you would try to prove that this
-was all wrong. My dear Lady Margaret, this is unkind.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She arose from her seat. She was driven to her wits’
-end for anything to say.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Silly boy,” she answered, as she came toward him,
-and then she quickly added: “Oh, Adam, would you
-mind just clasping this strap?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The strap was a narrow bit of finery which crossed
-her bare shoulder. She had artfully loosened the golden
-clasp and now came to present shoulder, strap, clasp
-and all for re-arrangement.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“There is nothing I can do with greater ease,” said
-Rust, “There you are,—done already.” He had performed
-his office with amazing dexterity and with a
-touch so fleeting that she would never have known
-when it alighted.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, you haven’t done it right, my dear foolish
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_366'>366</span>Adam,” she said, with a delicious little chuckle. “I’ll
-put my arm across your shoulder, so. Now, make it
-right, do, Adam, please.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She dropped her exquisite arm on his shoulder as she
-spoke and edged closer. She turned so that her face
-was so near to his that he could feel how glowing warm
-she was. Her breath fanned against his cheek, hotly.
-The man felt a sense of intoxication stealing upon him.
-Yet he was fixing the clasp as briefly as before, when
-she made a movement with her slipper.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, I am falling,” she said in a little cry, and
-throwing both arms about him, to support herself, she
-was clasped close to his breast, for a moment, before he
-could seem to re-establish her balance. In that brief
-time a mad horde of thoughts ran riotously through his
-brain. She was beautiful; she loved him; she had
-fascinated something in him always. Could he not be
-happy, loving her and having her love in return? Why
-not run away with her—to the Continent—anywhere—and
-fill the aching void in his nature with love and
-caresses!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>His heart was beating furiously. He trembled. A
-fever leaped into his brain. Through his arms shot a
-galvanic contraction, as they halted in the act of closing
-about the superb, slender figure he was holding. It
-seemed as if he must kiss her, on her lips, her throat—her
-shoulder!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Adam, I am dying!” she whispered to him again,
-as he held her.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Don’t die standing up,” he said, with a sudden recovery
-of the mastery over himself. “Sit down and
-do it calmly.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_367'>367</span>He swayed her aside, and there was nothing she could
-do but to take the seat she had occupied before.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“How provoking of me to trip on my gown,” she
-said, looking up at him sullenly. “Do you think we
-shall have snow to-morrow?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I shall pray against a precipitation of icebergs,” said
-Adam. “There is nothing suggestive of love in ice.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_368'>368</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER VII.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>A BEEF-EATER PASSES.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>The</span> rigors of the London winter pursued the beef-eaters
-relentlessly, tapping them remindfully on the
-shoulder, now and again, with a cold, or a spell of
-bronchitis, and then, under cover of a fog, some deadly
-affliction fastened upon the pair all at once. The rover
-found them, after an absence from their quarters of
-two days, so ill that first one and then the other was
-crawling from his bed to minister to his comrade, so
-that both grew rapidly worse.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam looked at the two of them ruefully, when at
-length he came to where they were. He had never
-known them ill in this manner before. They cared
-nothing for eating; they slept but little. Their eyes
-were bright. They were perfectly cheerful, in a feeble
-sort of way. After the Sachem had come they declared
-they wanted for nothing, provided he would talk to
-them, sing a little and let them lie there and see him,
-or hear him play on his favorite violin.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He brought them every comfort which money could
-buy. He cooked for them, served them and ate at their
-board—which was a board indeed, reaching from one
-bed to the other, where they could easily get at what he
-spread on its surface for their pleasure. But the choice
-wines he fetched, and the fruits and the delicate bits of
-game and fish, remained almost wholly untasted.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_369'>369</span>Adam was soon at a loss to know what to do. He
-tried to get at their symptoms.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Pike, you rogue,” he said, “I want to know where
-you feel bad. You are ill, you know; now where is the
-pain?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“By my sword-stroke,” said Pike, in a worn-down
-voice, “I have no pain. I may be tired, to-day, but to-morrow,
-bring me a pirate and I shall eat him without
-the trouble of slicing him first.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Tired, that’s it,” agreed Halberd. “I’m a bit tired
-myself, this afternoon, but by cock’s crow to-morrow I
-could enjoy pulling the tail out of a lion and beating
-the beast to death with the bloody end of it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, doesn’t your stomach ache, or your head
-hurt you?” insisted Adam. “When you cough like
-that, doesn’t it hurt your chest?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, I like it, for the tickling,” said Halberd.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The two old scamps were afraid of being taken across
-the channel to Spain again, or down into France, or
-perhaps across to Morocco. After three days of his
-“tinkering” unsuccessfully, with his faithful companions,
-Adam called in a doctor.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The worthy physician promptly bled the two patients.
-Little Pike became quieter, if possible, than before.
-Halberd, on the contrary, was somewhat wrought up in
-his feelings.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“By my steel!” said he, when the doctor had departed,
-“this puny Sir Nostrum has let more of my
-juice with his nonsense than ever was taken by swordsman
-out of my carcass. Faith! I’ll pulp the fellow,
-and he comes again!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam laughed, for Halberd suddenly got back a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_370'>370</span>monstrous appetite. He likewise abounded in pains,
-which he permitted the Sachem to soothe; and he
-otherwise improved past all belief. He had been a little
-ill, and his sympathy with Pike had made his ailment
-mischievous.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Pike, however, had no such rally in him. He put in
-his time smoothing the coverlet with slow, feeble movements,
-while he lay there looking at Adam with dumb
-affection until one could almost fancy he was wagging
-a tail, with weak, joyful jerks.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He got the Sachem to sing him the love song of the
-many seas, for Pike had once had a heart full of love
-for a maiden himself, and while the experience was
-nothing jollier than a funeral on the day set for the
-wedding, nevertheless he liked the lively song, with all
-its various maids and misses mentioned, for he conceived
-them all to be the self-same girl, after all,
-simply transported to different climes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>While Adam was singing and playing, with the merriest
-spirit he could conjure, the wistful old Pike had
-the impudence to close his eyes and die.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A faint smile lingered on his face; whether as a result
-of his joke on Adam and Halberd, or his pleasure
-derived from the song, could never be known.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_371'>371</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER VIII.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>A WOMAN SCORNED.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>Sir William Phipps</span> and Increase Mather, together
-with the other Puritan patriots who made up the small
-band of charter-hunters at the Court of William and
-Mary, worked consistently, if not harmoniously, toward
-their end.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They found their monarch disposed to permit them
-to do about as they pleased, when at length he comprehended
-their situation and the needs of Massachusetts.
-His attorney-general was ordered to draw
-up a charter, on the broad lines suggested by the
-American council. No sooner did they get it into
-their hands, however, than they fell into heated discussions
-over trifling divergencies which they found between
-it and the older charter, which they had come
-to regard with almost idolatrous awe and reverence.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The new charter granted them many liberties and
-privileges which the old one had not contained. Time
-even proved the new one to be the better document for
-the colony, but despite these facts, and the further fact
-that it restored to their dominion the provinces of
-Maine, New Hampshire, and Nova Scotia, to the St.
-Lawrence River, they found much at which to grumble.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>However, they finally accepted what they had, with
-what show of gratitude they were able to simulate.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_372'>372</span>Their disaffection doubtless had its purpose, and it
-might have been fruitful of the further concession
-which they gained, namely, the privilege of nominating
-their own next Governor.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Here, for once, they were quite unanimous. They
-requested that Sir William Phipps be appointed. They
-knew that without the priceless services which he had
-rendered the cause, during all his sojourn in England,
-they might never have received a tithe of what was
-now secured to their country with all possible stability.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The nomination of Captain Phipps was made complete
-by the King without delay. He was constituted
-Captain-General and Governor-in-Chief of the Province
-of Massachusetts Bay, in New England, and
-likewise Captain-General of the Colonies of Connecticut
-and Rhode Island.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Weighted down with these new responsibilities, he
-went seeking for Adam Rust, at the gay salon of the
-Duchess of Kindlen, noted in its day for its scope and
-the liberties acceded to the guests who assembled in
-its spacious halls.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Having heard from a mutual friend that Sir William
-would be looking him up at the Duchess’, Adam repaired
-to the scene rather more early than was his
-custom. He had seen but little of the captain for a
-matter of several years. He was chiding himself upon
-the negligence by which this had been made possible,
-when he arrived at the house.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The funeral of the faithful Pike, and the plight of
-the lorn old Halberd, since losing his comrade, had
-depressed Adam’s spirits immeasurably. Halberd had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_373'>373</span>been following him about, dumbly, ever since the
-dire event in the family. He said but little; he made
-no complaints of his loneliness. He simply hung on
-Adam’s footsteps, like a homeless old dog, whose one
-remaining instinct is faithfulness and undying affection,
-waiting for his master when he came from the brightly-lighted
-houses, pleased and excited whenever he could
-have the Sachem to talk with on the topic of Pike’s
-many virtues and traits of character that confirmed
-him in his fellow’s affections.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam had taken the lorn beef-eater into his own
-apartments, where he could keep a more careful watch
-over his health and his negative happiness. No friend
-among all his noble acquaintances had such a hold on
-Adam’s heart as had this bragging old remnant of his
-retinue, and to none did he drop the mask of frivolity
-as he did before this companion, whom nothing could
-discourage nor alter.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thus he had been glad to think of going no more
-where the Duchess, Lady Margaret and the others
-assembled, with their tinsel show, their thinly-plated
-talk, their gambling and amours, but had contemplated
-going away with Halberd, into Nature’s simpler walks
-and profounder beauties.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The garish glitter struck inharmoniously upon him,
-as he walked impatiently through the brilliant rooms,
-in a search for Sir William Phipps, who had not yet
-arrived. He presently found himself confronted by
-Suffle, who, in turn, had been looking about for Lady
-Margaret.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“How do you do?” said Suffle, at once. “My dear
-Rust, I am charmed to see you again. I have been
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_374'>374</span>wanting to see you, ’pon my word. Would you mind
-just giving me a few minutes’ talk?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“One of my greatest delights is derived from listening
-to a brilliant conversationalist,” said Rust. “Where
-shall we go?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“There is no one as yet in the dice-box,” said the
-other. “If you don’t mind, we might stroll in there
-by ourselves.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Saying, “I am yours to command,” Adam followed
-leisurely behind his friend to the now empty room employed
-nightly for gambling.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It’s rather a delicate business—what I have to say,”
-confessed Suffle, by way of a preface, “but you are a
-frank, decent fellow, that a man can talk to, well—openly—don’t
-you know.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Thanks,” said Adam. “If it is anything about
-Lady Margaret, let us be sensible, by all means.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That’s devilish clever of you, old chap,” responded
-Suffle, evidently much relieved already. “Of course
-you know how matters stand.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I would never be sure of where anything stood,
-that had a woman for an element in its make-up.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, I know. That’s clever, too—deucedly clever.
