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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 76784 ***
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE FAIR MISSISSIPPIAN
+
+
+[Illustration: HONORIA]
+
+
+
+
+ THE FAIR
+ MISSISSIPPIAN
+ _A NOVEL_
+
+
+ BY CHARLES EGBERT CRADDOCK
+
+[Illustration: [Logo]]
+
+ BOSTON AND NEW YORK
+ HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY
+ =The Riverside Press Cambridge=
+ 1908
+
+
+
+
+ COPYRIGHT, 1908, BY MARY N. MURFREE
+
+ ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
+
+ _Published October 1908_
+
+
+
+
+ THE FAIR MISSISSIPPIAN
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER I
+
+
+The simplest fact of this life of ours is subject to manifold and
+diverse interpretations. It was the faithful belief of Edward Desmond,
+and his inward protest, that he did not care for money. He had the true
+scholar’s disdain of the froth and fret of fashion that can but scantily
+disguise the mental shallowness of society. He was not fond of luxury.
+He had an ardor for hard work and a passionate ambition for achievement.
+He desired but a modest competence and the opportunity for mental
+development along the lines which his expanding capacities gave promise
+of compassing. Nevertheless, at twenty-four years of age, his elaborate
+education at length complete, in the prime of his intellectual powers,
+tingling with the consciousness of ability, he found that he had become
+suddenly solicitous in small matters of social precedence; he
+experienced a pained deprecation of the presence of wealth; he winced
+with a sensitive realization of poverty; he had acquired a wavering yet
+proud self-assertion, consciously futile.
+
+The change had been wrought in a time of grievous tragedy, full of
+poignancies scarcely to be adequately appreciated by the practical
+world. For less sensitive men have suffered more bitter woes. It was a
+trite tragedy, with no traits of dramatic potentialities. On the sudden
+death of his father ensued the revelation of a shattered estate, the
+usual frantic, useless effort to avert total wreck, final defeat
+culminating in the forced sale of an old home with all its
+appurtenances. The memories, the dreams, the traditions, the broken
+hopes that had hallowed the old chattels were too immaterial even for
+the cormorant-like comprehensiveness of the inventories, and these
+sanctities were all that was left for the heir.
+
+His friends, however, took an optimistic view. When the struggle was
+over,—brief, but hopeless and conclusive,—they found solace in the
+completeness of his equipment; his education was at length finished; he
+had returned to his Maryland home only the previous June from an
+elaborate course of study abroad; the world was before him. As to the
+profession of the law for which he had been destined, they cheerfully
+argued that the preliminary training and the necessary library would be
+expensive, success uncertain,—and he must needs live pending its
+delay,—the tardy emoluments disproportioned to the labor and ability
+involved. Since there seemed no vacancy in the professorial ranks of the
+small western colleges, where they had hoped he might find a chair, they
+spoke of him as having fallen upon his feet when the unusual brilliancy
+of his scholastic record brought him the offer of the tutorship of the
+three sons in a wealthy family, dwelling in the isolation of a secluded
+Mississippi plantation, the opportunity coming at the ultimate crisis of
+the painful financial emergency. For although the salary was small, in
+comparison with the allowance which the generosity of his father had
+heretofore afforded an only son, his prospective earnings would have
+abashed the honoraria of a fledgeling lawyer’s professional labors, even
+had he already attained admission to the bar. Thus, followed by few
+regrets, the last month of the year found him arrived at the scene of
+his pedagogical work.
+
+“It is Mrs. Faurie’s chief desire that her sons shall be adequately
+prepared for college. She is a great believer in individual instruction
+by a thoroughly competent educator, who can discern and—ah—strengthen
+the weaknesses, and—ah—develop special capacities in the mind of
+youth,—ah, yes! She fears that our frequent and extended tours abroad
+have cultivated their powers of superficial observation and love of
+travel at the expense of their love of study, and—ah—capacity to absorb
+theories and to concentrate their thoughts, and to take an interest in
+books, and—ah—that is the reason,—_one_ of the reasons,”—with a bow and
+smile,—“why we esteem ourselves so fortunate,—so _very_ fortunate to
+have you with us.” Nothing could be more suave than the old gentleman
+beaming upon him from the foot of the table, but Edward Desmond, after
+an effort at a receptive and grateful smile, looked down at his fork and
+turned it aimlessly in his hand, without a word in response.
+
+He had had full range of the pastures, and the harness galled him. Yet
+logically he could not find aught of fault in this smooth courtesy and
+tone of appreciation. It so became even a quasi-employer, though
+conscious of his magnanimity and sense of _noblesse oblige_. The fact
+that Desmond had grown gradually aware that Mr. Stanlett was but basking
+in the reflection of his niece’s splendors, and, although having some
+indeterminate income of his own, was content to spend the evening of his
+days in her embellished entourage, scarcely mitigated his secret
+displeasure. He felt that the old gentleman assumed a patronage which he
+had no right to exercise. Yet this resentment was inconsistent with his
+own theory that mere money had no title to homage from him. Thus Mr.
+Stanlett’s patronage, poor, should not have been less acceptable than
+Mr. Stanlett’s patronage, rich. Mrs. Faurie had not hastened to make
+Desmond welcome, but indeed he had been in the house only for an hour or
+so, and Mr. Stanlett’s urbanity was surely expansive enough to atone. He
+gave the newcomer his choice of excuses in Mrs. Faurie’s behalf: first
+the fatigue of a long drive, and again he mentioned a sore throat as her
+reason for not joining the group at the dinner-table. “She will see you
+later in the evening,” Mr. Stanlett promised.
+
+If the lady did not choose to appear at her own board for any reason
+which might seem to her good and sufficient, Desmond was in no position
+to cavil, but the old gentleman’s inadvertences in the matter gave him
+an impression of insincerity about the methods of the household which
+grated on his exacting and sensitive mood. Even the manners of the
+domestics, smooth, and deft, and obsequious in the extreme, were
+incongruous with the veiled scorn of the stranger, as a man of scant
+means, which he subtly detected in their eyes, for, the servitors of
+wealth and large pretensions, they had slight toleration of poverty out
+of their own rank of life. He perceived, too, the relish which Joel, the
+antiquated negro butler, took in the elaboration of the details of the
+daily dinner service, especially the old-fashioned custom of removing
+the cloth with each successive course, which was so deftly accomplished,
+revealing the fresh one spread below, that it seemed a prandial miracle.
+Mr. Stanlett, however, apologized in some sort.
+
+“We keep up the old style, you see. My niece says she despairs of ever
+inducing Joel to condescend to one cloth for the table at dinner, though
+she brought some very fancy centrepieces and such gimcracks from Paris
+expressly to stimulate his ambition for novelty.”
+
+Desmond felt little drawn toward his prospective pupils, one seated
+beside him and the other two opposite. They were of a type with which he
+had scant sympathy. They were younger, too, than he had reason to expect
+from the amount of the salary and his own scholastic pretensions, and
+his consequence seemed further diminished in that he should be called
+upon to teach in effect mere children. While they were not handsome of
+feature, they were extremely handsomely built and tall for their
+respective ages; but he perceived with disapproval that they lacked
+muscle. They were very apt and delicate in all the usages of the table,
+and in their elegant nicety of attire “mamma’s darling” was writ large.
+They all had good eyes, and they held up their heads in a frank,
+gentlemanlike way; but their cosmopolitan air, their easy assurance,
+their ready phrasings far beyond their years, though evidently the
+superficial result of their travels and their precocious relations with
+the world, did not serve to commend them to one who loved a boy for his
+crude boyishness. These seemed little men of the world, and they sat
+smug and silent and looked at their great-uncle with faces of filial
+gravity when, under the influence of too much old port, he began to show
+traits of the ridiculous, albeit in a genteel and refined fashion. Yet
+Desmond admitted to himself that he would not have thought it becoming
+that they should laugh. The clear pallor of the old gentleman’s lean
+face grew delicately flushed. His white hair was sparse on his long
+head, showing its bony structure. He had a white mustache, and a
+factitious idea of youth was suggested by the gleam of a very natural
+set of false teeth beneath it. Presently he began to hum, as if
+absent-minded, and at length he sang out:—
+
+ “My girl so fair, my friend so rare,
+ With these what mortal could be richer?
+ Give me but these,—a fig for care,
+ My sweet girl, my friend, and pitcher.”
+
+It was the echo of what had been a very pretty tenor voice in its prime,
+and its resonant vibrations reached and roused a parrot asleep in a
+cage, hanging in a broad, deep bay-window. The bird suddenly fluffed its
+feathers and sent out a sharp, harsh cry; then, twisting on its perch
+and swinging inverted by one claw, it sang with a painfully realistic
+imitation and with all the taunting effect of mockery:—
+
+ “My sweet girl, my friend, and pitcher.”
+
+It was too much for the decorum of the youngest of the three boys. He
+broke into an irresistible puerile cackle, and the old man, catching
+suddenly to his senses and his sobriety, flushed deeply, the crimson
+stealing through his sparse white hair and all along his polished white
+scalp.
+
+The eldest of the boys, a lad of fourteen, came at once to the rescue
+with the tact of a Chesterfield, as smooth as cream.
+
+“The idea of Polly remembering your old ‘pitcher-song,’ Uncle
+Clarence,—that’s quite a compliment. And after so long an absence.”
+
+“Very true,—very true,” said the old gentleman, readily reassured.
+“Pretty Polly,”—smiling blandly at the accomplished fowl. “Want a
+cracker?”
+
+“My pitcher,” repeated Polly, as if with the intention of prompting the
+nature of the refreshment.
+
+“Why, we have been away—let me see—my memory fails me about these little
+details. How long were we in Europe this time, Reginald?—how long is it
+since Polly heard that song?”
+
+“Eighteen months, Uncle Clarence. I shouldn’t have thought Polly capable
+of such an effort. May we be excused, sir?”
+
+“Certainly—by all means.” Then, turning to Desmond, “I don’t care to see
+young boys linger at the table after the cloth is drawn and the bottle
+is stirring over the mahogany.”
+
+The disaffected Desmond thought a continuance here might prove a
+salutary object-lesson as to the pernicious effects of vinous
+indulgence, and his eyes followed with no great favor the little
+gentlemen as, prettily bowing, they nattily made their exit. Somehow he
+was reassured to hear a clumsy shuffling of feet in the hall as, to
+judge by auricular evidence, they engaged in a scuffle outside the
+closed door. Suddenly one of them was thrown with a great bang against
+it,—then an abrupt and awe-stricken silence ensued.
+
+“Eighteen months,” Mr. Stanlett repeated. “I did not realize the length
+of our absence. In truth,” he added, with a spark of mischief kindling
+the wine in his eyes, “we stayed as long as we could,—as long as our
+money held out. My niece, Mrs. Faurie, said that she had run the full
+length of her tether. You see, Mr. Desmond,”—his voice had a
+confidential intonation,—“by the provisions of the will,”—he spoke as if
+it were the sole and singular testamentary document in human
+experience,—“Mrs. Faurie has a large income,—a very large income,—but
+she cannot go beyond it,—she cannot touch the principal.”
+
+Desmond flushed haughtily. He had had such close dealings with debts and
+financial distresses and sheer poverty of late, nay, of rivings and
+wrestings of possessions that seemed so inalienably his own as to give
+their seizure the taint of robbery, that he had scant appetite to digest
+the prosperity of others, and he was devoid of the vulgar vice of
+curiosity which might otherwise have stimulated his interest. His dark
+blue eyes were on the vast, murky spread of the Mississippi River, seen
+through the window beyond a group of pecan trees, and the Arkansas bank
+opposite, a dim line of dark gray against the fainter gray of the low
+and clouded sky. His closely cut chestnut hair showed the contour of his
+shapely head. His tall, strong figure, for he had a record in college
+athletics as well as less esteemed branches of learning, had a supple
+grace that lent an air of distinction to the well-fitting suit of gray
+he wore, for at Great Oaks Plantation no one affected evening dress for
+daily dinner. So quiet was Desmond that his attitude expressed an
+attention which he did not really accord,—in fact, it was divided by a
+fear that in Mr. Stanlett’s garrulity he was liable to trench too far on
+the private affairs of the family. However, the old gentleman occupied
+the position of host or employer, according to the viewpoint; he was
+treated with filial deference by the youthful Fauries; he had received
+the tutor with a happy blending of hospitality and authority, and
+Desmond hardly knew how he might decorously evade disclosures of
+bibulous candor which he was neither entitled nor expected to hear.
+
+“No, sir,” Mr. Stanlett repeated, “by the will she cannot touch the
+principal, but she has a large income,—a fixed sum, thirty thousand
+dollars chargeable on the whole estate, and in addition the yield of
+this Great Oaks Plantation, which varies according to the season,—a very
+large income,—_so long as she remains a widow_. Yes, sir!—a widow she
+is, and a widow she must continue! Mr. Faurie was a very arbitrary man
+in point of temper—where are those boys?—and had a grudging against any
+other man’s getting a chance to spend his money. Notwithstanding the
+losses occasioned by the Civil War and the various fluctuations in
+values since, Faurie was worth little short of a million dollars when he
+died. He had a very level head. He made a remarkable will, a good, safe,
+sound, able document.” Mr. Stanlett had an evident relish of the
+provisions of that will,—a great respect for it.
+
+“She could dissent,—she could break it, I suppose.” Desmond forced
+himself to speak. He was not to have the typical tutor’s mental privacy,
+apparently. By reason of the magnanimity his employers intended to
+affect, treating him according to his former worldly station and as an
+equal, a friend, an honored man of letters, he was to have the trial of
+participating in their social life as at a Barmecide feast, really
+sharing naught, a mere figment of fraternity and festivity.
+
+“Break the will!” Mr. Stanlett skirled in dismay. “Impossible!—after
+nearly seven years’ acquiescence. But if she could, she would only get
+what the will gives her anyhow in the event of a second marriage,—simply
+her dower rights in Tennessee,—one fourth of the personalty, a
+life-interest in a third of the realty situated there, including his
+town residence in Nashville,—just what the law would allow her had he
+died intestate,—and in the Mississippi estate a child’s part in fee
+simple, for ‘dower,’ you know, is abolished in this State, and the law
+always follows the location of the realty. But, in fact, she has seemed
+perfectly satisfied with the arrangement,—as indeed well she might be! I
+fancy, too, that she has had about enough of matrimony. She likes her
+own way, and Mr. Faurie was a self-willed, proud, dictatorial—are those
+boys gone?—And what are _you_ doing there, Joel?” glimpsing the butler,
+standing stiffly near the sideboard. “Gimme the brandy decanter. Have
+some cognac, Mr. Desmond. Light those candles, Joel,—and take yourself
+off. Want to wait on the table _all_ night?”
+
+Then as the door closed noiselessly on the accomplished old
+servant,—“That nigger has got ears as long as a mule’s,” Mr. Stanlett
+commented in parenthesis, quaffed from his glass, sucked in his thin
+lips with extreme relish, and continued his confidences.
+
+“No,—my niece’s position under the will cannot dispose her greatly to a
+second experiment in the holy estate of matrimony. Mr. Faurie was
+considerably her senior,—in fact, he was quite an old bachelor, you
+might say, when they were married. How much older he was _I_ never knew,
+for _she_ would not tolerate any mention of the disparity in
+years,—though Faurie himself, who was a very stylish, impressive man,
+was too vain and arrogant to care one whit for it. Why,”—lowering his
+voice sepulchrally,—“when he died, I couldn’t mention his age in
+preparing the newspaper announcements because _I never knew it_.”
+
+He looked hard at Desmond and nodded his head significantly. “Now, don’t
+you know that people thought _that_ was funny?”
+
+He paused to light a cigar, having pushed the tray over to Desmond.
+“Yes,” he resumed puffingly, “as my niece says, we stayed in Europe as
+long as our money lasted. We had a fine time, went everywhere, saw
+everything, were fêted and made much of to our hearts’ content,—could
+have married into the nobility more than once, for”—the candle-light
+illumined the freakish slyness and glee in his senile smile—“people over
+there don’t know how the will is fixed in regard to a second marriage.
+No! pledge you my honor! They only saw the royal way in which Mrs.
+Faurie _can spend_ money. Now,” he broke out into a chirping laugh of
+relish of the incongruity, “my niece says that she doesn’t know how she
+can make both ends meet till her next year’s income begins to accrue.
+Ha! ha! We are to stay down here in the swamp till the hot weather runs
+us out, and then we shall go down to the Gulf coast, find some cheap
+little place near Biloxi or Pass Christian, and ah—ah”—he waved the
+cloud of cigar smoke from above his venerable head—“and I for one wish
+that time were come. You see plantation life is a sort of syncope at
+best,—that is, hereabouts. Further down the river, though, things are
+livelier. In Louisiana, now, the people are of a different disposition:
+they go about, visit each other; they make festival occasions; they are
+of French extraction; they have the light heart and the happy hand.
+Nothing can subdue the old Gallic _gaieté de cœur_, not even the swamp
+country. But all this upper region of ours was settled by people from
+Tennessee, Virginia, and Kentucky,—about the time that the mania for
+raising cotton in the bottom lands of Mississippi took hold on the
+progressive planters of the Border States. We have got our inherited
+English temperament to reckon with, our seriousness, our stolidity, our
+inability to be amused by a trifle, like a kitten with a string, or a
+Creole. And, too, it is a matter of neighborhood,—we are only a few
+hundred miles from Memphis, counting by the crankings of the river, all
+our associations are with the Border States, and we are out of earshot
+of the lively Creoles. I am afraid you will find it very dull here, Mr.
+Desmond, way down in the swamp.” He had evidently forgotten the fact
+that his companion was not a guest.
+
+“I am not here for pleasure, you know,” Desmond reminded him.
+
+“True,—oh, yes,—very true,—the boys,—their education. But you are so
+like”—Desmond thought that he was about to say “one of ourselves,” but
+perhaps he was supersensitive—“ah—so very like a collegian yourself,
+that I forget you occupy the reverend position of tutor. The boys have a
+good start in the modern languages—that is, they can gabble fast
+enough—their mother’s wanderings made them regular polyglots—they had
+native teachers at every stoppage; but I reckon you will find them poor
+shakes in the rudiments of natural science, mathematics, rhetoric,
+Latin, and so forth, and I suppose that in spite of their colloquial
+glibness, they know little of the construction of the foreign languages.
+Mrs. Faurie is very anxious for their solid advancement. And she is
+determined to make this enforced quiet recruit both her fortune and
+their education. So glad to have you here, Mr. Desmond,—so glad to have
+you with us.”
+
+He hesitated, waved the smoke from his white head, and once more filled
+his glass from the decanter. It was a small liqueur glass, but its size
+was not commensurate with the potations to which it ministered, for it
+was easily replenished, and of course he drank his Cognac neat. Desmond
+began to have a shrewd idea, partly because the tiny glass had been
+intended for a mere sip of Curaçoa, that had Mrs. Faurie been present at
+dinner, the bibulous exercises would have been much curtailed. He was
+experiencing some embarrassment in thus lingering over the potations,
+for he had arrived only that afternoon, and had never met Mrs. Faurie,
+having been employed by Mr. Keith, the guardian of her sons. Desmond was
+solicitous lest the breach of etiquette and good manners be imputed to
+his connivance. Perhaps Mr. Stanlett’s proclivity was known to his
+niece, but he must seldom have such complete immunity from remonstrance
+and caution. While the old gentleman’s vinous indulgence and senile
+impairments would suggest that his preferences might with impunity be
+set aside in such an emergency, the evident appreciation and deference
+with which he was treated implied that he was a person to be reckoned
+with. Desmond dared not himself propose to quit the table: the gaucherie
+would undoubtedly offend the old gentleman as an intentional disrespect.
+Yet the tutor really felt that by thus lingering he jeopardized all his
+prospects with that far more important personage, the lady of Great Oaks
+and the head of the family. Distasteful as was his position to him, he
+valued it exceedingly the moment it was threatened, as the only
+opportunity that had offered at his utmost need. He had been positively
+penniless at the crisis of his disasters. Even had he completed his law
+course, he must have had means to live while he waited for a practice to
+accrue. He had no commercial experience or aptitudes. He had no
+available business connections. Perhaps few people realize the
+difficulty of leaping into a paying position at a vault, instead of
+growing and climbing up with it from the ground. All values seem
+accessible only _per ambages_. A moment earlier he had been recoiling
+from the employment, the situation he liked so ill, and now he was
+asking himself if he were desirous of standing behind a dry goods
+counter in a village store, that he could afford to make his entry into
+Mrs. Faurie’s household under circumstances so inauspicious,—carousing
+over the dinner-table with a man, not his host, obviously superannuated,
+in a sort irresponsible, unable perhaps to justify his own dereliction,
+much less the infringement of decorum by the tutor. The village
+store,—quotha! No refuge awaited him there. He did not know insertion
+from indigo. He had fallen into his niche, his proper place, and with a
+sudden sense of prizing its values, he quitted his chair. Not to leave
+the room abruptly and at once, however. The crisis had called his tact
+into play. He walked toward the mantelpiece as if to scrutinize the
+picture above it and thus pave the way to an easy withdrawal.
+
+“Take the candle to it,—take the candle to it. That is Faurie himself
+when he was about sixteen,—do not know how long ago it was painted,
+though! But the length of that rifle is a dead give-away,” cried Mr.
+Stanlett, from the table, his glass in his hand.
+
+As Desmond lifted one of the candles, the light revealed a large
+oil-painting executed in the florid portrait style of the middle
+nineteenth century,—a crowded canvas it was, showing a fair, vigorous
+young stripling leaning on his gun, a horse and foliage in the distance,
+a deer, with only the fine head visible, gray and antlered, lying at the
+sportsman’s feet;—the frame, inclosing all, very handsome. There were
+some other pieces in the room, which was large, square, and high-ceiled,
+all suggestive of game, and the fact that the late Mr. Faurie may have
+been a bon-vivant. One, a dainty water-color sketch of a piscatorial
+subject, the catfish of the Mississippi, bore the marks of the hand of a
+clever amateur.
+
+The wall-paper was dimly pictorial, after the style of even an earlier
+day, a mélange of forest boughs and boles of great trees through which a
+shadowy outline of the figures of a chase sped, with deer, hounds,
+horsemen, huntsmen, and horns, of “elfland faintly blowing.” A great,
+dark, mahogany press showed through small diamonded panes rows of silver
+vessels, glistering in the dusk, which neither the flicker of the candle
+nor the twilight glimmer from the great windows could annul. Several of
+the large cups bore inscriptions, and he thought they looked at the
+distance like trophies captured by some winner of the turf. As Desmond
+turned to ask the question, he perceived that the old man had sunk back
+in his tall armchair, his delicate face, still in slumber, keenly
+outlined against the cushion of its head-rest in the clear, refined
+light of the candle close at hand, his white hair gleaming frostily.
+
+Desmond stood uncertain for a moment. He saw through the bay-window that
+the night was falling fast without. But for the flicker of the moon, he
+might not have known how the great Mississippi rippled and sparkled
+under the currents of the wind. The passing of the first steamboat that
+he had yet seen he marked by her chimney-lamps, red and green, swinging
+high in the air, and their reflection, ruby and emerald, gemming the
+water. As she sheered, she showed the long line of her side-lights, like
+a string of yellow topazes. She did not turn nor approach, but sounded
+her whistle as if for a landing, and he wondered at this. The boat was
+saluting the place by way of compliment, for it was known that the queen
+was in residence, so to speak, and Mrs. Faurie shipped much cotton from
+the contemned and avoided plantation in the old way by water, for the
+almost omnipresent railroads were still distant from Great Oaks Landing.
+Presently the lights were quenched, the craft had passed beyond his
+view, the moon was overcast, and only the gray night was visible from
+the window. Desmond seized his opportunity for escape. He placed the
+candle he held upon the table, and with a noiseless step and a furtive,
+apprehensive eye, as if the exacting old gentleman might rouse to
+displeasure and reproach at a mere rustle, he quitted the room, leaving
+his companion, his empty glass still poised in his hand, asleep in his
+chair.
+
+The mansion at Great Oaks Plantation was as ill-lighted by night as are
+most residences dependent still on candle and kerosene. Unless, indeed,
+some festival occasion demanded extra brilliancy, only the gleam from
+the chandelier in the main hall guided the exit from the dining-room
+through a cross-hall, the entry, so called. Desmond had not the
+necessity for wariness that might have befitted the steps of Mr.
+Stanlett, but he paused in the dim entry, marking the subdued glow at
+the intersection with the main hall, then carefully directed his steps
+thither. Even thus he ran over the “bike” of one of the boys,
+inadvertently placed where it might most opportunely trip the
+unsuspecting pedestrian in these glooms, and threw it upon the floor
+with a tremendous clatter. To his vexation he heard a door open in the
+hall beyond and a feminine voice call out unintelligibly, whether in
+inquiry or warning or commiseration he did not accurately discern in his
+confusion. He hastily set the wheel out of harm’s way against the wall,
+and with a swift, prompt step advanced up the lighted hall toward the
+open door, which he perceived led into the parlor where he had been
+received earlier in the afternoon. A large lamp on a high, old-fashioned
+pedestal stood on a round, marble-topped centre table; a wood fire
+blazed with a white light in the great chimney-place, and the brass
+andirons and fender glittered responsively; an old-fashioned crimson
+velvet carpet was on the floor, and long crimson satin damask curtains
+hung over lace draperies at the windows. In the midst of this atmosphere
+of glow and warmth the lady of Great Oaks stood with expectant mien,
+awaiting him.
+
+Somehow she was so different from his mental image, from what he was
+prepared to see, that he was disconcerted for a moment. He had imagined
+a middle-aged frump favored by fortune, portly, puffy, rubicund,
+overfed, overdressed, bursting with self-importance, smiling in creases,
+of husky voice and fixed opinions, and laying down the law. This was a
+woman seemingly as young as himself; tall, slender, regal, with rich
+brown hair in a high pompadour roll, an exquisitely white, delicate
+complexion, luminous gray eyes, with a marvelous capacity for
+expression, a clear, coercive glance delivered from beneath long black
+eyelashes, and finely drawn black eyebrows, perfectly straight. She wore
+a gown of thick, creamy lace, some fabric rich of effect though not of
+commensurate cost, one of the pretty fads of the day, and about her slim
+waist was twisted a soft, silken sash in Roman stripes of pink and azure
+and amber, the long ends hanging knotted at one side. The sentiment of
+youth that clung about her presence was oddly incongruous with her
+assured address, replete with authority and the manner of seniority.
+
+“This is Mr. Desmond,” she said, in a clear, dulcet, vibratory voice, as
+she advanced and held out her hand. “So sorry not to have met you at
+dinner! But I am sure the rest did what they could for you. We are all
+so glad to have you here.”
+
+He seated himself in the fauteuil she indicated, and she sank down into
+one on the opposite side of the table in the blended light of lamp and
+fire. She fixed her disconcerting eyes full upon him, as if utterly
+unaware of their bewildering beauty, gravely scrutinizing him, evidently
+“sizing him up,” taking her impressions of his mental quality and
+personal fitness for the position.
+
+“There are many places on the river which are very attractive. But we
+are differently situated. We are so far from any neighbors,—quite
+isolated. It really seems a godsend that you are willing to come to us
+in the swamp.”
+
+As she talked on her homely themes, he was irritated to be so
+tongue-tied, but somehow he could not reconcile the situation; and as
+she looked straight at him from beneath those level brows, he gazed
+spellbound at her.
+
+“My three big babies are too old for the nest, I know, and in fact they
+are toppling out. But I can’t bear to send them off as yet, and I have
+great faith in home influence and individual teaching.”
+
+Desmond thought if he could but shut his eyes for one moment; he could
+see the kind of frump whom her sage, staid discourse would befit.
+
+“I think they can be prepared here for college, right here in the swamp
+with me,—and then—why, we shall see what we shall see. And now,
+good-night. I will not detain you.” She touched a bell, and as the brisk
+young footman’s black face appeared in the door,—“See that the lamp is
+lighted in Mr. Desmond’s room, and that the fire is burning well.”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER II
+
+
+Desmond, dismissed, felt cut through and through. It was no failure of
+courtesy, but the note of indifference, of complete self-absorption,
+impressed him; yet how could he expect Mrs. Faurie to be interested in
+her sons’ tutor except from her own viewpoint. To his apprehension it
+was as if in some psychic magic he had shifted his identity. He did not
+recognize himself in this null, unassertive personality. So lately he
+had been the centre of fond hopes, the pride of his father’s life. He
+was an object of mark at his university; his scholarship had been worthy
+the respect of the faculty. He recalled the words of their glowing
+commendations with a sort of pained wonder that they had ever been
+addressed to him. The president himself had not deemed it ill-advised to
+say, “With your equipment and your fine talents, we must expect great
+things of your future. Your name will reflect credit on our Alma Mater;
+I confidently believe it will stand high on the scroll.” His classmates
+rejoiced in his exceptional record, so far removed he was from envy or
+detraction. His popularity was unbounded, for he had an attractive
+personality and all the effervescence of cheery youth and
+good-fellowship, and his notability made him a lion in the social
+circles of the college town. His reputation followed him wherever he and
+his multitude of young friends had a connection; and he had enjoyed all
+the prestige of actual achievement, so amply did the flowering promise
+herald the rich fruition.
+
+How small was that microcosm of college life, how far removed from the
+actualities of the great uninstructed, prosperous world, blundering on
+in suave content, with its crass ignorance of all but money values, he
+learned only when the blow fell and he must needs have work, and work at
+once, for his daily bread. He might look in vain for market quotations
+on Greek. There was no corner in Old Saxon,—modern slang could better
+turn the trick on ’Change. The opportunities that lay in the line of
+pedagogy were already overcrowded; and thus instead of that road to the
+stars, to worthy achievement, for which he had so long and so
+laboriously prepared, for which he was so preëminently fitted, he was to
+trudge the by-paths of hopeless poverty; to be the drudging, futureless
+stipendiary in a rich, frivolous household, teaching three mollycoddle
+boys, buried in the seclusion of the Mississippi bottom lands, as if
+translated to another sphere.
+
+With these thoughts Desmond lay long awake that night. He mechanically
+watched the flicker of the fire on the light paper of the walls of the
+large, airy room, giving out here and there a sparkle of gilt from the
+scroll design, till it dulled gradually, and at length faded to a
+pervasive dusky red glow. He was not used to a bed with the
+old-fashioned tester and four posts, and when he was about to fall
+asleep, he was roused by the unaccustomed sense of something poised
+above his head, or standing solemnly sentinel, surrounding him as he
+lay. He was not sorry when the room grew too dark for aught to be seen
+but the gray night looking in between the long white curtains at the
+tall windows. Yet the hours brought incidents even in the monotony. He
+was apprised that he was on the side of the house nearest the river when
+he saw through the small panes the sudden distant glare of a steamboat’s
+electric search-light, making a rayonnant halo in the dim glooms of the
+riparian midnight, and heard the husky, remonstrant tones of her
+whistle, and the impact of “the buckets” on the water as the wheels
+revolved. He was not yet sufficiently familiar with the plan of the
+house to have otherwise known of his proximity to the bank; but after
+the boat had passed and the last vague echo of the stroke of the paddles
+on the water had died away, he was impressed by the silence of the night
+and the absolutely noiseless flow of the swift currents of the great
+river. It dismayed him in some sort, the sense of that mighty,
+irresistible, mute, moving force of nature out there in the still night,
+as changeful as life, as inexorable as fate, as ceaseless as eternity.
+He had felt small, reduced in worldly esteem, robbed of every prospect,
+and he had no heart to hope. With this expression of silent, majestic
+immensity brought to his contemplation, he seemed infinitely minute in
+the scheme of creation. So long had it rolled its waves from the far
+north to the Gulf; nations had risen on its banks and passed away, and
+strangers had come anew to die and be succeeded in turn by foreign faces
+still, and what mattered it what an atom such as he might suffer, or
+hope, or grieve to lose.
+
+He could not sleep; he had desisted from the conscious effort; he had
+resigned himself to the wakefulness embittered by such thoughts as
+these. It had grown dark, quite dark,—the windows, vague parallelograms
+in the gloom, more distinguished by his memory of the features of the
+room than by actual sight,—when he heard a sound that somehow thrilled
+his every nerve. Hardly a sound,—it was rather a sibilance. But for the
+intense stillness of the house he could not have noticed it,—a mere
+rustle.
+
+“What is it?” he asked himself, intent and curious. For when it vaguely
+came again, it conveyed the sense of motion; it suggested a varying
+distance. Once more his straining senses caught the sound,—very soft it
+was. Furtive, was it, he wondered, for he had identified it as the
+lisping note of a sliding foot on a velvet carpet. At first he thought
+it within his own room, but as it receded at regular intervals, he
+realized it as a step on the stair without. He began to appreciate that
+the head of his bed was against the wall, on the other side of which
+this stair ascended to the upper story, for his room was on the ground
+floor of the great, rambling house. He thus caught the vague vibration
+of motion, as well as the susurrus of the impact of the step on the pile
+of the carpet; otherwise he might not have distinguished so cautious, so
+very silent a transit. It had peculiar features of mystery. It receded
+into absolute quiet, then, approaching anew, seemed to pass.
+
+A long interval ensued while he lay still, the interest of his surmise,
+the doubt, the surprise, solacing his wakeful mood. Suddenly he started
+with a thrill that sought out some nerve of superstition which had
+contrived to coexist with all the logic of his mental training. It was
+coming again, softly, very softly, its sibilant passage scarcely to be
+discriminated even in the silence of the night, ascending once more the
+padded velvet stair. Then Desmond fancied that he heard a long-drawn
+breath, a stifled sigh. He lifted himself on his elbow, listening
+intently. The furtive step receded and yet receded, till it had won the
+distance that the ear might not reach. A long interval of absolute
+silence once more ensued. Then abruptly, again, a muffled step
+descending, softly, secretly.
+
+With a sudden thought Desmond sprang to his feet. His first idea of the
+passing of some member of the family to the upper regions of the house
+on some domestic errand, for extra coverings or for medicine or lamps,
+was annulled by the amazing silence and secrecy of the recurrent
+demonstration. Its repetition implied purpose. Its furtiveness suggested
+malignity. He reflected that, so far as he knew, the inmates of the
+house, with one feeble old man and three young boys, were all inadequate
+to cope with the intrusion of burglars or other marauders. He flung the
+door of the bedroom open and stood in the hall, his pistol in his hand.
+
+“Who is there?” he called out, his voice ringing through the darkness
+like a clarion.
+
+There was not a sound in response, not a stir.
+
+“Speak up,” he threatened, “or I’ll fire.” The metallic click of the
+weapon as he cocked it was of coercive intimations.
+
+Still not a sound, not a stir. No scurrying footstep to be out of harm’s
+way,—no premonition of the attack for which he was prepared, shifting
+his posture each time after he spoke, to escape a shot that might be
+aimed at the sound of his voice in the darkness. Nothing—the hall was
+absolutely vacant, silent.
+
+He stood irresolute for a moment. He scarcely dared turn to secure a
+light lest the lurking intruder escape in the interval of his absence.
+Yet when he heard a stir in a room farther down the hall, the sound of
+bare feet bouncing out of bed, the opening of a door heralding a
+trickling of candle-light into the gloom, he was all at once ashamed of
+the commotion he had aroused and its apparent lack of justification.
+
+As the light advanced along the hall, he was pleased to see that it was
+held in the hand of Reginald Faurie, the eldest of the three boys; the
+old man was too feebly irresponsible to be trusted, and he was glad that
+he had not aroused Mrs. Faurie. But as the young fellow held the candle
+high in his hand, the light showing his tousled auburn hair and his pink
+and white striped pajamas, the expression of his face, distinct in the
+glow, was not such as to ingratiate the future pupil with the tutor. It
+was of half-repressed mirth; yet Reginald paused once, and looked over
+his shoulder into the shadow with the half shudder of a qualm of cold
+fright. He showed no disposition to search for the cause of the
+disturbance, however, and he cut short Desmond’s excited attempt at
+explanation as of no importance.
+
+“Let me in here with you for a moment,” Reginald said. “Don’t want to
+wake up the kids! Yes,—yes,”—with a mature air of patronage,—“I know
+exactly what you heard,—old Slip-Slinksy, as we boys call him, going up
+and down stairs.”
+
+The coolness with which he shut the door, placed the candle on the high,
+white, painted mantelpiece, and sought to stir the fire was proof
+positive that there was no intruder to be reckoned with. Desmond yielded
+reluctantly. But it was the house of a stranger, and he was unused to
+his surroundings. He stood in his bath-robe, which he had flung on at
+the first alarm, and leaned on the high back of a chair, while Reginald
+set the blazes to flaring in the great fireplace, then dropped down on
+the rug and put the pointed toes of his bedroom slippers against the
+brass fender, evidently preparing to elucidate the mystery.
+
+“I know you’ll think I’m loony,—I hate to give myself away! But you are
+one of the solid, scientific, investigating kind, I’m sure. You will
+make inquiries, I know, and I don’t want mamma to learn that old
+Slip-Slinksy is at his queer tricks again. She is not a bit
+superstitious,—no sort of a crank,—but it is a creepy, inexplicable kind
+of thing that one doesn’t like to have in one’s house, and it would make
+her hate the plantation worse than ever; and as she has got to stay at
+Great Oaks for a while, I think she had better not hear about this
+demonstration to-night.”
+
+“But who is it?” asked Desmond, mystified.
+
+“Nobody,—just nothing at all!”
+
+Desmond walked around the chair, and, seating himself in the renewed
+radiance of the fire, drew the folds of his bath-robe close about him.
+He bent the brows of prospective authority upon Reginald, and the lad
+sought to explain.
+
+“What is a ghost but nothing at all!—its emptiness is what gets on your
+nerves. You can take your gun, as you did to-night, to the wicked man
+when he gets gay or out of place,—as long as he is alive. But once a
+deader, and he _has got you_. I’d like to hear your learned chemical
+analysis of a ghost. It is compounded of a winter night’s imaginings!
+It’s an untimely shiver! It’s the tremors of hearing a storm coming down
+the Mississippi River and making all the boats tie up for the night!
+It’s old Slip-Slinksy doing nothing but going upstairs and coming down
+again. I don’t know what on earth started it, but that is our ghost, and
+we have got it for keeps.”
+
+“Fudge!” exclaimed Desmond, contemptuously.
+
+“_You_ heard it,” said the boy, significantly. “I did not.”
+
+Desmond _had_ heard the strange manifestation, knowing naught of it
+hitherto. He remembered the unearthly thrill its first intimations had
+sent through every startled fibre. “But it must have some natural
+explanation, of course.”
+
+“I am sure I hope so,” rejoined Reginald. “But the natural explanation
+has defied us so far. We have done our little possible to solve the
+mystery. We have examined the walls and roof; we have taken up the
+carpets; we have lurked in wait for it, and rushed out upon it as you
+did to-night,—and found nothing,—as you did. I, for one, would take
+mighty kindly to any sort of a natural explanation. A ghost—no matter
+how much you give him the cold shoulder—doesn’t make for happiness in
+the home, and”—he shuddered—“he is apt to give you the cold shoulder.”
+
+“Is it an old affair?” asked Desmond.
+
+“We can’t exactly fix just when the manifestation began. It _always_
+butts in immediately after we come home. Then there will be a long
+interval. Presently it starts up again,—every few nights. Then we may
+have another long exemption. You would think this old house like any
+other happy old home. But in the midst of the preparation for departure
+it is sure to begin again,—if anybody is fool enough to lie awake to
+listen for it. Of course I don’t know what the ghost may do while we are
+away,—in our long absences he may run riot all over the place. At all
+events, we can get no caretaker to sleep in the house. I shouldn’t be
+surprised if its reputation of being haunted protects it from
+depredators, river pirates,—and such cattle. Anyhow, we leave only the
+ghost in charge, and there is not a thing stirred when we come back.
+Only the dust over all, and a sense of mystery.”
+
+“Of course there must be some natural explanation,” Desmond protested
+anew.
+
+“So glad you think so,” said Reginald, politely. “But you will not
+mention it to mamma.”
+
+“Certainly not; but is the demonstration always the same?”
+
+“Always the same,—a step going up and coming down the stair;—going up
+and presently coming down the stair, just as you heard it. It is up to
+you to explain it. It is no tradition as far as you are concerned; you
+were all unconscious and without expectation.”
+
+A sudden wind had sprung up without. It came down the great channel of
+the Mississippi in chilly gusts, with a thrill of dawn in its reviving
+stir. It shook the silence. Myriads of undiscriminated voices were rife
+in the air. The boughs of the great oaks of the grove without clashed
+and fell still again. The evergreen leaves of the Cherokee rose hedges,
+fencing the place for miles, kept up a rippling stir in the section
+close at hand. A draft became perceptible at the nearest window, and
+Desmond, looking toward it, saw through the parted curtains that the
+clouds were riven asunder and a clear, chill star was scintillating in a
+deep abyss of darkness. The night was wearing on,—not far from day—not
+far from a frosty dawn.
+
+“And nothing has ever been seen,” said Desmond, drawing the cord of his
+robe closer.
+
+Reginald stirred the fire; then resumed his easy posture before it, his
+eyes upon the blaze. “I beg pardon,” he rejoined, somewhat unwillingly;
+“but I did not say that.”
+
+“I misunderstood you, then,” said the tutor. He sought to laugh, but he
+had himself heard too much that he could not explain to make his
+ridicule effective. “But there must be some natural explanation.”
+
+“Well,—we can’t get at it,—that’s all,” said Reginald, somewhat nettled
+by the ridicule. “You see I am not stuffing you. I have not the least
+disposition to trot out our ghost to—to lord it over you. I do not
+expect you to bow down and admire him. I am not trying to make prestige
+on his account. You and he struck up an acquaintance without any
+introduction from me. And the apparition on the stairs is so logical and
+in keeping that it bears out the sound of the step,—and that is what
+troubles us,—especially mamma. She is not superstitious, but she is a
+very sensitive organization,—and she always hated this dull old
+plantation, and this gruesomeness that it has developed does not
+recommend it the least little bit.”
+
+“But about the apparition?” Desmond asked eagerly, even while he was
+ready to rally himself that he should entertain so primitive a
+curiosity.
+
+“Why, it came about the most natural way in the world,” declared
+Reginald. “There was a wedding over at Dryad-Dene, Colonel Kentopp’s
+plantation,—Mrs. Kentopp’s sister, I think,—a great wedding, all in the
+old style. The Kentopps are up-to-date people,—make a point of keeping
+up with the procession, unless some fashionable antique craze takes hold
+on them. Just at that time the imitation of the big old country wedding
+was all the go. So instead of having the ceremony at our little
+neighborhood church, and taking the next train or packet for the wedding
+tour, the marriage was at the mansion, in the style of fifty years ago.
+They invited the country; and the relatives and the friends came in
+their dozens, if you please. Of course the Kentopps couldn’t put them
+all up, so some of the guests were entertained by their neighbors, and
+there were many dinners and dances and such functions in the
+vicinity—houses five miles apart, mostly—to compliment the happy couple.
+We took our part, of course. We were just returned from Europe, Asia,
+Africa, and Oceanica” (with a pert little fling), “and the house was
+jammed. I don’t know if you have noticed that there isn’t a regular
+second story to this old bungalow. The rooms above are in a half
+story,—mighty near _all_ dormer window. We don’t use those rooms unless
+we are hard put to it. But on this occasion they were full,—even cots
+and pallets on the floor. Well, in the bedroom on the left hand side as
+you ascend the stairs were a lady and three children. They were nearly
+related to the bridegroom, but strangers to us,—they had never been here
+before—and one of the kids took advantage of the opportunity to make
+himself conspicuous by getting exceedingly ill. My mother suggested
+that, to have help near at hand in the night, the nurse should sleep on
+a pallet in the hall. The nurse was cheerful and agreed; there was a
+big, bright moon, and all the dormer windows were very festive. About
+midnight this lady was awakened by the nurse, who came and asked leave
+to draw her pallet into the bedroom, because she could not sleep for the
+continual passing up and down the stairs,—tip, tip, tip,—slyly slipping
+up and slyly slipping down.” He paused to listen apprehensively, then
+recommenced. “The good lady’s nerves were racked with anxiety, I dare
+say, for she declared that it was very ill-bred in the other guests not
+to let the house get quiet, when there was illness and a chance that her
+child would die. Then she told the nurse to return to her pallet,—that
+the room was too crowded already with herself and the three children,
+and the sick boy needed air. After a time the nurse, an intelligent,
+patient, reasonable woman, came back, declaring that she was afraid.
+There was something strange in this passing. It was not the other
+guests. The people were all still, asleep; the house was as silent as
+death; but yet—slip, slip, slip—something shuffling along so silently,
+so slyly,—she was fit to scream. She was once more rebuked and sent to
+her place. Presently she did scream! The moon had traveled over the
+house and the beams began to fall through the window over the staircase,
+and there she saw what had been going up and down the stops,—a man in
+fancy dress, she declared,—my uncle thinks it was some antique costume—”
+
+“Did he see the apparition, too?”
+
+“Sure! the whole house came running, scared to death,—in just what they
+had on,—a beautiful lot they were, too! but the thing had vanished. Only
+the nurse and her mistress, who, being awake, had run out instantly upon
+the alarm, saw it distinctly. They both said that it was a man in fancy
+dress, with powdered hair. My uncle had just opened his door on the
+lower floor, and, looking upward at the landing, his view was
+indistinct, but his impression was the same.”
+
+Desmond pondered for a moment. “Did it never occur to any of them that
+it was some wag of the house-party frightening the nurse for a freak.”
+
+“I have heard of making a long arm, but I can’t imagine making a long
+enough leg to keep a footstep going up and down a staircase, when none
+of our guests have been in the county, or even in the State, for four or
+five years.”
+
+“It is strange,” said Desmond, at last. “But all the same I am sure that
+there must be some reasonable natural explanation,—if it could be
+found.”
+
+“I wish I shared your belief, or disbelief,” said Reginald. He looked up
+doubtfully at the candle burning low now on the mantelpiece. It was not
+the regulation bedroom light, but in a tall, silver candlestick, that
+offered no protection against the drops which its guttering state sent
+dripping down its sides. The fire was sinking; the room had taken on a
+shadow and a sense of gloom; the wind suddenly rose in a shrill skirl;
+then one could hear some slight débris of leaves or twigs skittering
+across the grass as if in a weird dance without. Any suggestion of
+uncanny footsteps was in jeopardy to the maintenance of equilibrium.
+Desmond, fatigued from his journey and his vigils, was growing
+heavy-eyed and disposed to slumber. For some time he had been sensible
+of the increasing chill of the air, and was beginning to canvass the
+propriety of himself terminating the interview, and in his character of
+tutor authoritatively bidding the boy to betake himself to his own
+bedroom instead of awaiting his exit as a guest. But Reginald suddenly
+resumed. “I wish I could agree with you that there is a natural
+explanation,—if we could light upon it. I believe in its supernatural
+quality enough to wonder how I mustered the courage to come through the
+hall when I heard you call. I was afraid that if you spoke again, mamma
+would be roused. I don’t see how I am to get back. I am something of a
+man in the daytime, but a regular baby about it at night,—and—if you
+don’t mind—I’ll just climb over there in the back of the bed and stay
+with you till the rising bell. Oh, thanks, muchly. You have saved my
+reason, if not my life. Suppose—oh, just suppose—I was to meet old
+Slip-Slinksy in the hall,—and he was to—to—to blow out the candle.”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER III
+
+
+The breakfast-table showed little correlation to a haunted house. It was
+surrounded with bright and smiling faces when Desmond, to his chagrin a
+trifle tardy, opened the door. The sunshine lay among the potted plants
+blooming in wire stands at the two casements opposite the great
+bay-window, and through its broad outlook one could see the immense
+shining expanse of the king of rivers, with a golden glister on its
+ripples, and in the distance a line of tender brownish gray to denote
+the growth of cottonwood fringing the farther banks against the blue
+sky. The sylvan hunt on the wall-paper, in the medley of scrolls and
+fantastic tracery, had a realistic effect of motion as the sunshine and
+shadow shifted over it through the stirring boughs of the great live-oak
+tree close without. A fire of light wood glowed on the hearth, more it
+might seem for gladsome cheer than needed warmth, this balmy day of the
+southern winter, and old Joel, the butler, was holding on a silver tray
+a large, low basket of ripe figs and brilliant hothouse flowers, while
+Mrs. Faurie read a note that had come with the fruit. She paused for a
+moment and glanced up as the tutor entered.
+
+“Good-morning, Mr. Desmond. I hope you rested well.” Then, rustling the
+missive, she read aloud: “‘Congratulations on the date’—what the
+mischief is the date, Uncle Clarence?—the 5th of December?—Heavens and
+earth! The cruel woman! She is reminding me of my birthday.” She tossed
+the note aside with a gesture of mock desperation. “Let me give you some
+coffee, Mr. Desmond,—I can swallow my mortification later,—or will you
+have chocolate?”
+
+As she sat at the head of the table, moving the pieces of the large
+old-fashioned silver service, that glittered with polish, but showed
+here and there an indentation that bespoke the battering proclivity of
+years of daily usage, the light from the several windows was full on her
+face. Her complexion was more than ever like a white rose in its
+softness and delicacy thus displayed. Her fine, long throat was shown by
+the surplice cut of her plain white lawn blouse, of which the sleeves
+reached only to the elbow of her softly rounded arms, with their slim,
+dainty hands; her skirt was of plain pleated black voile, and her brown
+hair was rolled straight up from her forehead. Nothing could be more
+homelike, more simple; but the effect of her eyes as she looked at him
+from under her long lashes, her level brows slightly drawn, had a
+vaguely bewildering effect on Desmond. He had seen charming women
+heretofore, but none to parallel her loveliness. His mind was acclimated
+to the idea, the tradition of incomparable beauty, but not in these
+close relations. To breakfast with Helen of Troy, to receive a cup of
+chocolate from the hand of Diana herself, to reply to a word of simple
+inquiry and assured authority from the embodiment of the ideal that
+poets have sung and painters have limned in all ages, was disconcerting.
+Had she seemed herself more aware of her preëminent endowment, had she
+been self-conscious, he could have better adjusted himself to its
+continual contemplation; but he had the sentiment of a unique discovery,
+of perceiving somewhat unknown, unnoted.
+
+“I can’t see any cause for mortification; it seems to me a very pretty
+compliment, mamma.” Reginald had taken the note up with some anxiety and
+was perusing it with a clearing brow.
+
+“A compliment!—to be reminded of my dreadful age.”
+
+“Ah, Honoria, you are absurd, my dear,” Mr. Stanlett protested, with an
+air of concern. “Thirty-four is still young,—still young, my dear.”
+
+“Oh, how can you mention it, Uncle Clarence? Let me forget the exact
+number! I feel one foot in the grave! I am the prey of time!”
+
+She cast up her beautiful eyes in an affectation of distress; then,
+catching the serious regards of the youngest boy fixed upon her,
+dubiously, uncertain of her mood, she looked at him intently for a
+moment, and burst into a ripple of smiles, to which, reassured, he
+responded with a callow chuckle, infinitely alluring.
+
+“But we will have the basket in the centre of the table,” she continued.
+“All of you who have the heart can eat a fig. I’ll bet there are just
+thirty-four of them.”
+
+The two younger boys strained over the table to count.
+
+“Dead to rights, mamma,” said Rufus, the tenyear old, who enjoyed the
+preëminence of “baby.” “Just thirty-four figs.”
+
+“A very pretty compliment, mamma,” protested Reginald again. “For my
+part, I am obliged to Mrs. Kentopp, and I am ashamed that I did not
+remember the date myself.”
+
+“Oh, ho! You bet I did!” said Rufus, with a triumphant nod.
+
+Mrs. Faurie put down her spoon, and cast a look across the silver
+service so replete with maternal affection, so embellishing to her proud
+beauty, that it seemed indeed a pity that the face on which it was
+bestowed should be so round, so freckled, so jocosely creased, so
+facetiously winking.
+
+“What have you got for me, Chubby?” she asked. Her look was angelic.
+
+“You’ll see,—you’ll see!” He smiled widely. The dentist had been at work
+on that smile, and had eliminated two teeth, and the interval interfered
+with the happiest expression of filial affection.
+
+The other two brothers, though manifestly disconcerted and deprecatory,
+looked at him with the quizzical contempt with which an elder boy cannot
+refrain from tormenting his junior. “Chub, don’t be such a chump,”
+Horace admonished him. “You ought to be ashamed to give mamma a birthday
+offering of some of the trash that you have collected in your European
+_towers_,”—with a leer to emphasize the taunting mispronunciation,—“a
+last year’s calendar or a cigarette tag.”
+
+“’Tain’t no old European bibelot!” Chubby declared, his round cheeks no
+longer distended with happy smiles. His eyes were grave and flashing
+fire,—he was consciously on the defensive. He breathed hard and deep.
+
+“Oh, to be sure,—some of his chiffons from the Rue de la Paix,—souvenir
+de Paree,” Reginald twitted him, with a nettling laugh.
+
+“’Tain’t,—it’s brand-new,” Chub protested.
+
+“Where did you get it?” the other two asked in a breath.
+
+“I bought it with my own money,”—there was an intonation of pride in
+this assertion.
+
+“But where?—bloated capitalist!” asked Reginald, really curious, for
+there was scant opportunity to spend money at Great Oaks Plantation,
+forty miles distant from any town larger than a hamlet or a railroad
+way-station.
+
+“Where do you reckon?”—with temper. Then with a gush of pride, “From the
+trading-boat,—that’s where!”
+
+Desmond could not understand why the two elder boys stared at each other
+for a moment, then collapsed into inextinguishable laughter, scarlet in
+the face, nerveless, well-nigh helpless. Even Mr. Stanlett laughed with
+merry relish, and Chub looked from one to another, pitiably crestfallen.
+A “shanty-boat,” that had been tied up at the landing, was not of the
+usual type of trading-boat, offering provender and provisions and
+assortments of merchandise in localities remote from railway and packet
+connection, but a mere travesty on this mercantile craft, hardly more,
+indeed, than a raft, drifting with the current, bearing a little cabin
+in which the owner lived, and from which he sold a medley of
+stock,—pins, needles, stale candies, tobacco, whiskey, snuff, ribbons,
+plated jewelry,—such as might meet the needs or strike the taste of the
+humbler dwellers about the river-side, or the backwoods population among
+the bayous, along the sluggish current of which it was sometimes poled.
+
+“Oh,—oh, mamma,—the _trading-boat_!” cried Reginald, barely recovering
+the power of speech.
+
+But Horace was altogether beyond words.
+
+“It _is_ a trading-boat!” Chub protested. “Anyhow, they have lots of
+things to sell. They pole and row along the bayous and lakes, and they
+get towed by a steamboat once in a while, and go up any of the rivers
+they like. Then they drift down again. They have been selling along all
+the rivers in the State of Mississippi,—they _told_ me so.”
+
+“They must have been well able, then, to pay the considerable privilege
+tax to the State,” Mr. Stanlett commented dryly.
+
+“Did it occur to you to inquire into that question, Chubby?” asked
+Reginald, still gasping with merriment.
+
+“Ha! I’ll engage that the very word ‘license’ would make that boat’s
+crew cast off in a trice!” exclaimed Mr. Stanlett, with a significant
+nod. “That ‘trading-boat’ would be swallowed up from sight in the
+twinkling of an eye.”
+
+“But we have no right to take that for granted, Uncle Clarence,” Mrs.
+Faurie remonstrated. “Their trade along the bayous and bogues and lakes,
+where no other boats come, may be considerable and aggregate enough to
+justify the tax. The swampers in such out-of-the-way places have no
+other way to buy goods.”
+
+“Ah, well,—perhaps so,—I’m not a collector. We will be charitable and
+hope for the best. And they may have some exemption from the tax.”
+
+The proud Chub, suddenly brought down, was near to tears.
+
+Mrs. Faurie, all unmindful of the ridicule, was looking at him with eyes
+aglow. “With your money, Chubby,—your own little money?—and you always
+so hard up,—you dear little spendthrift! And you really remembered my
+birthday, and bled your precious nickels to commemorate it! Where is my
+present? I can’t wait to see it! I’ll value it above everything I have
+in the world. I’ll always treasure it as beyond price,—my lovely
+Chubby’s gift.”
+
+And then it developed that “lovely Chubby,” intent on surprise, had been
+seated throughout the meal with the present in a paper bag poised on his
+knee under his napkin. He was reassured in some sort by the cessation of
+the laughter of the fraternal torments. He was too young and too
+ingenuous to realize that it was only a momentary respite that they
+might better view the pomp of the presentation. Their physical condition
+might have alarmed one unused to view the ecstasies of adolescent mirth
+when the paper bag parted to disclose a large, round, wooden apple,
+highly tinted with the colors of nature, the upper section of which
+opened to reveal within an assortment of needles, pins, a cake of wax, a
+brass thimble, a bodkin, and an emery masquerading as a realistic
+strawberry.
+
+“An apple,—oh, ye gods and little fishes!” cried Horace.
+
+“An apple,—presented to mamma,—my prophetic soul! Didn’t I say it must
+be a souvenir of Paris,—to the fairest?” exclaimed Reginald, convulsed.
+
+“Ah, ha,—very good,—classical allusion,” said Mr. Stanlett,
+appreciatively. He cast a glance of pride at the tutor, as if calling
+his attention to this point of precocity.
+
+Mrs. Faurie silently examined every detail with deliberate gravity,
+while the two elder sons went from one spasm into another of mute
+laughter, deeming the episode too funny for words, and the breathless
+Chub looked seriously and expectantly at her.
+
+“Very useful, no doubt,” said Mr. Stanlett, taking his cue from the
+gravity of her manner. “Valuable,—always ready,—needle-case.”
+
+But when Mrs. Faurie lifted her eyes, Desmond could but note how
+brilliant they were with unshed tears.
+
+“Come here, Chubby,” she said, with a break in her voice. “I can’t wait
+to hug you!”
+
+He was a big boy for ten years of age, and looked bigger in his mother’s
+lap. She had pushed her chair a trifle back from the table, and as he
+sat enthroned and cherished beyond his fellows, some qualm of jealousy
+terminated their convulsions of mirth.
+
+“You have not touched your plate, mamma,” said one. “I have heard of
+people living on bread and cheese and kisses, but I never saw its
+demonstration before. Sweet Chub,—lovely breakfast food!”
+
+“You two must quit that thing of calling Rufus ‘Chub,’” remonstrated Mr.
+Stanlett.
+
+“Yes,” said Chub, whisking around in his mother’s lap, and facing the
+party from behind the silver service; “makes me feel like a fish,—chub
+and dace always mentioned together.”
+
+“Chub is a first-rate item on a bill of fare; serve him out, mamma,”
+suggested Horace.
+
+“I am coming down myself,” said Chub, with a final exasperating hug and
+kiss.
+
+“And—quite a coincidence!—the waffles are coming in,” jeered Horace.
+
+“And now,” said Chub, once more settled in his place at table, and
+feeling in fine fettle and high favor, “I move that, being mamma’s
+birthday, we have a holiday.”
+
+Desmond was altogether unused to being so set aside and passed over and
+made of scant account. He was aware that he could not expect aught else
+in a family life in which he had no part; nevertheless, he felt all the
+uneasiness incident to a false position and a new experience. He had
+scarcely spoken a word since he had entered the room. He could not
+expect the conversation to be guided with a special consideration of him
+in this circle of family privacy, and he had submitted to eat his
+breakfast among them, but not of them, with what grace he might. Chub’s
+last remark, however, trenched upon his own peculiar province, and he
+spoke uninvited and to the point: “And I move that we have no holiday.”
+
+Chub glanced up, his eyes both grieved and indignant. “Oh, why?” he
+said,—a phrase that is in more frequent use in remonstrance than any
+other in the English language by all American youth under twenty years
+of age,—a plea to which Desmond then and there resolved that he would
+never reply. There ensued a moment of awkward silence.
+
+Horace suddenly answered for him. “Because, Chub, we have to be
+classified, you know. Mr. Desmond might be expecting you to read Greek,
+if he started you without examination, you know.”
+
+“Don’t look so downcast, Chubby,” said Mrs. Faurie, with a caressing
+intonation; and Desmond was aware that, but for the pose of supporting
+his authority, the coveted holiday would have been granted without
+another moment’s consideration. “Mr. Desmond is not such an ogre.”
+
+Chubby wagged his head with a sorrowful monition of experience and
+forecast. “Tutors are all alike—when it comes to ogreing.”
+
+Despite her partiality, Mrs. Faurie evidently thought this hardly civil.
+She came hastily to the rescue. “And we have all the preliminaries to
+arrange; this must be a busy day.” Then, obviously with a lingering hope
+for Chubby’s release, for his appealing look was very touching, “But
+perhaps it might be best to begin to-morrow. I should think it would be
+well for you to look about you a little before going to work, Mr.
+Desmond,—familiarize yourself with your surroundings.” She ended with a
+rising inflection that required an answer, and her evident bias would
+seem to dictate its import. It was short, succinct.
+
+“Nothing whatever is gained, Mrs. Faurie, by the waste of time,” he
+said, “and much is lost by the bad precedent.”
+
+She was rising from the table. “Then we will at once consider the choice
+of a schoolroom,” she said, as she preceded the party out of the
+dining-room. At the intersection of the entry with the main hall she
+paused; here was an outer door which opened on a broad veranda, from
+which the glittering Mississippi could be seen through the vistas of the
+trees. This veranda ran quite around the front portion of the house, and
+passed through it, dividing the main building from the two wings. At one
+point this airy structure widened, the flooring extending into a
+roofless circular space, built around the great trunk of a live oak,
+that made a dense canopy of evergreen boughs above it, and let fall
+drooping shady branches all about it. The balustrade of the veranda was
+fitted with a circular bench, and one could scarcely imagine a more
+attractive bower.
+
+“This would make a fine schoolroom,” suggested Chub, and Desmond was
+irritated to observe that Mrs. Faurie actually seemed to consider it.
+
+“The less there is to distract the attention, the better,” he said
+promptly.
+
+“The passing of a steamboat,—or a squirrel, would put Chub out of the
+game for the day, I suppose,” she conceded, with evident reluctance.
+
+“We could come in if it rained,” persisted Chub.
+
+“We could if we had enough sense,” said Horace; “I have always
+understood that it required sense to know enough to come in out of the
+rain.”
+
+Desmond was feeling more interest in his unwelcome vocation as he
+followed Mrs. Faurie into the main hall. He was apprehensive lest some
+puerile folly of his pupils and the facile leniency of their mother
+jeopardize the practicability of his mission, and his vocation be riven
+from him when he had come to depend solely upon it. He looked about the
+place critically, noting facts that might have escaped him otherwise in
+a cursory, uninterested survey. The house bore little or indeed no token
+of the extensive wanderings of its inmates in foreign lands. There were
+a few good paintings on the walls, but their frames were old and
+tarnished and in several instances marred, and he fancied they were
+trophies of the travels of previous generations. Other canvases were
+devoted to the portraits of the family, some evidently painted by
+brushes of distinction, and others only redeemed from the imputation of
+being daubs by the facility and freedom with which the likeness had been
+caught, the art subordinate to the lifelike portrayal. The ornaments,
+clocks, vases, were rich and represented the expenditure of money, but
+were obviously the haphazard aggregations of years and successive
+owners, and with no system of collection or interest of suggestion. He
+divined that Mrs. Faurie cared too little for life in the mansion house
+of the hated plantation to spend time, or thought, or money on its
+decoration. Hence, in lieu of rich oriental rugs and polished floors,
+the old velvet carpets still did service, being of good quality,
+seemingly imperishable, covering every inch of the wood; the old satin
+damask curtains, with lace beneath, draped the windows as of yore. The
+furniture of carved rosewood, and especially that of ponderous mahogany,
+was better in countenance in view of the modern craze for ancient
+relics, but its owner valued it no whit more for the fashion. There was
+nowhere the museum-like effect to be seen so often in the home of a
+traveled proprietor. Except for a casual mention, no one could imagine
+that any of the household had sojourned in Japan, or journeyed on camels
+in remote deserts, or voyaged on the Nile and the Ganges. It was an old
+house, distinctly of its locality, in a fat, luxurious country, replete
+with the suggestions of decorous antecedents; and one might seem
+ungrateful to be so loath to come to it, and so eager to be gone again,
+as was Mrs. Faurie. The sons had evidently lost all sense of preference,
+small citizens of the world. Home was with each other and their mother;
+and it hardly mattered if it were in Rome, or in the light of the
+midnight sun, or on the banks of the great Mississippi.
+
+Desmond had felt himself somewhat expatriated in surroundings so foreign
+to the world of letters, of art, of public interest, of intellectual
+activity, until he came into the library. Unconsciously he drew a long
+breath of relief. On every hand he knew were friends. He was not sorry
+to see that the books were old and evidently long undisturbed. They bore
+the marks of some previous owner’s loving care. They were all under
+glass, the shelves built into the walls; below, extending up three feet
+from the floor, were solid doors betokening cabinets, fitted with locks,
+and doubtless containing treasures of old files of newspapers,
+pamphlets, magazines. These were all collections of elder members of the
+house of Faurie, and little troubled by the present generation. Two big
+globes, one terrestrial, the other celestial, could indeed give to the
+experienced young travelers of to-day only the information how very
+little was known of the world at the time of the construction of these
+microcosms.
+
+There was a great fireplace, vacant now, the room being out of use, with
+the usual glittering brasses of andirons and fender. The sun streamed in
+at the tall windows at the eastern side; on the other,—for the apartment
+was in one of the wings separated from the main building by the
+veranda,—one could look out through the vistas of gigantic trees at the
+great embankment of the levee in the foreground, the splendid scroll of
+the Mississippi emblazoning the middle distance, and far, far away the
+low line of the forests at the horizon meeting the blue sky. The windows
+were draped only by some old-time lambrequins, short and of a
+grape-blue, and below were suspended the slatted shades called Venetian
+blinds. A heavy mahogany desk, with innumerable pigeon-holes, and a wide
+writing-shelf, covered with grape-blue leather, looked tempting and
+scholarly. A long table with drawers was in the centre of the floor, and
+on each side some chance hand had arranged chairs high and stiff and
+ready for writing or reading.
+
+“This seems made for us. Could you spare this room?” Desmond asked,
+feeling nevertheless the assurance of the demand.
+
+She hesitated. Though she cared little for Great Oaks, the incongruity
+struck her. This was indeed a fine room to devote to the uses of pupils
+and pedagogue, and it might be that all that Chub would ever learn would
+not be worth the wear and tear that his acquisitions here would cost it.
+
+“But why not?” she asked in turn. “Certainly the parlors are ample for
+so little company as we see here.”
+
+“And we shall keep regular hours; the room can be at the service of the
+family in the evenings”; he rather pressed the point. “The library is
+separate from the rest of the building, and less liable to interruption,
+out of earshot of anything that may be going forward in the household;
+the books are all at hand; the atmosphere is inspiring.”
+
+“By all means, then,” she assented.
+
+But later, when she mentioned the decision to her uncle, he looked
+dismayed, and she half regretted her compliance.
+
+“He selected the library as a schoolroom!” exclaimed Mr. Stanlett.
+“Well, he _is_ moderate!”
+
+“He showed the first vestige of emotion that I think it is possible for
+him to entertain when he saw the books,” she said. “I want him to be
+satisfied at Great Oaks,—if anybody _can_ be satisfied in the
+Mississippi swamp.”
+
+“What sort of impression does he make upon your mind?” asked Mr.
+Stanlett, solicitously.
+
+“I think he is an iceberg; he lowers the temperature whenever he
+approaches.”
+
+But the value of the library as an educational influence was not
+immediately apparent, and Desmond, who had never taught, was destined to
+find that there is far more requisite for success than the equipment for
+instruction. The poignancy of the relinquishment of his dear ambitions,
+his sensitive appreciation of his reduction to an unsuitable, subsidiary
+position in the esteem of the world, the tingling sense of personal
+isolation, of humiliation in a sort, as of an unwelcome, disregarded,
+yet necessary supernumerary in the family circle, so apart themselves as
+to render his presence always felt,—he thought these elements of his
+poverty a sufficient handicap on satisfaction in the present and hope
+for the future. He might have been still further dismayed at the outset
+to realize that education is a cooperative function, and the receptivity
+of the student is as essential as the radiation of the professor. He had
+been himself so eager in the acquisition of knowledge, so earnest, so
+alertly intelligent, his mind assimilating as by an involuntary process
+the pabulum that the curriculum set forth in courses, that he did not
+readily grasp the idea of a different point of view. He was totally
+unaware of the luxury of mental inaction, the atrophy of the industrial
+muscles, the dead levels of the lack of ambition, of supine content with
+the least achievement compatible with the least exertion. He had given
+his instructors no occasion to seek to stimulate his aspirations to the
+goal of his best possibilities, and he had not even turned the eye of
+casual contemplation upon their labors as they herded their unwilling
+and loitering flocks along the dusty approaches to learning, fain to be
+content with such progress as their charges could be prevailed upon to
+make.
+
+Even in the preliminaries for instruction in the big, luxurious room,
+friction supervened. A fresh fire blazed on the hearth, the places at
+the table were assigned, the box of schoolbooks was unpacked, and the
+stationery deposited in appropriate drawers. Chub’s joy in the
+acquisition of a fountain pen it was necessary to moderate, and his plea
+to inaugurate his scholastic labors by experimenting with a writing
+lesson was tabooed.
+
+“You are not here to do what you wish, but what is best for you,”
+Desmond said finally, and Chub cast the pen from him on the table with
+an air of permanent repudiation and a sullen pout of disaffection.
+
+For a time Horace, with the puerile mania to be stirring something, must
+needs turn in his chair and with a meddlesome finger revolve again and
+again the terrestrial globe that stood near by, contemplating not its
+charted surface, but merely its pleasing semblance to a big ball, and
+its satisfactory poise that so slight a touch would compass the
+revolution of the earth. Twice Desmond politely requested him to desist.
+Horace was still for a little while, but soon his careless mood had lost
+the memory of the command, the world was briskly awhirl anew, and in his
+lazy consciousness he was scarcely aware of his own agency in the fact.
+
+Desmond hesitated. He gazed at the forgetful Horace for a moment, then
+he commented: “I hope that you are fond of the study of geography. If
+you turn that globe again, you shall map out every country on it and
+chart every body of water, working all the afternoons while the others
+are out of school till you practically own the earth and the boundaries
+thereof. Are you a pretty expert cartographer?”
+
+Horace, amazed and insulted, grew round-eyed and red. “Mamma would not
+permit it,” he said stiffly.
+
+“We shall see. This is _my_ schoolroom, and what I say here—goes!”
+
+“Now, Horace, I hope that you have got it!” Reginald exclaimed in
+reproach.
+
+Horace was motionless, mutinous in dubitation. Then with a fling he
+turned his back upon the allurements of the world and joined the silent
+and pouting Chub in fixedly regarding the grape-blue leather cover
+inlaid in the table, and spotted here and there with the ink of old-time
+chirographers.
+
+Desmond himself had his distractions. He was interested in the old
+sand-box, full of metal filings, formerly used instead of blotters to
+dry the ink on the page. He was surprised when a bronze bust on the
+table revealed an inkstand, as the helmet of the head of Pallas was
+lifted,—a series of inkstands, it contained, for different tints, and
+his set and joyless face relaxed as he refilled them. “This is a quaint
+fancy,—this inkstand,” he said.
+
+Then he must needs be quick to check Reginald’s intention to throw into
+the fire a bundle of carefully made quill pens of a bygone date. These
+came from a small drawer, evidently long disused, that had a trick of
+sticking. There were also some wafers here, for the sealing of letters,
+and a stick of sealing-wax.
+
+Desmond sought to inaugurate a more agreeable topic than had hitherto
+distinguished the incidents of the morning. He took these relics of the
+past as a suggestion. He said that it ought to be peculiarly pleasant to
+them to work here, where those of their own blood had read, and written,
+and thought out the problems of their day; and that this was home in the
+truest sense, a oneness of mind and heart and effort. They should have a
+sentiment to retain the inkstand, sand-box, and bunch of quills, these
+tokens of the mental activity of their forbears, hallowed by their
+usage; and the stiff, unnoticed, forgotten drawer of the table, where
+these writing-materials had been found, might cause them to think how
+yesterday always leaves a trace on to-day, and to take heed that it is
+not a vain regret nor the disaster of the waste of time.
+
+They listened in blank silence and unresponsiveness. Desmond, somewhat
+taken aback, for he had had a purpose of talking to his pupils to mould
+the form of their thought, to fashion their habit of phrasing, to direct
+their outlook and give the values of viewpoint, to accomplish their
+improvement insensibly even in their leisure hours, felt a disposition
+to recur to the line and rule of the text-book. “Let them learn, then,
+just what is set down for them,” he said, disappointed with the first
+experiment.
+
+But even thus his expectations were so suddenly dashed that he had a
+sense of helplessness,—an incapacity to reach that volition of mind that
+makes it a motive power. Words were all ineffective, argument thrown
+away. Already he began to perceive that he might teach in vain if they
+would not, and therefore could not, learn. His heart sank within him as
+he noted the look of dull disinclination, desolation indeed, with which
+Reginald turned the leaves of the Greek Reader.
+
+“What is the use of the classics, Mr. Desmond?” he asked in a tone of
+dreary protest. “Nobody speaks the languages any more. Why, when I was
+in Greece last winter, even I could see that what I had learned of
+ancient Greek was miles away from modern Hellenic. And I spoke Italian,
+not Latin, in Rome. As to Greek literature,—why, we have the finest
+translations,—better than any I can ever make. Now what gentleman ever
+sits down to read Euripides in the original? Now, honestly, Mr. Desmond,
+what good has Greek ever been to you?”
+
+This was indeed a home-thrust,—the contrast of his splendid and complete
+intellectual armament and the field of its employment.
+
+“It has given me the distinguished opportunity of teaching you.”
+
+There was dead silence for a few moments as the group sat around the
+table. The two sullen youngsters, apprehending rather the tone of the
+retort than its full significance, lifted their lowering eyes and looked
+in blank wonder from one of the speakers to the other. Reginald
+continued to turn the volume listlessly in his hand, but a scarlet flush
+was suffusing his face, and stealing to the roots of his auburn hair.
+Presently he said, with the air of venturing a suggestion, “It must be a
+language particularly rich in satire; it must cultivate the faculties
+for sarcasm, at all events.”
+
+The work got under way at length, and perhaps progressed as
+satisfactorily as if there had been a more genial understanding. Each
+faction was cautious, being uncertain of the other, and hence
+experiments were not in favor. There was much of the genuine gentleman
+in Reginald; he was averse to occasioning needless inconvenience or
+annoyance to others, and had he no further reason, he would have exerted
+himself to curb the vagaries of his wandering attention, so little
+accustomed to concentration. But he had, too, a proper pride. Without
+the opportunity of cramming for the examination, the disadvantages of
+his erratic training and the irregular development of his immature mind
+were to be discerned without palliation. This, however, gave token how
+solid an intellectual endowment he possessed. As he struggled with the
+questions and bent every faculty to the endeavor to do himself as little
+discredit as he might, Desmond felt somewhat encouraged. There was good
+material here, if it could be disengaged from the tangle of puerile
+folly, superficial observation, false standards, and a total lack of the
+habit of application.
+
+The other two promised less well, and Desmond had with them far less
+sympathy and less patience. Horace, still swelling with wrath for the
+indignity of the geographical threat, was merely biding his time, and
+temporizing with his tyrant till the close of the diurnal session should
+permit him to bear his tale of woe to his mother, who he doubted not
+would avenge him summarily. But Chub had capitulated. He adopted
+propitiatory tactics. Now and again he quitted his place and came around
+and stood beside Desmond’s chair, with a plump and pleading hand on his
+arm, and explained carefully that he could not really hope to master
+fractions because they had a peculiar effect on his head. He thought it
+would be much better to review long division, until his health was fully
+confirmed,—he was a crackerjack at long division. He would like to show
+Mr. Desmond what he could do; he could cover a slate with figures to
+beat the band. And would Mr. Desmond make those two boys quit laughing
+at him, and agree that he might skip fractions altogether. He had heard
+people say that fractions were of no use,—upon his word of honor, he
+had.
+
+“Some small people like unto yourself, I dare say,” Desmond retorted.
+
+Chub was always so disappointed and surprised when he was sent back to
+his place, his errand fruitless, to bend the round integer of his head
+over the tantalizing fractions on his slate, so eagerly abounding in
+renewed hope as he came out again with his plump paw to be laid
+persuasively on Desmond’s arm, as he stood by the tutor’s chair,
+advancing his enlightened views,—all of which tended to eliminate study
+from the scheme of things at Great Oaks mansion,—that it began to be
+very obvious that this was the pupil most difficult to contend with and
+for whose idiosyncrasies Desmond would have least toleration. For
+scholastic attainment was a very large and noble endeavor in Desmond’s
+mind, despite the reasons he had latterly perceived to minimize its
+worldly utilities. And to this effect did Mrs. Faurie express herself
+that evening at dinner when they were all grouped around the table.
+
+“I should judge from the children’s report, Mr. Desmond, that you have
+all had a rather serious time of it, to-day. And that is just what I
+desire,—that you should maintain your authority,”—she cast her beautiful
+coercive eyes on each of the youthful faces, shown in the candle-light
+intently regarding her—“and that they should exert themselves to do
+their duty.”
+
+They seemed to accept the fiat as law according to their several
+interpretations of duty,—Reginald with a sort of manly serenity, Horace
+as reduced to order, and the little Chub as so distressful and helpless
+and a-weary of the world that Mrs. Faurie could not refrain from
+reaching out her long fan, and with its downy tip touching him playfully
+under his chin to bring out his dimples and win from him once more a
+smile.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IV
+
+
+The insubordination of the youthful students at Great Oaks was happily
+at an end, but their educational problems remained. These promised
+Desmond food for much thought for an indefinite time, and roused him to
+an ingenuity of expedients to secure the best efforts of the young
+scholars themselves. For a time success swayed in the balance
+indeterminate. Sometimes it seemed impossible to break to habits of
+application, to harness the attention of these wildly roving minds. He
+did not love the spectacle of wounded pride, but the heroic treatment of
+bluff ridicule had the happiest effect.
+
+“For a fellow to have passed through the Suez Canal, to have seen the
+Assouan Dam, and the Sault Canal, and the Segovia Aqueduct, and the
+Ganges Canal, and the Solani Aqueduct, and have no more conception of
+the principles of hydraulics than a mule shipped in a stock-car has of
+the motive powers of a steam-engine! You didn’t notice?—neither does the
+mule.”
+
+Reginald was letter perfect the next day in such elementary exposition
+as the text-book on Natural Philosophy afforded concerning locks, dams,
+jetties, and the varied utilities of controlled waters; and Desmond,
+with a touch of self-reproach, called him into the library that evening
+after dinner, and made himself very gay and entertaining with stories of
+college life, details of hazing, rushes, athletics, such as had but a
+bitter flavor to his memory now, though likely to please the fancy of a
+destined collegian. Once or twice afterward Reginald dropped in again,
+his eyes bright and expectant; but the tutor had no immediate cruelties
+to atone for, and was dreary and sad himself, and of no mind to lacerate
+his sensibilities with reminiscences of happier days. He gave himself up
+to such solace as he could find in a book, and Reginald, quick of
+apprehension, sat on the other side of the table, a book in his own
+hands, albeit his attention wandered now and again to the black panes of
+the windows, where he could see the moon in the sky and a brilliant and
+shattered luminary fallen below, which he knew was the lunar reflection
+in the Mississippi River. The very touch of a book Desmond considered
+salutary, and thus he did not rebuke Reginald’s failure of attention.
+
+In truth, Desmond felt that he needed his evenings apart. He worked so
+hard with his difficult and unmalleable material during the day that he
+was likely to forget his disappointments, his perverted destiny, his
+many feuds with Fate. But he had not ceased when alone to set them in
+order before him, to canvass futile ways and means for a counter-stroke,
+to ponder with rancor on men who had made settlement of the financial
+difficulties impossible, and others who had found profit in pushing him
+to the wall. He would have his revenge, he resolved; he would pay them
+back in their own coin, some day,—some day,—and suddenly he would feel
+the sting of his own sharp ridicule as he would bitterly laugh aloud and
+demand of his utter helplessness how this might betide. Though it was
+now little more than a year since his father had died at the critical
+moment of a business enterprise of magnitude, which wrecked in its
+collapse his other interests, it had been already demonstrated that, had
+he lived, it would have succeeded signally,—indeed, in the hands into
+which it had gone, it was more than justifying the confidence of its
+projector. Desmond, who could not retain a single share for the lack of
+means, meditated ruefully on the sums spent in completing his course of
+study according to his father’s directions, before the condition of the
+decedent’s estate was definitely ascertained, and how these funds might
+have been applied to more utilitarian purposes. He was often too
+depressed, too distrait, too irritated by the untoward results of the
+day’s labor, to care to read; but a book in the hand was a protection
+from the intrusion of the family on the polite theory of not seeming to
+exclude him from their social life. He had been sent for once or twice
+in the evening to join a game at cards with Mr. Stanlett, Mrs. Faurie,
+and Reginald; but afterward, when he saw the boy’s figure appear on the
+veranda without and flit away softly from the library window, he was
+glad that the report that he was busy with books and papers had
+protected him from that irksome interruption. His leisure was not of
+pleasant flavor with his embittered memories, but it was his own bit of
+time with himself, and if he had come to be not a merry man, he could
+make no compact with a new identity. Sometimes he had a sudden thought,
+an abstract thought, as unsolicited, as unexpected, as beneficent as an
+angel’s visit, and he wrote. So late the light burned from the library
+windows night after night, so consecutively, that the pilots of the
+river craft came to reckon that stellular gleam among their nocturnal
+bearings betokening the Great Oaks mansion.
+
+Desmond soon began to take little note of other interests save indeed
+his pedagogic duties. He had begged off several times when guests,
+strangers of course to him, had come to dine. He was writing something,
+he once told Mrs. Faurie, confidentially; then he was offended by the
+eager alacrity with which she had excused his presence at the table, and
+the promptness and deftness with which the brisk waiter had served his
+dinner alone in the library. He did not write at all, that night. He
+smoked pipe after pipe of his own strong tobacco, instead of Mr.
+Stanlett’s fine mild cigars sent in with the dinner tray, although he
+esteemed it in the nature of “breaking training” as much now as when he
+was a star “half-back” on a crack Eleven. He meditated much and long
+over the bitter problems of the various degrees of want and woe
+expressed in poverty absolute and poverty relative, and in what actual
+wealth consists, and if the rich are not often paradoxically the poor,
+and if the poor,—but he felt that the converse was a more difficult
+proposition to be maintained, to demonstrate that the poor are ever by
+any fortuitous circumstance to be considered the rich.
+
+The winter was wearing away,—the passing of time marked only by the
+gradual development of approximate symmetry in the minds of the pupils;
+the slow budding of the trees of the grove, that had been the favored
+haunt of deer some fifty years earlier, before the marauding currents of
+the river had carried away the point called formerly “Faurie’s Landing,”
+amounting to near a thousand acres, thus bringing the mansion house
+forward on the banks of the stream, within half a mile of the levee,
+indeed; the adding of page after page to the record of the thought that
+had come to him in the deserted library in the midnight;—when there
+suddenly befell one of those incidents in which he played an important
+part, that were as links in a chain of events, fettering the lives and
+fortune of all in the house and many besides. This, the first of these
+significant happenings, came about in the simplest way, its importance
+all unrecognized at the time.
+
+It was morning, and in the library his pupils sat at their books, when
+there sounded a sudden tap at the door. Desmond turned, frowning, and
+looked over his shoulder. In response to his summons the footman
+entered, his face irradiated by subdued excitement; he presented
+formally, however, the compliments of Mrs. Faurie, who would be glad to
+see Mr. Desmond and his pupils in the parlor, Colonel and Mrs. Kentopp
+having arrived.
+
+Chubby sprang up with a whoop. It would be difficult to say whom he
+would not have welcomed with like enthusiasm to rescue him from the
+grisly lessons.
+
+Desmond rebuked him sternly, while the young servant looked on in amaze.
+
+“Say to Mrs. Faurie that Mr. Desmond and his pupils beg to be excused,
+as the hours for lessons are not over.”
+
+It is impossible to describe the look of wall-eyed remonstrance with
+which the footman hearkened to this message, and to emphasize his own
+opinion of it he closed the door so slowly that Desmond was sorely
+tempted to bound up and kick it to after him.
+
+Chub, on the verge of tears, was tempestuous in argument,—his mother had
+sent for him, he plained, and he was not allowed to go,—in the midst of
+which a second tap at the door heralded the footman, with a change of
+face if not of heart. Mrs. Faurie begged Mr. Desmond’s pardon for the
+interruption, but would be glad if Mr. Desmond would shorten the study
+hours by ten minutes in order to meet Colonel and Mrs. Kentopp in the
+parlor before luncheon.
+
+“Hi, Bob, they goin’ to stay to lunch?” cried Chub, hilariously. “Did
+the children come?”
+
+Bob’s grin of assent was petrified on his face.
+
+“Take your seat, Rufus,” said Desmond, sharply. “You must want to do
+some extras for penance.” Then to Bob, “Shut—that—door!”
+
+A great gush of talk and laughter issued from the parlor as Desmond
+approached it before luncheon. It scarcely seemed as if so limited a
+coterie could keep astir so cheery a conversational breeze, but Mrs.
+Kentopp was vivacity itself. She was about thirty-eight years of age, of
+medium height, but very slight. She impressed him at first as somewhat
+haggard, but he soon perceived that this was the effect of the dye or
+blondine, which heightened the natural tint of her light hair to a
+golden hue, that required special freshness of complexion to accord with
+this embellishment. This disparagement was obviated when she laughed,
+for a becoming flush came and went in her cheeks, and her light blue
+eyes danced. She was handsomely gowned in pastel-blue cloth, heavily
+braided, with a hat of the same shade trimmed with the breast of the
+golden pheasant. She wore long tan gloves on a hand so small and soft
+that Desmond almost thought the fingers boneless, for despite her air of
+condescension, she shook hands with him in the cordial southern fashion
+on informal occasions.
+
+“You have not given us the opportunity to welcome you earlier to this
+benighted region, Mr. Desmond,” she said, laughing always. “Misery loves
+company!”
+
+Her husband was tall, portly, fair, and flushed, with a bright, round,
+brown eye, dark hair, and a clean-shaven, square face. He was dressed in
+sedulous conformity to the dictates of the most recent fashion of
+gentleman’s garb, and this dudish suggestion was queerly accented by his
+peculiarly open and genial manner and his ringing, hearty voice. He
+strode quite across the room, and most cordially clasped the stranger’s
+hand. But Desmond appreciated that it was a very keen, searching, and
+business-like glance that Colonel Kentopp bent upon him, singularly
+unrelated to his jovial, haphazard manner and joyous tones. Desmond felt
+that it held an element of surprise, and that he was altogether
+different, for some reason, from what Colonel Kentopp had expected to
+see. Mrs. Kentopp, too, turned after a moment and seriously surveyed him
+through her gold-handled lorgnette, as he was replying to the civilities
+addressed to him by her husband. Concerning the newcomers Desmond made
+his own cursory deductions, almost mechanically, for they did not
+interest him in the least. He fancied that Colonel Kentopp rather valued
+himself upon his amiability and popularity, and was even prone to make
+it evident that his two children, a girl and a boy, were fonder of him
+than of their mother. They came in ever and anon from the veranda, where
+they raced and chased with Chubby, to acquaint him with some juvenile
+news, some change of moment to them, such as they had fed the parrot, or
+that Chubby had a Shetland pony, and they hung upon him, one on either
+side, their cheeks against his hair, their arms around his neck. Their
+neglected mother seemed no whit disconcerted by her supersedure in their
+affections, and talked on blithely to Mrs. Faurie and Mr.
+Stanlett—especially to the old gentleman, with whom Mrs. Kentopp
+exchanged many compliments and affected to hold a very gay flirtation.
+
+At the lunch-table Desmond would have felt quite apart from the
+occasion, since they were all old friends and had many subjects in
+common of which he knew naught, but that Colonel Kentopp, with his
+genius for geniality, persisted in drawing him out, making him talk,
+appealed again and again directly to him, and would not suffer him to be
+ignored by Mrs. Kentopp, who seemed disposed now to flaunt her
+condescension and now to give him the cold shoulder, albeit ever and
+anon she fixed upon him a surprised, contemplative gaze that temporarily
+stilled her brilliant, laughing face. Desmond could not imagine and he
+did not care in what respect he did not meet their expectations, and
+although he responded in good form to Colonel Kentopp’s lead, he was not
+sorry when the meal, unusually prolonged, was over at last, and he was
+free for the afternoon.
+
+He betook himself, as soon as the party had scattered sufficiently, to
+the library, where he sank down in one of the easy chairs to rest, not
+his bodily frame, but his tired mind and heart. He had not wished to
+seem to hold aloof from the family by withdrawing to his own room, yet
+he felt intrusive with them and their friends, who were no friends of
+his. He found the library a neutral ground; in some sort it befitted him
+and his calling. The quiet solaced him; the atmosphere of the books was
+always friendly; the traces of the scholastic labors were all effaced,
+shut up in the deep abysses of the drawers of the table; the fire glowed
+upon the hearth. He was more and more at ease as he rested, and the slow
+hours of the afternoon wore on. The shadows began to slant on the level
+reaches of the long vistas under the oaks; the sunlight had that dreamy,
+burnished splendor that embellishes the southern winter; it loitered
+slow, content, its progress imperceptible. All was still; not a sound
+reached his ear save the distant chatter of paroquets flitting about the
+pecan trees as if still in search of nuts. He could see from where he
+lounged in the great armchair the long stretch of the Mississippi River,
+the light reddening the hue of its murky floods, the ripples tipped with
+a sparkle like gold; he noted as often before the peculiar conformation
+of its surface, the curving centre rising apparently so much higher than
+the margins, which slanted downward still toward the interior after the
+manner of the banks of deltaic rivers; the opposite shores were merely
+distinguishable as a line of soft, tender green. Here and there a trio
+of white sea-gulls poised, then winged away, and again darted down
+toward the water, evidently roving hundreds of miles up from the Gulf
+intent on fishing. He was not reading; his mind seemed quiescent, blank.
+The intensity of his emotions, the dull discouragements of his position,
+had worn on him more than he was aware. He was mentally resting. He had
+no conscious thought, no recognized intellectual process, when suddenly
+he gave a start to perceive a figure standing at the French window that
+came down to the floor of the veranda. It was Mrs. Faurie. She opened
+one of the long sashes from outside, and entered without ceremony.
+
+“Why, how cosy you look in here!” she exclaimed. “‘There are none so
+deaf as those who will not hear.’ No wonder you did not answer.”
+
+“Were you calling me?” he asked, with an apologetic cadence. He had
+started to rise, but Mrs. Faurie had herself sunk into a chair, and he
+resumed his seat.
+
+She was looking about her with an intent, bright interest. “I think that
+we never quite appreciated this old room. What a scholarly look your
+rearrangement has brought into it! That old telescope,—why, you have
+mounted it again! How nice to put it in the centre of the bay-window—it
+is just the right height for observations of the sky, and can sweep it
+in three directions. Somebody yanked it off its stand long ago to read
+the names on passing steamboats from the veranda.”
+
+As she leaned her elbow on the arm of the chair and turned her
+beautifully poised head, he could not keep his eyes from her. She
+embodied to his mind the poetic ideal of all the beauties of fable or
+history. She was as a flout to the commonplace aspect of the day, to her
+associates, her surroundings, her own words and identity, and to
+himself. He could not accustom his eyes to such peculiar and preëminent
+perfection. Her charms seemed heightened at the moment by the
+embellishments of dress; for since luncheon she had made a toilet for
+the afternoon, of a richness which she had not hitherto affected,—a note
+of compliment to her guests. She was younger of aspect; her face seemed
+that of some radiant girl, though proud, assured, dominant. Her gown was
+of gray silk, quiet in tone and not heavy of texture, the brocaded
+pattern being a plume shading from darker gray to a tip of white. She
+wore on her richly tinted brown hair a velvet picture-hat of the same
+gray hue, with a line of vivid white about the brim, and apparently the
+ostrich plume of gray, that the brocaded gown simulated, coiled about
+the crown, its white tip drooping to her shoulder. And against this
+neutral background the splendor of her beauty glowed, her complexion so
+exquisite, her lips scarlet, her gray eyes so full and fine and lordly
+in their expression, and with those imperious brows so delicately drawn
+above. Somehow he could not hold his own before them. Never heretofore
+had eyes challenged him that he dared not meet. Her evident
+unconsciousness of the impression her beauty must make upon him added to
+his embarrassment. It was like talking to one in a mask or under a
+disguise. He could not speak to mother of hobbledehoys, householder,
+butterfly of fashion, while these incongruous characters were blended
+into the personality of Juno, or the ideal of the moon, or a muse of
+poetry. He was glad that she busied those radiant glances in scanning
+the sombre old room, and his chance bedizenment of it with such cast-off
+gear as had come to his hand.
+
+“Are the lenses of the telescope all right? Well, that’s a blessing! And
+you have brought out that old geological cabinet.”
+
+“It contains some quite valuable specimens,” said Desmond. He deprecated
+his tone; it seemed to him as if he were making excuses. “A few are
+genuinely rare.”
+
+Mrs. Faurie nodded her comprehension. “So I suppose; an uncle of Mr.
+Faurie’s had quite a fad in that direction.”
+
+“Mr. Stanlett?” asked Desmond, surprised.
+
+“No,—Mr. Stanlett is my uncle. This was a relative of Mr. Faurie’s, with
+quite literary tastes; and oh,—that old screen!—I had forgotten it
+completely,—skeleton leaves mounted between plates of crystal.”
+
+“There is nothing so symmetrical, to my mind, in all nature as the
+various tree-forms,” Desmond commented; “those outlines are grace
+itself, both in the denuded shape of the leaf and the tracery of the
+veins. Their preparation is exquisitely done.”
+
+“They look like lace!” she remarked. “If you are fond of tree-forms, you
+ought to have a beautiful time in the woods at Great Oaks”—she drew a
+deep sigh. “We have little else to offer as entertainment; but we are
+long on wilderness! Will the children study botany?”
+
+“Perhaps,—as a reward of merit,—when they shall have learned something
+in the indispensable branches.”
+
+Mrs. Faurie hastily changed the subject. “I am glad that you find enough
+interest in these things to resurrect them. I remember now that they
+were in that big old mahogany press in the alcove.”
+
+She rose suddenly, opened the door of the press, and looked in, her head
+poised inquiringly. There seemed nothing to attract her explorations,
+and she returned to her chair.
+
+“That’s where you found the frames for those old steel engravings; the
+arrangement of them is very inspiring, much better than that ragged old
+portfolio, which I see you have relegated to the press, where it ought
+to be. I wonder what used to be in those frames; but they are the very
+thing for steel engravings.” For between the bookshelves and the row of
+cupboards below, a blank space of paneled wood had received a series of
+small framed portraits of the great men in the world of letters and
+scientific achievement. The pictures were unharmed by time, save for
+spotted and yellowed margins, but the suggestion of antiquity better
+accorded with the old and worn fittings of the place than fresher
+equipment.
+
+“What did you find of interest in the cupboards of the bookcases?”
+
+“They are locked,” said Desmond, a trifle out of countenance to have
+tried doors obviously closed against intrusion.
+
+“Why, how odd! There must be lots of things in them which would interest
+you.” As if she could not trust the vigor of his experiment, she rose
+once more and flitted across the room, trying first one, then another of
+the small doors. They were without knobs, and only a key that might fit
+could open them. She had evidently broken a nail in her efforts to draw
+the doors ajar by the moulding, and she was looking somewhat ruefully at
+her dainty fingers as she returned. Not to remain seated at ease while
+she labored to open the obdurate cabinets, Desmond had followed her
+about the room, making similar efforts wherever the door seemed a less
+close fit; and as she took her chair by the fire he resumed his place
+near her, listening attentively as she talked on. “I remember that there
+are many old English periodicals there,—the ‘Gentleman’s Magazine,’ the
+‘London Magazine,’ the ‘Annual Register,’ all from the beginning of
+their issue, and a thousand old scientific and literary pamphlets. Why
+should they be locked up? Perhaps Uncle Clarence may have the key; if
+not, we may find one about the house that will fit, or on that little
+trading-boat where Chubby bought my apple, don’t you know?”—with an
+animated glance. “It has been off on the bayous and lakes since then,
+and it dropped down the river to-day and tied up at our landing—it may
+have a bunch of keys among its treasures of junk. We must try that
+expedient, at all events. I know you would enjoy exploring those nooks,
+and you might find something that would interest you. What are you
+writing?—something for publication?”
+
+He drew back in surprise, embarrassed, half flattered, protesting. “Oh,
+no,—only jotting down a few thoughts that struck me,—of no value to the
+public,—for my own entertainment, or rather my own satisfaction,—a sort
+of argument, pro and con, on some questions of political economy that
+were never clear to my own mind, never justified to my own point of
+view. It is in a sort a dialogue, thoughts that, expressed otherwise,
+would bore the life out of any interlocutor.”
+
+“But why don’t you arrange to write something for publication while you
+are here, Mr. Desmond?—not history, for of course this library is too
+general in selection to afford you the data requisite, but—something
+else; why won’t questions of political economy do? something—I don’t
+know what,—but something for publication and permanent interest.”
+
+“Why, I couldn’t,” said Desmond, flushing painfully, so close had she
+come to his grief for the relinquished ambitions of achievement. “I am
+not capable of that kind of thing. Besides, I came here to teach—”
+
+“Surely you don’t have to sit up o’ nights to prepare for Chubby’s
+lessons! And you can’t work the boys all day; you have to let them
+stretch their muscles in the afternoon. You think that more consecutive
+time would be necessary,—more concentration—well, perhaps,—I am not up
+to such things myself. Such ideas as I have are originated in the
+twinkling of an eye. At all events, you have made this a mighty pleasant
+place to read and rest and jot down any vagrant ideas that may be
+roaming around when your day’s work is done.”
+
+She lay back in her chair and let her eyes rove smilingly about the
+changes in the aspect of the room. “I shouldn’t be surprised if you will
+have to share the library now. I dare say that all the rest of us will
+want to ‘butt in,’ as the boys say.” She laughed with a mischievous
+relish of the grotesque phrase and its unseemliness on her dainty lips.
+
+On the low marble mantelpiece were figures in bronze of two of the
+muses, Clio and Calliope, evidently costly and of some artistic merit,
+and Desmond had crossed on the wall above them two long swords, that had
+stood in a corner of the room, genuine relics of warfare that had seen
+grim service, and in their way carved out records in both history and
+poetry. An oil painting, a spirited battle-piece, was still above, the
+scarlet uniforms giving an intense note of color among the prevailing
+tints of grape-blue with which the room was furnished. Desmond had not
+inquired as to its subject, and the signature of the painter was not
+familiar to him. Its execution did not rise above a respectable
+mediocrity, save for the central figure, a commanding officer, who, with
+raised hat and mounted on a white charger, seemed galloping down the
+line of troops and straight out of the picture at the spectator.
+
+All these details did Mrs. Faurie successively scan as she sat languidly
+pulling on a pair of long gray gloves; all were brought into new
+significance, into added harmony, in the readjustment of the room. She
+seemed at great leisure, and it was some time before she spoke again.
+
+“You give a very beguiling aspect to scholastic labor. I don’t think
+that I should mind learning a thing or two, myself, from you here.”
+
+She looked at him with a smile touching the curving lines of her lips.
+His cheek flushed. He lifted his head as he returned her look. It was a
+fine head, and was well poised on his broad shoulders. That wonderful
+magnetic smile of hers was addressed to him, and he must needs have been
+more than human had he not responded to its subtle, unconscious
+flattery. He had been so reduced in pride, in the esteem of the specious
+world, so thwarted, agonized, deprived, humiliated, that this look of
+interest, of rallying mirth, of alluring charm, was singularly suave to
+his sensitive perceptions. For a moment his face was as it used to be;
+his dark blue eyes had a serene light, confident, spirited; they were
+smiling in their turn. His expression was lifted out of its wonted cold
+constraint,—it was earnest, ardent; and he seemed to Colonel Kentopp,
+pausing at the window on the veranda, as handsome a man as could be
+found between Lake Itasca and the Balize; he was stricken with amaze by
+the mutual expression of the two.
+
+“It would be my place and privilege to sit at your feet, Mrs. Faurie,”
+said Desmond.
+
+Perhaps because she was acclimated to the language of admiration and
+missed it sorely at Great Oaks, perhaps because she was so genuinely
+pleased with the tutor as a tutor that she could but approve him as a
+man, she cast upon him a warm radiance from her beautiful eyes, and
+broke out laughing and flushing as a much younger woman might have done.
+
+“What a pretty speech, Mr. Desmond,—and how pitifully insincere! What
+under heaven could you hope to learn from me?”
+
+He had not seen before that exquisite dimple in her cheek, for she
+seldom laughed with such exuberant mirth, or perhaps he might not have
+answered with such definite aplomb.
+
+“I should learn those higher things beyond the ken of books,” he
+declared.
+
+Before the fire was quenched in Desmond’s eyes, the pose of his head
+shifted, the flush on his cheek faded, while yet the whole changed
+aspect of the man was patent, Colonel Kentopp conceived it beneath his
+dignity to stand on the veranda and look in the library window at what
+seemed to him singularly like a flirtation between his hostess and the
+tutor of her sons. He forthwith laid his hand on the window-catch, and
+as it clicked in opening, Mrs. Faurie turned and burst into a peal of
+silvery laughter while he slowly and ponderously entered.
+
+“How funny!” she exclaimed. “Where is our walk on the levee? Have all
+our party fallen by the way or dispersed? I took upon me the mission to
+find Mr. Desmond, and I suppose the rest sent you to find me.”
+
+Colonel Kentopp could not smooth out the frown that would gather and be
+dissipated to corrugate his brow anew as he listened. She seemed all
+joyous unconsciousness and insouciance, yet this might be affected. He
+could not judge whether she was merely carrying off the awkwardness of
+having been so absorbed in the tutor’s conversation as to forget her
+waiting guests and her own errand, which was to invite him to join the
+party in a walk along the levee, or whether she was genuinely interested
+as she called Colonel Kentopp’s attention to the changes by which Mr.
+Desmond had so enhanced the attractions of the library. Colonel Kentopp,
+who was as far removed from the possibility of the appreciation of any
+literary point as a man of intelligence and education can well be,
+surveyed with blank assent the details which she indicated to him.
+
+“I thought,” he could not refrain from saying, “that you always declared
+that you did not care _un sou marqué_ how things look at Great Oaks
+Plantation.”
+
+“But this is not ‘things’—it is thought; it was done with an idea,—an
+inspiration. There never was a duller and a dowdier old room, and now it
+is replete with suggestion, with charm, with all the allurements of
+learning; and miracle of all, without the expenditure of a cent of
+money.”
+
+“Take care, Mrs. Faurie,” said Colonel Kentopp, laughing in that
+mirthless, rallying way in which privileged friends give themselves the
+pleasure of saying a disagreeable thing in the guise of jest; “after all
+your open-handed career, you may become a miser yet.”
+
+“Heaven send the day!” she exclaimed. And long, long afterward Desmond
+remembered the phrase and her look as she uttered the words. “It might
+be better for me and mine if the open hand had been always the close
+fist.” Then she broke off suddenly,—“Why, there is Mrs. Kentopp.”
+
+For that lady was coming in, laughing very much, which always started
+her pink flush to justify her blonded hair, and declaring that she had
+almost gone to sleep on the sofa in the parlor, while they neglected her
+and kept her waiting. If Colonel Kentopp had had scant appreciation of
+the esthetic value of the changes that Desmond had wrought in the aspect
+of the library, Mrs. Kentopp’s glacial, superficial glance at its
+details implied absolute disregard. It might have been a lesson to
+reduce the vanity of those purblind insects denominated men of science,
+who grope about the hidden meanings of the universe, who seek to
+“unclench from the granite hand of Nature her mighty secrets,” to bring
+near the stars, to revive the dead life of the rocks, to discern the
+brush that paints the flower and leaf, to descry whence comes the
+fashion of the cloud, to find out the paths of the trackless oceans,
+could they have appraised the degree of Mrs. Kentopp’s contempt for
+their objects as her eyes rested upon the insignia afforded by the
+telescope, the geological cabinet, the skeleton leaves, the epitome of
+history and poetry above the mantelpiece. Her flout of intentional
+inattention was so patent, her air of minimizing, almost ridiculing the
+importance of the tutor and all which to him pertained, that it became
+obvious to the other two that the afternoon walk was in order, and they
+were presently sauntering down the veranda, while Desmond ran for his
+hat.
+
+To Desmond’s surprise, he was not in the slightest degree mortified, nor
+intimidated, nor crushed by Mrs. Kentopp’s manner, as she had doubtless
+intended he should be. He was noting the fact that, despite their
+apparent intimacy, these people did not call each other by their
+Christian names after the manner of their sort elsewhere. It had never
+been the custom in this region, where a certain formality of the old
+regime still lingers, and he felt a kind of special gratitude that he
+was not called upon to endure to hear Mrs. Faurie address Colonel
+Kentopp as “Tom,” and his wife as “Annetta,” and their responsive
+familiarity to her as “Honoria.”
+
+The four walked abreast along the winding avenue under the boughs of the
+dense trees of the grove, which was perfectly clear of undergrowth and
+as level as a floor. Now and again the colonnades formed by the great
+boles parted to show beautiful open, grassy vistas amongst the gigantic
+growths that had given the place its name; but the eye could reach no
+limits of the forest, save on one side where the river had come
+“cranking in and cut a monstrous cantle out.” The party struck off
+presently into a byway, which at length brought them into the road at
+the base of the levee. Here they climbed the great embankment covered
+with Bermuda grass. The short, dense growth was evidently feeling the
+spring of the year in its thick mat of roots that held the earth
+together, being an almost impervious network of innumerable, interlacing
+fibres, and of special utility because of its imperviousness in times of
+“fighting water.” As they took their way along the broad path upon the
+summit, they could view from the elevation, of peculiar advantage in so
+flat a country, a vast circuit of the surrounding landscape. The water
+was high and the river was still on the rise. The space outside the
+levee seemed to Desmond to have shrunken very perceptibly since he had
+seen it a few days before. This strip varied greatly in width; now it
+looked at the distance as if it might measure a mile or more, and at
+certain points it showed only a few hundred yards, with here and there
+marshy intimations and disconnected pools where the water stood and
+reflected the light like oval mirrors. The sun, down-dropping, vermilion
+red, had turned all the currents of the great stream to crimson, and as
+it sunk lower and lower the shadows began to gloom in the dense woods on
+the hither shore, albeit there was still a line of gilding sunlight
+glinting along the forest summits.
+
+It was all very quiet; not a craft was visible on the currents; the vast
+river was absolutely mute. Despite the fact that this is one of the
+great highways of the world, a natural channel from boreal to
+subtropical climes, designed, one might fancy, to bring man near his
+brother man, without reference to his own ingenuity of device,—in
+conquering the wilderness, harnessing the steam, annulling time, and
+obliterating distance,—it could have seemed no lonelier were theirs the
+first of human eyes to rest upon it. There was no trace, no suggestion
+of man’s presence, save the great embankment of the levee along the
+river-side, now and again receding so far inland as to elude the sight,
+and the newly arrived “shanty-boat” lying at the landing.
+
+This craft held the degree of comparison with the usual trading-boat of
+these waters that a junk-shop bears to a warehouse. Desmond’s attention
+was first attracted to the humble and grotesque nondescript vessel when
+Chub, nimbly footing it in his trim little knickerbockers and
+well-filled stockings and natty Paris shoes, to overtake the group,
+joined his mother; he began to bang upon her, his arm about her waist,
+his head lolling against her arm, begging and pleading with her to buy
+him a bicycle,—a beautiful second-hand wheel,—which the amphibious
+trader had assured him was as good as new.
+
+“But you have your own wheel,” she remonstrated. “You actually want
+another? You would have to be a quadruped to ride both.”
+
+“And a long-eared one at that!” Colonel Kentopp declared, somewhat
+nettled; for his own small son had come up on the other side, casting up
+lustrous, anxious eyes, beseeching that if Chub did not secure this
+treasure, dear, _dear_ papa would open his heart and purse and bestow it
+upon him; for woe to tell! he had no bicycle whatever,—he had only a
+tricycle, and a bitter blow it was to his pride when Chub rode a safety
+and he could only accompany him, bowed to the earth, as it were, on a
+humiliating three-wheeler.
+
+“My wheel?—Gracious! my wheel is all out of whack!” cried the tumultuous
+Chub. “Just look at it, mamma,—that is all I ask. Just go down to the
+trading-boat and look at the wheel,—a—beautiful—second-hand—bike!”
+
+“But, Chubby, it would be out of the question for you to own two wheels
+and both already used—”
+
+“Mine’s got a punctured tire,” wailed Chub.
+
+“Gimme second choice,—if Chub don’t make it; lemme have it, papa dear,”
+beguiled the Kentopp hopeful.
+
+It had been Desmond’s firm determination, rigidly observed so far, that
+he would have no concern with his pupils other than scholastic. He would
+consider the trend of the conversation in their presence, as indeed is
+necessary always in association with young persons, that the equilibrium
+of their moral, political, or religious convictions be not shaken till
+they are of sufficient age and discretion to exercise a sober and
+independent judgment. He would direct their thoughts to subjects of
+value in their general reading. He would impart information or correct
+mistaken impressions in the course of casual chat. He would in moments
+of recreation narrate details of special interest or amusement, and thus
+further incidentally the judicious development of their mental
+faculties. But with the problems of their control outside the
+schoolroom, their sports, their manners, their moral training, he would
+not tax himself. This was in a manner interference, however salutary,
+and might be resented by those in actual authority, resulting in anarchy
+for the youths, and their last estate would be worse than their first.
+He thus argued that he did not stand in _loco parentis_; he was simply a
+machine for the furtherance of learning, a paid purveyor of wisdom, and
+when his day’s work was ended his responsibility ceased for the day.
+Therefore he was surprised at himself when he stepped forward briskly,
+as Mrs. Faurie, with a somewhat doubtful and disconsolate air, yielded
+so far as to agree to examine the treasure, and turned to the descent of
+the levee on the outer side.
+
+“Let me go and examine the wheel, Mrs. Faurie, and report its condition
+to you; I understand these machines better, probably, than you do.”
+
+She turned back with a wave of the hand,—a fine, free gesture at arm’s
+length. “A rescue!” she exclaimed. “I was just wondering if I could
+survive the unmitigated boredom of the tires, and the bell, and the
+handle-bar, and the pedals, and the saddle. Is the date set for your
+canonization, Mr. Desmond? Go, by all means, and add another to your
+deeds of grace.”
+
+But Chub emitted a disconcerted whine. “I don’t wish you to go, Mr.
+Desmond,” he plained, with the unwitting insolence of juvenile
+sincerity.
+
+Desmond was not out of countenance; he even sustained the furtive sneer
+in Mrs. Kentopp’s face. “Just as it happens, I don’t care in the least
+what you wish.”
+
+“Now, there it is, mamma. I want the bike, and Mr. Desmond doesn’t care
+what I want; _he says so_.”
+
+“It ought to be little trouble to teach the logical ideas of the clever
+Chub to shoot straight,” commented Colonel Kentopp.
+
+“Well, then,” Mrs. Faurie could not resist, “suppose I go, too. Mr.
+Desmond can instruct me as to the perfection of the tires and the bell
+and the handle-bar, and the tumbling guaranty, warranted to give the
+best headers in the market,”—she was looking down with her gracious
+maternal smile at Chub, as in his tumultuous callowness he clamored and
+clung about her skirts (“Oh, rats! mamma, it’s got no tumbling
+guaranty,” he interposed),—“and in the mean time I can meditate on the
+price.”
+
+“But, mamma, it is cheap, it is dirt cheap, it is dog cheap.”
+
+“What is the price?” Desmond demanded.
+
+When Chub responded, the tutor might have had a salutary monition of the
+discretion of his resolution to keep apart from the affairs of his
+pupils outside the schoolroom. “You just wait and see,” said Chub,
+sullenly.
+
+“Come!” cried Mrs. Faurie, her foot poised on the verge of the outer
+descent of the levee, her skirts held daintily clear of the grass with
+her left hand, her right about the shoulders of the enterprising Chub.
+She looked back with bright expectation at the Kentopps as they stood
+motionless.
+
+“Thank you, no,” said Colonel Kentopp. “We will await you here. I shan’t
+put myself in temptation’s way. To be dragooned into buying a crippled
+bike from such a trading-boat as that would be the final blow to my
+paternal authority.”
+
+He and his wife looked gravely after the pedestrians while standing
+together on the summit of the levee. The sparkle and suavity of their
+countenances, addressed to the exigencies of society, were dying out.
+They both seemed years older in a moment. Mrs. Kentopp’s haggard pallor
+was unrelieved by the flush that was wont to come and go as she laughed,
+and a certain pendulous effect of the cheeks became noticeable in the
+immobile contemplativeness of her expression. Her husband was more
+saturnine than one could have imagined from his arrogations of bonhomie.
+He had a spark of irritation in his eyes, too sharply flashing to have
+been kindled merely by the persistence of his little son, now picking
+his way after the group bound toward the trading-boat, now pausing
+irresolute.
+
+“Mr. Stanlett is certainly in his dotage!” Colonel Kentopp exclaimed
+acridly. “I never could have imagined him guilty of such folly as to
+bring that man here.”
+
+“Why, what is the matter with the man?”—his wife had a short, crisp
+tone, level and direct, and all devoid of the little aspirations and
+sudden rising inflections and exclamatory interludes which interspersed
+the tenor of her usual discourse.
+
+“The matter,—why, he is as handsome as a picture! He has the dignity of
+a lord, and I never saw a man who seemed more highly bred.”
+
+“Well,”—she drawled, “don’t you consider those facts advantages? A
+stranger in one’s house is always a nuisance, but it is better that a
+tutor or governess should be as genteel as possible.”
+
+“Great Scott! Annetta, how can you be so dense? He is a man whom Honoria
+Faurie might very well elect to fall in love with and marry.”
+
+Mrs. Kentopp laughed in derision,—not her breathy, flushing, becoming
+laughter, but a simple cackle of scorn. “Why, he is young enough to be
+her son.”
+
+“He is ten years younger,—that is all.”
+
+“_All!_ Ten years is enough. No doubt she seems an old lady to him.”
+
+“You wouldn’t think so if you had caught a glimpse of his face as I saw
+them talking together in the library. They would make a very comely
+married couple.”
+
+“Why, Tom Kentopp, you are wild! She would have to give up that big
+income if she married, thirty thousand dollars of it every year are as
+certain as taxes, chargeable on the whole estate, and the Great Oaks
+crops besides,—and take instead only her dower rights in Tennessee,—just
+a life-interest in a third of the real property, with that old Nashville
+residence, in a locality that is awfully unfashionable nowadays,—she has
+never lived there since Mr. Faurie’s death,—and a fourth of the
+Mississippi property. And such a sacrifice for such a man,—a penniless
+tutor! Why, if it were not way down here in the swamp, he would seem
+hardly of more consequence than a courier.”
+
+“Exactly; it is a mighty lonesome country for a pretty widow, and he is
+a mighty fine man.”
+
+Mrs. Kentopp grew grave. “I never was more surprised than when he came
+into the parlor. I expected to see a little lean, wizened body, like the
+man they had last,—little Mr. ——, Mr. ——, I have forgotten the little
+animal’s name. This man is not at all what a tutor should be in
+appearance; he carries himself as if he owned the world. And his look of
+cool, assured gravity is positively insulting. I don’t think that he
+gave himself the trouble to fetch out a smile throughout luncheon.”
+
+“He was not amused, perhaps,” Colonel Kentopp suggested.
+
+“But he should be amused when his betters choose to be merry,” the lady
+retorted.
+
+“It would be a deuced unpleasant thing for us,” her husband resumed the
+matrimonial speculation. “As long as Mrs. Faurie is in the world among
+her peers, and the value of that large and certain income is forever in
+her mind, with the bliss of spending it, and living like a princess, I
+am not afraid. Besides, the lords and counts would back out the instant
+the settlements would reveal the awful trap that Faurie set for his
+successor. But this man, this Desmond, would be mighty well satisfied
+with the division that gives her a life-interest in one third of the
+Tennessee real estate and a fourth part of the personalty there, and a
+fourth absolutely of everything in Mississippi. It would be a long sight
+better than tutoring. He would be mighty glad for another fellow to be
+hired to teach Chub,—especially with Chub’s own money. Mrs. Faurie is at
+no expense on her sons’ account—except such as is voluntary; she gives
+them those costly foreign trips, for instance.”
+
+“But _she_,—she wouldn’t be satisfied with that provision;—she would not
+give up her income for any man living.”
+
+“This is a very exceptional man, and this is the jumping-off place of
+all creation,” persisted Kentopp.
+
+Mrs. Kentopp’s shallow eyes scanned the far reaches of the Mississippi.
+The sun was no longer visible, but the vermilion reflection was still
+red upon the rippling waters, for the afterglow was in the sky. “I don’t
+see how Honoria Faurie manages so badly as to come to the end of her
+income in this way; it is positively ridiculous,” she said, with a sort
+of petulance.
+
+Colonel Kentopp bit off the end of his cigar and spat it forth with an
+expression that suggested it might be bitter, but his thought was
+wormwood. “Oh, she even anticipates her income as far as she can,—she
+spends at such a clip! She bought her steam yacht with her _savings_,
+Chub told me.” He smiled derisively. “It is in dock now; it ought to
+have been chartered while she is on dry land.”
+
+“And her automobile is another extravagance; why couldn’t she hire a
+touring-car for the little time that she is rusticating while abroad?”
+
+“Princesses don’t stoop to such economies, that is, abroad. Economy
+befits the swamp. I have nothing to say against the diamonds, although I
+think she might well have been satisfied with the Faurie family
+jewels,—nor yet those wonderful emeralds, for such ‘savings’ have an
+intrinsic value. But it does seem a most mischievous mischance that she
+should have to _faire maigre_ here in the swamp just at this time, with
+such a hero of romance as Mr. Stanlett has introduced as tutor.”
+
+“Mr. Stanlett never saw him till he was engaged and had arrived. I heard
+him say that the whole matter was arranged by correspondence through Mr.
+Keith, the boys’ guardian. It seems that he and the tutor had some
+mutual friends. I understand that this fellow has an exceptional
+collegiate record,—though if he has, I should think he could get a
+better place. But why should his presence here concern us, do you
+think?”
+
+“Because if there were a prospect that the Faurie property might come on
+the market for division, as the result of her marriage, at any
+reasonably early day, we should never be able to sell Dryad-Dene
+Plantation to Jack Loring. He evidently much prefers Great Oaks.”
+
+Her face lowered heavily. “I was just beginning to think of that,” she
+said, now dully out of sorts.
+
+“There are actual advantages,” he argued. “Dryad-Dene Plantation is
+subject to overflow, and Great Oaks rarely goes under unless their cross
+levee breaks. Our lands are cut up with bayous and sloughs, while Great
+Oaks has thousands of acres as level as a floor and as dry as a bone.
+And then the old house, the groves and the glades. Loring is as new as
+yesterday, himself, but he wants a place reeking of ancestors and
+aristocratic traditions.”
+
+“I don’t see why; it is his one merit that he grew in a single night! It
+is Jack that has shot up so surprisingly this time, and not the
+beanstalk,” said Mrs. Kentopp, sourly.
+
+“He isn’t going to stay new. That is the reason he does not locate
+somewhere else. The Great Oaks air of the _ancien régime_, its
+shabbiness and out-at-elbows look of romantic poverty, the ruin of
+princes, on account of that woman’s grudging neglect, when it is really
+bursting with richness and luxury, would fill his bill exactly. Loring
+would be furnished with all manner of aristocratic hereditaments, and in
+ten years people would forget that he was not born at Great Oaks. His
+people were natives of this region, and his name is familiar in
+Deepwater Bend; he would rather own Great Oaks than anything else his
+millions can buy. Let him once hear of that prince-in-disguise-looking
+tutor, of fine family and exceptional cultivation, in constant
+association with the beautiful Mrs. Faurie! He is not precipitate at
+best. He will wait till the division of the Faurie estate consequent
+upon a second marriage puts Great Oaks up at auction to the highest
+bidder.”
+
+Mrs. Kentopp’s face seemed in anxiety to suffer somewhat of a collapse.
+How, it might be impossible to describe, but now her blonde hair showed
+that much of it near her face was false, when its naturalness of
+arrangement had rendered this suspicion impossible hitherto. She was one
+of the women not pretty, but who contrive to compass that reputation by
+assuming the pose, the conscious attire, the bridling expression. As she
+looked now, the coquettishness of her equipment was a painful commentary
+upon her appearance, haggard with disappointment and foreboding. For the
+Kentopps had scant affinity with this secluded life in the Mississippi
+bottom, and they had not had such resources as Mrs. Faurie for shaking
+its mud—one cannot say its dust—from their feet for indefinite periods
+of absence. The sale of Dryad-Dene Plantation, with its elaborate
+industrial equipment and beautiful modern residence, would make possible
+the dream of their lives,—its transmutation into a handsome town house
+in New Orleans and a summer cottage on the Gulf coast, with lands enough
+somewhere at the minimum price to rent out to tenants to make cotton, as
+lands are created to do, to furnish an income for the absentees. But
+purchasers for a property of such value as Dryad-Dene are rare, and the
+_ci-devant_ swamper, Loring, who had grown very rich by speculation, was
+one of the few men who cared to invest in so inconvertible an asset as a
+fine house and large plantation in Deepwater Bend. A species of
+self-assertion it was to him, perchance. Here where he was born, as poor
+as poverty, though of genteel and respectable parentage, he could, as a
+bit of luxury, own the finest estate around which the river curved, and
+in the scene of his early privations have its magnates in hot
+competition to place their splendid holdings in the best light for his
+somewhat supercilious appraisement.
+
+“It would be idiotic,—it would positively be ridiculous—and she ten
+years older,” Mrs. Kentopp declared bitterly.
+
+Suddenly, like the lightning-change effect of a performer on the stage,
+she resumed her wonted aspect as if by magic. Her cheeks rounded out;
+her flush came and went; her lips were again curving and plump with
+distending smiles over her white teeth; her eyes were all a-sparkle; and
+she was waving the end of her long feather boa in a response of
+exaggerated mirth to a fancied greeting from the door of the
+“shanty-boat” far below. Mrs. Faurie was issuing thence, lifting one of
+her delicate hands, gloved to the elbow in gray kid; but the gesture was
+one of protest. She was not looking at her guests, but after a loutish,
+grotesque, thick-set man, of amphibious suggestions, who was springing
+with great leaps up the bank with an open knife in his hand. With this
+he so swiftly cut die rope that held the boat to a gnarled old tree,
+that the craft, feeling the impulse of the current, began to move from
+the shore before Mrs. Faurie could step from the gang-plank of the deck
+to the ground. As it was, the ripples ran over her feet, and she
+exclaimed aloud in agitation and sudden fright. She was safely on the
+bank when Desmond, still on the deck, sprang lightly across the
+ever-widening interval of water, now almost impracticable, swinging Chub
+ashore with a hand under each of the boy’s arms. As the boatman came
+running down the bank Desmond paused, and meeting him at the margin,
+struck him between the eyes a blow so fair and furious that the fellow
+was weltering saurian-like in the water before he scarcely realized that
+he had been felled. Perhaps the deficiencies of his craft, with no
+propelling power, constrained his attention; perhaps the vigor of the
+blow tamed his rancorous rage. He made no effort at reprisal, though
+Desmond lingered on the bank, but struck out swimming after his boat,
+and turned, only when once more safe on deck and out of Desmond’s reach,
+to gaze lowering and askance across the water, with a look at once
+vengeful, amazed, and dismayed.
+
+“What can have happened?” exclaimed Mrs. Kentopp, watching the scene
+from afar with wondering eyes. “Mr. Paragon is a muscular Christian, it
+seems.”
+
+“He is very injudicious,” said Colonel Kentopp, gravely. “These
+water-side vagrants are often dangerous rascals,—river pirates. Their
+good-will is safer than their grudges.”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER V
+
+
+The errand within the cabin of the shanty-boat had not proved swift or
+easy of dispatch. When Desmond and Mrs. Faurie had approached the dingy
+and plebeian craft along the muddy bank, he once more urged that she
+should wait without and permit him to make the preliminary examination.
+
+“The boat is clean!” cried Chub, on the defensive. “It is as clean as
+any other old place. Mr. Desmond is so particular. It _isn’t_ damp. Its
+smell is just doolicious.”
+
+Chub continued insistent, and Mrs. Faurie once more yielded.
+
+Oakum, tar, and the peculiar and distinctive odor of junk were the
+blended perfumes thus lauded which floated out to them from the open
+door of the cabin. The boat was gently oscillating on the current,
+teetering as if with the instinct of dance, for the river was at flood
+height, and even thus close to the shore the encroaching waters were
+deep. As Mrs. Faurie and Desmond made their way along the gang-plank to
+the deck, she glanced over her shoulder at the great cable that held the
+craft to the bank, passed again and again around the girth of a tree. “I
+hope she is tied up fast and hard; I should object of all things to go
+floating down the Mississippi River, the involuntary guest of such a
+trading-boat, impossible to land except by the uncovenanted grace of the
+current.”
+
+The cabin seemed dark at first, by contrast with the pellucid atmosphere
+without. A formless hodgepodge of barrel and box, of bunk and junk, it
+presented, until the eye was sufficiently accustomed to its comparative
+obscurity to discern such degree of symmetry as informed its
+arrangement. One end was dedicated to the domestic life of the
+proprietor; holding the cooking apparatus, expressed in a monkey stove
+that furnished heat as well, a tier of bunks on either side, a few
+broken-backed chairs grouped around a table, a gaunt, pale woman in a
+tattered gray woolen skirt and a man’s ragged red sweater, with a mass
+of dull, straight brown hair “banged” across her freckled forehead and
+hanging unkempt down upon her shoulders. She held in her arms a wan,
+puny baby, bent on sucking its thumb, and giving the universe only such
+attention as it could spare from that absorbing occupation. Knowing this
+habit to be an infringement of juvenile etiquette, the woman had tried
+to effect a diversion the instant she saw the flutter of Mrs. Faurie’s
+gray silk gown at the door. But a house cannot be set in order for
+distinguished inspection on the spur of the moment, and still less can a
+neglected infant’s conduct be immediately brought up to standard. A
+piercing, heart-rending wail made the air hideous, and as the released
+thumb, all curiously translucent and blanched and reduced in size, went
+back into the child’s mouth, Mrs. Faurie, entering, whirled around and
+saw both the effort to save appearances and its failure.
+
+She shook her head in indignant rebuke. “That will never do!” she said
+imperiously. “You ought not to let the child spoil its hand. That is a
+bad habit, and keeps it from being bright. It just sogs away over that
+old thumb, and you don’t care so long as it is quiet and doesn’t worry
+you.”
+
+The woman rose with a belligerent toss of the head. “Mighty easy to
+talk!—mighty easy! But you just wait, young lady, till you gits some
+childern of yer own, an’ see if you won’t be sorter lax todes anythink
+that will keep ’em from yellin’, when yer head is achin’ fit ter bust. I
+been havin’ chills and ager all winter.”
+
+“_Some children of my own!_” Mrs. Faurie drew herself up, majestic and
+boastful. “I have _three_ of my own,—nearly as tall as I am—_three_!
+This”—pulling Chub forward—“is my baby,—and doesn’t suck his thumb, and
+never did. And that reminds me,” she continued, as the forlorn river
+nymph stared amazed at this rich and brilliant apparition of health, and
+wealth, and beauty, and transcendent youth that might have seemed
+immortal, feeling the contrast God knows how poignantly, “there are a
+lot of baby clothes left over up at my house—I am Mrs. Faurie and live
+close by;—they will fit that fellow out for a year or two to come. I
+will send them down to you this evening if you will promise to put some
+pepper on that child’s thumb to keep it out of his mouth.”
+
+The woman murmured her thanks, but she did not feel her gratitude so
+acutely, rags and dirt being the natural concomitants of her life, as
+her interest in this resplendent personage, and the error as to her age
+and state of life. “Lord!”—she smiled broadly, showing the devastations
+of a mouth whence many aching teeth had been “rotted out with bluestone”
+in default of a dentist’s care—“I thought you was just a girl,—turned
+twenty, mebbe; and this”—she pointed at Desmond—“was your courtin’
+beau.”
+
+Mrs. Faurie for once looked embarrassed. “Oh, no,” she recovered herself
+swiftly; “I’m getting middle-aged now. And where is the bicycle,
+Chubby?”
+
+The other end of the cabin was fitted up as a store, with shelves about
+the walls and a sort of counter. Here were displayed toys and gewgaws of
+imitation jewelry and beads, some bolts of coarse cloth, a glitter of
+tinware, some earthen and wooden bowls, an assortment of candies and
+canned goods, tobacco, fine cut and plug, snuff, and some boxes of cheap
+cigars. Incongruously enough, among these things was a fine, fresh
+bicycle, with pneumatic tires, evidently perfectly new.
+
+Desmond looked sharply across the counter as the sodden, amphibious,
+nondescript animal that the raftsman seemed, hardly frog, hardly fish,
+hardly water-rat, yet partaking of the characteristics of all three,
+eyed the party furtively from his place among his medley of wares. His
+straight red hair was pulled forward in wisps on his brow as if it had
+been wet in a ducking and matted there. His big black hat was on the
+back of his head. His freckled, red, mottled face had a sort of soaked,
+bloated suggestion. He hesitated for a very perceptible interval before
+he named the price, and Mrs. Faurie exclaimed in surprise:—
+
+“Ten dollars! Why, Chubby, you told me that the price was five”; for
+Chub had waxed confidential with his mother as they had approached, her
+opposition withdrawn.
+
+Chubby’s earnest, eager countenance scarcely showed above a pile of
+cigar boxes on the counter over which he peered. He was genuinely
+surprised, yet not willing to seek to take advantage of any mistake that
+he might have made.
+
+“I understood you to say that you would sell the wheel for five
+dollars”; he addressed the boatman directly, with a sober but
+unflinching gaze.
+
+The trader’s broad face did not change, but there was a furtive gleam in
+his quick, sharply glancing, rodent-like eye, which sought to measure
+Chub’s simplicity. “No, sport, I said ten,” he declared, with a smile
+showing teeth singularly sharp and closely set together in his wide
+mouth, appearing as if he had more than the ordinary complement.
+
+Another man in the background, big and raw-boned, but young, leaning
+against the door of a cubby-hole at the rear, which from some
+obstruction, apparently hastily thrust within, would not shut fast,
+seemed to bear witness to this statement. He grimaced affirmatively at
+Chub with the familiarity of previous acquaintance. He had a large face,
+which seemed somehow out of drawing, as if swollen here and there, and
+with uninflamed red spots. One eye and one eyebrow were higher than the
+other, and he had a half-witted or mentally weak appearance, suddenly
+confirmed when he abruptly licked out a large red tongue in grotesque
+triumph in the conclusion of the dicker, as Chub responded:—
+
+“Well, ten dollars is cheap anyhow,—dirt cheap,—dog cheap. We will buy
+it at ten, won’t we, mamma?”
+
+The proprietor had taken Desmond’s measure the instant he entered the
+cabin. Silently gazing at one another across the counter, both knew as
+well as if the fact had been put into words that the price had been
+doubled to meet his scrutiny. It would have been still further advanced
+had the trader better understood the quality of the wheel.
+
+“Why, ten is _very_ cheap,” Mrs. Faurie began.
+
+“We cannot buy it at ten,” Desmond interrupted swiftly,—“in fact, not at
+any price.”
+
+Mrs. Faurie turned toward him in angry surprise, her eyes blazing. He
+met them without flinching. “You must take my word for it!” he said
+sternly. “Chubby shall not have it! It is useless to discuss prices.”
+
+Desmond had laid his hand on Mrs. Faurie’s arm and was about to lead her
+forth, when the flatboat-man in sudden fury flung the machine down
+behind the counter with a great clatter of the spokes and pedals.
+
+“No, no!” he vociferated to Chubby, the insurgent, who was hopefully
+emptying his pockets and counting his cash; “_you_ can’t buy it at any
+price. Clear out!—the whole bunch of ye. I’m about to cast off. I’ll
+souse any stowaways in your old Mississippi bilge-water. I’ll cut the
+rope and see how ye’ll get ashore then! I’ll land you all in the Gulf of
+Mexico!” As he voiced his frenzied, disconnected, incoherent threats he
+suddenly ran past the group, sprang from the deck, and with deer-like
+swiftness sped up the bank, his open knife in his hand.
+
+Within the cabin Mrs. Faurie started back in dismay as the half-witted
+creature left the door he had held closed, now showing within the cubby
+a glimpse of coarse bagging, intimating a surreptitious cotton bale, the
+corner of which had prevented the slipping of the bolt. He jumped up and
+down before the group with a capering step and a wild and foolish eye,
+now to the right as they pushed toward the door, and as they turned
+aside, now to the left, evidently with the intention of preventing or
+delaying their exit. Even the woman pushed a chair in front of Mrs.
+Faurie so suddenly that her knees struck painfully against it. “Take a
+seat, lady,” she said mockingly. “Oh, _do_ take a seat!”
+
+Desmond scarcely could credit his senses. It was like a disordered scene
+of a dream. His logical faculties grasped but the one idea of flight.
+“Make haste,” he cried out to Mrs. Faurie. “Get off the boat even if you
+jump into the water.” For he felt that the craft was already loosed and
+moving from the bank.
+
+“For God’s sake, hurry!” he adjured her.
+
+Then as the great gawk of an idiot sprang again in front of them,
+Desmond seized him, with an effort to sway him back and forth and fling
+him from his feet; but the river man was as strong and heavier, with a
+stolidity and lack of expectancy that seemed to add sensibly to his
+weight and immovableness; and when he was finally thrown, it was after a
+series of struggles that carried them locked and swaying together around
+the room, both coming down at last with a tremendous crash, bringing
+with them not only the stove-pipe but the monkey stove itself. This
+spewed forth a cataract of live coals over the floor, and as the clouds
+of soot and smoke circled about the rafters, obscuring still further the
+dingy quarters, the woman exclaimed loudly and resentfully her fears of
+fire in notes of woe and injury, and left off such schemes of hindrance
+as she had furthered to run for a bucket of water from the shelf. A coal
+had touched the gigantic idiot, and he was bleating like some great calf
+in a wide open-mouthed blare of sound till admonished by her to lend his
+aid in extinguishing the fire.
+
+In the midst of the confusion Desmond seized Chub, and though doubting
+if he could compass the space as the current swung the boat ever farther
+and farther from the bank, he leaped ashore. The flatboat-man was at the
+moment running down the bank for the purpose of reëmbarking. Despite the
+limit on his time which the receding craft imposed, he suddenly swerved
+from his intention, and made a swift lunge at Desmond, intending to stab
+him in the back. The attack was not altogether unexpected. Desmond, on
+the alert, sprang lightly aside, and, being unarmed, struck the boatman
+with his clenched fist, the blow landing between the eyes.
+
+It was a short, sharp fracas and an easy victory. Desmond was a trained
+boxer, and here he had light and air and elbow-room, which he had lacked
+in the wrestle within the cabin. There was not a word spoken between the
+two; but after the boatman had dragged himself out of the water where he
+was tossed, to his jeopardy of drowning in the suction, and regained the
+deck, Desmond, breathless and agitated, took his way up the bank to
+rejoin Mrs. Faurie, muttering to himself, and now and again pausing to
+look back over his shoulder at the progress of the boat.
+
+“He ought to be apprehended. If Kentopp had a pistol and had been
+nearer, we might together have held them both. Perhaps the miscreant
+might be stopped by a shot if we can get a rifle at Great Oaks mansion;
+but no,—he’ll be too far down the river by that time. The boat is
+crossing in the current; he is going to try to get screened behind the
+towhead, and then the boat will hug the Arkansas shore, and it will be
+too dark and far to risk a shot. Is there no chance to overhaul him? Is
+there no telegraph station nearer than Fairglade, Mrs. Faurie?”
+
+But Mrs. Faurie, pale and bewildered, did not reply directly. “Why, Mr.
+Desmond, that man tried to abduct us all! What could have been his
+object?”
+
+“Nefarious enough, no doubt; but I don’t understand it at all.”
+Desmond’s eyes had now a more definite expression of heed, yet she was
+aware that she only shared his attention.
+
+“And upon my word, Mr. Desmond, I don’t understand your high-handed
+interference,” she exclaimed. “What was the matter with the bicycle? It
+seemed a very good wheel. It was your refusal to allow us to buy it that
+made all the difficulty.”
+
+“The wheel was too good,” said Desmond,—“too good entirely for the
+price. It was perfectly new and obviously stolen. It was worth fifty
+dollars at least, and was offered at five. Chubby is no fool to mistake
+a price. The trader doubled the price when he saw me. But the rise was
+not enough.”
+
+“Oh, how fortunate that you were with us! I know nothing of the value of
+these things. No, Chubby, you must never buy from a doubtful source an
+article far below its value; it implies that you profit by a fraud that
+you understand.” Then looking over her shoulder, “How distant they are
+down the river. Mr. Desmond, _look_ how fast the current is running. Do
+you suppose they were afraid that we would report the suspicious bargain
+bicycle?”
+
+There was something evidently more than this. No mere effort to avoid
+the imputation of receiving stolen goods would justify such violence,
+Desmond was reflecting. The Great Oaks party were to be drowned, as if
+by accident, before the eyes of their friends; or they were to be
+carried off by a similar unlucky chance apparently, and among some
+trackless network of sloughs and bayous and lakes of the swamp country,
+of which such craft is the only voyager, the rickety flatboat would be
+sunk, with all on board save only the murderous crew, surviving not to
+tell the tale, and disappearing without a trace,—or was the whole
+demonstration the expression only of the wild, ungovernable rage of the
+miscreant, that such a clue to some terrible and heinous crime had been
+thus fortuitously discovered?
+
+Desmond could not judge, and he looked with a sense of baffled mystery
+at the craft as it swung along in midstream, smoke issuing not only from
+the stove-pipe, evidently once more in place, but from the windows and
+door as well. There was in this obviously no menace, for the proprietor
+was seated upon the deck at large leisure, manipulating an old violin in
+a style of very jaunty bravado. The strains floated far on the
+transmitting medium of the water, and the tune was easily
+distinguishable as again and again the catgut reiterated “A hot time,—a
+hot time in the old town to-night.” Desmond was of the opinion that the
+incident should be forthwith reported to the authorities. But Mr.
+Stanlett, hearing the details with some concern, demurred to the
+proposition.
+
+“You cannot be certain that the bicycle was stolen,—at any rate, by that
+particular flatboat-man. He may have bought it among a lot of stolen
+stuff, to be sure, but offered it for sale again, not knowing its value
+or suspecting its history,—a _bona-fide_ purchaser himself.”
+
+Desmond listened in surprise, for Mr. Stanlett had not impressed him as
+of a particularly charitable nature nor lenient in his judgments.
+
+They were sitting around the hearth in the front parlor after dinner;
+the fire was blazing in cheery wise, more in accord with the chill of
+the night and the record of the calendar than the springlike atmosphere
+of the day just closing in. The Kentopps were staying overnight, and the
+topic had been for some time up for discussion, after the manner of
+those whose lives are leisurely affairs and of little distraction. It
+had come in with the cigars, for the gentlemen had been sociably
+permitted to bring them into this sanctum after the service of the
+coffee.
+
+“We want to hear you talk,” said Mrs. Kentopp, with a pretty _moue_.
+
+“Yes, indeed,” cried Mrs. Faurie; “a man never has an idea in his head
+unless he has a cigar in his mouth. There is some obscure psychological
+connection between facility of cerebration and blowing rings, and some
+day when I am not too busy, I’ll think it out.”
+
+“As to the boatman’s casting off in that hasty way,” said Mr. Stanlett,
+pursuing the subject, “that is not an infrequent trick with better
+craft. Why, in my time I have been inadvertently left at a wayside
+landing ten miles from a habitation,—no joke in this country way back in
+the fifties,—and I have been carried off halfway to Vicksburg before I
+knew that the boiler had steam up. It is a pity that you floored the
+men. You overrated the provocation. Rough river rats can’t be expected
+to show drawing-room manners. That is one disadvantage of college
+athletics,—it makes a gentleman as handy with his fists as a
+professional bruiser.”
+
+When Mrs. Faurie interposed to protest her fright and danger, the temper
+of the party who did not participate in the turmoil within the cabin
+made it seem as if she were ambitious of the pose of heroine.
+
+“Why, my dear,” Mr. Stanlett reasoned with her, “you said yourself that
+the man who danced about and sought, as you supposed, to detain your
+party was a poor simpleton, a weak-minded creature; he doubtless meant
+no offense, though perhaps they were all nettled at Mr. Desmond’s
+refusal to buy the bicycle when he had heard it priced.”
+
+“I should have asked no questions about the bicycle, and therefore
+should have been told no lies,” said Mrs. Kentopp, with airy
+recklessness. “I should have taken the bicycle at the very cheap asking
+price, and in my innocent ignorance suffered no qualms of conscience. A
+little learning of the law is a dangerous thing.”
+
+“Quite right, quite right, madam,” commented Mr. Stanlett. “Really, I
+feel that we have no obligations in the premises, and our riparian
+situation here, so isolated, renders it peculiarly necessary for us to
+be on our guard against collision with the rougher river element.”
+
+Colonel Kentopp waved away the smoke that had thickened about his
+massive head. “Very true, very true!” he said, with a definiteness of
+assent welcome indeed to the old gentleman, who had spoken with some
+hesitation, for no man likes to express a fear that others may decline
+to entertain. Relieved of the imputation of timorousness, Mr. Stanlett
+went on with decision:—
+
+“These water-rats, many of them really river pirates, enjoy such
+immunity that I wonder that they are not more daring and enterprising
+than they are. I should not like to provoke personal animosity and
+possible reprisal for injuries, real or fancied, among them.”
+
+“That is just how our house at Dryad-Dene is so much more safely
+situated than you are here at Great Oaks. Why,”—Colonel Kentopp leaned
+forward with dilated eyes and lowered voice,—“a handful of marauders
+could loot Great Oaks mansion any foggy night; and once an oar’s length
+or two off the landing, they would be as completely lost in the mist and
+their pursuit as impracticable as if they were in the desert of Sahara.”
+
+Mr. Stanlett looked uncomfortable.
+
+“Yes, indeed,” declared Mrs. Kentopp, dimpling, “a bit inland,—as Great
+Oaks mansion used to be in the old time, before the bank caved in and
+the river carried off the whole point,—and this place would be Paradise!
+I sometimes wish that the river would make another grab at it and take
+it off—off—away down to the Gulf of Mexico!”
+
+“Thank you for your very queer wishes,” began Mrs. Faurie.
+
+“Only that you might move inland and rebuild near us,—we are _so_ far
+apart as it is,” said Mrs. Kentopp, with her head askew and her sweetest
+smile.
+
+“Never because of river pirates. What are our peace officers for, if we
+are not to take our ease under our own vine and fig tree?” retorted Mrs.
+Faurie.
+
+“Ah, but evil is inherently stronger than good. Hence the difficulty in
+the administration of the law and the conservation of the peace,” said
+Colonel Kentopp, magisterially. “Otherwise, of course, the cause of
+right and justice would have a clear walk-over. It is unfortunately far
+easier to conceal a crime than to detect it,—though skill and practice
+and persistence in ferreting out misdeeds go a long way and ultimately
+triumph in most instances, no doubt. But then, think of that affair last
+fall at Whippoorwill Landing,—nefarious business,—the malefactors still
+at large! Two men killed inside a good trig house,—big, healthy, hearty
+fellows. I knew Patton well,—used to keep a store in Arkansas;—and not a
+sign nor a clue yet as to how or why,—both wiped off the face of the
+earth,—touched off as lightly as the ash of this cigar,” suiting the
+action to the word, then shaking his head solemnly.
+
+“Oh, oh! raw head and bloody bones! Not another word! You will give the
+whole house awful dreams,” cried Mrs. Kentopp. “Come, Mr. Stanlett, let
+us show this worshipful company what bridge whist really is.”
+
+She rose with a great rustle of silk skirts and whisked away to the
+centre table, where she opened a drawer with an affectation of busy and
+sly peering, and thence produced a pack of cards. Desmond could not
+understand why Colonel Kentopp should look so disconcerted and annoyed.
+He had an air of positive concern as he said with pointed emphasis,
+“Choose some other game, Annetta, that perhaps we play better,”—with a
+heavy attempt at mirth. “We are too many for bridge. _I_ would sit out
+willingly, but I know that Mrs. Faurie will not permit me in my quality
+as guest,—distinguished stranger!—and Mr. Desmond being ‘home-folks’
+here.”
+
+“Bridge mote it be,” Desmond responded lightly, perceiving that Mrs.
+Kentopp, usurping the initiative of her hostess, had arranged the party
+expressly for his exclusion as if he were of no consideration, and
+caring little or naught what the tutor might think or feel; and to his
+surprise, Desmond cared naught for her demonstration. “I have letters to
+write,—I hear the packet passes near daylight to-morrow. I was just
+about to ask to be excused.”
+
+The straight, level brows above Mrs. Faurie’s fine eyes were drawn into
+something like a frown. It was inconsistent with her high-bred sense of
+courtesy that this exclusion should have been suggested. She would not
+willingly have ignored the gentleman, poor and proud, whose dignity
+should have been the more jealously regarded because of its jeopardy in
+his subsidiary position. As Desmond, on his way to the library, passed
+on the veranda without, he glanced through the window at the group, now
+settled at the table, a cheery scene, with the glow of the old-fashioned
+crimson curtains and velvet carpet, the sheen of gilt-framed mirrors,
+the elusive flicker of the fire, the rich dresses of the two women. He
+could but note that the frown was not altogether effaced from those
+level brows, somewhat formidable of expression in their _rapprochement_,
+and he discerned that Mrs. Kentopp had found it necessary to be even
+more resolutely alluring in her sparkle and flushing laughter and
+insistent gayety than her wont.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VI
+
+
+Desmond’s conviction that the matter of the bicycle was eminently fit
+for report to the authorities was shared by the party who was most
+intimately concerned, the flatboat-man himself. The jovial pose which
+Jedidiah Knoxton conserved that afternoon while he sat on a coil of rope
+on the deck and sawed on the fiddle, as the friendly current carried him
+farther and farther toward the centre of the stream, had no relation to
+the attitude of his mind. It was dismayed, intimidated, as he now
+reflected upon the episode and its possible consequences. He did not
+welcome the realization that his thought was shared by his wife, as he
+noted that she was standing with the child in her arms, staring with a
+sort of dull, apprehensive, quelled contemplation at the receding scene,
+for it seemed to move instead of the craft,—the bight of the great river
+bend, where the roiled water gave token of the path of the boat; the
+strip of level territory outside the levee; the immense, green,
+serpentine embankment where the group of “quality folks” stood dwindling
+till they seemed but a bunch of bright-hued fabric; the heavy, tangled
+growths of a stretch of swamp country to the north, and to the south,
+with no apparent limits to their extent, the seigneurial groves of Great
+Oaks.
+
+And here could be seen the mansion itself, with its score of red
+chimneys, its long, low white façade, each remove showing its many
+appanages,—now a wing and then, swinging into view, an ell, and
+straggling away the kitchen and offices, and dove-cote, and dairy and
+bell-tower, and stables, and orchards and vineyards; farther still was
+the village-like cluster of buildings for hired hands and tenants,
+formerly the “quarter” for slaves; and yet beyond appeared the
+steam-gin, the saw-and-grist mill, the potato-houses, the sheds for
+cows, and the work animals, mules, and horses; then thousands of acres
+of cotton-fields, orderly and neat as a flower border, already ploughed
+and bedded up, ready for the planting of the great staple,—a
+principality indeed, the realm of the rich and powerful and learned;—and
+was it wise to excite the just wrath, and the dangerous suspicion, or
+even to court the notice of those whose stake in the country was so
+large, whose hand was so heavy, whose ascendency was so complete!
+
+“Mighty fine folks, Jedidiah,” she said at length, still staring at the
+moving landscape. Her voice reached him even amidst the discordant
+sawings and scrapings of the horsehair and catgut. His hat was thrust
+back; his red forelock tossed to and fro as his head wagged in unison
+with his raucous performance. He did not speak, and presently, still
+eyeing the receding scene, she said, “Mighty rich folks, Jedidiah!” Her
+voice was pitched high, and its penetrating quality made itself
+insistent throughout the hubbub of the “hot time in the old town.” The
+discordant strain ceased suddenly. The bow, still held after the
+fiddler’s fashion, was shaken at her in emphasis as he drawled
+malignantly:—
+
+“Ye-es,—an’ if this fallin’ weather in the upper country holds a week
+longer, I can take a cool thirty thousand dollars outer that sucker’s
+pocket with three strokes of a spade; an’ by gum, I’ll do it, too!—if I
+gits a chanst.”
+
+He lifted his hand to the abrasions of his bruised and swollen face,
+which he had hitherto disregarded with an assumption of hardihood as
+naught. The last building of the “quarter” was disappearing in the
+distance, glistening with whitewash,—it was said on the river that the
+manager at Great Oaks whitewashed all creation when he was informed that
+Mrs. Faurie was returning from abroad, _even the under side of the
+horse-block_!—but the flatboat-man’s wife still stood staring, some
+vague premonition of trouble in her mind. Jedidiah, the frog-like
+suggestions of his face emphasized as he crouched his body forward, his
+legs doubled up among the coils of rope, stared, too, blinkingly. The
+light in the sky was a keen saffron gleam now; it dazzled his eyes; he
+was thinking hard, eagerly, fearfully, maliciously.
+
+The next moment the whole world seemed resonant and rocking with a wild,
+pervasive turbulence,—a steamer was rounding the point, and the little
+helpless, drifting leaf of a boat lay directly in her course. How he
+should not have heard the respiration of her engines, like that of an
+immense breathing creature which she resembled, he never knew, or how he
+had not felt the vibrations of the water pouring like a cataract over
+the great wheel at her stern,—for formidable as she moved upon the
+currents, loftily as she towered in her white, glistening presence, her
+chimneys seeming to vie with the forest heights of Great Oaks, she was
+not one of the fine packets plying between the cities. She was destined
+for one of the smaller tributaries, and the Mississippi made only a part
+of her course. But she looked to the flatboat-man like the scourge of
+God. She was materialized Fate! She was Terror, Doom, and Death in one
+to the wretched man whom momently she threatened to run down. He could
+never have described what he felt as now and again she lifted anew her
+frightful voice and spoke to him,—he could only feel,—spoke of warning,
+of smug and exact compliance with the law, of due notification of the
+death that she must presently mete out to him. He seemed all apart from
+the straining wretches that toiled, one at the pole and two at the
+rowlocks, as the two men and the woman strove against the current to
+bring the raft aside from the path of the domineering monster that bore
+straight down upon them,—for as far as consciousness was concerned, he
+could not have moved a muscle. It was a matter of instinct which
+controlled his labor, a mechanical effort, with which heart and brain
+had no part. He began to tremble when he perceived that the steamboat
+was slightly sheering to the left. Then for the first time he was
+sufficiently in command of his faculties to realize that the pilot’s
+bell was continually jangling, that the throbs of the engines were
+disjointed, feebler, that there was a desperate effort making to back,
+to sheer, to change the course.
+
+It was all useless,—too late! He saw as his frenzied muscles still
+strove against the impossible that the guards were filled with people,
+passengers, calling out undistinguished words of commiseration, of
+encouragement; the roustabouts stood on the lower deck, scarcely higher
+out of the river than himself in his humble craft level with the
+surface, and roared out advice.
+
+Suddenly with a wild scream the woman despaired. She rose, dropping her
+oar, and held up the child at arm’s length, with a gesture of appeal,
+toward the captain, who was standing on the hurricane deck. He waved his
+hand in encouraging response, and then the sheer was sufficient for
+Jedidiah to see that the yawl was unslung and sliding from the davits,
+and that the Flora F. Mayberry proposed to have the credit of humanely
+picking up their carcasses, after she had sent to the bottom their
+floating home and all their pitiful store of goods and chattels.
+
+For this was the aspect the episode took to his mind when, almost within
+the suction of the steamer, the flatboat struck a swift swirl of
+current, made, heaven only knows how. Some obstruction on the bottom may
+have caused it,—the smokestack of an old sunken boat, long since
+forgotten; a tree of former swamp growths, too deeply whelmed to be
+known to snag-boats or river charts, barely sufficient to turn a ripple.
+With the vast strength of the Mississippi River currents the deflecting
+ripple swung the flatboat around like a leaf in an eddy, and, as safe as
+if he had miles of sea-room, Jedidiah Knoxton stood on his raft, with
+his face corrugated and lined with rage, and his mouth stretched wide
+and distorted, and shook his fist at the towering steamer, and called
+out frenzied curses upon the craft and her captain, and passengers, and
+crew, and consigned them all to hell, a deep and fiery hole in his
+version. Meantime the passengers, their sympathy reacting, laughed and
+sneered; the deck-hands yelled out gibes of derision and responsive
+defiance; the captain shrugged his shoulders in silent contempt and
+ordered the yawl once more to its place.
+
+The woman, her arms akimbo, the baby, wailing unheeded now on the
+dancing, teetering floor, looked bitterly after the greater craft as she
+passed, the water playing in cascades of white foam over the wheel at
+her stern, her moving chimneys seeming to describe scrolls of mystic
+import among the clouds, punctuated here and there by the faint spark of
+a star.