-Perhaps I had better put it plainly.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Do, I beg of you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Now—you are a frank, sensible man. Now—do
-you really like—you know—love, you know—Lady
-Margaret,—just speaking as man to man, sensibly, as
-you so cleverly said?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Would you force me to become either ungallant or
-a traitor?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Not at all, I——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_375'>375</span>“Well, let us say that I am ungallant, since we are
-to be frank,” said Rust. “I will even admit that I am
-ungallant.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Good,” said Suffle. “That’s what I thought—I
-mean, you know——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, I know what you mean. Proceed.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, I feel very much relieved. You are a decent
-sort, Rust—a deucedly decent sort. Now I am very
-fond of Lady Margaret. I have learned to be, you
-know. My uncle requires me to marry her, don’t you
-see, or be cut off with a brass farthing. So I have
-learned to be deucedly fond of her, you know.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Very reasonable and like a man,” said Adam.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, I fancy so myself. I am coming to the
-point.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Then there is a point?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh dear me, yes. You see, as you don’t care for
-Lady Margaret, that way, and I do——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Why then, to be sure, take her and let me give
-you my blessing,” Rust interrupted. “I will do this
-with all my heart.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Thanks, old chap, but that is not quite the point,”
-Suffle assured him. “The fact of the matter is, she
-rather likes you, Rust, you know. I’m bound to admit
-she does, though God knows why, and we are two
-sensible men, you know, and that is what I wanted to
-talk about.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You do me too great an honor,” Adam assured
-him. “But what would you have me do?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Why—that’s just the point. Of course I wouldn’t
-like to ask you to clear out of the country——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Don’t let modesty stand in your way, my
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_376'>376</span>dear Suffle. This favor would be nothing—a mere
-trifle.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh no, now, I wouldn’t permit it,” said Suffle,
-magnanimously. “But you are such a deucedly clever
-fellow, don’t you know, that I thought you might be
-able to devise something, something to—well, you
-know.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, oh yes,” said Adam, pulling calmly at his long
-golden mustache. He meditated for a moment and
-idly picked up a dice-box, placed in readiness for the
-evening’s play upon the table. “Do you ever fripper
-away your time with these? If you do, perhaps we
-might arrange a little harmless device without much
-trouble.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At one of the doors, the figure of Lady Margaret
-appeared and disappeared as Suffle expressed his eagerness
-to know what the plan in Adam’s head might be.
-Although she had glided swiftly from room to room in
-search of Rust, Lady Margaret had frowned when she
-saw him in company with her fiancé, and petulantly
-beating her fan in her fragrant little palm, she had
-gone back around toward a secondary entrance, in
-which a heavy curtain hung. She was vaguely wondering
-what the two could find to talk about together,
-and to what extent they were gambling, that they went
-at the dice thus early.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She now met Sir William Phipps, Governor-elect of
-New England, who had finally arrived and who was
-scanning the gathering company for a sight of Adam
-Rust.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, how well you are looking, Sir William,” she
-cried to Phipps, delightedly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_377'>377</span>“I am looking for a friend,” said the captain, with
-his customary bluntness. “But thank you, Lady
-Margaret, thank you, heartily.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“If you are looking for a friend, why, look over my
-head?” she said to him, prettily. “Oh, you dear Colonial
-Governors are such delightfully honest people.
-We all have to like you, really.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I have found some honest men in England,” said
-the Captain, with conviction. “The Puritans are
-growing numerous among your people.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Lady Margaret laughed, spontaneously enough.
-“And what about our women?” she said. “Do you
-find them at all—well, charming?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Some are as bold as a pirate,” he said, without intending
-anything personal. He could see many ropes
-and clusters of jewels, gleaming from afar. “And
-some of them must have plundered many a good ship
-of her treasure,” he added. “If I don’t put about and
-do some cruising, I shall never speak that boy to-night.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He bowed, somewhat jerkily, and sauntered off.
-Lady Margaret continued on her way around toward
-that curtained door, on the other side of which she had
-seen Rust and Suffle with the dice.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>William Phipps spent no further time in conversing
-with the women, beyond a word as he passed, so that
-finally he came to the gambling apartment, where he
-found his protégé. Knitting his brows for a second,
-in an ill-concealed annoyance, to see Adam Rust engaged
-in such a pursuit as this, he stood there in the
-doorway, hoping to catch Adam’s eye and so to admonish
-him silently for indulging even a moment’s
-whim at this vice.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_378'>378</span>“One thousand more,” said Adam, somewhat hotly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Sir William pricked up his ears in amazement.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Lost again!” Rust exclaimed. “The devil is in
-the dice!” His back was toward the curtained door.
-There was a mirror, however, directly across the room.
-Watching the glass he presently beheld the reflection
-of a movement, where the tapestry swayed behind
-him. “Three thousand now, or nothing!” he added,
-desperately.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The dice rattled out of the box in the silence that
-followed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It’s luck,” said Suffle, scooping up the dice to
-throw again.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It’s sorcery!” exclaimed the rover, in evident heat.
-“Come, sir, I have two thousand left. I’ll stake it all
-on a single throw!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Phipps would have interfered, had it been in any
-place but a private house, where the scandal would
-spread so swiftly. He twitched in nervousness, as he
-gripped the cane with which he would have liked to
-knock the dice-box endways.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The throw was completed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I’m done!” said Rust. “I’ve nothing more to
-stake!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, come,” said Suffle, tauntingly, “play your
-sword, your—surely you must have something you
-prize. What, no resources? Must we cease the play
-so soon?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My sword? No!” said Adam, with temper.
-“But stay; since you speak so slightingly of my sword,
-I have one more stake to offer.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“By all means name it and play.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_379'>379</span>“My stake, sir, is the Lady Margaret,” Adam
-growled at him, angrily. “Betrothed to you, she
-loves me more. Come, sir, stake me a thousand
-against my chances to win her and take her away from
-you, heart and soul. A thousand, sir, and if you can
-win it—your field shall be open, you shall hear nor
-fear no more from me!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“By my faith,” said Suffle, rising, as Adam had
-done, “you hold this lady lightly, that you prattle of
-her name like this. Better I should run you through,
-for an arrant knave.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Bah!” said Rust, “you think more of your winnings
-than you do of your lady. You hesitate and
-scold over a paltry thousand. Stake it, man, or by my
-troth I shall tell her what valuation you put upon her
-worth.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Lady Margaret’s face appeared for a second at the
-curtain. It was white with rage.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You insult this lady with your monstrous proposition,”
-cried Suffle.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And you insult her worse, with your parsimony!”
-came the swift retort.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It is calumny for you to say she loves you!”
-Suffle growled.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yet stake me, sir, or you shall see me get her and
-laugh at your stinginess,” Rust flung at him banteringly.
-“Come, sir, one more moment and I withdraw
-the offer.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Done!” said Suffle, “for by ’sdeath, my fortune
-shall prove you a liar! Throw the dice.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam threw and counted. “My luck has changed
-at last,” he said, in triumph.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_380'>380</span>“We shall see,” retorted Suffle, and flinging the
-dice he sat down and roared with laughter.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Lost!” said Adam, tragically. “So be it. To
-the devil with you, sir; and I wish you joy of your
-winnings.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He strode from the table, met Sir William Phipps
-at the door, winked at him merrily and so drew him
-out in the hall.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What’s this? What’s this?” said the Governor,
-excitedly. “I come here to see you, with news on my
-tongue, and find you—like this!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Tush, William,” said Adam, laughing boyishly,
-and as cool as a fish. “I was betting in farthings. I
-must have lost a hundred. Did you think the luck
-was all with Suffle?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But, sir, this—this lady?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“There is more than one way to cure a woman of a
-heart’s distemper,” said the young man, cheerfully.
-“Lady Margaret was just there, behind the curtain.
-But this is wasting time. What is your news?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Phipps looked at him in wonder, for a moment, then
-shaking his head, sadly, he presently drew his hand
-down across his face, to his double chin, as if to wipe
-out a smile, which had come out of his eyes and traveled
-all over his countenance.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Adam,” he said, “they have made me Governor of
-the colony, and I want you to go home with me to
-Boston.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam said nothing, for a moment, then he answered:
-“Let’s get out of this. I want some fresher air to
-think it over in.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They were soon walking out at the gate, arm in arm.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_381'>381</span>The air was not only fresh, it was bitter cold. When
-they turned to go down the street, Adam having first
-looked about, without seeing what he sought, old Halberd
-issued from a niche, where he had been dancing
-to keep himself warm, and followed along behind his
-master.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, now that you have thought it over,” said
-Phipps, at last, “what do you say?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam had thought it over, from a thousand standpoints.
-The magnet at Boston had drawn him and
-drawn him so long that he felt his whole soul was already
-across the Atlantic. Why fight his longing any
-further? Why not at least go home, look the proposition
-in the face and perhaps be disillusionized?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I’m your man,” he said, as if to catch himself before
-he should alter his mind. “When are you sailing?”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_382'>382</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER IX.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>REVELATIONS.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>When</span> the Andros government came to an end,
-Edward Randolph had languished in jail for a brief time
-only. The Puritans were chiefly angered at his master,
-whom they had finally put aboard a ship and sent away
-from the country. Thus the more mischievous spirit,
-and author of many of their wrongs, escaped to work
-his malignant will upon them for years.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Randolph was so crafty, so insidious, and willing to
-remain so in the background, that until it was quite
-too late to redeem their position, the Puritans failed
-even to suspect him of the monstrous iniquities he induced
-them to commit upon one another. The witchcraft
-persecutions, which he fastened upon them, had
-not originated in his brain, fertile as that organ was
-for the growth of things diabolical. He got his cue
-from England, where thousands of persons perished,
-at the stake and otherwise, convicted on fantastic
-testimony of practising arts that were black and
-mysterious.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Randolph, realizing that Boston had been made too
-warm for active operations, began his work in Salem.
-That center offered him exceptional opportunities.
-The growth of the dread disease was appalling. History
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_383'>383</span>which would convey an adequate idea of this
-criminal fanaticism should be bound in charred human
-skin.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Boston was duly afflicted with the scourge. Randolph
-then returned, quietly, and so manipulated his
-work and his dupes, from behind his own scenes, that
-scores of old women were charged with and convicted
-of witchcraft, in Randolph’s hope of wreaking his
-vengeance thus on whatsoever old woman it might have
-been who had told Garde Merrill of his affair with
-Hester Hodder. Having never been able to ascertain
-that this person was Goody Dune, he was sweeping his
-net in all waters, to make sure of his prey, in the same
-merciless spirit that Herod slew all the male infants,
-to accomplish his terrible purpose.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When Governor Phipps, with Adam Rust and Increase
-Mather, arrived at Boston, in the frigate “Nonsuch,”
-in May, 1692, the prisons were crowded full of witches,
-for the smell of whose burning or rotting flesh scores of
-fanatical maniacs were clamoring.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>All Massachusetts had known that William Phipps,
-the Governor who had risen so mightily from the ranks
-of the working men among them, was coming. The
-name of the lane wherein his house had been built
-was altered to Charter street, in his honor; the citizens
-beat their drums; the disciples of gladness in the
-stomach arranged for a banquet; the hordes marched
-in joy and with pomp and Puritan splendor, which
-lacked nothing in ceremony, as Sir William was conducted
-to his house and then to the public dinner.
-Even the fanatics waxed enthusiastic and developed
-symptoms of being yet more greatly pursued and bewitched
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_384'>384</span>by the witches whose incarceration they had
-already procured.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the madness, confusion and excess of glee, two
-persons were more inwardly stirred than all the others,
-not by the arrival of William Phipps, but by that of
-Adam Rust. One was Garde, to whose ears and heart
-the story of Adam’s return came swiftly flying. The
-other was Edward Randolph, who saw an opportunity
-for deviltry for which he had waited so long that he had
-almost despaired of ever tasting its bitter-sweet. With
-his own eyes he beheld Adam Rust, and he grinned.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At the end of that long, fatiguing day, Rust retired
-to the privacy of his tavern apartments, secured haphazard,
-during one of the moments less filled than the
-others with pressing events. Here he sat him down
-for the purpose of thinking. He wondered why he
-had come to Boston again, and what he would do, now
-that at last he lived under the same sky with Garde,
-hearing the same sounds she was hearing, breathing
-the same fragrance of the Spring that stole to her.