+
+“It is allus the way, Jedidiah,” she said. She could scarcely get her
+breath as yet, and her voice had a catch like a sob. “It is allus the
+way! The big folks is safe, an’ high, an’ dry, while us pore folks take
+water, an’ skim the edge of hell.”
+
+His pride, if he might have claimed such an endowment, his
+self-sufficiency, had been grievously cut down by the incident; but
+since it had not culminated in death or disaster, it had seemed to
+resolve itself into a flout, an injury, a wanton insult. This view was
+confirmed in an illogical sort by the evident revulsion of the sentiment
+of the passengers and crew, their sympathy naturally enough checked,
+however, by his rage and futile venom as he volleyed his curses at them.
+
+“Not _allus_ so safe an’ sound,” he protested, “the rich folks ain’t.
+Them galoots up there at Whippoorwill Landing didn’t skim the edge of
+hell,—that’s true; they went teetotally in,—kerplunk!”
+
+The woman had been wringing out her hair and shaking out her skirts, all
+damp with the spray of the stern wheel of the steamer and the churning
+wake of her passage in which the raft yet rocked. An awed stillness
+though fearful delight came over her face at his words, and she softly
+drew near, and sat down on a coil of the ropes with the baby in her
+arms. The child had ceased to cry aloud bewailing his desertion, but as
+if silence were too great a boon to accord, he kept up a sort of
+absent-minded whimpering or crooning, reciting in some sort a theme of
+woe, learned by rote, the significance of which had been forgotten or
+was uncomprehended.
+
+“Yes, sir!” Jed Knoxton exclaimed with hearty satisfaction, “_they_ got
+the butt end of the club, sure! Providence was right after them at a
+two-forty clip!” He sneered as he laughed. “I tell you the way it was
+meted out to _them_, you might have thought they was pore folks, fur
+sure.”
+
+“I never could make out how ’t was they never suspicioned nothing,—how
+it was so easy done,” she speculated.
+
+There was not a soul within a mile of the boat, yet he glanced fearfully
+over his shoulder before he answered. His brother, the idiot, had gone
+back into the cabin, and now and again a long-drawn snore and at times a
+sputtering gasp told that he had sought his bunk for the night. The
+broad Mississippi stretched silent and deep, vacant on either hand, so
+broad that they could only see the line of the hither shore a mile away
+as they drifted along on the swift current. There was no other craft in
+view; no motion save the long, elastic undulations of the waves, here
+and there crisping into ripples when a flaw of the chill night breeze
+struck the water. Sometimes they were tipped with a shifting
+scintillation, the reflection of a star, and again only a sense of a
+dark, transparent lustre betokened the depths. A world, it was, and all
+to themselves; yet he looked over his shoulder, fearfully.
+
+“They got into the store by purtendin’ to be customers,—that’s how.”
+
+“But stores don’t keep open past midnight,” she remonstrated.
+
+He ducked his red head and chuckled into the bosom of his checked
+hickory shirt. It seemed so funny,—so very funny! “Of course ’twas outer
+business hours; but they was ailin’—oh, my, how ailin’ they was! Becburn
+give out that he had ptomaine pizenin’;—when they landed in the skiff,
+an’ came up the bank, Danvelt told me that they hallooed the store bold
+as brass, same as if they was in earnest. An’ them two, the proprietor
+of the store and his clerk, they took it all in, for gospel sure.
+Becburn _had_ swallowed something mighty nigh as bad,—a power o’
+ipecac,—and he was jus’ a-vomitin’ an’ retchin’ as he come,—an’ sure
+enough them suckers opened the door, to give him something to ease him
+off!” He paused again to laugh silently, holding his head down. “That
+light-haired, slim fellow, Oscar Patton, the clerk, he said that common
+kitchen sody was the antidote; an’ all bar’foot as he was, he run into
+the back room to git a box,—they dealt with him there.”
+
+The child still crooned its plaint, though forgetting its sorrow; the
+woman’s face was illumined by the light of the moon, only a mere segment
+of pearl, but all else was so dark,—the silent river running like the
+stream of Time, the glooms of the forest crowning the nearer banks
+towering dimly into the night, the opposite shore lost in distance,—that
+its lineaments were easily discerned by one familiar with them. Even one
+not accustomed might have noted the peculiar slant of the eyes, the
+snake-like contour of the countenance, the long, serpentine curve of the
+throat,—she seemed not out of place clinging to the slimy timbers of a
+raft in the midst of the murky Mississippi. She listened in cold-blooded
+interest to this tale of a deed of dread, but now and again she
+shuddered.
+
+“The t’other fellow, Ackworth, was harder to kill, they say. He got his
+chanst and fit. He got on to the game, whenst he heard Patton yell out
+‘Oh, my God!’ an’ drap to the floor. Ackworth made a break for the
+drawer of the counter then,—he had just been pourin’ out a glass of
+whiskey for the sufferer from ptomaine; Becburn declares now he ain’t
+responsible for nothin’ ’bout it all, for he done nothin’ but turn
+himself wrong side out with that ipecac!—an’ when Ackworth laid holt of
+the knob of the drawer, they knowed there was a pistol in it, an’ they
+jumped on him. Ben Danvelt jes’ held him by the nape o’ the neck, an’
+though he got the drawer open, they pushed him down an’ shut his head up
+in it. He couldn’t git a purchase on himself to pull his head outer it.
+Tom Turfin stabbed him twicet, while the t’others held him thar with his
+head in the drawer,—stabbed him twicet in the back just under the
+shoulder-blade. He wasn’t dead, though, when they let the drawer loost
+an’ he drapped,—he died hard. Tom say that he wriggled an’ writhed on
+the floor like a wum. He only spoke once; he lifted up his voice an’ he
+says, says he, ‘My blood shall be a testimony against you.’ An’ his
+mouth was full of it, then. But Ben Danvelt he spoke up,’ Incompetent
+testimony in this court.’ He’s a funny feller, full of his jokes! Then
+he let Ackworth have the knife agin,—right in the throat, this time. An’
+they got no more o’ his jaw then. A slick job, it was,— done right.”
+
+The progress was swift down the great, pulsing river; they could see the
+dark forests upon the bank all a-journeying northward as so elastically,
+so noiselessly, they swung along toward the south. Now and again the
+braided currents carried the craft close in shore, and they could smell
+the dank, rich vernal odor of the earth, the pungent tang of herb and
+tree; once in a deep, oozy tangle where a bayou went sluggishly forth
+into the woods, an outlet from the Mississippi, they heard a sudden
+resounding splash in the water. The woman started nervously, and with a
+sharp exclamation let her snuff-brush drop from her mouth into her lap.
+
+“Shucks, Jocelinda,” the man sneered, “don’t you know a ’gator takin’ to
+water yit?”
+
+The ripples of the great saurian’s stir as he swam along the marge were
+perceptible now in the moonlight as the boat shot past, down and down
+the stream, and they seemed far away and faint the sound when they heard
+the alligator’s resonant call to his mate in the lagoon, and presently
+another roar hardly more than some dull blast of a distant horn, so fast
+the river swept them on.
+
+“It ain’t seemin’ no slick job to me,” Jocelinda commented at length,
+“else it would never have been found out.”
+
+“Oh, _you_’d have done it mighty different, wouldn’t you, now?” he
+sneered. “_You_ are up to all sorts o’ tricks.”
+
+“I can kindle a fire that won’t go out,” Jocelinda declared.
+
+“But the fire didn’t go out; ’twas _put out_,—that’s whut! The light gin
+the alarm so denied quick. That old hussy, the Swamp Lily, came scootin’
+down the river a full day behind time; an’ headin’ for the landin’, the
+pilot seen the store afire. He sounded the whistle fit to wake the
+dead,—waked all the swamp country for miles around. The old boat jes’
+sot there on the water a-pipin’ an’ a-blowin’ as if she’d bust. Then all
+the galoots round about got inter their breeches an’ boots an’ run to
+the landing to help put it out. The Swamp Lily sent out all the
+deck-hands, an’ the Mississippi River had a leetle water to spare,—no
+reason why they couldn’t throw the water on the fire an’ put it out.
+_You_ couldn’t kindle a fire that the Mississippi River can’t squench,
+hey, ‘smart Aleck’?”
+
+“But then the folks found the bodies right there,” she objected.
+
+“Ye-es,” he drawled. “They had their own reasons for not having walked
+off.”
+
+“An’ so the folks found the bodies fresh killed, an’ seen that the store
+had been stripped of mighty nigh all the goods an’ all the money in the
+cash drawer.”
+
+“Ye-es, the boys loaded up all they could kerry on the steam-launch an’
+set the shebang afire. But for the accident of the Swamp Lily comin’
+along out of turn, the whole caboodle would have been ashes and cinders
+before the sun had riz. They would have thought the proprietor an’ his
+clerk was burned by accident, or in tryin’ to save something, or was
+drunk an’ didn’t wake. I ‘member Danvelt said he thought that Ackworth
+had the name of takin’ a glass too much once in a while.”
+
+“’Twas a big fire,” she remarked, as if making a concession. “It lighted
+up the whole country. The river shone like a stream of flames in the
+fog,—just seemed to split the world in two.”
+
+“_’Twas_ a big fire—an’ a slick job, too,” he protested. “They got away
+with the goods an’ some cash,—consid’ble spondulix,—an’ nobody ain’t
+’spicioned ’em yit. ’Twas way last fall, too.”
+
+“Them bodies ought not to have been found,” she argued dolorously. She
+felt that it was the one disparagement to the artistic achievement.
+
+He did not reply. They were now passing between a small island and the
+shore. The water, thus compressed in volume, ran with still more
+turbulent rapidity. He was not sure how their voices might carry on the
+still air and the transmitting medium of the silent river. They were too
+near the land on either hand to risk such words as might phrase the
+thoughts of their dark hearts. The island was in progress of swift
+building. At no distant day it would be the shore. The great, restless
+river—now sweeping away hundreds of acres, that melted into nothingness
+in the floods; now cutting channels through points of land in an
+inconceivably short time, transmogrifying them into islands far from
+their ancient affiliations—was here filling up with silt the shallows
+and rifts and chasms into solid continuity with the bank. This island
+was what is locally called “a towhead,” a spit of white sand, sparsely
+covered with brush; and one might imagine so desolate a loneliness could
+shield no human being who could lend the ear of comprehension to a
+chance word floating over the water. But Jedidiah Knoxton and his wife
+Jocelinda kept their dubious counsels, till once more they swung along
+between distant banks of the deep and lonely river below and the
+unpeopled skies above.
+
+“Jed, warn’t that bicycle one of the Ackworth stock?” she queried, in a
+mere whisper.
+
+“Ax me no questions an’ I’ll tell you no lies,” he retorted gruffly.
+
+“I allus believed them was ’spensive things,—heap mo’ ’spensive than you
+knowed. I b’lieve Danvelt let you have ’em jus’ to let you git tracked
+by ’em,” she suggested, “ter keep s’picion off ’n him.”
+
+“Shet yer mouth, Jocelinda,” he vociferated furiously, “else I’ll break
+it in.”
+
+“Why, _you_ had nothin’ to do with thar trick,” she expostulated. “I
+ain’t taxin’ _you_ with nothink.”
+
+She was quiescent for a time, as if knowing that her silence would
+stimulate him to speech. The surest way to reopen the discussion was
+paradoxically to close it. The child was sleeping now, and once and
+again she patted its back, as it lay on her breast, with a fragmentary
+“Bye-oh, Bye-oh.”
+
+“Them things ain’t labeled,” Knoxton recommenced, as if there had been
+no cessation of the discussion. “They are as common as crayfish. Folks
+are wheelin’ all over the country.”
+
+“Not at no five dollars, Jed,—nor yit ten. I tole you that I priced them
+jiggermarees whenst I was in Vicksburg, an’ some was as high as fifty
+dollars.”
+
+“An’ I tole you that the store folks was stuffin’ you,” he cried, with a
+sort of turbulence that was akin both to rage and woe. “A tacky body
+like you to go pricin’ wheels an’ such fixin’s!—they was makin’ game of
+you.”
+
+“Mebbe so, mebbe so,”—she yielded a facile acquiescence, apparently
+without sensitive vanity; “but I _did_ see this evening that ten dollars
+was a power too low. That man wouldn’t let Mrs. Faurie risk herself with
+it,—rich as she is! He knowed it war new and stole.”
+
+“Well, damn Mr. Faurie,—that is all I have got to say,” the flatboat-man
+cried, his hand going up to his bruised face tingling with pain as his
+rancor roused at the recollection of the incident. Then tremulous with a
+nervous rage, that yet contended with a cold chill of fear, “But if this
+wheel was to be tracked to me, what would ail me not to split on Danvelt
+and Turfin and the others?”
+
+“I reckon they are too far by this time to be caught; it all happened
+last October, and here it is nigh the spring o’ the year agin. I reckon
+they think that nobody would believe you. The law would have you safe by
+the laig, an’ the goods found on your boat. ’Twas only a blind if
+anybody took after them.”
+
+There was a long silence. The boat was again approaching the shore of
+its own accord, it seemed, yielded as it was to the whim of the current.
+The dark forests were coming down to the verge of the stream with
+beckoning, sheltering suggestions in their wild, tangled glooms. Her
+breath was short, so ardently she hoped what she dared not say. He
+divined her hope, but with that perverse sense of domination, so
+characteristic of the domestic tyrant, he would say naught to encourage
+it. He pursued the subject. “If I believed that, I’d sink the wheels in
+the river without more ado,” he declared.
+
+“They are too light,” she protested. “I dunno how them cur’ous
+injer-rubber rims might make ’em float.”
+
+Again there were no words between them for a time, while the river clove
+through the night as silent as the stars vibrating above in the sky. The
+moon was sinking toward the western bank. A vague sense of yearning, of
+wistful sadness, pervaded the lunar light that began to suffuse the
+summits of the great, gloomy, primeval forests. This glister seemed to
+respond to the slow down-dropping of the weary one who had finished her
+course through the skies,—no joyous welcome this, but replete with
+solemnity, with weird silence, with aloof suggestions such as might
+typify the down-dropping into a grave. The wind had grown more chill.
+Jocelinda wrapped closer a ragged petticoat of red flannel, which the
+baby wore about its shoulders like a mantle. The touch of the fabric
+reminded her of the infant’s wardrobe which Mrs. Faurie had promised
+her,—not that she cared for such comforts and means of tidy array; it
+would have been far too much trouble to keep the child clothed and
+tended in many whole and clean garments. The recollection merely brought
+to her mind a collocation of ideas that had earlier occurred to her. “I
+don’t believe that man was Mr. Faurie!” she said suddenly.
+
+It was an unlucky topic. The very name roused Knoxton’s rancor. “What
+for no?” he exclaimed, in a sudden gust of anger. His knowledge that the
+bicycle had been instantly recognized as stolen goods; the possibility
+that his possession of the machine might connect his identity with the
+miscreants who had plundered the store at Whippoorwill Landing, and
+murdered the proprietor and clerk; the fear that this was their
+nefarious intention in shunting off on him these costly wares so easily
+detected, so rare among the humbler population among whom his trade lay,
+so incongruous with his stock of goods and character of custom, filled
+him with a bewildered dismay. His was not a trained mind to think
+consecutively, to deduce correct conclusions; he blundered upon his
+convictions; his plans were founded on impulse, inclination. Ignorance
+is not compatible with a just and accurate foresight. His resolves,
+taken in a tumult of angry volition, he would seek to execute without
+due regard to feasibility or perception of sequences, and he had no
+sense of justice and could maintain no poise of temper. “What for no?”
+he reiterated, striking at his wife with the rope’s end.
+
+Thong-like it curled around her body, the end lashing her arm, bare to
+the elbow, with force enough to raise a welt. Experience had ripened
+such wisdom as she possessed, and in self-defense she forbore to
+exasperate further her brutal husband. She said naught of the smart of
+the lash, but recanted hastily. “I just took up the idee that he was
+somebody else. I thought that old man Faurie was dead. Ain’t this his
+widder?”
+
+“Widder?—rats! old Faurie’s widder? That slim, handsome, high-steppin’
+gal! She is his son’s wife,—she ’lowed to you that her name was Mrs.
+Faurie.”
+
+“Mebbe so; they hev been gone to Europe so long I lost the run of ’em,”
+the woman meekly admitted.
+
+“Naw, that ain’t it,” Jedidiah sneered. “Ye are grudgin’ her them good
+looks an’ brash, high-handed ways; draggle-tailed vixens like you can’t
+stand for other women to be young an’ sniptious.” He spat moodily into
+the Mississippi. “That was young Faurie an’ his brand-new wife—the old
+man is dead long ago. I’m thinkin’ the brat mus’ be his leetle brother.
+I remember that there was a new baby at Great Oaks mansion about ten
+year ago; I noticed it ’cause the old plantation bell was rung like mad
+for rejoicing, like it had an ager fit, an’ the Swamp Lily an’ other
+boats whistled a salute when they passed, though such is agin the
+regulations.”
+
+“I hedn’t never been hereabouts in them days,” she stipulated, by way of
+excuse for her lack of readiness to confirm these vagrant and erratic
+recollections of his wandering experiences as he floated down the river
+with his store of goods, or poled his craft laboriously in and out of
+the bogues and bayous. “I lived then over in the Arkansas.” She held her
+head down for a moment. A scene had arisen before her mind best
+discerned with eyes closed: a little cabin in a bit of clearing in the
+dense, dark woods; a filthy, miry dooryard; the fowls and hogs and lean
+old mule, all clustered about the rickety porch; a stationary home on
+dry land,—all seemed paradise at this instant to the amphibious nomad,
+for the rope’s end stung, and her indurated sensibilities had yet some
+nerve a-tingle to the coarse taunt and the bitter fling.
+
+“Why, any fool but _you_ would know. Didn’t _she_ say that she was Mrs.
+Faurie? And didn’t he tell the brat he shouldn’t have the wheel at no
+price? And didn’t he tell her she must take his word for it? And didn’t
+he grab the woman by the elbow and the cub by the collar, like they
+belonged to him, an’ start them off the boat, him looking as fierce as
+Judgment Day? An’ ain’t that the Faurie plantation, Great Oaks, where we
+was tied up? Answer me that,—answer me,—answer me,—ye tongue-tied
+slut,—or I’ll cut yer tongue out.”
+
+“Oh, laws, Jed,” said Jocelinda, her nerve shaken and very near to
+tears. “I ’lowed that she was a widder lady. She spoke of her kids. I
+’lowed that boy was one of ’em. I hearn her say that—”
+
+“Ye _’lowed_ an’ ye _hearn_ like a dod-rotted fool. That man is Faurie
+and owns Great Oaks! An’ ye can bet yer immortal soul I’ll give _him_
+somethink to think about soon that’ll make him forgit he ever seen a
+bike or a tradin’-boat, air one.”
+
+He had risen from the coil of rope and was stepping about elastically on
+the deck as if he intended to pole the craft in to the shore. She
+silently followed his example, first placing the child in the centre of
+the coil of rope, and taking her turn at the work with strength and
+activity as muscular as if she were a man. Perhaps an infusion of
+cheerfulness aided her exertions, for they were making for a bayou that
+the river sent sluggishly wandering down with scant impetus from its
+currents through the swamps and the heavy glooms of a cypress slough,
+and she welcomed the sense of added safety in the deep seclusions of the
+wilderness. Before the Faurie party, with the utmost expedition which
+the isolated situation of Great Oaks Plantation permitted them, could
+contrive to notify the authorities of any suspicion they might have
+entertained, the shanty-boat would have quitted the thoroughfares of the
+river, leaving not a trace. The story of the imminent danger of being
+run down by the Flora P. Mayberry would suggest some similar disaster as
+a reason for the disappearance of the flatboat-man and his craft. The
+bicycles—there were only three—could be hidden, destroyed, buried in the
+deep, murky, marshy tangles of the lagoons. Here it would be scarcely
+possible that the fugitives should be seen or followed,—a succession of
+cypress brakes, of swampy pools, a network of bayous and sloughs with
+scarcely a dry acre for miles, the land of no value and impracticable,
+the locality the deepest solitude, the aquatic growths of an
+impenetrable density. She had not expected to sleep that night with so
+grateful a sense of security, for it was not long before the boat was
+tied up in a jungle of young cottonwood trees, awaiting the passing of
+the hours till dawn should bring the light necessary for the navigation
+of such tortuous ways. But she was up and ready at the first glimmer,
+her energies recruited as much by the surcease of suspense as by the
+physical rest.
+
+As the gray day began to break, dim and clouded, it might seem to a
+sophisticated sense a desolate scene, for even such symmetry as the
+sluggish bayou possessed was obliterated; and now the boat was poled
+along a stream-like channel, and now it threaded a series of lakelets
+connected by narrow straits, full of half submerged growths, and again
+it seemed almost aground in a slough where the medium was mud rather
+than water. These lakelets were of an inky blackness, and in their midst
+stood forlorn forests of gigantic cypress; upon the dark, mirror-like
+surface of the water the white boles of the trees, long ago deadened by
+a permanent inundation from some freak of the changeful river, were
+reflected with weird distinctness and a spectral effect. The boat was as
+if afloat in a world of dead vegetation, the duplication of the lifeless
+trees below, the ghostly white forest towering above. Now and again a
+sharp bit of steering became necessary to keep the craft clear of the
+cypress-knees, as the conical, protruding excrescences of the roots are
+called, rising considerably above the surface of the water. Hanging moss
+depended in vast masses and heavy festoons from the bare white boughs
+far, far above, and served to deepen the gloom of the eerie effect of
+the scene. More than once the voyagers saw an alligator lying half
+embedded in ooze and mud, looking as lifeless as the log it resembled;
+but one had awakened apparently from the period of hibernation, and was
+swimming down the centre of the black lake. Jedidiah Knoxton, watching
+his approach, was dubious which course he might take, in meeting the
+boat, in the narrow passage.
+
+“He don’t understand the code of signals nohow,” he demurred.
+“’Twouldn’t be no good to whistle if I could.”
+
+The alligator solved the problem as far as he was concerned by diving
+suddenly, and doubtless embedded himself in the refuge of the mud. The
+question as to where he might come up again presented another doubt to
+the mind of Jed Knoxton, but he prodded boldly with his pole, and
+presently they had passed, the huge saurian still invisible.
+
+There were other tokens of the spring besides the awakening of the
+alligators from their wintry torpors. Birds were flitting through the
+air; frogs were all a-croak about the logs; the slimy, nondescript
+medley of vegetation and muck was here and there pierced by tender
+spears of delicate yet intense green, the folded leaves and shoots of
+the swamp lily. Suddenly the first ray of the sun struck upon a wide
+expanse of silver sheen in the distance,—it was a lake evidently miles
+in length, of the peculiar horseshoe contour characteristic of the
+lacustrine waters of the region, surrounded by dense and gloomy forests,
+and fringed with saw-grass. This thick, prickly growth, so heavily
+notched as to suggest its name, caught Jed Knoxton’s attention. It was a
+keen glint of green at this season, almost as intense as light itself.
+Jed Knoxton stood still and held his hand above his eyes as he gazed;
+then he turned to scan some landmark which he identified toward the
+west, and again he shifted toward the east.
+
+“I done los’ my bearin’s somehow in the swamp,” he muttered. “I been
+polin’ todes the north ‘stead o’ south. An’ damn that old corkscrew of a
+river. We drifted thirty miles las’ night to make five miles o’
+distance.”
+
+He still stood absorbed and pondering when his wife issued from the
+little cabin on the deck. “What’s the matter, Jed?” she asked
+apprehensively. Smoke was curling from the stove-pipe thrust through the
+roof, and the sizzling of frying pork came with its pungent odor from
+the open door. She held in her hand a long iron spoon coated with meal
+batter while she fixed expectant and anxious eyes upon him.
+
+“Jes’ as well, jes’ as well!” he muttered.
+
+“What is it, Jed; what you studyin’ about?” she persisted.
+
+“We made no distance las’ night scarcely on that twisted sarpient of a
+river,” he said. “It is blamed like that old joke of the fool
+drummers,—travel fifty mile down the Mississippi, an’ then take your
+gripsack an’ walk half a mile back to where you started from.” He
+grinned in surly mirth. “Then I done shortened it some more by missin’
+my way in the swamp.” He looked about in dull speculation, as if he were
+wondering anew how this mischance should have betided him, and she
+dreaded lest he might fail, in considering this problem, to disclose the
+intention evidently slowly forming in his mind. But for him its interest
+was paramount. It struck her as a blow in the face might have done when
+she heard it voiced anew, for she had hoped that time and distance had
+combined to obliterate it, and it boded ill, she knew. “We ain’t more’n
+five miles from the edge of Great Oaks Plantation,—I know it by the
+earmarks o’ that old White Deer Lake. An’ it’s just as well,—_just as
+well_—p’intedly convenient, in fac’. I’m goin’ to give Mr. Faurie of
+Great Oaks Plantation something to study about that will make him forgit
+there was ever sech a thing as a bike or a tradin’-boat, air one.”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VII
+
+
+The ensuing days were bland and soft, and the Faurie family life
+gravitated insensibly to the wide verandas of the Great Oaks mansion,
+where much time was spent in futile chat, and where one could take the
+air without the exertion of exercise and be out-of-doors without the
+trouble of quitting the house. It was a fine illustration of the best
+method of _dolce far niente_. The favorite rendezvous was beneath the
+canopy of live-oak boughs on the extension of the veranda just outside
+the library windows, and here Desmond often joined the group, saying to
+himself that it had an air of churlish avoidance to hold himself aloof
+when they were all so near. In these days he heard no little of Mrs.
+Faurie’s plaints of the limited capacities of Great Oaks for rational
+entertainment.
+
+“Nothing to do,—nothing to say,—nothing to see. ‘Oh, give me to drink of
+mandragora, that I may sleep away this gap of time!’” she exclaimed, as
+she reclined languidly in her garden chair.
+
+There was something to see in the Great Oaks avenues,—the sward was rich
+and fresh, and all the vague, sparse, spring foliage of the trees sent
+out a glitter now of gold and now of green. Hyacinths, pink and white
+and blue, shook their fairy bells in a parterre near the house, and the
+trellises in the old-fashioned garden were delicately sprayed with
+green, lace-like leafage. There was much to see in the vast, murky
+floods of the Mississippi River; the opposite banks had wholly
+disappeared in the encroachments of the water on the swampy Arkansas
+shore, and as its limits were beyond the reach of vision, its aspect was
+that of some great inland sea. When Desmond remarked on the phenomenon,
+Mr. Stanlett stated, with the pride which the dwellers on the banks of
+the river take in its arbitrary and monarchical exhibitions of power,
+that sometimes here, in high water, it measured sixty miles wide, and
+always in the Bend its average depth was not less than one hundred and
+eighty feet.
+
+“And just beyond the point the lead-line often marks scant four feet on
+the sandbars,” Mrs. Faurie interpolated iconoclastically.
+
+The words suggested a lurking danger to the larger craft visible, the
+possibility of getting aground even in such a vast welter of waters. A
+great tow of coal was in midstream, bound from Pittsburgh to New
+Orleans, the steamboat pushing before her a score of broad, laden
+barges, ranged elliptically about her prow, and gliding slowly and
+majestically down the current. Seen above the summit of the dense
+forests in the distance, against the bland, blue sky, a whorl of black
+smoke uncoiling from lofty chimneys announced the approach of the
+steamer of the regular packet line rounding the point; and the upward
+course of a snag-boat had its own suggestion of yet another of the
+jeopardies of the navigation of the great, lawless river.
+
+“Talking about something to drink,” said Mr. Stanlett, a bit uneasily,
+“I had a queer experience yesterday. I was out riding, and when that
+sudden shower came up, I was pretty far from home and got soaking wet.
+And—you know my rheumatism—I stopped at the first house I could reach;
+it was Jessop’s shack, and I went in to dry off by his fire.
+Well,—Jessop is a friendly fellow, and would have me take a drink to
+keep from catching my death of cold. You know he is only an Irish
+wood-chopper,—makes a scanty living by furnishing wood from anybody’s
+land who will give it to him for the clearing, and selling it to anybody
+who will buy it; but I accepted because I don’t like to refuse a
+civility from such a person,—and, bless my soul! it was French
+brandy,—good sound Cognac. He was mightily surprised when I told him so.
+He said he knew that it was a tipple to which he was unaccustomed, but
+it cost the same as ‘bust-head whiskey’; he said it was all the same to
+him so long as it fired up all right,—‘made drunk come.’ He bought it
+from that shanty-boat.”
+
+Desmond looked up significantly at Mr. Stanlett, who resumed: “You are
+right, sir,—stolen, no doubt! I fear from the Whippoorwill Landing
+stock. I remember that though Ackworth kept a general assortment of
+goods, he had a limited class of fine custom. Some rich people live near
+Whippoorwill Landing, and they preferred to give him their orders
+instead of dealing elsewhere. Ackworth was of the gentry himself,—came
+of good people,—broken up by the Civil War. He put what he had left into
+this store; he had been in the Confederate army, though one of the
+youngest veterans—distinguished himself—was very popular—and as the
+planters round about gave him all their custom instead of sending to
+Memphis or New Orleans, he kept in stock such choice grades of articles
+as they would require. I fear this brandy was stolen and that bicycle
+also; I wish that I had taken your view and given notice of our
+suspicions to the police authorities.”
+
+“To be quite candid, I did not think it prudent to abide by the theory
+of non-action,” said Desmond. “I wrote that evening,—and the mail-boat
+took the letter next morning.”
+
+Mrs. Faurie sat up straight in her chair and looked about her with
+widening eyes,—that a tutor in her house should take the initiative in
+its direction! Mr. Stanlett’s delicate face flushed. Even through his
+sparse silver hair one could see the polished scalp, all roseate. He
+said nothing, however, looking down at his cigar as he flipped off the
+ash.
+
+Desmond noticed their evident attitude of mind both with humiliation and
+indignation. Then he roused himself,—for his paltry salary they did not
+buy his identity, annul his personality.
+
+“The responsibility was mine,” he said icily, more in self-assertion and
+in response to their offended silence, their mien of rebuke of his
+presumption, than because of any sense of obligation to give account of
+his motives. “It was I who discovered the quality of the article offered
+at a mere fraction of its value. Knowing that it must have been stolen,
+I did not feel justified, as far as I was concerned, in remaining
+silent.”
+
+“There is a grave responsibility in unwarranted interference,” remarked
+Mr. Stanlett, dryly.
+
+“And in bringing down suspicion on innocent people, perhaps,” Mrs.
+Faurie said, with cold reproach.
+
+“If the proprietor of the trading-boat came honestly by a wheel,
+perfectly new and a favorite make, which he is able to offer for sale at
+five dollars, he will have no difficulty in making the fact clear. It is
+not my prerogative to judge.”
+
+“I should be sorry to provoke the enmity of a rude, lawless man such as
+that, by putting upon him an unnecessary affront and hardship,” Mr.
+Stanlett coldly urged. He had no longer his genial drawl of leisure and
+luxury. His intonation was crisp, clear-cut.
+
+“As I understand it, a heinous and brutal murder was committed only last
+fall at Whippoorwill Landing,” Desmond said, his pride pulsing in his
+temples, his own restiveness under expressed displeasure showing
+haughtily in his flushed face. “To have knowledge—or such grounds of
+suspicion as amount to knowledge—of stolen merchandise being vended
+through the country at fantastic prices and yet say nothing, in my
+opinion comes perilously near conniving at the escape of the
+villains,—accessory after the fact.”
+
+Mrs. Faurie turned and surveyed the tutor with wide eyes and a look of
+such affronted amazement that even he quailed before them. Desmond was
+impressed with the fact, noted by him for the first time, but doubtless
+often perceived before by others, that the very rich are fearless of the
+ordinary operations of disaster. The ægis of great possessions
+overshadows them. The law is their ally, for their protection; the
+imputation that by their negligence, or assumptions, or bravado, or
+inconsiderateness it could be arrayed against them is in itself a
+ridiculous impossibility, a sort of grotesque parody on fact, a
+distortion of the powers of established order. All other menace is
+likewise abated in their favor. The dangers of travel are minimized for
+them; the distresses of sickness are mitigated; every ill that flesh is
+heir to is softened and alleviated and embellished till they are
+scarcely to be identified with the woes, savage and hideous, that rack
+the multitude; and death itself is so bedizened and beautified and
+exalted that it ceases to be the great leveler. Mrs. Faurie’s
+astonishment that anything that she or hers thought proper to do could
+be liable to misconstruction, to question, to disparagement, was beyond
+words.
+
+Mr. Stanlett, however, stared at him with a sort of dawning
+comprehension in his watery blue eyes. “Upon my word, I never thought of
+it in that light!—ridiculous aspersion—impossible, though, as far as we
+are concerned; but, I believe,—in respect to the law, the bare facts of
+the case,—silence might aid the murderers, shedding the goods of which
+they stripped that store among the flatboat-men, woodcutters, ditchers,
+and niggers.”
+
+“Then Mr. Desmond was right?” asked Mrs. Faurie, seriously.
+
+“Yes,—yes,—though I deprecate anything that tends to draw upon this
+house the enmity of the wretches.”
+
+“The law is its best protection,” declared Desmond. “To make them feel
+the power of the law is the real resource. To let them and their fences
+and pals get away with impunity is to invite depredations.”
+
+“Yes, yes,—true, true!” said Mr. Stanlett. “But you take a good deal on
+yourself, Mr. Desmond.”
+
+“It was imposed upon me by good conscience and good citizenship.”
+
+“Ah, well, now,—I don’t know about good conscience,” said Mr. Stanlett,
+drawing hard at his cigar, but with renewed satisfaction. “Batting the
+eye is necessary sometimes. It won’t do to see so much, and deduce so
+correctly, and act so promptly. Let sleeping dogs lie.”
+
+“Do you call these sleeping dogs?”
+
+“So far as we are concerned they are. Quiet, peace, security,—we have
+them all at Great Oaks.”
+
+“And a dullness that has no parallel outside the grave,” declared Mrs.
+Faurie, once more falling back in her graceful reclining posture. She
+had never seemed to Desmond so beautiful as to-day. She wore the
+daintiest of afternoon dresses, of delicate lavender broadcloth, and the
+dazzling purity of her complexion was even more radiantly asserted in
+the full light. Her gray eyes, with their dense, long black lashes,
+seemed more expressive in their petulant, slumberous disaffection. From
+her white brow her hair rose in the usual pompadour effect, but its rich
+brown tint was heightened by the broad illumination of out-of-doors, and
+her lips had all the lustre of wet coral. Into the meshes of the lace of
+her high “transparent collar” and chemisette, that showed the gleam of
+her snowy white neck and throat, was thrust a set of stick-pins of
+amethyst. She held some wands thickly studded with pink almond blooms in
+her hand. “Great Oaks leads the field for monotony,” she said
+disconsolately. “It might be a gentle distraction to be called upon to
+defend the mansion against river pirates.”
+
+She suddenly sat up straight, her eyes dilating and brightening, her
+infrequent flush, an incomparable tint, mounting into her cheeks. “Think
+how it would sound in the deep midnight,—if the old plantation bell
+should boom out on the air, up the river and down the river, and across
+the Bend, calling on all who ever stood on the pay-roll of Great Oaks
+Plantation, or owed it a good turn, or wished it well, to lend a hand at
+its utmost need. I can hear it now! It would sound so far! It would
+shake the moss on the cypress trees in the White Deer Swamp, where
+ghosts have been seen. It would rouse the gangs at the engineering work
+who are trying to raise the river on jackscrews, or sinking a revetment
+mat, or building a dyke at the point, or whatever they are up to over
+yonder in the chute. It would even start up the loafers from the
+card-tables at the old Shin-Plaster Landing, way down on the Arkansas
+side, where everybody says they gamble half the night. And the Swamp
+Lily would be climbing up the current, and old Captain Cleek—who dropped
+me into the Mississippi River once when I was a baby and he was a mud
+clerk, and my parents were leaving the steamboat in midstream to make
+the landing in a yawl, and who has always declared he owed me indemnity
+for a ducking—would signal to head for the shore with every pound of
+steam that his engines can carry.”
+
+Mr. Stanlett moved uneasily, and now and again cast a furtive, anxious
+glance at her sparkling, girlish face. This badinage was far from
+appealing to him. He had sought once or twice to interrupt, but in the
+very desperation of idleness and lack of interest she found a sort of
+entertainment in the picture that she had conjured up, and persisted:—
+
+“What would you two do? All out here in the grove where it is so
+egregiously dark of a moonless night—we shan’t have this function on
+till the moon changes—there would appear occasionally a sudden,
+funnel-shaped flare of light and a sharp report,”—she put her hands over
+her ears for a moment as if to shut out the sound,—“and Mr. Desmond
+would be winning his spurs, and Uncle Clarence would be wanting to show
+how worthy he is of his, already won, and the babies would be telling
+each other, and everybody else, how wrong and wicked and purblind I was
+never to let them learn to shoot so that they might now fill the
+marauders full of lead; and I—why I—would just open the door a bit ajar,
+and—‘Gentlemen,’”—with the most gracious bow and an airy waving of the
+hand,—“‘the goods and chattels in this house are somewhat antique, but
+with a lot of wear in them yet. They are racy of the soil, and the trail
+of the European serpent is over none of them. They are all at your
+service. As to the people,—Mr. Stanlett is a man wise in counsel, gentle
+in manner, and a genial companion at dinner; Mr. Desmond will teach you
+“to speak Greek as naturally as pigs squeak”; and you are welcome to
+_both_ of them until I can ransom them, which I will do as soon as I can
+save something from my next year’s income!—all for the slight
+consideration that you will give me and my squabs a free passage down to
+Natchez on the Swamp Lily,—and no questions asked!’” She paused
+breathless, triumphant. “Now, Uncle Clarence, don’t you think that would
+wake us up?”
+
+He turned to throw his cigar stub over his shoulder into the grass. The
+wind was stirring the long, drooping branches of the live oak above
+their heads, and little, fluttering ripples ran through the folds of the
+skirt of her gown. “I think that we may have yet something to disturb
+us, not so sensational, but sufficiently perturbing. There is no
+necessity to ‘raise the river on jackscrews.’ Colonel Kentopp thinks we
+are going to have an overflow in Deepwater Bend. The river is at flood
+height, and in several localities above, the water is standing against
+the levee. There have been recent rains all through the upper country.
+He says that since the rise, the work of the River Commission on the
+other side has had the effect of throwing a water of overwhelming weight
+against the levee above his place, and if it breaks at Ring-fence
+Plantation, where it was always liable to crevasses, considerable
+territory in the Bend must go under too.”
+
+“So poor Colonel Kentopp makes his moan! We never go under on account of
+the cross levee. I am mighty sorry for his anxiety; an overflow,
+especially if it were not general, would hurt the sale of Dryad-Dene,
+and he has been negotiating that place so long with that rich Mr.
+Loring. For my part, I believe that man will need only so much land as
+he can lie down in,—he will be dead before he makes up his mind to buy,”
+Mrs. Faurie prophesied.
+
+She gazed silently out for a time at the tawny sweep of the Mississippi
+at flood height, beyond the vivid variant tints of the bourgeoning
+spring growths. “I wish the Mississippi River were drained. Such a
+torment as it has been. What a queer thing its channel would be, though.
+Just think of it! Boats unnumbered, of all sizes and pretensions, from
+the first little stern-wheeler to the floating palaces of the days of
+the Robert E. Lee and the Great Republic. Then the bones of all the
+people that have gone down in the fires and collisions and swampings and
+sinkings to their watery graves! The nations, the races, they are all
+represented there, and who knows what prehistoric people! And in modern
+times the English, the French, the Spaniard,—De Soto, himself, must be
+there yet. He could not be swept with the current down to the Gulf, for
+he was buried in his armor, encased in a hollow log, and he must be
+lying still, oh, very still, the great wanderer! bound to one restricted
+spot,—the great explorer! under tons and tons of the ooze and mud of the
+Mississippi, that he came so far to find, and that has held him fast so
+long! Yes,—the bottom of the Mississippi River must be a strange sight
+indeed.”
+
+“Might try a diving-bell; that would put an end to the dullness!”
+suggested Reginald, who had come up and was leaning over the high back
+of her chair as she talked. Now and again his eyes wandered to the
+tennis-court at one side of the house, where Horace and Chubby were
+playing a match, running very nimbly, but serving the balls badly enough
+from the standpoint of his superior expertness. Mrs. Faurie did not
+reply. Her eyes were fixed on a mounted figure approaching through the
+grove, presently identified as a groom from Colonel Kentopp’s place.
+Dismounting at the foot of the steps, he presented a note with the
+request for an answer.
+
+“An answer?” said Reginald, who had run down the flight of steps to
+receive it. “Then you had better ride around to the kitchen and wait.”
+
+As the groom rode off and Reginald turned to ascend the steps he
+remarked: “From the Kentopps, mamma,” holding up the envelope, showing
+the elaborate crest. Then, as she extended her hand, he continued in the
+accents of an extreme but half-suppressed surprise: “It is addressed to
+Mr. Desmond.”
+
+The tutor looked up in blank amaze, the expression deepening on his face
+as, after a request for permission, he read the contents. The note was
+from Mrs. Kentopp, in a tone of the suavest urbanity and the most
+friendly and informal cordiality, begging that he would give Colonel
+Kentopp and herself the pleasure of his company at Dryad-Dene for the
+week-end. “We have some very charming young friends staying with us whom
+we wish you to meet, and especially we wish to give them the pleasure of
+knowing you. I have selected the week-end, thinking that this will not
+much conflict with your schoolroom duties with the little Faurie
+torments. So I beseech you to let us have you Thursday evening, Friday,
+Saturday, and Sunday. We will return you, with no disparagement of your
+wisdom, early Monday morning, though we don’t intend to be very serious
+and staid at Dryad-Dene either.”
+
+He could not command the muscles of his face in his surprise as he read,
+and his disconcerted doubt and dismay were so patent that Mrs. Faurie
+cried out gleefully:—
+
+“Have mercy on our curiosity! What are the Kentopps doing to you?”
+
+Without a word he handed her the note. Her brilliant eyes scanned the
+lines with a brightening interest over all her face. “Why, how perfectly
+delightful! A dance after dinner Thursday evening—Mercy! in Lent?—oh, I
+remember,—it is Mi-Carême. Will they have enough?—Yes, with Miss
+Allandyce and the Mayberrys and Miss Dennis and Rupert Regnan and those
+two young gentlemen who were landed from the Primrose last night, and
+Miss Kelvin, and she suggests others whose names she does not
+mention,—and a camp hunt on Friday and Saturday,—‘the young ladies are
+wild to go!’—Oh, I know they are, and I will bet everything that they do
+go, and spoil the fun for the men.—No shooting Sunday,—but only the
+sylvan pleasures of the camp; for if the ladies don’t go earlier, they
+will then join the hunters for a day in the woods. How delightful! How
+perfectly delightful! But,”—a shadow crossed her face, quizzical, but
+nevertheless a shadow—“how very strange that she doesn’t invite me!”
+
+“I was thinking of that,” Desmond remarked. “It must be an oversight.”
+
+“How can it be?—‘Cordial remembrances to dear Mrs. Faurie.’”
+
+“I don’t understand it,” he said helplessly.
+
+“I do,” Mrs. Faurie declared; “she is relegating me to my proper place
+as an old woman. This entertainment is given for the young people; ‘gay
+youth loves gay youth.’”
+
+Desmond flushed. “I think it an extreme impertinence on the part of the
+Kentopps.”
+
+“Well,—in a way. I shouldn’t take up much room,—and oh, how I should
+have enjoyed it,—the days are so long!”
+
+“If you will excuse me, I will step into the library and answer the
+note,” said Desmond, rising slowly from his chair.
+
+“Do; and I am sure that you will have a charming time,—it will be a
+delightful break in the monotony for you.”
+
+Desmond stood aghast. “I have not the most remote idea of accepting.” He
+had his hand on the back of his chair, and he leaned slightly upon it as
+he looked down at her. His expression seemed reflected upon her face.
+
+“But, my dear child, you must accept,” she exclaimed in dismay. “I
+wouldn’t have you miss it for any consideration.”
+
+“I don’t think an acceptance is appropriate—with you excluded.”
+
+She laughed lightly. “Can’t you see that it is a party of young people,
+and that it is only my incurable frivolity that makes me frenzied to go
+to it? You are the only member of the household of the appropriate age
+for such volatile amusements. The children are too young for society
+such as this, and Uncle Clarence and I are too old. I insist upon it. I
+will not have it otherwise. Go write your acceptance, or I will do it
+for you.”
+
+Still he leaned on the back of his chair, and still he looked at her
+doubtfully. Rarely indeed since his advent at Great Oaks had his face
+shown its natural lines of expression. It was frank, gentle, almost
+appealing now, without the cool constraint, the aloof dignity, the
+critical reserve, it generally wore. “The Kentopps did not particularly
+attract me,—and, to be candid, I think that I perceived that I was not
+acceptable to Mrs. Kentopp. It would be distasteful to me to go.”
+
+Mrs. Faurie remembered suddenly Mrs. Kentopp’s pointed exclusion of
+Desmond in her proposition for a game at cards, her manner of airy,
+unseeing indifference.
+
+“But you must perceive from this note that there was nothing
+intentional,—it is cordiality and consideration itself. Mrs. Kentopp’s
+manners are so affected and she is so self-absorbed that it is easy to
+take her amiss. One should not be too exacting; we must take the people
+in this world as we find them.”
+
+Obviously, however, he was not placated, and she resumed with a note of
+decision: “Now, I make this a personal matter. As a favor to _me_ I hope
+that you will accept this invitation. The Kentopps are exceedingly civil
+to you,—and you have no excuse. They would think a declination very
+strange. And, besides, I want you to have the little bit of
+entertainment that you can get from a neighborhood visit, while you are
+consigned to this slough of despond yclept Great Oaks Plantation. I only
+wish I had an invitation, too,—” She dropped her hands in her lap with a
+gesture of mock despair, then she laughed out gayly at herself.
+
+“Couldn’t you go without it,” he suggested. “There seems such an
+established friendship between the families, formality might be
+dispensed with.”
+
+“If the note had been addressed to me,—perhaps. If I had been charged
+with the transmission of the message to you, I might have stretched a
+point and interpreted it as inclusive. But no!—I am expressly and of set
+purpose excluded. I am out of the game! There is nothing for me but to
+sit down in the chimney-corner and just be old.”
+
+She turned her radiant face up toward him, the most apt interpretation
+of beauty in its fullest expression he had ever imagined, the bloom of
+perfect development upon it, the rare ripe fulfillment of the promise of
+first youth. She was apart from the idea of time. There were more lines
+about Chubby’s eyes, from much crinkling with laughter; her fair, smooth
+lids showed naught but the form of their perfect design. Reginald had a
+vertical crease between his brows, from a frown of perplexity he
+sometimes wore in moments of cogitation; but his mother’s face was as
+free from the trace of care as of age, and morning itself looked out of
+her eyes.
+
+The point of exclusion was so preposterous an incident,—it was so
+jejune, and lacking in social tact and appropriateness, that Desmond,
+try as he might, could not interpret it. He did not give over his
+impressions of Mrs. Kentopp, for all her fair words now; he did not
+easily forgive or forget, but the ground of offense was untenable. It
+was infinitely unpalatable to accept, yet it was not practicable to
+decline, and he was as little in a holiday mood as ever in his life
+when, two days later, the Kentopps’ phaeton, which had been sent for
+him, rolled up to the porte-cochère of the mansion at Dryad-Dene
+Plantation.
+
+If Great Oaks were reminiscent of the past, it might seem that
+Dryad-Dene was a respecter only of the morrow. It could hardly be said
+to be up-to-date,—it was an earnest of the future. Certainly it was the
+most modern house in all that portion of Mississippi; and but that the
+surrounding woods, with the peculiarity of harboring no shoots nor
+underbrush, betokened the locality, one could scarcely have identified
+the vicinage. The river was out of sight; the levee, unseemly,
+utilitarian, suggestive of jeopardy in its promise of protection, held
+its serpentine course far beyond the range of the windows of Dryad-Dene.
+There were no forest trees immediately about the house; the grounds were
+laid off in the formal Italian style, with conventional walks in the
+midst of a fine green turf embellished with cone-shaped evergreens and
+other ornamental shrubs, white stone vases, terraces with stone copings
+and steps; and pleasing though the effect was to the eye, it was as
+foreign to all suggestions of Mississippi as if it had been hundreds of
+miles from the dominant old river. Only when its beauty might compensate
+for its old-fashioned savor was aught brought into use of merely
+domestic suggestions. These walks were covered with tiny, fine white
+shells, brought up by steamer in hogsheads from the Gulf coast; and
+charming as was their aspect, this entailed not more expense than
+ordinary gravel, which must needs have been imported also, for there was
+not a pebble to be found in all this stoneless region. A crystalline
+glitter from one side betokened the slanting glass sashes of the
+conservatory, and great ornamental plants—palms and Japanese
+tree-ferns—were ranged on either side of the stone flight of steps of
+the main entrance, as well as the porte-cochère. The house was of brick,
+with stone facings, the roof of fantastic device, of many peaks and
+gables; a tower was at the eastern corner; a deep loggia, an oriel
+window, a balcony, embellished the façades elsewhere, breaking up every
+suggestion of regularity in the architectural effect.
+
+The large reception hall, into which Desmond was ushered, had a fire
+blazing in a deep chimney-place, so huge as to be of mediæval
+suggestion, and a grand staircase in massive oak, descending in devious
+turns, with here a landing below a great, stained glass window, and here
+a niche in which was a marble bust on a tall pedestal; on the lowest
+step was lolling a young lady, a cup of tea in her hand and a
+riding-crop across her knee. There were several other figures turning at
+gaze as he entered; in fact, the apartment seemed full of people to
+Desmond, coming into an unaccustomed entourage from the brighter light
+without. It was a moment or two before his dazed sight disintegrated the
+group. Most of the party were sipping tea, as they stood about, their
+whips under their arms, for they were in riding costume. Two ladies sat
+chatting in the high-backed antique chairs on either side of the fire. A
+little beyond, in a deep bay-window, was a tea-table, a rich gleam of
+color with its choice ware and lustre of silver, where Mrs. Kentopp, in
+a blue-and-white striped silk tea-gown, long and flowing, was handling
+the sugar-tongs, while a tall, blond youth was holding out his cup
+toward her, apparently facetiously dickering for an extra lump. She
+suddenly caught sight of Desmond, and sent the sugar-bowl falling to the
+tray and scattering its treasures as she rose precipitately.
+
+“There, now!” she exclaimed, “I said I heard horses’ hoofs, and this
+greedy thing said I didn’t,”—for the young man had possessed himself of
+the tongs and was sweetening his tea to his own taste. “I can’t hear the
+phaeton’s wheels for the rubber tires.”
+
+She swept toward Desmond, the skirt of her gown trailing behind her, and
+the white lace which veiled its front from yoke to hem all shimmering
+above the broad blue-and-white stripes of the silk foundation. “Mr.
+Desmond,” she cried, “how good of you to come!” She pressed his hand
+cordially, and turned about to the group with her most coquettish air,
+her fluffy flaxen curls above her forehead somewhat more deeply tinted
+in the glow of the fire and the light through the ruby “jewels” of the
+stained glass window. “This is the Mr. Desmond with whom we all fell in
+love over at Great Oaks,” she exclaimed joyously.
+
+“Is it the regulation thing to fall in love with Mr. Desmond?” one of
+the young ladies asked, as Mrs. Kentopp, having concluded her flaring
+collective introduction, began to mention the names of the guests
+nearest at hand.
+
+Miss Allandyce was standing beside the tall newel-post, and he noted in
+surprise that she wore the dark cloth “cross-saddle riding-breeches”
+affected by progressive horsewomen, with boots to the knee and a
+riding-coat, in lieu of the habit in which he was accustomed to see fair
+equestrians. The costume was not utterly unknown to his observation, but
+never should he have expected to see it here, and affected by a lady
+with the unmistakable southern accent. She was tall and thin, though of
+a large frame, and wore her masculine gear as successfully as a big,
+bony boy might have done. She was not without charm; her gauntleted
+hands were small, her boots were shapely and slender and displayed a
+high instep. She had a Derby hat in one hand, while she held her crop
+under her arm, and nibbled at a sandwich from the other. She had a fair,
+frank, freckled face; her auburn hair was packed high on her head to be
+well out of the way of the Derby, and amidst the mass two or three
+fleecy short curls escaped from a richly tinted tortoise-shell comb. She
+seemed much at ease, and moved about with great freedom among the
+petticoats, though there was no other costume similar to her attire. The
+delusive draperies of a divided skirt, which one of the party wore, came
+to the floor, and were even fuller and much less graceful than the
+familiar riding-habit of the girl who sat upon the step, and who was of
+the type so usual in that country,—the woman who looks like a white
+rose, with dark eyes and hair and very fair, delicate skin; who spends
+the summer-time resting indoors, with a novel, taking care of her
+complexion; who would as soon consign herself and her complexion to
+Tophet as bathe in the sea, or climb a mountain, or walk out without a
+veil or a mask of chamois after April. She had an oval face, her lips
+were red, and her high silk hat had all the chic which the contrast with
+exceeding femininity is expected to afford.
+
+“Can I bow upward?” she asked, with a ripple of lazy laughter. “Is it
+polite to bow when you are sitting on the floor?”
+
+“You are perfectly horrid, Gertie,—the idea of pretending to be so worn
+out as all that by a little horseback exercise!” Mrs. Kentopp declared,
+with an assumed air of pettish displeasure. “Please don’t speak to Miss
+Kelvin, I beg of you, Mr. Desmond. Remember that I haven’t introduced
+you.”
+
+“I am saving up for the dance this evening, Mr. Desmond,” the young lady
+declared. “You ought to be glad that you did not get here in time for
+the drag-hunt. We have had a run after an old bag, that we made believe
+was a fox,—and I never knew before how many bones I had to ache.”
+
+“Would you ache any less if you had had a fox instead of an anise-seed
+bag?” Mrs. Kentopp reproached her. “Let me give you some tea, Mr.
+Desmond”; and with all her silken train a-flutter she whisked back to
+the tea-table.
+
+“Yes, indeed,—glory would have sustained me,” Gertrude Kelvin declared.
+“I was ahead of the hounds, Mr. Desmond,” she protested, still in her
+soft collapse on the lowest step of the stairs. “The field was nowhere.
+I can’t say that I was in at the death, for there was nothing to die;
+but if I could have had the brush, I should have been forever happy.
+Nobody could call me lazy any more! I can’t say that I captured the
+bag—Is that sportsmanlike, Mr. Desmond?”
+
+“Did the hounds run well?” asked Desmond, seeking to seem interested,
+now equipped with a cup of tea and a sandwich, and free to stand about
+at a distance from Mrs. Kentopp.
+
+“Oh,—they did that!” exclaimed Miss Gertrude Kelvin, wagging her head
+and widening her eyes to express great speed; “and I was in—with the bag
+to hold!”
+
+“Oh, the hounds make me mad,—they are so easily deceived! I hate a
+fool!” Miss Allandyce came up in a gentlemanly fashion near Desmond and
+Miss Kelvin, looking down at that young lady, who was secretly a bit out
+of countenance at her proximity in this novel attire. She said no more,
+and Miss Allandyce went on presently, moving one of her handsome feet
+with a heel and toe alternation, to which she was accustomed with her
+skirts, but which now had a style of brazen indifference in the mind of
+the young lady clumped up in her habit at the foot of the stairs. “It is
+a pretty good pack, though.”
+
+“Colonel Kentopp’s kennels, or do they belong to a neighborhood hunt?”
+asked Desmond.
+
+Both girls opened wide eyes to horrify and impress him.
+
+“Neither!” replied Miss Kelvin, significantly.
+
+“Isn’t that ridiculous?” exclaimed the strong-minded Allandyce, whirling
+half around on her heel. “The pack belongs to an old wood-chopper named
+Sloper,—and ‘the quality’ _borrow_ his dogs.”
+
+“Isn’t that low?” Miss Kelvin cast up her dark eyes from her humble
+posture. “_He_ is all right—for a wood-chopper! Is he Irish,—or Scotch?
+He has a queer accent.”
+
+“Plain Mississippi,—without any foreign frills,” replied Miss Allandyce.
+
+“He lives all alone,—got no relatives,—and keeps such a lot of dogs for
+company, he says. They are just friends of his,—guests, a permanent
+house-party, and oh!—think of it!—when they all ask together to be
+helped first at breakfast.”
+
+“And the neighborhood planters object to it, for he won’t take a cent,
+and they don’t want him in the run; but if they borrow his dogs, they
+have to invite him and treat him as a guest for the time being. So about
+a year ago they thought they would make up a good pack—” explained Miss
+Allandyce.
+
+“Went at it in great style—” interpolated Miss Kelvin.
+
+“Imported dogs,—English—”
+
+“Colonel Kentopp bought some beauties—”
+
+“Great price—”
+
+“Oh,—oo—oo—!” said Miss Kelvin, but beyond that enigmatic syllable she
+could not express her sentiments.
+
+“Oh,—oo—oo!” echoed Miss Allandyce.
+
+Their eyes filled with tears of laughter, as one looked down and the
+other looked up.
+
+“Well, how did they run?” asked Desmond.
+
+Miss Kelvin in her lowly posture took refuge in the safety of silence.
+She began to manifest renewed interest in her sandwich, and proceeded to
+eat it up on both sides of its bit of encircling ribbon.
+
+Perhaps even the assumption of manly attire imparts a degree of courage.
+Miss Allandyce chose a bolder course. She walked first to the tea-table
+and put down her cup,—Desmond realizing too late that the influence of
+her boyish aspect had prevented him from offering that service. As she
+came back, her Derby in her hand and flecking her boots with her
+riding-whip, she looked over her shoulder once or twice to make sure of
+Mrs. Kentopp’s distance. Then she said: “I’ll tell you, but you must
+never mention it to her, and above all things never to the colonel,—he
+is a sweet dear and I love him! His English hounds ran like fun; they
+gave tongue like a bell,—the most mellow, searching, thrilling, musical
+sound you ever heard,—and the first staked-and-ridered rail fence they
+came to—”
+
+“They could as easily have climbed a tree, the poor foreigners!” giggled
+Miss Kelvin, sly in her corner.
+
+“Such a fence as our swamp dogs would just scramble over,” explained
+Miss Allandyce; “but the imported English hounds ran hither and thither,
+squeaking and wheezing, and Colonel Kentopp—”
+
+“They say his language was awful!”—Miss Kelvin had crumpled herself up
+very small.
+
+“I never see him so decorous in church without thinking of it,” said
+Miss Allandyce, and the two exchanged a glance of extreme relish.
+
+“The hounds climbed the fence at last?” asked Desmond, impatient for the
+sequel.
+
+There was a moment of silent and speechless mirth. Then Miss Allandyce
+said, in a husky voice and with eyes full of tears, “Colonel Kentopp and
+the huntsman dismounted and _lifted_ the imported English hounds over
+the fence,—and by that time the fox had run to Issaquena County!”
+
+“Why, what a gay time you are having over there! What’s the fun? Don’t
+keep the joke to yourselves,” called out Mrs. Kentopp, in the midst of
+their laughter. But she did not approach the group, and presently the
+two recovered their composure.
+
+“I wonder,—I have often wondered what did ever become of those imported
+hounds,” speculated Miss Allandyce.
+
+“Perfect dears, too.”
+
+“So handsome! But they were seen here no more, and whenever ‘the
+quality’ have a run, they borrow old man Sloper’s house-party, and put
+the old wood-chopper up on as good a horse as there is in the county.”
+
+“They don’t indulge in riding to hounds about Great Oaks, do they, Mr.
+Desmond?” asked Miss Kelvin, still resting her bones.
+
+“Not since I have been there,” replied Desmond.
+
+“How long will you be at Great Oaks?” asked Miss Allandyce.
+
+“Why, I hardly know,” replied Desmond, slightly embarrassed.
+
+“Oh, they make it so delightful to guests, I don’t wonder you can’t say
+when you will get your visit out,” Miss Kelvin remarked.
+
+A sudden illumination broke in upon Desmond’s mind. Mrs. Kentopp had not
+acquainted her house-party with their fellow guest’s vocation.
+
+“But I am not a guest at Great Oaks,” said Desmond, quickly. “I am the
+tutor.”
+
+An appalled astonishment was on the face of both young girls for an
+instant. Miss Kelvin remained silent, but Miss Allandyce rejoined in a
+tone which obviously sought to keep the key of the previous chat, “Oh,
+yes,—Mrs. Faurie has three children,—what a charming household it is
+there!” Then she drew a tiny watch from her fob and said in a low tone
+to Miss Kelvin: “I wonder that Mrs. Kentopp doesn’t let us go and dress.
+I shall be a fright if I don’t have at least an hour.”
+
+“We have to dance, too, in our dinner-gowns,” Miss Kelvin murmured a
+trifle absently.
+
+Desmond silently upbraided his folly in yielding to the insistence that
+had brought him here. Despite his gentle breeding, the position of his
+family, the opportunities of wealth that he had hitherto enjoyed, his
+culture, he felt that he was at a disadvantage in general society. His
+poverty, his station as a private tutor,—to small boys, mere
+children,—rendered his presence an incongruity among frivolous people
+who could not know and could not appreciate him fairly. He had no
+opportunity to make his value and quality felt. It was only in some
+cultured coterie capable of going deeper than the shallow appraisement
+of fashion that he could ever hope to find again his level. He could not
+forgive himself that he had laid himself liable to this misapprehension,
+and for his life he could not imagine why Mrs. Kentopp had given her
+guests no intimation of his position, to avoid such a contretemps as he
+had encountered. For their own sake, and for hers, they would have been
+civil in any event. Had she intended to pass him off as a man of their
+world, of wealth and leisure and luxury? And why, indeed? For his own
+part he had no desire to pose in a guise that must coerce their respect.
+But the malapropos incident had made him feel out of place, as if he
+were a presuming aspirant, patronized by the Kentopps, and foisted upon
+their guests’ society without warrant. Neither of the young ladies had
+spoken again, both apparently absorbed in their eagerness to be off to
+dress, and the negligence of Mrs. Kentopp, still flirting at the
+tea-table, to give them the opportunity.
+
+Suddenly Colonel Kentopp entered and rushed forward with an enthusiastic
+extended hand. “Why, my dear sir,” he exclaimed heartily, “I didn’t know
+that you had yet arrived. Glad to see you! How well you are looking! The
+sight of you is good for sore eyes.” His left hand had crept up to
+Desmond’s shoulder, which he patted affectionately as he spoke. “Wish
+you could have been with us on the run to-day,—great time!—But what are
+you all dawdling around here for? It is time to dress for dinner. The
+Mayberrys and Timlocks will be here long before you are ready. Joyce,
+keep those sweet nothings that you are whispering into my spouse’s ear
+for a season of more leisure.” And he advanced upon the tea-table, where
+Mrs. Kentopp was mildly carousing, so to speak, in a flirtation with a
+man almost young enough to have been her own son. She broke out into a
+peal of her affected, coquettish laughter, and Desmond in their midst
+looked on with as unresponsive a pulse, with as alien and unrelated a
+mien, as if among some mystic crew of Comus.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VIII
+
+
+The room to which Desmond was assigned was never intended for an
+unimportant guest. As he looked about him, he could not understand the
+incongruity. The Kentopps were neither of them such people as value a
+man for his own sake, regardless of wealth or station; they had no fine
+perceptions that could discriminate the higher attributes; they were
+devoid of that gift of generosity which belittles self to make the more
+of greater worth; they could not even understand a lofty poise of mind,
+and it amazed him that they should seem to strain after it,—to ignore
+the trivial incident of the vital fact.
+
+It was a spacious, airy apartment at one of the corners of the building,
+and the sharp angle was decorated with a dainty oriel window, though
+large enough to hold a fauteuil, a writing-desk, and a shelf of books;
+from this outlook one might see down a deep bosky dell artificially
+beautified, with a tangle of vines and interlacing shrubs, amongst which
+was visible here and there an elusive face, with the pointed ears of the
+fauns and elves of garden statuary. There were no trees of tall growth,
+and hence he caught a repeated glimpse of jets of leaping water among
+the leafage, and in the stillness he could hear the splashing of a
+fountain. At the end of a pleached alley was a rustic pavilion,
+evidenced by its conical roof, and in the opposite direction a life-size
+figure in marble on a pedestal had suggestions befitting the classic
+ideal of sylvan nymphs. The new fad of an old dial was illustrated in a
+shadowy nook where the sun might make scant register of time. This,
+Desmond was sure, was the “dene” which gave the place its name. The
+preciousness of its design affronted him, despite its prettiness. In his
+unconsciousness he did no homage to the ingenuity of Kentopp, who, after
+the burning of his simple farmhouse, inherited from his father, at the
+other end of the place, had utilized this desirable building-site
+despite the proximity of an old “bear wallow,”—the swampy depression
+thus drained, civilized, and made ornamental and even poetic. Any
+declivity or acclivity was rare in this level region, and the “dene” was
+greatly admired; its original status was wholly forgotten in the success
+of the landscape gardener’s achievement, save when some blunt yeoman
+neighbor sought a rift in the armor of the Kentopps’ satisfaction and
+the relish of a crude joke by directing a note or other paper-writing to
+“Kentopp Bear Wallow” instead of “Dryad-Dene.”
+
+As Desmond turned from the window and again surveyed the room, he was
+struck anew by the elaborate aspect of its appointments. A
+reclining-chair invited to lounging, with foot-rest and book-holder.
+There was the daintiest of toilet tables draped with lace, instead of
+the heavy old mahogany bureau such as the gentry of Deepwater Bend were
+accustomed to use; and in place of the immemorial mahogany four-poster
+was a brass bedstead, also canopied and covered with lace, and furnished
+with a duvet of delicate, embroidered blue silk. The polished floor had
+rugs in which this azure hue predominated; an open door gave on a
+bath-room tiled in blue and white, and the cut-glass candlesticks among
+the other crystal accessories of the toilet table held faint blue wax
+tapers,—never intended for use, however, for a flood of gas-light
+illumined the room, and made his preparations an easy matter, in
+contrast with the usual labors of dressing in the country for a festive
+occasion by the light of a kerosene lamp, however decorated.
+
+Desmond had earlier experienced a natural youthful gratulation that his
+evening clothes, relic of his London visit the previous June, seeming a
+thousand years ago and in a different state of existence, were so fresh
+and unworn, and a specially handsome garb. He could at least appear to
+personal advantage and be no discredit to his entertainers. Now he did
+not care! He fretfully adjusted the diamond studs, a gift that he had
+not parted with in all the exigencies of the financial stress he had
+known, and the choice and fine sleeve-links, also mementos of happier
+days. He would as soon wear jeans, he said to himself, as he stood, tall
+and conspicuously imposing, before the long mirror, tying his cravat
+with a touch that grudged its practiced deftness, for in his
+undergraduate days he had been something of a dude, despite the
+roughening influences of the “Gridiron.” He called out in a peremptory
+tone when a tap fell upon the door, and as it opened admitting a young
+gentleman, one of the guests of the house, the leisurely drawl with
+which he entered upon his mission received an impetus from the imperious
+gravity and challenge of the eyes fixed upon him.
+
+“Mrs. Kentopp requested that as I was going by—Great Scott! they do you
+immensely proud.” He was young, and blond, and of slight figure, and had
+already a tendency to baldness. He was not tall, but very erect,
+deported himself with conscious chic, and spoke with a superficial,
+negligent enunciation. It was with an air of surprised amusement that he
+paused to look about the room. “They haven’t put me up half so fine. I
+feel slighted,” with an airy laugh. “Well,—Mrs. Kentopp asked that as I
+was going by I would stop for you, to—to”—he was beginning to feel the
+influence of Desmond’s eyes—“to show you where the drawing-rooms are
+located.”
+
+“Lest I should lose my way without chart or compass,” Desmond commented.
+
+“Well,—they seemed actually to try to twist things when this house was
+planned,—nothing is where you would expect to find it,” said Mr.
+Herndon.
+
+“I am beholden to you, then, for towing me to a safe harbor,” said
+Desmond.
+
+Young Herndon had recovered his equanimity. “Kentopp is such an
+incorrigible dawdle that she dare not trust him. But I have a special
+virtue of promptness,—among my many other virtues. My friends say that I
+will die some day twenty minutes before my time comes.”
+
+Notwithstanding this vaunted promptitude, there were several gentlemen
+already in the large drawinging-rooms when the two entered. The glitter
+of gas and crystal from the chandeliers, the gloss of the floors, the
+richness of the oriental rugs, the gilded chairs and sofas, upholstered
+in cream and terra-cotta satin brocade, the glow, deep yet delicate, of
+costly pictures, the scattered ornaments, vases of Venetian glass and
+choice porcelain, tall urns of Persian ware, Chinese curios in carved
+ivory,—there was not a suggestion of home but the great fire blazing
+behind a brass fender and andirons, and this was so bedizened by a
+modern “high-art” mantel, that the leaping hickory flames had much ado
+to make the domestic note heard in the bizarre medley; and indeed the
+fire itself was a mere matter of ornament, for the house was heated by a
+furnace fed by Pittsburgh coal, even more convenient in this riparian
+locality than wood which must be hewn, and incredibly cheap by reason of
+the low rates of water-carriage as compared with railway freightage.
+Neither of the Kentopps had yet appeared, and as Desmond entered the
+room, though maintaining his manner of proud composure, he was grateful
+for the fact. Their overwhelming cordiality daunted him in the
+realization of its superficiality. He fumbled vainly for his identity in
+the midst of their soft deceits and unimagined intention, beyond his
+ken, but unmistakable. He could meet their guests, to whom he was not
+even conventionally beholden, on a level as man to man, and he would
+make no concessions. He would maintain his sense of his own dignity.
+
+In the sensitiveness and self-consciousness incident to an unaccustomed
+and in a degree a false position, he did not reflect that beyond his
+name he was wholly unknown to the party, and that the momentary interval
+after his appearance was instinct only with uncertainty and a
+preliminary effort to “place him” in evolving some suitable phrase
+introductory to conversation with a stranger. He interpreted the silence
+as cool, critical, not to say supercilious, and he had no mind humbly to
+await his adjustment to such place in the coterie as the sense of the
+meeting, so to speak, might consign him. He walked to one side of the
+hearth, and stood for a moment as if in contemplation of the group. Then
+singling out one, a man of mature years, conventional of aspect, with a
+long, thin face and a most unenthusiastic expression, he remarked, “I
+think I have not met you earlier.”
+
+“And what of that?” was in the countenance of all the amazed group, as
+Desmond held the centre of the stage,—even in the impassive, wooden
+countenance of the gentleman whom he had addressed.
+
+“Mr. Loring, Mr. Desmond.” The youthful Herndon was no reluctant
+scholar; as he often remarked, when he had had a thing demonstrated to
+him forty thousand times, he had learned it. He had now mastered the
+fact that the tutor, for whatever reason placed in the position of
+Colonel Kentopp’s guest, was by no means disposed to interpret this as
+patronage, nor to capitulate to good-fellowship on anything short of the
+full honors of war. “Mr. Loring has just arrived,” Herndon further
+explained.
+
+As they shook hands Desmond’s next remark brought a sudden gleam of
+expression into the wooden grooves of Mr. Loring’s immobile face. “I
+have heard you mentioned at Great Oaks Plantation,” he said, recalling
+vaguely Mrs. Faurie’s account of the dilatory methods of the prospective
+purchaser of Dryad-Dene.
+
+“Great Oaks? Are you visiting at Great Oaks? Charming old place.”
+
+“I am living there. I am the tutor of the Faurie boys.”
+
+Mr. Loring could not control the surprise in his face, for this princely
+presence was not to his mind the way the tutor of unlicked cubs should
+look. It was no intentional discourtesy, for he said with more animation
+than an article so apparently manufactured might be expected to show:
+“Do you intend to make teaching your regular profession?” He could but
+think that there must be something unexplained. This was some friend of
+the Fauries, perhaps taking a pose for a freak; there was some lure that
+had induced a pretended lodging in a humble position at Great Oaks.
+
+“My present intention,—certainly.”
+
+Nevertheless, Mr. Loring did not for one moment relegate this imposing
+personage to the situation of a mere pedagogic drudge for small boys,
+because, if it were true, what did he here? The Fauries, with their
+ancient traditions and high standards, might annul and obliterate all
+worldly differences in their intercourse with a poor gentleman, refined
+and intellectual, but never the recent and purse-proud Kentopps.
+
+And here suddenly they both were, overflowing with cordial greetings and
+exclamatory apologies and with elaborate rustlings and bows. Colonel
+Kentopp showed such a glittering expanse of white shirt front over his
+broad bosom that the sight of so much linen suggested undress; and his
+wife showed so much collar-bone and sternum independent of fabric and
+almost of flesh that she suggested no dress at all. She wore, however, a
+ruby-tinted brocade, and a fine pendant of rubies and diamonds swung
+from a delicate chain about her throat. Her hair had a deeper hue of
+blondine than usual, and she wore in it a cluster of ruby-tinted ostrich
+tips, at the base of which a very large diamond scintillated.
+
+But diamonds were all at a discount in comparison with those that
+glimmered like dewdrops in the dark masses of Gertrude Kelvin’s hair.
+They were not many nor of great size, but they were set artfully to
+quiver and glitter at every movement of her head, and the midnight of
+her hair gave them a stellular brilliancy. She was attired in a gown of
+delicate green tissue over silk of the same shade, and the exquisite
+whiteness of her shoulders and arms and face, heightened by the dainty
+tint of the dress, seemed worth some deprivation of the garish light of
+the summer sun and outdoor joys.
+
+“Come, Mr. Desmond, you will take out Miss Kelvin,” said Mrs. Kentopp,
+busied in arranging her party. Then in an aside to Mr. Loring behind her
+fan of ruby-tinted ostrich plumes: “He was just dying with suspense!”
+She played her blue eyes at him significantly, and Mr. Loring was thus
+given to understand that Mr. Desmond’s lure in Deepwater Bend was Miss
+Kelvin.
+
+“But how old man Kelvin will cut up if there is really no money,” he
+thought sagely.
+
+In slow and stately wise they filed out in couples to the dining-room;
+and even if the predilections of Mr. Loring were already engaged by the
+traditions of the _ancien régime_, he must needs have admitted to
+himself that the entourage at Dryad-Dene was most attractive,
+embellished by this glittering company, which set off the house in its
+gala aspect to the greatest advantage.
+
+The dining-room was large, and its appointments betokened that its
+owners gave serious heed to the problems and the pleasures of the table.
+“My house was built around my refrigerator,” Mrs. Kentopp was fond of
+saying; and Colonel Kentopp might have added, with a significance not
+altogether literal, that his house was built over his cellar. For the
+Kentopps, though not sages of wisdom, were quite indisposed to depend
+largely upon the attractions of their personality and the feast of
+reason and the flow of soul to commend their entertainments. The wines
+were choice and had been long in bottle, and distance and
+inaccessibility worked no impairment upon the menu. All the delicacies
+of the season, and many out of season, graced the successive courses,
+and the decorations of rare exotics—the spring flowers were left to
+bloom in their thousands out-of-doors—had indeed scant affinity with the
+backwoods.
+
+“These are from our own hothouses,” Mrs. Kentopp was saying, in reply to
+a comment. “Yes,—we have the world at command at Dryad-Dene. This is the
+newly discovered site of the Garden of Eden, between the waters of the
+Mississippi and Bogue Humma-Echeto; they used to be called the Pishon
+and the Gihon rivers, you know.” She held her head down and looked up
+under the rims of her eyelids to emphasize the felicity of her remark.
+“If there is any little item that we haven’t got, the Mississippi River
+on one side and the railroad on the other will bring it to us.”
+
+Mr. Loring sat at her right hand and was subject to all her
+beguilements. Opposite at a little distance was Desmond, between Miss
+Kelvin and Miss Allandyce, with Herndon on the farther side. Desmond had
+been presented to the Mayberry and Timlock contingent, but he had taken
+only a vague impression of pink and blue draperies and blonde hair and
+roseate smiles, with the usual complement of attendant cavaliers; for in
+the place to which he had been assigned he was absorbed in an effort,
+more or less successful, to explain to Miss Allandyce a reason for not
+recognizing her that should be something less blunt than the statement
+that her riding-costume had quite disguised her at their earlier meeting
+in the afternoon.
+
+“I have heard that the cultivation of the powers of memory is considered
+important in modern education,” she twitted him. “I should think your
+pedagogical laurels would wilt after this. How can you urge upon Chub
+Faurie the value of such discipline of the faculty of—of—”
+
+“Observation,” suggested Miss Kelvin, on his other hand.
+
+“Yes,—observation and—and tabulation of traits as to enable you to
+recognize an object—”
+
+“In the landscape—” prompted Miss Kelvin.
+
+“Yes—in the landscape—an object with a red head, after the lapse of an
+interval of time,—an hour, say—”
+
+“Arithmetically, sixty minutes, to be exact,” Miss Kelvin urged her on.
+
+Desmond had no sense of amusement as he realized that he had tabulated
+her equestrian garb in his mind and would never forget it. The
+predicament he was in was far too critical for that. He made a gallant
+struggle for a diversion of interest. “I saw no object with a red head,”
+he stipulated. “I should never tabulate it as red, but auburn.”
+
+“Then you would be most discourteous; for red heads are very
+fashionable, and mine is treated with chemicals at stated intervals to
+make it seem redder than it is,” she said gravely, assuming an air of
+staid and offended decorum.
+
+He wondered in his desperation whether it would be permissible to tell
+her frankly that she was not half so gentlemanly in her gown of white
+silk. A necklace of seed pearls of fantastic device hung about her
+delicate white neck. Her short sleeves had a fall of lace that met the
+tops of her long white kid gloves, which she had slipped off her hands
+without disturbing the upper section, tucking the fingers beneath her
+bracelets. She wore a comb of seed pearls in her auburn hair, and she
+looked very handsome. He had an idea, curious enough to him, that she
+did not in the least grasp the reason of his failure to recognize her,
+his apparent lapse of memory, but that Miss Kelvin had divined it in an
+instant, and had a mischievous delight in his plight. Although Miss
+Kelvin would not have alluded to the riding-costume her friend
+affected,—for she thought it a horrifying, strong-minded notion, worthy
+of the woman who wants to vote, who engages in business, who preaches,
+who practices medicine and law, and its adoption by a southerner an
+apostasy, abominably uncharacteristic,—her eyes dwelt upon him with a
+luminous mirth, and now and then, as she caught his glance, she burst
+into a ripple of involuntary laughter.
+
+Her recurrent observation of him, her smiles in response to his glance
+as oysters and soup, and fish and entrée, successively filed past him,
+almost untouched, were remarked by Mr. Loring, and these apparently
+tender passages between the two were interpreted to further Mrs.
+Kentopp’s plan even more than she had anticipated. She had expected to
+artfully give Mr. Loring such an idea of mutual interest as their
+propinquity might suggest, aided by some crafty phrases of her own. But
+she had not dared to hope for these bright glances from Gertrude, for
+her half-suppressed delighted laughter, for the attitude of the girl,
+leaning half across Desmond to whisper and prompt Miss Allandyce to
+further jocose upbraidings of the mischance. Gertrude seemed, indeed,
+throwing herself at his head; and to her demonstration he ardently
+responded, now and again turning to take her counsel in a low voice how
+he might best plead his excuses, often misadvised to his detriment and
+setting Selina Allandyce off on a new score of rebukes and reproaches.
+For they found the tutor great fun. After the first shock of
+disappointment, they resigned themselves with a good grace to his
+impecunious state and ineligibility. He was too handsome a man to view
+with indifference, and too interesting, for his manner attracted no less
+than his presence. There was something, too, below the surface of his
+talk, and while they did not discriminate its quality, they were aware
+of its submergence there.
+
+As the gay chat grew in interest and animation, Mrs. Kentopp in her
+elation could not leave the aspect of the trio to produce its own
+impression; she must needs give it a nudge.
+
+“Love’s young dream,” she murmured sentimentally to Mr. Loring, her head
+held down, the iris of her eyes under the upper lids. “‘There’s nothing
+half so sweet in life.’”
+
+Mr. Loring for some time had seemed quite attentive to the champagne and
+the roast, but he was not altogether absorbed.
+
+“Not so young, I take it, as far as the gentleman is concerned,” he
+replied discerningly.
+
+“Oh,—oh,”—Mrs. Kentopp could hardly contradict this conclusion fast
+enough. “Why, _he_ is just a boy,—a collegian,—graduated last June,—just
+twenty-four.”
+
+“Rather old for a collegian,” commented Mr. Loring, dryly.
+
+“Took a very elaborate course, all sorts of elective extras as well as
+the regular curriculum. Has a degree from _two_ great universities.”
+
+“One is more than enough,” sneered Mr. Loring, who had matriculated with
+much brilliancy on ’Change.
+
+“Oh, yes,—he is a mere boy!” Mrs. Kentopp emphasized her insistence.
+
+“He looks fully thirty,” said Mr. Loring, wondering why olives were not
+always “pitted,”—otherwise it seemed more decent to swallow the pits, if
+the possibilities of appendicitis did not hinder.
+
+“Oh, he has had so much sorrow,”—and Mrs. Kentopp conjured an appealing
+sadness into her eyes and shook her flaxen head as she bent it to look
+down in token of sympathetic woe.
+
+“Hasn’t turned his hair gray,” said Mr. Loring. “He is the
+finest-looking man I ever saw.”
+
+“Oh, do you think so?” asked Mrs. Kentopp, with a surprised and negative
+tendency.
+
+“Certainly; he has a noble head, and a very fine and impressive face.
+They must be long on looks at Great Oaks. I always thought Mrs. Faurie
+the most beautiful woman in the world.”
+
+“‘The most beautiful woman in the world!’”—one of the Mayberry group
+caught the words and tossed them back. “I know just whom you are talking
+about.”
+
+The attention became concentrated. Mrs. Kentopp sought to divert it. “I
+want you to observe the mould of the sorbet,” she interrupted,
+bespeaking notice for the red ices. “Somebody said that this looks like
+a melon and ought not to be striped this deep red. Do you think it is a
+melon?”
+
+“Why, no,” said Desmond. “It is a pomegranate.”
+
+“There,—what did I tell you?” She clapped her hands in juvenile glee, as
+she spoke across the length of the table to her husband.
+
+“The first time I ever tasted a real pomegranate was down at Great
+Oaks,” said Miss Mayberry. “They have them in their old-fashioned garden
+yet. You have got the flavor, too,” she added, as she daintily tasted
+the ice.
+
+“And who do you say is the most beautiful woman in the world?” queried
+Mr. Loring, his inelastic countenance reluctantly crinkling in his
+smile, sure of her answer.
+
+“Mrs. Faurie, of course! I have always heard her called that, and
+everywhere as well as at home. I remember when we were at Vevey we met
+some Italians,—high-class people who knew the Berkeleys,—oh, they were
+very agreeable,—and one day we were talking at random of pictures and
+pose and elements of beauty, and one of the gentlemen, who was quite an
+art connoisseur, said that he believed he knew the most beautiful woman
+in all the world. He had met her in Chamouni, doing Mont Blanc, and that
+sort of thing; and when he said that she lived in Paris, Madame Honoria
+Faurie, we all screamed! He didn’t even know that she was an American.”
+
+“But she has gone off a good deal in her looks of late,” Mrs. Kentopp
+suggested.
+
+“I hoped that I would meet her here to-night,” said Mr. Loring, without
+even ordinary tact; everything connected with Great Oaks, the embodiment
+of his ideal, for which his soul sighed, was interesting to him. “Is
+Mrs. Faurie not well?” He fixed his eyes on Desmond and asked the
+question directly across the table.
+
+“Oh, yes,—quite well,” Desmond replied, a trifle embarrassed.
+
+There was a pause. The general attention was apparently required by the
+game course, which was just being served. The inference was too plain.
+Mrs. Faurie, it seemed, had not cared to honor the diversion at
+Dryad-Dene with the distinction of her presence. For who could imagine
+Mrs. Kentopp’s purblind folly in failing to invite her!
+
+The tact of all the party seemed to have suffered a collapse. “I suppose
+that Mrs. Faurie has gone so much, and seen so much, and had so much,
+that she does not care for our neighborhood gatherings,” said Gertrude
+Kelvin at length.
+
+“She finds Great Oaks as dull as the grave,” snapped Mrs. Kentopp, the
+pendulous tendency of her cheeks reasserted without the dimpling breadth
+of laughter. “Doesn’t she, Mr. Desmond?”
+
+He was a little at a loss. “She complains of its monotony,” he said.
+
+“The idea!” exclaimed Mr. Loring, indignantly; “one of the finest places
+in the whole Mississippi River country. From Memphis to the Balize you
+couldn’t find its superior. To my mind it is the loveliest place I ever
+saw. I wish it was mine! Monotony! I’d like to own that kind of
+monotony.”
+
+From the foot of the table Colonel Kentopp, in all his pose of
+geniality, with his glass of Chambertin in his hand, lowered upon Mrs.
+Kentopp.
+
+The woman rallied first from the contretemps. “The land I know is fine
+and there is a deal of it, and the outbuildings are good and stanch, but
+the old mansion is a rattle-trap,—so out of repair, and built on any
+kind of an old plan. It has no style about it, no modern improvements
+and embellishments and—”
+
+“It simply crystallizes the past,” Mr. Loring declared solemnly. “It is
+an epitome of the old South,—its comfort, its space, its disregard of
+ostentation; its broad acres about it can keep the tally of its values;
+it takes you back a hundred years; it has yesterday in every line. I
+wish it was mine!”
+
+He talked on and on, the taciturn man, over the salad and the sweets,
+the theme unvaried, throughout the service of the dessert with the
+notable ancient Madeira, till at last his voice was lost in a silken
+rustle. Mrs. Kentopp had given the signal for rising, and the young
+girls were presently flitting along the big square hall, still visible
+from the dining-room, making a picture that enhanced the charming
+setting which should have appealed to any man with an eye for beauty,
+who did not cultivate a distorted squint backward toward the exploded
+past instead of the sophisticated present.
+
+The ballroom was in the third story,—another intimation of the intensely
+modern spirit of Dryad-Dene. There was all out-of-doors to build on, and
+surely there was scant reason to economize space when the value of land
+was contemplated by the quarter section instead of the running foot. The
+destined use and cost of building materials alone might limit the size
+of any structure in Deepwater Bend. But though there was no need to
+climb stairs, there was much that was picturesque in this airy ballroom,
+and it was indeed a great contrast to the long, low wing devoted to the
+same purpose at Great Oaks, with its green shutters closed, the spiders
+weaving in the corners, and the wide, smooth spaces of its polished
+flooring devoted to the humble purposes of miscellaneous storage; for
+there was not a dance at Great Oaks mansion in all the quiet years while
+Mrs. Faurie had been the admired cynosure in palatial assemblages in
+many foreign capitals.
+
+Here the decorated ceiling had a fine pitch, and all the architectural
+embellishments of the house below culminated on this level; the cupola
+of the tower gave a circular alcove to the ballroom, and on the opposite
+side the French windows issued upon a long, flat roof that, furnished
+with a balustrade, offered a charming promenade between the waltzes for
+the young people under the white, palpitating stars and in close
+familiarity with the gentle night wind. It offered also every
+opportunity to the overheated dancers for pneumonia and influenza; but
+as they gave this fact no heed, it might scarcely be considered one of
+the choice advantages of the ballroom. The hothouses had sent hither
+their offering of palms and banana trees and ferns for a tasteful scheme
+of decoration, and an Italian band, brought up from New Orleans for the
+occasion, tossed lilting melodies from behind a leafy screen. The
+stringed vibrations found in Desmond’s heart a thrilling response of
+poignant memory, reviving in contrast with the present all the happy
+past, the cherished prospects, the vanished faces, the hallowed home.
+But he was young, and his pulses were astir with vitality and vigor. The
+rhythm, the motion, the sweet, swinging melody, imparted their own
+jubilant effects, and he could but enjoy with his muscles all the
+buoyancy of his stalwart young frame, while with a curious duality his
+heart’s sorrows were unassuaged and his mental indifference and
+aloofness were no self-deceit. It was perhaps the mental attitude of
+many a reveler in joyous scenes that awoke no sense of mirth, but it had
+no parallel among the dancers at Dryad-Dene. The young ladies were all
+a-weary of the dull season spent at the abominated plantations; it was
+too late for New Orleans, being mid-Lent, indeed, and yet too early for
+the White Sulphur Springs or the Gulf coast.
+
+“How delicious!” Gertrude Kelvin exclaimed. “I should have thought I had
+forgotten how to ‘two-step,’—I have scarcely stood on my feet since
+Mardi-Gras.” For it was with the charming white rose that Desmond found
+himself chiefly awhirl. He danced specially well, and more than once, as
+the music recommenced, she looked from a chatting group toward him, with
+so bright and expectant a smile that he was fain to ask the pleasure
+once more. And indeed it was no great constraint. She was as light, as
+airy, as poetic of movement, swinging as rhythmically as a blossom on a
+bough, with as little suggestion of effort. Her delicate green tissue
+draperies floated diaphanous in the breeze of their motion; her white
+arms and neck were fairer still in the moony gleams of the shades of the
+gas-jets; her ethereal pallor took on no unbecoming flush with the
+exertion; her movement was as devoid of the idea of fatigue as the
+flitting of a butterfly or the noiseless winging here and there of one
+of the white moths that, allured by the lights, came in, now and then,
+from out of the night. The sparkle of the diamonds in her hair flashed
+into his eyes occasionally as her head was poised so close to his
+shoulder, for she was tall despite her small and feminine ways, and they
+made a pretty couple to look at, as Mrs. Kentopp did not omit to point
+out to Mr. Loring when at length he came into the apartment.
+
+He had been loitering at the table over Kentopp’s good wine and fine
+cigars with his martyrized host, although the younger men had earlier
+joined the ladies, who had had coffee in the drawing-rooms, and together
+they had trooped up to the ballroom at the first long-drawn, plangent
+cadence of the violins. Mrs. Kentopp had a freshened, elated mien as she
+surveyed the scene, standing in the ballroom door beneath the vines of
+an elaborate hanging-basket, with the most feathery of trailing ferns,
+and plying her fan of ruby ostrich plumes, though she felt the cool
+breeze from the widely opened windows.
+
+“A handsome couple; that will be a match,” she commented, smiling
+sentimentally.
+
+“No doubt,—no doubt,” replied Mr. Loring. He smelled very strong of
+tobacco: when the cigars were mild, he smoked a good many of them. He
+was a self-made man, the architect of his own fortune,—a massive
+structure on which little ornament had been bestowed. He was apt to
+consider market prices, potential bargains, possible rebates, and
+equivalent values, even in social affairs, although his interest in
+social affairs scarcely seemed actively concerned with an adequate
+return for the outlay at present. He was bent upon enjoying his money,
+but he wanted the best article of pleasure that the market could afford.
+He saw an opportunity of richly rewarding himself at a very great
+bargain in buying one of the fine old estates in Deepwater Bend far
+below its value in the shrunken estimates of post-bellum ratings, where
+he might retire to enjoy the pose of magnate and millionaire within a
+few miles of where he had been born of poor but eminently respectable
+parents. His father, who had been one of the subordinate clerks, “mud
+clerk” it was called in those days, on a steamboat, had secured for him
+by favor a place in the office of a broker in New Orleans, and stood
+amazed by the portentous growth of his scion in that hotbed of
+speculation. Loring felt always much at his ease, assumed to be as “good
+as anybody,” yet he was very definitely aware that his consequence would
+be much enhanced in the neighborhood that he desired to dominate by the
+possession of one of the fine old places, at whose seigneurial splendor
+he had once gazed as at fairyland, without a thought of entrance. He had
+little sympathy with poverty,—it was never romantic, or picturesque, or
+appealing to him. Wealth had been his ambition, and wealth was now his
+admiration. His study was how to seem not less magnificently endowed
+than he really was with this world’s goods. He was a bachelor, and could
+not express his riches in the splendor of a wife’s equipment. He could
+not afford to marry when he would, and since he had been able to consult
+his wishes, he had lost the impulse toward domesticity. His eyes roamed
+over the charming scene of the decorated room, the whirling dancers, the
+dark blue night looking in with a myriad stars from the windows of
+balcony and long, railed promenade, with no fixity of interest and no
+undercurrent of sentiment.
+
+“Yes,” he reiterated, “no doubt it will be a match. Naturally, Mr.
+Desmond will recoup his disasters by marrying money.”
+
+For Mrs. Kentopp had effaced the dullness of his propinquity at table by
+talking much of Desmond. The matter just now nearest her heart was her
+scheme to divert Loring from the theory that Mrs. Faurie might become
+interested in the tutor, and she was sure that the peculiar quality of
+Desmond’s personality would soon set such a rumor afloat, were it not
+forestalled by one more credible. Mrs. Kentopp was one of those women
+whose shallow minds are reflected in their talk. She could no more have
+kept a secret without a word to play about it than she could have
+emulated the Spartan boy and without a sign held the gnawing fox beneath
+her cloak. She would never give such an intimation of her plan that
+Loring might discover and rush in upon it; but she needs must chat of
+Desmond, his recent history, his father’s death, the ensuing financial
+disasters, his relinquished career, the incongruity of his collegiate
+record with his humble position.
+
+“Oh,—I didn’t give you the idea that Mr. Desmond is a fortune-hunter,
+did I? Why, I wouldn’t have you think that for the world!”
+
+Mrs. Kentopp had a peculiar aversion to the character of a
+fortune-hunter. As a girl she had been rich in her own right, and
+Colonel Kentopp had not escaped the suspicion of a lively perception of
+the side on which his bread was buttered.
+
+“Why not? Are we not all fortune-hunters?” demanded Mr. Loring, dryly.
+“What else do we hunt?”
+
+“But not in that sense—a mercenary marriage! Oh, no!”
+
+Mr. Loring had a touch of perversity, or perhaps Mrs. Kentopp, with her
+_arrière pensée_ concerning the disinterestedness of her own marriage,
+had been heavy-handed enough to permit him to feel rebuked. “I can’t
+look on Miss Gertrude Kelvin as such a hardship,—even if she would tack
+a tidy little fortune on to a wedding-ring,” he retorted, his wooden
+countenance smiling satirically.
+
+“Gertie? why, she is adorable!” cried Mrs. Kentopp, seeking in a frenzy
+to find her feet in this slough of misapprehension. “Any man would be
+too lucky to talk about to win her, even if she would not have a cent!”
+
+“Just _my_ opinion,” said Mr. Loring, as if he had enforced its
+adoption. “But if Miss Kelvin has not enough money for our gentleman,
+perhaps his good looks, and his great learning,” his lip curled
+cynically, for Mr. Loring was very short on the classics, “and his
+collegiate honors, and his interesting dumps and douleur over the fling
+that Fate has given him, might appeal to Mrs. Faurie,—she will give up
+that nice income some day for a life-interest in a third of the estate
+and a husband,—and the third will be a deal more money than our tutor
+will ever see otherwise.”
+
+Mrs. Kentopp suddenly felt a cold chill stealing up and down her spine,
+to which her dress, cut low and loose in the neck, left her liable. But
+it was not the inclemency of the wind! Her heart sank at this deliberate
+wording of the fear which her husband had evolved and she had adopted.
+If this idea were seriously entertained, the sale of Dryad-Dene was
+indeed a distant and doubtful prospect, for there were few investors
+able to compass a purchase of such magnitude, and fewer still with a
+disposition toward property of this character. And Dryad-Dene was not
+always gay like this. With half the rooms shut up, and the gilt and
+brocade furniture in hollands, and the visitors few and far between and
+always the same, and no excitement, and naught to do, and her eyes
+forever fixed on a house in New Orleans in the winter and a cottage on
+the coast in summer,—oh, Dryad-Dene was but a dreary imprisonment indeed
+in the depths of the backwoods! The crisis was so acute that it imparted
+to Mrs. Kentopp a touch of dignity.
+
+“You forget, Mr. Loring, how very distasteful such a suggestion would be
+to Mrs. Faurie were she to hear of it. This man occupies a very humble
+position in her household,—a paid retainer,—not exactly like a courier—”
+
+“Why no, indeed,—I should say not!” cried Mr. Loring, as indignant with
+this perversion of his suggestion as with its affront to the dignity of
+the tutor. “He is a gentleman, of fine family, and a learned man.”
+
+“So _I_ said; but he _is_ a paid and humble attaché of her household,
+and the idea that she could unbend to consider such a person, ten years
+her junior,—”
+
+“_That_ makes no difference,” interrupted Mr. Loring, who took this
+schooling rather aversely.
+
+“—And sacrifice her great income for a man so egregiously beneath
+her,—why, the suggestion is belittling, Mr. Loring.”
+
+“It is belittling to get rid of money, sure!—and she _may_ hang on to
+her money yet,” Mr. Loring conceded.
+
+“Except that we are all so deadly dull down here and value any new
+face,” she began once more.
+
+“Especially such a handsome one,” Mr. Loring stipulated, with a knowing
+grin.
+
+“Yes,—and a dancing man, too.”
+
+Mr. Loring did not dance. At the period when he might have had the
+opportunity to learn the latest Terpsichorean quirks and kicks, he was
+absorbed in the saltatory vagaries of the stock market and the
+fandangoes of cotton futures.
+
+“And there is always such a dearth of cavaliers that we have admitted
+him among us as one of ourselves. Otherwise and elsewhere, as you know,
+the tutor would be in his place in the schoolroom.”
+
+“_Though_ a gentleman and a learned man!” sneered Loring.
+
+“Yes,—and I hope that he may marry Gertie Kelvin, and get a chair in
+some good college, and one day be the president of it.” Mrs. Kentopp
+benevolently smiled.
+
+“And what will old John Kelvin be doing all that time?” asked Mr.
+Loring, with a sidewise twist of his mouth, of which his wooden face
+seemed incapable.
+
+“Oh, Mr. Loring, in an argument you always vanquish me—Why, certainly,
+Mr. Herndon,—I am _dying_ to waltz.”
+
+And thus, perhaps because she had the only blondined coiffure in the
+room, was considerably rouged, and floridly attired in her rich,
+ruby-tinted brocade, Fate maliciously decreed that she should dance with
+Mr. Herndon, the slightest of spindling young gentlemen, wan of face,
+thin of flaxen hair, of incipient involuntary tonsure, altogether pallid
+and fragile of effect by contrast with the artificially heightened
+charms of his partner, and together they furnished the aptest
+illustration of “before and after.”
+
+Mr. Loring still stood in the doorway, apparently casting the eye of
+appraisement over the festive scene. He was of so monetary a
+personality, of so speculative a reputation, that it was impossible to
+disassociate his presence with a deal. It had a certain incongruity and
+incompatibility with the remainder of the company, and even Mrs.
+Kentopp, who had not the most delicate perceptions of tact, was vaguely
+aware of this with an irritating subconsciousness as she whirled and
+whirled. She had hoped that, being a single man, Mr. Loring would be at
+once assimilated in the merry party as one of the beaux, and while she
+could count with security upon his conventional acceptance, on the
+footing at which she proposed him, by the well-bred young people, she
+had not reckoned upon the lack of malleability of Mr. Loring’s own
+predilections in the matter. He was not one of them, he had no pulse in
+common, no affinity with their tastes, no social ambitions to which
+their warmth of reception might minister. He made no pretense of being a
+young man; he claimed naught of the courtesy that thus reckons one
+scarcely yet of middle age. He was not sensitive on the point; his
+record on ’Change kept the tally of the years, and he was proud of the
+events as they totted up. His age was known to people of more importance
+in his mind than these inexperienced girls just liberated from the
+schoolroom, and their cavaliers still with a lingering dependence on the
+paternal purse-strings. He had no response for the graceful coquetry of
+the young ladies, nor for the jejune opinions of the youths, financially
+mere cumberers of the ground, for he had no method of rating other than
+financial. He was too rich a man, too dominant, too self-centred and
+consciously important, to submit himself unnecessarily to boredom, and
+he had not that altruistic impulse of high social culture that would
+constrain him to sacrifice his preference for the sake of his hostess.
+Hence it pleased him to stand in isolation in the doorway, under the
+feathery fronds of the drooping ferns, and stare moodily, absently,
+silently, at the revolving dance, taking no part.
+
+He was never intentionally frank, but the unavowed reason of his
+presence became very definitely outlined as the evening wore on, and Mr.
+Loring associated with every appearance of satisfaction with himself.
+Mrs. Kentopp, now and again, fluttered up to him and made a great show
+of talk, aided by a waving fan and upturned eyes, and he had then the
+grace to respond; but to Colonel Kentopp, who must needs sometimes take
+her place, he had not a word to throw. Being of a festive temperament
+and relishing the joyous occasion, the host was obviously a martyr, in
+the long intervals when he felt constrained to stand beside the wooden
+figure and ply him with artful talk, so constructed as to need no
+response other than the absent grunt or nod which Loring vouchsafed in
+recognition of his character as quasi-guest.
+
+“‘How doth the little busy bee improve each shining hour,’” quoted
+Gertrude Kelvin, as she and Desmond, breathless from the final whirls of
+the waltz, issued into the tower alcove to find already standing there,
+enjoying the breezes of the open space, Selina Allandyce and Rupert
+Regnan. He was a tall fellow, with an outdoor complexion suffused with a
+constant red flush, brightly glancing gray eyes, and dark hair. He had
+served in the Spanish War, and had acquired, besides the title of
+lieutenant, a military carriage which would be his proud possession for
+all time, and which added a certain stiff stateliness to his appearance
+in evening dress. His father, a veteran of another war, one of the
+Unreconstructed Rebels, was wont to look askance at him, tabooed his
+title at home, and had informed him that he could not set foot on the
+plantation while he wore a blue uniform. But the son cheerfully
+responded that he had shed the uniform when he had quitted the service,
+and that the title of lieutenant was too tight a fit for him,—he was out
+for bigger game! He had developed a sense of his own importance, and he
+now felt it jeopardized in some sort.
+
+“What is that man here for, do you suppose?” he said to Miss Allandyce.
+The coterie was quite confidential in the restricted space, which, with
+the windows all open between the pilasters on three sides, seemed to
+poise them in the midst of the cool, dark night, the airy roof of the
+cupola above.
+
+“For the same reason that you are here, I fancy,—for the pleasure and
+honor of your company,” she responded, looking in the dim light very
+sweetly feminine in her white silk gown and her pearl-crowned auburn
+hair.
+
+“But there isn’t any pleasure in _his_ company, I should judge from
+Colonel Kentopp’s countenance, and I should judge from his own that he
+isn’t disposed to confer any honor. I imagine that he has come to look
+at the house,—people say that he is going to buy it.”
+
+“You seem to object; are you a prospective purchaser, too?” Miss Kelvin
+twitted him with this incongruity in view of his youth and financial
+inexperience.
+
+“I do object. I may be exacting, but it strikes me that this party was
+made up to give him an opportunity to see Dryad-Dene to the best
+advantage. I can’t imagine what else he is doing here. He scarcely makes
+a feint toward the manner of a guest.”
+
+“And you object to dancing for a purpose,—how wrong! You know that the
+reproach of dancing is that it is at best but an idle amusement. You
+ought to be glad to convert it to some use.”
+
+“I object to being made use of without reference to my feelings,” he
+protested, as he wagged a somewhat round and close-cropped head with an
+emphatic, not to say affronted air.
+
+“And are you not willing to skip and leap like a young lamb to make Mr.
+Loring think this is a pretty house?”
+
+“I am not! The pleasure of my company was requested, and I came to
+compliment my hosts, and to enjoy myself, and to see you all,”—he
+included the whole group with a bow,—“and to contribute my little
+possible to the general entertainment.”
+
+“And you are frustrated!” Gertrude Kelvin averred. “Now, if I were you,
+I’d take it all back; I’d cancel my services. I’d make the whole thing
+ridiculous. You ought to go right out there in the middle of the
+ballroom floor and throw a somersault! Then you would undo all that you
+have done.”
+
+“Oh, do it, Mr. Regnan,—or rather undo it!” cried Selina Allandyce.
+
+He laughed, but did not stir.
+
+“He’s afraid!” Gertrude exclaimed. “You know that he must have been a
+coward in the Spanish War,—for see now, he’s afraid.”
+
+“I’m sure that he ran at the battles,—I’d be willing to take my
+affidavit to it,” Selina goaded him.
+
+“It’s a mere pretense that he got a presentation sword after the war—for
+he’s _afraid_!” said Gertrude.
+
+“He couldn’t have got it for gallant conduct, for he’s afraid!”
+
+Regnan looked from one to the other, but only laughed.
+
+“He is deceitful, too,” Gertrude recommenced, “and he encourages deceit
+in others. He lets Mr. Loring accredit Dryad-Dene with all the chic and
+style of his presence—”
+
+“And all the grace and agility of his waltzing,” Selina interrupted.
+
+“And all the bonhomie and sparkle of his conversation,” Gertrude added.
+
+“Oh, let up on me; I’ll be good! I’ll be good!” Regnan pleaded; but he
+made no saltatory intimations toward the required somersault.
+
+“And all the distinction of his military record,” persisted Gertrude.
+
+“And all the prestige of his hereditary position,” Selina supported her
+contention.
+
+“And when Mr. Loring buys this house, the title-deeds will call for more
+than they cover,—oh, poor defrauded Mr. Loring!”
+
+“But now, seriously,—” Regnan began.
+
+“Seriously,” Gertrude interrupted, “in fair dealing you ought to throw a
+somersault in the middle of the ballroom floor, in order that its lack
+of style and its grotesquerie and awkwardness, if _you_ can make it
+awkward, may condone for your unwitting alacrity in palming off a house,
+entitled to none of your signal attractions, on Mr. Loring, who will pay
+a bonus for the grace your presence lends to it!”
+
+“But now, seriously,— doesn’t it seem to you that this is not an
+appropriate time to show off the house to a buyer?” Regnan appealed to
+Desmond. “I may be exacting, but yet—”
+
+Desmond, who was aware that he himself was here for a purpose he could
+not fathom, had a monition of caution.
+
+“Don’t ask me; I am a stranger here, and—”
+
+“Hesitate to express an opinion, of course. Well,—we are all old
+friends, and but that it might seem a disrespect to Mrs. Kentopp’s
+feelings, and in so far uncivil, I should be willing to tax her with it
+myself.”
+
+The soft rustling of the treetops below in the bosky, benighted “dene”
+impinged upon the talk; the freshening breeze coursed through the tower,
+at this height inclosed only by the slight pilasters which upheld the
+conical roof. The sense of altitude, the vision of the lonely, starlit
+sky, and the dark, far-stretching wilderness on every side beyond the
+plantation clearings, were incongruous with the ballroom scene close at
+hand, the graceful figures promenading the glossy hard-wood floor with
+its mirror-like reflections. More akin was the romantic, languorous
+theme of the waltz, with a sort of melancholy yearning in its
+sentimental iteration, and presently a high-heeled white satin slipper
+was beginning to move unconsciously in rhythm as the quartette still
+stood in the tower together.
+
+“If your scruples against adorning the premises of Mr. Loring’s
+prospective purchase are not too great a restriction on this waltz,”
+Desmond suggested to Miss Allandyce, with whom he had not danced
+hitherto.
+
+“Oh, I repudiate the responsibility,” she exclaimed. “I am neither the
+bargainer nor the bargainee, and Mr. Loring is popularly supposed to be
+able to take care of himself financially.”
+
+She had lifted her hand to Desmond’s arm before they issued from the
+tower alcove, and as they came waltzing out of its seclusion together,
+Mr. Loring noted the change of partners. “He is making himself generally
+agreeable, and probably has no special idea of Miss Kelvin,” he
+commented within himself. “There is no money in his line of business. If
+he marries it, of course he will marry all he can. He would be mighty
+well pleased with the Faurie third,—which maybe Madame Honoria’s dukes
+and princes wouldn’t look at after they had seen her flourishing around
+on the income of so much more.”
+
+Mrs. Kentopp’s spirits were wilting; the lassitude of brain-fag was
+evident. She looked her thirty-eight years. Her cheeks were pendulous,
+so seldom did the distention incident to the redeeming smile visit them.
+She realized she had taken great pains to a doubtful end. She began to
+think that she might have better commended Dryad-Dene without the
+house-party. She could have managed Mr. Loring to greater advantage
+without its distractions. It had not made the excuse and occasion to get
+him here incidentally without obviously putting the house on parade. He
+assumed none of the pose and port of a guest. He seemed to consider that
+he was invited for business reasons only, and this doubtless suited his
+easy interpretations of the obligations imposed by hospitality as well.
+And why else should he have been invited? He was no friend of the
+Kentopps, and he had no desire to be friend of their friends. Why should
+they ask him here, save to show him the house to advantage? and
+to-morrow, on the camphunt, he would have every opportunity to see the
+land. The house certainly did appear to great advantage, but Mr. Loring
+was a discreet and discerning operator,—he could easily divest it of
+such attractions as were added to it by the fascinations of Mr. Regnan’s
+two-step and Miss Kelvin’s sylphine charms. He was appraising the
+woodwork, the quality of the plate-glass, the hand-carving on the
+newel-posts, with their long shafts holding up lily-like sprays of
+gas-jets. He condemned what he had learned to phrase as precious or
+Brummagem, and he regretted that it was all so new, so glossy, so like a
+fine hotel. He was ambitious of the pose of grand seigneur. He had now
+as much money as any one of the Mississippi princelings in the palmy
+days of the old plantation times. He coveted their entourage; it
+represented taste to him; wealth, family, culture, all the majesty of
+the magnate, as he rated the great in the world. A few modern
+conveniences kept as carefully as might be out of sight, a touch of
+modern frugality,—“I’d never throw away money with both hands like those
+old ducks,”—and this would comprise all the improvements that he thought
+would befit the domicile of eld. Still it was not to be had, and he
+addressed himself to contemplating the tower balcony, with the
+white-draped figures hanging on the balustrade, now gazing down into the
+dark shrubbery of the “dene,” where the fountain splashed rhythmically,
+and now chatting with the cavaliers while the group discussed the
+delectable ices. Mr. Loring partook of his selection with a meditative
+mien. It was of a mint flavor and was stiffly laced with old Bourbon,
+and a long, fragrant sprig of the newly budded herb stood in the midst
+of the delicate glass. Very perfect were the beautifully served
+refreshments, with accessories of daintiest device; but he knew full
+well that he would not have command of Mrs. Kentopp’s deft arrangements
+here if the house were his, for money itself could not buy good-will to
+equal her efforts in the interests of getting Dryad-Dene off on him.
+“Not even here will the larks fall all roasted into one’s mouth.” He
+remembered the old French proverb with a sardonic smile. He took no part
+in the outcry of protest with which, after one more entrancing waltz,
+the dancers greeted the strains of “Sleep well, Sweet Angel,” wafted out
+from the leafy screen embowering the Italian orchestra, with which the
+dinner dance was obviously brought to a close.
+
+Regnan followed Mrs. Kentopp here and there, insisting that she should
+look at his watch, which he had drawn from an inner pocket, and which
+marked but ten o’clock. She was doubtful for one moment; so little
+agreeable had she found the evening that she would not have been
+surprised to know that it had dragged as slowly as this witness
+maintained. Then she recognized the artifice.
+
+“It is a gay deceiver,—just like you!” she cried. “But if you did but
+know at what unearthly time you will have to rise, you would have been
+off to bed long ago. I expect to hear that old swamper’s halloo under
+the windows any moment, and the baying of his pack.”
+
+And so presently, reflected in the polished flooring, the procession
+wended its way through the ballroom and down the many turns of the
+elaborate staircase, pausing only once, at the first _entresol_, when
+Mrs. Kentopp called the attention of Mr. Loring to the electric button
+in the wall by means of which the gas-jets in the upper story were
+instantaneously extinguished, and the ballroom and the Mi-Carême dance
+were in a moment in the darkness of the past.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IX
+
+
+It seemed indeed to Desmond that his head had scarcely touched the
+pillow when he was roused by the baying of hounds from the stable-yard
+at the rear of the house. He was on his feet in a moment, for Mr.
+Herndon did not monopolize the virtue of promptness at Dryad-Dene, and
+Desmond was zealously heedful that his distaste to the occasion and his
+entertainers should induce no breach of observance on his part. He was
+half dressed when the screech of the speaking-tube summoned him within
+the sound of Colonel Kentopp’s voice, urgently asking if he were awake,
+then with equal urgency if he were risen,—which demonstrated that
+Colonel Kentopp’s brain was not very completely cleared of the vapors of
+slumber.
+
+Desmond arrayed himself in his equestrian togs, which he considered the
+most appropriate gear at his command, and finding the halls alight and
+following the sound of voices, he soon made his way to the dining-room,
+where a hasty breakfast was going forward.
+
+“Just a snack,” Colonel Kentopp was saying to the gentlemen seated at
+the table, or standing at the sideboard helping themselves to cold
+mutton or ham as they would. He himself seemed to be breakfasting on
+brandy, and he went around the table, decanter in hand, administering a
+nip here and there, willy-nilly, like the Squeers treacle.
+
+“For the stomach’s sake,” he would insist to youths whose hearty young
+stomachs could with impunity have begun the day with ice-cold
+buttermilk. There was hot coffee, but no hot breads, and therefore, in
+Mississippi estimation, no breakfast. “We shall have a hot breakfast
+ready for us at the camp. We just want a snack here to enable us to get
+away. Those girls will be wild to go, and they couldn’t keep the saddle
+half the distance.”
+
+“Why, Miss Kelvin rides as well as any man,” said Rupert Regnan,
+displeased; “and Miss Allandyce—”
+
+“Rides just like a man,” Kentopp finished, with a laugh. “The truth is,”
+he spoke mysteriously, “we expect a rough day. We hope to get up a bear,
+and it isn’t safe to have ladies along in such a harum-scarum
+expedition. This is our last chance,—the game laws, you know. Monday is
+the first of March!”
+
+There was a touch of the _preux chevalier_ about Regnan. It was
+distasteful to him to sneak off and debar the young ladies of the
+pleasure they had set their hearts upon. If there had been any means of
+rousing them to the deceits practiced upon them, other than
+inappropriately appearing at their bedroom doors, he would have availed
+himself of it. What cared he for such stereotyped fun as was comprised
+in pulling through sloughs and cane-brakes with a lot of men after a
+bear, if one could be found! They were not of metropolitan life; the
+wilderness and its incidents were an every-day story; they were
+veritable “swampers,” as much old “residenters” as the bear himself!
+Such amusement as the day might offer lay, to his mind, in the
+incongruity of feminine society, and the enjoyment at second-hand of
+these hackneyed details, wonderful and new to the young girls’
+experience. He would fain have afforded them this joy, which they
+childishly craved.
+
+He realized, however, that it was not his place to dictate, and
+presently the men had all trooped out to a small room, ambitiously
+denominated the armory, and were busied over the choice of weapons and
+supply of ammunition. A great array of antique blades, helmets, shields,
+more or less genuine or suggestive of the junk-shops of New Orleans,
+hung upon the walls, with some really interesting specimens of the
+blunderbusses and cutlasses of the buccaneers of early times on the Gulf
+coast; of bows and arrows, beaded quivers, scalp-knives, tomahawks, from
+the date of the Chickasaw and Choctaw occupation of this region; and of
+the flintlock rifles, powder-horns, and shot-pouches of the pioneer
+days. Two or three of the party had brought their own guns, but others
+had depended on a chance furnishing forth from Kentopp’s armory. The
+modern repeating shotgun, holding in its magazine five cartridges, each
+with a dozen buckshot, permitting the discharge of sixty balls within
+five seconds, was a prime favorite with the sportsmen in preference to
+the staunch old double-barreled breechloader; only those who boasted
+special accuracy of aim were content with rifles; Desmond, not very
+enthusiastic in pressing forward, found his choice limited to necessity.
+
+“I hope that you are a good shot, Mr. Desmond,” said Colonel Kentopp,
+with polite concern, “for these fellows have left nothing but two rifles
+for us. First-rate make, though not repeaters.”
+
+Desmond’s outdoor accomplishments were limited to the “Gridiron.” He
+fancied the swamp game destined to be long-lived indeed, if they were to
+die from the chances of a single rifle-ball directed by his unaccustomed
+aim. For he was no sportsman. He did not thirst for victory over the
+sylvan folk. He accepted the rifle as graciously as if he were a dead
+shot and confident of his powers, secured his share of the appropriate
+ammunition, and rejoined the others, who had already repaired to the
+stable-yard.
+
+It was an animated scene. The gas-jet over the stable-door brought it
+out in high lights and black shadows. A number of fresh, restive horses
+had been led out of their stalls still in their blankets; others were
+bare and shivering in process of being saddled.
+
+“Will you ride with a curb, Desmond, or just with a snaffle?” asked
+Kentopp, as he bustled about, as busy as any of his negro grooms, who,
+with shining eyes and glittering teeth, entered into all the spirit of
+the occasion. The dogs were literally beside themselves, and with their
+dark, whisking shadows seemed twice as numerous as in reality. Now they
+leaped in a series of ecstatic gambols as if they could not keep their
+feet to the ground, and again they manifested strange proclivities not
+to be accounted for on a basis of human reasoning. One suddenly planted
+himself in front of a young and spirited steed and treated him to a
+succession of frenzied bayings and elastic boundings that sent the
+horse, restricted to a limited space, quite wild with surprise and
+dismay,—now leaping aside with the hope of evading his queer tormentor,
+and now rearing and threatening to bolt. Another of the dogs, with a
+yelp so shrill that it menaced the integrity of every tympanum within
+reach of the sound, urged the setting forth without more delay,
+scampering around among the hoofs of the horses and the legs of the men,
+and so to the gate and away!—looking over his shoulder presently, seeing
+that he was not followed, and returning to repeat the demonstration,
+calling “Come on! Come on! Come on!” as distinctly as if he had the
+powers of human speech.
+
+The horses, sniffing the morning air and the promise of adventure, again
+and again sent forth neighs shrill and clear and as matutinal of effect
+as a cock’s crow; there was a great stamping and champing; the voices of
+the stable-men were loud with calls for gear within the buildings, and
+admonitions to the horses, and adjurations to Mr. Sloper to take some
+order with his pack.
+
+“’Fore Gawd, them scandalous hound-dogs don’t show no more manners than
+if they were so many rapscallion childern,” the head of the stable
+averred.
+
+The guests discussed bits and saddles and chose according to their
+liking, and went in and out of the harness-room with grooms and
+lanterns. Often, in the midst of the turmoil, Colonel Kentopp looked up
+with apprehensive forecast at the house, which seemed with its three
+stories and tower very tall and stately in this region of the bungalow
+preference, expecting to hear a sash lifted and a voice, sweet but
+imperious, demand a stay of the proceedings. “Wait for us! Wait for us!”
+seemed to sound in his ears, until with the quick, assured tramp of a
+body of horse, a frenzied crescendo of the skirling of the dogs, a wild
+jocose “Yah! Yah!” of the stable-men left in the deserted yard, the
+hunters were mounted and gone.
+
+It was still so dark that Desmond could not have kept the road had it
+not been for the horsemen on either side, and the voices of those
+valiant precursors, the dogs, some of whom, however, now moderated their
+transports and were trotting silently forward. The tones of their owner,
+or entertainer it might seem, so honored were they in his domicile, came
+from the van, where he rode abreast with Colonel Kentopp, who had ceased
+his attentions to Mr. Loring to ply old Sloper with his courtesies. He
+really felt under special obligations to the old swamper for the loan of
+his pack of hounds, though, as in the case of many other politic people,
+his gratitude included a lively sense of favors yet to come. It was the
+opportunity for a day of sport preëminently appropriate to the region,
+which without Sloper’s coöperation it would have been impossible to
+offer to the house-party. Hence Colonel Kentopp had put up Mr. Sloper on
+the best horse in his stable, well knowing that the old swamper would be
+keen to discern and quick to resent any invidious distinction in the
+matter. Mr. Loring rode only the second best, a point which doubtless
+ministered to the swamper’s satisfaction and jealous sense of his own
+consequence. Therefore in fine fettle he led the cavalcade, continuously
+talking, his high-pitched voice, with its frequent breaks into a
+snuffling chuckle of falsetto laughter, coming back on the keen, dank,
+matutinal air with great distinctness.
+
+He was definitely of the class known as the “poor whites” of that
+region, and his company was not acceptable to Mr. Loring. The man who
+rises in the world is not tolerant of lower conditions. It is only the
+acknowledged aristocrat who can really unbend. Sloper’s estate in life
+did not duplicate or approximate Loring’s origin, which was in all
+essentials distinctly genteel,—in the fact of educated parents, in
+refinement of early association, in point of social connection; for
+although his immediate family were of small means, he was related to
+well-to-do people of good middle-class standing. Sloper, however,
+distinctly expressed the “common folks” of that region as contrasted
+with the baronial planter, and as Loring had no affiliations with the
+latter class, it offended him to be brought into familiar juxtaposition
+with the representative of the widely different lower order.
+
+Colonel Kentopp could suffer no reduction of personal consequence in
+hobnobbing as man to man with the old plebeian, but as far as Loring was
+concerned, familiarity might seem an outcropping of quondam tastes and
+associations and similarity of station. Hence he said naught as Colonel
+Kentopp’s jovial laughter rang out at the conclusion of one of Jerry
+Sloper’s stories that he had heard a score of times heretofore. As the
+old swamper’s high falsetto cackle punctuated the applausive mirth of
+the others, one might have thought that he was himself too noisy to
+distinguish the fact that Mr. Loring had not relaxed his risibles in
+compliment to the gifts of the raconteur; it was still too dark to
+discriminate facial expressions, and the lantern, which one of the
+colored grooms carried, was too far ahead to afford its gleams. There is
+not always that submission in the minds of the lowly in estate which
+would seem an appropriate concomitant of that humble condition.
+
+“Powerful glad to see you here, Mr. Loring,—though I don’t rightly see
+you yit,” Sloper remarked, holding in the spirited steed on which he was
+mounted to range alongside the millionaire. “We feel here in the
+Miss’ippi bottom that you jes’ nachully b’long to us. Why, I knowed yer
+dad way back in the fifties. _Yes_, sir! He used ter run the river in
+them days. He was mud clerk on the old Cher’kee Rose. I kep’ a wood-yard
+up yander on the p’int, an’ Gus Loring an’ me had chummy old times when
+he would come ashore to medjure the wood. That was before he
+married—considerable looking up his match was, for a mud clerk, ye know!
+Yer mother was a tidy gal,—plump as a partridge,—and I used to set up
+ter her considerable myself. He! he! he! She turned me off, though, for
+Gus Loring! An’ she done better, though I do say it myself. She done
+better to take Gus instead o’ me. She had a leetle chunk o’ money, an’
+yer dad quit the river an’ bought a share in a store an’ set out
+a-clerkin’. But Lawd! I reckon ye wouldn’t bat yer eye for no such stock
+o’ goods as he had. They tell me as ye have prospered considerable down
+yander in Orleans! I reckon if _ye_ was ter store-keep, like yer dad, ye
+could show forth as good a stock as they had at Whippoorwill
+Landing,—that would ha’ made Gus Loring stare! I don’t mean ye could
+_own_ it all—part credit o’ course! But I reckon from all I _have_ heard
+tell that ye could get a note in bank,—an’ that is mo’ ’n yer dad ever
+could do.”
+
+Regnan loved his fellow-man. “For God’s sake, pull that old fox off the
+Spartan’s vitals,” he said in a low voice to Kentopp. “I can’t abide for
+a fellow to be gnawed like that.”
+
+“Then, curse him,—why can’t he show some sense!” Kentopp growled _sotto
+voce_ in return. “Who but a fool would try to top old Jerry Sloper with
+his _nil admirari_ millionaire airs. _He_ knows what Loring cut his
+teeth on! I am afraid of my life to say a word.”
+
+Lieutenant Regnan had missed his billet as the destroyer of life. His
+instincts were all for first aid to the injured. He presently began
+melodiously to hum, and suddenly as he rode in the clump of horsemen he
+broke forth: “Say, Mr. Sloper, how does the tune go to that old
+high-water song:—
+
+ “Step light, neighbor,—_don’t_ jar the river!
+ Rising, rising, brimful and over—”
+
+Forthwith the old swamper was blissfully chanting as he rode at the head
+of the cavalcade, and Mr. Loring had time to readjust the expression of
+his face and to conceal the ravages of the onslaught on his pride before
+a certain pallid influence began to annul the darkness. A sense of mist
+was in the atmosphere, yet great, towering trees were visible, and far
+along apparently infinite vistas, level and devoid of woodland débris as
+a royal park, some vague presence shifted continually, never so
+distinct, so definitely embodied, as to be formulated to the vision, and
+at last realized as the impalpable medium of the dawning light. Suddenly
+day was revealed in the woods. The sun was up, not seeming to rise on
+those infinite levels, but to spring at once like a miracle into the
+place of darkness. It filled the world with the amplitudes of a glorious
+golden glow, so fresh, so elated, yet pervaded with a sort of awe, a
+splendid solemnity. Stillness characterized its earlier moments, but
+presently, in the chill morning, the spring birds were singing from the
+branches of the trees, which rustled with the sudden stir of the wind.
+Through the vistas to the west the great Mississippi was agleam with
+thousands of wavelets tipped with dazzling scintillations, and the
+rising mist that veiled the Arkansas shore shimmered with opalescent
+reflections. Beyond the limits of the forest one could see here and
+there a scattered growth of cottonwood trees and the serpentine line of
+the levee, its great embankment covered to the summit with the thick
+growth of Bermuda grass, the interlacing roots of which were considered
+of much avail in strengthening the earthwork to resist the action of the
+current in times of high water. At one point, where the river turned in
+its corkscrew convolutions, the horsemen could see that the encroaching
+flood had crossed the intervening space and was beginning to stand
+against the base of the levee. This premonitory symptom of overflow Mr.
+Loring was prompt to notice.
+
+“I have a cross levee half a mile back,” Colonel Kentopp said, with a
+jaunty air. “I don’t think we will go under, even if that stretch of
+levee should give. And if we do,” still more jauntily, “crawfish and
+river detritus are fine fertilizers.”
+
+“Best crops ever made in Deepwater Bend was after the biggest water I
+ever see,” interrupted Jerry Sloper, exceedingly glib. “Levees broke in
+March, and water stood sixty miles wide. Plantations were under till
+mighty nigh May. River was not in its banks till nigh May. Then the crop
+was planted and—”
+
+“I have heard my grandfather tell about that,” interposed Regnan. “The
+fields were so thick with cotton that they laughed and sang,—and the
+planters laughed and sang, too.”
+
+“Still, I’d rather Dryad-Dene should keep dry feet,” said Colonel
+Kentopp, turning in his saddle to look over his shoulder at the water
+lapping about the verdant spaces at the base of the levee. Nevertheless,
+he felt very cheerful. The cavalcade could hear the plantation bell at
+Dryad-Dene ring forth its strong, mellow acclaim, calling out the hired
+force to work, as well as the tenant farmers, who were under the same
+regimen. The broad expanse of fields was now and again visible, all
+prepared for the planting of cotton,—as carefully laid off and with the
+earth as thoroughly pulverized as if for a flower-bed. It was impossible
+for the heart of a proprietor of so fine a plantation not to swell at
+the sight, and while away from Annetta and her eager fostering of their
+mutual ambitions toward metropolitan life, Kentopp felt a sort of
+independence of the millionaire’s doubtful attitude. Let the event fall
+out as it would, he had here a mighty good thing.
+
+In the midst of these more vital and manly interests, Loring’s phlegm
+and pose of indifference could but give way. He knew the country and its
+possibilities thoroughly, and now and again he made searching inquiries
+into local conditions, which showed that his mind was genuinely occupied
+with the proposition, and caused Colonel Kentopp to think that he did
+not half care to sell at all. Repeatedly the richness of the opportunity
+was demonstrated. A turn in the road suddenly gave to view a lovely
+level of pasturage inclosed by hedges of the Cherokee rose, over whose
+wide-spreading evergreen brambles the horsemen could look upon a green
+plain, dotted with trees of gigantic girth, and embellished with as fine
+a flock of sheep as ever wore wool. Three or four black pickaninnies,
+already absorbed in a game of mumble-the-peg, and several collie dogs
+were entered upon their guardian duties for the day, and Colonel Kentopp
+was descanting upon varieties and pedigrees, weight of shearings and
+flavor of mutton.
+
+“We raise everything at Dryad-Dene, as a model plantation should. The
+world is within the bounds of Dryad-Dene. We buy nothing but gunpowder,
+salt, iron, and sugar.”
+
+This was, of course, the ancient brag of the great river principalities;
+but the immense drove of hogs which the horsemen passed after a time,
+crowding about a gate where swineherds were throwing out as breakfast
+the contents of a wagon loaded with corn over the high fence of the
+inclosure, the wide expanse of the potato-fields, harvested long ago,
+their yield garnered into the potato-sheds that stretched along on one
+side like the roofs of a little street, the saw-and-grist mill, the
+cotton-press and steam-gin, with the obeliscal smokestack towering above
+the plain,—all the appurtenances of the industry, went far to confirm
+the boast.
+
+And now into the depths of the wilderness, primeval, apparently
+illimitable, with the wind footing it featly alongside. There were
+clouds in the densely blue sky, but high, white, flocculent, and lightly
+floating. The odors of spring vegetation, of early blooms, came on every
+breath; and when the first of the sloughs was reached, it was so draped
+in lace-like willows, so full of verdant moss and ooze, so still and
+dreamy in its marshy pools, mirroring the sky, that one might have
+accounted it a valued feature of the landscape, but for the experience
+of fording it.
+
+“We can’t hunt bear in a parlor,” Colonel Kentopp declared, as he forced
+Ringdove to wet her dainty hoofs. The rest were soon splashing after,
+unmindful of mire and solicitous only of quicksands. But on the farther
+side they were on dry and level ground once more, cantering alertly
+amidst the great forest trees, the horses scarcely breathed, and the
+courage of the cavalcade rising to the summons of exertion. And
+now,—deepest shades, great overhanging, swamp-like growths! The dense
+cypress, festooned by the gray Spanish moss, rose towering out of
+ink-black water; a white heron, standing motionless beside a clump of
+the protuberances known as “cypress-knees,” looked as if it might have
+been sketched into the scene with a bit of chalk; logs, moss-covered and
+dripping with slime, lay half buried in the ooze; the canopy of foliage
+was so thick, the boughs of the trees so densely interlacing, that the
+light of the brilliant day was cut off and the hunters rode as if in a
+dream-shadow. Lakes presently opened alongside, series of glassy
+stretches, blue under the azure sky, and connected by a bayou so dully
+flowing that, gaze as one might, the motion of a current could not be
+discerned. Once wild ducks were glimpsed, and though old Jerry Sloper
+protested, he could not hinder the prompt discharge of one of the
+shot-guns. On the crash of the report ensued the whizzing of wings in
+the flurry of terrified flight, and two of the birds floated dead upon
+the water. A handsome setter sprang into the lake, and presently swam
+out with his feathered trophy; while the dogs of different breeds
+wheezed uneasily about the margin, and one of them, a famous bear hound
+of a singular bluish tint, his hide about his jaws hanging in loose
+folds, sat down and contemplated the feat with head askew, as much as to
+say, “Now, how did _you_ find out how to do that?”
+
+Jerry Sloper was beside himself with indignation. “Now, you fellers air
+goin’ to spile the chances fur the whole day! How fur d’ ye think this
+here piece o’ water ’ll carry the crack o’ that thar gun? Old Pa Bear
+will hide in the cane-brake an’ old Ma Bear will gather the children up
+in the hollow tree, an’ they won’t ventur’ out ’fore June. An’ then the
+manners of my dogs! I been tryin’ ter get it out o’ that thar
+Lightfoot’s fool head that he is expected to go arter what I shoot. _I_
+don’t kill fowels with a gun.” His lip curled with scorn, showing his
+long, tobacco-stained teeth. “I go ter my hen-cup an’ chop off thar
+heads with a hatchet. I am a man, I am! An’ when I play, I take my sport
+like a man. I shoot deer an’ bear an’ wolves an’ sech animals. The last
+time I killed a bear, ’twas by accident. I hed nobody with me but
+Lightfoot, thar. An’ the crittur,—durn his little old cranky soul!—he
+p’inted. Came to a stand, with his forefoot crooked,—jes’ so”—and Jerry
+Sloper crooked his great hairy paw in clumsy imitation of Lightfoot’s
+graceful instinct—“else I wouldn’t have seen old Bruin. I ’lowed a’ fust
+’twar jes’ a hawg over in the brake. An’ all of a suddenty, lo an’
+behold, ’twas revealed to me that thar was a bear! An’ I fired,—an’ o’
+course he fell. An’ off skittered Lightfoot ter _bring him in_, mind ye!
+Thar I was hollerin’ arter the child, thrown to the wild beast,—I warn’t
+able to stir hand or foot,—I was jes’ palsied with skeer. Lightfoot tuk
+him gently by the ear,—not to spile him with gnawing,—jes’ like he done
+that duck—Gimme that thar fowel, _you_ distracted beast!” and the
+setter, with half-squatting hind-legs and wriggles of delight and pride,
+and lifted, liquid, shining eyes, relinquished the game into his hand.
+“An’ what happened? The bear warn’t plumb dead! And Lightfoot come back
+tore mighty nigh ter the breastbone. See them scars on his chist? An’ ez
+soon as he was able to stand it, I gin him a beatin’ besides ter teach
+him better. An’ now,—ye have set him at his old tricks ag’in. I wouldn’t
+own a dog with sech a mania, if he warn’t a present ter me. An’ till ye
+fellers tuk to triflin’ with him, I ’lowed I’d got him plumb sensible.
+You see that duck?”—he looked down sternly at his accomplished retainer,
+who, discerning the change of tone, began to cringe miserably,
+thoroughly crestfallen. “Oh, ho! ain’t forgot what I told you, eh? Well,
+then,—want some mo’ slipper pie?”
+
+Oh, he did not! He did not, indeed,—his pleading countenance protested.
+But the threat was a mere feint; and as the old swamper turned to take
+up the route once more, the setter, with a shrill yelp of delight to get
+off from the colloquy with no painful sequence, dashed ahead, and was
+presently trotting nimbly with his companions of various families and
+traditions, the only bird dog, and the only one whose record comprised
+the heady effort to retrieve a bear.
+
+“I’d buy that setter, Mr. Sloper, if you’d put a price on him,” said
+Regnan, who sometimes descended to the trifling sport of bird hunting.
+
+“An’ _I’d_ buy the State of Miss’ippi, if ’twas layin’ around loose,”
+was the not too encouraging response.
+
+Sloughs, lagoons, bayous unnumbered! The horses were soon mired to their
+girths; the men were splashed from head to foot, and those inexpert at
+swimming a horse when suddenly out of his depth, had their high
+riding-boots full of water. More than once an alligator was viewed, half
+embedded in the ooze, only distinguished from the rotting log that he
+resembled when he would rouse himself to swim slowly a few yards,
+tempting the knights of the magazine shot-guns.
+
+“Don’t ye know that a bullet from a forward shot will glance off as if
+he wore chain armor!” old Sloper remonstrated. “The only chance is a
+rifle-ball behind the eye.”
+
+“And when did _you_ become acquainted with chain armor?” asked one of
+the Mayberry youths, in merry wonderment and with a twinkling eye.
+
+“About twenty-five years before you was bawn,” retorted the old swamper.
+He paused to spit forth an enormous volley of tobacco-juice against the
+trunk of a tree, with a seeming solicitude for the accuracy of his aim;
+then resumed with the greatest deliberation.
+
+“I holped in a jewel that was fought by two tremenjious swells, who got
+themselves landed by the Great Republic for that purpose. They tuk up an
+insult to each other while on the boat. They came up to my wood-yard—I
+used ter furnish fuel ter the packets reg’lar. They said all they wanted
+was a man ter see fair play an’ shut his mouth. They plastered mine good
+an’ tight with a double eagle. One of the parties was tremenjious brash
+an’ overbearin’; I could see that the other looked into death’s
+eyesockets at close quarters. I medjured the ground for them with the
+Flying Cloud’s wood-staff that the mud clerk had left at the
+yard,—miserable, unshifty, keerless cuss! Bet he needed it himself
+before he got ter New Orleans! An’ these two dandy fellers tuk thar
+stand an’ fired. An’ the one that was so cocksure missed his aim, though
+his hair-trigger was as fine a weepon as ever I see. An’ the t’other,
+that thought he had come to his las’ minit, shot straight. But he aimed
+at the man’s mouth, as it ’peared to me. He threw up his pistol at the
+last second. The ball tuk the gentleman right through the throat. Ought
+to have seen the blood spurt out ’n his jugular! Mighty nasty way to
+kill a gentleman, I thought! An’ as we both run to the body on the
+ground, one on either side, the winner’s hand shook so he could hardly
+undo the vest. So I laid back the fine linen shirt, though I knew it was
+no use to feel his heart, for he was as dead as a buckeye; I seen
+between it an’ his silk underwear a shirt of fine steel rings. ’T would
+turn a bullet; ’t would break a knife! An’ the s’vivor says,—his chin
+shook so that he could hardly talk,—‘What do you think of that? I
+s’picioned from the fust that he would give me no fair chance in a
+fight, an’ he forced it upon me.’ An’ I say, ‘Let’s put this murderer in
+the bayou. Thar’s some fierce catfish thar, an’ snakes, an’ slimy beasts
+to eat the flesh from his bones. The mud is deep an’ will hold him down,
+an’ the mire is fit for his last home! The Miss’ippi is too tricky to
+trust,—floats things, ye know. The bayou for me, every time!’”
+
+“Why, Mr. Sloper,” cried young Mayberry, suddenly grave and aghast. “I
+should think that you would have been afraid.”
+
+“Well, he ain’t never got up from thar,—so fur as I have heard tell.
+What’s to be afeard of?”
+
+“Was that _all_ you did? To bury him in the bayou?”
+
+“Naw, sir; I went down to Natchez an’ spreed away the double eagle, the
+twenty dollars.”
+
+“But I mean about notifying the authorities?”
+
+The old swamper’s face had a bewildered look. “Whar was they? What call
+had they ter meddle? I done nothin’ but the heftin’.”
+
+“Didn’t the Great Republic say anything the next time she passed?”
+
+“Oh, yes! I told the mud clerk that the price of wood had riz, an’ he
+told me to go to hell. That’s the last word with the Great Republic.”
+
+Suddenly a sound smote the sylvan silence. A keen note of query, a wide
+blare of discovery,—and all the pack opened on the scent, baying as
+rhythmically as if trained to this woodland music. The horn rang out its
+elated, spirited tones, the sound leaping like a live thing along the
+far reaches of the levels. The horsemen, in a frenzy of excitement, were
+separating, each taking his own course and riding as if the rout of some
+swift pursuit were upon his track. Desmond hesitated for a moment,
+bewildered, the only stranger to the wilderness of all the party,
+forgotten utterly by his host, by old Sloper, by the huntsman on ahead
+with the dogs, by the youthful sportsmen. Presently, however, Regnan
+bethought himself of the tutor and his imminent danger of being lost in
+the fastnesses, and paused after an instant of frantic plunging through
+a narrow bogue that issued from a swamp where there was promise indeed
+of scant solid ground.
+
+“Come with me,” he called. “I am going to try an old stand on a deer
+path I know. The hounds have got up a buck—I think so from the tongue
+they are giving. Follow me. Swim your horse when he begins to flounder
+in the bayous.”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER X
+
+
+There was no choice. Desmond had scant interest in this tumultuous sport
+of coursing deer with hounds, but he was fain to follow. He could not
+have retraced his way for his life, and to be lost in the wilderness—for
+every horseman had disappeared—was taking all the jeopardy of disaster
+and even of death. He congratulated himself that the excellent brute he
+bestrode seemed to know more about the matter than he. Suddenly Regnan,
+who had been for a few minutes lost to him, appeared in glimpses through
+the redundant vegetation about the lagoon, which could be characterized
+as neither water nor land, consisting now of one and now of the other,
+and again of a treacherous combination of both, that afforded neither
+footing nor the medium for swimming. The young sportsman was thrashing
+through brake and slough at a breakneck speed that presently carried him
+out of the reach of vision.
+
+The glimpse was sufficient for the powerful red roan that Desmond rode,
+and he needed no prompting. He sprang instantly into the water in the
+essay to follow, swimming with great spirit, now and then stretching his
+legs to gain a firm footing, and, with a splashing flounder that nearly
+shook Desmond out of the saddle, striking out again to swim with alert
+vigilance and stalwart strength. Desmond was used to equestrian exercise
+in milder form and found a need for all the principles of equitation
+that he had been taught, for the most progressive of mounts can hardly
+act on his own initiative throughout the incidents of such a drive as
+this promised to be. Desmond gave the horse his head as to direction,
+but checked him according to his own judgment at impassable obstacles,
+and held him up firmly when he threatened to go to his knees. A little
+later, in a deep quagmire, where he showed signs of sinking, and, losing
+courage, began to snort in fright, Desmond used bit and heel to such
+effect as to reinstate his confidence and bring him leaping lightly out
+of his floundering instabilities to good dry ground.
+
+When the wild, disordered turmoils of the alluvial wilderness gave way
+on the borders of a fine bit of water, Desmond was surprised himself to
+note how reassured he felt to perceive Regnan on his swimming horse
+nearly in the centre of the lakelet. In the swift transit he had
+scarcely had time to speculate if he were on the right track, but
+confirmation was welcome. Regnan had evidently felt a doubt, for he was
+looking over his shoulder; and as Desmond and the red roan galloped down
+to the margin, the horse sending forth a gleeful whinny at the sight of
+his swimming comrade in advance, Regnan waved his hand and pressed on to
+the opposite shore, where the dense shadows of a great stretch of forest
+gloomed. Here there was good going. Desmond pressed his horse to added
+speed to overhaul his precursor, and side by side they galloped at their
+utmost capacity, with scarcely a word exchanged, through miles of level
+woods, at last reaching the almost impenetrable densities of a
+cane-brake, skirting the growth rather than striking across it; this was
+the outpost of sluggish bayous and cypress sloughs, almost impassable,
+seeming impracticable, till suddenly they stood on a fair sheet of
+water. The blue sky looked down suavely upon it, and so serene it was
+that one might have thought the wild tangles through which the way
+hither had lain were some vision of a distraught imagination. All around
+the dense woods were silent, primeval. Something of the redundant swamp
+growths were about its margin and cloaked the approach to its placid
+waters, but beyond stretched the endless forests.
+
+Regnan was dismounting. “It is too wide to swim with a horse,” he said.
+“I suppose that is the reason the deer take to it. And once get this
+body of water between them and the dogs, and the scent is lost.”
+
+He was hitching his horse among the tangled growths at a little
+distance, where he would be invisible, and cautioned Desmond to follow
+his example.
+
+“See that deer path?” he said. A narrow line threaded the luxuriant
+marshy grasses about the margin,—scarcely a path,—yet a keen eye might
+discern the imprint of a cleft hoof in the moist ground at the water’s
+edge. “I have shot deer here before,” added Regnan.
+
+With the butt of his gun he beat down the boughs of evergreen shrubs to
+afford an elastic couch; and here they lay them down and rested and
+talked spasmodically and dully drowsed, while they awaited the sound of
+hound and horn.
+
+“He’s giving them a good run for the money,” opined Regnan, as time wore
+on and brought no change. The placid lake gleamed serene; the dark
+forest gloomed. But for their own languid voices they heard naught, and
+sometimes long pauses intervened in the desultory talk.
+
+“Fond of this sort of thing?” asked Regnan.
+
+Desmond was more comfortable since he had taken off his high
+riding-boots and poured the water from them, being advised by Regnan to
+put them on immediately, lest they so stiffen in drying that their
+resumption would be impossible. The amusement did not seem so
+disagreeable to Desmond as he lay stretched out at his long length, his
+soft hat over his eyes, and his gloves also dutifully drying into shape
+on his hands. He was able to answer both veraciously and courteously.
+
+“I am not used to it. I like the violent exercise well enough. But I
+don’t want to kill anything. I am glad I can’t.”
+
+“Why can’t you?”
+
+“Oh, I never shot at anything in my life but with a handful of
+bird-shot.”
+
+Regnan, also recumbent, with his hat over his eyes to be rid of the
+combined glare of lake and sky, lifted himself suddenly to look about
+him.
+
+“What a pity! We both have rifles! Kentopp ought to have given you a
+shotgun. I wish I had mine. I don’t know why I should have brought this
+thing.”
+
+Then he lay back once more and shaded his eyes. A long silence ensued.
+The glare on the lake had dulled; a network of clouds gathered
+gradually, the meshes weaving continually until dense, dark, impervious
+to any gleam, it hung unbroken above the lake. The woods had fallen into
+deeper gloom; only the green of the saw-grass fringing the water-side
+seemed lifted into an intenser chromatic grade by the lowering of a gray
+sky. When a sound smote the mute quietude of the woods, it was a
+muttering of thunder.
+
+“Rain! We are going to have it in plenty,” suggested Regnan.
+
+“It has been demonstrated to-day that we are neither sugar nor salt.”
+
+“But it will disperse the scent; the hounds will run counter.”
+
+“Hallo!” exclaimed Desmond, in sudden excitement, lifting himself on his
+elbow. He could not have said why it should thrill him; but that sound
+of a horn, elastically leaping along the distance, so signally clear, so
+searchingly vibrant, so infinitely sweet, sought out every fibre of the
+romantic in him. Then rose the melody of the dogs in full cry, rhythmic,
+mellow, musical, softened by the distance, significant, unceasing,
+echoing with the sentiment of the sylvan chase of all the days of eld.
+It was not old Sloper’s “house-party” that Desmond heard, but every pack
+of high degree that ever coursed through the realms of poesy or the
+liberties of tradition. He was on his feet,—a light in his eyes, a flush
+on his cheek, his hands trembling, his muscles alert.
+
+“They are coming this way! They are heading for the lake!” he exclaimed.
+
+Regnan listened for a moment. “Right you are!” he cried.
+
+As they took up their position at the stand, ambushed beside the deer
+path, Regnan insistently waived precedence.
+
+“You fire first. _You_ are company! If you miss, I’ll fire. Buck ague?”
+he whispered.
+
+The undulating sound of the cry of the hounds, emitted rhythmically with
+each bound, came ever nearer and nearer, and suddenly there was close at
+hand a crashing through the bushes down the deer path. Desmond threw up
+his rifle, conscious that he must catch the aim as quick as light. To
+his own surprise he was singularly cool and steady. A flash, the sharp
+report rang out; something clouded white and brown and gray leaped high
+into the air, issuing from the brush, and fell dead at the water’s
+edge,—a gigantic wildcat.
+
+“A crack shot you are!” Regnan exclaimed, amazed. The ball had taken the
+creature just beneath the ear and pierced the brain. “And this cat is
+the finest ever!”
+
+He bent over the magnificent specimen. “I didn’t know such a fellow as
+this was left in the country. But oh, how old Sloper will swear!”
+
+“Why?” asked Desmond, the excitement cooling only gradually.
+
+“His hounds are to run only deer and bear, no matter what’s the purpose
+of their creation and previous education. He lets them chase a fox, now
+and then, with a great palaver of explanation, and keeping right up with
+them. But a cat! He’ll be worth hearing!”
+
+When the pack came presently, swiftly loping through the brake, and
+beheld their prey, it was difficult indeed to reduce them to order; and
+as old Sloper raged, and fumed, and indignantly rebuked them, their air
+suggested contradiction as they whisked about their prostrate foe, their
+gait as if they could not keep feet to ground—lifting them as if it were
+hot—in the flutter and excitement, and they noisily yelped with delight
+every time he spoke to them. It would seem that the subtle current of
+comprehension, the medium of communication, was broken. They so
+valiantly protested that they had done a fine thing, and piqued
+themselves so pridefully on their prowess, that he was fain to end the
+discussion in his own interest in the prey.
+
+“Git out’n my way, or I’ll punch the nose off’n ye,” he roughly adjured
+them, as he dismounted to lay out at length the savage beast, in order
+to take its measure from its muzzle to the tip of the tail. “Thar! I’ve
+stepped on your foot, and I’m glad of it!” as a piercing squeak split
+the ears of the party. But the sufferer was game and hopped joyously
+about on three legs, participating in the event, despite his plaintive
+disabilities.
+
+“What you goin’ to do with this here cat, Mr. Desmond?” he asked, an
+added respect for so fine a shot unmistakable in every line of his face
+and every inflection of his voice. “Better git it off the ground—the
+dogs mought tear it; they air so durned sassy over it, I can’t govern
+’em none. And ’tis the finest thing I ever see. My! how handsome that
+fur is!”
+
+“Why,” exclaimed Desmond, suddenly roused to the possibilities of his
+possession, “I’ll have it stuffed and present it to Mrs. Kentopp as an
+ornament to the armory and a memento of the occasion.” He had not eaten
+much of her bread, but he distrusted the motive of her hospitality, and
+his pride welcomed the opportunity to make a requital so promptly and in
+a guise which he knew would be so acceptable. He began to take an
+interest in the exceptional beauty of the specimen.
+
+“Then it ought to be skun right now, before the critter stiffens. An’
+I’ll do it fur ye and send the pelt to ye.”
+
+Down old Sloper went on his hands and knees to the work _con amore_, his
+sharp hunting-knife gingerly tracing the lines where the cuticle and fur
+could be separated with least injury to the appearance of the
+integument. It was a long job and a careful one, but none of the other
+sportsmen had put in an appearance when it was finished. He straightened
+up and looked about him doubtfully.
+
+“They all lost out somehows,” he said. “Mighty rough ridin’ in them
+slashes. I reckon they’ve all rid off to camp, mightily interested in
+that thar barbecued shoat fur dinner.”
+
+The mention elicited a responsive interest and a desire to minimize the
+distance between the hunters and this dainty, time-honored of the _al
+fresco_ feast. The hounds, old Sloper, and the huntsman set out by way
+of the deer path, as they had come.
+
+“I’ll try a short cut,” suggested Regnan, “if you don’t mind a bit more
+wading and swimming.”
+
+Desmond protested his indifference to a renewal of their amphibious
+experience, and, mounting their horses, the two rode off through the
+saw-grass, which fringed the borders of the lake. Suddenly the
+slate-tinted clouds, darkening and still sinking lower, were cleft by a
+vivid forked flash; the thunder crashed with an appalling clangor; the
+horses were snorting in fright and plunging wildly, and the floodgates
+were unloosed. The rain descended in sheets; there was not a breath of
+wind, and the torrents fell vertically. It seemed for a time as if they
+were menaced by a cloud-burst. The quantity of water liberated was
+incalculable. The swamp which they now threaded was inundated so swiftly
+that Regnan more than once paused and looked back as if he canvassed the
+possibility of retracing their way to the solid earth they had quitted.
+But the rainfall was no translucent medium. He could distinguish naught
+beyond its opaque curtain. In serried lines in undiscriminated myriads
+the torrents fell, yet seemed always stationary. It hardly mattered
+which course they adopted, for each was soaked to the very bones. On and
+on they plodded, the horses dully drudging in the progress, making
+special exertion when they needs must, but obviously showing that they
+were of opinion the fun was at an end, and that there could be too much
+of a good thing. Like human beings, they found a vastly different animus
+in going forth full of expectation and coming back exhausted with the
+day’s run. They held down their heads in meek endurance as the rain beat
+upon them, and when they stumbled in the shifty, marshy soil, there was
+great danger both to the animal and his rider in the lack of that
+alertness of muscle to recover a footing or bound with his burdened
+saddle beyond the limits of the quagmire. Once or twice this recovery
+was so precarious, so clumsy a floundering, and sinking was so imminent,
+that both horsemen were alarmed and prescient of disaster.
+
+“We have done this thing once too often, I am afraid,” said Regnan.
+
+Desmond, too, had been looking over his shoulder, though not in the
+forlorn hope that they might be able to see the point from which they
+had started, for they had pressed the horses forward, against their
+will, with such energy that they had made it as impossible to retrace
+their way as to reach satisfactory footing in going on. Some injutting
+point of land in the irregular outline of the swamp, or one of the
+ridges of higher ground whereon switch cane grew luxuriantly, and which
+here and there traversed it, might yet afford them rescue, but if he
+could have discovered such opportunity in ordinary weather, the
+tumultuous, blinding downpour rendered it invisible now.
+
+“There is nothing for it but to go on,” he said in a depressed cadence,
+for his heart had a sensation of sinking. He was growing desperate. The
+rain had in its midst great shifting clouds of thin vapor. Now it so
+inclosed them that they lost sight of each other. Yet when they called
+out in alarm, fearful of the disaster of unwittingly parting company,
+the changing mist gave a vision of the head of the other horse close at
+hand, though a moment earlier it could not be discerned.
+
+Suddenly as Desmond shifted his position in the saddle, looking straight
+over his horse’s ears, he gave a start and an abrupt exclamation,
+staring as if he doubted his senses; for before him, in the pallid,
+hovering mists, half revealed and half concealed by the immaterial
+investitures of the curtaining rain and the cloaking cloud, like the
+travesty of a ship under full sail which tantalizes the desperate hope
+of wrecked or castaway mariners, he beheld as if suspended in the air
+between heaven and earth the outline of a river craft, a boat of some
+humble sort, a refuge.
+
+“Look, Regnan, what is that in the sky?” he exclaimed hastily.
+
+Regnan lifted his head and put up his hand to hold away the flapping
+brim of his drenched hat. His voice suddenly rang out with a thrill of
+good cheer: “In the sky? Why, it’s in the bayou, thank God!”