-Should he try to see her? Perhaps. But to speak to
-her—no, he thought he could make no advance in this
-direction. But he could learn whether she had married,
-as of course she must have done, long before, and
-then—well, something in him ought to be satisfied—that
-something which had urged him so inexorably to
-return and to make this moment possible.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the midst of his reveries, he heard a knock upon
-his door. It was poor old Halberd, doubtless, who had
-been so forlorn and so ill on the ocean. He had left
-him asleep, but, no matter, he would be glad to see him,
-privacy of thought notwithstanding.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_385'>385</span>“Come in,” he said. “Come in.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The door opened, not as Halberd was wont to perform
-an act so simple, and Adam was conscious that a
-stranger had intruded upon him. He looked up,
-winked his eyes and looked more intently, as if absolutely
-incredulous that he was awake and sane.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>His visitor was Edward Randolph.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Mr. Rust, I am glad to see you again in Boston,”
-said the man, coming forward in a tentative manner
-and smiling by sheer force of effort. “You didn’t
-expect me, but I have taken this early opportunity of
-calling, to say I know what a great wrong I did you in
-the past, and to make what reparation I can.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The devil could do no more,” said Adam, looking
-him over calmly. “And I doubt if the devil ever had
-your impertinence.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You do me wrong,” Randolph assured him,
-meekly. “I could do no less than to come here and
-tender what apologies I may, and to do you a small
-favor. I was grossly misled, concerning your worth
-and your courage, by spiteful persons who had, as I now
-understand, some personal grudge.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“As I knew but two men in the town, when first I
-had the honor of appraising you for a rascal,” said
-Adam, “your tale pleases me but indifferently well.
-As for favors, I have none to ask of you, and none to
-grant.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yet, if only in a Christian spirit,” the fellow insisted,
-“you must permit me to beg your pardon for
-my errors of the past. I have long regretted my grievous
-mistake of judgment, and for that long I have
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_386'>386</span>desired an opportunity of showing my mortification
-and doing you the one kindness in my power.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“In the spirit of the Christian crusaders,” said
-Rust, “I feel that I could deny you little. You would
-do well, sir, to retire in good order while my indisposition
-to throw you through the window is still upon
-me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But, my dear Mr. Rust, you don’t know what an
-injury you are doing to yourself,” the visitor went on.
-“If you knew how cruelly we were both wronged,
-almost at the same time and by the same person, you
-would listen, if only for that one compassion.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I have been wronged in Boston,” Adam agreed,
-ominously, “and shatter my hilt if I know why I hesitate
-to redress myself while I may.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But I did you no wrong to your heart, sir. Our
-injuries were both of the heart,” Randolph reiterated,
-persistently. “Look, sir, I had a heart, six years ago,
-and I felt it cruelly trampled under foot—the same
-foot that trampled upon yours, and here——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Beware!” Adam growled. “I shall cut out your
-tongue, for little more. Begone, sir, and thank your
-God at every step you take, that you still live—if you
-value your life at all; and this I am driven to doubt.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Here, here!” replied Randolph, nervously, and
-with shaking fingers he drew from his pocket a packet
-of paper folded in the form of a letter. “You will
-never believe me till I show you this. But I lay my
-heart open—I expose my wounds, to prove how you
-wrong me. Read it, read it—the letter she sent me—and
-then I shall be willing to bide by your answer.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam could not fail to be impressed by the man’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_387'>387</span>tenacity of purpose. Being a just man, he had a faint
-suspicion dart through his head that, after all, the man
-might not have known what he was doing when he
-committed all his fiendish acts, years before. There
-had never been any sufficient reason for what he had
-done, that Adam knew. He took the letter, briefly to
-see what it was the fellow meant and wanted.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He began to read, and then to feel that the man had
-obviously undergone some trial, severe and not readily
-to be forgotten. It was Garde’s own letter to himself
-he was reading.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“She sent me that and then broke my heart after,”
-said Randolph, speaking in a low, emotional voice,
-while Adam looked at the letter. “As if she had not
-shattered my life sufficiently before.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I’m sorry for you,” said Rust, after a moment.
-“Here, I don’t care to pry into your letter. Take it,
-and go in peace.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But read it, read it. You don’t know who wrote
-it,” said Randolph, who was white with excitement.
-“I shouldn’t have come to you here with my mortifying
-apologies, if there had not been a bond between
-us.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam gave him a look, as of one baffled by an inscrutable
-mystery. He could not comprehend his
-visitor’s meaning. Then suddenly a flush leaped into
-his face, as he remembered something he had heard in
-those by-gone days, when he walked with that youth,
-whose very name he could not recall, from Plymouth
-to Boston.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He read the letter again with a new interest, a terrible
-interest. He had gone away from Garde—sent
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_388'>388</span>away—with a stab in his heart, from which he had
-never been able to recover. He had thought at first
-she sent him away as a renegade, a fugitive from
-pseudo-justice, whom to have loved openly would be a
-disgrace. He had thought then that perhaps she
-loved Wainsworth, or even this Randolph. He had
-thought till he nearly went crazy, for circumstances
-had compelled him to flee from Boston for his life, and
-therefore to flee from all explanations which might have
-been made. Garde having released him from jail, he had
-been driven to think she believed him innocent. She
-had said she could do no less. Then he had been left
-no belief to stand on but that of her loving some one
-else more than she did himself. She had admitted
-that something had happened. Cornered thus, he had
-found the case hopeless, and thoughts of return to
-Boston then had seemed to him madness.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This letter, now in his hand, confirmed all those
-more terrible thoughts and beliefs. She had done some
-wrong to Randolph, too, as she here confessed in her
-letter. She had believed some infamous story against
-him, and now prayed his forgiveness. And what, in
-God’s name, had she then added to this first wrong to
-the man, that Randolph now was so bitter?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Terribly stirred, he raced his glance over the pages
-and so to the little quaintly affectionate ending. Then
-he read her signature, “Garde—John Rosella.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>John Rosella!—the name of that youth! She!
-Garde!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He felt he should suddenly go mad. That boy he had
-so learned to love—had been Garde! She had written
-this letter—she had signed that name, which meant so
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_389'>389</span>much to him and to her, and so little to any one
-else!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He made a strange little sound, and then he began
-to read the letter over again, from the first, letting
-every word, every syllable, sink into his soul with its
-comfort and its fragrance of love. He forgot that
-Randolph stood there before him. He was oblivious
-of everything. He was on that highroad again. He
-was standing with Garde in the garden at midnight,
-her kisses still warm on his lips.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You see there is a bond between us,” said Randolph.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam ceased reading, galvanically. But for a
-second he did not raise his eyes. He folded the letter
-and held it in his hand. He arose to his feet and
-slowly moved between Randolph and the door.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“There is a bond between us,” he agreed, speaking
-with nice deliberation. “It is something more than
-a bond. It’s a tie of blood and bone and suffering.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I thought you would see it,” said Randolph.
-“This was all I came to tell you,—this, and my sense of
-having done you wrong.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh yes, I see it,” said Adam, turning the key in the
-lock and putting it calmly in his pocket, “I see it all
-clearly. By the way, sir, who is John Rosella, if I may
-ask?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Randolph had become pale. His eyes were growing
-wild. He had watched Rust lock the door with quaking
-dread.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“John Rosella?” he repeated, with a sickening
-sense of having overlooked something important, which
-he had thought an insignificant trifle; “why, that is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_390'>390</span>merely the—her middle names. Her full name is
-Garde John Rosella Merrill.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I trust you are gentleman enough to fight,” said
-Rust, placing the letter in his pocket, “for I shall tell
-you, sir, that you are a liar, a scoundrel, a murderous
-blackguard.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Walking up to the staring wretch, calmly, Adam
-slapped his face till the blow resounded in the room
-and Halberd came hastening to the door to know what
-could be the matter.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I rang the bell,” said Rust, who opened the door
-with great deliberation. “Bring a sword for one.
-The gentleman wishes to fight.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What do you mean, sir?” said the trembling
-coward. “Give me back my letter. I shall leave
-this place at once!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Will you jump through the window?” Adam
-inquired, with mock concern. “Don’t call that letter
-yours again, or I may not let you off with a mere
-killing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Halberd came with his sword. Adam drew his own
-good blade from the battered scabbard he had always
-retained, and looked at the edge and the point, critically.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I refuse to fight you!” said Randolph, who had
-once seen that terrible length of steel at play. “I
-demand to be released from this place!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Rust went up and slapped him again. “Get up just
-manhood enough to raise that sword,” Adam implored.
-“Take it and strike any sort of a foul blow at me—one
-of your foulest—do! you dog.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The craven tried to make a run at the door. Adam
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_391'>391</span>pushed him back and kicked him again toward the
-center of the room.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“This is murder! I refuse to fight with such a
-villain!” cried the fellow. “Let me out, or I shall
-call for help.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You wouldn’t dare to let anybody know you are in
-town,” said Rust, contemptuously. “Howl, do howl,
-and let me tell the public what you are. Halberd,
-alas, there is no manhood in it. Therefore fetch me
-the whip I saw in your apartments, for a sad bit of
-business.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>To all of Randolph’s protests and wild chatterings
-of fear and hatred, Rust was deaf. He took the whip,
-which Halberd presently brought, and proceeded to cut
-Randolph across the face, the legs, the shoulders and
-the hands till the craven smarted with a score of
-purple welts.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Halberd, you may clean your boots afterward,”
-Adam said at last. “Be good enough to kick the dog
-from the room.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Halberd placed but two of his aids to departure, and
-then, Rust opening the door, the craven flew madly
-out and away, a maniac in appearance, an assassin in
-his state of mind.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_392'>392</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER X.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>AFTER SIX YEARS.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>At</span> Grandther Donner’s house, Garde had passed
-the day with her heart so fluttering between hope and
-fear that she was all unstrung by the time the evening
-arrived. She could bear it no longer, then, and with
-a shawl on her head she started out to go to the Soams’
-to learn what she might of the many events of the
-hour.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the garden she paused. The stillness, the calm,
-the redolence of Spring, burgeoning into maidenly
-summer, brought back to her mind that similar time,
-six long years before, when she and Adam had met
-here among the flowers, for that brief time of joy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The fire of love, kept so sacred by the vestal virgin
-spirit of her nature, burned upward in her cheeks, as
-warm, as ardent as ever, after these years of her lonely
-vigil.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But would he ever stand there again, in the garden?
-Would he ever more clasp her hands on the pickets of
-the gate? Or would he now prove disdainful, proud
-of his friendship with the new Governor, aloof and
-silent, as he had been since she sent him her letter?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>No matter what might be, she so hungered to hear
-some word of his coming, some meager description of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_393'>393</span>how he looked, some mere hearsay of how he bore
-himself, that it seemed as if she must consume herself
-with impatience on her way to her uncle’s.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the dusk which was swiftly descending on the
-face of the world, she closed the gate behind her and
-started along the road, her face so pale and yet so
-eager, in her yearning, that it was almost luminous.
-She was presently conscious that some one, dimly visible,
-ahead, was rapidly approaching. She drew her
-shawl a little more closely about her face and quickened
-her footsteps, the sooner to pass this pedestrian.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A metallic tinkle came to her ears and made her
-heart give an extra bound, she knew not why. It had
-simply sounded like a scabbard, beating its small
-accompaniment to sturdy strides. She looked up,
-timidly, to see who it was that carried a sword into
-such a quiet part of Boston. Then she halted and
-suddenly placed her hand out, to the near-by fence,
-for a moment’s support.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The man was almost passing her by, where she stood.