+
+“It is a flatboat?” Desmond hesitated.
+
+“A flatboat it is!”
+
+Regnan’s face had not regained its florid tint; the chill of the fog and
+the rain, that had not left a dry thread on his body, and the effluvia
+of the swamp, penetrating his lungs, had turned his lips blue. But he
+laughed out gayly, although as his lineaments moved he swallowed the
+rills of rain that ran down his face. “It is rescue, my boy! That’s what
+it is! The boat is half a mile off, and we can just about make it.”
+
+“Half a mile! A flatboat!” Even yet Desmond was hardly convinced that it
+was not a delusion. “What makes it so high!”
+
+“What makes us so low!” laughed Regnan. “Because we are away down in the
+swamp, and the flatboat is away up in the bayou.”
+
+“I should think the bayou would overflow and convert this swamp into a
+lake.”
+
+“And so it would but for the conformation of its banks. And so it will
+if this cloud-burst keeps on a bit longer and swells the waters of the
+bayou.”
+
+They shifted their direction and pushed on with a good heart, despite
+the difficulties that increased at every step; and though the horses,
+with their bent heads and drenched coats and drudging plod, had not seen
+the craft so high above their own level, now indeed obliterated from all
+view by the encircling cloud, they obviously felt the recruited hopes
+and energy of their riders. The revived spirits of the men were subtly
+imparted to the steeds, and the improved progress caused the distance to
+seem less than Regnan’s estimate when again the cloud lifted so much as
+to disclose the mirage-like craft, now lower on the limited horizon by
+reason of the nearer approach.
+
+“To tell you the truth, Desmond,” said Regnan,—the two had become
+chummy, despite the tutor’s sensitive reserve and repellent dignity, for
+there was no justification in holding Regnan at arm’s length,—“I thought
+our hour had come. I thought we were destined to leave our bones in the
+bayou with the caitiff of the shirt of mail.”
+
+Desmond shuddered. “Oh, give me better company!” he cried. “Death is a
+leveler, but it can never lay me so low as that.”
+
+Now and then each looked up from beneath his sodden hat-brim to discern
+if their approach had been noticed from the craft, but as yet she gave
+no sign of observation. There was no one on deck, as they soon
+perceived. The rain beat down heavily upon it, and the water washed over
+its low gunwales as if it were the waves of the bayou. The stream,
+however, showed even yet no motion, no current; it was covered by a
+myriad of tiny bosses, so to speak, the rain being so persistent, the
+fall so regular, as to make the drops seem to stand stationary on its
+surface. It had risen several feet, as was evinced by the half submerged
+vegetation along the banks, the tips fresh and green, with no token of
+having been long under water. Beneath that black cloud, with the
+sinister effect of the white trunks of the cypress trees on either hand,
+deadened by repeated overflows, their weird reflections in the trembling
+black water, the funereal aspect of the pendent Spanish moss hanging
+from the high limbs and even festooning the trees from one side of the
+stream to the other,—the world, the past, life itself, annihilated by
+the clouds,—the dark and gloomy watercourse might have suggested the
+river Styx, and the shadowy, visionary, ill-defined boat the craft of
+Charon. They both felt an averse curiosity as they approached still
+nearer, striving to disintegrate from the rain and the cloud some
+individual characteristic or sign of occupation of the phantom craft.
+Regnan began to think it a derelict, an old abandoned hulk; but he soon
+saw that it sat the water much too jauntily, a stout, dry hull, tight
+and serviceable. Presently their keen young eyes discriminated a curl of
+smoke amidst the vapors that lay on the roof of the cabin. This was
+little more than a shed of upright boards, very flimsily put together,
+and a tiny square window along the eaves promised little for light. It
+served the purpose of a lookout, however. A pale face appeared there. It
+seemed to scan disconsolately the rain-lost world without, the
+encroaching cloud, the swamp with its sinking aspect; and suddenly, with
+transfixed attention, to become aware of the approaching sportsmen, the
+horse of the one up to the girth as he plodded through the half
+submerged morass, that of the other out of his depth and beginning to
+swim.
+
+For one spectral moment the face stared as if confronted by doom. Then
+the door of the cabin opened, and disregarding the downpour, with skirts
+lashing about her, with long hair loose and flying, a tall, sinuous
+young woman appeared, sprang from the deck upon the marshy bank, cast
+loose the line about a tree, leaped back upon the deck in a moment,
+caught up a pole, and with a stalwart effort had pushed off an oar’s
+length or two before the man whom her shrill cries had summoned stumbled
+out of the cabin and stood staring at the newcomers, with little
+apparent inclination to lend a hand to the effort of clearing the
+harbor.
+
+It was vain. The horsemen were too close upon them. Such motive power as
+kept the sluggish bayou on its course from the Mississippi River was too
+slight to aid the pole to evade the speed of a swimming horse. Desmond,
+indeed, had boarded the craft while the imbecile face of the boat-hand
+was still bent upon him.
+
+“What do you mean by this behavior?” he demanded angrily, not as yet
+recognizing either the man or the woman. “Tie up the boat again, and
+show us your bar.”
+
+“Jocelindy! Jocelindy! ye fool, ye!” cried the boat-hand, striking the
+struggling woman on the shoulder with his heavy hand. But for this
+repulsive brutality it might have been pathetic to hear him tax another
+with his own obvious infirmity. “Don’t ye see the gentleman’s goin’ ter
+spen’ money with us!”
+
+He busied himself in tying up the boat in quick order, and found a place
+where the two horses could stand on pretty staunch ground under the
+interlacing boughs of cottonwood, so thick as to afford some shelter
+from the rain. He had fodder aboard, too, he said.
+
+“Some fodder we had to pack a lot o’ chany,” interposed the woman,
+suddenly and shrilly, “becase there wasn’t no straw convenient.”
+
+Desmond had no mind to linger on ceremony. Without waiting for an
+invitation, he turned toward the cabin door. The woman, still standing
+in the torrents, a secret thought in her face, her head askew, her
+draggled attire dripping with rain, her mouth bent down upon her
+clenched fist, suddenly asked:—
+
+“Tell me one word,—is your name Faurie?”
+
+“No,” said Desmond, frowning at the identification with his employers as
+if he were of no importance in himself; “my name is Desmond.”
+
+“Thar now, Jocelindy, ye told Jed that very word,” exclaimed the
+boat-hand, mowing and laughing with imbecile and extravagant glee. “Ye
+told him that this very mornin’ before he set out with his spade.”
+
+There was an incongruity in any mutual utilities between a boat and a
+spade, but Desmond was new to the river country and did not appreciate
+this fact. It struck Regnan at once, but he had no reason to place
+inimical construction upon the acts of the boat’s company, and it passed
+without comment.
+
+Though what is called “not right bright,” Ethan Knoxton was
+discriminating enough to preside very acceptably at a bar when two
+storm-drenched wights stood before it, and he ranged the glasses with an
+extra polish and tipped a decanter. It was a dull, squalid little hole,
+with a permanent aroma of the greasy fumes of many breakfasts fried on
+the monkey stove at the farther end of the cabin, and the heavy, oily
+flavor of the untrimmed wick of a kerosene lamp swinging above the bar.
+The water dripped dismally from their coats and riding-breeches into the
+already well-filled legs of their high boots, that gave a squashing
+sound at every step. From their hats chilly little streams trickled into
+their collapsed shirt collars and down their shivering spines; and as
+the first drop of liquor touched their palates, the surprise to find
+that instead of rank, coarse whiskey it was good French brandy was so
+grateful that they could but look at each other with glistening eyes
+over the rims of their glasses as they drank.
+
+The boat-hand watched them expectantly.
+
+“My! Ain’t that fine!” Then as they set the glasses down, he whooped out
+his vicarious joy and smote his leg with the palm of his open hand.
+
+Desmond had insisted on paying by right of his discovery of the bar, and
+he laid down the price of three drinks. “You will oblige me,” he said
+politely to the boat-hand, struggling with his distaste and disgust. One
+should not despise the poor, and the uncouth, and the deprived, who may
+have more value in their Maker’s eyes than one wots of. Therefore,
+because the semblance of humanity was not always disdained, he sought to
+have a regard to the mere image.
+
+“For me?” The protuberant, grotesque eyes of the boat-hand were
+stretched. “For _me_!” He could hardly realize the rich opportunity.
+“For ME!” And at last convinced, he exclaimed, “Lord love ye! Lord bless
+ye! Lord save ye!” and gulped down the French brandy, casting up the
+gloating eyes of extreme ecstasy at every swallow. He smacked his lips
+again and again, to be heard in the remotest corner of the cabin, then
+stood comfortably smelling the glass while the others turned toward the
+stove.
+
+“Isn’t that queer—French brandy?” Desmond suggested.
+
+“Smuggled, I suppose,” said Regnan.
+
+“Stolen, I’m afraid,” said Desmond, _sotto voce_, mopping the rain from
+his cold face and shaking the rills from his drenched hat. The jeopardy,
+the confusion, the exhaustion attendant on the moment of rescue from the
+sinister menace of the swamp and the cloud-burst engrossed his
+faculties, but he was vaguely recollecting that he had recently heard of
+the dispensing of this choice liquor among a class of swampers to whom
+its market price rendered it unaccustomed and unattainable.
+
+“Well, I was not _particeps criminis_ till it was halfway down,—too far
+to catch it. And it feels just as good where it is as if it was honestly
+come by,” Regnan laughed.
+
+The woman had utilized the interval while their backs were turned, and
+perhaps the shelter of a curtained bunk, to slip into a dry gown and a
+clean apron, and she, too, seemed to have determined on a change of
+tactics. She would fry for the gentlemen some rashers of bacon and eggs,
+if they liked; and set on a strong pot of coffee, she said.
+
+“Are you afraid of spoiling your appetite for that barbecued shoat?”
+Regnan asked Desmond, with a rallying eye.
+
+“No; are you?” For the day was wearing on into the afternoon. There were
+already dulling intimations in the clouds, as if the limits of light in
+their midst were curtailed. The woman listened intently as she set forth
+her poor and humble board with its best; and when they were seated on
+either side and she whisked about serving them, her strange, snake-like
+face had a more propitiatory and pleasing expression than seemed
+possible, with her high cheek-bones, her eyes aslant, her long,
+serpentine neck.
+
+She suddenly addressed Desmond. “You see he ain’t quit suckin’ his thumb
+yit,” she said, as an infantine babbling caused Desmond to turn his head
+to perceive sitting bolt upright in a bunk behind him an infant in a red
+gown with his thumb in his mouth, regarding the feasting with slobbering
+admiration, but making no effort to partake and no demand to be served.
+
+Desmond recognized her now for the first time. He had given her but
+little notice since coming aboard, and on the occasion of his previous
+visit to the shanty-boat, partly because of the dimness of the light in
+the little cabin, partly because of the sensational development of the
+interview, he had not sufficiently observed the subsidiary members of
+the crew—the woman, the child, and the boat-hand—to remember their
+faces. If Jedidiah Knoxton had been present, there would have been no
+delay in recalling the personnel of the whole party.
+
+“That lady, Mrs. Faurie,” continued the woman, speaking in a very
+propitiatory manner, “told me how to break him of it, too. She’s
+powerful handsome, sure, ain’t she?”
+
+“Yes,” said Desmond to this direct appeal. “And she is a very kind
+lady.”
+
+“Sure! She told me she’d gin little Ikey some baby clothes.”
+
+“But you left very suddenly,” said Desmond, significantly.
+
+Regnan continued to eat silently, surprised at the evidence of previous
+acquaintance, but comfortable enough that it made no conversational
+demands upon him, so keen an appetite had the vicissitudes of the day
+given him.
+
+“I want to tell you about that,” said the woman, winningly. “Jed’s a
+mighty techy kind o’ man an’ he got sorter nettled ’bout that thar
+wheel. He ’lowed you b’lieved it was stole. An’ truth was, he knowed he
+didn’t come by it right straight. A young boy nigh Ring-fence Plantation
+traded it to him fur mighty little money. His dad had give it to him fur
+Chris’mas, an’ the chile had got tired of it an’ had ruther have a few
+dollars. I begged Jed not to humor him; ’twas wuth mo’. But Jed said a
+plaything a boy is tired of ain’t wuth nothin’. ’Twas a good bargain fur
+him, an’ he gits a heap o’ trade ’mongst the young fry. But he oughtn’t
+ter helped the boy sell his wheel unbeknownst to his folks.”
+
+Her serpentine aspect was not altogether unjustified. As she charmed so
+wisely, Desmond’s conviction was shaken. She laughed a little, as if
+embarrassed, passing the hem of her apron back and forth in her hand.
+
+“Truth is, he was mad ’cause it carried out my warnings; an’ sorter
+skeered, too, ’cause he seen how it mought look to other folks. Jed’s
+real helterskelter. He pulled loose and drapped down the river, but he
+hadn’t gone a mile before he was sorry. That’s Jed.”
+
+The boat-hand, listening, and now quite won to complaisance by the
+unusual prosperity that had befallen the “trading-boat,” here in its
+cache, echoed loudly, “That’s Jed!”
+
+“So I didn’t git my duds the beautiful lady promised me.”
+
+“Mrs. Faurie would no doubt send them to you if she knew where you would
+be,” said Desmond, mechanically meditating on his suspicions. The story
+was very glib. The shanty-boaters might have had no complicity with the
+tragedy at Whippoorwill Landing and no culpability as the receivers of
+stolen goods,—thus accessory after the fact. But the flavor of the
+French brandy still lingered about his palate; evidently they did not
+know its value as a beverage, and this was suspicious. Still, smuggling
+was comparatively a venial matter, and he had a vague regret that he had
+been so quick to direct the suspicion of the authorities upon so poor
+and defenseless a group. But he had had no word how the information had
+been received, or whether it was to be acted upon. Nevertheless, it
+would be easy to prove the truth of her story, provided her story was
+true.
+
+“Just as well she is where she is to-day,” Regnan declared. He was
+leaning back in his chair, having finished his meal with a good relish,
+and feeling about in his cigar case to make sure that its contents had
+escaped without injury in the general flood. “Try one of these,”—he held
+it across the table to Desmond. “They seem to be all O. K.”
+
+Desmond selected one, and, leaning over, struck a match on the lid of
+the stove. “The luckiest thing imaginable for us,” he said in jerks, as
+he held the light to the end and pulled hard to set it aglow, “that we
+happened to see the boat when we did.”
+
+“Fires up all right?” Regnan queried. Then—“You must charge us a good
+round price for this dinner, madam. We are paying for not being at the
+bottom of the bayou,”—he laughed. “We have a special reason for not
+wanting to meet up with something we know is there.”
+
+His face changed suddenly; he looked at her in consternation. Never had
+he seen such an expression as settled upon her countenance. Fear it was
+at first. “For God’s sake, what!” she gasped. Then—anger. “Ye’d better
+mind yer tongue, now!” Her fingers closed on the handle of a great
+butcher knife on the meat block in the corner. And now—venom. “Ye’re
+jes’ two cowardly, lying rapscallions! Ye dunno _what’s_ in the bayou!
+An’ ye ain’t got no call to know! An’ besides,”— with a realization of
+self-betrayal,—“thar ain’t nuthin’ thar fur ye to know—ha! ha! ha!—te,
+he, he!”
+
+Regnan had risen, startled and wondering; but Desmond sat perfectly
+still, looking steadily at her, convinced that, added to the unstoried
+crimes and the unsavory detritus that the bayou hid under its black
+waters and its deep, unstable mire, lay the stolen wheel, and heaven
+knew what gear besides, from the looting of the store at Whippoorwill
+Landing by the merciless murderers.
+
+It was a painful moment. He was glad to walk to the door of the cabin
+and look out once more at the steadily falling rain; at the spurious
+palpitation that the drops set up on the surface of the immobile stream;
+at the dark, encompassing forest, the water-side vegetation still in the
+pallid green of spring, seeming to hold all the light and color of the
+neutral-tinted landscape; at the slow circling of the vapors about the
+deck of the shanty-boat. There was a projection above the door like the
+shelter of eaves, and as he stood, only an occasional drop of water fell
+upon his head. He was all unprescient; he was conscious merely of
+distaste, the exhaustion from exertion, a sense of inexpressible
+boredom, the discomfort of his half-dried garb, and an impatient desire
+to be through with the whole episode. It met him like fate!—the muffled
+boom of a distant bell!
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XI
+
+
+It was a strange thing to Desmond. Try as he might, Regnan could not
+hear it. Summoned to the door, he stood and looked out, and bent his
+attention to discern only the rhythmic throb of the rain, only the waves
+splashing across the deck, only the slow drip of the water through a
+leak in the flimsy roof. He looked curiously at his companion as
+Desmond, every fibre alert, his eyes afire with excitement, his lifted
+hand trembling, and the cigar between his fingers dead in its ash, would
+exclaim “Now!” and stand motionless again, listening acutely as if to an
+echo.
+
+“I hear nothing but the rain,” said Regnan. “But even if there were no
+rain, we couldn’t hear the bell at Dryad-Dene so far as this.”
+
+“But this might be the bell at Great Oaks,” argued Desmond.
+
+“They wouldn’t ring unless they were overflowed. We left Dryad-Dene high
+and dry this morning, and Great Oaks never goes under until Dryad-Dene
+is half drowned, hardly ever even then; for the Fauries have a private
+cross levee that protects Great Oaks, to a considerable extent. Besides,
+there is no danger yet from high water,—all talk and the usual spring
+scare.”
+
+“There!” The bell boomed again, shaking the mists. And Desmond looked
+into the face of Regnan in triumphant confirmation, to find his
+companion fixing agitated, half-compassionate, half-questioning eyes
+upon him.
+
+“My dear fellow,” laying his hand on Desmond’s arm, “you don’t hear a
+sound but the rain.”
+
+“I must go! I must return at once to Great Oaks.”
+
+Regnan remonstrated. They would be bogged down; the continued exposure
+would kill them; he would not be a party to so foolhardy a hazard. “What
+good could you do? If they are going under water, they are ringing up
+the force to bring out the gunny-sacks and patch up the break.”
+
+“It might be something else. There!”
+
+Along the dark waters the sound was borne. It filled the fall of the
+rain with a distant undiscriminated vibration.
+
+“I ought to be able to restrain you by reason, Desmond,” Regnan urged
+seriously. “Don’t let me have to appeal to these people for aid.”
+
+“Look out,” said Desmond, with a dangerous flash of the eye. “They are
+river pirates. I have cause to know.”
+
+“So have _I_,” declared Regnan, bursting with laughter. “I saw two bales
+of cotton tucked away in that closet when that rascal opened the door to
+get the brandy.”
+
+A word, a nod, an inferential phrase, and Regnan was in possession of
+the story of the bicycle and of the suspicions of the shanty-boat’s
+complicity as a “fence” with the marauders of the looted store at
+Whippoorwill Landing.
+
+“If you are minded to trust yourself to such creatures, I can only
+deplore your lack of judgment. If you will come with me, I know they
+will be glad to put you up at Great Oaks.”
+
+“I’m afraid of getting my feet wet,” Regnan whimsically protested.
+
+“You had much better come with me to Great Oaks.”
+
+“I’m all right here. There is nothing to gain by meddling with me. These
+people won’t dare. If I should be missing, they know that you would give
+information where I was last seen. I am perfectly safe. I am going to
+take up my abode on this trading-boat, my ark, as it seems, till the
+waters subside. The dove is apparently something of the fiercest. And
+the lunatic yonder sends cold chills down my spine. But I will risk
+them, rather than that treacherous swamp. So will you, if you are wise.”
+
+Boom! Desmond had already paid his score without question, to the
+surprise of the boat’s company, accustomed to dicker on a price.
+
+“Make my excuses to the Kentopps,” he said to Regnan, ending the
+discussion and turning to leave.
+
+“If ever I see them again,” cried Regnan. “I feel my feet spreading out
+in webs. I think my wing feathers are sprouting. I’ll be transformed
+into some sort of waterfowl and never get beyond Bogue Humma-Echeto any
+more!”
+
+“I’ll send the horse back to-morrow,” Desmond called out. He sprang
+through the rain from the deck to the dark and marshy soil. But his
+horse lifted his head with a glad neigh of recognition, and as he put
+foot in stirrup and rode off, the animal set out at a swift gait and
+with a stout willingness of heart that showed his eagerness for a
+comfortable stall and manger, and his weariness of the detention that
+had nevertheless rested him well. Under these conditions the inundated
+swamp proved a less difficult proposition, albeit the water had risen
+almost girth high and the wading was slow,—the horse splashing along
+with a distinct impact of the mire, pulling with a sort of suction under
+his hoofs.
+
+Desmond, prescient of disaster, he knew not what, fired with the ardor
+of a rescue, he knew not from what, ready to sacrifice comfort, safety,
+life itself, in this wild, adventurous sort in his premonition that
+Honoria Faurie had summoned assistance, that the bell had rung for help
+at Great Oaks Plantation, resolved that no aid should come more
+willingly, more instinct with protective spirit, than from him. It did
+not once occur to him that this was a superfluous hazard which it was no
+part of his duty to encounter. His only care, his only hope, was to
+reach the plantation safely, that he might reach it swiftly. He took no
+risks, less with a realization of his own interest than a prudence in
+compassing his object. He exerted a judgment that might have been
+thought impossible in one so unused to woodland experience; and though
+the sense of loneliness settled down heavily upon him when he could no
+longer see Regnan on the deck of his ark, and at last not even the
+outline of the trading-boat, rising ever higher and higher in the sky as
+he went down and down into the swamp till indeed it seemed caught up
+into the clouds, he kept a stout heart. He resolutely turned his mind
+from the knowledge of the coming of darkness, only an hour or so
+distant, the savage animals of this primeval aqueous wilderness, the
+probable chance that he might lose his way, the indefinite data by which
+he might keep it, his burning impatience of the slow progress which
+might yet fail to put him ere benighted beyond the immediate region of
+slough and swamp and bayou, now infinitely increased in extent by the
+rainfall. The small compass in his pocket which he had used in a lesson
+with the redoubtable Chub was of great advantage in keeping him to his
+direction. Straight to the south, Regnan had declared, and he would come
+at last to the cross levee which usually protected Great Oaks in time of
+overflow from receiving a share of the neighboring inundations, backing
+up as the waters were reinforced. Southward he went, struggling through
+sloughs, swimming bayous, scrambling up steep banks. On one of these his
+stout horse fell backward almost upon his rider, and Desmond, throwing
+himself to one side, escaped but for a bruised shoulder and arm, while
+the animal was badly shaken. He could hardly endure the delay as he
+stood on the edge of the water by the trembling creature and they had
+some conversation, as one may say, over the mischance and the necessity
+of pressing on. But the red roan was a good plucked brute, and before
+long they were forging ahead once more, man and horse in perfect mutual
+confidence.
+
+Desmond could have shouted with joy when at last he saw the great
+winding earthwork, covered with its green Bermuda grass; and when they
+climbed its steep slope and gained the path on the summit, the horse of
+his own accord struck a jaunty little canter, glad of the good going and
+the sight once more of a civilized landscape; for presently within view
+were great stretches of cotton-fields. And what was that immense expanse
+in the distance? Desmond could not distinguish for the rain and the
+mist, and for a phenomenon of far more import. In the shadow of a
+stretch of forest a huge gully intervened in the levee,—fresh, the earth
+on the sides showing a degree of dryness despite the rain, the sod of
+Bermuda ripped through, and the turf, still green, thrown aside. The
+levee had been cut, and Desmond received an illumination in the
+recollection of the boat-hand’s words that Jed Knoxton had gone forth
+that morning with his spade. He began to have an appalling sense of the
+extent of the disaster even before he came upon a counterpart excavation
+and realized that the levee had been cut in more than one place. The
+nefarious job had been thoroughly done, and though in broad daylight,
+the cloaking fog and blinding rain offered an impunity that a dark and
+clear night could scarcely have afforded. He understood now the
+significance of that broad expanse of copper-hued glister of which he
+had caught but a glimpse through the aisles of the woods and the serried
+ranks of the rainfall; it was overflow, miles of overflow, submerging
+the wide tilled and orderly fields of Great Oaks Plantation. And that
+roar in the air—what was it? Tumultuous, loud, with a petulant dash and
+a sinister sibilance, blended with episodic crashes and sudden wild
+clamors, like the frenzied turbulence of savage beasts. It was the voice
+of the Mississippi River, silent no longer in its deep channel, but
+rioting in shallow floods over the aghast, despoiled plains, crying out
+in its license and its mad joy, seeming now and again to smite against
+the sky.
+
+The wind was rising. The gusts, coming down the great, unimpeded highway
+of the stream, gave impetus to its currents surging against miles of
+levee still unbroken, and lashing and sweeping away, melting in a
+moment, the embankments that collapsed under its force. The water
+nearest at hand, he perceived, was backing up; it was not long before he
+had reached it, lapping playfully about the base of the cross levee on
+which he stood. How long this path would continue practicable he could
+not compute. The horse, more accustomed to the river and its incidents,
+was showing evident signs of uneasiness, and in fact he stopped
+presently, with tossing head and startled eyes and planted hoofs, before
+Desmond perceived through the rain and the distance a white flashing in
+the dun evening light, which, had he no experience of the locality, he
+might have mistaken for a cataract. The inference was obvious. It was
+the foam of raging waters as they tore through an excavation
+intersecting the cross levee once more. The great volume of the flood
+was surging over its summit. It was a question of only a very short time
+when the levee, along which he had come and where he now stood, would be
+swept away. Both he and the horse were in imminent danger of death by
+drowning. His first impulse was to turn back and retrace his way. But at
+this moment of hesitation his attention was caught by a moving object on
+the face of the waters, emerging from the fog and the rain, and
+gradually materializing as a man in a very small boat.
+
+“Hello!” cried Desmond, peremptorily.
+
+The man ceased to paddle and looked about him doubtfully, at first on
+his own level, only descrying the mounted figure on the embankment at a
+second stentorian roar from Desmond.
+
+“Fur de Lawd’s sake, is dat you, Mr. Desmond!” he cried out in instant
+recognition. “In de name o’ sense, what you gwine do up dar on dat
+levee?”
+
+“Is that you, Seth?” for the negro was a hostler on Great Oaks
+Plantation, a very black fellow, looking as he sat in the dugout like a
+silhouette against the gray rain and the white mist and the yellow
+water. “I don’t know what to think—”
+
+“I does,” Seth promptly interrupted. “I think you gwine git yo’se’f
+drownded, an’ Colonel Kentopp’s hawse, too.”
+
+“How deep is the water?” Desmond had the instinct of remonstrating
+against this as a decree of fate.
+
+“Six feet along dar, an’ risin’ every jump. I ain’t never seen the
+contrary old ribber on sech a bender, an’ I been knowin’ her gwine on
+fawty year.”
+
+Desmond was alarmed at the idea of jeopardizing the valuable horse. He
+hardly noticed Seth’s plaints.
+
+“We-all’s levee done cut—’fore de Lawd, dem planters in Deepwater Bend
+below Great Oaks would be mighty glad if dey could cotch dat varmint dat
+cut de levee. Dey nachully depends on Great Oaks cross levee to keep the
+ribber off ’n dem, when Dry’-Dene goes under. Oh, my Lawd A’mighty, dis
+am a drefful day, shore!”
+
+“I had better ride back along the levee,” said Desmond, ponderingly.
+
+“It’ll be under water in ten minutes.”
+
+“But I must take the horse to some place of safety.”
+
+“Whar is dat?” demanded Seth, walling his great eyes, with the whites
+very prominent as he gazed up at his interlocutor at long range; the
+distance was constantly lessened, however, for he paddled closer and
+closer to the base of the levee as he talked.
+
+“What is the safest way to the stables? I will take the horse there.”
+
+“What you gwine dar fur? You hatter charter a steamboat. Water up ter de
+mangers.”
+
+“In the Great Oaks stables? Is the mansion flooded, too?” Desmond, in
+keen alarm for the household, trembled to hear the reply.
+
+These disasters and their concurrent dangers were so new to his
+experience and even traditions that he could scarcely contemplate their
+encounter with composure. Seth seemed to him a stolidly unfeeling clod,
+hardly able to stretch his limited faculties to an adequate
+comprehension. But indeed, though there was no lack of water hereabout,
+Seth had contributed a tear or two to the floods in his woe and despair
+for the destruction of these familiar values by which he lived and in
+which he had such vicarious pride.
+
+“The stable under water? Why, how about the mansion?”
+
+“De gret house is safe!” Seth snapped out, as if the question were
+imputatious; even the insubordinate Mississippi River would not venture
+upon the presumption to meddle with the dignified mansion house of Great
+Oaks Plantation. “I jes’ seen Bob, an’ he ’lowed de water had filled de
+grove, an’ air lappin’ ‘round de underpinnin’, but ’tain’t riz yit inter
+de veranda.”
+
+Desmond was aghast at this intimation of jeopardy.
+
+“De gret house is on high groun’, an’ dough dey tuk up de kyarpets
+wunst, de overflow ain’t never been rightly in de mansion house.”
+
+“Bob ought to be there; it is the footman’s station,” Desmond exclaimed,
+thinking how few the inmates to cope with any unusual danger.
+
+“Dey ain’t none o’ de house sarvants dar, ’cept de cook-woman. Mis’
+Honoria sont de rest ob dem ter holp dar famblies at de quarter. Bless
+de Lawd, boss, ye oughter see de quarter!” Seth’s voice rose to a
+distressful quaver. “’Twas so suddint—the cross levee never gave way
+before, an’ we-all ain’t never had no sich water as dis here. Some o’ de
+tenant folks is sittin’ on de ridge-poles ob dar cabin roof, savin’
+nuttin’ but dar bedclothes; dar funicher is floatin’ ‘way like ’twar
+’witched an’ gone swimmin’. The chillen wuz mighty nigh drownded. One
+dem pickaninnies ob Liza Jane’s war cotched by the tail ob its coat an’
+hung in a cottonwood tree. Hit hollered! But hit never squirmed. Hit
+knowed catfish an’ yalligator war smackin’ dar lips an’ sharpenin’ dar
+teeth for hit. Lawd! Lawd! We ain’t never had no sech time. Mis’ Honoria
+sont ebery sarvant from de gret house ter holp dar folks, ’cept de
+cook-woman—an’ _she_ say she is feared ter ride ter de quarter in de
+overflow in a dugout.”
+
+“That was why the bell was ringing, then; to summon help?”
+
+The darkey paused, leaning on his paddle, and looked up at Desmond with
+a curious and searching eye.
+
+“Bell!” he exclaimed. “The Great Oaks plantation bell ain’t rung since
+daybreak.”
+
+There was a pause. Desmond knew the superstition concerning bells,—the
+ancient universal tradition of mystic summons. There was no habitation
+nearer the bayou whence some great brazen casting could send forth that
+coercive tone; the distance from the river was too great to admit the
+sound from a passing steamer.
+
+“Naw, sir; if you hearn bells callin’ you to-day, they ring in your
+mind. Somebody in heaven or hell, or somebody in yearth or air, is
+callin’ you, callin’ you by spirit bells—thoughts reach furder’n sound.
+Mighty cur’us, but that’s sure true. Bells!” Seth raised himself on his
+paddle and looked up with a face distorted by query and fear into the
+rain and fog. “_Bells!_” he said again. Then he lent himself to the work
+of the paddle, and was soon within leaping distance of the levee.
+
+“You gimme dat hawse, boss, an’ I’ll take him ter de risin’ ground whar
+we got what we is saved. Lawd! ye ought ter see de cattle drownded! My
+Gawd! De cows mooin’ an’ de calves a-blatin’, all swimmin’ as long as
+dar legs could work ’em along—an’ de sheep! Ef I had time, I’d jes set
+down an’ moan an’ weep an’ preach dar funeral. Some ob de best head ob
+our Great Oaks cattle! Dar carcases floatin’ down de ribber or cotched
+in de bushes in de swamp! Gimme dat hawse. Colonel Kentopp’s a perlite
+man, but I’d hate fur anything belongin’ ter him ter git lost on Great
+Oaks Plantation. _You_ couldn’t find yer way. I’ll take tacks an’ short
+cuts, an’ I know whar is risin’ ground. You an’ de hawse would lose yer
+way an’ both be drownded. You git in de dugout an’ go ter de mansion
+house. You kin find dat, ef ye kin see ter keep ter de west.”
+
+The immemorial dugout, peculiar to the Mississippi River country, is a
+primitive craft, nothing more, indeed, than a log, roughly hollowed out
+and shaped as to stern and prow. It is quite adequate, however, to the
+purposes of its creation, for skirting banks, navigating bayous and
+lakes, rarely venturing into midstream or crossing the great river. It
+is safe enough in accustomed hands, but it is doubtful if Desmond were
+not in more danger of drowning thus embarked than returning on his
+precarious route along the summit of the levee. The dugout wallowed
+portentously as Desmond stepped within its restricted space, but after a
+few words of instruction from Seth he righted the craft and presently
+paddled off easily enough, the darkey standing beside the horse,
+watching the boat till it was lost to sight in the rain and the
+approaching dusk and the fog closing down.
+
+“I ’spec’ dat ar man is safe in de dugout,” he muttered, “dough his kind
+is used ter de saloon ob a side-wheel steamboat, an’ dat’s de fac’. We
+done loss enough cattle drownded dis day, ’dout him ter top off wid.” So
+saying, Seth mounted and rode away into the rain.
+
+Though the dugout was a new proposition to Desmond, he had had some
+experience with the paddle as a propelling agent. His Alma Mater was
+situated on a watercourse, and at one time the Indian canoe and paddle
+was a favorite fad. Thus his progress was swift through the rain and the
+fog, despite the fact that for the first time he felt the strength of
+the current of the Mississippi; for he was soon out of the limits of the
+back water and in the direct course of the overflow. He would have
+scorned the acceptance of a superstition, but the premonition of a
+summons was so strong upon him that he stretched every muscle to his
+task. The glimpse of the wide expanse of water, that might have appalled
+him, alone and without guidance in the midst of its willful, riotous
+turbulence, was but limited. The fog shut in, and but for a few
+boat-lengths he could see naught but the surging yellow current of a
+restricted space and the pallid curtain of the cloudy dusk. Sometimes a
+shadowy looming near at hand intimated a building half submerged,
+invisible in the fog and rain. More than once he thought he heard
+voices, whether far or near he could not determine. An incident of the
+high water, on which he had not counted, was the débris aloose and
+afloat, which invested navigation with undreamed-of dangers, with which
+he could make no covenant of caution. More than once flotsam shot past
+him in the gloom on the swift current, with a force as if flung from a
+catapult; sometimes it was the lumber of a wrecked building; once it was
+a capsized boat, adrift, telling either of the strain of the current,
+breaking it loose from its moorings, or of a hapless wight lost upon the
+turbulent waves; once it was a drift log, which was upon him almost as
+soon as seen, shooting out of the white invisibilities of the mist and
+striking the dugout amidships with a force that threatened to send it to
+the bottom. It rocked so violently that Desmond had much ado to keep it
+right side up. When the drift log had disappeared and he was once more
+paddling on in clear water, it seemed so deep, the current was so
+strong, night was closing in so fast, that he began to fear he had been
+swept out to the main river; at length, however, the mist gave
+intimations here and there of vertical, shadowy objects at close
+intervals, which he only discriminated as the trees of the grove when he
+came in sudden contact with the bole of a gigantic oak. The dugout
+rebounded from the collision with a violent recoil that seemed to stir
+all the fibres of the hollowed log, but Desmond could hardly realize the
+shock which had jarred his every bone, so rejoiced was he to feel
+himself near his journey’s end. He steered more deftly after this, with
+more heed, with less effort at speed, perhaps because the mists were
+lightening, or that now he had his faculties better in hand since his
+plunging, frantic haste under the spur and lash of suspense was abated,
+as his object was achieved. Soon he was able to discern that he was
+surely and swiftly approaching the house, which to his surprise, massive
+and wide and low in the gloom, showed not a single gleam of light. He
+saw the live oak at one side, which the veranda encircled, towering up
+into the air, and suddenly he lifted his paddle and let the dugout drift
+without a sound. For there, in front of the main entrance, a yawl swung
+at a distance of a few oars’ length, kept from drifting by the
+occasional stroke of half a dozen rowers. At the bow a man was standing,
+holding a colloquy with the inmates of the house. Desmond had not heard
+his words, the husky, gruff voice and defective articulation had masked
+them, but his heart plunged responsive to the clear, vibrant tones,
+thrilled with fright, as Mrs. Faurie spoke as boldly as she might.
+
+“But they are not here,” she said.
+
+The man gave a sort of derisive chuckle and the oarsmen laughed
+together. One of them, a thick-set fellow with matted red hair, vaguely
+familiar to Desmond, sitting crouched in the place of the stroke-oar,
+spat contemptuously in the water.
+
+“Well, Mrs. Faurie, whar mought you be willin’ to say they are?” the
+spokesman asked.
+
+Another, pale, wiry, hatchet-faced, and evidently a meddlesome lout,
+intruded a sneer. “I reckon,” he said, with a simpering, brisk
+intonation,—“I reckon ye won’t purtend that you disremember whar you put
+thutty thousand dollars wuth o’ emeralds.”
+
+“I will not, indeed! I put them into a bank in New Orleans.”
+
+Desmond realized that she was standing at the open window of the parlor,
+and from such shelter as it afforded was holding parley with the
+villains,—it was doubtless the identical gang of river pirates who had
+looted the store at Whippoorwill Landing with such signal impunity.
+
+“Then, madam, we will take your order for them,” said the flippant
+intermeddler, airily.
+
+“Keep yer face out of it,—ye’re bug-house, Danvelt!” said the thick-set
+man. “What good would the order do? She would signal the fust steamboat
+that passed,—she would telegraph as soon as we were gone!—send a nigger
+in a dugout across the river to the railroad flag station in the
+Arkansas. Either one would overhaul us.”
+
+“Mightn’t be ekal to signalin’ an’ telegraphin’. Might be gagged an’
+under lock an’ key—ef still alive!”
+
+The man in the bow spoke authoritatively. “Sorry not to take a lady’s
+word. But biz is biz! We will search the house, an’ if the jools are not
+thar, sure enough, you will obleege us with your order on your bankers,
+and the key of your deposit box.”
+
+Mrs. Faurie had lost control of her voice. It was high and shrill in the
+dank, misty air. “I will not permit you to enter. I warn you of the
+consequences if you set foot on that veranda. You will all bear
+witness,” she added, as if she addressed an unseen group within.
+
+The feint, gallant-hearted as it was, failed of conviction. The
+spokesman, openly scornful, disdained response other than threats. “The
+Miss’ippi River is mighty convenient, here.”
+
+“Tain’t gone dry noways that I can see,” said the pert wit of the party,
+and there was a tumult of chuckling and shaking shoulders in the boat.
+
+“We have a lot of rope handy,” the spokesman continued, holding up a
+coil in his hand, his hard face white and fierce against the gray waters
+and lowering sky. “Look at them iron vases!”—the rims of the great lawn
+ornaments, six in number, showed above the surface of the swirling
+waters, where they stood at the end of the broad walk and at the
+intersections of the driveways on either side of the mansion. “They will
+make capital weights, enough to sink every soul in the house,—the three
+boys, old man Stanlett, yerself, and even that big fat nigger
+cook-woman, for that is all ye have got in the house,—sink ye, every
+one; the Miss’ippi River is one hunderd and eighty feet deep in
+Deepwater Bend, even at low water.” He shook his head ominously, and the
+rills of rain ran off the wide slouched brim of his hat with the
+sinister energy of his motion. “Never be heard tell of no more,—if ye
+don’t see yer way to accommodate us with the order and the key.”
+
+And, sooth to say, if she should! There was no alternative. It was only
+a subterfuge of inducement. Desmond’s blood ran cold. He perceived in
+aghast dismay the symmetry and perfection of the plan of the miscreants.
+They had doubtless made sure of the absence from the plantation of the
+manager, who was in Vicksburg on a business trip, and of the visit of
+the tutor to Dryad-Dene, before they ventured to cut the levee. The
+inundation of the plantation quarter with its flimsy low houses menaced
+its inhabitants, especially women and children, with drowning, and would
+draw to its succor every available man from the stanch mansion house,
+which was amply able to cope with floods. When the servants should
+return, the absence of the family would be accounted for variously in
+their minds and without apprehension of evil: some passing steamboat
+might have responded to a signal and sent out a yawl to assist them to a
+refuge in Natchez or Memphis, there to abide till the overflow should
+abate; some neighbor, the Kentopps, the Mayberrys, perchance still on
+dry ground themselves, might have come and delivered them from their
+inundated domicile. There would be no one among the tenants and servants
+left in authority, no one fitted to act. Days might well elapse before
+aught would be suspected. The order upon the bankers would be duly
+honored; the fence in New Orleans—for doubtless in an affair of such
+magnitude the robbers were provided with a respectable seeming _deus ex
+machina_, some shyster at the bar, some trickster of a loan agent, some
+defaulting bank official on the eve of detection and flight—would be
+upon the high seas with the famous emeralds, before the Faurie mystery,
+as the disappearance of the family would be called, should set the river
+country agog with horror and baffled wonder and impotent despair.
+
+Desmond’s strong head was dizzy; his stout heart fluttered as he
+realized the peril and the tenuous possibility of succor,—a single hair
+to which he might cling, the fraction of a minute of time! If only he
+could enter the house first! From without he could hope for naught. He
+could not cope here with six brutal and hardened villains, doubtless the
+miscreants who had wrought robbery and arson and malignant murder in the
+tragedy at Whippoorwill Landing. He could not show himself here, for he
+would only sacrifice his life, worth more at this moment than ever
+before,—than it could be again. He dared not shoot from ambush; for a
+failure of aim would result fatally to her, to him, to all in the house.
+He could not venture to step on the veranda, lest his footfall be heard
+or even his form be dimly descried from the yawl continually oscillating
+to and fro.
+
+Oh, for one impulse of courage in that fainting feminine heart! Could
+she but rally her forces to withstand their demand, to brave their
+hideous threat, to hold them in parley but one moment longer. His own
+heart leaped as he heard her voice again. It was full of quavering
+vibrations, high and shrill and strangely out of tune. But she spoke
+stanchly and with the poise of dignity. “This is my house. I forbid you
+to set foot in it,—to trespass one inch on this veranda. I warn you that
+I shall not be answerable for the consequences. I call you all to
+witness,” she seemed to address the group within. “And I have help at
+hand.”
+
+She uttered the words with such apparent confidence in the midst of her
+direful extremity that they seemed to carry somewhat of conviction, to
+stir the suspicion, the cowardice of the marauders. They did not at once
+move forward, but hung as it were in the wind on the oscillating water.
+
+It was a failure of judgment which induced her on noting the effect of
+her words to repeat them, for instantly interpreting them as a bluff,
+the oars struck the water and the craft moved forward. “I have help,”
+she piteously repeated. “I have help at hand.”
+
+“You have,—you have, indeed!” Desmond’s heart responded, for his plan
+was perfected in those few minutes of final parley. He let the dugout
+drift away while he caught the drooping branches of the live-oak tree
+that swept the surface of the water. The stir of the foliage, as with
+his rifle he clambered through the boughs, was not to be distinguished
+from the rustling of the wind. He lifted the sash of one of the dormer
+windows and was safe in a room he had never seen. A wan gleam of the
+twilight fell through the glass, barely enough to disclose the
+surroundings, for the window was curtained with some floriated opaque
+stuff. An unused room it apparently was, with an unfurnished bed, a few
+chairs, a table, and in the jamb of the chimney on either side tall
+presses built in the wall, one of which stood half open and was
+seemingly full of bundles of papers. A mere glance afforded these
+details as he dashed to the door. It gave easily under his touch; he had
+had one dreadful moment, faint with fear, lest it might prove to be
+locked. He was still trembling as he groped along the dark hall, his
+weapon in hand. He paused for an instant at the head of the unfamiliar,
+vaguely descried stairs, feeling with his foot for the edge of the first
+of the flight.
+
+He could hardly control his agitation, his wonder, as he heard a
+strange, muffled stir, that sibilant, lisping step on the stair which he
+remembered from the early days of his stay at Great Oaks Plantation, the
+silken sound of the invisible patrol.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XII
+
+
+It shook his nerve, strained to the tension of breaking. But he rallied
+his faculties. This was no time for vague terrors, for theories, for
+hesitation. He moved on swiftly, silently. Nevertheless, as he hurried
+down the dark flight, he could have sworn he passed some mute presence,
+some sense of moving.
+
+He burst into the dim twilight of the parlor, but still without a sound.
+There were two figures at the window, infinitely incongruous of aspect
+with the scene without, with the frightful crisis, with the imminence of
+their danger. Both were dressed with some touch of elegance for the
+evening; Reginald with an incipient relish for his own good points, and
+in the wan light from the window and the dark shadows within the room
+Mrs. Faurie was like some antique picture, her gown of a light
+Pompeian-red silk, of a quasi-Empire effect, a girdle of dark red
+velvet, and a guimpe of thick, fine white lace to the throat,—yet
+robbery, arson, murder, faced her at the moment. Reginald, pale with a
+realization of his helplessness, nevertheless stoutly stood his ground,
+his arm around her waist.
+
+Without a thought, Desmond passed his arm around her from the other
+side. “Be quiet, be very quiet. I am here,” he said in a low tone.
+
+Her head drooped on his shoulder and she burst into tears. “How I have
+wished for you! How I have prayed for you!” she murmured.
+
+“I am here! I am here!” he said again and again. He could only repeat
+these words. The fact filled the universe.
+
+He was cool, confident, triumphant, despite the desperate odds, despite
+the awful responsibility that hung upon his judgment. He made his
+preparations without an instant’s flutter. He waited the significant
+moment without a pulse of impatience.
+
+Mrs. Faurie, quieted, reassured, in perfect confidence did as he bade
+her. She stood well up against the wall under the folds of the long and
+heavy silken curtains, while he placed himself in front of the window,
+too far withdrawn for his presence to be suggested in the dim light. Not
+until the yawl had almost reached the steps, not until several of the
+men had risen to spring upon the veranda, did he raise his rifle and
+fire. For one moment the flash, the smoke, the report,—deafening in the
+restricted space of the room,—were the only elements that could claim
+attention. The next instant the result was apparent. That accurate aim,
+that steady hand, that cool nerve, had come to Desmond as gifts, unknown
+until to-day. The ball crashed into the skull of the red-headed,
+thick-set man he had recognized as Jed Knoxton. He swayed to and fro for
+a moment, then fell like a stone into the water, leaving the yawl
+violently rocking, and the rowers doing all they could to prevent her
+from capsizing.
+
+The return fire came whizzing through the window, but Desmond had
+stepped aside and the ball crashed against a mirror on the opposite
+wall. The yawl’s party seemed to have recovered from the surprise at
+finding a defense attempted for the house, expected to be so easy a
+prey. They gave no heed to the welterings and writhings of Jed Knoxton
+in the water at their very gunwales, not able to recover himself, and
+yet not dead, until at last the relentless Mississippi drowned out the
+flickerings of life that the rifle had failed to extinguish.
+
+Once more, as they approached, this time with a heady rush, the rifle
+got in its work. One of the assailants sank down on the very steps of
+the veranda, and the blood flowed higher than the palpitant waves. An
+attack from an unexpected quarter further demoralized them. A charge of
+buckshot from the window across the hall rattled against the timbers of
+the yawl—with not the best aim in the world, it is true. Reginald had
+been stationed there in the short interval with a shotgun which happened
+to be in the hall, and which Desmond hurriedly loaded, directing him to
+blaze away at random, being careful, as Reginald loved to tell
+afterward, to warn him to keep from between the muzzle of the gun and
+himself!
+
+The apparent demonstration of adequate force to make good the defense of
+the house was too much for the nerve of the river pirates. The yawl was
+no longer water-tight; the buckshot had riven the wood, here and there,
+old and rotten. It was filling fast, and this fact threatened their safe
+retreat. They had intimations of more pressing personal interests than
+had centred in Mrs. Faurie’s famous emeralds. Suddenly putting about,
+they disappeared in the mist, leaving one of their comrades drowned in
+six feet of water at the bottom of the veranda steps, and another lying
+on the floor, apparently dying, the blood flowing from his mouth and
+tinging all the waves as they lapped about with a deeper hue than the
+copper tint of the great river.
+
+It would seem that no cheer of evening could ensue on so grisly a
+primordium of horrors. Honoria Faurie wrung her hands as she reflected,
+appalled, that a man had met a terrible doom at her door, and his
+bloating corpse still lay at the foot of the steps to await there the
+action of the coroner’s jury, and that another had stretched his
+lacerated body on her veranda to die a lingering death. But Desmond
+seemed to have no affinity or toleration for shuddering or tears. He
+came and went noisily, ordering fires to be rebuilt in the library and
+parlor. When Bob reappeared, having made the transit from the quarter in
+an old dugout, the footman was aghast to hear the startling news.
+
+“Ought to have been here, Bob; you missed the time of your life!” cried
+Desmond, cheerily. “Oh, it was great! And Mr. Reginald Faurie is a
+_man_, all right, and don’t you forget it. Equal to downing any kind of
+pirate! Pretty nearly sunk their yawl for them. They will all knuckle
+down to Great Oaks, after this. We are the pirate tamers here.”
+
+Mrs. Faurie had sunk into a chair before the dead ashes of the parlor
+fire, her face pallid, her chest heaving, her hands nerveless.
+
+“I wish you would give me a little brandy,” Desmond said to her, “and
+you would be the better for what Colonel Kentopp calls ‘a weeny teeny
+nip,’ yourself.” She walked with him to the dining-room, where he
+detained her upon the pretext that he, himself, wanted to order the
+belated dinner.
+
+“I need a _good_ dinner,” he said. “I have hardly had a bite since a
+daylight breakfast.”
+
+The cook was summoned, an immense woman, so tall and so fat that she was
+apparently immovable. She had been in the house throughout the turmoils.
+If the skies should fall, she would continue to sit in the open kitchen
+window and await events. She seemed to do nothing but sit on the sill of
+the kitchen window, but when she did move it must have been to the
+purpose, for she was a famous expert,—of an unparalleled excellence. So
+long did they discuss each dish and compare views and criticise sauces
+that Mrs. Faurie could scarcely compose herself to wait and listen to
+these trivial details. It was a distinct hint when she sank into a chair
+at one side of the old-fashioned mahogany table, the cloth not yet laid,
+and put her dimpled elbows on the glittering dark red surface and
+supported her chin in her clasped hands; while Desmond, still booted and
+spurred and holding his brandy glass, stood before the sideboard, and
+the cook filled the doorway, beaming with smiles upon a gentleman who
+knew so well how to appreciate the delicate miracles of her art.
+
+When at last the menu was settled, he turned for its approval to Mrs.
+Faurie.
+
+“Oh, how can you think of such things at such a moment”—and she shook
+her head to and fro while the ready tears came—“with a man dying at my
+door and another dead!”
+
+“The dying man is very comfortable upstairs in a nice clean room and a
+fresh, tidy bed, where Bob and Seth have no doubt put him by this time,
+as I ordered. And the other man got his deserts, as no doubt Providence
+intended he should. We are not going to sentimentalize about them. On
+the contrary, we are going to ask for the thanksgiving for special
+mercies to us to be said in the public prayers in our little
+neighborhood church next Sunday, and I should think you would write to
+the rector at once so that the request may be received in time. Go into
+the library, won’t you? and write the note at my desk,—the fire must be
+blazing there,—while I dress for dinner.”
+
+“Do you have to take the trouble to dress for dinner?”
+
+He spread out his hands in dismay. “Do you want me to come to the table
+like this,—with my boots full of water and all over mud?”
+
+She still sat at the table and looked at him through her tears,
+realizing his vital aid, his courageous rescue at the most crucial
+moment of her life. But his little devices to divert her mind, to
+sustain her composure, to prevent a morbid reaction of sensibility, all
+of which she appreciated, touched her in a different way. The one was
+essential salvation, but the other had so tender, so careful, so
+individual a thought for her.
+
+“You are so dear!” she said abruptly; “I shall never call you ‘Mr.
+Desmond’ any more. What is your Christian name? Yes, Edward. You are my
+dear, _dear_ Edward; like a dear, _dear_ son!”
+
+As she sat at his desk in the library, she was surprised to find how she
+liked to be there. She wrote her note, and wept some happy tears of
+gratitude over the occurrence which had taken on the aspect of a
+merciful deliverance rather than a tragedy; she lingered, fingering the
+little objects of chirographical use that belonged to him—the
+paper-weight, the pen, the blotter-holder—and thinking of his thought
+for her. But for the wholesome influence of his sound intellect her
+nerves would be shattered by the reaction, she would endure agonies of
+foolish regret and terror; she would not now have this glow of earnest
+love to God and confidence and gratitude that made her heart so warm.
+Yet her equanimity was not entirely restored, and she had a sentiment of
+recoil when Mr. Stanlett brought a very pallid, harassed, and tremulous
+face to the window and looked in; then entered by the long sash.
+
+“I am hunting for you, Honoria,” he said in a strained, husky voice. “I
+am much worried.”
+
+“There is no need, Uncle Clarence.” She was surprised by her full,
+steady tones. “Edward Desmond will attend to all these troubles. See
+what a miracle he wrought to-day, by the favor of God. We were at the
+end of our capacity even to hope.”
+
+“Yes—but, Honoria,” the old man leaned forward as he stood and laid an
+impressive finger upon the edge of the desk. “This man, Desmond,—I had
+forgotten his name was Edward, if I ever knew it,—he takes a deal on
+himself! Without a word to anybody, he ordered this marauder to be put
+in the blue room upstairs. And there he is now—in the _blue_ room!”
+
+She stared at him in amaze. “And why not the blue room as well as any
+other?”
+
+He shook his head, and with a gesture of despair struck his high, bony
+forehead with his outstretched palm.
+
+“I forget! I forget! You do not know!”
+
+She looked at him steadily, sternly, for a moment.
+
+“What is it I do not know, Uncle Clarence?”
+
+He had come around the desk and sat down on a sofa on the opposite side
+of the crackling fire. It was necessary to turn in her chair to face
+him, and she looked over her shoulder at him as she sat at the desk. He
+met her eyes miserably, with a detected, hangdog look, but he had closed
+his lips resolutely; she saw that he would say no more. His face was
+bloodless, deathlike in its pallor. He looked very old, with his spare
+frame, his clear-cut, bony lineaments, his thin, silver hair.
+
+There is something infantile in the infirmities of age. It touched her
+maternal spirit. No one was making enough of Uncle Clarence,—he had been
+neglected. He, too, was to-day greatly threatened by overpowering odds;
+and a man disabled by age and infirmity must feel an appalling
+helplessness, a pathetic shame, to be no longer of force, of availing
+courage in the face of physical danger, a source of refuge and
+protection to the weak. And so great had been the peril, of so terrible
+an aspect, that it might well have touched his intellect for the time
+being. She did not press for his answer, albeit she was of an imperious
+spirit and not accustomed to have her will gainsaid or her words set at
+naught. She rose and advanced toward him, pained to see how he cringed
+at the idea of her persistence while he yet massed his pitiful
+resources, his face hardening, his eyes aglow with an excited gleam, yet
+terrorized lest his steadfastness fail. He watched with doubt and
+expectancy, like a beast at bay, as she sat down beside him and laid her
+hand on his shoulder.
+
+“Don’t be troubled, Uncle Clarence,” she said, in a dulcet tone. “You
+are hardly yourself, you have been put through so much agitation and
+suspense to-day.”
+
+He glanced at her ever and anon with excited and furtive eyes, and
+moistened his lips, but kept silence.
+
+“I will ask no questions that you do not want to answer.” She passed one
+of her soft white arms around his wrinkled old neck, feeling it stiff
+and rigid with his tense resolve. Then she laid her cheek on his
+shoulder. “I love you so much. I can’t endure to see you worried.”
+
+“It is just for you, Honoria. Just for you,” he protested huskily.
+
+“Don’t worry for me, I feel so happy to-night—so happy! as if I had the
+world in a sling! I think it so strange. To-night—of all the nights in
+the year! I suppose it is because we had such an escape.” Yet when she
+thought of the escape, she shuddered.
+
+“I am much worried, Honoria. The—blue—room!”
+
+“If you loved me as much as I love you, you would not worry. Think,
+Uncle Clarence, how much we are to each other,—almost like father and
+daughter. We ought to stand by each other.”
+
+“That’s why, Honoria, I have taken my course. For you, my dear!
+And—the—blue—room!”
+
+“Let it pass for the time, Uncle Clarence,—for the moment. We will ask
+Mr. Desmond if the man can be moved without injury, and set your mind at
+rest; though for my life I can’t see that the blue room is less to be
+desecrated by his presence than any other.”
+
+He held his lips together once more as if afraid of disclosure, and sat
+stiff, immovable, furtively glancing about with absorbed eyes; and as
+she with maternal patience drew her soft arm closer about his neck, her
+head on his shoulder, the glow of the shaded lamp and the flaring fire
+on the rich tints of her dress, her beauty embellished by her softened
+expression, the two were a charming illustration of reverend age and
+filial youth when Desmond, freshly groomed once more, stood a moment by
+the window ere he entered by the sash.
+
+Desmond was in no mood for concessions. He had assumed control of the
+household, and he had a strong if not a heavy hand. He declined at once
+to interfere with the wounded man.
+
+“It might be as much as his life is worth to move him. I am not
+competent to judge. I am not willing to risk it.”
+
+Her sympathies went out to the old man, inadequate to cope with this
+masterful, youthful usurper.
+
+“Uncle Clarence seems to desire it,” she said, not without emphasis.
+
+“I cannot imagine a reason sufficient to jeopardize the man’s life,”
+Desmond rejoined.
+
+“I am not informed, sir, by what theory I am to submit my reasons to
+you,” said Mr. Stanlett, with stately and satiric dignity.
+
+“Oh, Uncle Clarence,”—Mrs. Faurie started up in alarmed
+remonstrance,—“think what we owe to Mr. Desmond—how grateful we should
+be!”
+
+“That is neither here nor there,” said Desmond, maintaining his
+placidity. “You are the arbiter of events here, Mrs. Faurie, but you
+_must_ not suffer this man to be moved, and perhaps sacrifice his life—”
+
+“Heavens—no!” she interpolated.
+
+“—Especially before he can be interrogated by the authorities. The
+information he may give will cause the apprehension and the breaking up
+of this gang of river pirates, and avoid the accomplishment of such
+disasters as menaced this house to-day.”
+
+He turned toward Mr. Stanlett, who had risen and stood stiffly, a sort
+of blight on his face, at one side of the low, old-fashioned marble
+mantel. “I am disturbed to differ with you, Mr. Stanlett, to urge my
+views against your preference when you have been so kind to me.”
+
+“My kindness is returned in a way I had not anticipated,” said Mr.
+Stanlett, coldly.
+
+“Oh, Uncle Clarence, I protest. _Don’t_ mind it, Edward!” She smiled
+and, leaning over, patted Desmond maternally on the coat-sleeve.
+
+“I _do_ mind it very much—to incur Mr. Stanlett’s disapproval. But, my
+dear sir, it will be only for a short time. The officers will reach here
+in the morning. I have sent Jacob off in a dugout with an imperative
+note to the constable and the coroner; they must come. If the man can be
+moved, he will be taken to jail; at all events, he can’t be long dying
+with that hole bored through his lungs. Then the blue room will be once
+more at your service.”
+
+“_At my service!_” the old man sneered. “You know nothing about it! You
+only show your ignorance.”
+
+The announcement of the belated dinner put an end to the discussion, and
+as they filed out, Mrs. Faurie’s face was pale and drawn and altogether
+unlike itself. But Desmond seemed in high spirits. He begged pardon for
+asking for a cocktail before the soup, and he praised a certain
+different combination so that Mr. Stanlett requested that a glass be
+mixed for him, remonstrating sharply against any dilution, when Desmond
+good-naturedly diverted his interest by reminding him of the classical
+apportionment of water with wine, smilingly quoting “Hail, Dionysus: are
+you Five-and-two?” The mixture proved sufficiently potent, and sent the
+blood to the old gentleman’s pale cheeks and brought out a gentle dew on
+his forehead, and predisposed him to enjoy and digest his dinner, to
+postpone his unrevealed trouble, and to hope for the best.
+
+Desmond developed a spirit of gossip. He recounted the details of the
+house-party at Dryad-Dene, and Mrs. Faurie and Mr. Stanlett laughed,
+though slyly, at Chub, who seemed to think that Desmond had committed a
+great impropriety in mentioning Miss Allandyce’s boyish equestrian
+costume and describing his embarrassment that he did not later recognize
+her when accoutred in white silk skirts. Reginald and Horace indulged in
+great hilarity at this demonstration of the prudish Chub, and Mr.
+Stanlett was immensely “tickled” by the description of Loring’s
+sufferings because of the unwelcome reminiscences of the old
+wood-chopper, Sloper, concerning the millionaire’s family.
+
+“Shows just what a snob Loring has graduated into,” said Mr. Stanlett,
+his face now pink from Clos Vougeot, the blue room forgotten. “His
+parents were most reputable, educated, respected people, even if they
+were not well off, and the only reason they were ever acquainted with
+such a party as Sloper, as every one knows, is that in this sparsely
+populated country everybody is acquainted with everybody else. But
+social differences are now and always have been rigorously maintained.”
+
+He had a keen commercial interest in Desmond’s detail of Regnan’s
+suspicions that the house-party had been made up to show Dryad-Dene to
+advantage to Mr. Loring, with charming young people in gala attire
+enlivening all its highly decorated apartments, and how Regnan resented
+the idea that he had danced not for his own pleasure, but like a trained
+dog, for a purpose.
+
+Mrs. Faurie dimpled and beamed, and asked him how the ladies looked and
+what they wore, now and then checking his description with the
+exclamation “Impossible!” and setting him to rights with apt conjectures
+as to fabrics and styles.
+
+“If I were mamma, I’d give a house-party that would mash the Kentopps
+flat,” said Chub, sturdily. “I’d have up a lot of swell guys from New
+Orleans and down from St. Louis and Memphis, and then I’d open the
+ballroom and dance all one day and one night on a stretch, and have a
+party supper and dinner and breakfast,—and leave the Kentopps out!”
+
+The older boys collapsed over this truculence of the vengeful Chub and
+his idea of a fashionable entertainment. Mrs. Faurie checked him, though
+smiling. “Mustn’t bear malice, Chubby. I am too old for a young people’s
+party.”
+
+“Prettier’n anybody, ain’t she, Mr. Desmond?” said the confident Chub,
+with his mouth full of salad.
+
+To the tutor’s amazement, he flushed to the roots of his hair at this
+appeal. He felt the blood mounting and pulsing as it rose, but he was
+ready with the repetition of Miss Mayberry’s compliment to the “most
+beautiful woman in the world,” albeit he doubted his good taste in the
+rehearsal. Mrs. Faurie, however, who had often heard similar
+appraisements of her attractions, took the remark quite simply, and was
+absorbed in the interest of recollecting details concerning this Italian
+count, who was a man of talent and high position, and whom she had often
+met in notable circles while she was living in Paris. This brought them
+to a harmonious end of the feast, and when they rose from the table,
+Desmond proposed a return to the parlor, where Mrs. Faurie countenanced
+the cigars, and seated herself before the fire in a great fauteuil, her
+Empire gown of rich yet delicate red enhancing her beauty, her eyes
+fascinated by the flames, her lovely neck glimpsed through the lace
+guimpe, her quiet respiration rising and falling calmly, the tumult of
+fear assuaged that had shaken her heart so few hours ago.
+
+Desmond had taken his station on one end of the sofa, where Chubby also
+ensconced himself, for out of school hours he had developed a great
+disposition to loll on his tormentor. The other two boys had seats here
+too, facing the window, but only the inconsiderate youngest spoke out
+his sudden surprise.
+
+“Where does all that light come from?”
+
+Mrs Faurie turned her head apprehensively. The verandas were under a
+steady illumination, and for a distance the murky waters of the overflow
+showed their constant, sinister palpitation.
+
+“I had those lamps filled and the brackets fastened to the posts,”
+Desmond said coolly. “I found them by rummaging around upstairs. I
+suppose they must have been used in some entertainment in the house.
+There were some reflectors, too, in the ballroom.”
+
+Mr. Stanlett raised himself in his chair, his cigar held out at arm’s
+length.
+
+“You have no call to go rummaging around the house. It—it—is outrageous!
+It is—is—intrusive!”
+
+Mrs Faurie had paled. “Do you anticipate another attack on the house
+to-night?” she asked in agitation.
+
+“No,” said Desmond, “for I am prepared for it.”
+
+Beneath his gay and cheerful exterior, sustaining the spirits of the
+household lest the palsy of panic overwhelm them and bring down
+undreamed-of disaster, Desmond had wrestled with some sombre fears,
+distressing doubts, troublous paucity of resource. There was no boat due
+to pass, or he would have braved the maddening floods in the primitive
+dugout to put Mrs. Faurie on board. He had thought of the neighbors, to
+ring the plantation bell and summon aid. But the neighbors by this time
+were struggling with the overflow, or seeking to patch sodden and
+threatened levees. Their own families were exposed to the manifold
+distresses of high water, and the very fact that marauders were abroad
+had homing promptings. Besides, he did not wish thus to advertise to the
+river pirates that the occupants of the mansion felt incapable of its
+defense. The garrison had already demonstrated its efficiency; the
+pirates no doubt believed that they had been misinformed as to the
+unprotected condition of the house; and though Desmond feared an attempt
+at the rescue of the wounded man, in order that he might not turn
+state’s evidence, inculpate the gang, and compass their capture, he
+could rely only on such means as had been equal to the emergency in the
+afternoon, hoping that this would prove adequate to whatever the night
+might bring forth. The idea that Mrs. Faurie was the focus of their
+schemes, the suggestion of wresting from her an order on her bankers and
+by some nefarious plan rendering her incapable of giving the alarm till
+it should be honored, filled him with dismay. The possibility suggested
+abduction, imprisonment, even murder. He had provided against surprise.
+No boat, no swimmer, could approach the house without becoming instantly
+visible,—the old ballroom lights playing a part undreamed of in their
+festive design. He had posted one of the most reliable of the house
+servants as a lookout on each veranda, and a relief sat in the kitchen,
+finding royal good cheer in the remainder of the big dinner he had
+ordered with this view. His rifle was loaded, his pistols at hand, and
+Reginald had been called aside and, as he protested, given some points
+concerning the best method of distinguishing the muzzle from the butt of
+the gun. He had in fact been taught to load, aim, cock the hammer, and
+pull the trigger, and he had a half dozen buckshot cartridges in his
+pocket as he lounged on the sofa.
+
+“Won’t the lights attract attention and make navigation easy?” she
+asked.
+
+“Perhaps; but they will show that we are on the alert and ready for all
+comers,” said Desmond. Then after a moment of hesitation, “It was an
+accident that they did not reach the veranda before I did this
+afternoon. Now, any approach would be detected at a considerable
+distance.”
+
+Her level eyebrows were drawn. “I had hoped the danger was over,” she
+said, with a sort of plaintive patience.
+
+“But not the precautions,” he replied, with a smile.
+
+“Why don’t we have up some of the tenants from the quarter? they could
+spare ten or twelve men.”
+
+He did not tell her that he had already attempted a levy from the
+quarter, and that the tenants had revolted. For the dead flatboat-man
+lay alongside the veranda steps with a dog collar and chain around his
+neck, to keep him from floating away while awaiting the coming of the
+coroner; this Desmond had been compelled to attach with his own hands.
+The negroes did not so much fear the living as the dead. They would not
+undertake to touch the floating body and lift it to the shelter and
+security of the veranda, there to await the coming of the coroner; they
+would not wittingly approach the house so long as it was there,—nay,
+until it should be removed to a distance and to an unknown place. They
+did not believe that the pirates would dare return, and were not
+actuated by fear of them, but they were sure that Jed Knoxton would
+haunt them to their dying day! “I think they are perhaps shy of meddling
+in our feud,” Desmond replied to her suggestion. “The darkeys always
+seem doubtful as to whether they are fairly instructed as to the points
+at issue in any disturbance among white people, and are afraid of
+getting into trouble with the authorities. They would merely give the
+sense of strength in numbers, anyhow. We had enough, to-day, and to
+spare.”
+
+Nevertheless, he had not permitted to depart those whose vocation had
+caused them to return to the mansion, and who, upon discovering the
+facts, would have been glad to get away again. They were fain to
+reconcile themselves to the grim necessity as best they might. The old
+butler, whose attachment to the family dated from before the war, a man
+of experience and intelligence, pinned his faith to the Faurie banner in
+weal or woe. He smartly admonished Bob, his son, to “show some manners,”
+when the footman was insisting upon putting a goodly quantity of the
+Mississippi River between himself and the locality where such dreadful
+deeds were done and which harbored such ghastly visitants, and
+withdrawing to the quarter. It was not merely that the old butler knew
+that special duty rendered in time of stress received a special and
+proportionate reward, for he was long past his prime and had no
+ambitions disconnected with an aspect of distinction in the Faurie
+dinner service. But a word to the wise Bob was sufficient. Though under
+constraint indeed, he cheerfully consented to watch in turn with his
+father on one side of the house, while Desmond and Reginald kept a
+lookout through the parlor windows from the front. The cook insisted
+that naught could approach undiscovered from the east while she sat on
+the sill of the kitchen window, and Seth, the old-time hostler, who
+dwelt in a world of Houyhnhnms and rated as slight matters any disasters
+that did not concern the frog and the fetlock, or threaten spavin or
+sprain, found his sympathy with mere humanity so indurated by disuse as
+to be able to stand guard over the wounded pirate to make sure that he
+did not attempt to escape, that he wanted for naught in comfort, and
+that no shadowy approach was made toward the house upon the waters
+viewed from the dormer window, from the hood of which Seth continually
+scanned the expanse.
+
+“Too many people make confusion and get into each other’s way,” Desmond
+explained to Mrs. Faurie. “I need only one steady lieutenant like
+Reginald here. I invited Regnan to return to Great Oaks with me, and I
+was sorry at first that he did not come. But we are all right without
+him.”
+
+“I wish I could shoot,” plained Chubby.
+
+“I am going to put a stop to this mollycoddle business, anyhow,” said
+Desmond, waving away the smoke from his cigar and looking at Mrs. Faurie
+with challenging, laughing eyes. “Just as soon as we get out of our ark,
+I am going to have regular target practice three times a week, and teach
+these boys how to shoot, and then we will borrow Mr. Sloper’s dogs and
+go on a camp hunt of our own.”
+
+“Oh, little Chubby,” protested Mrs. Faurie, while Chub fairly rolled
+himself into a ball of chuckling delight, hugging himself as if he felt
+that he might fly to pieces in the centrifugal force of so much ecstasy.
+
+“Little Chubby is a good plucked one! I was proud of Chub and Horace,—to
+stand here in the parlor, and hold still without a word, and get in
+nobody’s way, and make no confusion, and face danger without a protest.
+Oh, this is a great day for the house of Faurie! We have three men here,
+rather small-sized and callow as yet,—but _men_, for all that!”
+
+“Oh, you make me feel so proud of them!” cried Mrs. Faurie, laughing and
+flushing with pleasure.
+
+Suddenly a drear sound—knock! knock! knock! at the front of the house.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIII
+
+
+Mrs. Faurie sprang up with white lips and a half scream. The old
+gentleman, who had sunk into a placid doze, was roused from slumber to
+vague but terrible fright.
+
+Knock! knock! knock! again reiterated at the door. The three boys gazed
+in questioning suspense at the tutor’s face.
+
+“It is not”—Reginald began—he had held the chain while Desmond locked
+the dog collar—“it is not—it could not be—”
+
+“Oh, no! _Impossible!_” cried Desmond, bewildered nevertheless, and at a
+loss.
+
+The strain of the events of the evening was telling on the tutor,—even
+the stress of the effort to sustain the equilibrium of the household was
+making its impression. Some moments elapsed before his mind could evolve
+a conjecture, a reasonable solution of the mystery, and all the time the
+heavy, dull knocking was renewed at ominous intervals.
+
+“It must be—it is—a drift log!” he exclaimed at length. “No, you must
+stay here,” he insisted, as Mrs. Faurie started forward; “Reginald and I
+will see.”
+
+He led her back to her chair, and was not sorry that he had done so when
+he opened the door into the hall and saw there all the negro watchmen,
+trembling and agitated, with a look of abject terror shown in the
+swinging chandelier.
+
+“No, no! Nathan,—I am astonished at you. You know that a dead man cannot
+knock at the door! No, Bob! You can’t have the dugout. I have got it
+chained and padlocked. If you leave us here, you will have to swim.
+Seth—you, too! It _must_ be a drift log. I am going to see. I might have
+been afraid of that man alive, but I have got a cinch on him, sure, now
+that he is dead. Nobody in the house knows that he is there, but
+Reginald and me. You tell that fat old cook in the kitchen that the
+Mississippi River hasn’t swept him away from here, or that the other
+pirates didn’t take him with them, and she’ll die of fright. I should
+want no ghost of her size after me, if I were you. Keep quiet here and
+I’ll see.”
+
+It proved to be a drift log, and with the aid of a stout cane Desmond
+leaned over the railing and pushed it clear of the entrance to the
+house. The body of the flatboat-man had not yet risen, and as the log
+was on the surface, it struck against the floor of the veranda.
+Unluckily, as it floated down a little farther on, it caught in the
+angle between the flooring and the projection of the steps, and there it
+swung on the oscillations of the current,—knock, knock, knock,—and there
+it was destined to hang and, as if it were the dead man clamoring for
+admittance, knock, knock, knock in a dull monotone at intervals all the
+livelong night.
+
+Desmond could not rally his energies again for a show of cheerful
+spirits. He could no longer direct the trivial conversation and evolve
+ebullitions of satisfaction and pleasure. Despite his gratitude for the
+crowning mercy of his rescue of the household, he had a sentiment of
+infinite repugnance for the taking of life, necessary, justifiable, even
+laudable though it was. That dull knock, knock, knocking at the door
+where lay the man he had killed beat upon more sensitive nerves than he
+had yet known he possessed, and set them all a-quiver.
+
+When Desmond induced the negroes to return to their posts, old Joel made
+a great show of self-ridicule and abasement that so little a matter
+should have shaken his equilibrium. “’Fore Gawd, boss, I done turned
+fool, fur a fack! _Drift log!_ Gawd A’mighty! I wuz cradled in a _drift
+log_! I been paddlin’ in dugout hollowed out’n _drift log_ dese six or
+seben hunderd years. I been loadin’ up an’ firin’ powder fur Chris’mus
+in de _drift log_—Lawd! eber sence Noah fust went a-wadin’ in de
+overflow. An’ now—done took a skeer ob a _drift log_! Ye-all will have
+ter hire somebody to wait on de table at Great Oaks besides a
+_dee_stracted ole nigger whut is afeard ob a _drift log_.”
+
+Seth was retreating up the stairs, chuckling at the causeless fright,
+and Bob was mightily entertained to see the old butler at fault, who was
+so rich and ready in caustic reproof to the young and flighty. Desmond
+and Reginald turned from the servants and repaired to the parlor, where
+the tutor was able laughingly to explain the cause of the sound to the
+group waiting by the fireside, and to apologize for having awkwardly
+towed the log into the angle of the steps so that it could not shake
+free, and thus the melancholy iteration of its oscillations against the
+flooring would probably continue all night. “But I move that we pay as
+little attention to the sound as possible, and adjourn for the present,”
+Desmond continued, looking at his watch.
+
+“I feel as if I could never sleep again,” said Mrs. Faurie, pressing her
+hands to her temples.
+
+“What a pity that you sent your maid down to the quarter. She could have
+a cot in your dressing-room and be company for you so close at hand,”
+suggested Reginald.
+
+“Yes, she is afraid to come back. She made all sorts of excuses, but
+_that_ is the truth,” said Mrs. Faurie. “I sent her to help her people
+save their things; their household furniture and bedclothes are so
+important to them,—hard to come by and difficult for them to
+replace,—the accumulations of many years.”
+
+“Suppose you let Chub have a cot in your room,” suggested Desmond.
+
+“I won’t,” said Chubby, stoutly. “I won’t sleep in a room with a lady!”
+
+The collapse of the two elder boys over this demonstration of Chub’s
+delicate modesty was shared in less degree by the others, while Chub sat
+gravely on the edge of the sofa and ejaculated—“The _idea_!”
+
+“He’d be no good, anyhow. He is a perfect dormouse,” said Reginald.
+
+“Leave him alone in his propriety,” added Horace.
+
+“Let things be as usual,” said Mrs. Faurie. “Anything different might
+get on my nerves and make me wakeful.”
+
+Desmond was rummaging in a drawer. “There is a hammer here. Will you let
+me nail up the window-shutters so that the room can be entered only from
+the hall?”
+
+That idea of a coerced order on her banker operated on his mind like an
+obsession. Should the pirates return, in view of their peril by state’s
+evidence, to attempt the rescue of their comrade, they would have the
+opportunity for a renewed effort to secure the paper with its rich
+guerdon in case of success.