-He halted. He made some odd little sound, and then
-he remained there, looking upon her, his hand coming
-involuntarily up to his heart.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde looked up in his face, without fear, but not
-without sadness, wistfully—with the inquiry of six long
-years in her steadfast eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Garde,” said Adam, in a voice she barely heard,
-“Garde—I have—come home. I never got your letter
-till to-night.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She could not answer, for a moment.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I—have been waiting,” she then said, and striving
-to hold her lips from trembling, she let two great tears
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_394'>394</span>trickle slowly across her face as she still looked up in
-his eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There was nothing he could say. He read her whole
-story of faithfulness and of suffering, her epic of a love
-that could not die, in that one long look. Slowly he
-went up to her and taking her face in his hands he
-kissed away the tears from her cheeks. He put her
-head gently against his breast and let her cry.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She still held to the fence, as if she dared not too
-suddenly lean on his love, without which she had
-learned to live so long. But gradually, as he held her
-there, saying nothing, but softly kissing her hair and the
-one little hand he had taken in his own, her arms crept
-upward about his shoulders and her heart beat against
-his, in a peace surpassing anything of earth.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My Garde,” he finally began to whisper, over and
-over again, “my own Garde—my darling, precious
-Garde.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, this may all be wrong, Adam,” she answered
-him, after a time. “I don’t understand it. We don’t
-know what has happened, in all these years. Oh, how
-did you happen to come?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You drew me, sweetheart,” he said, in a voice
-made tremulous with emotion. “I have had no peace
-till now. I have loved you so! I have dreamed of
-you so! But I never knew—till to-night, when I got
-your letter.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You—never got it till to-night? Oh Adam,” she
-said. “Oh, Adam, I have been so punished for the
-wrong I did. Oh, you can never, never forgive me!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“There, there, sweetheart,” he said to her soothingly,
-letting her cry out the sobs she had stifled so
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_395'>395</span>vainly. “Forgive you, dear? You had no need to
-ask for forgiveness—you who came to me there in that
-jail—you, whose sweet little motherly spirit so provided
-for my poor old beef-eaters, when they were hungry
-and fleeing for their lives. Dearest, I don’t see how
-you did it, when I was a hunted renegade, a fugitive,
-with doubled infamies piled upon my head. Oh,
-forgive me, dear, that ever I doubted my own little
-mate.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, I should never have believed them—not all
-the world!” she protested. “My Adam. My
-Adam.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>With his strong arm about her, and her head leaned
-in confidence and love on his shoulder, he led her
-back to the garden, at once the scene of their joys and
-tragedies.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He enthroned her on the steps of the porch, where
-as a child she had been enthroned, when he as her boy-lover
-had sat, as now, at her feet and listened to the
-dainty caresses of her voice. Only now he held her
-hand in his and placed it on his cheek and kissed it
-fondly, as he listened and told her of how he had come
-at last to receive the letter.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At this she was frightened. She wanted to cradle
-his head upon her bosom, now, and hold forth a hand
-to shield him from danger. She felt that the perils for
-them both were clustered about his fearless head and
-that hers was the right to protect.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, please be careful, Adam, dear,” she implored.
-“That man is a terrible man. Oh, I wish you had let
-him go. You will be careful, dear. You must be
-careful, and watchful, every moment.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_396'>396</span>His reply was a kiss and a boyish laugh. Now that
-he had her once more, he said, and now that nothing
-should ever part them again, his world was complete,
-and there were no dangers, nor evils, nor sorrows.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Then he begged her to tell him of the years that had
-passed. He petted her fondly, as she spoke of her
-long, long wait. She seemed to him thrice more
-beautiful, in the calm and dignity of her womanhood,
-which had laid not so much as a faded petal on her
-beauty and her endless youth.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He exchanged a history of heart-aches, matching
-with one of his own every pang she had ever endured.
-There was something ecstatic, now, in the light of
-their new-found rapture, in recounting those long days
-of sadness and despair. Every pain thus rehearsed
-drew them the closer, till their love took on a sacredness,
-as if suffering and constancy had wedded them long
-before. Like parents who have buried the children
-they loved, they were made subdued and yet more
-truly fervent, more absolute in the divine passion which
-held them heart to heart.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>And so, at last, when Garde was sure that Adam ought
-to go, they walked hand in hand to the gate together.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Sweetheart, let me go outside, for a moment,” said
-Adam, quickly shutting the barrier between them.
-“Now, with your two dear hands in mine, it is just as
-it was six years ago. The night is the same, your
-beauty is the same, our hearts and love are the same as
-before, and nothing has ever come between us—except
-this gate.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He kissed her hands and her sweet face, as he had
-done on that other happy night.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_397'>397</span>“And we can open the gate,” said Garde, in a little
-croon of delight.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam laughed, like the boy he was. He flung open
-the gate and went inside and took her in his arms,
-kissing her upon the lips, rapturously, time after time.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh Garde, I love you so!” he said. “I love you!
-I adore you, my own little mate!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I could have waited fifty years,” she answered him,
-nestling close and patting his hand as she held it, in
-excess of joy, to her heart. “Oh Adam! My Adam!”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_398'>398</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER XI.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>A BLOW IN THE DARK.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>The</span> rover, so lost in exalted happiness that he hardly
-knew where he was going, when at length he said his
-final good night to Garde, was not aware that the faithful
-old Halberd finally fell into his tracks behind him
-and followed him off toward the tavern.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Immensely relieved again to see his master, whom
-he had not been able to locate before, the old beef-eater
-was soon convinced that Adam was in a mood the
-like of which had not appeared in the family for many
-a day. He therefore glided silently after the dreamer,
-a rod or so to the rear, waiting until Adam should turn
-about, as was his wont, to bid him walk at his side.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But to-night the Sachem was so thoroughly engrossed
-with his love and his forming plans, that he completely
-forgot to think of his lorn retinue, and therefore the
-beef-eater felt more alone and sad than usual. There
-was nothing in Boston, save Adam, with which he
-could associate any thoughts of jollier days. There
-was nothing but Adam left in the world, to which to
-devote the great fund of affection and devotion in his
-simple breast.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But he was making no complaint, not even to himself.
-Whatever the Sachem did was right. Nothing
-that Adam could have done would have driven him
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_399'>399</span>away, nor have altered his love by so much as one jot.
-All he desired was the privilege of loving his master,
-at whose heels he would have followed, though the
-path led to Hell itself, and this with never so much as
-a question, nor a murmur of hesitation.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The moon had been silvering the roofs of the houses
-for some time, and Adam and Halberd wended their
-way, in their short procession, through the deserted
-business streets of the town. Masses of shadow lay
-upon the sidewalk, where Adam was striding buoyantly
-along.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Within fifteen feet of him, and between him and
-Adam, suddenly Halberd heard a sound that made him
-halt where he stood. Three figures, their faces masked
-with black cloth, ran out from a deep doorway, where
-they had crowded back, for concealment, and darted
-upon the rover, walking unconsciously onward.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Sachem! Sachem!” cried the beef-eater, wildly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He darted forward, in time to see Adam turn to receive
-a stab in the neck and a blow on the head that
-sent him to earth before he could even so much as
-raise a hand to ward off his murderous assailants.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Dragging his sword from his scabbard as he ran, old
-Halberd leaped frantically into the midst of the three
-asassins, ready to battle against any odds conceivable,
-in this the climax-moment of his loyalty.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He struck but a single blow, which fell upon one of
-the bludgeons held by the masked ruffians. He
-screamed out his terrible tocsin of anguish and rage.
-Then a blow from behind him crushed in his skull and
-he fell across the master he had striven to serve, a
-corpse.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_400'>400</span>Waiting for nothing further, the three figures sped
-away, down the street, dived into the darkness of an
-alley and were gone, past all finding, when a few startled
-citizens opened their windows or doors and looked
-out on the street to see what the awful cries of Halberd
-had betokened.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I see something—down on the sidewalk,” said the
-voice of one of the men. “The lantern, wife, the
-lantern!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What is it? What is it?” called another, from
-across the way.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>And others answering, that they knew not what it
-meant, or that it had sounded like some terrible deed
-being done, there were presently half a dozen awed
-men coming forth, when their neighbor appeared at his
-door with his light.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The black, still heap which had been seen from a
-window smote them all with horror. A dark stream,
-from which the light was suggestively reflected, already
-trickled to the gutter. They lifted Halberd from the
-second prostrate form and found that Adam was
-swiftly bleeding to death from a ghastly wound in the
-neck, from which the life-fluid was leaping out in
-gushes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Turn him over, turn him over!” commanded
-the man with the lantern. “Run to my house and
-ask the wife for everything to tie up an artery—bandages,
-too!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He knelt down in the red stream. Digging his
-fingers into the gaping, red mouth of the wound, he
-clutched upon the severed artery with a skill at once
-brutal and sure. The gushes ceased, almost entirely.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_401'>401</span>Adam’s face, already deathly white, had been turned
-upward.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Saints preserve us!” said one of the citizens.
-“It’s the bosom friend of the Governor!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Then we know where to take him, if he doesn’t
-die in spite of me,” said the skilful surgeon who had
-pounced upon the wound. “Look to the other man
-and see if he too, is bleeding.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>One of the other men had already loosened the collar
-about old Halberd’s neck. Another came to assist
-him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“He’s bleeding a little, from the back of his head,”
-said he. “O Lord! He’s dead!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The doctor’s wife came running to the place herself,
-with her husband’s case in which he had a score of
-cunning tools and the needs of his craft.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The good woman pushed the men aside and with an
-assurance and a courage almost totally unknown in her
-sex, at the time, in such a case as this, bent down
-above the wounded man and lent to her husband the
-nimble fingers and the quick comprehension without
-which he might easily have failed to prevent that
-deadly loss of blood.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As it was, Rust was at the door of death. The turn
-he had made, when Halberd called out in alarm, had
-saved him from inevitable death. The steel driven so
-viciously into his neck, would have severed the jugular
-vein completely had he turned the fraction of a
-second less soon than he did, or an inch less far.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The blow on his temple had glanced, so that half
-the power, which in the case of Halberd had crushed
-in the skull instantly, had been lost, nevertheless it
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_402'>402</span>had served to render him wholly unconscious. Therefore,
-two hours later, when brave little Mrs. Phipps
-got him laid in a clean, sweet couch, he looked like
-death, and his heart-beat was feeble and faintly fluttering
-between mere life and the Great Stillness.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_403'>403</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER XII.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>ADAM’S NURSE.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>When</span> the intelligence of the almost unparalleled
-crime spread with terror and awe in its wake through
-Boston, in the morning, Garde heard it like a knell—a
-fatality almost to have been expected, when she
-and Adam had been at last so happy. She did not
-faint. Not even a moan escaped her lips. She turned
-white and remained white.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Grandther,” she said to the old man who owed his
-restoration to health and almost complete soundness
-of mind to her ministrations, “I am betrothed to this
-friend of our new Governor’s. I shall go to attend
-him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She left her grandfather staring at her in wonder,
-and with only her shawl on her head, she went to the
-“fair brick house” which William Phipps had built
-for his wife at the corner of Salem and Charter streets
-in the town.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I am betrothed to Adam Rust,” she repeated,
-simply. “I have come to attend him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As if poor Garde had not already, in six years of
-waiting and hoping and vain regrets, sufficiently suffered
-for a moment’s lack of faith in her lover, the anguish
-now came upon her in a flood tide. Adam no
-sooner recovered a heart-beat strong enough to give
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_404'>404</span>promise of renewed steadiness, than he lapsed from his
-unconscious condition into one of delirium.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Had Garde been wholly in ignorance of his past and
-his life of many tragedies, she would have been doomed
-to learn of all of it now. He lived it all over, a hundred
-times, and told of it, brokenly, excitedly, at times
-with sallies of witty sentences, but for the most part in
-the sighs with which his life had filled his heart to overflowing,
-but to which he had never before given utterance.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She knew now what the boy had suffered when King
-Philip, the Sachem of the Wampanoags, was slain,
-with the people of his nation. She felt the pangs he
-had felt when, on first returning to Boston, he had believed
-himself supplanted in Garde’s affections by his
-friend Henry Wainsworth. She heard him croon to
-the little Narragansett child, as he limped again
-through the forest. And then she sounded the depths
-of a man’s despair when the whole world and the woman
-he loves drive him forth, abased.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Yet much as she suffered with him in this long rehearsal
-of his heartaches, there was still one little consolation
-to her soul.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The one name only that he spoke, and spoke again
-and again, in murmurs of love and in heart-cries of
-agony, was—Garde.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Having acquired her skill in the harsh school where
-her grandfather’s illness had been the master, Garde
-could almost have rejoiced in this reparation she was
-making to Adam for what she had contributed to his
-pangs in the past, had it not been that his hovering so
-at the edge of death frightened all other emotions than
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_405'>405</span>alarm from her breast. Nevertheless she believed he
-would live. He could not die, she insisted to herself,
-while she gave him a love so vast and so sustaining.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This feeling was fairly an instinct. And the truth
-in which it was grounded came struggling to the fore,
-one morning, when Adam opened his eyes, after his
-first refreshing sleep, and laughed at her gayly, if a
-little weakly, to see her there, bending down above him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“John Rosella,” he said, “I have been dreaming
-of you—the sweetest boy that ever lived.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, Adam,” said Garde, suddenly crimsoning.