+
+“Nail up the windows!” exclaimed Mrs. Faurie. “Heavens! I feel like a
+pampered lunatic.”
+
+“It would do no harm except to the shutters, and would mightily set my
+mind at rest,” urged Desmond.
+
+“Work your will on the shutters, then, and peace to your mind!” she
+said, laughing a little at his impetuous haste, as Reginald caught up a
+lamp to light him and the two made off together.
+
+When they were through with the windows, it would have been as easy to
+tear down a section of the house as to effect an entrance there.
+
+As the group stood together in the hall for the last few words, the
+knock, knock, knocking was renewed, as of solemn clamors for admittance.
+None of them mentioned the sound, and presently they were all gone
+except Desmond and Reginald, who seemed to linger, but really intended
+to wait and watch all night.
+
+“The lights are better out,” said Desmond, reaching up and extinguishing
+the swinging lamp in the hall chandelier. “If they should come, which
+God forbid, they could not so easily get about the house in darkness,
+and we could fire at better advantage from the shadow than in the full
+glare of the veranda lights.”
+
+They closed the window-shutters of all the house as they patrolled the
+verandas. The width of these was great enough to limit the light sent
+across the rooms, but thence through the slats one could look out almost
+as with the distinctness of daylight on the great brown welter of water
+palpitating with the rainfall and undulating with the current.
+
+“You had better lie down for a while in the parlor,” Desmond said to
+Reginald. “No—you will play out long before day, if you have no rest at
+all. You will be well within call here, with your gun beside you, and
+you can watch through the slats for any approach from the front of the
+house.”
+
+They had arranged that one or the other should remain in the hall
+outside Mrs. Faurie’s door—unknown to her, however, lest this precaution
+excite her alarm anew—throughout the night. Reginald was in a tremor of
+terror to perceive that it was she against whom the schemes of the
+marauders were most directed. He had earlier thought of the family
+silver and the scattered valuables about the house, and had fancied that
+these had allured them hither, but that most appalling suggestion of a
+coerced order on her New Orleans bankers and the extremest measures to
+insure its being honored was of far more sinister import. The silver in
+its present form was easily identified; melted down, it would be mulcted
+of half its value in the loss of the rich chasing of the ornamentation
+and the fine workmanship. Moreover, the water-rats might well fear their
+own discrimination between what was real and what might be a heavy plate
+and for their purposes worthless. But there could be no possible doubt
+as to her order on her bankers. Without question they were in
+communication with fences and graduated rogues in New Orleans of such a
+quality as to be able to present such an order without fear that it
+would not be honored. Truly, the possibility invested the menace that
+hung over the house with a terror which he could scarcely contemplate
+without a complete collapse of all his faculties, and which drove every
+impulse of sleep from his heavy eyelids. He sank down obediently on the
+sofa, however, and sought to compose his mind, his eyes staring into the
+gloomy waters, his gun on the floor beside him within arm’s reach, his
+ears acutely discerning every sound within the house, and the splashing
+of the water against the foundations as the rain fell and the currents
+of the overflow rose ever higher and higher, and now and again the
+sombre vibrations of the knock, knock, knocking at the door before which
+the dead man lay.
+
+Desmond had thrown himself at full length on the long, old-fashioned,
+mahogany hall sofa, that he, too, might find some repose for his
+exhausted limbs,—now beginning to ache and stiffen from the stress of
+the day’s exertion,—if not solace for his racked and anxious mind.
+
+The dark house had grown still—so still that the silence seemed
+sinister, as if some portentous crash must break this unnatural hush.
+The lapping of the water had become monotonous, the ear so accustomed to
+it that it scarcely impinged upon the sense of silence. The ghostly
+knock, knock, knocking had its sombre echo, and the interval relapsed
+into muteness. There was no stir of whatever sort from the bedrooms; the
+inmates were all lost in slumber. The house might have seemed
+tenantless, when suddenly Desmond became conscious of a sense of motion.
+He raised himself on his elbow and stared about him.
+
+The hall was absolutely dark. The glass half-moon above the solid panels
+of the double front door, and the panes in the long side-lights on
+either hand, were covered with some quilled stuff that tempered the
+light to gloom by day, and utterly excluded the glimmer of night. He
+could not have said how or when it came, but something was astir, he
+knew, even before he heard that lisping sibilance of the ghost of a step
+on the padded velvet carpet of the stair. Again and again it sounded,
+sometimes regular for several steps; then silence; once more the
+sibilant tread, sliding on the silky pile of the velvet. Farther and
+farther it receded, unmolested; he thought it was gone! And once
+more—the impact! And now all was silence; he listened in vain. As he
+laid himself back on the sofa, the cold touch of the haircloth with
+which it was covered caused him to withdraw his hand with a jerk and
+start violently. Then he composed himself anew and sought the rest his
+fagged-out system so needed.
+
+At another moment he would have sprung up to challenge the presence, but
+in this juncture he remembered the alarm a sudden commotion in the hall
+would rouse. Mrs. Faurie was aware of the peculiar jeopardy in which she
+stood. The demand for the emeralds, for the order on her bankers, had
+apprised her that she was the special mark for the enterprise of the
+marauders. So extreme a terror as a sudden awakening to more turmoil and
+suspense might prove too much for her nerves, for her overstrained
+heart,—might, indeed, be fatal. This demonstration marked no intrusion,
+no new menace; it was only the old unexplained, inexplicable spectral
+mystery which he had encountered when he first reached Great Oaks
+Plantation,—almost forgotten until this afternoon when he had sprung
+into the window and rushed downstairs, hearing a sibilant descent and
+passing an unseen presence.
+
+In the midst of the lull induced by the uncanny associations, he felt a
+rush of impatience that this fantastic demonstration should be forced
+upon his attention now,—at this time, when any slight lapse of vigilance
+on his part, any failure of judgment under circumstances so strange to
+all his training and experience, might cost the life of every one in the
+house. He believed that there must be some natural explanation for the
+manifestation; but since it baffled reason and conjecture, it mattered
+little to the fact that he did not fully accept it. He had as distinct a
+thrill quivering icily along his spine as if he had no philosophy
+whatever, and as he placed his hand on his brow, he felt that cold drops
+were standing there.
+
+Suddenly he sprang to his feet. There was a commotion upstairs, not so
+much a tread or a movement, but a husky, half-smothered voice crying
+out. In the tremendous crisis that the moment was to him, he remembered
+to open the front parlor door, and with a whisper he motioned Reginald
+to take his post on the hall sofa while he bounded noiselessly up the
+stairs, three steps at a time. He burst into the room where the wounded
+man lay—expecting he hardly knew what. It was the only chamber alight in
+the house, yet full of distorted shadows. The kerosene lamp had been
+extinguished, and the dim illumination came from that primitive
+contrivance known as a button lamp,—a bit of cloth tied over a button,
+the end lighted and set afloat in a saucer of lard, giving a clear, tiny
+flame peculiarly adapted to a sick-room. Seth had placed this on the
+fireless hearth, and thus shining upward, all the furnishings cast
+gloomy shadows on the wall. They seemed curiously out of proportion,—out
+of drawing, so to speak, because of the slant of the walls of the
+half-story structure and the deep recesses of the dormer windows.
+
+In the middle of the room Seth stood staring, evidently just roused from
+slumber; his starting eyes were on the wounded man, who had struggled
+into a sitting posture, wildly gesticulating toward the door, every
+fresh exertion sending the blood spurting over the bosom of the white
+night-shirt furnished him, and trickling down the white coverings of the
+bed.
+
+“Who is that thar guy?” he exclaimed huskily. “An’ what’s he comin’
+after me fur?”
+
+He fixed wild eyes on Desmond, who marveled whether it was yet time for
+the delirium and fever attendant upon a gunshot wound to set in.
+
+As he spoke in a soothing voice, the incongruity of the situation could
+but strike him. He had sought to kill this man and had nearly compassed
+his object; but now he was laying the gentlest hands on the marauder’s
+shoulder, and trying to place him back in his recumbent posture. The
+danger was all gone out of him, but the semblance of kindness seemed
+strange.
+
+“Nobody is going to disturb you. Take your night’s rest. Lie down and be
+quiet.”
+
+The marauder grasped Desmond’s arm with a sunburned hand garnished with
+broken nails. “But—say—_who_ was he? Oh, my! he looked comical! What’s
+he want o’ me?”
+
+“There’s nobody here,” protested Desmond. “Lie down.”
+
+“Can’t stuff me! Ain’t slep’ a wink ter-night.” A shadow crossed his
+face, which was young and broad, and with a “bang” of straight sandy
+hair, a square jaw, and a long, thin mouth. “I got too much to study
+’bout.”
+
+“Don’t do it now,” Desmond kindly admonished him. “You have started that
+wound to bleeding. Lie down.”
+
+“That man looked comical; he didn’t look like folks hereabout! He had on
+a three-cornered hat.”
+
+Desmond gave so palpable a start that the wounded marauder noticed it.
+“Ai-yi! _You_ know him,” he said with significance. “Is he after me?”
+
+“Did he have powdered hair?” Desmond asked, surprised at his own
+temporizing, and remembering Reginald’s description of the nurse’s
+vision.
+
+“Gunpowder on his hair!” the man said wonderingly. “Naw, ’twuz white!
+An’ Lord! he didn’t expect to see me lookin’ at him. He flipped in—an’
+when his eyes met mine, he flipped out. Say—I be ’feard o’ him,—he
+looked so comical! Say—is he _alive_!”
+
+Desmond turned to the attendant. “Seth, who is this man?”
+
+“Gawd A’mighty, boss, I dunno!” Seth gasped, the whites of his eyes
+distended and their pupils wildly rolling. “Ter tell de trufe, boss, an’
+shame de debbil, I jes’ batted my eye one minit, an’ dar war dis man
+shyin’ an’ plungin’ an’ ’lowin’ dat he done seen—I reckon ’twuz dat ar
+Slip-Slinksy what de chillern talks about wunst in awhile. Lawe-a-massy,
+Mist’ Desmond, lemme go home! ’Fore Gawd, I can’t stay here no mo’!
+Lemme go’—leastways, down ter de kitchen, whar _he_ ain’t neber been
+seen nor hearn. I can’t stay whar Slip-Slinksy—oh, yi! hi-i!”
+
+He was looking in affright over his shoulder at a sudden movement of
+Desmond’s shadow across the slanting wall. It was clearly demonstrated
+that the utility of Seth in the offices of sick nurse and lookout was at
+an end. So charging him to say naught to his fellows downstairs, on pain
+of being ordered to return to the sick-room, Desmond assigned him to a
+post on the back piazza within call of the others, and within exchange
+of cheerful conversation with the corpulent old cook, always a fixture,
+half a-doze in the kitchen window.
+
+The clumsy descent of the stairs by Seth, used only to the one-story
+dwelling so common in the region, Desmond thought was sure to advertise
+his withdrawal to all the house. But when the back hall door had closed
+upon him, absolute quiet succeeded. All the inmates were asleep,—a much
+needed rest, obviously. But the continued hush demonstrated how
+essential was the strict watch, since so turbulent and erratic a transit
+had failed to rouse the domicile. He reflected that the cautious methods
+of burglars could never have permitted so much noise. He began to doubt
+the vigilance of his sentinels. He had no blame for Seth, who had slept
+at his post. It had been a strenuous day of excitement and labor for the
+hostler, and indeed for all the household retainers. The exposure to
+rain and wind is always of a peculiar exhaustion to the physical
+energies. He began to fear that, thus absorbed by the strange
+manifestation of the troublous peripatetic spirit of Great Oaks
+Plantation, worse dangers might have been allowed to approach.
+
+He went swiftly to one of the dormer windows, and looked out upon the
+great flood as upon an inland sea. Still the rain fell; the drops stood
+in bubbles, and again coursed lazily along the panes of the glass, and
+through their corrugations he could see the rippling waters in the wan
+light of the illuminated veranda; the vague boles of the trees in the
+shifting mist; the floating débris,—here and there uprooted bushes,
+logs, fence-rails, timbers of buildings; but never a boat, never a human
+suggestion. The ark could not have seemed more lonely, more aloof from
+all humanity in the floods that drowned the earth, than did Great Oaks
+mansion in that deep and memorable overflow in Deepwater Bend from the
+crevasse in the Faurie cross levee.
+
+The tiny light of the primitive button lamp burned whitely on the
+hearth; the fire was dead some hours since, and no coal gleamed through
+the ash. The room had a comfortable aspect, though the blue and white
+curtains were still undrawn as when he had sprung through the window
+there. It was at the opposite side, and without shifting his posture,
+where he sat in the recess of the other window, he could see through it
+the sloping roof of the veranda, on which lay the boughs of the live-oak
+tree towering high above. A table at the foot of the bed held a glass
+from which restoratives had been administered, a bowl which had been
+filled with the soup in which the old cook excelled, some lint and
+home-made bandages from an old linen sheet, ready for use in case they
+might be needed for stanching the further flow of blood. The floor was
+covered with a blue and white matting; the woodwork was of the old
+china-white paint, as smooth as enamel. The white wall-paper bloomed
+with blue corn-flowers,—it was the blue room! There were presses in the
+jambs beside the fireplace, and these, too, were of the spotless white
+of the door and chair-rail and wainscot. The bed was dressed in white,
+but from the half canopy long blue curtains depended, mottled with some
+indeterminate design in white. He rather wondered at the freshness of it
+all, considering its disuse; but there was little dust afloat amidst the
+densities of the woods and along the expanse of the river, and the
+traditions of Great Oaks were of famous housekeepers. A single sign of
+disorder the room showed!—one of the presses was open, and within was
+glimpsed a congeries of old account-books, bundles of papers, japanned
+boxes, all in a degree of confusion that implied long neglect or great
+haste.
+
+When he glanced again at the pillow, he was relieved to see that the
+wounded man had fallen asleep, doubtless from the exhaustion attendant
+upon the excitements of the last hour. The breath came with a queer
+whistling sound from his torn lung, and this gave Desmond a keen pang,
+notwithstanding the knowledge that the miscreant deserved far worse
+punishment than the wound he had received. His sunburned face was yet
+younger of aspect as he slept, and softer; his unkempt yellow hair, his
+stubbly, unshaven chin and upper lip, and his dirty face on the fine
+white linen of the pillow-case spoke the limitations of his low station;
+and the tutor, who had pinned his faith to training, had a reservation
+in his condemnation,—holding that this man might not have been what he
+was but for what his circumstances had made him.
+
+Desmond, in the deep, shadowy recess of the dormer window, thus
+meditating, looked out keenly at every shifting change of the watery
+expanse, listening acutely to every semblance of sound within the house,
+hearing even the recoil of the springs of the sofa in the hall below as
+Reginald altered his position; hearing the water rush futilely against
+the foundations and turn splashing aside; hearing every iteration of the
+knock, knock, knocking of the drift log caught at the veranda steps, and
+he was instantly aware when once more that scarcely to be discriminated
+impact of a sibilant footfall, so stealthy it was, sounded anew on the
+stairway of the hall. He could hardly control his impatience,—the
+inexplicable incident so jeopardized the fidelity of his watchmen, the
+composure of the rest of the household. He remembered that it was
+Reginald who had first told him the story of the strange step on the
+stair. He wondered if the boy heard it now, as he lay obediently waiting
+on the sofa in the hall below. He wondered that Reginald could hold
+himself motionless, for not a sound came save that lisping tread, soft,
+sibilant,—now still, now distinct once more, ascending the stairs.
+
+Desmond had an impulse almost uncontrollable to rush out into the hall,
+only checked by the fear that he would find nothing. Then, with an
+effort at self-control, he held himself quiet in the deep, curtained
+recess of the dormer window. Since the figure had entered this room
+before the unwilling vision of the wounded robber, perhaps the lure it
+then followed might again bring it hither. Desmond caught his breath as
+he heard the step approach nearer and yet nearer. When the footfall was
+just without, it paused, and Desmond fearfully heard the sombre knock,
+knock, knocking at the door below stairs before which the dead man lay.
+The next moment his heart was thumping so loudly that he thought the
+sound might betray his presence. For there entered slowly, cautiously,
+with a quick, nervous glance at the bed where the wounded robber slept,
+the apparition he had described hardly an hour ago,—the figure that
+patrolled the stairs in the wan moonlight in the tradition of the
+nurse’s vision.
+
+A tall man it was, and spare. He was muffled in a cloak to the chin. He
+had upon his head a hat, cocked as if accessory to a fancy costume; his
+hair was white, not powdered; he held in his hand a scroll of paper; his
+face was one that Desmond recognized instantly, despite the anxious,
+secret, blazing eye, the tension of excitement in every drawn feature.
+Mr. Stanlett, with that careful, soft tread, noiseless save for an
+occasional slipping shuffle incident to the step of age, crossed the
+room and stood for a moment scanning the face of the sleeping man.
+Desmond, invisible in the deep shadows of the curtained recessed window,
+trembled for him lest that peculiar mesmeric influence, responsive to an
+intent regard, rouse the sleeper to a moment of frenzied fright. But the
+man still slumbered, the breath still whistling in labored respiration
+from his torn lung. Mr. Stanlett evidently harbored no suspicion of the
+shadowed window recess. He was very old, and his age was telling on him
+in the draughts that this strange secret made upon his powers of
+endurance. He tottered as he approached the press, its door ajar, and as
+he paused and gazed at its disorder, he shook his head to and fro in
+dismay. He pulled the door back, and leaning within, he opened a drawer
+which Desmond fancied was a secret receptacle. He laid the scroll in
+this, and then with a cheering face and a brisk satisfaction of manner,
+his lips set firmly together, he began to push the bundles of papers and
+japanned boxes back into their places, his nervous, veinous old hands
+moving here and there with great diligence in his eager haste to be
+gone. As he forced the door to shut on the crowded shelves, he did not
+observe what the keen young eyes in the recess perceived, that the
+corner of one of these bundles so protruded that the door did not
+compactly close. He shot the bolt and turned the key, unaware that
+neither had gone home, whirled about with a jaunty air of capability,
+looked keenly at the sleeping face on the pillow, and went briskly but
+softly shuffling out of the door, leaving Desmond at once relieved,
+amazed, and dismayed.
+
+He could not for a time collect his faculties to ponder on this strange
+chance. He sat silently listening to the stealthy footsteps that had so
+long baffled inquiry at Great Oaks Plantation. He was remembering that
+on the occasion when the spectre was declared to have been seen, Mr.
+Stanlett was one of those first present in the hall below, and could not
+recognize, it was said, the features of the apparition through looking
+upward at the landing. The steps retreated farther and farther, and at
+last their sibilance sounded no more.
+
+In the silence Desmond took counsel with himself. There was something of
+mystery here, of an importance to justify some risk, of a continuance to
+warrant years of concealment. What it was, whom it might affect, he
+could not imagine. He had the sentiment that whatever is secret is
+wrong. And certainly this was in a keeping neither wise, nor consistent,
+nor competent. His nettling discovery, for he wished now he knew naught,
+entailed a certain responsibility. The old man imagined that the scroll
+was in a secret receptacle, locked and double locked. And, in fact, one
+man, perhaps indeed two—for Desmond could not feel sure of those
+half-closed eyes and whistling breath—knew that it was within reach of
+any deft and groping hand. He revolted at the assumption of
+responsibility with which he had no concern. Nevertheless, this had been
+thrust upon him, and in view of the personnel of all concerned, he could
+not shirk it.
+
+He rose abruptly, crossed the room, and opened the door of the press.
+He, too, gazed doubtfully at the sleeping man in the bed, who did not
+stir. Presently Desmond’s deft hands were fingering the outline of the
+secret drawer. It was constructed after an old and ordinary type, and
+with one or two efforts his thumb pressed a spring and the drawer shook
+loose. Taking the scroll, for there were no other contents, Desmond
+slipped it without examination or a glance of scrutiny into his breast
+pocket.
+
+As he descended the stairs, Reginald rose from the sofa to meet him.
+“Such a night,” he whispered. “As if we have not enough to bear already,
+I heard—I could almost swear it—old Slip-Slinksy going up and coming
+down the stairs!”
+
+Desmond passed his arm around him and gave him a jocose hug. “And this
+is the fellow I have been calling a man. Afraid of nursery ghosts!”
+
+He was going into the library. The rain had ceased; the mist was
+lifting. A pale gray light was sifting through the slats of the
+shuttered windows. The veranda lamps burned queerly out of countenance
+before its definite, pervasive distinctness. As Reginald threw open the
+blinds, Desmond was lighting a wax candle that stood on his desk, and
+sealing in a large envelope a paper at which he scrupulously forbore to
+look; and as he lifted his head, he saw that the sun was striking long,
+red, shifting gleams across the great inland sea of the Mississippi
+overflow.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIV
+
+
+The waters had not yet disappeared from the face of the earth when the
+routine at Great Oaks mansion was reëstablished. Those ghastly events,
+the coroner’s inquest, the identification and removal of the
+flatboat-man’s corpse, the ante-mortem statement of the wounded
+prisoner, and the subsequent capture and incarceration of the river
+pirates, followed in a rapid succession that seemed incongruous with
+their importance. The horrified and superstitious servants now went
+about their duties with casual cheerful faces; the tutor had resumed his
+pedagogic struggles with the young idea; Chubby, in the intervals of his
+labors as a student, sat upon the railing of the veranda and fished in
+the overflow, his skill being now and again rewarded by the splashing of
+a finny trophy at the end of his line, whereupon long and serious
+conferences ensued between him and the cook as to the best methods to
+prepare certain piscatorial dishes considered of small gustatory value
+by the epicure, and always served in a single platter for Chub alone.
+Mrs. Faurie had resumed her plaints against the dullness and general
+vapidity of Great Oaks, but not her lassitude. For there was much to do.
+The preparation for repairs and rebuilding incident to the destruction
+wrought by the overflow to the farm machinery, the miles of fencing, the
+tenants’ cabins, brought the manager of the place, now returned from
+Vicksburg, almost daily to the house, with estimates and suggestions and
+discussions of ways and means. There were many problems presented,
+difficult of solution even to one of his experience, and Mrs. Faurie had
+come to dread the sight of him, with his perplexities, paddling up to
+the veranda in his dugout, the glister of the blinding sun on the
+expanse of waters narrowing his keen gray eyes to mere slits,
+corrugating his brow, burning his complexion almost to a scarlet hue,
+incongruous enough with his straight yellow hair and straw-colored full
+beard, for he wore his straw hat on the back of his head.
+
+Mrs. Faurie had begun to say often, “Let us ask Mr. Desmond,” when the
+alternative propositions of plans and computations of approximate
+expenses involved them both in doubt and anxiety, and he had found the
+clear-headed views of a man of judgment, progressive yet prudent, of
+value in appraising possibilities and reaching conclusions, despite
+Desmond’s inexperience in the questions at issue and need of information
+in the premises at every step. He was so quick to comprehend, so willing
+to take instruction, so cautious of precipitate decision, of such keen
+acumen and justice of reasoning, that Mr. Bainbridge was glad of his
+counsel and to be able to cease to confer only with a woman, albeit the
+owner of the interests involved. He broached the suggestion himself one
+day in his big, hearty voice, “Let’s submit the whole idee to Mr.
+Desmond”; then, abashed, perturbed, he looked up fearfully from under
+his bushy blond eyebrows, perceiving the many untoward inferences to be
+drawn from his reference to this arbitration.
+
+But Mrs. Faurie discerned none of them. “The very thing,” she concurred,
+touching the bell. Then as the servant appeared, “Ask Mr. Desmond if he
+can’t come here for one tiny minute. Tell him to lock Chubby up in the
+mahogany cupboard, or fasten him in the letter-press, or kill him a
+little,—anything, to get rid of him,—and come here quick.”
+
+She, too, relied upon Desmond’s judgment implicitly, and sometimes he
+was disposed to protest. “What will you two say if all this goes wrong?
+You know that I am as green as a gourd to this business.”
+
+“Ah, but it cannot go wrong,—it is instinct with right reason. I
+couldn’t devise it myself, but I can discriminate its value. You have
+the happy hand; everything you touch is successful.”
+
+Mr. Bainbridge sat demurely by, scarcely daring to breathe for the
+temerity of the thought in his mind, his eyes discreetly downcast. Would
+the widow really sacrifice her great income for this man of pinched
+conditions? “Mighty smart man, though!” he was sufficiently just to say
+to himself when out of her presence, as he flung himself into his dugout
+and took up his paddle. “Mighty glad he is here. Don’t know how in the
+world I’d ha’ made out to git along with all these perplexity fits with
+just a woman’s whims to control things.” For Desmond often boldly
+battled with Mrs. Faurie’s preferences and prejudices in the cause of
+her best interests, and demonstrated what was most worth while, and what
+was idle and useless expense in the rehabilitation of the wreckage of
+the overflow; and though she disputed with spirit, she was open to
+reason, and if convinced, was willing to concede.
+
+There were other visitors at Great Oaks in these days, and mightily
+surprised to find the trio in one of these heady discussions were
+Colonel Kentopp and Mr. Loring, rowing in a skiff up to the veranda
+steps and ushered into the parlor before the wranglers well knew that
+intruders were upon them. At the sight of the papers piled upon the
+table, the account-book in Desmond’s hand, and the budget of letters
+that Mr. Bainbridge held from Mrs. Faurie’s “machinery man,” as she
+dubbed a great factory, Colonel Kentopp’s face clouded.
+
+“You have fallen upon evil days, Mr. Bainbridge,” he said, gripping the
+hand of the manager, for he made it a point to be hearty and cordial
+with all sorts and conditions of people in the conservation of his
+reputation for popularity. “You will raise more crayfish than cotton
+this year,” he continued, with that agreeable manner of making a
+distasteful remark which serves the double purpose of indulging one’s
+ill-humor at an interlocutor’s expense while complimenting him with
+conversation.
+
+“Not at all,” interposed Mrs. Faurie, for she had an affinity with
+success, and resented evil prognostications in her affairs as intrusive.
+“Mr. Desmond says that if the water recedes in time to get cotton
+planted properly, the alluvium of the overflow will enrich the land and
+materially increase the yield.”
+
+“Much virtue in an ‘if,’” Colonel Kentopp contended, as he came around
+the table with a rolling step and flung himself into one of the big
+armchairs. “I did not know that Mr. Desmond is an agricultural
+authority,” he continued with a large air of jocularity as he crossed
+his legs. “I thought his knowledge of rural matters was contained in the
+Georgics of Virgil—ha! ha! ha!” And he sent a glance of rallying
+laughter at Desmond from out his round, dark, glossy, unamused eyes.
+
+“Mr. Desmond knows a great deal about many things,” Mrs. Faurie retorted
+promptly, unaccustomed to contradiction or discipline, and restive under
+the slur of ridicule cast upon Desmond.
+
+“So _we_ found out who had the pleasure of being his fellow guests at
+Dryad-Dene,” said Mr. Loring, who had a very bland aspect for a wooden
+man, as he sat in the group before the fire. He had a great respect for
+money in the abstract, and Mrs. Faurie represented large aggregations of
+wealth and thus commanded his interest. He was disposed to soften to her
+liking the tone of the conversation, which he thought ill-taken.
+Moreover, he had not often had the opportunity of meeting her, and the
+sight of the great beauty was an event of moment. He was not a “ladies’
+man” in the ordinary acceptation of the term, but he had the successful
+man’s reverence for preëminence in any form, and the splendor of her
+personal gifts appealed to his appreciation of the predominant. Her
+beauty was always so striking that whatever she wore seemed cunningly
+designed to enhance it,—even to-day, when her costume was a sheer lawn
+blouse and a plain black skirt. Her arms and shoulders were so
+dazzlingly white through the soft fabric; its absolute simplicity made
+so undeniable a demand to mark how the lack of effort or ornamentation
+brought into higher relief and added importance all the fine details of
+her perfect face, the exquisite tints of her long-lashed gray eyes, the
+lustre of her rich brown hair rolled up so plainly from her fair brow,
+the beautiful shape of her hands and arms, shaded only by a simple
+ruffle at the end of her elbow-sleeves. She was in Mr. Loring’s eyes a
+woman whose wishes were to be considered, whose station and wealth were
+to be respected, whose beauty was to be worshiped, and he wondered at
+Kentopp’s fatuity when, catching his cue, he said:—
+
+“Indeed, Mr. Desmond was greatly appreciated at Dryad-Dene,—especially
+by the young ladies!” with an arch glance at the tutor.
+
+Loring thought of the dim, pale attractions of Miss Kelvin and Miss
+Allandyce in comparison with the resplendent vision before him, and he
+deemed Kentopp mentally a poor creature.
+
+“Of course Mr. Desmond has not had agricultural experience, but he has a
+very good article of common sense, and with what mind Mr. Bainbridge and
+I have left, since the overflow fairly crazed us both, we think we are
+going to make out mighty well,” stoutly insisted Mrs. Faurie.
+
+“I’ll be bound you do,” said Mr. Loring, admiringly.
+
+“But Mr. Desmond is due at Dryad-Dene,” protested Kentopp, now on the
+back track. “He took French leave of us, and our week-end party is not
+yet dispersed, though the week has. The overflow gave us that boon, at
+all events. They haven’t been able to get away.”
+
+“You are very kind, but it is impossible for me to return,” said
+Desmond, courteously.
+
+“Oh, I’m so glad,” cried out Mrs. Faurie, unexpectedly, and in a tone of
+girlish glee. “I was so afraid that Edward might accept.” Then, turning
+to the amazed Kentopp, she added. “You know that he is the source of all
+our courage. We were in a state of siege here. We look upon him as if he
+were as powerful as an army with banners.”
+
+“Killed two of the men with your own hands; I believe the testimony at
+the inquest showed that,”—Colonel Kentopp’s lip curled as if in
+distaste. “Painful necessity.”
+
+“Not all,—providential opportunity! Edward and I agreed that we would
+have no morbid sensibility over it,” declared Mrs. Faurie.
+
+“Why, I should smile!” said the wooden man, in hearty indorsement, his
+slang literal. It was not his place, and he knew it, but he rose from
+his chair with the intention of himself terminating the visit and taking
+the malapropos Kentopp home. “You have much to do here; we had best be
+going.”
+
+“If Mr. Desmond will not return with us,” said Kentopp, gathering his
+faculties together as best he could, and perceiving the light of elation
+in Loring’s eyes. Great Oaks Plantation would doubtless be soon on the
+market. Its overflow scarcely made against its value, though it might be
+utilized to cry down the asking price, since it was only the result of
+the nefarious crime of cutting the cross levee, that was hitherto a
+complete protection. Mrs. Faurie, evidently all unwitting of the future,
+was herself to defray the immense expense of its rehabilitation. Loring
+scarcely looked as wooden as was his wont, smoothing down his bristly
+mustache with a jaunty air, a secret smile behind his eyes, as it were,
+so confidential, so introspective, so self-communing was its expression.
+Of all the boons that his money had brought within reach of the
+millionaire, Great Oaks Plantation was the one he most coveted. Even its
+semi-grotesque amphibious aspect could not diminish his desire as he
+paused on the veranda, the water lapping about it, the great trees
+standing inundated, as if knee-deep, the glistening expanse of the
+overflow stretching out to the Mississippi proper, its channel only to
+be now discerned by the course of a steamboat ploughing her way through
+the illimitable floods, no vestige of a shore within view. He was
+cheerful in his leave-taking, and turned in the skiff, even after the
+darkey at the oars had rowed far down the submerged avenue, to wave his
+hand at the group on the veranda, while Colonel Kentopp moodily pulled
+his hat down over his eyes with a muttered “Confound this glare,” as the
+sun flashed blindingly upon the waste of waters.
+
+The prominence of Desmond in the lady’s counsels was also noticed by old
+Mr. Stanlett, and he regarded it obviously with jealous distrust. He had
+been peculiarly favorably impressed by the young man during the earlier
+days of his stay at Great Oaks, and had taken pains to bestow upon him a
+kindly consideration and courteous attention, of which the tutor, then
+fresh to his duties and despondent, consciously out of his element, was
+very definitely sensible. Now, Mr. Stanlett seldom addressed Desmond,
+and when this was necessary he used a cold civility, in strong contrast
+to his former demeanor, and savoring very distinctly of a realization of
+the inferiority of the tutor’s position and a resolute intention of
+relegating him to his proper sphere. Whenever Mrs. Faurie spoke to
+Desmond, discussing her affairs and deferring to his opinion, Mr.
+Stanlett was wont to draw his heavy white eyebrows together in a very
+definite frown, scanning first one and then the other, an angry flush
+mantling his face, evidently minded to protest. One day at the table,
+when she chanced to address the tutor as “Edward,” Mr. Stanlett stared
+as if startled, then broke out with so satirical and frosty a laugh that
+she looked up in surprise, forgetting what she was about to say. She
+manifested no confusion nor self-consciousness, but Reginald flushed
+hotly to the temples, and Chubby paused, his fork in his hand, and
+remarked in callow affront: “Uncle Clarence seems to have a good joke
+that he keeps to himself.”
+
+“Just so, Chubby,—a very good joke—ha, ha, ha!—and I wish to God I could
+keep it to myself!”
+
+Mrs. Faurie had so far recovered her composure and the tone of her
+nerves, greatly imperiled in all the anxiety and jeopardy and stress of
+the tragic events of the overflow, that Desmond resolved on the evening
+after the visit of Kentopp and Loring to defer no longer to acquaint her
+with his discovery of the mystery of the spectral manifestations at
+Great Oaks mansion, and to surrender to her keeping the paper which he
+had seen so strangely and significantly concealed. From time to time he
+had furtively watched Mr. Stanlett, seeking to discern if he had become
+aware of the abstraction of the scroll from the secret drawer of the
+press in the blue room. He was sure that the old man would manifest such
+disquietude as would be ample evidence that his caution had gone amiss.
+But Mr. Stanlett maintained a genuine composure, absorbed in the simple
+routine of his day,—the mail from the packet, or the neighborhood news
+brought by some amphibian in a dugout scouting on various errands on the
+face of the waters; his cigars; sometimes humming an old song and
+looking from his easy chair placidly out on the waste of the overflow.
+Occasionally he occupied himself in telling one of the boys, or the
+three in conclave, old stories of war times, the gunboats on the
+Mississippi, the riders and raiders, the burning of cotton—bales, gin,
+and all—by the soldiers rather than let the precious staple fall into
+the enemy’s hands; and again he abounded in anecdotes of the palmy days
+of river travel and traffic, the tremendous loads of cotton the
+freighters carried, the choice company on the floating palaces, the
+phenomenally high play of the “gentleman gamblers,” the competitive
+speed of the steamers and details of the exciting races, the horrible
+accidents and the frightful picture a blazing boat presented, a tower of
+flames, as she came swinging around Deepwater Bend on her course. No;
+placidity was the keynote of his life save when his frown gathered as
+his eye fell on Desmond, and his manner stiffened, and his intonation
+grew crisp and icy.
+
+To-night, as they sat by the parlor fire, he was busied in a game of
+chess, the fashion of his youth in which he excelled. He had taught
+Reginald to play with such skill as to give him difficulty enough to
+maintain his interest in reaching the finality of checkmate. The other
+two boys were on the rug romping with an Irish setter, and the dog was
+most unwillingly learning to sit up and shake hands and make a feint of
+smoking an empty pipe. Desmond could count on their absorption for some
+time as he passed the window on the veranda and saw them there thus
+occupied. The moon was beginning to steer clear of a surge of clouds
+that had hung in the sky all the afternoon, presaging rain, and as its
+long, golden slant fell upon the waste of waters Mrs. Faurie rose from
+her chair, laid her book on the centre table, and went anxiously to the
+window. As she saw Desmond standing outside, she naturally supposed that
+he, too, was absorbed in scanning the signs of the skies. With more
+falling weather the waters would rise anew and postpone, perhaps past
+feasibility for the season, all the plans for the rehabilitation of the
+plantation, and all the possibility of making a crop or even a half crop
+of cotton.
+
+“Don’t you think that it looks less like rain?” she asked, slipping the
+thumb-bolt of the sash of the long French window and joining him at the
+balustrade.
+
+“The rain has gone around this time,” he said. “I am very sure of that.”
+
+It was difficult for him to bring his mind back to the weather signs,
+bent as he was upon the imminent disclosure, canvassing continually its
+best method. He was sensitive in submitting his own conduct for
+scrutiny, and eager for her approval. He was solicitous concerning
+matters of phraseology, knowing how she valued her uncle and cherished
+his age, fearful lest some unconsidered word offend, or, worse still,
+wound her. He was afraid that the disclosure might involve some shock to
+her nerves. He did not know, he could not imagine, what the paper so
+significantly hidden might contain, and how she might condemn his course
+in possessing himself of it. Indeed, she might deem that he had exceeded
+all the bounds of convention, and, declining to look at the paper,
+require him to surrender it to Mr. Stanlett and make confession of his
+unwarranted interference. He stood in silence, his meditative eyes on
+her face so long that she noted his absorption.
+
+“What is it?” she said suddenly. “You look strange, troubled. Surely
+there is nothing more amiss.”
+
+“Let us take a turn along the veranda. I have been waiting for days to
+tell you something.”
+
+She assented in silent suspense, and together they walked along the
+broad, moonlit veranda, the shadows of the trees now and again falling
+athwart it, the sheen on the waters striking across the expanse for
+sixty miles, making a vast roadway of glister to the vague unknown of
+the shimmering distance. Her lustrous dark eyes with the moon in their
+depths were dilated, expectant, her face was ethereally white and
+quietly serious. Her dress was white, of a soft, clinging woolen fabric,
+with a stripe of satin at intervals, that shone itself with a moony
+lustre. The square-cut bodice was filled in with lace that rose and fell
+with the stir of her breath as she waited, intent and a trifle agitated.
+
+Desmond began without preamble. “When I first came to Great Oaks, one of
+the boys, Reginald it was, told me of the step on the stair.”
+
+She laid her hand on his arm, and he felt the quiver in its slim
+fingers.
+
+“I had then heard the step, once,—it was about midnight; and I heard it
+again, twice,—the night of the attack on the house.”
+
+“Oh, oh,—I cannot abide that idea,” she exclaimed, with a quiver of pain
+in her voice. “You never have heard me mention it. I am sure it must be
+some fallacy,—some”—She could not speak for gasping. Then she gathered
+her composure and resumed with dignity: “It is nothing,—it is some
+trick! It is an insult to the memory of the sacred dead. It was never
+pretended to be heard in the lifetime of Mr. Faurie.”
+
+Desmond felt on difficult ground. “I think that no one has ever
+associated his name with the manifestation, though it is very natural
+that you should deprecate that idea. But the step is genuine, for I
+heard it distinctly twice that night; the last time I waited for it to
+approach, and it entered the room, and I saw the presence in the light.”
+
+“Wait,—wait!” she exclaimed, and he paused, for she seemed unable to
+advance a step. The waters lapped about the veranda; the shadows of the
+great trees were weird and strange, falling across the surface of the
+flood flowing in the midst of the grove; the continual melancholy rise
+and fall of the voices of frogs sounded from woodsy tangles in lagoons
+and submerged marshes; the broad lunar lustre quivered on the expanse of
+the gray waters, and the moon rode high,—high in the dark sky.
+
+“Let me tell you,” he urged. “I was standing at the window in the blue
+room—”
+
+“The blue room,” she faltered, as if with some vague memory.
+
+“Yes,—where the wounded man lay. I heard the stealthy step on the stair,
+as I had heard it twice before; a mere slip and then silence, and again
+a suggestion of a footfall, coming and coming up the stair; and I waited
+in the curtained recess of the dormer window,—and the step paused at the
+threshold; the door noiselessly swung ajar,—the step entered,—and it was
+Mr. Stanlett.”
+
+“Mr. Stanlett!” she cried, standing suddenly erect and strong, her
+moonlit face showing a haughty displeasure; “why should you connect him
+with such mummery?”
+
+“Because I had heard the step twice before and recognized it; because as
+I listened to this step it came straight to the door, and, as I say, Mr.
+Stanlett entered; because I identified his aspect with the description
+of an intruder who had silently appeared and disappeared at the door
+earlier in the evening, frightening the wounded man with a vague
+terror.”
+
+“I am ashamed to listen, I am ashamed to question; but if only to have
+done with these mysteries, I will ask what action did you observe Mr.
+Stanlett to take while you lay _perdu_?” As she confronted him a proud
+indignation burned red in her cheeks and her eyes flashed in the
+moonlight.
+
+Desmond took umbrage at her tone. His spirit mounted as he felt that his
+motives were entitled to some consideration on that night of all nights,
+when he had done so much for her and hers at the risk of his life. It
+was in his mind in self-justification to tax her with this, and demand
+the respect for his deeds due to the integrity of his intentions. But
+he, too, was proud. If she could forget her gratitude, he could waive
+its cause. He continued to describe, with a certain constraint in his
+voice, how the old man cautiously advanced to the bedside, and with
+fantastic cocked hat and disguising, muffling cloak watched the sleeping
+man to make sure of his unfeigned unconsciousness. She winced as she
+learned that the swift, skulking step took him straight to the press, in
+which he hid within an interior drawer a scroll of paper.
+
+Desmond was surprised by her next words. “He locked the door of the
+press? I know that it has a key,” she stipulated.
+
+“He _thought_ he locked it; but I saw that the bolt did not go home.”
+
+She had every trait of wild agitation. “Did you not speak to him? Did
+you not warn him?”
+
+“Why should I? Would he not have resented my presence as spying on him?
+when even you resent my disclosure of the fact that you may give the
+matter such weight as it deserves.”
+
+“Resent it?—oh, no! no!” She laid both her cold hands on his as she
+stood looking up into his face. “I resent nothing from you; we all owe
+you too much, far too much! But I am frightened, mortified, uncertain.
+Can’t you see that that paper must be of the first importance to be so
+secreted—setting such a superstition afloat in a simple, domestic
+household—by the frankest, the kindest, the most gentle of men? Don’t
+you connect and interpret now the story of the step?—always heard just
+before we complete our preparations to quit the country, for he carries
+the paper with him,—always heard just when we return, for he brings it
+back and hides it again. And last week, that dark and dreadful evening
+when you say you passed the presence, the step on the stair, he thought
+that we must quit the house and he was doubtless bringing it down. But
+after you had rescued us—never, never imagine that I forget it for one
+moment!—he felt safe again and took it to its hiding-place once more.
+And oh, Edward, how could you—so unthinking, so heedless!— let him leave
+the door ajar believing that he had locked it,—an old man, Edward, a
+very old man,—and make off with the useless key in his simple
+satisfaction while that scoundrel lay on the bed,—oh, I shouldn’t speak
+harshly of the unjudged dead!—and his suspicions had already been
+excited, and perhaps he secured it, only having pretended slumber,—and
+oh, we must see if it is really there still. Say nothing to Uncle
+Clarence; let us go up first to the blue room and see if it is gone; get
+a lamp,—let us go.”
+
+Desmond laid a restraining hand upon her wrist. “It is not there,” he
+said, looking down into her wild, eager, agitated eyes. “I saw the
+danger of leaving it there, and I secured it for safe-keeping until I
+could consign it to your care.”
+
+“And what—what—is it?” she faltered.
+
+“Can you imagine that I would so much as glance at it?” he replied
+sharply. “Stop; here we are at the library. I will give it to you now.”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XV
+
+
+The fire was dully drowsing on the hearth; a lamp on the desk burned
+dimly with the wick turned low. Desmond had a quick, nervous touch as he
+stirred the embers into flames, threw on a fresh stick of wood, and set
+the lamp aglow. His sensibilities, despite his vigor and youth, had felt
+the inroads of all the agitation to which the household had been
+subjected. The renewed cheer of the room dispensed, however, its cordial
+influence. We are at last but animal mechanism, and must needs shiver
+with cold, and burn with heat, and gloom in darkness, and hope in the
+glad light. Everything seemed suddenly more facile of adjustment, more
+possible of optimistic interpretation, and at all events the period of
+suspense was terminated when, seated at the desk, he turned the key in
+the lock of the drawer and wheeled in his swivel-chair, the envelope in
+his hand.
+
+“Here it is, at last,—all safe,” he said, in his firm, clear voice.
+
+Mrs. Faurie, who had sunk down on the end of the sofa, almost collapsing
+in uncertainty and agitation and dubious foreboding, her hands pressed
+to her eyes, roused herself as the room sprang into its wonted cheerful
+guise and lifted her head. She did not immediately take the paper as
+Desmond held it out to her. She adjusted a sofa-pillow under her elbow,
+and set her dainty foot on a hassock on the floor, and piled up the
+supporting cushions,—hesitating, contriving hindrance, postponing the
+evil moment.
+
+“I am afraid of entering upon some hasty action and that I may afterward
+regret my precipitancy,” she temporized.
+
+“I should advise you to be deliberate,” he rejoined. “From what we know
+of the history of this paper, it would not seem to press for action.”
+
+“And yet delay might be prejudicial,” she said, eager when not opposed.
+She held out her hand for it, and then drew back, once more doubtful.
+She had grown calm, and she looked deeply meditative as she leaned
+forward in her soft, clinging white dress from amongst the dull crimson
+silk cushions, her slim, jeweled hand extended, yet not touching the
+paper that he held out to her as he sat near by in the chair before the
+desk. “But have I the right to examine it?” she argued. “It may not
+concern me or mine. Mr. Stanlett has affairs of his own, no doubt, into
+which I am not privileged to intrude.”
+
+“His course has been very eccentric,” said Desmond, tingling with
+impatience to reach a conclusion, yet not willing to urge her decision,
+and weighing considerately her every argument and scruple. “He has
+carried on for years, apparently, a very elaborate and mysterious
+emprise of concealing a document which, if it were his own, might be
+considered safe enough among his valuable papers. His midnight comings
+and goings have given rise, as he knew, to a theory of spectral
+manifestation in the house which might be very injurious to young minds,
+and even, in default of all explanation, to elder people. He went so far
+as to foster this theory by a semi-disguise as a precaution against
+recognition should he be unwarily glimpsed.”
+
+Then they both sat silent while the freshened fire glowed red in the
+room, and the lamp dispensed its steady, white light, and the great
+windows revealed the moon shoaling on the vast stretch of silvery water,
+with the shadows of the trees on its expanse below, and the dendroidal
+forms towering high into the pearl-tinted sky,—all seeming some strange,
+mystic, illuminated tangle of enchanted forest and lake, full of dreams
+and vagaries, of quivering radiance and yearning melancholy, under a
+spell, perpetual, somehow, and far away from to-morrow.
+
+“But I feel as you do,” Desmond recommenced after a moment of
+reflection. “From the first I doubted my right to touch it. Still, it
+has occurred to me that in view of his age and its possible relation to
+his eccentric actions in this matter, and also in view of your position
+as the head of this house in which these practices have come to your
+knowledge, you might justifiably open the package, and glance at its
+contents sufficiently to discern if they concern you. If they do not,
+then I will restore the papers to him and apologize as well as I can for
+my interference.”
+
+“I believe you are right,” she conceded. She took the envelope from his
+hand. Even then she drew back. “The seal!” she exclaimed. “I cannot
+break a seal.”
+
+“That is only my seal,” Desmond explained. “I put it on to protect the
+papers from interference.”
+
+She leaned toward the desk to catch the light on the papers, broke the
+seal, and drew out two inclosures, one a document of length, the other
+evidently a letter.
+
+“It is mine!—mine!” she cried wildly. She gave a gasp, her free hand
+fluttering nervously. “It is my husband’s handwriting,” she whispered in
+a reverent, awed tone, as if consciously in an unseen presence.
+
+Then, as her brilliant eyes scanned the lines, shifting from side to
+side as she read, the color surged up into her cheeks and her lips
+curved in a radiant smile. Suddenly she burst into a flood of tears, her
+words, as she sought to speak, breaking into gusts of happy laughter,
+her brimming eyes looking into his with eagerness to disclose the tenor
+of the papers, yet in her agitation her powers of speech failing,
+inadequate. “It is such happiness,—happiness,—happiness” was all that
+she could say.
+
+Once more she strove to read, but her voice broke and trailed off into a
+sob that was yet like a gurgle of laughter. “Read it,”—she handed it to
+him. “Read the letter—I’d rather have it than all the diamonds of
+Golconda!”
+
+As Desmond straightened the pages, he saw that it was addressed to a
+lawyer of Memphis, whom he knew to be the executor of the will of the
+late Mr. Faurie, and in fact this letter related to that instrument. He
+desired to alter certain dispositions of this will, the writer said,
+although mailed so recently as by the last packet, and he stated that he
+had set forth these changes in a paper that he inclosed, duly signed and
+witnessed, and which he pronounced a codicil to his last will and
+testament.
+
+“It is, I doubt not, a poor performance,” he wrote, “in comparison with
+the admirable instrument that you drew with such care and skill; but it
+will hold, and I cannot hope to have a lawyer to come to Great Oaks in
+time to take my instructions for the codicil, for I fear that my days
+are at an end indeed.” The writer went on to explain that he had grown
+dissatisfied with the provision which he had directed to be made in the
+will for his wife. He had desired that she should enjoy as large an
+income as practicable, and that she should not be burdened with the
+management of real estate other than her home place, unless she should
+herself elect to make such investments with the surplusage of her
+income. Hence he had thought best not to assign to her the usual one
+third life-interest in his property, but an annuity of thirty thousand
+dollars during widowhood, which was a larger income than her statute
+right to dower in Tennessee could justify, and chargeable upon the whole
+estate, and he had given her also, subject to the same restrictions, his
+plantation, Great Oaks, the annual yield from which necessarily
+fluctuated according to the season. Under these circumstances, the
+interest of the three sons in the rest of the property was to remain
+undivided during minority, that the estate could be nursed to better
+advantage. It was to be partitioned, or sold for division, when the
+youngest became twenty-one years of age, the elder two, however, to
+receive a certain sum of money upon attaining majority, for the purchase
+of business interests, that they might not pass in inaction the years of
+waiting for the division of the whole and the possession of their
+respective shares.
+
+“So thoughtful,” murmured Mrs. Faurie.
+
+It had seemed to him, the writer stated, that the three sons would be
+rich enough when they came severally to their majority, and could well
+spare the aggregations of such portion of the income of the estate as he
+had assigned to the use of their mother, over and above her rightful
+share, in order that she might have no reasonable wish ungratified.
+
+“Oh, to be thinking of that in those awful last days!” she interpolated,
+her flush fluctuating, and once more bursting into tears.
+
+“I should like her to travel, for this she enjoys,” the letter
+continued. “I should like her to see the world, and that others might
+have the privilege and benefaction of seeing her, as I could wish that
+no one should be beyond the reach of the sunshine. And with all this in
+view I directed you, as you know, to draw the will as it stands.”
+
+Forthwith he entered upon a systematic defense of his motives and views
+in the corollaries necessitated by these provisions embodied in the
+instrument. While he had no crude jealousy, he protested, and would not
+seek to curb his widow’s independence in making a second marriage, he
+was not willing that the extra income allotted to her should go into the
+control of a stranger at the expense of the estates of his sons. It was
+one thing, he argued, to restrict the wealth of his sons for their
+mother’s benefit. It was quite another thing to take from them to enrich
+a stranger, who might or might not be of mercenary motives, of
+ungenerous temper, or of undue domestic ascendency, and who might or
+might not permit her the free use of what was her own. Then, too, the
+subjection of the estates of the sons to the charge of her income under
+the circumstances of a second marriage was of discordant suggestion;
+possibly, in the unforeseen mutations of human affairs, even subversive
+of their independence, and inimical to family peace. Therefore he had
+had the clause inserted revoking the allotment of her income should she
+marry again, and substituting as her provision one fourth of the
+Mississippi property in fee, and a life-interest in one third of the
+Tennessee realty including, in lieu of Great Oaks, his town residence in
+the city of Nashville, the rest of the estate in that event to be sold
+for division, that the portion of each devisee might be ascertained and
+set apart.
+
+These were his reasons for such disposition as he had made of his
+property. Now, however, since he had executed and forwarded the will to
+his executor, he had begun to fear that this matrimonial clause would be
+misunderstood by Mrs. Faurie, whose feeling for him it might possibly
+affect, all unexplained as it was.
+
+“But never!—never!” she sobbed. “I always realized that you were
+actuated by the best motives for what you deemed the welfare of all
+concerned. But I am so happy to know _why_ you did it!”
+
+Desmond paused, a strange thrill at his heart as he gazed at her. She
+might have been some young girl in the childlike abandonment to her
+tears, as she leaned on the arm of the sofa, her long white dress
+a-trail on the dark carpet, her scarlet cheek against her upheld bare
+white arm, her lovely hands clasped above her drooping head. Desmond’s
+voice was strained, husky, with sudden breaks as he read on.
+
+Upon further reflection, the writer stated, the provisions he had made
+in the will for Mrs. Faurie in the event of a second marriage had become
+obnoxious to him. He had accorded her merely the equivalent of her dower
+rights, such as the law would allow her were he to die intestate, or
+were she to dissent from the will. In effect, he seemed to make a point
+of giving her nothing in the contemplated contingency that he could
+avoid giving. He had not intended thus to interdict a second marriage,
+and her right to order her life after her widowhood as she chose,
+according to her most excellent judgment.
+
+“Oh,” cried Mrs. Faurie, with a little irrelevant laugh, not for
+Desmond, but as if she rallied the writer with the extravagance of his
+approval.
+
+Therefore, the testator declared, he had revoked in set terms both the
+dispositions of a life-interest in the real estate in reference to a
+second marriage, and the imposition of a charge for her benefit upon the
+realty of the whole estate during widowhood. Instead, he had thought
+best to devise to her absolutely one fourth of the real estate in fee,
+inclusive of Great Oaks, which he considered particularly desirable
+because of its income-bearing values, the other three fourths to be
+equally divided between his three sons.
+
+He added some words setting forth arrangements for the guidance of the
+executor in regard to disbursements for maintenance, emergencies, and
+education of the minors, pending an interval which he evidently
+anticipated would endure for a considerable time, before the estate
+could be fairly administered. This depended upon the conclusion of a
+certain litigation involving some conditional increments, then in
+abeyance. When a decision should be reached, and these assets realized
+upon, he directed that the whole estate should be partitioned; and in
+order that the several shares might be justly ascertained, the portion
+of each of the minors should be chargeable with such expenditures as had
+been made for him during the interim, and the portion of the widow
+should be chargeable with such sums as she had received from the funds
+of the estate; but she should not be obliged to put also into the common
+stock for division the profits from any investments that she had made,
+or accretions of value, of whatever sort, that had accrued from means
+derived from the estate.
+
+Desmond stared blankly at the paper for a few moments after he had
+concluded the reading of the letter. “Did the executor win the suit to
+which he refers?”
+
+“Oh, yes,—in the infinitely leisurely legal fashion. It would go up to
+the Supreme Court and be remanded on a certain point, and then it would
+go up on another and come down as before. It was a sort of legal
+shuttlecock. I was amazed when I heard that the lawyers were through
+playing with it.”
+
+Desmond could not control the cadence of depression in his voice. “How
+long ago was it decided?” he asked, hoping against hope.
+
+“A little more than a year, I believe.”
+
+Evidently, the lapse of time could not be a potential factor in the
+impending future. The contingent event on which the partitioning was
+conditioned by the codicil had just fallen out, and the rest of the
+estate, save for the aggregations of income and the depletion of
+expenditures, was much as the testator had left it, for the executor had
+no general powers of sale. Desmond could see no reason why this codicil
+should not be admitted to probate and at once subvert the existing
+status. Technically, it was itself a part of the will already in force,
+though its provisions were _pro tanto_ a revocation of the previous
+testamentary disposition. The indeterminate interval after probate in
+common form allowed in Tennessee, where the bulk of the property was
+situated, for the institution of revocatory proceedings; the disability
+of non-age in the minors, to whom laches could hardly be imputed; the
+fact that it was manifestly impossible for their guardian to take any
+action in view of the unsuspected existence of the codicil of which the
+executor was the proper proponent, would seem to annul all obstacles to
+its effectiveness, despite any complications with which the conflict of
+laws in the two sovereign states might otherwise invest the situation,
+the statutes of each of course controlling the realty within their
+respective borders.
+
+There was silence for a time. Both looked out from the mellow light of
+the room through the windows on that pale scape of moonlit mist and
+water and mystic woods, all in pearly neutral tones, soft, sheeny,
+white, like some dream scene, full of weird suggestions and dim
+spectacular configurations. Now there was a floating island, distant,
+half descried; now a flying, gauzy, vaporous figure, with feet touching
+the surface of the water, and hands laid against the star-studded gates
+of the sky; now a phantom craft under full sail, with clouds of tenuous
+canvas and streaming pennants of mist. She saw naught, busied with her
+memories; and he, strangely grudging, sought for words to snatch her
+from them.
+
+“You must look at the codicil,” he said, holding the document out toward
+her.
+
+“I don’t care for that—heavens, how I love that letter!” and once more
+she burst into tears. She rose after a moment to reach for it, and then
+she read it anew, with sudden gurgles of tender laughter and sobs and
+gushes of tears.
+
+“I suppose that this codicil will, to this extent, revoke the provisions
+of the will that has stood all this time,” he said. He was no lawyer,
+but he had a definite understanding of the ways of the business world
+and the justice of its methods. A very appalling possibility began to
+open before him. He leaned forward and turned the upper corner of the
+pages of the letter, still in her hands, to look once more at the date,
+written evidently only the day before the testator’s death.
+
+“It has been a good many years,” he said, in dismal forecast.
+
+“Oh, forever!” she exclaimed, the tears coursing down her cheeks.
+
+He had begun to understand the quandary of the poor ghost, slipping
+slyly about the midnight quiet of the house to conceal this bit of
+paper, potent destroyer of its peace. He doubted the policy of putting
+into words the fear in his mind. But he must have her attention. He
+clutched at her thoughts with imperative insistence. Those memories,
+those gentle, tender memories in which he had no share,—how desolate,
+how deserted they left him! His jealous reproach was in his eyes, all
+unnoted. His indignation burned red in his cheek. A figment, a
+recollection, pervaded the room and annulled his presence. But he would
+not be ignored, forgotten, denied. He grasped at her attention as a
+child clutches the skirts of its unthinking mother, and persists in its
+plea.
+
+“In this division the executor may make a claim on you for the income
+that you have spent. It strikes me that this will operate as the
+equivalent of a refunding bond.”
+
+“Let them take everything. I have this letter!” and she clasped it to
+her bosom.
+
+He had a sense of turning aside. He could not move her. He opened the
+codicil himself and scanned its contents. It duplicated the intendment
+of the letter, but in more formal and lucid phrase. A very exact and
+strict man of business Mr. Faurie showed himself to be in this paper.
+Desmond was impressed with this fact, yet dismayed in a sort, in regard
+to the accuracy of the accounting which the testator contemplated
+between the minors and widow at the partitioning of his estate. He even
+superfluously directed that the difference of age among the children
+should be considered and the actual outlay for each charged, and not
+merely an approximation of expense as applied to each of them; since the
+expenditure for the youngest might for a time be more, in view of extra
+attendance, elaborate attire, and special liability to ailments, and
+later less than the disbursements for the elder boys. Desmond might have
+laughed, yet he could have wept, that the testator, despite his evident
+astuteness, should have permitted himself the simplicity of anticipating
+that Mrs. Faurie would have applied any portion of her receipts from the
+estate to investments of real property or the acquisition of other
+assets that would yield “accretions of value.” As well might one expect
+the sun to hoard its gold or the bird its song of spring. No! nearly
+seven years of joyous, open-handed dispensing of all her income from the
+estate were thus chargeable against the one fourth in fee of realty and
+of the personalty that formed her liberal portion. How much this might
+be, Desmond of course was not qualified to judge; but the ravages in
+this provision which the restoration of that great income for nearly
+seven years must needs work might well appall the pallid Mr. Stanlett in
+his niece’s interest, and set as talk the storied spectre, the
+Slip-Slinksy of the midnight stairs.
+
+“Mr. Stanlett must have found this paper in some unaccustomed
+receptacle,” Desmond hazarded.
+
+Mrs. Faurie sat stiffly erect. This phase troubled her more than the
+fear of the financial loss; it touched her pride. Her level eyebrows
+were corrugated into a frown. Her eyes were bright, hard, restlessly
+glancing. But she bent her faculties to the consideration calmly.
+“Perhaps,” she said thoughtfully, but her lips were stiff; they moved
+with difficulty to frame the words so distasteful to her. “It was
+understood that all Mr. Faurie’s important papers were already in the
+hands of his executor. He, himself, had them transferred some time
+before his death,—it was not unexpected.”
+
+She was silent for a few moments, looking reflectively out of the
+window. “I remember that the rest of the papers, account-books, packages
+of letters, files, and all such things were taken out of the library
+soon after Mr. Faurie’s death and, without examination, placed in
+japanned boxes and locked in the press of the blue room. It was presumed
+that there was nothing of real importance among them, but they were
+preserved on the chance. He must have written this codicil and letter
+the day before his death,—both are dated on the 18th,—and had the paper
+witnessed and laid it aside among the other papers in his desk,
+intending to forward it to Mr. Hartagous in Memphis. The mail packet was
+due the next day, and passed about dusk; he died just before
+candle-light that evening, and I dare say this paper was among those in
+his desk that were packed away in the press of the blue room.”
+
+“I suppose that this codicil must have been found some years afterward,”
+Desmond dolefully suggested. “Mr. Stanlett seems to me to be a man of
+good business judgment. He would never have desired to conceal this
+paper if a great part of those liabilities had not been already
+incurred. Of course he had only your interest in view. He has sufficient
+means of his own. It is nothing to him.” She brought herself more
+willingly to follow his line of thought, since she perceived
+justification, in some poor sort, in the perspective, for Mr. Stanlett’s
+aberrations.
+
+“I remember,” she said drawlingly, as if the recollection had just begun
+to trail its dubious length into her mind, “that about three years ago
+the executor called for some old levee bonds, on which the estate was
+entitled to something, and asked that the papers here be searched for
+them.”
+
+“Who made this search,—do you recollect?”
+
+She visibly winced from the inquiry, but she answered with her usual
+directness: “I recollect very well that it was Uncle Clarence who made
+the search; and now that it seems to bear upon the question, I do recall
+that he was much out of sorts afterward. I remember that his petulance
+astonished me. He was never a profane man, but he swore violently
+because the executor had given him so much trouble, and declared that if
+he had wanted to be set to a clerk’s work, he would have asked for a
+clerk’s pay. And he said that the papers were disordered and dusty and
+devilish, and that he had broken himself down in working amongst them. I
+was a little hurt by the tone he was taking; and when I said that I was
+sorry he had put himself out to do a favor for me, he replied very
+significantly, ‘A favor,—for you, Honoria,—for _you_? Why, I would eat
+off my little finger for _you_.’ And oh, poor old Uncle Clarence! We
+must keep him from ever suspecting that we have discovered his course.
+It would humiliate him; it would bow him down to the earth with
+mortification.”
+
+Desmond looked dumfounded. “I don’t see how we can prevent it. This
+codicil must be produced, and at once.”
+
+“Of course; but will it be necessary to publish all the details, his
+fantastic masquerades and midnight vigils to protect its concealment?”
+she argued.
+
+“His course has been very strange, certainly.” Then, after a pause, “In
+fact, I am confident that concealing a document of this sort, a will or
+codicil, to prevent it from being proved and becoming operative, is
+obnoxious to the law,—a very serious matter,” said Desmond, nerving
+himself for her storm of protest.
+
+“He has not prevented it from becoming operative,” she retorted
+frostily. “The codicil is discovered and will be sent to-morrow to the
+executor, who will at once secure the two subscribing witnesses,—the
+same who swore to the will in force,—both still living, and will offer
+the codicil for probate. I will have to return the money that I have
+spent out of the different provision now made for me. I see no sense in
+telling our little yarn of Slip-Slinksy, and blue room, and secret
+drawers, for all the world to guy and laugh at, and mortify poor old
+Uncle Clarence to the soul. Oh, poor, poor Uncle Clarence,—how his
+discovery of the codicil must have tortured him! What must he have felt
+for me! It must have turned his brain,—it must have crazed him. That is
+the explanation of his course,—that is the solution of the mystery.”
+
+Desmond did not conceive it necessary to contend on this theory. At
+first glimpse it seemed to him a remarkably coherent scheme for a
+disordered brain to evolve, and one which only a strange accident had
+frustrated. Mr. Stanlett, however, was very old, and it may have been
+that at first he had withheld the paper in the frantic, senile, foolish
+expectation that another will might be found, not so destructive to his
+niece’s interest as this codicil, which, by reason of the time that had
+elapsed in her enjoyment of the estate that was not hers by right, had
+practically beggared her. Doubtless he had postponed the disclosure from
+day to day, the disaster augmented by his delay, till perchance the
+pressure on his brain had resulted in subverting his reason. He had
+always intended to bring it forth, some day,—some day,—for he had
+carefully preserved it at great cost of anxiety and suspense and
+comfort, when its easy destruction would have given him security, and
+confirmed the existing status which was so happy for all concerned.
+
+Realizing as Desmond did the magnitude of the disaster, that the
+interests of the widow so tenderly, so richly provided for, had been
+wrecked by the extreme of the solicitude exerted for her welfare, he was
+utterly unprepared for the airy lightness and consummate tact with which
+Mrs. Faurie made the disclosure without revealing the discovery of the
+concealment of the codicil.
+
+She came fluttering into the parlor the next morning when were present
+all the family, Mr. Bainbridge, the manager, and Colonel Kentopp, who
+had been out in a skiff to a passing packet and had paused on his way
+back to Dryad-Dene to leave some newspapers. “What do you suppose?” she
+cried. “I can tell you news more astonishing to our neighborhood than
+anything you are likely to hear from the outside world. You know that of
+course we had the blue room upstairs, where that wounded river pirate
+died, thoroughly overhauled, and in one of the big presses in the wall
+Mr. Desmond found a secret drawer, and in it a later will of Mr.
+Faurie’s,—are you not surprised?—a codicil it is, I should have said.”
+
+Mr. Stanlett stared for a moment blankly, rose to his feet, essayed to
+speak, and sank back very pale and entirely unobserved amidst the
+excitement of the others.
+
+“Regularly executed?” Colonel Kentopp inquired, amazed.
+
+“A codicil all in his own handwriting,” said Mrs. Faurie, “perfectly
+regular, with the same witnesses as the will.”
+
+“To your advantage, I hope,” said Colonel Kentopp, his glossy hazel-nut
+eyes glittering, his eager curiosity difficult to control.
+
+“Oh, I am perfectly satisfied,” Mrs. Faurie declared, smiling proudly;
+and Colonel Kentopp knew as well as if he had seen the instrument that
+Mrs. Faurie had been relegated to a designated share of the real estate,
+out of which she would be required to make good her lavish expenditures
+heretofore. He was not indisposed to rejoice after the manner of men of
+his kind in the disasters of others, but presently his spirits fell.
+This change boded doubtless the partitioning of the Faurie property, and
+with Great Oaks on the market, he knew that there was scant hope of
+Loring as a purchaser of Dryad-Dene. So ill at ease was he under this
+theory, so suddenly out of countenance, that he sought to avoid
+observation, and made haste to conclude his call and get himself away.
+
+He was promptly followed by Bainbridge, dully pondering on the news,
+half stunned by the revelation, and apprehensive of a change in the
+ownership of Great Oaks and the jeopardy of his own employment there.
+
+Desmond breathed more freely when both were gone; he felt that he could
+not have summoned the nerve that Mrs. Faurie had shown in risking the
+disclosure in the presence of others, although he realized that, had Mr.
+Stanlett spoken inconsiderately, it would have been ascribed to the
+vagaries of age and his natural and extreme disappointment,—in effect,
+the overthrow of his reason in so signal a misfortune to his nearest and
+dearest relative, who had always been like a duteous daughter to him.
+Nevertheless, Desmond was glad that surprise and dismay had held the old
+gentleman silent till only the family group was present. In the
+disclosure Mrs. Faurie had stated the literal truth, that Desmond had
+found the codicil in a secret drawer, and Mr. Stanlett accepted it
+without demur or suspicion of the further discovery of his knowledge of
+the cache, or agency and motive in its concealment.
+
+“But why, and how, and when, in the name of all that is sacred sir,” the
+old man said, scarlet, trembling, his eyes blazing, and scarcely able to
+keep his feet, “should _you_ go rummaging around into the secret drawers
+of a locked press?”
+
+“The press was not locked,” Desmond said, without looking up, and
+trifling with the violets in a glass bowl in the centre of the table
+beside which he sat. “The bolt did not reach the slot.”
+
+“And why did you send it off without consulting me, Honoria? Another
+will might yet be found. I have searched and searched. Another will and
+a later one is now right among those papers in the blue room. Oh, how
+many nights, how many nights I have searched!”
+
+“Dear Uncle Clarence, the codicil was written and dated and witnessed on
+the 18th, and my husband died the night of the 19th.”
+
+“Plenty of time for another will,—Faurie was a most expeditious man of
+business. He was not bedridden, as you know. He even slept in his chair
+toward the last, as you must remember. That heart trouble would not let
+him lie down in peace—queer, for a man of his physical strength. He died
+at last in his chair, in that library. Plenty of time for another will;
+it could be found! This Mr. Desmond seems to have a nose for game; set
+him after another will, and see what he can tree this time.”
+
+Mrs. Faurie broke in to prevent the old man from indulging in further
+sarcasm along this line. “And oh, Uncle Clarence, such a dear letter was
+with the document! I want Reginald and Horace and Rufus, each one, to
+read that letter, and bless God for a father so good and generous and
+considerate for us all.”
+
+As they sat and listened they had that look so pathetic in children old
+enough to appreciate their situation in matters of moment, yet realizing
+their helplessness in the hands of others, and not able to compass a
+full reliance on the direction of the course of events.
+
+“Do you understand, Honoria, that you will have to refund to the
+executor, the estate, the expenditures of all these years, the
+accumulated amount of the income, your annuity,—the money that you have
+been spending so royally with both hands for nearly seven years? It will
+certainly sweep away more than half your present provision, possibly the
+whole, into the craws of those vipers that you have warmed on your
+hearth.” The old man was piteous in his age and agitation, as he stood,
+lean, gray, wrinkled, half bent in his tremulous emphasis, his arm
+outstretched, the fingers quivering as he shook them at the group of
+aghast boys. “Do you understand that, woman?”
+
+“Why, what else, Uncle Clarence? Would you have me rob my children?” She
+had reached out for Chub when he was denominated a viper with a craw,
+and was now drawing him into that juxtaposition so unbecoming to his
+appearance, his fledgeling blond head on her bosom, his hard, round,
+freckled red cheek against the soft, exquisite whiteness of her neck. He
+struggled to speak through her tender kisses.
+
+“You will oblige me, Uncle Clarence, by not calling my mother a woman,”
+he said, in callow affront.
+
+“What else is she?—and a most ill-used, unlucky, and poverty-stricken
+woman.”
+
+“She is as ’spectable as any man!” protested Chub; and while the other
+two boys burst out laughing as usual at Chubby’s queer views, they were
+all three in tears presently, horrified that their mother should be
+impoverished to make restitution to them, and that they were powerless
+to hinder the sacrifice.
+
+“Oh, terrible! terrible!” the old man said as he strode to and fro
+before the fire, literally wringing his hands. “It is the duty of the
+executor to exact every mill, and he will do it. The executor has no
+option whatever in the matter. He is constrained by the terms of the
+codicil.”
+
+Then he fell to crying again and again, “Oh, terrible! terrible!” and
+wringing his hands as he wavered to and fro with his uncertain, senile
+step.
+
+“Uncle Clarence, why will you not set an example of composure and
+courage in adversity to these boys? The event must have fallen out this
+way, at any rate.”
+
+“Why?”—he had paused abruptly. “Why, Honoria, why? If the codicil had
+not been found, you would not have had to refund under any
+circumstances.”
+
+“I only meant that this codicil must have come to light sooner or
+later,” she explained.
+
+But he went on unheeding: “Did you intend to give up the income for a
+life-interest in the third, under the provisions of the old will? Are
+you going to marry this man Desmond?”
+
+Mrs. Faurie sat still and amazed for a moment. Then her buoyant laughter
+rang joyously through the room. “Marry?—a mere boy, like Edward? Uncle
+Clarence, you are funny,—positively funny!”
+
+“He is no boy,—he is as old as the almighty hills! And if you have not
+thought of such a possibility, _he has_,—take my word for it, _he has_.
+He has a keen eye for the main chance. He found the codicil, and now you
+have to give up the income whether or no. But he had better not be in
+too great a hurry for the fourth of the estate. Wait till you make good
+these expenditures. He hasn’t seen you spend money as I have done. Wait
+till you make good your refunding bond, for that is just what this
+amounts to.”
+
+Desmond felt the flush rising to his forehead. His heart was beating
+furiously. In his agitation he had upset the bowl of violets and the
+blossoms were scattered over the table, while the water in which they
+were steeped began to drip slowly, slowly to the floor. He did not lift
+his eyes, not even when Mrs. Faurie spoke in apology.
+
+“I cannot express to him how grateful I am for his forbearance under
+these insults,” she said gravely. “And, Uncle Clarence, you would never
+subject him to them and so tax his generosity were you yourself
+to-day—so scrupulous as you are in every relation in life,—so—”
+
+“_Too_ scrupulous! _Too_ scrupulous! Scrupulous enough to be such a
+stupendous fool as not to tear a bit of paper when I had my chance,
+and save you a gigantic fortune, as fortunes go in this
+country,—ah,—ah,—when I had my chance!”
+
+He tottered out of the room, banging the door, the three boys staring in
+dismay after the lurching figure with the feeble impetuousness of gait,
+and listening to the mutter of his impotent wrath as he went stumbling
+and cursing down the hall.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVI
+
+
+Desmond had never experienced such dejection as now overwhelmed his
+spirits. He could not rally from it. He could not understand it. He had
+recovered from the strain of the physical fatigue, even from the stress
+of excitement. He had permitted little interruption to his pedagogic
+duties, and the routine of the schoolroom continued in force as regular
+as if no river pirates had ever assailed the house, and died in the
+commission of the intended robbery; as if no coroner’s jury had ever
+grimly deliberated on the veranda; as if no codicil of the will had ever
+been found to reverse all the orderly status with a presage of future
+financial chaos.
+
+“We will take care of to-day,” Desmond had said to his restive,
+unsettled, agitated pupils, “and to-morrow will take care of itself.”
+
+They were docile under his admonition, but he could not so easily press
+its sage philosophy upon himself. Now and again he struggled with this
+gloom when he was sufficiently at leisure to cope with it. He had been
+fortunate beyond any reasonable expectation, considering his status, he
+argued. In lieu of the position of a tolerated necessity in the house, a
+tutor to boys remote from schools, he had been treated first with
+respect and courtesy, then as a valued guest, made as one of the family,
+and now as the predominant controlling element, from whose decree there
+was no appeal. More and more did Mr. Bainbridge, with his papers, and a
+furtive eye, and a deprecating hand laid over his mouth, as if resolved
+to keep his conjectures from going further than his mustache, come
+directly to Desmond, to take his advice, as he said, in fact to secure
+the annulment of some impracticable order, or to obviate unwise
+dispositions of Mrs. Faurie’s in the readjustment of the wrecked
+plantation interests. He did not directly bespeak Desmond’s influence.
+He only showed the papers and set forth the facts, coughed discreetly
+behind his hand, and if securing Desmond’s promise to place the matter
+before Mrs. Faurie, would set forth confident and alert, acting on the
+rescission of the order as if it were received; for whatever Mr. Desmond
+undertook at Great Oaks Plantation was regarded as _un fait accompli_.
+The attitude of the servants toward him for some time past was
+compounded of a deep respect and some real liking, influencing swift
+feet and dexterous hands and willing smiles in his service. “He is a
+man, shore!” was the general comment. His pupils first obeyed, then
+esteemed, and now adored him, using their utmost diligence to win the
+meed of his approval. Even they, he thought, noted his gloom, which he
+could not disguise, and which rested upon his aspect as definitely as a
+pall. He lost his readiness to sleep, which, since he had become content
+in a measure with his lot, he had recovered—in his youthful health and
+vitality. Long, long after the house was lapsed in slumber, he would
+linger in a reclining-chair at his window, the candle burning down to
+the socket, his fingers in the pages of an unread book, looking out
+dully at the lustrous scene, now grown so familiar, of the expanse of
+gray, shimmering water under the white moon and the faint stars, while
+all the room about him dulled to indiscriminate gloom and the hours wore
+on and on toward dawn.