-“Oh—now you—you mustn’t talk. You must go back
-to sleep at once.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam was drowsy, despite himself. “I remember—every
-word—we said,” he murmured, “and every—look
-of your sweet—sweet face.” And then he fell
-again into peaceful slumber.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Arrived so far as this toward recovery, he made
-rapid progress. Healthy and wholesome as he was,
-sound, from habits of clean, right living, he mended
-almost too fast, according to Garde’s ideas of convalescence,
-for she feared he would rise in revolt, over
-soon, and do himself an injury by abandoning care
-and comfort before she could pronounce him quite
-himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In reality there had been but little more than his loss
-of blood to contend with, save that his state of mind
-had engendered a fever, as a result of all he had undergone,
-so that when this latter was allayed and
-the wound in his neck was healing with astonishing
-rapidity, his strength came back to his muscles and
-limbs by leaps and bounds. Therefore, despite her
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_406'>406</span>solicitude, Garde was soon happy to see him again on
-his feet and making his way about the house, his face
-a little wan and white, but the twinkle in his eye as
-merry as the light in a jewel.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He could furnish no accurate or reliable information
-as to whom his murderous assailants had been. He
-could only conjecture that Randolph had been at the
-bottom of the affair, from motives of vengeance. This
-was the truth. But the disappearance of Randolph
-from Boston was reckoned so variously, as having taken
-place anywhere from two days to three years before,
-that nothing could be reliably determined.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Moreover, it sufficed for Adam and Garde that they
-were here, in the land of the living, together, and
-though it made the rover feel sad to think of the loss of
-his last beef-eater, the faithful old Halberd.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_407'>407</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER XIII.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>GOODY IN THE TOILS.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>The</span> worthy Puritan citizens of Boston fêted Governor
-Phipps in one breath and asked him to make
-concessions of his powers to his council in the next.
-They worked themselves weary with enthusiasm over
-his advent and then they wore him out with exactions,
-with their epidemic of persecuting witches and with
-the faults they found with his methods of life and
-government.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Sir William had not been long in his new harness,
-when he was heard to wish he again had his broadax
-in hand and were building a ship of less dimensions
-than one of state. A little of his old love for his calling
-and the men it had gathered about him was expressed
-in a dinner which he gave to ship-carpenters, from
-whose ranks he was proud to have risen, as he told them
-and told the world. He had a hasty temper, as a result
-of having been so long a captain on the sea, accustomed
-to absolute obedience at the word of command. Yet
-his squalls of anger were soon blown over, leaving him
-merry, honest and lovable as before.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Unfortunately Governor Phipps was largely under
-the influence of Increase Mather and his son, the
-Reverend Cotton Mather, who were both as mad fanatics
-on the topic of religion and witchcraft as one could
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_408'>408</span>have found in a day’s walk. The influence over
-Phipps had been gained by the elder Mather in
-England, where he and Sir William were so long associated
-in their efforts to right their colony and its
-charter.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Witchcraft persecutions, having fairly run amuck in
-England, Increase Mather had enjoyed exceptional opportunities
-for observing the various phenomena developed
-by this dreadful disease. He arrived in Boston
-after Randolph had succeeded far beyond the dreams
-of his own malice in starting the madness on its terrible
-career. The field offered an attraction not to be
-withstood, by either of the Mathers. They were soon
-fairly gorging themselves on the wonders of the invisible
-world, testimonies and barbarous punishments.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Lieutenant-Governor Stoughton was an active figure
-in all this lamentable business. Phipps was dragged
-into the maelstrom bodily. He pitied the frightened
-wretches in the prisons and secretly instructed his
-jailers to be remiss in their duties of chaining, ironing
-and otherwise inflicting needless punishment on these
-helpless mortals.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The more effectually and quietly to turn the fearful
-tide, so appallingly engulfing the minds of the
-wrought-up populace, Phipps organized a court of
-Oyer and Terminer, wherein he sat himself, with seven
-magistrates, to try the wretched old women, dragged
-screaming to the farcical examinations. At these
-trials, devilish children swore away the lives of fellow-creatures,
-abandoned alike by their kind and by their
-God. In this court of his own making, William Phipps
-was slowly and surely putting a stop to the mania, for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_409'>409</span>the horrors of some of the executions sent a thrill of
-fright and dread through the whole of Boston.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Exercising his power of pardoning, and then expending
-his own money to assist them to flee from the
-state, William Phipps saved so many defenseless
-women that he fairly broke the fabric of the awful
-mania in twain. Early after his arrival, however, he
-was called away to Plymouth. No sooner was his back
-turned than the zealots pounced, tooth and nail, upon
-a new crop of witches and hailed them before the
-court, on trial for their lives, in haste before the Governor
-should return to work his leniency upon them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thus it came about that Garde, having exhausted
-the small supply of simples possessed by herself and
-Goodwife Phipps, went to Goody Dune’s and there
-witnessed the work of a witch-hunting mob.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was a warm, summery morning, fit jewel for the
-year’s diadem of things beautiful. Cries, yells, of pretended
-fear, and harsh, discordant prayers, screamed
-into the air, assailed Garde’s ears before she could yet
-see the little flower-surrounded hut where Goody lived.
-She felt a sudden misgiving strike through her heart
-as she hastened onward.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She came upon the scene in a moment. Nearly fifty
-men and boys, with a sprinkling of mere girls and one
-or two women, were storming the small stronghold of
-the old wise woman, who had done so much for those
-afflicted by ailments and troubles. Indeed in the
-crowd there were many citizens who had blessed her
-name and the wisdom by which she had mended their
-bodily woes. But all now were mad with excitement.
-Some were purposely frothing at the mouth. A dozen
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_410'>410</span>leaped frantically about, declaring they were being
-pinched and bitten by the demons that Goody was
-actuating to malice. Young boys slily put nails and
-pins in their mouths and then spat them forth, to show
-what evils were then and there being perpetrated upon
-them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The tidy little garden was trampled to pitiable
-wreckage of flowers and vines. The house was being
-boldly entered by a few lusty knaves, with Psalms
-Higgler and Isaiah Pinchbecker in their midst.
-Sounds of wild beating, upon the pans and kettles
-inside, made half the assembled people turn pale with
-self-induced fear, which they loved to experience.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Suddenly Goody’s old black cat came bounding forth.
-The men, boys and women fell down in affright,
-screaming that the devil was upon them. To add
-to their horror and superstitious dismay, the jackdaw,
-Rex, came flying out. He perched for a moment on
-the ridge and then circled once or twice about the
-house. He was wounded, for the ruffians in the cottage
-had beaten him savagely, with sticks and whips. He
-was bedraggled; for they had thrown water upon him.
-His feathers were all awry. He was altogether a sorry
-spectacle.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“B-u-h-h—it’s cold,” called the bird. “Fools, fools,
-fools!” and flapping his ragged wings so that they
-clapped against his sides as he flew, he started straight
-for the woods and was soon out of sight.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>If the witch-hunters had been smitten with delightful
-fear before, they were appalled by this terrible
-bird. They fell down upon their knees and wept and
-prayed and made a thousand and one mysterious signs
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_411'>411</span>by which evil could be averted. Those who knew in
-their hearts that the whole thing, up to this, had been
-humbug and fraud, now quaked with a fear that was
-genuine. The devil himself had said some horrible,
-unthinkable rigmarole which would doubtless cast
-a spell upon them such as they would never be rid of
-again in their lives. Their children would be born
-with fishes’ tails, with asses’ legs, with seven heads.
-Above the wails of anguish, which arose on the air,
-came the shouts of the captors of Goody Dune. They
-were now seen dragging her forth with hooks, which
-were supposed to insulate the operator from the evils
-which a witch could otherwise pronounce upon her
-enemies with dire and withering effect. And then it
-was seen what the shouting of triumph was.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Each of the captors bore a Bible in his hand from
-which he read, haphazard, at the top of his voice as he
-walked, thus disinfecting himself, or fumigating himself,
-as it were, to prevent him from catching the evil
-which was hovering about the witch, like an aureole of
-dangerous microbes of the devil’s own breeding.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>No sooner did old Goody’s well-known form appear
-than the fanatics in the garden fled in a panic for the
-gate, howling and wailing their prayers more loudly
-than before, but pushing and jostling one another and
-falling endways, as they tried to run and to look behind
-them at the same time. They must see everything,
-whatever the cost.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The men were seen to be armed with pitchforks.
-There is nothing in the way of a weapon which your
-devil so abhors as a pitchfork, in the hands of any one
-save himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_412'>412</span>This noisy, mad procession moved in great disorder
-out into the highway, where Garde had paused, dismayed
-and concerned for Goody. She saw the wise
-old woman walking calmly along with her captors, for
-Goody, unlike the witches of lesser wisdom, knew too
-much to cry out wild protests against this infamy, and
-so to convict herself of uttering curses, spells and
-blasphemies on the public roads. She looked about
-her, at men and women she had relieved of pains, and
-at children whose early ailments she had exorcised with
-her simples.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They were all now possessed of the devil, in good
-faith, for the mad capers they cut to show that Goody
-was all potent to produce the most fiendish and heinous
-results upon them could only have been invented out
-of the sheer deviltry which is one of the component
-parts of the human animal.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helpless, terrified by these maniacs about her, Garde
-could only lean against the fence and hold her place
-while the running, neck-twisting people went by.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, poor dear Goody,” she murmured to herself,
-involuntarily.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The old wise woman looked across the bank of bobbing
-heads about her and half smiled, in a weary, hopeless
-manner that sent a pang straight to Garde’s heart.
-She knew that Goody was saying, “Never mind me,
-dear,” and this only made it all the more unendurable.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Goody had been hustled by in a moment. The dust
-arose from the scurrying feet. The hobble-de-hoy
-pageant went rapidly toward the town, its numbers being
-momentarily augumented, as fresh persons heard the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_413'>413</span>disturbance rising and coming near, on the summer
-air, and joined the throng.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Unwilling to let her friend be conveyed thus away
-without her even knowing where she was now to be
-taken, Garde followed the last of the stragglers, and so
-saw the crowd become a mob, in the more populous
-streets of the town, and finally beheld Goody hurried
-to one of the prisons and shut out of sight behind the
-doors.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The jail was the one into which, six years before,
-Adam Rust had been so infamously thrown.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_414'>414</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER XIV.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>GARDE’S SUBTERFUGE.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>Nearly</span> as strong and well as ever, Adam Rust
-heard Garde’s excited and desperate tale of Goody’s
-capture with an indignation which far outran her own.
-He failed to realize, at first, the full import of Goody’s
-position. Then, as Garde made him understand the
-almost inevitable execution, staring this old woman-friend
-in the face, at the end of a trial from which
-Truth would fly moaning, with her hands to her ears,
-the rover would have buckled on his sword and gone to
-batter down the jail to set the old wise woman free,
-had his sweetheart not restrained him with all her
-powers of dissuasion.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, we have got to be far more clever than that,”
-she said. “We have got to get her out of there
-quietly—so quietly that we can get her away—a long
-way off, before the awful crowds shall find it out.
-Help me to do this. Help me to get her out cunningly,
-or we shall fail—and to-night it will all be too late.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Couldn’t the Governor pardon her out?” said
-Adam. “Why has he gone away at such a time?
-Here, couldn’t Mrs. Phipps write a pardon? We
-could take it to the jailer, and try him. If he then
-refused to release our friend, we could try with a little
-gold in his hand. Mrs. Phipps—Mrs. Phipps,” he
-called to the Captain’s wife.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_415'>415</span>The plump little woman would have done anything
-on earth for Adam—her boy—and for Garde, whom
-she loved no less, but she shook her head at this new
-proposal. The potentialities of the position in which
-William’s sudden elevation had placed her still gave
-her a little fright to contemplate. She knew nothing
-of the powers of a Governor, still less of those of a
-Governor’s wife.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I would be glad to do this thing, dear Adam,” she
-said, “for your sake, or Garde’s, or even for old Goody
-herself, but can I? Would I dare? I fear you hardly
-know the temper of these people on this question of
-witches. They are mad.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Try it,” said Adam. “We can do no less than to
-give it a trial. The jailer will know of no reason for
-limiting the Governor’s prerogatives, nor even those of
-his good wife. Write what I shall dictate, and let us
-make the attempt. A bit of boldness is often as good
-as an army.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Never able to resist when Adam begged or even suggested,
-Goodwife Phipps wrote, as he directed, one of
-the most sweeping and imperious pardons ever reduced
-to cold language. This being duly sanded, and approved,
-Rust folded it up and placed it safely in his
-pocket.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Now then, John Rosella,” he said to Garde, who
-blushed prettily, in spite of her many conflicting emotions,
-“even supposing this works its charm, we have
-only then made a good beginning. I must have a
-horse on which to convey old Goody out of the reach
-of harm, when they find she has slipped between their
-fingers. And the horse must be my own. No more
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_416'>416</span>borrowed horses will do for me. Therefore content
-your mind, sweetheart, while I go forth to make my
-needed purchases.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He kissed her, while Goodwife Phipps bustled off
-importantly about her duties, and reassuring her that
-all should yet be well for Goody, he went out into the
-glorious sunlight, and felt his old-time vigor spring
-forward—from the warmth and the joyousness of
-Nature—to meet him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But the matter of finding a horse in Boston was not
-one to be disposed of lightly. He hunted far and wide,
-for of those which were offered for sale, many were
-old, a few were lame and others were vicious. These
-latter he would have liked, for himself, since they
-challenged him, their spirit against his, but foregoing
-the pleasant anticipation of a battle royal, he rejected
-offers right and left, until he had used up the morning
-completely, and at length felt obliged to be satisfied
-with a somewhat undersized bay, who nevertheless
-seemed strong and otherwise fit for the business in
-hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde in the meantime had grown nervous with impatience,
-afraid as she was, of one of those swift, inhuman
-trials of Goody which so often were the subterfuges
-of the fanatics for rushing a person pre-condemned,
-to the death from which there was no
-escape.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I have thought the matter over calmly,” said Adam,
-who knew nothing of real calmness in a moment of daring,
-“and I feel certain we shall double our chances of
-success by waiting till dark, or near it, when the jailer
-might be persuaded to think we could get her away unnoticed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_417'>417</span>noticed by the rabble, and so might consent to
-the plan, when otherwise he would think he must
-refuse.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There was reason in this, as Garde could see.
-Making Adam promise to take a rest, before the time
-should be ripe for their enterprise, she went home to
-David Donner, to set things to rights, and otherwise
-to keep abreast of her little housewifely duties. She
-found the old man excited, by a call which had come
-for his services, at noon.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>One of the seven magistrates who sat in the court of
-Oyer and Terminer, to try the witches, had fallen ill.
-David had been requested to assume his place. At
-this wholly unexpected news, Garde felt her heart leap
-with a sudden rejoicing. If the worst came, Goody
-would have at least one friend at the trial, to whose
-words of wisdom the Council had so frequently listened.
-She ran to the old man and gave him a kiss.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, I am so glad, dear Grandther,” she said.
-“They know how wise you are and just!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Thankee, child, thankee,” said the white-haired
-old man, smiling with the pleasure which the whole
-transaction had excited in his hungering breast.
-“They recognize me—a little—at last.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Yet so eager had the girl become, and so frightened
-of what the results were almost certain to be, if Goody
-ever came to her trial, during the absence of Governor
-Phipps, that she and Adam were hastening off to the
-jail the moment the twilight began to descend on the
-town.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Jailer Weaver owes me some little favor,” she said
-as they came to the place, “and he really owes a great
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_418'>418</span>deal to Goody.” Her voice was shaking, her teeth
-felt inclined to chatter, so excited was all this business
-making her feel.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Vivid recollections of those terrible moments in
-which she had come to see Mrs. Weaver and then had
-hovered about the prison, to liberate Adam, made her
-cling to his arm in terror of what they were now about
-to attempt.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam himself, wondering if the jailer would by any
-chance remember his face, and the break he and the
-poor old beef-eaters had made, had the boldness and
-the love of adventure come surging up in his heart,
-till he petted the hilt of his sword with a clenching
-fist.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They entered at the door of that portion of the
-prison building where the Weavers made their residence,
-as this would excite no suspicion on the part
-of the few pedestrians in the street. The nature
-of their business being partially secret, they chose to
-interview the jailer in the room which answered for his
-parlor.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Weaver was a man who constantly raised and lowered
-his eyebrows—a habit he had gained through years of
-alternately scowling at his guests and then looking
-puzzled or surprised that, being so innocent as they
-always were, they should still be brought to such a
-place. He listened to Adam’s flowery and courtly address,
-in which he announced the advent of Goody’s
-pardon, with at least a hundred of these eyebrow contortions.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But the Governor never pardons before a trial,”
-he said. “Else, how should he know but what he
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_419'>419</span>was pardoning a very guilty person indeed? If he had
-pardoned her, or if he will pardon her, after the trial,
-I shall be glad to give her freedom, poor soul. But
-you see she hasn’t even been tried, and moreover this
-pardon comes from the Governor’s good lady.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Garde’s heart sank. The man was so unanswerably
-logical.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But, my good man,” said Adam, “I tell you this
-would be the Governor’s pleasure. And the Governor
-stands in the shoes of the King, in matters of grave
-importance. Now call in any one and ask if I am not
-the Governor’s friend—his secretary, indeed.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I know your face,” said Weaver, who remembered
-Adam well enough, as a former guest of the house, but
-who chose to say nothing on delicate subjects. “I
-saw you with Sir William the day he landed. Oh,
-aye, you are his friend, I know that well. But——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Good!” Adam interrupted. “Then, the Governor—who
-stands, mind you, in the King’s shoes, in
-this matter, is away. I, being his friend, for the moment
-take his place. Therefore I stand in the King’s
-shoes myself, and I desire this woman’s pardon!
-Bring forth your ink, and I shall add my signature to
-the document, in the King’s name.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Weaver was bewildered. This reasoning was as clear
-as a bell, yet he knew what the angry mobs would soon
-be demanding from his stronghold.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But—but there can be no pardon, as I said, till
-after trial,” he stammered.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What!” said Rust striding back and forth, while
-Garde looked on and trembled, “do you refuse to
-obey your King?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_420'>420</span>“Oh, sir, alas, no,” said the jailer. “But what can
-I do?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Do? Do? My friend, do you value your daily
-bread? Do you wish to retain your office? Or shall
-the Governor grant your dismissal?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This was touching the man on a spot where he could
-endure no pressure. He quailed, for he found himself
-between the devil—as represented by the fanatical
-spirit of the mob—and the deep sea into which the loss
-of his place would plunge him at once.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, don’t turn me out!” he begged, convinced
-well enough of Adam’s power with the Governor. “I
-would do anything to please you, sir, and I have done
-much already to please the Governor. I am an old
-man, sir, and we have saved nothing, and we know no
-other trade, and many people hate us. There would
-be no place for me and mine. Do not turn us away
-for this.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t wish to turn you away,” said Adam. “I
-merely ask you to release this woman.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“She has never done any harm,” put in Garde.
-“She has been very good to your wife and you. Surely
-you could spare her this.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I would, Miss, I would,” said the wretched man.
-“I am sick to death of this terrible craze of witches,
-but what can I do? If I do not release her, I shall
-lose my place and starve. If I do let her go, I shall
-have all the mobs down upon me, when they find there
-is no witch for trial. How can I show them a paper,
-instead of a prisoner? My life might pay the forfeit.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_421'>421</span>“Oh, Adam, this is terrible,” said Garde. “What
-can we do?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“After trial, you can surely get her pardoned,” the
-man insisted. “You have the power. You can save
-her then.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, they will never wait!” cried the girl. “They
-may try her to-night, and find her guilty and hang her
-the first thing in the morning!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Weaver turned pale. He knew that what she said
-might in all probability be true.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But I cannot give them a bit of paper instead of a
-prisoner,” he repeated. “If you will bring me some
-one else, who will vouch for the mob’s respect of your
-pardon, as you vouch for the Governor——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“We’ve got to have her,” interrupted Adam. “You
-can say she escaped, by her power of witchcraft. Release
-her, or look your last on these cheerful walls.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, but, Adam,” said Garde, “why should we make
-such misery and trouble for one person—for two persons,
-indeed with Mrs. Weaver—in trying to save
-another? I like these good people. They are very
-kind to their prisoners. They have spent much of
-their own money to give them little comforts. Can we
-not think of some other way, as good as this, to get
-poor Goody out and do no harm to innocent people?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Weaver was ready to break into tears. He started
-to repeat, “Bring me some one to——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh! Oh, I know! I know what to do!” cried
-Garde, interrupting. “All you need is some one else
-to blame, when they find she is gone! It would never
-be your fault if some one took her place. It would be
-a trick on you, when they found it out. I’ll take her
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_422'>422</span>place. I’ll take her place, because when they find out
-they are starting to try only me, they will have to
-laugh it off as a joke. And Grandther is one of the
-magistrates—appointed to-day—so they will have to
-let me go—and Goody will be far away, by then—and
-no one will get into trouble!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“So one could blame me—nor they wouldn’t,” said
-Weaver, slowly, “but as for you, Miss——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Then we can do it!” Garde broke in, a little
-wildly. “Oh, hurry! we might he too late. You can
-put me wherever Goody is, and I can change clothes
-with her, and then, Adam——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, but——” started Adam.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, let me, dear. I shan’t mind it a bit. And in
-the morning it will all be over, and Goody will be safe,
-and no one harmed—and there is no other way. And
-I want to! Oh, Goody has been like a mother to me!
-I must do it. Please don’t say anything more. Mr.
-Weaver, take me to Goody now!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You brave little woman!” said Adam, his own
-courage leaping to greet this intrepid spirit in his
-sweetheart. “I believe you can do it! We shall
-win!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Come back as early as you can,” said Garde, on
-whom a thought of the lonely part of the business was
-suddenly impressed. “It won’t seem long. And
-when it is over, I shall feel so glad I could do a little
-thing for Goody. We must hurry. Every moment
-may be precious!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But, lassie——” the jailer tried to insist once more,
-“you——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Please don’t talk any more,” said Garde. “Take
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_423'>423</span>me to her now. And when somebody looking like me
-comes back, let her go out by Mrs. Weaver’s door
-with Mr. Rust.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, I, but——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“In the King’s name, no more talk,” interrupted
-Adam. Then he turned to Garde. “You won’t be
-timid, little mate?” he said. “I shall not be gone
-past midnight at the most.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I shall be so glad to think I am leaving Goody in
-your strong, dear hands,” said Garde, with a smile of
-love in her eyes. “Good-by, dear,—good night, till
-the morning.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She kissed him, and smiling at him bravely, followed
-the jailer, who saw that his place in the jail depended
-now on compliance with Adam’s and Garde’s demand.
-The tremulous pressure of her little hand in his remained
-with Adam when she had gone. He wondered
-if he were doing well, thus to let his sweetheart assume
-poor Goody’s place. Then his own boldness of spirit
-rebuked him and he laughed at the imaginary scene
-of the magistrates, when they should finally discover
-their trial to be nothing but a farce.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Weaver meantime took a candle in his hand and led
-the way down the corridor of the prison. Garde
-hesitated when she saw him descending the steps.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Why—where is she?” she asked, timidly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“In the dungeon, lass,” said the jailer. “I was
-over sorry, but it could not be helped. We are full
-everywhere else. But I shall leave you the light, and
-anything you like for comfort. Only, if you hear any
-one coming, blow out the candle straightway, or I
-shall be in a peck of troubles.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_424'>424</span>Quelling her sense of terror, and thinking of
-Goody, alone in that darkness, with such dreadful
-fates awaiting her reappearance among the people, she
-promised herself again it would soon be over, and so
-followed resolutely down into the hole where Adam
-had once been locked, in those long-past days of
-despair.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_425'>425</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER XV.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>THE MIDNIGHT TRIAL.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>Goody Dune</span> was a frightened and pitiable spectacle,
-with her age and the terrors of the dungeon and coming
-execution upon her. She struggled in an effort to
-maintain a show of composure, at sight of Garde and
-the jailer. Nevertheless she would not, at first, listen
-to a word of the plan of substitution, to get her away
-from the prison.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When at last she had fairly overridden Goody’s objections,
-and had made her complete the exchange of
-garments, Garde kissed her with all the affection of a
-daughter, and sent her forth to Adam’s protection.