+
+What was this obsession? he sometimes angrily asked himself. Why should
+he wince in poignant pain at the very thought of the tender music in
+Honoria Faurie’s voice as she sobbed amidst joy and laughed amidst
+sorrow, in the blended ecstasy and woe in reading her husband’s letter,
+so replete with his love and thought for her? Was he jealous of the dead
+man—dead these seven long years!—the dead man he had never seen? And how
+did her tears and smiles concern him,—whom she deemed but a boy,—at whom
+she looked with such sweet, maternal eyes? Sometimes he felt that he was
+losing his reason. Why should this evidence of her love for the dead man
+who had been her husband set an exquisite pain a-quiver in his every
+fibre? Had he thought she had forgotten—that were not to her credit. Did
+he fear that if the dead still lived so in her heart there was no place
+in her affections for him? And why had he ever hoped this? And when,
+indeed, had he first thought of it? There had grown up in his mind so
+gradually from admiration of her beauty, from approval of her
+standpoint, from confidence in her principles, from interest in the
+disclosures of her charming mind, an absolute adoration so complete, so
+possessive, that he was hardly aware of it until it absorbed him wholly.
+He had no more identity of his own. He existed only in relation to her.
+The fact became apparent to him as he reviewed the last few months. He
+had come here penniless, as a tutor to teach her sons, mere children, to
+do designated work; he had stipulated and stood stoutly on these limits,
+defining exactly what were to be his duties, that he might not be called
+upon to exceed them, to become an overworked, underpaid drudge, with
+such expenditure of vitality that he might be unable to rise to higher
+things.
+
+He recurred no more to these limitations. He controlled the boys in
+school and out, laying commands upon them with paternal freedom,
+restricting dangerous amusements, interdicting prejudicial reading,
+requiring salutary exercise, cutting off amusing associates sometimes,
+for no better reason than that their conversation tended to impair the
+grammar and parlor manners of his youthful charges,—all of which was out
+of his contract and beyond the bailiwick of his authority.
+
+He had been inducted into even more exacting occupations. He had become
+the referee in all matters of dispute about the place, which required
+some nicety of discrimination; he was often put into a position of
+extreme doubt and embarrassment in deciding the small property interests
+between servants or the plantation hands, who had agreed together to
+abide by his decision, thus exerting, indeed, the functions of justice.
+Mrs. Faurie consulted him in business correspondence. He had been led,
+by the turn of events, to risk his life in defense of the mansion and to
+hold it out in a state of siege. He had kept up the good cheer by his
+genial arts, and preserved the calmness of all in the house that
+dreadful night when, but for his stanch composure and his resources of
+management, they might have fallen victims to causeless fright and
+ghastly horror in their isolation, and become the wreck of their own
+nerves in lieu of passing the ordeal with no result but the confirmation
+of their powers and their confidence in themselves. It was he who had
+conferred with the county officials by letter and in person when they
+came to the house. Mrs. Faurie and the younger boys had been spared the
+ghastly details of the inquest through his representations to the
+coroner, and were busied in a rear room opening some boxes of potted
+plants for the approaching summer decoration of the veranda, which had
+been shipped by the packet opportunely passing on this morning, and
+which he contrived should be brought off in a skiff simultaneously to
+the house; thus they were not aware of the event in progress till the
+inquisition was concluded. His own testimony, that of Reginald and Mr.
+Stanlett, the confessions of the wounded man, who died later the same
+day, the corroborative details of the servants as to the subsequent
+events, were deemed ample evidence, and the verdict of the jury was in
+accordance with the facts.
+
+He had solved the mystery of the spectral manifestations that had
+terrorized the house for years; he had secured the cache from its
+possible wresting away by vandal hands; he was her confidant and
+counselor in all the troublous forecast of the complications to ensue
+upon the propounding of the codicil.
+
+Surely these were the services of no hireling. They were the cheerful
+tribute of love that found danger dear for her behoof, and toil light,
+and the tangles of perplexity easy of unraveling since she might elude
+their intricacies, and responsibility a broadening of the shoulders, and
+his day all too short for its devotion to her interests.
+
+And to her—he seemed but a boy! a mere springald out of college, glad to
+teach for a time,—to repeat his own lessons recently conned as a
+stepping-stone to a man’s devoir.
+
+And yet—he looked at the long lane of light, the mystic avenue of the
+moon on the water in the glade between the lines of inundated trees.
+What alluring dreams, what soft deceits were coming to him along that
+roadway of shimmering pearl,—coming to him from the moon, the home of
+fantasies, to which it stretched at the limits of the perspective. Did
+she know her own heart? She had no mind but his. She adopted his views,
+and deferred her preferences, and abated her prejudices. He had no need
+to care for his dignity; she was quicker than he to resent aught that
+seemed to touch upon it. The whole house, the whole plantation, was
+relegated to his control. She seemed in a hundred ways to ask his
+permission,—might she do this? might the boys have that? She said that
+day,—that dreadful day,—when he and Reginald held her in their arms
+between them, that she had longed for him, that she had prayed for him.
+How strange that the bell, which had never rung through all the gloomy
+day, sounded her signal for him so far away! How was it that his ears
+quickened to a peal that had never vibrated,—that her wishes, her
+prayers, drew him from far, through sloughs and slashes, through bayous
+and lakes, to her side at her utmost, her extremest peril! And why for
+him had she prayed! She knew that the time set for his return was yet
+two days distant. The manager was overdue, however, and momently
+expected. She had not contemplated the coming of Mr. Bainbridge, a
+stalwart fellow and eminently capable of coping with these familiar
+conditions. She had not thought that a steamboat might chance to pass
+and discern and respond to a signal of distress. She had longed for
+Desmond—for _him_, as the protecting ægis in all her frenzied terror.
+And love—mysterious love—had clamored at his ears, annulled the
+distance, shaken the fogs, penetrated the rains, defied, set at naught
+plain fact, and sounded her summons, her wish, her frantic hope, till he
+needs must have heed and respond. It was strange, the accord between
+them. Surely, surely she did not translate aright the tenor of her own
+emotions.
+
+Suddenly he noticed that the mystic illuminated avenue of pearly,
+shimmering waters between the giant oaks was dulling: a sort of gloating
+glister grew golden upon it; vague yearnings were in the air; unseen
+beings descended continually, their presence demonstrated only by the
+sense of motion. A wind from out the moon ruffled the surface into
+thousands of tiny wavelets, like twinkling feet half discerned.
+Fancies!—fancies hastening down, lest dawn come too soon, cut off
+communication with the ideal, and leave the poor world the prey, the
+possession of the prosaic. For, indeed, the light was fading to a
+glimmering steel, and now to an unillumined gray, and as he rose at last
+to seek an hour’s repose before the household should rouse for the day,
+he realized that with his griefs and anxieties, his fears and his waking
+dreams, he had worn the night away.
+
+He did not mistake the character of his emotions—they were strictly
+paternal!—when it developed in the next few days that Reginald, of his
+own motion, had written, unknown to all but his brothers, a letter to
+the executor of the will, Mr. Hartagous, a lawyer of Memphis. The others
+had signed it, and thus unified the solemn requirement that in the
+execution of the newly discovered codicil he should make no demands upon
+their mother for the return to the estate of the funds that she had
+spent under the provisions of the will as hitherto in force, and now to
+be charged against her portion. It seemed that they had at first
+appealed to their guardian, Mr. Keith, who had declined the discussion
+by stating that the distribution of the property was wholly in the hands
+of the executor. Therefore they called the attention of Mr. Hartagous to
+the fact that they were the owners of the estate in his hands, and
+claimed that they had a right to waive this demand upon their mother,
+against which they protested, and to impose upon him their command. It
+would be contrary to the wishes of the testator, their father, they
+argued, to impoverish for a legal quibble the widow and mother; and even
+if they should restore to her—as they were fully resolved to do, as soon
+as the eldest came of age—anything that was taken from her, that was a
+distant date, and she would spend the best years of her life in poverty,
+restricted and deprived of the comfort and luxury to which she was
+accustomed. If the executor should persist in enforcing the codicil, the
+letter sternly concluded, it would be their resolve to seek to visit
+their wrath upon him, as his evil deed merited.
+
+This truculent epistle came back to Great Oaks inclosed in a letter from
+Mr. Hartagous to Mrs. Faurie. Their sentiments did them honor, he
+declared, overlooking the puerile violence of their menace, and this
+heralded the coming of Mr. Hartagous to Great Oaks for a conference in
+the changed state of things.
+
+The Faurie boys were somewhat startled to see their valiant
+demonstration in the hands of their mother, who kissed and hugged and
+wept over them till they, too, shed tears as they clung together.
+
+“But will he, mamma, will he make you pay us all that money?” asked
+Reginald, leaning over the back of her chair and gripping hard the hand
+that she held up to him.
+
+“Oh, what a pity we are all so young,” plained Horace,—“so many years
+before we can give it back.” He knelt by her side and sobbed against her
+shoulder.
+
+Chubby sunk from her lap to the floor and clung to her, hugging her
+knees. “Oh, mamma, will you be poor till I am a man? Oh, I will work for
+you, mamma. I will—I will—I will dig in the garden.”
+
+Reginald and Horace had no laugh to-day for Chub’s unintentional
+anticlimaxes, and as Mrs. Faurie sent them away, that she might consult
+with Desmond, they carried very dreary countenances, and she still
+pressed her handkerchief to her eyes.
+
+“It is not as if the money were going to strangers,” said Desmond,
+craftily. “It will only advantage those dear fellows. I am so delighted
+with that letter of Reginald’s.”
+
+“I didn’t realize that it was in him to do that,” she said, suddenly
+smiling radiantly.
+
+“I did,” said Desmond, promptly.
+
+“I believe you love him as much as I do,” she cried joyously.
+
+“All three,” he protested. “I am jealous for the others.”
+
+“Poor little Chubby,” she said, lingering lovingly on the words.
+
+“Dear old Chubby!” he exclaimed. “So you need not mind about the money.
+It is for them.”
+
+“But how am I to get it, Edward?” She drew her level brows together in
+her pretty frown. “You have no idea of the clip I went, spending money.
+I can see now the awful mistake I made; but it seemed not so
+unreasonably extravagant then, having a large income at my disposal for
+my lifetime, and my children all independently and handsomely provided
+for. And now,—to return all that money! And that man is coming! I have
+been staying here to economize, you know, to get the old place to take
+care of me till the reservoir fills up again.”
+
+“You have something to show for the money, I suppose. Didn’t those
+wretches mention some famous emeralds?”
+
+“Ye-es,—but don’t you think it _infra dig._ to sell jewelry?”
+
+“It is _infra dig._ not to have money,” he said bitterly.
+
+Ah, how he wished that he were adequately equipped to come to her
+rescue; to let her relinquish to the Faurie estate all that the name had
+brought her; to offer commensurate resources.
+
+“I do not agree with you,” she said firmly, “_You_ have no money, and
+you can discount the world for dignity.”
+
+He had never regarded himself in this light, and he flushed with
+pleasure. As her eyes rested on him she suddenly exclaimed: “Now you
+look a little bit like yourself. This torment is telling more on you
+than on me. I assure you that _I_ shall not let myself go off in _my_
+looks for a few dollars, dimes, cents, and mills.”
+
+“About the emeralds?”
+
+“Beauty when unadorned with emeralds is as green as grass. But needs
+must—let them go! Let them go!”
+
+“Do you love them so much?” he said wistfully.
+
+“You just ought to see them on me!” she bridled.
+
+“They will never be the same on any one else,” he hazarded.
+
+“And that is one comfort,” she acceded. Her pride in the preëminence of
+her attractions was like the innocent vanity of a child, so entirely was
+her beauty acknowledged and a matter of course.
+
+“What will they bring at a forced sale?”
+
+“Thirty thousand dollars, they cost.”
+
+Desmond jotted down the sum and then went on. “About the yacht?”
+
+“The yacht? Must it be sold? Why, what will we do in the Mediterranean?”
+
+Obviously, she did not understand the situation. It must be brought home
+to her. He waved his hand to the waters of the overflow shimmering just
+outside the veranda balustrade. A dugout was rocking at a little
+distance. “There are all your facilities for voyaging for some time to
+come, Mrs. Faurie.”
+
+She burst into laughter at the incongruity. Then she said, “I cannot
+realize that it is so serious as all that. My yacht is a beauty, and
+ought to bring a pretty penny.”
+
+“Perhaps you will also have to give up the title to Great Oaks, which
+the codicil gives you in fee, to make good the sums which you have
+received from the estate,” he ventured.
+
+Her face fell. “I have begun to love this life,” she declared
+unexpectedly. “I don’t want to change. I don’t want to give up Great
+Oaks. I have forgotten the world.”
+
+A thrill stole through his heart. What had she said? She did not
+understand her own heart!
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVII
+
+
+Mr. Hartagous brought with him a metropolitan atmosphere, the manner of
+one used to good society, a portly stomach accustomed to fine feeding, a
+handsome gray-streaked beard parted in the middle, and a pair of
+searching, quickly glancing dark eyes. He landed at Great Oaks shortly
+before dinner, and it was at table that he made Desmond’s acquaintance.
+It was not he, but the guardian of the Faurie boys who had sought out
+Desmond, and through the offices of mutual friends secured his services
+as tutor, when Mrs. Faurie had placed a period to her European
+wanderings, but Mr. Hartagous, in the general family interests, had been
+apprised of all the details, and in meeting Desmond for the first time,
+inwardly congratulated all concerned upon the phenomenal opportunity of
+finding such a man for such a place. The meal was somewhat more
+elaborate than usual, in honor of the guest. Mrs. Faurie, in one of her
+Parisian gowns, was in great beauty. So marked, indeed, was the effect,
+that it seemed not inappropriate to take some notice of what was so
+obvious.
+
+“Upon my word, madam,” Mr. Hartagous declared, having progressed with
+great prosperity in feeding through the menu to the dessert, “you must
+surely lose the tally of the years as you go, else you would not have
+the effrontery to look younger than when I first met you as a bride.”
+
+“I was a skinny bride,” she smiled. “The years round out the angles. But
+they lay on fat and fads and frumpishness, and I feel really like an old
+country-woman.
+
+He looked at her beamingly, his face flushed, partly from the reflection
+of the old-fashioned red Bohemian glass finger-bowls, and partly from
+Mr. Faurie’s Madeira, which he had laid down a good many years ago, and
+which had survived him to delight other palates. Mr. Hartagous was
+pleased and surprised to find how debonair was her carriage under the
+changed prospects. He had not thought she could sustain her equanimity
+in such cruel incertitudes, nothing positively established, but great
+loss,—financial ruin, more or less complete. He had feared the visit as
+a dismal experience; but her brilliant aspect, her joyous tones, might
+enliven even a board at which sat the three downcast and indignant
+Faurie boys, thoroughly schooled as to their civility, but showing in
+every facial line how they deprecated and resented his part in the
+untoward falling out of affairs. The two younger ones asked to be
+excused shortly after the entrance of the dessert; and as Mr. Stanlett
+had not appeared at all since the arrival of the guest, sending in by
+Bob a plea of indisposition, Mrs. Faurie felt some anxiety, and a desire
+to go and inquire into his malady.
+
+“I leave you in good hands with Mr. Desmond and Reginald,” she said to
+Mr. Hartagous, as she rose from the table with a rich stir of silks and
+laces; “I will go and see how Uncle Clarence feels now, and meet you
+later in the parlor.”
+
+Reginald, pale and disaffected, and all unlike himself, lingered
+listlessly for an interval, and presently asked Desmond if he might be
+excused also.
+
+“What?—are you going to leave us, too?” Mr. Hartagous cried out
+genially, in a determinedly cheerful and friendly tone.
+
+“I am nothing of a boon companion,” said Reginald. “Mr. Desmond does not
+allow me to drink but one glass of light wine,—I shall not be missed.”
+And with a poor effort at a friendly smile, obviously insincere, he
+stayed for no more parley.
+
+“Ah, you seem to have the young fellows under good control,—excellent
+for them. A short tether,—best thing in the world for colts apt to feel
+their oats.”
+
+Mr. Hartagous was now looking about the room with considerable freedom
+and a sort of disregard of the presence of the tutor, taking _faute de
+mieux_ the part of host. “Everything is just as it used to be: old
+sylvan wall-paper, in design of tapestry hangings, hunting-scene; old
+racing-cups in that big mahogany cabinet. Faurie used to have a string
+of good horses. And there is the family silver,—very fine,—armorial
+bearings,—all just as it used to be. Can’t think what Mrs. Faurie did
+with her money,—didn’t put any of it on Great Oaks, at all events.”
+
+Desmond cloaked his failure to respond in speculations on this theme by
+passing the bottle, and Mr. Hartagous promptly refilled his glass.
+
+“Severe stroke for her,—the finding of that codicil. Pity it didn’t come
+into my hands earlier! There wouldn’t be the devil and all to pay as
+there is now.” He lifted his glass and refreshed himself bountifully.
+Perhaps he was used to livelier company at dinner, for he presently
+remarked Desmond’s serious, not to say dispirited expression, and,
+possibly because unable to appreciate that the tutor’s anxiety could be
+disconnected with a personal application, hastened to stipulate: “But it
+will not affect _you_ at all. Your salary comes out of the minors’
+estates. Mrs. Faurie is not at expenses, except such as may be voluntary
+in their education and maintenance.”
+
+Mr. Hartagous was well aware that there had been some difficulty in
+catching an appropriate man to consign to the remote depths of an
+isolated plantation in the Mississippi bottom-lands. As Mrs. Faurie was
+not willing that her sons should be separated from her for their
+schooling, already much postponed, Mr. Keith, the guardian, must needs
+secure a college graduate, of irreproachable character, of elegant
+breeding, and so piteously poor as to be willing, for a small salary, to
+turn his back on the world at the outset of his career. As by signal
+good fortune the guardian had captured this _rara avis_, it was no part
+of the executor’s scheme to interfere to set him at liberty again, or to
+foster restlessness by any suspicion that his financial interest was
+threatened in the impending changes.
+
+“But Mrs. Faurie will have to pay the piper for the dance that she has
+had,—a long and a lively one from all that I hear,—and I should think
+that it would sweep away the best part of her provision under this
+codicil. I do hope that she won’t make a fight for it,—very embarrassing
+the whole affair is for me, especially considering the attitude the boys
+take in the matter. Mr. Keith can afford to pooh-pooh it, and say they
+will think differently when they come to their majority. He is not
+called upon to sustain their resentment. Yet he would be ready at the
+drop of a hat to sue me, the executor, in their interest in this very
+matter that the little fools want to relinquish. As far as their
+interest is concerned, however, there will be no litigation in carrying
+out the provisions of the codicil. But I confess I dread the idea of
+Mrs. Faurie’s futile resistance.”
+
+“I think Mrs. Faurie has no intention of making a contest,” said
+Desmond, fearing that his silence on the subject might be misconstrued.
+
+The lawyer whirled around excitedly. “Turn over Great Oaks Plantation
+without a fight,—eh? She will have to lose it to make good.”
+
+Mr. Hartagous had a brightening aspect. There had been already
+sufficiently discordant elements in the situation fomented by the
+conflict of laws in the two states where the properties lay, a pertinent
+instance of which came to mind in the incongruity of an indeterminate
+limit of twenty or thirty years in Tennessee for the revocation of
+probate in common form, and in Mississippi a prescription, with the
+statutory savings, of only two years, which had long ago elapsed. Though
+this was hardly conclusive, by reason of the exception of the statute,
+in favor of the disability of the minors, and their financial interests
+in the revocation of the Mississippi probate, it might further be
+inoperative to render Mrs. Faurie secure in her local holdings, if her
+interest in Great Oaks, for life or widowhood, as under the will, could
+be subjected to levy as for debt to satisfy the requirements of the
+codicil in Tennessee. The guardian of the minors had been alert to
+perceive another phase of the situation incident to the discovery of the
+paper, and had indeed averred to Mr. Hartagous that, even could their
+rights of prescription be defeated, he felt that the long and
+incomprehensible delay to produce the codicil savored of concealment,
+and in the event of proof of this, the Mississippi statute allowed two
+years further for the revocation _pro tanto_ of the probate. The lapse
+of time had wrought such ruin to Mrs. Faurie’s interests that, even
+apart from her high character, which precluded such a suspicion, she
+could never be supposed to have been a party to such a disastrous scheme
+of concealment; and the diligence of the search of Mr. Hartagous among
+the valuable papers of the decedent was protected by a letter from Mr.
+Faurie himself, dated a few days before his death, stating that all
+important papers had been transferred to his keeping, as the executor,
+in view of the settlement of the estate. Mr. Hartagous had not found it
+an easy task, with its diversified interests, its complicated
+litigation, its many details, and he welcomed the thought that perhaps
+after all Mrs. Faurie might yield at once to the inevitable, and the
+settlement of the estate might yet go cannily on, including the
+provisions of the codicil, without raising the issue of _devisavit vel
+non_ and repairing to the circuit court for probate in solemn form.
+
+Desmond was a trifle embarrassed. “It may not be necessary to relinquish
+Great Oaks,” he said uneasily. “Mrs. Faurie has other convertible
+assets.”
+
+The lawyer bent his brows and cast a keen glance at him. There was a
+significant silence. “So you are in her confidence, are you?”
+
+There was so much receptivity in his aspect as he waited for the reply,
+he was so evidently ready to discriminate and utilize all manner of
+subtle and diffusive impressions and information, that Desmond grew
+unwontedly wary. “Not to the extent of being able to speak for her,” he
+stipulated. “But Mrs. Faurie is very candid, as you know, and I am in a
+position to hear much of the family conversation.”
+
+He came to a dead halt. But Mr. Hartagous had not wrestled with
+reluctant witnesses for a matter of thirty years to be baffled at this
+late day by an after-dinner interlocutor with a bottle of choice wine
+between them. He gave it a push as he said: “And I also stand in a
+quasi-confidential relation to her, having long been the friend of her
+husband and herself, as well as the executor of his will. It would
+gratify me extremely to be able to adjust this difficult matter without
+contention and the rupture of long-established amicable sentiments.” He
+gazed keenly at the handsome face of the tutor, intellectual and
+powerful beyond his years and experience, the expression of mental value
+enhancing the effect of symmetry of feature. He was about to suggest
+that it might be beneficial to Mrs. Faurie’s interests to canvass the
+matter between them, and from its incidents strike out some middle
+course of advantage to all parties concerned. But there was something in
+Desmond’s deep, steadfast eyes that admonished him that this confidence
+could come about only from inadvertence. Desmond would not of set
+purpose disclose Mrs. Faurie’s intentions. The executor began to realize
+that if he wanted such facts as the tutor knew, he must surprise them.
+
+“Mrs. Faurie would not want Great Oaks at any rate,” he hazarded. “I
+wonder at Faurie for that disposition of the plantation,—cumbrous
+property.”
+
+“It is a fine place,” said Desmond, non-committally.
+
+“Looks mighty pretty now,—a full fathom deep in water in the shallowest
+spot,” sneered the lawyer.
+
+“The land is of fine quality,—raises good crops, I am told,” Desmond
+commented.
+
+“Don’t need fertile land to raise crawfish.”
+
+“Why, even the floods that drowned the world dried off after a while;
+and Great Oaks is relying on precedent and Providence, and expects to
+raise cotton here again some day.” Desmond’s tone was crisp. He had no
+necessity that he recognized to submit to the acerbities of the
+executor. It was strain enough on his patience to make allowances for
+the infirmities and age of Mr. Stanlett.
+
+His tone, the vigor of his argument, shook the self-restraint of Mr.
+Hartagous. The lawyer’s spirit of contention responded. He wagged his
+head with an aspect of melancholy, not unrelated to his sentiment, when
+he said: “The overflow will cry down the price. I have a letter in my
+pocket now from a would-be purchaser, a Mr. Loring, formerly a resident
+of this county. His offer is low, but as much as the place can command
+for the next ten years to come.” He shook his head and filled his glass
+anew.
+
+Desmond quickly reviewed the events of the past weeks. Doubtless the
+news of the discovery of the codicil had been widely bruited abroad, and
+thus Mr. Loring, aware of the exigencies of the prospective refunding
+and of Mrs. Faurie’s depleted resources, had taken the field with the
+first offer. He had astutely approached the executor rather than its
+present owner, whose disposition to sell might be in inverse proportion
+to the necessity; and as the exacting creditor, Mr. Hartagous, knowing
+that such an opportunity of sale would not be easily duplicated, might
+press an acceptance as a ready solution of the emergency, which promised
+him a world of anxiety and perplexity. Little effort indeed might be
+requisite to urge, flatter, overpersuade a woman unaccustomed to the
+turmoils of hopeless debt and annoyed by business complications.
+
+But poor Honoria Faurie! To have unwittingly dispensed her whole fortune
+as her income, her annuity. To be called upon now to surrender the roof
+above her head as penance of those years of plenty that had held out to
+her the deceit of perpetuity. Desmond trembled for her future, for her
+sons were mere children and helpless. He feared lest she be harassed
+into precipitancy and clutch at any prospect of speedy deliverance from
+these troublous toils, willing to concede anything, to relinquish
+everything, to have peace,—when, alas! there would he no more peace. He
+realized the immense capacity to clinch tight, to hold hard, of the
+genus of which Mr. Hartagous was a type,—cool, collected, with no
+personal interest involved that might affect his judgment, ready to
+stand on a quibble, to fight for the minutest fraction, to prolong the
+contention to the uttermost, to the extremest exhaustion of his
+adversary’s slender resources of resistance. And she had not a soul to
+whom she might appeal, save indeed some lawyer, earning his fee, and
+appreciative only of the surface conditions of her case,—but no one who
+cared for her, who would think for her. The realization roused Desmond
+in her behalf.
+
+“You had best wait till morning to place the offer before her,” Desmond
+said, determined to be the first to acquaint her with the facts,
+determined that she should not meet her adversary in his guise of friend
+without consideration of the double identity in which he came. “There is
+always so much stir in the parlor after dinner,—the children and their
+dogs make a deal of noise. Mrs. Faurie always gives up her evenings to
+the entertainment of her sons.”
+
+He had no mind to offer the library, which indeed had been assigned to
+his exclusive use, and he hoped that Mr. Hartagous did not remember its
+facilities for quiet consultation, so long had it been dismantled.
+
+Mr. Hartagous was one of the most acute of men, and his facial traits
+were well under control. Few people could have interpreted the sudden
+cynical uplifting of his bushy eyebrows as he said casually, “Ah,
+well,—plenty of time,—plenty of time.”
+
+But Desmond’s perceptions were quickened in her interests and he knew
+that the hour was come, that before they separated for the night, Mrs.
+Faurie would be acquainted with the executor’s version of the
+facts,—that they were the most lucky of mortals! for property was slow
+of sale, plantations a drug upon the market, the labor questions
+impossible of solution; clouds, darkness, environed them on every side,
+and they knew not whither to grope,—and here suddenly a flood of
+financial sunlight was opening upon them in the midst of their night of
+despondency. Only the touch of her pen,—the title of Great Oaks, which
+she had always loathed, would be transferred. The millionaire’s cash and
+notes would make good her indebtedness to the estate to that extent, at
+least; the rest could be “carried”—fatal word!—arranged for a time with
+liens on smaller properties. Plausible representation!—the sense of a
+load of debt lifted, the turbulent apprehension of contention averted.
+She might adopt the executor’s conclusions, and indeed from his point of
+view there was naught else practicable. She had known him long, liked
+him well, and relied on his friendship. But his duty in the premises was
+to the estate, to make the most and the best of the testator’s
+dispositions as far as it was concerned. As to the widow, the wreck was
+her own work, unconscious though she had been, mistaken; he had no
+responsibility so far as she was interested save to enforce the
+provisions of the codicil, and to exact the terms of the refunding
+clause. She might be prevailed upon, in the first flush of relief that
+any solution of the problem was at hand, to sign at once, to-night, some
+agreement of sale; she might not commit herself beyond the possibility
+of withdrawal, but so far embrace the proposition as to be unwilling to
+recede from it. And indeed she might be persuaded into a coincidence of
+opinion. His representations might fix her resolution. Later, Desmond’s
+remonstrances might not avail. He was young, as she knew,—she had called
+him repeatedly a mere boy. He could not be sure that she seriously
+valued his business instincts, when he had no business experience. He
+desired only to put her on her guard, to excite her apprehension, to
+counsel reserve, above all delay. He could imagine the sequence, and it
+appalled him. The wishes of Mrs. Faurie, reduced to poverty, to
+insignificance, would no longer have such weight as when issued from her
+princess-like affluence and preëminence, and the wishes of the boys were
+as empty of influence as the disability of their minority would compel.
+He wondered dolorously as to her impending fate. Perhaps there might be
+accorded to her, from among the chips and blocks of the Faurie estate,
+saved from the cormorant clutch of the refunding, some cottage on a side
+street in the outskirts of Vicksburg or Natchez, some little farm of a
+few acres regularly overflowed, and raising indeed more crawfish than
+cotton.
+
+It seemed as if Desmond had intentionally misled Mr. Hartagous when he
+opened the parlor door and they entered a room of absolute silence and
+stillness. Mrs. Faurie, in a gown of sage green silk brocaded in lighter
+tones, the lace at her throat coruscating with the delicate white fires
+of a diamond “sunburst,” leaned back in a large chair, her eyes on the
+hearth, evidently moody from argument and remonstrance with her sons.
+Their faces, as they sat in a row on a sofa, were downcast, full of
+distress, and marked with the distorting trace of nervous anxiety, which
+they could feel as if they were men, but unlike men could not hope to do
+aught to abate;—only Chub gazed up at Mr. Hartagous with childish,
+lowering, resentful eyes and a half-suppressed tendency to pout. Mr.
+Stanlett, pallid, seeming more lean than usual, shrunken, and very
+perceptibly aged by the shock of the excitements of finding the codicil,
+lay in a reclining-chair on the opposite side of the fire. He greeted
+Mr. Hartagous with courtesy indeed, but with noticeably few words, and
+protesting that his indisposition had passed, welcomed him to Great Oaks
+mansion. Desmond felt the future in the instant. It would require but
+little exertion of Mr. Hartagous’s tact to inaugurate one of the
+old-time reminiscences, which seemed the delight and the resource of Mr.
+Stanlett’s failing life. His eyes would flash, his thin cheek flush, the
+boys would listen in spellbound silence, and Mr. Hartagous, already
+seated beside her, would secure an uninterrupted tête-à-tête with Mrs.
+Faurie; for the tutor, in his subsidiary position and obligatory show of
+respect, must needs accord Mr. Stanlett’s narration his attention also.
+But even should Desmond so far forget himself as to interpose in the
+discussion of business in which he had no concern, Mr. Hartagous had
+arguments which on first view would easily discomfit his crude and
+inexperienced counsels. Nevertheless, Desmond resolved anew that she
+should not hear of the offer of Mr. Loring for Great Oaks first from the
+executor. He cast about him in desperation. Mr. Stanlett was already
+replying with some spirit as to the early history of certain localities
+that Mr. Hartagous had noticed from the guards of the steamboat in
+coming down the Mississippi River from Memphis, which itself was built
+on one of the famous Chickasaw Bluffs. Mr. Stanlett’s memory reached
+back to the days before the Chickasaws and Choctaws had generally
+vanished westward, and he had then gleaned from the chiefs some
+traditions at first hand which made him an authority on moot points of
+early history, and he piqued himself on his accuracy. It was easy indeed
+to engage him in a discussion as to the site of the old Chickasaw
+towns,—seven of them together in a row, the last called Ash-wick-boo-ma
+(Red Grass),—where they defeated D’Artaguette and later Bienville, and
+the details of the battle of Ackia and its famous last charge. The young
+Fauries’ faces had brightened. Suddenly Reginald asked a breathless
+question as to the boy-commander, the Canadian, Voisin, who at sixteen
+years of age conducted the safe and skilled retreat of the troops
+through many miles of wilderness from the field of the battle which his
+superior officer, the unfortunate D’Artaguette, had lost.
+
+Mr. Stanlett needed no more prompting, nor, Desmond feared, would he
+heed interruption. Mr. Hartagous presently leaned forward with his elbow
+on the table at Mrs. Faurie’s right hand, and had begun to speak to her
+in a low voice, when Desmond asked Mr. Stanlett if he knew the ancient
+French buglecalls, and said that one claimed a Merovingian origin. He
+declared that he would like to believe that the same strain which had
+rung from the famous “Olivant,” the horn of the Paladin at Roncesvalles,
+had served to rally D’Artaguette’s motley levies of Indians, and
+_coureurs des bois_, and French soldats along the banks of the
+Mississippi, and would forever continue to sound down the centuries, to
+find echoes in the heart of the enthusiast and the metre of the poet.
+
+“Let me see if you find the old calls familiar,” Desmond exclaimed,
+lifting the lid of the piano and tangling it in his haste with its
+crimson embroidered cloth cover. It was an old piano, with the felt of
+its hammers worn hard and thin. So much the better, since he desired to
+drown out the voice of Mr. Hartagous. The martial strain, instinct with
+its imperative mandate, throbbed through the room and then died away,
+and as they listened a note was repeated, and still a vibration, as from
+some vague distance.
+
+“An echo!—an echo!” cried Chub, vociferously. “Oh, mamma, listen to our
+Mr. Desmond! He can do anything,—how he can play!”
+
+“Now, what do you suppose is the date of that call?” Mr. Stanlett’s
+cheek had flushed; his interest was roused.
+
+“The introduction of this one can be definitely fixed,” and once more a
+spirited lilting strain rang through the room. Then Desmond turned on
+the piano stool. “Where, Reginald, did you put that old book on the
+Ancient Military Orders of France? It gives some old calls. I found that
+rummaging about in the library.”
+
+“You find too much, sir, rummaging about!” said Mr. Stanlett, with a
+bent brow and a fiery eye. “You should curb your talents for rummaging
+about.”
+
+But Desmond had thrust an old folio into his hand, with a recommendation
+to examine the very quaint and antique illustrations of arms and
+accoutrements and military costume with which it was embellished. There
+were some extra inserts of military portraits, steel engravings, and Mr.
+Stanlett was turning the leaves, his thin mouth drawn in very small, his
+eye alight with a fervor of interest, his rebuke and its cause forgotten
+in an instant.
+
+Not by Mr. Hartagous. He made the serious mistake of casting a merry,
+significant glance at the tutor, expecting it to be returned in like
+genial wise. He desired to establish confidential relations with
+Desmond. He might find so accomplished, so versatile, so lightning-quick
+a fellow of special use here, where diplomatic management might be
+necessary to smooth the way for readjustments. But Desmond did not
+respond, and Mr. Hartagous felt the rising surge of anger. He realized
+that the young man was too observant to have lost the demonstration; he
+was far too keen to fail to appreciate its relish and its demand for the
+recognition of Mr. Stanlett’s pitiably funny allusion to the tutor’s
+instrumentality in discovering the codicil of the last will and
+testament of the late Mr. Faurie. Desmond’s studied insensibility was a
+covert rebuke, and the spirit of Mr. Hartagous revolted against this
+schooling, which he felt might befit some crude hobbledehoy. He would
+have liked to remind the tutor that he was the guardian’s employee and
+not Mrs. Faurie’s, and that the pedagogic office was held at his
+pleasure; to recall the fact that despite the young man’s learning and
+many accomplishments, it had been already demonstrated to him that one
+must have foothold, a starting-point, to make these felt by the world. A
+flood, quotha!—a sorry time a dove or any other fowl would have to find
+a perch, set adrift from this ark of Great Oaks mansion.
+
+Mrs. Faurie intercepted and interpreted the glance, and for a time she
+held her eyes down to the fan in her hand with which she seemed
+gracefully to toy, but Desmond had seen that they were full of tears.
+She felt that these two men, in the pride of their powers, in the flush
+of their prime, in the vigor of their health and strength, were
+ridiculing poor, dear Uncle Clarence for his distress in her loss, for
+his feeble, inadequate, unreasoning indignation at the officious
+intermeddling, as he thought it, which had brought the catastrophe
+about.
+
+But Desmond had begun to sing,—she had not known that he could sing,—and
+the room was filled with surging waves of melody. A powerful baritone
+voice he had, of no great cultivation, enough only to temper the
+crudities of his rendering, but of correct intonation, and it was
+singularly, lusciously sweet. They were military songs that he sang,
+with the triumph of the trumpets, the gay clash of the cannikin, the
+impetuous speed of the high-couraged war-horse, all infused through
+them. Now they were French and again German, and some were in quaint old
+English phrase of mediæval suggestion.
+
+“Never, never let me hear you speak another word,” cried Mr. Stanlett,
+in senile delight. “You should go singing through the world like the
+mockingbirds in spring.”
+
+He looked across the room, smiling and nodding, expectant of sympathetic
+response from Mr. Hartagous, who was as weary of it all as if the
+evening were spent in that other ark to which Great Oaks mansion was so
+often likened. Under these circumstances he could have as easily
+communicated with the ladies of the patriarchal Noah as with Mrs.
+Faurie,—the terrible Chub chasing continually from the side of the piano
+and across the room to fling himself into his mother’s arms crying,
+“Ain’t it beautiful, mamma? Ain’t it beautiful? The grand opera in Paree
+don’t touch Mr. Desmond nowhere!”
+
+So weary, indeed, did Mr. Hartagous presently look that the dispersal of
+the party for the night was obviously in order, although much earlier
+than usual.
+
+“Can you find your way back to your room, do you think?” Mrs. Faurie
+said to the guest, as the group stood at a side table in the hall and
+she lighted their bedroom candles seriatim.
+
+The house was so large and so rambling in its plan that he was not sure
+that he remembered his way about it, he replied. He had expected, and
+indeed so had she, that Desmond would come forward with his readiness
+for any emergency and officiate as guide. But Desmond, stolidly
+unmindful, snuffed out and then relighted his own candle, its tiny white
+blaze illumining his flushed, absorbed face, and after a moment’s
+hesitation Reginald offered to accompany the guest to his room. Thus Mr.
+Hartagous departed to his night’s rest, a little dissatisfied with the
+situation, and not a little doubtful of the tutor. He resented this
+incertitude, because it was partly his influence that had placed Desmond
+here. “And mighty glad he was to come, too,” he reflected. He rather
+wondered that Desmond should not discern his own interests more clearly
+than to seem to adhere to the losing side, for Mrs. Faurie’s power,
+always limited, was now definitely a thing of the past. “For she is not
+worth one red cent, as matters stand!” Mr. Keith, he was aware, had
+begun to doubt whether the redundant maternal coddling was the best
+thing for the boys, and had only agreed to their persistent retention
+under her wing in deference to her wish; but Hartagous was sure, did he
+so desire, that he could easily induce him to insist as their guardian
+upon packing them off summarily to boarding-school, where they might
+encounter some of the roughening and hardening phases of boy life. “Make
+men of them.” Although balked of the conversation which he had expected
+to have with Desmond when he should have reached the room assigned him,
+and feeling distinctly man-handled, he determined to have a definite
+understanding with the tutor on the morrow, and apprise him that he was
+expected to act in the interest of his employer, the guardian, which was
+identical with that of the executor, in smoothing the way to a pacific
+adjustment of the troublous toils in which the discovery of the codicil
+had entangled the household of Great Oaks,—and this signified, in the
+interpretation of Mr. Hartagous, an unconditional surrender of all the
+opposing interests.
+
+“It is not late, though you seem tired,—and I must speak to you
+to-night,” Desmond said to Mrs. Faurie, when the young host and the
+guest had vanished down the cross-hall.
+
+She had her lighted candle in her hand, and the flame threw into high
+relief against the dull shadows her exquisite face, with the subdued
+green of her gown, the shimmer of the lace above her bosom, the diamond
+“sunburst” at her throat. “Won’t to-morrow answer?” she replied,
+stifling a yawn.
+
+“No! Oh, no, indeed! Believe me, I would not insist, but the matter is
+urgent.”
+
+“Heavens! More business!” she remonstrated. “I imagined that with the
+arrival of Mr. Hartagous all the bother would be over. He can think for
+us all. What else is a lawyer created for?”
+
+“Your lawyer,—yes! But this man is not acting in your interest. He is
+acting for the estate.”
+
+“It is the same thing,—my sons’ interest. He will settle everything.”
+
+Desmond could scarcely have feared a more inert attitude of submission
+than this. How could the woman be so blind! “Come,” he said
+authoritatively, drawing her arm through his. “You shall hear first what
+I have to say.”
+
+She turned back to the parlor with him, dragging a little unwillingly on
+his arm. “I have always appreciated ‘gentlemen’s society,’ as it is
+called, and I have to a degree and with exceptions loved my fellow men,
+but I had no conception until lately that the creatures had it in them
+to be so wonderfully and fearfully dull and depressing as they are when
+they talk of their everlasting business. Hereafter, if I have my choice,
+I shall always prefer ‘hen parties’ as the lesser evil.”
+
+With an elaborate air of patience she seated herself on the sofa while
+he stirred up the fire and brightened the lamp. As he began to talk, she
+was inattentive at first, and interpolated irrelevant remarks. “What a
+lovely voice you have,” she said, as her eyes wandered to the open
+piano. “I shall be wanting you to sing all day.”
+
+As he began to recapitulate the details of the codicil and the
+executor’s requirements concerning the refunding clause, she broke out,
+“Wouldn’t you hate to be as chuffy and as stuffy as Mr. Hartagous when
+you come to be of his age, and look so like a weasel?”
+
+When he disclosed the real mission of Mr. Hartagous, to effect an
+immediate sale of Great Oaks, a light suddenly sprang into her face, and
+her voice broke into a sob. He saw that the situation bore far more
+heavily upon her than she had manifested. She had been whistling, as it
+were, to keep her courage up.
+
+“How providential!” she cried. “It breaks my heart now to part from
+Great Oaks, but I see that it is the only way. And oh, for liberation!
+To be free from debt. The sense of it weighs upon me; I can understand
+the agony of the old torture of death by pressing.”
+
+He was still for a moment, looking at her in sombre thought. “This is
+what I feared,” he said at last,—“your precipitancy. I want you to
+think, to survey the ground first, to test the possibilities.”
+
+He had made out from the will a schedule of the properties, with their
+approximate values, and the amounts by years of the annual income that
+must be returned. He went across the room and sat beside her on the
+sofa, that they might look over the page together. Her face paled while
+scanning the estimates,—they seemed methodically to set forth financial
+ruin, absolute, hopeless.
+
+“Then why,—how _dare_ that man come here and press Mr. Loring’s
+inadequate offer for Great Oaks?” she blazed out.
+
+“Because he is not acting in your interest, but against you.”
+
+She turned and looked Desmond in the face, her beautiful eyes
+bewildering at these close quarters. He dropped his own eyes on the
+paper in his hands.
+
+“Mr. Hartagous must distribute the estate according to the terms of the
+codicil. As executor he is constrained by law to require the refunding
+of your receipts from it. He is coerced, too, by the position of the
+guardian, who also has no option, and who will in the changed state of
+things require this amount to be charged against your portion at the
+partitioning of the estate and the ascertaining and setting aside of the
+several shares of the minors. Naturally, Mr. Hartagous is anxious to
+seize the first opportunity of converting your assets to make good,
+whatever sacrifice it may impose on _you_.”
+
+“What shall I do?—oh, what shall I do?” she cried, in despairing
+realization of the situation. “But why should I ask? I can only yield.”
+
+“You can temporize,—stand out for the full value of the property,— fight
+for terms. Time is your ally. And you have this strength in your
+position, that you might give them a contest; a lawyer might find you
+sufficient grounds,—but, at all events, you are entitled to a fair
+valuation of your property.”
+
+“But even then, Edward,” she put her hand on his and pressed it
+convulsively, “there is not a competence, not a hope from the estate for
+me.”
+
+He did not seek to encourage her by false representations. He was
+looking the disaster squarely in the eye. “And the boys are powerless
+for years to come!” he admitted despondently.
+
+Her lips were trembling piteously. “I have not a dollar that I can call
+my own. I have not a friend in the world.”
+
+“You have me,—such as I am,” he said, his eyes downcast, still on the
+papers.
+
+“I never think of you,—you are like another self. But you _are_ my
+friend, and I am not alone! You think for me,—you rescued me at the risk
+of your life. You think for me,—you care for me,—I am not alone!”
+
+“Care for you!” he broke out, tempted beyond all resistance. “I care for
+nothing else on God’s earth. I love you,—I love you,—I worship you!”
+
+She turned, staring at him in quiet surprise; then, as if she thought he
+might come nearer, she put one hand against his shoulder, holding him at
+arm’s length.
+
+“Oh, I should have eaten out my heart in silence; I should never have
+said a word but for this strange change, when you seem as poor as I! But
+since you feel alone, you may care to know now how beloved, how
+cherished, how adored you are by me.”
+
+“But suppose,—suppose,”—she was still looking hard at him, into his very
+eyes—“but suppose it might have been grateful to me earlier to know so
+much—”
+
+“I could not have spoken then; I could not have asked you to make so
+great a sacrifice for me,—to relinquish your status under the will.”
+
+She smiled radiantly at him. “It seems to me now that I might have been
+glad to make that sacrifice,—for you.” Once more her hand pressed
+against his shoulder to hold him at arm’s length. “But it can never be,
+now,” she stipulated, “when I can give you nothing.”
+
+“Nothing! You are all the world to me,” he protested.
+
+“No, you have your own difficult way to make, and I shall not burden
+you. It was only a fleeting fancy that came over me,—a sentimental
+glimpse of what I _might_ have felt for you had fortune favored us.”
+
+“You shall not decree the future,” he declared imperiously. “I shall
+fashion it for us both. It is not yours to say. You have said enough. I
+know your heart better than you do,—I believe you love me—”
+
+“Like a son,” she interrupted, with a gurgling laugh. “I am older than
+you by ten years.”
+
+“And younger by a century in spirit, and as beautiful as the angels in
+heaven. If you leave Great Oaks, we go forth together. Life in poor
+conditions would not be sordid with you. It would always be fresh and
+deliriously sweet and forever a blessing, whatever hardships fate might
+impose. I am strong and well equipped, and with this hand in mine I
+could make my way against all the world. I would have no false pride to
+hamper my efforts, so truly proud would I be in having the dear
+privilege of working for you.”
+
+“Like Chub,—would you dig in the garden?” The anticlimax was of
+conclusive import in the stress of the moment. She had not intended to
+yield, but she laughed in tender recollection of her little son’s
+childish offer of help, and in the instant of relaxation she burst into
+happy tears. Her head sank on Desmond’s shoulder, and his arm was around
+her.
+
+“Like Chub, I would even dig in the garden,” he protested.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVIII
+
+
+It was not yet a late hour when Desmond quitted the parlor, Mrs. Faurie
+having flitted away, joyously protesting that the consideration of such
+nonsense as his discourse was undermining to the reason. The evening had
+resulted in so signal a failure to entertain the guest acceptably that
+an earlier dispersal than usual had supervened. Nevertheless, as Desmond
+made his way down the veranda toward the library, intending to smoke and
+linger an hour or so in his chosen haunt, for with this tumult of joy
+and expectation and triumph in his brain and heart he knew that he could
+not soon compose himself to rest, he was surprised in turning the corner
+to see a light upon the waters at a little distance, in the midst of the
+dark, rippling expanse that surrounded the mansion.
+
+The night wind blew dank and chill across the damp purlieus of the
+veranda, the flooring of which was always splashed and reeking from the
+tossing waves of the recent landing of some dugout at various points,
+but it brought no other sound than the monotonous voices of the night,
+so accustomed that they scarcely impinged upon the consciousness: the
+stir of the foliage of the great oaks, the effect of their stately
+avenues “queered” by their diluvian surroundings; the iterative
+batrachian chorus from some insular “high ground” far away; the sudden
+bellow of a bull alligator; and always the murmur of the widespread
+shallows of the overflow under the influence of the breeze.
+
+The light was stationary, and though it was now the dark of the moon and
+Desmond had only the vague illumination of the myriad stars of the clear
+spring night, he made out behind it the dull outline of a small boat. A
+lantern was evidently carried at the prow, and despite the fact that the
+light annulled the suggestion of secrecy, Desmond fancied that the
+motionless pause bespoke observation. Suddenly he heard the impact of a
+paddle upon the water, and became aware that the craft was about to
+turn. The spy, if spy he were, intended to retrace his course;—not until
+he should have given an account of himself, Desmond resolved, and of his
+mission, scouting about on the dark waters of the overflow, making his
+secret observations of Great Oaks mansion when asleep and off its guard.
+
+“Hello, the boat!” Desmond’s strong young voice carried like a clarion
+across the flooded distance.
+
+The answer came, hearty and reassuring: “Hello, the house!”
+
+The dugout swung around once more, and as its prow was presented to
+Desmond’s eye as it advanced in a direct line, its bulk was obliterated,
+and this gave the man who stood erect plying his paddle in the Indian
+fashion the weird effect of walking on the water as he approached the
+house in the clare-obscure.
+
+“God! What _is_ that?” exclaimed Mr. Hartagous, looking out from the
+dark window close at hand. He had been roused by the tutor’s ringing
+call to the boatman, and, apprehending some disturbance, had in the
+instant’s time secured his trousers and his pistol, the two essentials
+to dignified midnight combat. The light from the lantern of the dugout,
+which now began to head for a landing at the veranda, was flung far out
+on the watery gloom, and sent a ray to the long window, illumining a
+tousled mass of gray hair and whiskers, and a puckered face of most
+discordant and disconcerted petulance.
+
+“Nare light do you show, Mr. Desmond,” said the voice of Bainbridge, the
+manager, from the dugout. “You are such owels up here at the big house
+that I made sure o’ findin’ you up, anyhow. Why, ’tain’t quite eleven
+o’clock.”
+
+“And what in hell do you mean by sidling up to Great Oaks mansion in the
+middle of the night in this enigmatic way without warning?” demanded the
+lawyer, testily,—he evidently considered Desmond a mere attaché of the
+household and with no prerogative to speak with authority. Therefore he
+took bold precedence. “And who are you?—and what mischief are you bent
+upon?”
+
+“Ah-h-h! It’s _you_ bent on mischief, Mr. Hartagous! Mischief is the
+trade of all your tribe!” tartly retorted the manager, none of whose
+interests could be imperiled by the lawyer, and whose nerves were
+already exacerbated by the jeopardy of all his prospects in the
+impending changes.
+
+“Oh, is it Mr. Bainbridge, the manager? Beg pardon, my good man. I
+didn’t recognize you in the darkness,—but you should really let people
+sleep in peace”; then with an accession of acerbity,—“buccaneering
+around in the overflow at this time of night!”
+
+It hardly affected Desmond that Mr. Hartagous should take the pas, the
+air of control in these matters appertaining to Great Oaks Plantation,
+as if the power of its possessor and her staff were already a thing of
+the past; but Mr. Bainbridge was not used to such reversals of spiteful
+fortune. Wind and weather had worked him much woe in his agricultural
+experience; desperate calamities, such as the overflow, had visited him
+more than once; but these mischances supervened in his professional
+conflict with natural forces, and were the dispensations of established
+authority, the “hand of God,” to use the pious commercial phraseology,
+and he submitted to them with such broadening of his back to the burden
+and such patience as he could muster. The disaster, however, which
+menaced the tenure of Great Oaks Plantation, this flagrant injustice,
+this legalized mischief, was the artifice of man, the deflection of the
+will of the testator rather than its execution, and he entertained scant
+toleration of the operations of law that permitted it and the person of
+its representative. It threw Mr. Bainbridge out of an employment in
+which he was well satisfied and had given satisfaction these many years,
+for he had a ghastly prevision of the overthrow of all the existing
+status which would ensue under a new owner.
+
+“Oh,” he said with jaunty bravado, as he ran the nose of the dugout
+close to the veranda and sprang heavily upon the flooring, securing the
+trace chain that served as painter around one of the columns, “me and
+Mr. Desmond go on a ‘high old lonesome’ most any time o’ night. We don’t
+keep reg’lar hours in the swamp, you see, like you cits do in
+Memphis,—early to bed and early to rise makes you-all so all-fired
+healthy, wealthy, and wise.”
+
+Mr. Hartagous sputtered, but no immediate answer occurred to him, though
+presently he found cause to admonish Mr. Bainbridge of his heavy
+footfall. “You’ll wake up the whole house,—you tramp like a grenadier.”
+
+“And what sort o’ animal might that be,—fourfooted?” queried Mr.
+Bainbridge, affecting deep ignorance.
+
+Mr. Hartagous disdained to reply, but the admonition touching his
+resonant swinging gait had not been altogether lost on Bainbridge, and
+to avoid passing on the veranda, thus noisily, the vicinity of Mrs.
+Faurie’s room, he entered unceremoniously at the long French window at
+which Mr. Hartagous stood, intending to traverse the guest’s apartment
+and thus reach the cross-hall in order to take his way thence to the
+library, where he could discuss his errand with the tutor. Desmond
+followed, meditating some lubricating word of apology. But Bainbridge
+continued in sarcastic ill-humor: “I never _did_ pretend to be one of
+your soft-steppin’, Slip-Slinksy sort o’ fellows. I could understand
+your objections to having him slying around the house of a night, but—”
+He paused abruptly as he opened the door leading into the cross-hall;
+the stoppage was a sort of galvanic shudder, such as might befit a
+cessation of steam propulsion. He turned toward the others, over his big
+brawny shoulders, a face visibly paling beneath its sunburn in the gleam
+of the candle which the saturnine Hartagous had just lighted.
+
+“Hist,” he said, and silence fell. For outside in the distance and the
+darkness, so soft that one might wonder that it should be so distinct,
+was that vague sense of an unseen progression,—a step, or rather the
+impact of a foot with the pile of the velvet carpet of the padded stair,
+a silken sibilance, then silence, and again a footfall ascending the
+flight.
+
+It was audible to Mr. Hartagous as he stood half dressed beside the
+table. A dismayed, protesting question was in the wrinkles and
+corrugations of his face as he turned it toward the door; a keen,
+excited gleam shone in his eyes, for he, too, had heard of the furtive
+spectre of Great Oaks. The blazing match in his hand burned unheeded to
+the tips of his fingers. When the flame touched the flesh he dropped the
+match, but without a word or sound. It seemed to have tangibly kindled
+his intention, his resolution. It was hardly possible to imagine a man
+of his age and so portly, who was now so light of movement. He had
+noiselessly thrust his bare feet into his bedroom slippers, great
+yawning foot-gear, placed his revolver in the pistol pocket of his
+trousers, while he held in his hand a thing that to the rustic Mr.
+Bainbridge seemed a pocketbook, but which Desmond recognized as one of
+the tiny electric lamps that have this semblance. He dropped the conical
+extinguisher over the newly lighted flame of the candle, and in a moment
+all was darkness and silence.
+
+Each of the others recognized the lawyer’s determination to see the
+thing out. Bainbridge, for all his bold initiative in matters cognate to
+daylight, fell behind him as Mr. Hartagous briskly flung the door wide
+and shuffled noiselessly along the hall. For one moment Desmond felt an
+agony of indecision. He had an unreasoning instinct to call out and give
+the forlorn old spectre some warning of the fell forces of flesh and
+blood that were even now upon his elusive track, that he might craftily
+compass his disappearance as more than once heretofore. Then he
+hesitated. He had shrunk from such knowledge as had come to him as to
+the details in the concealment of the codicil of the will, and he had
+found its only extenuation in the doubt of Mr. Stanlett’s sanity and
+responsibility. It was impossible to judge how this might have stood in
+the beginning, but now, when it was so obviously futile and the ghostly
+step was once more wandering through the midnight quiet of Great Oaks
+mansion, he became afraid of interference,—discovery could only prove
+the mental unsoundness that was at last poor Slip-Slinksy’s protection.
+Moreover, Mr. Hartagous was now halfway up the stairs; Bainbridge,
+sitting on the bottom step, had pulled off his high boots and followed
+in his stocking feet as noiseless as a cat. Nevertheless, the crafty old
+spectre had become aware of their approach. Not a sound, not a stir,
+issued from above. He was still up there somewhere in the darkness.
+Surely he could scarcely have drawn a breath as the two below stood on
+the stairs, motionless also, watching, waiting. Desmond, lingering in
+the hall beneath, one hand on the newel-post, felt a rush of
+indignation, knowing what he did. The two spies, stalwart, alert, both
+more than a score of years younger, could easily wear out the endurance
+of the poor, patient, disappointed ghost, whose lawless mission had
+always been instinct with beneficent intention. Yet not so easily,
+perhaps; for presently, when a timber of the stair creaked, Desmond knew
+that Bainbridge, his muscles stiff and cramping, had been forced to
+shift his weight.
+
+The house within was absolutely noiseless. The half-moon of glass above
+the doors at the front showed its presence in a dim gray contour, but
+shed no light. The splashing of the water of the overflow under the
+buffets of the wind was distinct in the pause. Once a gust went skirling
+with a wild, chill voice among the score of chimneys, and passed into
+the distance, and silence ensued. Suddenly a light cut the gloom like a
+knife. There, standing on the landing, was the spectre of the tradition,
+the cocked hat upon its white hair, powdered, alas! only by time, its
+cloak falling almost to its heels, its eyes blazing with that fierce yet
+consciously helpless anger of the aged, and its lips drawn close and
+thin to keep the secret that battered against their reticence.
+
+Mr. Hartagous had crept up the stairs like a panther in his eagerness
+for his prey, yet at the instant of discovery he slunk back amazed and
+disconcerted. “Mr. Stanlett,” he exclaimed, his finger failing for a
+moment in the pressure on the button, and the whole scene vanishing into
+darkness with a leaping suddenness, then as suddenly leaping into view,
+“I am astonished at you!”
+
+“And I cannot express _my_ surprise,” the old gentleman said, with a
+crisp sarcasm that had an unexpected edge. His eyes ran deliberately
+over the details of the unconventional aspect and attire of Mr.
+Hartagous: his bushy, tousled gray hair and whiskers; his burly, much
+wrinkled throat, left bare without collar or cravat; his suspenders, all
+unadjusted, still hanging from the waistband of his trousers and
+dangling sashwise almost to his heels; his bare feet and ankles revealed
+nearly in their entirety by his loose, yawning bedroom slippers. And he
+had not the wit to take his thumb from the button of the lamp. “I cannot
+express my surprise to detect you skulking, noiseless, in this unshod
+condition, about a house in which you are a guest. Fie! Fie! Mr.
+Hartagous. If you have taken a fancy to any valuables of ours, why,
+speak out, man, and we will _give_ them to you! We have lost too much
+lately not to realize the vanity of earthly hoardings.”
+
+Mr. Hartagous might have seemed of the porpoise family, so resonant were
+the deep and gusty breaths he drew. “Before God, old man, I have a mind
+to throw you down these stairs,” he cried, in fury and amaze that such
+an imputation, though forced and satiric as it was, could be cast on his
+conduct. “I have a mind to throw you down these stairs!”
+
+“Have a care, have a care of your fellow burglar, then,” cried Mr.
+Stanlett, secure in the immunity of his age and his weakness. “Stand
+from under, my good Mr. Bainbridge.”
+
+Mr. Hartagous had never dreamed how much of his acumen as a lawyer, his
+dignity as a man, his force as an individual, appertained to his usual
+smart metropolitan costume. He made a desperate effort to lay hold on
+his wonted identity.
+
+“But you have your own conduct to explain, Mr. Stanlett,” he said
+severely.
+
+“Explain?—to whom?—to you?” the old man flouted contemptuously.
+
+And Mr. Hartagous was aware that this was not the noted cross-examiner
+whom he had hitherto recognized in himself.
+
+“You surely know, Mr. Stanlett,” he began anew, “that your
+mysterious midnight rovings about this house have given rise to
+misinterpretations—”
+
+“Strange,—strange that you should think so, and yet go roving too!” said
+Mr. Stanlett, his eyes burning.
+
+Mr. Bainbridge, a good deal perturbed by the unexpected falling out of
+the event, yet nevertheless reassured too to find the familiar figure of
+the old gentleman in lieu of the unimagined spectre, in anticipation of
+which his stout heart had quailed, suddenly broke out in his burly
+voice: “Well, I ain’t faultin’ Mr. Stanlett, anyhows he chooses to do.”
+He had known him since his own early youth, and his veneration had the
+strength of long habit. “He can have his own way at Great Oaks. If he
+has a mind to sit up late of a night and loaf about the house, it is his
+own affair. No curfew here! If I had ha’ known that Slip-Slinksy was
+_you_, sir, I’d ha’ been in my dugout and a mile away by now.” The tone
+of respect, of consideration, to which the old gentleman was accustomed,
+broke down his reserve. He could meet defiance with taunts, and
+reproaches with sarcasm, but he melted before kindness.
+
+“Oh, Jerry, Jerry Bainbridge,” he wailed, holding out both hands and
+shaking his old gray head, so fantastic in its cocked hat, dismally to
+and fro, “I was just hunting for a will,—a better will than that
+poisonous paper that is to destroy us all. Faurie never intended that
+such a will should hold. Night after night, year after year, I laid it
+away and hunted for a better one. And I’m hunting for it yet, and I’ll
+hunt for it till I die,—and maybe I’ll find it yet.” Then breaking off
+suddenly, with a look of proud and deep offense, “Slip-Slinksy,—that’s
+what they call me! Slip-Slinksy!” He repeated the distasteful word,
+while a vivid flush mounted to the roots of his silver hair.
+
+“But nobody knowed ’twas you, Mr. Stanlett,” Bainbridge urged
+caressingly, yet with deep respect. “You are more looked up to than
+anybody in Deepwater Bend.”
+
+In view of the tone of this interlocutor, it seemed to Mr. Stanlett not
+derogatory to his dignity to defend himself. “It was my duty,
+Bainbridge, my duty. I had promised Faurie. My word was out.”
+
+Mr. Hartagous cocked up his head to listen and bent his brows. “What
+promise was this which you gave to Mr. Faurie, if I may ask?” he
+demanded, puzzled.
+
+“I recognize no obligation to inform you, Mr. Hartagous, and no coercion
+in your question,” replied Mr. Stanlett, with dignity. “But I would not
+willingly seem churlish and reticent. I have no objection to answer, now
+that that unfortunate codicil has been produced—none whatever. Mr.
+Faurie urged me to search for another will till I found it,—I say a
+‘will,’ but ‘paper-writing’ was the word he used.”
+
+A pause ensued, while his fantastic figure on the landing, with the
+divergent rays of the lamp full upon him, stood silent and stiff, as he
+looked down at the brilliant focus of the electric wire in the case,
+which dulled the dim group about it on the stairs.
+
+“When did Mr. Faurie tell you that?” asked the wondering lawyer.
+
+“Just about four years after he died,” the old man replied, quite
+simply.
+
+A thrill of astonished comprehension quivered through the group on the
+stairs. Hartagous, accustomed to a sedulous facial control, did not
+change countenance or speak; his thumb, however, trembled on the button
+of the lamp, and the scene fluttered back and forth, ghostly-wise,
+through the darkness. But both the other listeners exclaimed, each after
+the fashion of his wonted phraseology, though neither could have
+remembered his own words a moment later. Mr. Stanlett apprehended the
+amazement in the tones, and his interest, which had seemed but a jaded
+familiarity with an old experience, pricked up suddenly.
+
+“Very remarkable, wasn’t it?” he said. “I remember that it surprised me
+extremely at the time, though really I don’t know that it should. Faurie
+was always different from anybody else. I was in the blue room up there,
+where after his death we had packed away all of his papers which he had
+seemed to consider of no particular account, till _you_ sent here, as
+executor, for those cursed levee bonds.” He paused to glare down with
+sudden wolfish rancor at Hartagous, then resumed abruptly: “I was
+ransacking the papers again, for in searching for the levee bonds I had
+found that codicil to the will,—which I wish to God I had never seen or
+had burnt on the spot. I knew the havoc that four years of Honoria’s
+expenditures would make in her provision if they were chargeable against
+her portion in the partition of the estate. Four years’ income,—one
+hundred and twenty thousand dollars. It seemed immense then! And _now_
+it is nearly seven years’ income derived from the general estate that
+she must refund, and in addition all the yield of the crops of Great
+Oaks Plantation.”
+
+He paused, his dreary, sunken eyes lifted suddenly to the upper story
+opposite the landing, and Bainbridge began to quake so perceptibly for
+the thought of what might be leaning lightly over the balustrade, a
+graceful manly figure, which he could see well enough though he would
+not look toward it, that the stout stair-rail shook responsive to the
+quiver of his brawny hand laid upon it. He kept instead his attention
+fixed resolutely on Mr. Stanlett’s lean, pallid face, with its fantastic
+headgear and its fiery eyes. There seemed naught more definite than mere
+memory before them, for he went on as if he had been only arranging the
+sequence of the events in his mind. “It surprised me then considerably,
+but now it seems no great matter. Faurie came in suddenly, as if it were
+the most natural thing in the world, and he said,—you know that way he
+had of demanding impossibilities of people and getting them too,—‘Keep
+back that codicil, Mr. Stanlett,—there is another paper-writing; find it
+and present them both together.’ He was pale and eager. He seemed
+desperately in earnest. He was dressed for riding,—he had come from far.
+I wonder which horse he had! He held a riding-crop in his hand, and he
+struck the codicil contemptuously with it,—you remember his tempestuous
+ways when he was angered, and he had that fine air of scorn that used to
+become him so well,—he struck the codicil as the paper lay open on the
+table. And you can see the welt of his riding-crop across it now.” Mr.
+Hartagous was conscious of a vague icy touch that seemed to delineate
+the course of his spinal column in successive shivers, for he was
+remembering that he had noticed an unaccountable diagonal indentation
+athwart the paper when it had been recently produced in court.
+
+The recital had been to Mr. Stanlett a tremendous nervous strain; the
+old face began to quiver and the voice broke into whimpers, and the thin
+hands were aimlessly fluttering. “And ’twas just like Faurie to set me
+to search and never tell me for what nor where. ‘_Paper-writing!_’ have
+looked—and looked—for the paper-writing,—and I have looked for _him_,
+too, but I have never seen him since,—though—sometimes”—Mr. Stanlett
+glanced furtively over his shoulder at the ascending flight of stairs—“I
+have heard his step behind me as I went hunting—hunting—for the
+‘paper-writing.’ If I had met him once on these dark stairs, I’d have
+held on to him, dead or alive, till I got some data as to what and
+where.”
+
+As the tall, thin figure wavered to and fro and seemed about to fall,
+Bainbridge pushed hastily past Mr. Hartagous on the stair and offered a
+supporting arm to the old gentleman. “Such tiresome times, Jerry
+Bainbridge, that I have, to be sure. I need my sleep,—I need my night’s
+rest,” he plained, looking out of the deep, pathetic, sunken eyesockets
+of the aged: “to watch, and wait, and listen, and slip, and
+search,—’twas mighty hard! And then to be heard, after all. To be
+followed and spied out by this lawyer, and Desmond, and
+you,—_Slip-Slinksy_!” he repeated with a repugnant mutter.
+
+Suddenly the light went out, leaving the whole in darkness. Mr.
+Hartagous pressed the button in vain. “The battery is exhausted. It will
+have to be recharged,” he remarked impersonally, as he turned on the
+stair.
+
+Desmond was suddenly sensible of his position as quasi-host, and he felt
+the Great Oaks traditions of hospitality had hardly been maintained in
+the treatment that Mr. Hartagous had received on the stairs. “I will get
+a candle immediately. There is a fire in the library still, Mr.
+Hartagous; it has grown quite chilly. Perhaps you might care to have a
+cigar there.”
+
+He addressed the unresponsive darkness apparently, in which, however,
+the queer figure of Mr. Hartagous was scarcely invisible, so definitely
+had it impressed itself upon the memory; but it was shuffling along very
+systematically, for his voice came from out the gloom, far down the hall
+and near his own door: “Thanks, thanks, very much; I will put on
+something extra—I feel the change of the temperature—and join you
+presently.”
+
+Mr. Stanlett was not altogether self-absorbed. “Why, Desmond, why don’t
+you offer him a nightcap?” he called out genially, from the darkness of
+the landing. “Make him mix you a toddy in the library, Hartagous. He
+hasn’t got so little sense as you might think! He knows how to do that,
+at any rate!” Then with a distressful quaver: “Take something,
+Hartagous. You ain’t used to the Slip-Slinksy business like me.
+_Slip-Slinksy_,—the very boys call me that!” And now again jocund,
+though ever and anon his voice broke, “Do a little rummaging around in
+the dining-room, Desmond, and see if you can’t put two and two
+together,—a sandwich and a decanter.”
+
+“But won’t you join us, Mr. Stanlett,” demanded Desmond, cheerily, for
+he judged from the diminishing distance of his voice that the old
+gentleman was approaching on the arm of Bainbridge; but Mr. Stanlett
+fell anew to whimpering, and said that he wanted to be in his bed, and
+indeed in his grave, that ought to have been made long ago with him laid
+at peace within it, for the days had come in which he could take no
+pleasure and the nights in which he could take no rest. Then he broke
+off, smartly to reprimand Bainbridge for stumbling, and pathetically
+averred, “But I have had more practice in walking in the dark. My
+conscience! I am familiar with the face of the night. Some terrible
+features it has, too. It is made up of grimaces!”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIX
+
+
+When Mr. Hartagous repaired to the library, he scarcely compared in
+regard to apparel with the point-device Desmond, who was still in the
+attire that he had worn at the somewhat formal dinner early in the
+evening, but the guest’s aspect was far more conventional than during
+the episode on the staircase. As he blew a refreshing whiff of cigar
+smoke from his lips and allowed a second to curl in thin tendrils
+through his nose, he sank deep in his easy chair and stretched out his
+slippered feet luxuriously to the fire. They were now encased also in
+natty black silk socks, which came well up under the trousers and hid
+the ankles, erstwhile so frankly displayed. His hair had been hastily
+brushed, and though he still wore no collar nor tie, his iron-gray
+whiskers, parted and smoothed in his swift toilet, touched the edge of a
+jaunty smoking-jacket, just donned, of quilted bronze silk faced with
+cardinal red. He was more bland now than in his demeanor hitherto;
+perhaps because of the genial influence of the decanter and glasses on
+the library table, he had reached the conclusion that suavity was the
+best method to enlist the good-will of the tutor, and throw his
+influence in the household, which might be considerable, to the
+advantage of the executor in effecting the sale of Great Oaks Plantation
+and a pacific settlement under the terms of the codicil to the will.
+
+“Why, I had no idea that Mr. Stanlett had aged so much,—greatly broken!”
+he remarked confidentially. “He is practically demented. Utterly
+irresponsible! Did you note what he said about having hidden the
+codicil? I wonder how long he has had it in his possession,—might
+approximate the time by the duration of the tradition of the ghostly
+footfall at Great Oaks.”
+
+“He couldn’t have had a nefarious intention, or he would have destroyed
+the paper; yet he must have known how disastrous delay in producing it
+would be to Mrs. Faurie’s interests,” argued Desmond, dispassionately.
+
+“You are reasoning like a sane man, but his course is insanity,”
+rejoined Mr. Hartagous. “I suppose that the shock of the discovery
+impaired his powers of discrimination. There must have been some earlier
+cerebral lesion, some obscure affection of the brain, to which this
+incident gave expression. His delusion is very curious,—the apparition
+of Faurie; great verisimilitude in that character sketch,—I could almost
+see him myself!”
+
+“What strikes me as amazing is that he should never have shared his
+secret,—that he could guard his delusion and his search for a
+‘paper-writing’ through so many years with so many narrow escapes from
+detection,” said Desmond.
+
+“Well, insanity is essentially abnormal.”
+
+“He is insane in no other respect, apparently,” Desmond suggested.
+
+“This is a case of ‘the fixed idea,’” said Hartagous. “It is a good
+thing that he is not legally responsible,—that is, if his possession of
+the codicil was not also a delusion from the beginning.”
+
+“You think that possible?” said Desmond, with raised eyebrows.
+
+“Anything is possible in this connection. But it doesn’t matter,—he is
+wholly irresponsible. Bad thing he has made out of it for Mrs. Faurie!
+It will leave her practically stranded for life, unless indeed she
+should make an advantageous second marriage, which I hope to heaven she
+may.”
+
+“That is hardly likely,” said Desmond, with his eyes on the fire.
+
+Mr. Hartagous bent his bushy gray eyebrows in insistent argument. “And
+why not? She is extremely beautiful, and the years literally make no
+impression upon her. She is as young and as handsome as she was at
+nineteen. And she is very fascinating, in the best sense of the word. A
+very charming and delightful woman! Her piteous prospects in this change
+have worried me no little. Indeed, that is doubtless the one hope,—an
+advantageous second marriage. Among us we must try and save enough to
+her out of the estate to put her in a position—temporary, of course—to
+be able to make it,—go somewhere for a while, Memphis, or New Orleans,
+or New York. Buried here in the woods, she will never see
+anybody,—unless—unless—it were somebody slying around trying to buy
+Great Oaks.” Mr. Hartagous paused reflectively. He was essentially a
+business man, and could have succeeded signally in any line to which he
+had devoted his energies; he was now unconsciously showing great
+capacities to conduct a matrimonial agency. He let off a slow,
+meditative whiff of smoke, holding his cigar in one hand as he looked
+speculatively at the ceiling. “I wonder—I _do_ wonder—whether Loring
+might not fill the bill! What a solution of the problem it would be, if
+we could capture Loring!”
+
+“We don’t want him,” said Desmond, in evident repugnance.
+
+“Why not?” Mr. Hartagous bent his brows in a cogitating frown as he
+surveyed the tutor. “Loring is a very worthy, honorable man, and
+agreeable, apart from his money,—and Mrs. Faurie will have absolutely
+nothing. He is a very brainy man, and of excellent moral character. I
+should think he could make himself very acceptable. You think that Mrs.
+Faurie would not marry him?”
+
+“I know she would not. In fact, Mrs. Faurie has promised to marry me,”
+Desmond said succinctly.
+
+In the scope of humane protection there ought to be some restraint on
+the administration of sudden shocks. The jerk, mental and moral, which
+Mr. Hartagous experienced was as if a galvanic current had thrilled
+through every sensibility. Even his physique was not exempt. As his hand
+on the arm of the chair mechanically flew up, it struck his cigar
+between his lips with such force as to break it in half, so that it hung
+bent at right angles in his mouth as he sat upright and stared at the
+tutor.
+
+Desmond wondered that he should have no qualms of conscience in thus
+interposing an insurmountable obstacle to the fair haven to which Mr.
+Hartagous was desirous of steering Mrs. Faurie’s future. But he only
+felt elated, delighted, triumphant. He did not even resent the indignant
+remonstrance, deprecation, amazement, in the executor’s face.
+
+“Did she intend really,” he demanded, in a low, tense, excited voice,
+“to relinquish her fine income during widowhood,—under the will,—for
+merely what amounts to her statute rights of dower—and _you_?”
+
+The tutor laughed aloud, so joyously, in such gay elation, that Worldly
+Wisdom could but bend its brows anew. “She never had the opportunity. I
+could not, I would not, ask her to relinquish anything for me. It was
+only when she had nothing to lose that I offered my heart and hand,—only
+this evening, in fact.”
+
+Mr. Hartagous leaned forward, the bent cigar still between his lips, to
+survey the young man who, holding his own cigar between his finger-tips,
+lightly touched off the ash and smilingly returned the mentor’s look. He
+still smiled in imperturbable good-humor when Mr. Hartagous ejaculated,
+as if involuntarily, from the depths of his conviction: “You—poor—fool!”
+
+“Thank you very much,” cried Desmond, in airy nonchalance.
+
+“My dear boy, she is ten years older than you—”
+
+“And she looks ten years younger,—but that is neither here nor there. I
+am not marrying her for her beauty any more than for her money.”
+
+“Certainly not for that,” said Mr. Hartagous, sourly. “But Mrs. Faurie’s
+friends will never consent to this; it would make her ridiculous in the
+eyes of the world.”
+
+“If I may judge by what I have learned in my own experience of
+friendship, as this world goes, Mrs. Faurie’s friends will let her very
+severely alone as soon as they are informed of the state of her
+exchequer. As to ridicule,—just as it happens, we do not care in the
+least for that.”
+
+“But you must consider her sons,—the very children will protest.”
+
+“And they alone have the right,” Desmond admitted. And Mr. Hartagous
+made a mental note to be early at their ear with crafty counsel.
+
+He again hesitated for a moment, with the bent cigar now in his hand. “I
+know that you will not thank me for my interference,” he said gravely,
+“but as a mutual friend,—yours as well as Mrs. Faurie’s,—a friend of the
+family, indeed, I must remind you of your financial position. You know
+that it was difficult to find foothold for yourself,—how can you support
+an additional burden? I should be glad to advise Keith to continue you
+in your present employment—”
+
+“I am beholden to you!” laughed Desmond.
+
+“But your common sense must show you that it would be untenable,
+unsuitable. You know that the learned professions are not paid in
+proportion to the equipment required and the talent employed. They ought
+to be—and, in fact, they generally are—filled by men who could at a
+pinch live by other resources. But what would _you_ do if you should
+find no other opportunity?”
+
+“Snap my fingers in the faces of the Nine Muses and come down from
+Olympus! I would do whatever fell to my hand. I would not now be so
+choice, so exacting, so determined on pursuing the course that I had
+laid out. If ‘letters’ are not for me, then I am not for ‘letters.’ I
+will work at anything. I will dig in a ditch. I will turn wood-chopper.