-She then heard the lock in the dungeon-door shoot
-squeakingly into place with a little thrill of fear, which
-nothing human and womanly could have escaped.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She listened to the footfalls receding down the corridor,
-and then the utter silence of the place began to
-make itself ring in her ears. She looked about her, by
-the aid of the flickering light which the tallow dip was
-furnishing, at the barren walls, the shadows, and the
-heap of straw in the corner. At all this she gave a
-little shiver of dread.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>All the excitement which had buoyed her up to
-make this moment possible escaped from her rapidly.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_426'>426</span>She began to think how Goody must have felt, till her
-moment of deliverance came. Then she thought of
-what Adam had endured when, lame, hungry, exhausted
-and defamed, he had been thrown with violence into this
-horrible hole, from which he could have had no thought
-of being rescued.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She took the candle in hand and went in search of
-the tiny window, down through which she had dropped
-him the keys. When she saw it, she gave a little
-shudder, to note how small it was, and how it permitted
-no light to enter the place.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Returning then to a paper, filled with bread and
-butter, pie, cake and cold meat, which Weaver had
-fetched her, while she and Goody had been exchanging
-garments, she tried to eat a little, to occupy her time
-and her thoughts. But she could only take a sip of
-the milk, which stood beside the paper, and a nibble at
-the bread. To eat, while in her present state of mind,
-was out of the question.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The stillness seemed to increase. She felt little
-creeps of chill running down her shoulders. What a
-terrible thing it would be to have no hope of leaving
-this fearful cellar! Suppose anything should happen
-to Adam, to prevent him from returning! How long
-would it be till morning? Surely she must have
-been there nearly an hour already. She clasped her
-hands, that were cold as ice. She almost wished she
-had not tried this solution of the difficulty. Then she
-remembered the wise old woman, who had made her
-neighbors’ children her own care—as she had no sons
-nor daughters of her own—and who had been sister,
-mother and friend to Hester Hodder, and guardian
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_427'>427</span>angel, teacher and kindly spirit over herself. This
-made her calmer, for a time, and again courageous.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When once more the dread of the place and the
-ringing silence and the doubts that seemed to lurk in
-the shadows, came stealing back, she thought of Adam,
-rehearsing every incident in every time they had ever
-met. And thus she lingered long over that walk from
-Plymouth to Boston.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the midst of sweet reveries which really did much
-to dissipate her qualms and chills, she heard someone
-walking heavily along in the corridor above her.
-Swiftly calling to mind what the jailer had said about
-the light, she blew it out and stood trembling with
-nervousness, waiting for the door to open before
-her.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But the sounds of heavy boots on the upper floor
-presently halted. Then they retreated. She breathed
-more freely. And then—she suddenly felt the darkness
-all about her.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Fear that some one had been about to enter had, for
-the moment, made her oblivious of the curtain of
-gloom which closed in so thickly when she blew out
-the candle. Now, when she realized that she could
-not again ignite that wick, a horror spread through
-her, till she closed her eyes and sank on the floor in
-despair.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The time that passed was interminable. She had
-not thought of how terrible the dungeon would be
-without the candle. She could almost have screamed,
-thus to be so deprived of the kindly light which had
-made the place comparatively cheerful. But she
-pulled up her resolution once again, thinking how
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_428'>428</span>Goody and Adam had endured nothing but darkness,
-and with no hope of succor such as she could see illuminating
-her hours of dread.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Midnight came at last and found Garde unstrung.
-When the tramp of many feet rang above her, at last,
-she welcomed the thought that some one was near.
-She hoped it was morning and that Adam had returned.
-But then she heard a jangle of keys, and
-footfalls on the steps leading down to where she was,
-and her heart stood still.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the natural consternation which the hour, the
-darkness and the suspense had brought upon her, she
-hastily hid her head and face in Goody’s shawl, and
-bending over, to represent the older woman, she
-tremblingly saw the door swing open and heard the
-jailer command her to come forth.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>With her heart beating violently and her knees
-quaking beneath her, Garde came out, relieved in
-some ways to flee from that awful hole of darkness,
-but frightened, when she saw the array of stern-faced
-men, who had come, as she instantly comprehended,
-to take her away to a trial.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There was not one among the five or six men that
-she knew. She remembered the faces of Pinchbecker
-and Higgler, having seen them in the morning, when
-Goody was taken, but the others were witnesses that
-Randolph had sent from Salem, experts in swearing
-away the lives of witches. They too had been present
-at the capture of Goody.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Undetected as she was, Garde was surrounded by
-this sinister group of men, and was marched away,
-out of the jail, into the sweet summer’s night air, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_429'>429</span>so down a deserted street, to a building she had never
-entered before in her life.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Hardly had the prison been left behind when Adam
-Rust, swiftly returning, after having readily provided
-for the safe escape of Goody Dune, came galloping into
-Boston, his brain on fire with a scheme of boldness.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He had made up his mind to ride straight to the
-prison, demand admittance, compel the jailer to deliver
-Garde up at once, carry her straight to a parson’s,
-marry his sweetheart forthwith, and then take her off
-to New Amsterdam. Weaver could blame the rescue
-of the witch to him and be welcome. He could even
-permit Adam to tie him and gag him, to make the
-story more complete, but submit he should, or Rust
-would know the reason. His wild ride had begotten
-the scheme in his adventure-hungry mind.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He knew the residence of the parson who had
-married Henry Wainsworth and Prudence Soam, the
-week before he and Phipps had returned to Massachusetts,
-for Garde had told him all the particulars, time
-after time—having marriage in her own sweet thought,
-as indeed she should. He therefore went first to this
-parson’s, knocked hotly on the door, to get him out
-of bed, and bade him be prepared to perform the ceremony
-within the hour.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The parson had readily agreed, being a man amenable
-to sense and to the luster of gold in the palm, wherefore
-Adam had gone swiftly off to work the <i>tour de
-force</i> on which all else depended. He arrived at the
-jail when Garde had been gone for fifteen minutes.
-Here he learned with amazement of the midnight trial
-to which she had been so summarily led.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_430'>430</span>Trembling like a leaf, Garde was conducted into a
-chamber adjoining the room wherein the dread magistrates
-were sitting, with their minds already convinced
-that this was a case so flagrant that to permit the witch
-to live through the night would be to impair the
-heavenly heritage of every soul in Boston.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Here the girl was left, in charge of Gallows and two
-other ruffianly brutes, whose immunity from the evil
-powers of witches had been thoroughly established in
-former cases. In the meantime her accusers had gone
-before the magistrates, ahead of herself, to relate the
-unspeakable things of which Goody Dune had been
-guilty.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Shaking, not daring to look up, nor to utter a sound,
-Garde had tried to summon the courage to throw off
-the whole disguise, laugh at her captors and declare
-who she was, but before she should arrive in the presence
-of Grandther Donner, who would protect her
-and verify her story, at least as to who she was, she could
-not possibly make the attempt.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Terribly wrought upon by the suspense of waiting
-to be summoned before that stern tribunal of injustice,
-Garde began to think of the anger which these unmirthful
-men might show, when she revealed the joke before
-their astounded eyes. She swayed, weakly, almost
-ready to swoon, so great became her alarm.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She could hear the high voices of Psalms Higgler
-and Isaiah Pinchbecker, penetrating through the door.
-They were giving their testimony, in which they had
-been so well coached by Edward Randolph, who was
-even now in there among the witnesses, disguised, and
-keeping as much as possible in the background.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_431'>431</span>The door presently opened and Garde was bidden to
-enter. Her heart pounded with tumultuous strokes in
-her breast. She could barely put one foot before the
-other. She caught at the door-frame to prop herself
-up as she entered the dimly-lighted, shadow-haunted
-room.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Then her gaze leaped swiftly up where the magistrates
-were sitting. She saw strangers only—men she
-knew in the town, but not David Donner. She felt she
-should faint, when one of the men turned about, and
-she recognized her grandfather, looking feverish, wild-eyed
-and hardly sane. This was why she had not
-known him sooner.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, Grandther!” she suddenly cried. “It’s I!
-It’s Garde! Oh, save me! Oh, take me home!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She flung off Goody’s shawl, and darting forward ran
-to her grandfather’s side and threw her arms like a
-child about his neck, where she sobbed hysterically and
-laughed and begged him to take her away.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The court was smitten with astonishment from which
-no one could, for the moment, recover.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Randolph had pressed quickly forward. But he now
-retired again into the shadow.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What’s this? What’s this?” demanded the chief
-of the magistrates, sternly. “What business is this?
-What does this mean? Where is——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Witchcraft! A young witch! Cheated! We are
-cheated! The young witch has cheated us of the old
-witch!” cried Pinchbecker, shrilly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My child! My child!” said David Donner. “This
-is no witch, fellow-magistrates and friends.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“She has cheated us of the old witch!” repeated
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_432'>432</span>Pinchbecker wildly. “She has daily consorted with a
-notorious witch. She has aided a witch to escape.
-She is a witch herself! We know them thus! She is
-a dangerous witch! She is a terrible young witch!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“How comes this?” said the chief again, excitedly.
-His associates also demanded to know how this business
-came to be possible, and what was its meaning.
-The room was filled with the shrill cries of the men denouncing
-Garde more stridently than before, and with
-the exclamations of astonishment and shouts to know
-what had become of the witch they had come there to try.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>During all this confusion, Garde was clinging to her
-grandfather and begging him to take her home.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Have the girl stand forth,” commanded the chief
-magistrate. “We must know how this business has
-happened.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Three of the men laid hold of Garde and took her
-from her wondering grandfather’s side. She regained
-her composure by making a mighty effort.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Goody Dune was no witch!” she cried. “You all
-know what a good, kind woman she has been among
-you for years—till this madness came upon us! She
-is a good woman—and I love her, for all she has done.
-She is not a witch—you know she is not a witch!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The witnesses, who knew all the ways in which
-witches were to be detected, raised their voices at once,
-in protest.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Order in the Court!” commanded the magistrate.
-“Young woman, have you connived to let this Goody
-Dune escape?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“She was no witch!” repeated Garde, courageously
-now. “I knew you would try to send her to the gallows.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_433'>433</span>I knew she was fore-condemned! I could do
-no less—and you men could have done no less, had you
-been less mad!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Blasphemy!” cried Higgler. “She is convicted
-out of her own mouth!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“When a witch is young,” cried Pinchbecker, “she
-can work ten times more awful evils and arts!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>One of the magistrates spoke: “No woman ever yet
-was beautiful and clever both at one time. If she be
-the one, she cannot be the other. This young woman,
-being both, is clearly a witch!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“She’s a witch—worse than the other!” screamed
-another of the witnesses. “Condemn her! Condemn
-her!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, Grandther,” cried Garde, “take me away
-from these terrible men!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Randolph now came sneaking forth, out of the
-shadow.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“This is that same young woman,” he cried, “who
-lost the colony its charter!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The charter!” screamed David Donner, instantly
-a maniac. “The charter! She lost us the charter!
-Witch! The charter! Condemn her! Kill her!
-The charter! She! She! She! Kill her!—Where
-is she? The charter! The charter! The charter!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>With his two bony, palsied hands raised high above
-his head, like fearful talons, with his white hair awry
-over his brow, with his eyes blazing with maniacal fire,
-the old man had suddenly stood up and now he came
-staggering forward, screaming in a blood-chilling voice
-and making such an apparition of horror that the men
-fell backward from his path.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_434'>434</span>“Oh Grandther! Grandther!” cried Garde, holding
-forth her arms and going toward him, to catch him
-as she saw him come stumbling toward her.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Witch!” screamed the old man shrilly. “Kill
-her! Kill her! I never coerced her! The charter!
-Witch! Witch! The charter!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He suddenly choked. He clutched at his heart in a
-wild, spasmodic manner, and with froth bursting from
-his lips, he fell headlong to the floor and was dead.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“She has killed him!” cried Higgler. “She has
-killed him with her hellish power!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Witch! A murderous young witch!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Condemn her! Condemn her!” came in a terrible
-chorus.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“To the gallows! Hale her to the gallows!” Randolph
-added from the rear.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The man called Gallows thought this referred to
-him. He grinned. He and the two brutes who had
-handled many defenseless witches before, came
-toward the girl, who stood as if petrified, her hand
-pressed against her heart in dumb anguish.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Suddenly the door was thrown open and in there came
-Governor Phipps, cane in hand, periwig adjusted, cloak
-of office on his shoulders. He was blowing his nose as
-he entered, so that no one saw his face plainly, yet all
-knew the tall, commanding figure and the dress.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What, a trial, at night, and without me?” he
-roared, in a towering rage, which many present had
-already learned to fear. “Is this your province, you
-magistrates, assembled to deal out justice? Do you
-heckle a defenseless woman like this? Disperse!—the
-whole of you, instantly. I command it! If you have
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_435'>435</span>condemned, I pardon. The prisoner will leave the
-court with me!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The men, craven that they were, he could deceive,
-but Garde knew the voice, the gait, the bearing of her
-lover. She sprang to his side with a little cry of
-gladness and clung to him wildly, as his strong arm
-swung boldly about her waist. She could hardly
-more than stand, so tremendous had been the stress of
-her fearful emotions.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Scorning to expend further scolding or shaming upon
-them, and comprehending that delay had no part in
-his game, Adam turned his back on the slinking company
-and strode away, half supporting Garde, who hung
-so limply in his hold.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Randolph, baffled, afraid to reveal himself by denouncing
-the imposture which he had been only a
-second behind Garde in detecting, stole close to his
-henchmen and whispered the truth in their ears.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Higgler and Pinchbecker, conscious of the blood of
-Adam on their hands, felt their knees knock suddenly
-together. The man must be the very devil himself.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_436'>436</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER XVI.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>THE GAUNTLET RUN.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>With</span> his bride up behind him on his horse, the
-rover spurred swiftly away from the parson’s, still within
-the hour, in which he had promised to return to his
-wedding. Unafraid of whatsoever the world, before
-or behind, might contain, while her lover-husband
-lived at her side, Garde felt a sense of exhilaration, at
-leaving Boston, such as she had never known in all
-her life.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>With her grandfather dead and Goody no longer at
-the little cottage on the skirts of town, she had no
-ties remaining, save those at the houses of Soam and
-Phipps. And what were these, when weighed in the
-balance against Adam Rust—her Adam,—her mighty
-lord?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Trembling and clinging as she was, he had carried
-her off. Gladly she had gone to the parson’s. Her
-heart now rejoiced, as he told her that Massachusetts
-was behind them forever. For its people, with their
-harsh, mirthless lives of austerity and fanaticism, she
-had only love enough to give them her pity. But her
-life was life indeed, when, ever and anon, Adam halted
-the horse, lest she fear a fall, and twisted about to
-give her a kiss and a chuckle of love and to tell of the
-way he had cheated the mob and the court of their
-witches.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_437'>437</span>“Make no doubt of it, you are a witch—one of
-the sweetest, cleverest, bravest, most adorable little
-witches that ever lived,” he said, “and I love you and
-love you for it, my darling wife!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They had left the town early in the morning. By
-break of day they were not so far from Boston as Adam
-could have wished. The horse had been wearied by
-carrying double, when he conveyed Goody Dune to a
-place of safety,—so that the old woman could subsequently
-join himself and Garde in New Amsterdam,—and
-therefore he had halted the animal humanely,
-from time to time, as the load under which the good
-beast was now working was not a trifle.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Having avoided the main road, for the greater part
-of the remaining hours of darkness, Adam deemed it
-safe at last to return to the highway, as he thought it
-unlikely they had been pursued under any circumstances.
-Thus the sun came up as they were quietly
-jogging along toward a copse of trees through which
-the road went winding with many an invitation of
-beauty to beckon them on.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Crossing a noisy little brook, the rover permitted the
-horse to stop for a drink. Not to be wasting the precious
-time, Adam turned himself half way around in
-the saddle, as he had done so frequently before, and
-gave his bride a fair morning salute.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He had then barely ridden the horse a rod from the
-stream, when, without the slightest warning, the figure
-of Gallows, mounted on a great black steed, suddenly
-broke from cover among the trees and bore down upon
-them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The great hulk, sword in hand, made a quick dash
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_438'>438</span>toward the defenceless two, and slashed at Garde with
-all his fearful might.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Jerking his horse nearly out of the road, Adam
-swung from the line of the brute’s cowardly stroke, yet
-before he could do aught to prevent it, Gallows righted,
-flung out his leaden fist and dragged the girl fairly off
-from her seat, till she struck on the back of her head,
-among the rocks of the road, and lay there unconscious,
-and almost beneath the tread of the horse’s prancing
-feet.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Then the monster spurred at his horse and turning
-him back, rode to drive him madly over the prostrate
-form in the dust.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Making a short, sharp cry of anger, Adam whipped
-out his sword and dashed upon the murderous butcher
-before he could get within fifteen feet of Garde, where
-she lay in the sunlight.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Gallows had plenty of time to see him coming. The
-two met in a tremendous collision of steel on steel
-that sounded a clangor through the woods and sent the
-two swords flying from their owners’ grips.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Disarmed, the pair thudded together in a swift and
-hot embrace, sawing their horses close in, the more
-firmly and straight erect to hold their seats.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You be a fool and I be the fool-killer!” roared
-Gallows, hoarsely. He tugged with his giant strength,
-to drag Adam fairly across to his own big saddle, where
-he could either break his back or beat him to death
-with the butt of a pistol, which he was trying to draw
-with the hand that held the reins.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Slipping his wrist under the chin and his hand
-around to the fellow’s massive shoulder, Adam tilted
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_439'>439</span>back the heavy head with a force so great that Gallows
-was glad to release his hold, else he would surely have
-toppled from his perch.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The horses leaped a little apart. Back their riders
-jerked them. Again the two big human forms shot together,
-and clung in a fierce embrace, like two massive
-chunks of iron, welded together by their impact. Once
-more Gallows used his great brute strength, while
-Rust employed his wit and got his same terrible leverage
-on the monster’s neck.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>For a moment Gallows fought to try to break the
-hold, and to drag his opponent headlong from his
-horse, by kicking Adam’s animal stoutly in the flank.
-But Adam was inflicting such an agony upon him as
-he could not endure. They broke away, only to rush
-for the third time, back to this giant wrestling.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The fool will never learn. I shall kill him yet!”
-cried Rust to himself, for he went for Gallows’s neck
-as before and got it again in his hold.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He threw a tremendous strength into the struggle.
-Gallows let out a bellow. Releasing the reins, he threw
-both his arms about his foe and deliberately fell from
-his seat, with the intention of crushing Rust beneath
-his weight, on the ground.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adam’s turn in the air was the work of the expert
-wrestler. The horses shied nervously away.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The two were up on their feet and telescoped abruptly
-in one compact, struggling mass, as if two malleable
-statues of heroic size had suddenly been bent
-and intertwisted together.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>With his ox-like force Gallows began to force Adam
-backward. Adam let him expend himself in this
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_440'>440</span>manner for a moment. He then discovered the great
-hulk’s design. He meant to force the rover to where
-Garde was still lying, and so to trample upon her till
-the life should be stamped and ground from her helpless
-form.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Randolph had sent him to commit this final infamy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The rage that leaped up in Adam’s breast was a terrible
-thing. He feinted to drop as if in exhaustion.
-Gallows loosened his hold to snatch a better one, at
-once. In that second Adam dealt him a blow in the
-stomach that all but felled him where he stood.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Before he could straighten to recover, Rust was upon
-him like a tiger. Getting around the great brute’s
-side, he threw both hands around the short, thick neck
-and twisted himself into position so that he and Gallows
-were placed nearly back to back. Then with one
-movement he lifted at the man’s whole weight, with
-the monster’s head as a lever, hauled fiercely backward.
-Into the action he threw such a mighty rush of strength
-that Gallows was hoisted bodily off the ground, for a
-second, and then his neck gave forth a tremendous snap
-and was broken so fearfully that one of the jagged ends
-of a vertebra stabbed outward through the flesh, and
-dripped with red.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The whole dead weight of the fellow’s carcass rested
-for a second on Rust’s back and shoulder, and then
-Adam let him fall to the ground, where, like a slain
-hog, he rolled heavily over and moved no more.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Panting, fierce-eyed, ready to slay him again, Adam
-stood above the body for a moment, his jaws set, his
-fists clenched hard in the rage still upon him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Then he heard a little moan, and turning about saw
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_441'>441</span>Garde, attempting to raise herself upward, in the road.
-He ran to her instantly and propped her up on his
-knee.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Dearest, dearest,” he said, “are you badly hurt?
-Garde, let me help you. Don’t look—don’t look
-there. It’s all right. Here, let me get you back to
-the shade.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He took her up tenderly in his arms and carried her
-out of the road to a near-by bank of moss. Here he
-sat her down, with her back to a tree, and ran to fill
-his hat with water from the stream.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The two horses, having stopped to take a supplementary
-drink, and a nibble at the grass, were easily caught.
-The rover secured them both and tied them quickly to
-a bush, with the dragging reins. Then back to Garde
-he ran with the water.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, thank you, dear,” she said, “I don’t think I
-am hurt. But with the fright, and the fall, I think
-I must have fainted.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Thank God!” said Adam, as she drank from his
-hat and smiled in his face, a little faintly, but with an
-infinite love in her two brown eyes. “Thank God,
-for this delivery. There will be no more trouble. I
-feel it! I know it. At last we have run the gauntlet.”</p>
-<hr class='c024' />
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_442'>442</span>
- <h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER XVII.<br /> <br /><span class='c019'>BEWITCHED.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c020'><span class='sc'>In</span> his tidy little house in New Amsterdam, Adam
-sat reading a letter from Governor William Phipps,
-written at Boston.</p>
-
-<p class='c025'>“I forgyve you y<sup>r</sup> merrie empersonashun and all ye
-other things alsoe, save y<sup>e</sup> going away without goode-bye,”
-he read, “but let it pass. I w<sup>d</sup> write to say God
-Blesse you bothe. And as I have never known such a
-goode blade as y<sup>rs</sup> in fight, I w<sup>d</sup> offer you to make you
-my commander of ye forces to goe in war against ye
-French, where they do threat to harasse our peeple as
-of yore——”</p>
-
-<p class='c023'>Adam halted here and looked up at the battered old
-sword on the wall. His thought went truant, to his
-helpmate, away for a few minutes’ walk to Goody
-Dune’s. He shook his head at the Governor’s generous
-offer.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, well, William,” he said aloud, “I don’t know.
-I don’t know what may be the matter, but—no more
-fighting for me, old comrade. I think it must be that
-I—am bewitched.”</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div>THE END.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<p class='c007'>&nbsp;</p>
-<div class='tnbox'>
-
- <ul class='ul_1 c003'>
- <li>Transcriber’s Notes:
- <ul class='ul_2'>
- <li>Missing or obscured punctuation was silently corrected.
- </li>
- <li>Typographical errors were silently corrected.
- </li>
- <li>Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation were made consistent only when a predominant
- form was found in this book.
- </li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- </ul>
-
-</div>
-<p class='c007'>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WHEN A WITCH IS YOUNG ***</div>
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