+I will ‘run the river.’”
+
+“You will make a success of whatever you turn your hand to; but ‘run the
+river’—I hope you ain’t talkin’ of leavin’ us, Mr. Desmond.”
+Bainbridge’s rough voice broke suddenly on the colloquy, as he entered,
+hearing only the last words. “I don’t know how we would get on at Great
+Oaks without you now.” Then, bethinking himself of his own insecure
+tenure of office, his face clouded and his voice fell. “Well, gents,” he
+continued, after a pause, “I have got old Mr. Stanlett resting easy, and
+I believe I’ll finish out my yerrand here and take myself home. Mr.
+Desmond, do you know if there was any of them sticks o’ giant powder
+left here at the house after we blasted that last tangle?” For a recent
+development of the dangers of the overflow was the approach of floating
+débris dislodged from the inundated forests above, now merely drift
+logs, and again gigantic trees, long since dead and easily overblown in
+the high winds that had latterly prevailed. Sometimes they came slowly
+slipping along the sluggish flood of the back waters, sometimes swiftly
+hurtling, as if flung from a catapult, down the impetuous currents of
+the mid-channel of the great river. Now they appeared singly, and again
+entangled with other growths; and these fibrous masses, difficult of
+disintegration, offered a menace in collision with boats or buildings,
+which required all the ingenuity of the skilled in “fighting water” to
+ward off. To climb upon the floating tree, insert a dynamite cartridge
+in some convenient hollow, and speed off as fast as dugout might skim
+and paddle ply before the explosion rent the floating mass asunder,
+setting it adrift in hundreds of harmless fragments, had been found an
+effective measure, though not without dangers of its own.
+
+Desmond said that he had reserved a few cartridges, which he had
+deposited in an out-of-the-way place for safety. He laid his cigar on
+the edge of the ash tray on the library table, searched one of the
+drawers for a key, and as he left the room, he remarked that dynamite
+was a commodity with which Mr. Bainbridge could not be too careful.
+
+“I ain’t going to set down on it, you can bet high on that!” the manager
+observed, with the kind of laugh attributed to the horse, with less than
+fair appreciation of equine manners. He slouched across the room in the
+big boots which he had resumed, having drawn them over his trousers to
+the knee according to his wont. His big hat was on the back of his
+straw-tinted hair, for since Mrs. Faurie was not present, he recognized
+no etiquette which required him to remove it, and he habitually wore it
+indoors; he sunk into a large chair of the reclining variety, furnished
+with a shelf at the side, which was available, turning on a pivot, for
+either book-rest or writing-desk. As he quietly waited, he began to eye
+Mr. Hartagous and his bent cigar, which was past all surgery. The lawyer
+discarded it into the smoking-tray, and spoke to avoid a question
+concerning it, for he realized that Mr. Bainbridge’s curiosity was
+unrestricted and his tact slight.
+
+“They have made great changes here, Mr. Bainbridge,” he said, glancing
+about the room,—“and yet there is no especial difference when you come
+to examine,—a mere matter of rearrangement.”
+
+“Yes, sir,—yes, sir. The kids recite here now. But Mr. Desmond has a way
+of putting his mark on things. This room reminds me only of him now, yet
+I can remember a time when it was as good as a photo of Mr. Faurie. He
+died here, you know,—and if I don’t forgit, it was in this very chair.”
+
+“Yes, yes,—of heart failure. Yes,—a good while ago,” Mr. Hartagous
+replied, and fell silent.
+
+The whole house had become silent, too, once more. If Desmond were astir
+in his search for the stick of dynamite, it was at a distance in the
+rambling old building, for there was no token of movement far or near.
+The clock on the mantelpiece was bringing the minute hand into
+occultation by the hour hand on the dial, and the silver tale of
+midnight presently rang out. The single log across the andirons, for it
+had been a bright fire rather than a great one, had charred through by
+the heat of the day’s embers below and presently fell apart, sending up
+jets of sparks and tendrils of pungent smoke. Mr. Bainbridge rose and
+nimbly kicked the ends together between the dogs, and as the flames of
+the dry wood flared up cheerily, he returned to his seat, and seemed
+disposed to moralize and favor Mr. Hartagous with his views on the
+mutation of sublunary affairs. “But I useter never come in this room but
+what I could fairly pictur’ Mr. Faurie sittin’ in this very chair. Lord!
+what a power o’ pains he did give himself about that will o’ his and all
+his papers, Mr. Hartagous. And to think! it’s all turned out as he would
+have liked least. Not that I blame _you_, sir.”
+
+“No, of course not,” acceded Mr. Hartagous, promptly, conscious that his
+position did not commend itself to the manager’s favor.
+
+“Being the executor, you have to do as the law requires. But little did
+_he_ think that he was leaving his pretty young wife a share of—river
+fog, to live off ’n all her days; no wonder it’s turned old Mr.
+Stanlett’s brain! She has been like a daughter to him. Well, well,—I
+don’t wonder that he thought he viewed Mr. Faurie up there amongst the
+old papers in the blue room. Mr. Faurie lived amongst his papers those
+few last weeks,—every lease, every lien, every mortgage, every
+promissory note, was examined in expectation of the administration of
+his estate. I useter look at him and wonder how he had the grit to fix
+and fix his papers when he warn’t able to work, so feeble as he was.
+He’d send for me as a subscribing witness in leases, and contracts, and
+such,—me and the trained nurse; we witnessed a power o’ papers in those
+last days. They mostly seemed short,—little matters hereabouts. The
+important papers had been packed and sent to you in Memphis by that
+time; but these were some renewals he had promised, and he canceled some
+obligations he held. Mr. Faurie was not what a body would call a liberal
+man,—he was rather strict: but he executed a release for old man Tynes,
+whose debt wasn’t more than half paid out, and who was likely to ha’
+been sold up; and he give a quittance to old Sloper; and he acknowledged
+a quitclaim deed on that tract o’ swampy woodland that that Irish
+wood-chopper Jessop hadn’t paid scarcely any purchase money on—’tain’t
+worth much, but ’twas riches to old Axe-helve; and he relinquished his
+rights in that steamboat, the Swamp Lily, to Captain Cleek, for old
+acquaintance’ sake; and he remembered the old niggers variously; and he
+gimme my mule Lucy, finest mare mule I ever see, as good to-day as she
+was then, and two hundred dollars in gold in a bag,—but _he_ didn’t care
+to stand for liberal. He wouldn’t ha’ put such little extras into his
+will for the public to know—indeed, no,—not for a pretty! He just
+settled his gifts beforehand. And every paper was just so!—and they all
+held together as tight as hell, except that will that he cared for more
+than all the rest. Things turn out cur’ous, they do,—for a fact!”
+Bainbridge shook his head drearily, and looked reflectively into the
+fire. Great Oaks Plantation had been home to him for many a year, and he
+was a man of scanty resources and narrow experience. He knew naught of
+the world beyond, and he deprecated change.
+
+“Of course I didn’t know the contents of the papers then,” he presently
+resumed his reminiscences. “I just heard about what they were in the
+gossip after his death, and in fact a good many were put on record in
+the court-house right away. I wasn’t expected to read ’em when he
+executed them. All I did was to witness his signature.” With his
+unemployed hands he drew before him the writing-shelf attached to the
+arm of the chair and took the position of the scribe as he meditated,
+drumming slightly on the wood with his fingers, that showed in their
+blunt, roughened tips and broken nails the hand of the toiler. “Mr.
+Faurie was a proud man,” he discriminated. “He didn’t openly admit that
+death itself could down him. He only used to remark, ‘No man can say
+that he will be here to-morrow, so I am setting some pressing affairs in
+order.’ He said that to me on that last night, just about a half hour
+before he died. Why, I hadn’t got home,—I was riding one of his
+horses,—do you remember Indian Chief, and how fast he could rack?—I
+hadn’t reached the willow slough when I saw the rocket go up at the
+landing to signal the Swamp Lily as she passed to stop and take on the
+orders for the funeral, you know.”
+
+“Yes,—oh, yes,” said Mr. Hartagous, hastily, reminded of ghastly
+details. It was not a cheering subject; he had had a troublous day; he
+had been awaiting Desmond’s return that he might have an additional word
+with him in continuance of the discussion so suddenly sprung upon him;
+but the tutor was long away, scarcely sustaining his reputation for
+rummaging. The lawyer was about to comment with acerbity on the delay,
+for he felt the need of his well-earned night’s rest, when he was struck
+by the fidelity of the mimicry of voice and manner with which the
+manager was reproducing the scene so often enacted here, so replete with
+significance to all those whom these signatures concerned. “‘Witness my
+hand and seal,—witness my hand and seal,’” he repeated more than once.
+Then, with an imperative intonation, “‘Attest, Jeremiah Bainbridge. Sign
+here.’”
+
+He glanced up with a mirthless laugh, and as he thrust the shelf away
+from him the elastic strap of a portfolio, attached on the under side,
+gave way in his rough handling and a flutter of papers slid from the
+receptacle to the floor.
+
+“Look at me!” exclaimed Bainbridge, in contrition for the mischance.
+“What’s these?—the kids’ exercises.” He read aloud in a droning voice:
+“‘And when King Xerxes marched to the north he left’—a heap of confusion
+behind him, I reckon!” he remarked facetiously, gathering up the flying
+pages of writing, inscribed in a large, boyish hand, stopping now and
+again to peruse quizzically the inapposite theme with a sort of relish
+of its incongruity with the scene, the life, and the thought of to-day.
+
+Mr. Hartagous lent his aid. The accident was of a kind peculiarly
+irritating to his prepossessions, and to his mind suggested the bull in
+the china shop. He was less animated, however, by the desire to help the
+worthy manager than to remove the débris and obviate thus any difficulty
+which might otherwise prevent Mr. Bainbridge from getting himself away
+immediately upon the return of Desmond with the stick of dynamite; Mr.
+Hartagous was capable of wishing that this might blow the manager into
+the Mississippi River, were there no other method of compassing his
+speedy withdrawal. To preserve the juvenile work from destruction, since
+several pages had flown within the big brass fender, he reached over it
+and secured them from the hearth. Then, seating himself in the chair
+just vacated by Bainbridge, who was now occupied in seeking fugitive
+papers under the table, the sofa, the globes, Mr. Hartagous addressed
+himself to replacing the pages in the portfolio.
+
+An awkward, old-fashioned device of desk arrangement, he thought it, for
+the portfolio attached to the shelf swung beneath, leaving the upper
+surface free for the writer’s needs, and it could only be drawn high
+enough to receive or disburse papers by means of the elastic strap which
+Bainbridge had burst. It now showed signs of letting the pages slip as
+soon as restored; and saying with a note of tense vexation, “Where did
+these belong, anyhow?—and how the devil does this go?” Mr. Hartagous
+drew the despoiled receptacle up on top of the shelf to aid his
+disposition of the collected sheets. As in most portfolios, the two
+gaping pockets were obvious, but as he was about to stow the remaining
+briefs concerning the Persian hero therein, another paper from an inner
+slit in a different handwriting was brought to view. His face changed
+sharply as he drew it forth, all unnoticed by Mr. Bainbridge, laughing
+over the crude views of the boy’s work as he held a page to the lamp on
+the table, his big teeth a-glimmer in the midst of his straw-tinted
+beard, the big hat and broad shoulders thrown in a Brobdingnagian shadow
+on the wall.
+
+“Will you give me your attention for a moment, sir,” Mr. Hartagous said,
+in a low, repressed voice. “Is this your signature?”
+
+Bainbridge lumbered heavily forward in startled expectation. “By gum, it
+sure is!” he cried, excited to fever heat. “And that is the last paper
+which Mr. Faurie ever signed!” he added, leaning over to scan the
+document. “I am sure of that, because Mr. Dabney witnessed it with
+me,—’twas me and the trained nurse that always subscribed as witnesses
+together, except this once. And just before I reached the willow slough
+I seen the rocket go up at the landing to signal the death to the Swamp
+Lily, that was just rounding the point off the Arkansas shore.”
+
+There were a few other papers with the document, a canceled note of
+hand, a contract for the erection of buildings, a surveyor’s plat of
+land, all memoranda of completed purpose, which had evidently been
+returned. Mr. Hartagous was running them swiftly over, while
+Bainbridge’s attention was focused upon his own scrawl as a subscribing
+witness on the sheet on the portfolio.
+
+“I never thought of it again,” Bainbridge resumed; “and I suppose that
+whoever set the room to rights after he was carried out of it must have
+laid this away among the other papers in the portfolio and desk. He must
+have intended to mail it with other inclosures,—that will that Mr.
+Stanlett found, I reckon,—for see, here is a long, stamped envelope,
+with six cents postage and an immejet delivery stamp.” Bainbridge held
+it up to the light. “He must have weighed it with the inclosures,—but it
+has got no address. I remember now that after Mr. Dabney and I had said
+good-night to him and went out into the hall, I noticed the nigger
+waiting at the library door, with the bag for Mr. Faurie’s mail, ready
+to paddle in a dugout to the Swamp Lily just sighted nigh the point off
+the Arkansas shore.”
+
+Mr. Hartagous was once more bending his bushy brows over the names of
+the witnesses to the document. “And who is this other party?” he asked.
+
+“Mr. Dabney? Richard Dabney?—why, don’t you remember him? He used to run
+a store near Great Oaks. The land it was built on fell into the river
+not long after that, and he moved away. He was living in Arkansas the
+last I heard of him, running a sawmill. He had come to Great Oaks
+mansion that evening to inquire for Mr. Faurie, hearing that he had been
+ailing,—in fact, he was taken with a short rigor while Mr. Dabney was
+here. Mr. Faurie was still sitting in this chair when he wrote his name,
+which he did easily enough, but he seemed very faint when he called upon
+us to witness his signature, and pronounced the paper a little—little
+coddle-shell, I think he called it, to his will. I never thought of it
+since. I jus’ allowed it was some of his Tennessee business, because he
+remarked sorter mumbling to himself, ’twas situated there and that he
+s’posed this coddle-shell would take effect under the laws there, it
+being his domicile, so to say, him being a resident o’ Nashville, and a
+regularly qualified voter of Davidson County,—though shucks! we claimed
+him here in the swamp country; he had been here so much at Great Oaks in
+the winters, as his health declined. I haven’t thought of it since. As
+he was always busy with his papers in them days, I didn’t taken any
+special notice of the circumstance. Is it any account, particularly,—cut
+any ice?”
+
+A codicil, indeed, it proved; and while affirming and republishing the
+main testamentary provisions of the previous codicil, the testator made
+the single change of giving to his widow all his personal property of
+whatever sort,—in lieu of one fourth of it,—stocks, bonds, and some
+hoards of special deposits in Tennessee banks; and though the vital
+importance of this bequest was altogether unforeseen by the dying man,
+the crucial emergency being far beyond the purview of his vicarious
+precautions, it was evident that it would aggregate enough to solve the
+refunding problem of Mrs. Faurie’s receipts from the estate.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XX
+
+
+It was a joyous household the next morning, and Mr. Hartagous genially
+participated in the prevailing good cheer. He had very heartily
+deprecated the hardships to be wrought by the execution of his duty, and
+was thankful indeed that they were mitigated to the extent of the
+benefactions of this codicil. Great Oaks under water, with valuable
+machinery and livestock, miles of fencing and indispensable buildings,
+to replace, was no boon in comparison with Mrs. Faurie’s former rich
+endowments, but at all events it was not to fall to his lot to turn the
+widow out of her shelter for the behoof of her young sons. Nevertheless,
+he resolved to remonstrate very seriously with her against the proposed
+marriage, and to stint himself no whit in forceful phraseology.
+
+He did not meet her at the breakfast-table, for he was late, owing to
+the vigils of the preceding night, and when he presented himself to
+partake of the matutinal meal, he found that she had already departed,
+leaving him to the vicarious hospitality of Desmond, the jubilant Mr.
+Stanlett, and the three boys with their shining morning faces. He
+fortified himself with a good cigar after breakfast and a meditative
+stroll upon the veranda in the fresh, breezy, summery day, intending
+that his nerves should be well soothed and his tact whetted before he
+should enter upon his delicate mission.
+
+The leafage of the wide-spreading grove was green and lush, and waved
+gilded in the sunlight; hanging baskets, with trailing ferns and laden
+with parti-colored foliage plants, swung in the arches between the
+vine-draped columns of the veranda. If one could imagine one’s self
+afloat, or in some Venetian entourage, the diluvian scene might have
+seemed, instead of the dreariest expression of disaster, to have
+elements of picturesque amphibious interest. What though the Arkansas
+shore were withdrawn from view—there was not much of it visible in its
+best estate!—and instead was an expanse of rippling sunlit sea of
+indefinite bounds, of a richly tawny hue, and with enlivening and unique
+incidents,—a couple of gayly whisking dugouts in the foreground, a
+steamboat in the middle distance, puffing columns of curling smoke as in
+the centre of the channel she steadily climbed the current, and in the
+offing a white flash of sea-gulls, describing eccentric curves,
+brilliant as stars against the depressed horizon, blue and hazy and
+dimly discriminated. There was an absence of briny odors, which are not
+always acceptable, however, and instead a pungent fragrance of bark came
+from the inundated woods, and the honeysuckle twining about the
+balustrade and bravely blooming from out the floods sent forth a subtile
+and delicious perfume.
+
+“‘A life on the ocean wave,’” Mrs. Faurie exclaimed joyously, as he
+turned a corner and came suddenly upon her. She had been rifling a wire
+flower-stand that lifted its redundant growths against the wall of the
+house, and she held in her hand a cluster of pink and white carnations.
+As she stood in the blended sheen of the bland day and the refulgent
+reflection of the blazing waters, she looked not unlike the bloom
+itself. She had upon her head a wide hat of delicate pink organdy, the
+brim variously bent and shirred and frilled, and her morning dress was
+of sheer white lawn. He strove within himself to avoid its recognition
+as the simplest toilet, such as any country girl might wear, for she
+took no grace from it, but embellished its every suggestion. Her slim,
+lissome figure lent it such distinction; the exquisite fairness of her
+complexion was so emphasized by the unrelenting clarity of the tints of
+her costume; the shoaling lights and shadows of her beautiful gray eyes,
+her rich brown hair piled high amongst the carnation-like frills of the
+hat, her delicate dewy lips, her dainty hand and arm and throat, all
+were more assertive in their demand for homage in the simple not to say
+stereotyped attire. And she looked scarcely twenty years old, as her
+laughing, long-lashed eyes met his.
+
+“Can you keep your sea-legs in the contemplation of that weltering
+main?”—she glanced at the waterscape. “Will you feel less as if in an
+indigestible dream and more like a landlubber if I give you a
+boutonnière?” She selected a very perfect carnation from the cluster,
+and as she advanced to place it in the buttonhole of his coat, he caught
+her hand with the flower in it.
+
+“I want to say something very serious to you,” he protested. “I want to
+speak as freely to you as if you were my daughter.”
+
+She glanced up, gayly laughing. “Your sister, you should say.”
+
+He perceived his error,—on the very point of age, which was to be the
+gravamen of his remonstrances! But he had unconsciously been allured by
+her aspect,—as she looked scarcely twenty.
+
+“Well, hardly young enough to be my daughter, indeed,” he said craftily,
+“though Desmond is really young enough to be my son. My dear madam, you
+will make yourself a laughing-stock if you contemplate this marriage.
+You ought to remember that you are ten years older than this boy.”
+
+“Should I mind that if he does not?” she queried, holding up the cluster
+of carnations no fresher than the flush in her cheeks.
+
+“And now that, by the grace of God, you are to have Great Oaks
+unincumbered, you will put him into the position of making a mercenary
+marriage; he is sensitive on that score,—I can see that already,—though
+of course he is glad that your future comfort is assured, however
+meagrely in comparison with the old days.”
+
+“But ought we to consider the public,—if it will accord us so much
+distinction as to gossip about us as a nine days’ wonder,—or only
+ourselves, and our own mutual happiness?” She slipped the carnation into
+his buttonhole and drew off, standing in her graceful slimness, her head
+aslant, to observe the effect.
+
+“Ridicule deals a vicarious stab, which is peculiarly sharp. You should
+consider your children, dear Mrs. Faurie,” he urged.
+
+“And I will,” she promised heartily. “Trust me for that! I will do
+nothing contrary to their wishes.”
+
+He made no secret of his intentions. He turned at once. She stood
+looking after him, smiling at his haste, as he went bustling down the
+veranda to find the boys. His method of busy progression was not unlike
+that of the puffing steamboat in the channel, bustling up the river.
+Though he had no fear of her interference or adverse influence, he was
+so impressed with the importance of his mission to enlist some potent
+opposition to the marriage that he made no effort to enliven the
+seriousness of the crisis with jocose preamble, in view of the juvenile
+character of his interlocutors, or to minimize its significance. In
+logical and definite fashion he set forth the fact and its aspect to the
+world at large, with its effect on their mother’s future and their own,
+in very unvarnished phrase. They silently heard him out, seated before
+him in a row on the sofa in the front parlor, very attentive, and with
+more friendly faces than he had heretofore seen them wear.
+
+“It rests with you three,” he said in conclusion, seeking to impress
+them with a sense of their responsibility. “Your mother cares more for
+you than she ever did or ever will for any man. She is the most maternal
+woman I ever knew. You can prevent her from making a ridiculous
+marriage,—a foolish marriage,—a disastrous marriage, that will bring
+unhappiness upon everybody connected with it.”
+
+“Oh, no! Mr. Hartagous!” promptly responded the rosy and beaming Chub,
+taking the pas, perhaps instinctively on the principle that the youngest
+officer on a court-martial speaks first. “It is the very best thing that
+we can do. Ever since I have found out that Mr. Desmond was going to
+marry us, I have felt that we-all were so safe!” He gave himself an
+affectionate little hug to express his sense of security.
+
+Horace administered a rude nudge with his elbow. “Nobody is going to
+marry _you_!” he admonished his junior, shamefaced for the ignorance he
+manifested.
+
+“Oh, yes,” protested Chub, wagging his round head, evidently having
+mastered the situation; “when a gentleman marries a widow lady, he
+marries the whole family!”
+
+“You certainly have an interest to consider,” said Mr. Hartagous,
+gravely. “Your affection for your mother, your respect for your father,
+ought to urge you to a course of discreet remonstrance,—nothing
+unfilial, or likely to estrange you, but to prevent an absurd and most
+unseemly marriage that must necessarily be, too, unhappy and
+unfortunate.”
+
+“I don’t see it in that light, Mr. Hartagous,” said Horace, slowly. His
+face had an intimation of precocious force, and there was even a
+mutinous spark in the glance of his eye. His was the complex and
+difficult disposition of the three brothers. His convictions were
+obviously strong, and his opposition likely to be of a strenuous order.
+Mr. Hartagous hearkened with an access of attention. “I don’t see it
+that way. I think that Mr. Desmond cares more for her and for us than
+anybody else ever will. I think his proposal when he had reason to think
+her fairly bankrupt shows that he was willing to make every sacrifice
+for her. Then look at him! Why, you are obliged to see that he is head
+and shoulders above anybody—though he is not rich. But he is younger,
+just as you say, though he does not _seem_ young. He is old in mind and
+disposition. And Lord! the heaps he knows about everything! As to your
+fear about what people will say,—well, _I_ have seen a lot of the world,
+and it seems to me that if a certain kind of people don’t laugh at you
+for one thing, they will for another. If you stay at home, they call you
+‘a swamper’; if you travel abroad, they call you a ‘globe-trotter’; if
+you dress well, they ridicule you as ‘a dude’; if you take it easy, they
+say you are ‘tacky.’ _My_ idea is to go right ahead and do what you
+think is right and properest, and—let them laugh! I’d hate to deny
+myself anything good and valuable ’cause Mrs. Kentopp might giggle over
+it.”
+
+“She left us out of her house-party,—and we ain’t dead yet!” said Chub,
+banging the heels of his shoes back and forth against the sofa.
+
+Reginald took a deeper view. “I think, sir, that her happiness ought to
+be considered first. She is young, after all is said, and has many years
+yet to live, I hope. She ought to have her independence,—to be a free
+agent! When I was in India, there had been a recent case of suttee way
+off somewhere in some remote district,—I heard a great deal of talk
+about it. People had supposed the practice was suppressed. And without
+meaning any disrespect to my father’s will,—for I can understand how the
+idea of a stranger in the family circle would influence a division of
+property,—I always thought an objection to second marriage was a sort of
+civilized suttee. As to Mr. Desmond, himself, I should prefer him as a
+stepfather to all the world.”
+
+And thus Desmond was welcomed without a dissentient voice.
+
+At first Mrs. Kentopp, who might be taken as representing the gossips at
+large, was so rejoiced that Great Oaks Plantation would not come
+immediately on the market in competition with Dryad-Dene that it
+mitigated the acerbity of her views, and although she twinkled and
+dimpled much in commenting on the disparity in age and fortune and
+prospects of the couple, her talk had not the rancor which it developed
+later when Mr. Loring seemed indisposed to console himself with
+Dryad-Dene, and gradually drew off without making any offer.
+
+A golden era of happiness had dawned on Great Oaks; the waters of the
+overflow gradually disappeared, and during the brief interval of the
+wedding journey Mrs. Kentopp drove over through the mud, bogging down
+once or twice in the alluvial sloughs, on a tour of discovery, and
+recounted with facetious distortions of effect afterward Chub’s simple
+boastings in great pride as to the preparations that were making for the
+reception of the couple on their return. Mr. Stanlett had designed and
+supervised these, and was very important and happily busy. “I hope he
+furnished the money to pay for the changes, for otherwise I don’t see
+where it was to come from, for Desmond must have put all his pedagogic
+savings in the expense of the bridal tour,” she jovially speculated.
+Great Oaks was very judiciously embellished, and looked most genially
+hospitable on the day of her visit, for the old man had a pretty fancy
+and an accurate discrimination of the appropriate.
+
+“I always said there was another will or codicil, or, to be accurate,
+‘paper-writing,’” he cheerily averred, as he handed Mrs. Kentopp into
+her carriage. “This is not of course the provision that was intended for
+Honoria, but it passes,—it passes fairly well, and Edward, my nephew,
+Mr. Desmond, you know, does not care for money.”
+
+And when Mrs. Kentopp repeated this, she was wont to point out gayly the
+incongruity of this statement with the fact that “Edward,” Mr.
+Stanlett’s “nephew,” should have contrived to surround himself
+comfortably with that useful commodity in a wife so well endowed and
+three very rich stepsons, over whom he had now paramount influence. She
+found much joy, also, in Horace’s simplicity in believing that the
+sentimental interests between the two had been settled before the
+discovery of the last codicil which had put a new aspect on the
+financial status, and she sought to convince people in Deepwater Bend
+and elsewhere that the comfortable estate, more than the phenomenal
+beauty of the lady, had served to obviate the disadvantage of the
+disparity of years.
+
+Prosperity supplemented happiness. There was a great crop of cotton
+produced by the overflowed lands; the debts were finally settled; the
+yacht was gone, indeed, when all was done, but the emeralds remained,
+and the next carnival season the famous beauty blazed in all her wonted
+splendor upon the old coterie in New Orleans which she had frequented in
+her girlhood. But she soon became secondary in the household. Colonel
+Desmond,—how Mrs. Kentopp laughed when that brevet of consideration was
+added to him instinctively, insensibly by the community, addicted to the
+bestowal of titles on those who so manifestly were entitled to the
+insignia of supremacy,—in the serene quiet of the ensuing winter, found
+in the desk of the library the scattered sheets of a manuscript which he
+had written in his lonely leisure in the early days of his stay at Great
+Oaks. He re-read it in surprise, and withal in self-conscious doubt,
+then again with growing appreciation. He thought that he could not now
+write its like. It had the concentrated strength of complete mental
+isolation. It was the work of the seer,—one who stands apart and judges
+justly without flinching, and it was instinct with the abstract truth.
+Much of it was bitter like life, much of it was sad; but it apprehended
+an unrealized purpose, a symmetry of design in life, a divine direction,
+and it shadowed this forth. So unfamiliar had the work grown in the
+lapse of time that he was flattered by the tone of its scholarship, its
+evidences of close reasoning, deep learning, and wide scope of thought,
+and the distinction of its literary style. For this reason he showed it
+to his wife and the eldest of the stepsons, and straightway the
+household clamor arose. Greatness unsolicited had knocked at their
+doors! Fame had been busy all this time gathering laurels for their
+brows. The younger sons, although uncomprehending, were equally elated,
+and though Desmond laughed at them all, he let them have their will, and
+he became grave and respectful toward their acumen when he read the
+letter of the publisher to whom it was submitted.
+
+Mrs. Kentopp said later that its vogue—an absolutely unreadable book, on
+all sorts of political conditions, for nobody had really read it—was
+because a notable English statesman, very meddlesome with pen and ink,
+had canvassed its positions in a London quarterly, duller, if possible,
+and less read than the book itself, and another English quarterly had
+published Desmond’s reply, and for some time the counter-arguments of
+other political economists who found the work of vital interest caused
+the effusion of much printers’ ink. And when the family went to London
+the next year, Colonel Desmond was lionized in distinguished circles,
+and was given an additional learned degree at a great English university
+where he had taken one in his earlier youth.
+
+“Deepwater Bend is a literary centre now, and don’t you forget it, and
+has its learned light,” Mrs. Kentopp dimpled, “though none of us of
+course have read or ever will read the Great Book.”
+
+But even Mrs. Kentopp’s flings were destined to disregard and
+discontinuance. A javelin, however skillfully aimed, must needs have a
+point to take effect. “I don’t think there seems a disparity in age,” a
+stranger in a social company had dubiously replied to her delighted
+mention of the ten years’ difference. “Colonel Desmond does not look so
+much as ten years older.”
+
+And after the company’s somewhat mischievous burst of laughter had shown
+their comprehension of her intention and hopelessly mystified the
+stranger, who could not imagine what had been said amiss, Colonel
+Kentopp had taken occasion to admonish his wife in private. “You do
+yourself no good, Annetta, by harping on that woman’s age. People will
+only think you carping and jealous.”
+
+And, indeed, Desmond was fast growing older and graver. Other books had
+succeeded the first; and while they added distinction in differing
+degrees, they added, too, the marks of thought on brow and mien. Now the
+light always burned late from the library window on the water-side, and
+the river pilots counted its faint, far glow in their midnight bearings.
+Often they pointed it out with pride to some passenger admitted to the
+wheel-house, seeing it shining with a sort of stellular isolation amidst
+the darkling riparian forests of Great Oaks, and repeated the titles of
+his volumes, although perhaps, like Mrs. Kentopp, they had read none of
+the works.
+
+But this was really not the illuminated hour of the library, the time of
+its signal triumph. Regularly every afternoon when the western sunlight,
+striking in long, slanting bars athwart it, turned from burnished gold
+to ethereal, hazy red, his wife appeared, and seated one on each side of
+the fire in true Darby-and-Joan fashion, as Kentopp’s prophetic eye had
+long ago beheld them from the veranda, Desmond read aloud the result of
+his day’s labor, while her beautiful, listening, reflective eyes dwelt
+on the coals and his voice filled the quiet spaces of the scholastic old
+room. She never criticised. She gave no word of applause. She offered no
+monition of advice. When he laid down the papers and their eyes met, her
+comment was always the same.
+
+“What did I tell you long, long ago, the first afternoon that you and I
+ever sat here before the fire?”
+
+“Why, that I ought to write for publication,—to write books.”
+
+“And what did you say?”
+
+“Well,” he always laughed as he replied,—“that I couldn’t,—that I was
+not capable of it.”
+
+“Then,” she was wont to solemnly rejoin, while her eyes danced with joy
+and mirth and pride, “do you never _dare_ to contradict me again as long
+as you live.”
+
+
+
+
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+ MONTLIVET
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+UNDER THE MAN-FIG>
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+THE WIRE CUTTERS>
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+Illustrated by E. BOYD SMITH.
+
+
+CATTLE BRANDS>
+
+“Clever, original and highly amusing tales.” _Boston Transcript._
+
+ Each of the above, $1.50.
+
+ HOUGHTON
+ MIFFLIN
+ COMPANY
+
+[Illustration: TOUT BIEN OU RIEN]
+
+ BOSTON
+ AND
+ NEW YORK
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES
+
+
+ ● Typos fixed; non-standard spelling and dialect retained.
+ ● Enclosed italics font in _underscores_.
+ ● Enclosed blackletter font in =equals=.
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 76784 ***
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+ <body>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 76784 ***</div>
+
+<div class='tnotes covernote'>
+
+<p class='c000'><strong>Transcriber’s Note:</strong></p>
+
+<p class='c000'>New original cover art included with this eBook is granted to the public domain.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='chapter ph1'>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c001'>
+ <div>THE FAIR MISSISSIPPIAN</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='figcenter id001'>
+<img src='images/frontispiece.jpg' alt='' class='ig001'>
+<div class='ic001'>
+<p>HONORIA</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='titlepage'>
+
+<div>
+ <h1 class='c002'><span class='xlarge'>THE FAIR</span><br> MISSISSIPPIAN<br> <span class='large'><em>A NOVEL</em></span></h1>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c003'>
+ <div><span class='large'>BY CHARLES EGBERT CRADDOCK</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='figcenter id002'>
+<img src='images/signet.jpg' alt='[Logo]' class='ig001'>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>BOSTON AND NEW YORK</div>
+ <div>HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY</div>
+ <div><span class='blackletter'>The Riverside Press Cambridge</span></div>
+ <div>1908</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c001'>
+ <div><span class='small'>COPYRIGHT, 1908, BY MARY N. MURFREE</span></div>
+ <div class='c004'><span class='small'>ALL RIGHTS RESERVED</span></div>
+ <div class='c004'><span class='small'><em>Published October 1908</em></span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='chapter ph1'>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c001'>
+ <div><span class='sc'>The Fair Mississippian</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_1'>1</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER I</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c006'>The simplest fact of this life of ours is subject
+to manifold and diverse interpretations. It was the
+faithful belief of Edward Desmond, and his inward
+protest, that he did not care for money. He had the
+true scholar’s disdain of the froth and fret of fashion
+that can but scantily disguise the mental shallowness
+of society. He was not fond of luxury. He had an
+ardor for hard work and a passionate ambition for
+achievement. He desired but a modest competence
+and the opportunity for mental development along
+the lines which his expanding capacities gave promise
+of compassing. Nevertheless, at twenty-four years of
+age, his elaborate education at length complete, in
+the prime of his intellectual powers, tingling with
+the consciousness of ability, he found that he had
+become suddenly solicitous in small matters of social
+precedence; he experienced a pained deprecation of
+the presence of wealth; he winced with a sensitive
+realization of poverty; he had acquired a wavering
+yet proud self-assertion, consciously futile.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The change had been wrought in a time of grievous
+tragedy, full of poignancies scarcely to be adequately
+appreciated by the practical world. For less
+sensitive men have suffered more bitter woes. It was
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2'>2</span>a trite tragedy, with no traits of dramatic potentialities.
+On the sudden death of his father ensued the
+revelation of a shattered estate, the usual frantic,
+useless effort to avert total wreck, final defeat culminating
+in the forced sale of an old home with all
+its appurtenances. The memories, the dreams, the
+traditions, the broken hopes that had hallowed the
+old chattels were too immaterial even for the cormorant-like
+comprehensiveness of the inventories, and
+these sanctities were all that was left for the heir.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>His friends, however, took an optimistic view.
+When the struggle was over,—brief, but hopeless and
+conclusive,—they found solace in the completeness
+of his equipment; his education was at length finished;
+he had returned to his Maryland home only
+the previous June from an elaborate course of study
+abroad; the world was before him. As to the profession
+of the law for which he had been destined, they
+cheerfully argued that the preliminary training and
+the necessary library would be expensive, success uncertain,—and
+he must needs live pending its delay,—the
+tardy emoluments disproportioned to the labor
+and ability involved. Since there seemed no vacancy
+in the professorial ranks of the small western colleges,
+where they had hoped he might find a chair, they
+spoke of him as having fallen upon his feet when the
+unusual brilliancy of his scholastic record brought
+him the offer of the tutorship of the three sons in a
+wealthy family, dwelling in the isolation of a secluded
+Mississippi plantation, the opportunity coming at the
+ultimate crisis of the painful financial emergency.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_3'>3</span>For although the salary was small, in comparison with
+the allowance which the generosity of his father had
+heretofore afforded an only son, his prospective earnings
+would have abashed the honoraria of a fledgeling
+lawyer’s professional labors, even had he already attained
+admission to the bar. Thus, followed by few
+regrets, the last month of the year found him arrived
+at the scene of his pedagogical work.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“It is Mrs. Faurie’s chief desire that her sons shall
+be adequately prepared for college. She is a great
+believer in individual instruction by a thoroughly
+competent educator, who can discern and—ah—strengthen
+the weaknesses, and—ah—develop special
+capacities in the mind of youth,—ah, yes! She fears
+that our frequent and extended tours abroad have
+cultivated their powers of superficial observation and
+love of travel at the expense of their love of study,
+and—ah—capacity to absorb theories and to concentrate
+their thoughts, and to take an interest in
+books, and—ah—that is the reason,—<em>one</em> of the
+reasons,”—with a bow and smile,—“why we esteem
+ourselves so fortunate,—so <em>very</em> fortunate to have
+you with us.” Nothing could be more suave than the
+old gentleman beaming upon him from the foot of
+the table, but Edward Desmond, after an effort at a
+receptive and grateful smile, looked down at his fork
+and turned it aimlessly in his hand, without a word
+in response.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He had had full range of the pastures, and the
+harness galled him. Yet logically he could not find
+aught of fault in this smooth courtesy and tone of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_4'>4</span>appreciation. It so became even a quasi-employer,
+though conscious of his magnanimity and sense of
+<em>noblesse oblige</em>. The fact that Desmond had grown
+gradually aware that Mr. Stanlett was but basking in
+the reflection of his niece’s splendors, and, although
+having some indeterminate income of his own, was
+content to spend the evening of his days in her embellished
+entourage, scarcely mitigated his secret displeasure.
+He felt that the old gentleman assumed a
+patronage which he had no right to exercise. Yet this
+resentment was inconsistent with his own theory that
+mere money had no title to homage from him. Thus
+Mr. Stanlett’s patronage, poor, should not have been
+less acceptable than Mr. Stanlett’s patronage, rich.
+Mrs. Faurie had not hastened to make Desmond welcome,
+but indeed he had been in the house only for
+an hour or so, and Mr. Stanlett’s urbanity was surely
+expansive enough to atone. He gave the newcomer
+his choice of excuses in Mrs. Faurie’s behalf: first
+the fatigue of a long drive, and again he mentioned
+a sore throat as her reason for not joining the group
+at the dinner-table. “She will see you later in the
+evening,” Mr. Stanlett promised.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>If the lady did not choose to appear at her own
+board for any reason which might seem to her good
+and sufficient, Desmond was in no position to cavil,
+but the old gentleman’s inadvertences in the matter
+gave him an impression of insincerity about the
+methods of the household which grated on his exacting
+and sensitive mood. Even the manners of the
+domestics, smooth, and deft, and obsequious in the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>extreme, were incongruous with the veiled scorn of
+the stranger, as a man of scant means, which he
+subtly detected in their eyes, for, the servitors of
+wealth and large pretensions, they had slight toleration
+of poverty out of their own rank of life. He
+perceived, too, the relish which Joel, the antiquated
+negro butler, took in the elaboration of the details of
+the daily dinner service, especially the old-fashioned
+custom of removing the cloth with each successive
+course, which was so deftly accomplished, revealing
+the fresh one spread below, that it seemed a prandial
+miracle. Mr. Stanlett, however, apologized in some
+sort.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“We keep up the old style, you see. My niece
+says she despairs of ever inducing Joel to condescend
+to one cloth for the table at dinner, though she
+brought some very fancy centrepieces and such gimcracks
+from Paris expressly to stimulate his ambition
+for novelty.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond felt little drawn toward his prospective
+pupils, one seated beside him and the other two
+opposite. They were of a type with which he had
+scant sympathy. They were younger, too, than he
+had reason to expect from the amount of the salary
+and his own scholastic pretensions, and his consequence
+seemed further diminished in that he should
+be called upon to teach in effect mere children.
+While they were not handsome of feature, they were
+extremely handsomely built and tall for their respective
+ages; but he perceived with disapproval
+that they lacked muscle. They were very apt and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>delicate in all the usages of the table, and in their
+elegant nicety of attire “mamma’s darling” was writ
+large. They all had good eyes, and they held up
+their heads in a frank, gentlemanlike way; but their
+cosmopolitan air, their easy assurance, their ready
+phrasings far beyond their years, though evidently
+the superficial result of their travels and their precocious
+relations with the world, did not serve to
+commend them to one who loved a boy for his crude
+boyishness. These seemed little men of the world,
+and they sat smug and silent and looked at their
+great-uncle with faces of filial gravity when, under
+the influence of too much old port, he began to show
+traits of the ridiculous, albeit in a genteel and refined
+fashion. Yet Desmond admitted to himself that
+he would not have thought it becoming that they
+should laugh. The clear pallor of the old gentleman’s
+lean face grew delicately flushed. His white
+hair was sparse on his long head, showing its bony
+structure. He had a white mustache, and a factitious
+idea of youth was suggested by the gleam of a very
+natural set of false teeth beneath it. Presently he
+began to hum, as if absent-minded, and at length he
+sang out:—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c008'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“My girl so fair, my friend so rare,</div>
+ <div class='line'>With these what mortal could be richer?</div>
+ <div class='line'>Give me but these,—a fig for care,</div>
+ <div class='line'>My sweet girl, my friend, and pitcher.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>It was the echo of what had been a very pretty tenor
+voice in its prime, and its resonant vibrations reached
+and roused a parrot asleep in a cage, hanging in a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>broad, deep bay-window. The bird suddenly fluffed
+its feathers and sent out a sharp, harsh cry; then,
+twisting on its perch and swinging inverted by one
+claw, it sang with a painfully realistic imitation and
+with all the taunting effect of mockery:—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c008'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“My sweet girl, my friend, and pitcher.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>It was too much for the decorum of the youngest
+of the three boys. He broke into an irresistible puerile
+cackle, and the old man, catching suddenly to his
+senses and his sobriety, flushed deeply, the crimson
+stealing through his sparse white hair and all along
+his polished white scalp.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The eldest of the boys, a lad of fourteen, came at
+once to the rescue with the tact of a Chesterfield, as
+smooth as cream.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“The idea of Polly remembering your old ‘pitcher-song,’
+Uncle Clarence,—that’s quite a compliment.
+And after so long an absence.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Very true,—very true,” said the old gentleman,
+readily reassured. “Pretty Polly,”—smiling blandly
+at the accomplished fowl. “Want a cracker?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“My pitcher,” repeated Polly, as if with the intention
+of prompting the nature of the refreshment.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Why, we have been away—let me see—my
+memory fails me about these little details. How long
+were we in Europe this time, Reginald?—how long
+is it since Polly heard that song?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Eighteen months, Uncle Clarence. I shouldn’t
+have thought Polly capable of such an effort. May
+we be excused, sir?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>“Certainly—by all means.” Then, turning to
+Desmond, “I don’t care to see young boys linger at
+the table after the cloth is drawn and the bottle is
+stirring over the mahogany.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The disaffected Desmond thought a continuance
+here might prove a salutary object-lesson as to the
+pernicious effects of vinous indulgence, and his eyes
+followed with no great favor the little gentlemen as,
+prettily bowing, they nattily made their exit. Somehow
+he was reassured to hear a clumsy shuffling of
+feet in the hall as, to judge by auricular evidence,
+they engaged in a scuffle outside the closed door.
+Suddenly one of them was thrown with a great bang
+against it,—then an abrupt and awe-stricken silence
+ensued.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Eighteen months,” Mr. Stanlett repeated. “I
+did not realize the length of our absence. In truth,”
+he added, with a spark of mischief kindling the wine
+in his eyes, “we stayed as long as we could,—as long
+as our money held out. My niece, Mrs. Faurie, said
+that she had run the full length of her tether. You
+see, Mr. Desmond,”—his voice had a confidential
+intonation,—“by the provisions of the will,”—he
+spoke as if it were the sole and singular testamentary
+document in human experience,—“Mrs. Faurie has
+a large income,—a very large income,—but she cannot
+go beyond it,—she cannot touch the principal.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond flushed haughtily. He had had such close
+dealings with debts and financial distresses and sheer
+poverty of late, nay, of rivings and wrestings of possessions
+that seemed so inalienably his own as to give
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>their seizure the taint of robbery, that he had scant
+appetite to digest the prosperity of others, and he was
+devoid of the vulgar vice of curiosity which might
+otherwise have stimulated his interest. His dark blue
+eyes were on the vast, murky spread of the Mississippi
+River, seen through the window beyond a group of
+pecan trees, and the Arkansas bank opposite, a dim
+line of dark gray against the fainter gray of the low
+and clouded sky. His closely cut chestnut hair showed
+the contour of his shapely head. His tall, strong figure,
+for he had a record in college athletics as well
+as less esteemed branches of learning, had a supple
+grace that lent an air of distinction to the well-fitting
+suit of gray he wore, for at Great Oaks Plantation
+no one affected evening dress for daily dinner. So
+quiet was Desmond that his attitude expressed an
+attention which he did not really accord,—in fact, it
+was divided by a fear that in Mr. Stanlett’s garrulity
+he was liable to trench too far on the private affairs
+of the family. However, the old gentleman occupied
+the position of host or employer, according to the
+viewpoint; he was treated with filial deference by
+the youthful Fauries; he had received the tutor with
+a happy blending of hospitality and authority, and
+Desmond hardly knew how he might decorously
+evade disclosures of bibulous candor which he was
+neither entitled nor expected to hear.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“No, sir,” Mr. Stanlett repeated, “by the will she
+cannot touch the principal, but she has a large income,—a
+fixed sum, thirty thousand dollars chargeable
+on the whole estate, and in addition the yield of this
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>Great Oaks Plantation, which varies according to the
+season,—a very large income,—<em>so long as she remains
+a widow</em>. Yes, sir!—a widow she is, and
+a widow she must continue! Mr. Faurie was a very
+arbitrary man in point of temper—where are those
+boys?—and had a grudging against any other man’s
+getting a chance to spend his money. Notwithstanding
+the losses occasioned by the Civil War and the
+various fluctuations in values since, Faurie was worth
+little short of a million dollars when he died. He had
+a very level head. He made a remarkable will, a
+good, safe, sound, able document.” Mr. Stanlett had
+an evident relish of the provisions of that will,—a
+great respect for it.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“She could dissent,—she could break it, I suppose.”
+Desmond forced himself to speak. He was
+not to have the typical tutor’s mental privacy, apparently.
+By reason of the magnanimity his employers
+intended to affect, treating him according to his
+former worldly station and as an equal, a friend, an
+honored man of letters, he was to have the trial of
+participating in their social life as at a Barmecide
+feast, really sharing naught, a mere figment of fraternity
+and festivity.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Break the will!” Mr. Stanlett skirled in dismay.
+“Impossible!—after nearly seven years’ acquiescence.
+But if she could, she would only get what the
+will gives her anyhow in the event of a second marriage,—simply
+her dower rights in Tennessee,—one
+fourth of the personalty, a life-interest in a third of
+the realty situated there, including his town residence
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>in Nashville,—just what the law would allow her
+had he died intestate,—and in the Mississippi estate
+a child’s part in fee simple, for ‘dower,’ you know, is
+abolished in this State, and the law always follows the
+location of the realty. But, in fact, she has seemed
+perfectly satisfied with the arrangement,—as indeed
+well she might be! I fancy, too, that she has had
+about enough of matrimony. She likes her own way,
+and Mr. Faurie was a self-willed, proud, dictatorial—are
+those boys gone?—And what are <em>you</em> doing there,
+Joel?” glimpsing the butler, standing stiffly near
+the sideboard. “Gimme the brandy decanter. Have
+some cognac, Mr. Desmond. Light those candles,
+Joel,—and take yourself off. Want to wait on the
+table <em>all</em> night?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Then as the door closed noiselessly on the accomplished
+old servant,—“That nigger has got ears
+as long as a mule’s,” Mr. Stanlett commented in parenthesis,
+quaffed from his glass, sucked in his thin
+lips with extreme relish, and continued his confidences.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“No,—my niece’s position under the will cannot
+dispose her greatly to a second experiment in the holy
+estate of matrimony. Mr. Faurie was considerably her
+senior,—in fact, he was quite an old bachelor, you
+might say, when they were married. How much older
+he was <em>I</em> never knew, for <em>she</em> would not tolerate any
+mention of the disparity in years,—though Faurie
+himself, who was a very stylish, impressive man, was
+too vain and arrogant to care one whit for it. Why,”—lowering
+his voice sepulchrally,—“when he died,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>I couldn’t mention his age in preparing the newspaper
+announcements because <em>I never knew it</em>.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He looked hard at Desmond and nodded his head
+significantly. “Now, don’t you know that people
+thought <em>that</em> was funny?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He paused to light a cigar, having pushed the
+tray over to Desmond. “Yes,” he resumed puffingly,
+“as my niece says, we stayed in Europe as long as
+our money lasted. We had a fine time, went everywhere,
+saw everything, were fêted and made much
+of to our hearts’ content,—could have married into
+the nobility more than once, for”—the candle-light
+illumined the freakish slyness and glee in his senile
+smile—“people over there don’t know how the
+will is fixed in regard to a second marriage. No!
+pledge you my honor! They only saw the royal way
+in which Mrs. Faurie <em>can spend</em> money. Now,” he
+broke out into a chirping laugh of relish of the
+incongruity, “my niece says that she doesn’t know
+how she can make both ends meet till her next year’s
+income begins to accrue. Ha! ha! We are to stay
+down here in the swamp till the hot weather runs us
+out, and then we shall go down to the Gulf coast, find
+some cheap little place near Biloxi or Pass Christian,
+and ah—ah”—he waved the cloud of cigar
+smoke from above his venerable head—“and I for
+one wish that time were come. You see plantation
+life is a sort of syncope at best,—that is, hereabouts.
+Further down the river, though, things are livelier.
+In Louisiana, now, the people are of a different
+disposition: they go about, visit each other; they
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>make festival occasions; they are of French extraction;
+they have the light heart and the happy hand.
+Nothing can subdue the old Gallic <em>gaieté de cœur</em>,
+not even the swamp country. But all this upper
+region of ours was settled by people from Tennessee,
+Virginia, and Kentucky,—about the time that
+the mania for raising cotton in the bottom lands
+of Mississippi took hold on the progressive planters
+of the Border States. We have got our inherited
+English temperament to reckon with, our seriousness,
+our stolidity, our inability to be amused by a trifle,
+like a kitten with a string, or a Creole. And, too, it is
+a matter of neighborhood,—we are only a few hundred
+miles from Memphis, counting by the crankings
+of the river, all our associations are with the
+Border States, and we are out of earshot of the lively
+Creoles. I am afraid you will find it very dull here,
+Mr. Desmond, way down in the swamp.” He had evidently
+forgotten the fact that his companion was
+not a guest.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I am not here for pleasure, you know,” Desmond
+reminded him.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“True,—oh, yes,—very true,—the boys,—their
+education. But you are so like”—Desmond thought
+that he was about to say “one of ourselves,” but
+perhaps he was supersensitive—“ah—so very like a
+collegian yourself, that I forget you occupy the reverend
+position of tutor. The boys have a good start
+in the modern languages—that is, they can gabble
+fast enough—their mother’s wanderings made them
+regular polyglots—they had native teachers at every
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>stoppage; but I reckon you will find them poor shakes
+in the rudiments of natural science, mathematics, rhetoric,
+Latin, and so forth, and I suppose that in spite
+of their colloquial glibness, they know little of the
+construction of the foreign languages. Mrs. Faurie is
+very anxious for their solid advancement. And she is
+determined to make this enforced quiet recruit both
+her fortune and their education. So glad to have you
+here, Mr. Desmond,—so glad to have you with us.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He hesitated, waved the smoke from his white head,
+and once more filled his glass from the decanter. It
+was a small liqueur glass, but its size was not commensurate
+with the potations to which it ministered, for
+it was easily replenished, and of course he drank his
+Cognac neat. Desmond began to have a shrewd idea,
+partly because the tiny glass had been intended for a
+mere sip of Curaçoa, that had Mrs. Faurie been present
+at dinner, the bibulous exercises would have been much
+curtailed. He was experiencing some embarrassment
+in thus lingering over the potations, for he had arrived
+only that afternoon, and had never met Mrs. Faurie,
+having been employed by Mr. Keith, the guardian
+of her sons. Desmond was solicitous lest the breach
+of etiquette and good manners be imputed to his
+connivance. Perhaps Mr. Stanlett’s proclivity was
+known to his niece, but he must seldom have such
+complete immunity from remonstrance and caution.
+While the old gentleman’s vinous indulgence and
+senile impairments would suggest that his preferences
+might with impunity be set aside in such an emergency,
+the evident appreciation and deference with
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>which he was treated implied that he was a person to
+be reckoned with. Desmond dared not himself propose
+to quit the table: the gaucherie would undoubtedly
+offend the old gentleman as an intentional disrespect.
+Yet the tutor really felt that by thus lingering
+he jeopardized all his prospects with that far more
+important personage, the lady of Great Oaks and the
+head of the family. Distasteful as was his position to
+him, he valued it exceedingly the moment it was threatened,
+as the only opportunity that had offered at his
+utmost need. He had been positively penniless at the
+crisis of his disasters. Even had he completed his law
+course, he must have had means to live while he waited
+for a practice to accrue. He had no commercial experience
+or aptitudes. He had no available business connections.
+Perhaps few people realize the difficulty
+of leaping into a paying position at a vault, instead
+of growing and climbing up with it from the ground.
+All values seem accessible only <em>per ambages</em>. A moment
+earlier he had been recoiling from the employment,
+the situation he liked so ill, and now he was asking
+himself if he were desirous of standing behind a dry
+goods counter in a village store, that he could afford
+to make his entry into Mrs. Faurie’s household under
+circumstances so inauspicious,—carousing over the
+dinner-table with a man, not his host, obviously superannuated,
+in a sort irresponsible, unable perhaps to
+justify his own dereliction, much less the infringement
+of decorum by the tutor. The village store,—quotha!
+No refuge awaited him there. He did not
+know insertion from indigo. He had fallen into his
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>niche, his proper place, and with a sudden sense of
+prizing its values, he quitted his chair. Not to leave
+the room abruptly and at once, however. The crisis
+had called his tact into play. He walked toward the
+mantelpiece as if to scrutinize the picture above it
+and thus pave the way to an easy withdrawal.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Take the candle to it,—take the candle to it.
+That is Faurie himself when he was about sixteen,—do
+not know how long ago it was painted, though!
+But the length of that rifle is a dead give-away,”
+cried Mr. Stanlett, from the table, his glass in his
+hand.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>As Desmond lifted one of the candles, the light
+revealed a large oil-painting executed in the florid
+portrait style of the middle nineteenth century,—a
+crowded canvas it was, showing a fair, vigorous young
+stripling leaning on his gun, a horse and foliage in
+the distance, a deer, with only the fine head visible,
+gray and antlered, lying at the sportsman’s feet;—the
+frame, inclosing all, very handsome. There were
+some other pieces in the room, which was large, square,
+and high-ceiled, all suggestive of game, and the fact
+that the late Mr. Faurie may have been a bon-vivant.
+One, a dainty water-color sketch of a piscatorial subject,
+the catfish of the Mississippi, bore the marks
+of the hand of a clever amateur.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The wall-paper was dimly pictorial, after the style
+of even an earlier day, a mélange of forest boughs
+and boles of great trees through which a shadowy
+outline of the figures of a chase sped, with deer,
+hounds, horsemen, huntsmen, and horns, of “elfland
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>faintly blowing.” A great, dark, mahogany press
+showed through small diamonded panes rows of silver
+vessels, glistering in the dusk, which neither the flicker
+of the candle nor the twilight glimmer from the great
+windows could annul. Several of the large cups bore
+inscriptions, and he thought they looked at the distance
+like trophies captured by some winner of the
+turf. As Desmond turned to ask the question, he
+perceived that the old man had sunk back in his tall
+armchair, his delicate face, still in slumber, keenly
+outlined against the cushion of its head-rest in the
+clear, refined light of the candle close at hand, his
+white hair gleaming frostily.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond stood uncertain for a moment. He saw
+through the bay-window that the night was falling
+fast without. But for the flicker of the moon, he
+might not have known how the great Mississippi rippled
+and sparkled under the currents of the wind.
+The passing of the first steamboat that he had yet
+seen he marked by her chimney-lamps, red and green,
+swinging high in the air, and their reflection, ruby
+and emerald, gemming the water. As she sheered, she
+showed the long line of her side-lights, like a string of
+yellow topazes. She did not turn nor approach, but
+sounded her whistle as if for a landing, and he wondered
+at this. The boat was saluting the place by way
+of compliment, for it was known that the queen was
+in residence, so to speak, and Mrs. Faurie shipped
+much cotton from the contemned and avoided plantation
+in the old way by water, for the almost omnipresent
+railroads were still distant from Great Oaks
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>Landing. Presently the lights were quenched, the
+craft had passed beyond his view, the moon was overcast,
+and only the gray night was visible from the
+window. Desmond seized his opportunity for escape.
+He placed the candle he held upon the table, and
+with a noiseless step and a furtive, apprehensive eye,
+as if the exacting old gentleman might rouse to displeasure
+and reproach at a mere rustle, he quitted the
+room, leaving his companion, his empty glass still
+poised in his hand, asleep in his chair.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The mansion at Great Oaks Plantation was as ill-lighted
+by night as are most residences dependent
+still on candle and kerosene. Unless, indeed, some
+festival occasion demanded extra brilliancy, only the
+gleam from the chandelier in the main hall guided
+the exit from the dining-room through a cross-hall,
+the entry, so called. Desmond had not the necessity
+for wariness that might have befitted the steps of
+Mr. Stanlett, but he paused in the dim entry, marking
+the subdued glow at the intersection with the
+main hall, then carefully directed his steps thither.
+Even thus he ran over the “bike” of one of the
+boys, inadvertently placed where it might most opportunely
+trip the unsuspecting pedestrian in these
+glooms, and threw it upon the floor with a tremendous
+clatter. To his vexation he heard a door open
+in the hall beyond and a feminine voice call out
+unintelligibly, whether in inquiry or warning or
+commiseration he did not accurately discern in his
+confusion. He hastily set the wheel out of harm’s
+way against the wall, and with a swift, prompt step
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>advanced up the lighted hall toward the open door,
+which he perceived led into the parlor where he had
+been received earlier in the afternoon. A large lamp
+on a high, old-fashioned pedestal stood on a round,
+marble-topped centre table; a wood fire blazed with a
+white light in the great chimney-place, and the brass
+andirons and fender glittered responsively; an old-fashioned
+crimson velvet carpet was on the floor, and
+long crimson satin damask curtains hung over lace
+draperies at the windows. In the midst of this atmosphere
+of glow and warmth the lady of Great Oaks
+stood with expectant mien, awaiting him.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Somehow she was so different from his mental
+image, from what he was prepared to see, that he
+was disconcerted for a moment. He had imagined a
+middle-aged frump favored by fortune, portly, puffy,
+rubicund, overfed, overdressed, bursting with self-importance,
+smiling in creases, of husky voice and fixed
+opinions, and laying down the law. This was a woman
+seemingly as young as himself; tall, slender, regal,
+with rich brown hair in a high pompadour roll, an
+exquisitely white, delicate complexion, luminous gray
+eyes, with a marvelous capacity for expression, a clear,
+coercive glance delivered from beneath long black
+eyelashes, and finely drawn black eyebrows, perfectly
+straight. She wore a gown of thick, creamy lace, some
+fabric rich of effect though not of commensurate cost,
+one of the pretty fads of the day, and about her slim
+waist was twisted a soft, silken sash in Roman stripes
+of pink and azure and amber, the long ends hanging
+knotted at one side. The sentiment of youth that
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>clung about her presence was oddly incongruous with
+her assured address, replete with authority and the
+manner of seniority.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“This is Mr. Desmond,” she said, in a clear, dulcet,
+vibratory voice, as she advanced and held out her
+hand. “So sorry not to have met you at dinner!
+But I am sure the rest did what they could for you.
+We are all so glad to have you here.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He seated himself in the fauteuil she indicated, and
+she sank down into one on the opposite side of the
+table in the blended light of lamp and fire. She fixed
+her disconcerting eyes full upon him, as if utterly
+unaware of their bewildering beauty, gravely scrutinizing
+him, evidently “sizing him up,” taking her
+impressions of his mental quality and personal fitness
+for the position.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“There are many places on the river which are
+very attractive. But we are differently situated. We
+are so far from any neighbors,—quite isolated. It
+really seems a godsend that you are willing to come
+to us in the swamp.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>As she talked on her homely themes, he was irritated
+to be so tongue-tied, but somehow he could not
+reconcile the situation; and as she looked straight at
+him from beneath those level brows, he gazed spellbound
+at her.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“My three big babies are too old for the nest, I
+know, and in fact they are toppling out. But I can’t
+bear to send them off as yet, and I have great faith
+in home influence and individual teaching.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond thought if he could but shut his eyes for
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>one moment; he could see the kind of frump whom
+her sage, staid discourse would befit.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I think they can be prepared here for college, right
+here in the swamp with me,—and then—why,
+we shall see what we shall see. And now, good-night.
+I will not detain you.” She touched a bell, and as
+the brisk young footman’s black face appeared in the
+door,—“See that the lamp is lighted in Mr. Desmond’s
+room, and that the fire is burning well.”</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER II</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c006'>Desmond, dismissed, felt cut through and through.
+It was no failure of courtesy, but the note of indifference,
+of complete self-absorption, impressed him;
+yet how could he expect Mrs. Faurie to be interested
+in her sons’ tutor except from her own viewpoint. To
+his apprehension it was as if in some psychic magic he
+had shifted his identity. He did not recognize himself
+in this null, unassertive personality. So lately he
+had been the centre of fond hopes, the pride of his
+father’s life. He was an object of mark at his university;
+his scholarship had been worthy the respect
+of the faculty. He recalled the words of their glowing
+commendations with a sort of pained wonder that
+they had ever been addressed to him. The president
+himself had not deemed it ill-advised to say, “With
+your equipment and your fine talents, we must expect
+great things of your future. Your name will reflect
+credit on our Alma Mater; I confidently believe it
+will stand high on the scroll.” His classmates rejoiced
+in his exceptional record, so far removed he was from
+envy or detraction. His popularity was unbounded,
+for he had an attractive personality and all the effervescence
+of cheery youth and good-fellowship, and
+his notability made him a lion in the social circles of
+the college town. His reputation followed him wherever
+he and his multitude of young friends had a connection;
+and he had enjoyed all the prestige of actual
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>achievement, so amply did the flowering promise herald
+the rich fruition.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>How small was that microcosm of college life, how
+far removed from the actualities of the great uninstructed,
+prosperous world, blundering on in suave
+content, with its crass ignorance of all but money
+values, he learned only when the blow fell and he
+must needs have work, and work at once, for his daily
+bread. He might look in vain for market quotations on
+Greek. There was no corner in Old Saxon,—modern
+slang could better turn the trick on ’Change. The
+opportunities that lay in the line of pedagogy were
+already overcrowded; and thus instead of that road to
+the stars, to worthy achievement, for which he had
+so long and so laboriously prepared, for which he was
+so preëminently fitted, he was to trudge the by-paths
+of hopeless poverty; to be the drudging, futureless stipendiary
+in a rich, frivolous household, teaching three
+mollycoddle boys, buried in the seclusion of the Mississippi
+bottom lands, as if translated to another sphere.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>With these thoughts Desmond lay long awake that
+night. He mechanically watched the flicker of the
+fire on the light paper of the walls of the large, airy
+room, giving out here and there a sparkle of gilt from
+the scroll design, till it dulled gradually, and at length
+faded to a pervasive dusky red glow. He was not
+used to a bed with the old-fashioned tester and four
+posts, and when he was about to fall asleep, he was
+roused by the unaccustomed sense of something poised
+above his head, or standing solemnly sentinel, surrounding
+him as he lay. He was not sorry when the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>room grew too dark for aught to be seen but the gray
+night looking in between the long white curtains at the
+tall windows. Yet the hours brought incidents even
+in the monotony. He was apprised that he was on
+the side of the house nearest the river when he saw
+through the small panes the sudden distant glare of a
+steamboat’s electric search-light, making a rayonnant
+halo in the dim glooms of the riparian midnight, and
+heard the husky, remonstrant tones of her whistle,
+and the impact of “the buckets” on the water as the
+wheels revolved. He was not yet sufficiently familiar
+with the plan of the house to have otherwise known
+of his proximity to the bank; but after the boat had
+passed and the last vague echo of the stroke of the
+paddles on the water had died away, he was impressed
+by the silence of the night and the absolutely noiseless
+flow of the swift currents of the great river. It
+dismayed him in some sort, the sense of that mighty,
+irresistible, mute, moving force of nature out there
+in the still night, as changeful as life, as inexorable
+as fate, as ceaseless as eternity. He had felt small,
+reduced in worldly esteem, robbed of every prospect,
+and he had no heart to hope. With this expression
+of silent, majestic immensity brought to his contemplation,
+he seemed infinitely minute in the scheme of
+creation. So long had it rolled its waves from the far
+north to the Gulf; nations had risen on its banks and
+passed away, and strangers had come anew to die and
+be succeeded in turn by foreign faces still, and what
+mattered it what an atom such as he might suffer, or
+hope, or grieve to lose.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>He could not sleep; he had desisted from the conscious
+effort; he had resigned himself to the wakefulness
+embittered by such thoughts as these. It had
+grown dark, quite dark,—the windows, vague parallelograms
+in the gloom, more distinguished by his
+memory of the features of the room than by actual
+sight,—when he heard a sound that somehow thrilled
+his every nerve. Hardly a sound,—it was rather a
+sibilance. But for the intense stillness of the house
+he could not have noticed it,—a mere rustle.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“What is it?” he asked himself, intent and curious.
+For when it vaguely came again, it conveyed
+the sense of motion; it suggested a varying distance.
+Once more his straining senses caught the sound,—very
+soft it was. Furtive, was it, he wondered, for he
+had identified it as the lisping note of a sliding foot
+on a velvet carpet. At first he thought it within his
+own room, but as it receded at regular intervals, he
+realized it as a step on the stair without. He began
+to appreciate that the head of his bed was against
+the wall, on the other side of which this stair ascended
+to the upper story, for his room was on the ground
+floor of the great, rambling house. He thus caught
+the vague vibration of motion, as well as the susurrus
+of the impact of the step on the pile of the carpet;
+otherwise he might not have distinguished so cautious,
+so very silent a transit. It had peculiar features of
+mystery. It receded into absolute quiet, then, approaching
+anew, seemed to pass.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>A long interval ensued while he lay still, the interest
+of his surmise, the doubt, the surprise, solacing
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>his wakeful mood. Suddenly he started with a thrill
+that sought out some nerve of superstition which had
+contrived to coexist with all the logic of his mental
+training. It was coming again, softly, very softly, its
+sibilant passage scarcely to be discriminated even in
+the silence of the night, ascending once more the
+padded velvet stair. Then Desmond fancied that he
+heard a long-drawn breath, a stifled sigh. He lifted
+himself on his elbow, listening intently. The furtive
+step receded and yet receded, till it had won
+the distance that the ear might not reach. A long
+interval of absolute silence once more ensued. Then
+abruptly, again, a muffled step descending, softly,
+secretly.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>With a sudden thought Desmond sprang to his
+feet. His first idea of the passing of some member of
+the family to the upper regions of the house on some
+domestic errand, for extra coverings or for medicine
+or lamps, was annulled by the amazing silence and
+secrecy of the recurrent demonstration. Its repetition
+implied purpose. Its furtiveness suggested malignity.
+He reflected that, so far as he knew, the inmates of
+the house, with one feeble old man and three young
+boys, were all inadequate to cope with the intrusion
+of burglars or other marauders. He flung the door of
+the bedroom open and stood in the hall, his pistol in
+his hand.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Who is there?” he called out, his voice ringing
+through the darkness like a clarion.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There was not a sound in response, not a stir.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Speak up,” he threatened, “or I’ll fire.” The
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>metallic click of the weapon as he cocked it was of
+coercive intimations.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Still not a sound, not a stir. No scurrying footstep
+to be out of harm’s way,—no premonition of the attack
+for which he was prepared, shifting his posture
+each time after he spoke, to escape a shot that might
+be aimed at the sound of his voice in the darkness.
+Nothing—the hall was absolutely vacant, silent.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He stood irresolute for a moment. He scarcely
+dared turn to secure a light lest the lurking intruder
+escape in the interval of his absence. Yet when he
+heard a stir in a room farther down the hall, the
+sound of bare feet bouncing out of bed, the opening
+of a door heralding a trickling of candle-light into
+the gloom, he was all at once ashamed of the commotion
+he had aroused and its apparent lack of justification.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>As the light advanced along the hall, he was pleased
+to see that it was held in the hand of Reginald
+Faurie, the eldest of the three boys; the old man was
+too feebly irresponsible to be trusted, and he was
+glad that he had not aroused Mrs. Faurie. But as the
+young fellow held the candle high in his hand, the
+light showing his tousled auburn hair and his pink
+and white striped pajamas, the expression of his face,
+distinct in the glow, was not such as to ingratiate the
+future pupil with the tutor. It was of half-repressed
+mirth; yet Reginald paused once, and looked over
+his shoulder into the shadow with the half shudder
+of a qualm of cold fright. He showed no disposition
+to search for the cause of the disturbance, however,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>and he cut short Desmond’s excited attempt at explanation
+as of no importance.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Let me in here with you for a moment,” Reginald
+said. “Don’t want to wake up the kids! Yes,—yes,”—with
+a mature air of patronage,—“I
+know exactly what you heard,—old Slip-Slinksy, as
+we boys call him, going up and down stairs.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The coolness with which he shut the door, placed
+the candle on the high, white, painted mantelpiece,
+and sought to stir the fire was proof positive that
+there was no intruder to be reckoned with. Desmond
+yielded reluctantly. But it was the house of a stranger,
+and he was unused to his surroundings. He stood in
+his bath-robe, which he had flung on at the first alarm,
+and leaned on the high back of a chair, while Reginald
+set the blazes to flaring in the great fireplace,
+then dropped down on the rug and put the pointed
+toes of his bedroom slippers against the brass fender,
+evidently preparing to elucidate the mystery.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I know you’ll think I’m loony,—I hate to
+give myself away! But you are one of the solid, scientific,
+investigating kind, I’m sure. You will make
+inquiries, I know, and I don’t want mamma to learn
+that old Slip-Slinksy is at his queer tricks again. She
+is not a bit superstitious,—no sort of a crank,—but
+it is a creepy, inexplicable kind of thing that one
+doesn’t like to have in one’s house, and it would
+make her hate the plantation worse than ever; and
+as she has got to stay at Great Oaks for a while, I
+think she had better not hear about this demonstration
+to-night.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>“But who is it?” asked Desmond, mystified.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Nobody,—just nothing at all!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond walked around the chair, and, seating
+himself in the renewed radiance of the fire, drew the
+folds of his bath-robe close about him. He bent the
+brows of prospective authority upon Reginald, and
+the lad sought to explain.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“What is a ghost but nothing at all!—its emptiness
+is what gets on your nerves. You can take your
+gun, as you did to-night, to the wicked man when he
+gets gay or out of place,—as long as he is alive.
+But once a deader, and he <em>has got you</em>. I’d like to
+hear your learned chemical analysis of a ghost. It is
+compounded of a winter night’s imaginings! It’s
+an untimely shiver! It’s the tremors of hearing a
+storm coming down the Mississippi River and making
+all the boats tie up for the night! It’s old Slip-Slinksy
+doing nothing but going upstairs and coming
+down again. I don’t know what on earth started
+it, but that is our ghost, and we have got it for
+keeps.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Fudge!” exclaimed Desmond, contemptuously.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“<em>You</em> heard it,” said the boy, significantly. “I
+did not.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond <em>had</em> heard the strange manifestation,
+knowing naught of it hitherto. He remembered the
+unearthly thrill its first intimations had sent through
+every startled fibre. “But it must have some natural
+explanation, of course.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I am sure I hope so,” rejoined Reginald. “But
+the natural explanation has defied us so far. We
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>have done our little possible to solve the mystery.
+We have examined the walls and roof; we have taken
+up the carpets; we have lurked in wait for it, and
+rushed out upon it as you did to-night,—and found
+nothing,—as you did. I, for one, would take mighty
+kindly to any sort of a natural explanation. A ghost—no
+matter how much you give him the cold shoulder—doesn’t
+make for happiness in the home, and”—he
+shuddered—“he is apt to give you the cold
+shoulder.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Is it an old affair?” asked Desmond.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“We can’t exactly fix just when the manifestation
+began. It <em>always</em> butts in immediately after we
+come home. Then there will be a long interval. Presently
+it starts up again,—every few nights. Then
+we may have another long exemption. You would
+think this old house like any other happy old home.
+But in the midst of the preparation for departure it
+is sure to begin again,—if anybody is fool enough
+to lie awake to listen for it. Of course I don’t know
+what the ghost may do while we are away,—in our
+long absences he may run riot all over the place. At
+all events, we can get no caretaker to sleep in the
+house. I shouldn’t be surprised if its reputation of
+being haunted protects it from depredators, river
+pirates,—and such cattle. Anyhow, we leave only
+the ghost in charge, and there is not a thing stirred
+when we come back. Only the dust over all, and a
+sense of mystery.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Of course there must be some natural explanation,”
+Desmond protested anew.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>“So glad you think so,” said Reginald, politely.
+“But you will not mention it to mamma.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Certainly not; but is the demonstration always
+the same?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Always the same,—a step going up and coming
+down the stair;—going up and presently coming
+down the stair, just as you heard it. It is up to you
+to explain it. It is no tradition as far as you are
+concerned; you were all unconscious and without
+expectation.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>A sudden wind had sprung up without. It came
+down the great channel of the Mississippi in chilly
+gusts, with a thrill of dawn in its reviving stir. It
+shook the silence. Myriads of undiscriminated voices
+were rife in the air. The boughs of the great oaks
+of the grove without clashed and fell still again.
+The evergreen leaves of the Cherokee rose hedges,
+fencing the place for miles, kept up a rippling stir in
+the section close at hand. A draft became perceptible
+at the nearest window, and Desmond, looking toward
+it, saw through the parted curtains that the clouds
+were riven asunder and a clear, chill star was scintillating
+in a deep abyss of darkness. The night was
+wearing on,—not far from day—not far from a
+frosty dawn.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“And nothing has ever been seen,” said Desmond,
+drawing the cord of his robe closer.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Reginald stirred the fire; then resumed his easy
+posture before it, his eyes upon the blaze. “I beg
+pardon,” he rejoined, somewhat unwillingly; “but I
+did not say that.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>“I misunderstood you, then,” said the tutor. He
+sought to laugh, but he had himself heard too much
+that he could not explain to make his ridicule effective.
+“But there must be some natural explanation.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Well,—we can’t get at it,—that’s all,” said
+Reginald, somewhat nettled by the ridicule. “You
+see I am not stuffing you. I have not the least disposition
+to trot out our ghost to—to lord it over you.
+I do not expect you to bow down and admire him. I
+am not trying to make prestige on his account. You
+and he struck up an acquaintance without any introduction
+from me. And the apparition on the stairs is
+so logical and in keeping that it bears out the sound
+of the step,—and that is what troubles us,—especially
+mamma. She is not superstitious, but she is
+a very sensitive organization,—and she always hated
+this dull old plantation, and this gruesomeness that it
+has developed does not recommend it the least little
+bit.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“But about the apparition?” Desmond asked
+eagerly, even while he was ready to rally himself that
+he should entertain so primitive a curiosity.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Why, it came about the most natural way in the
+world,” declared Reginald. “There was a wedding
+over at Dryad-Dene, Colonel Kentopp’s plantation,—Mrs.
+Kentopp’s sister, I think,—a great wedding,
+all in the old style. The Kentopps are up-to-date
+people,—make a point of keeping up with the procession,
+unless some fashionable antique craze takes
+hold on them. Just at that time the imitation of the
+big old country wedding was all the go. So instead
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>of having the ceremony at our little neighborhood
+church, and taking the next train or packet for
+the wedding tour, the marriage was at the mansion,
+in the style of fifty years ago. They invited the
+country; and the relatives and the friends came in
+their dozens, if you please. Of course the Kentopps
+couldn’t put them all up, so some of the guests were
+entertained by their neighbors, and there were many
+dinners and dances and such functions in the vicinity—houses
+five miles apart, mostly—to compliment
+the happy couple. We took our part, of course. We
+were just returned from Europe, Asia, Africa, and
+Oceanica” (with a pert little fling), “and the house
+was jammed. I don’t know if you have noticed that
+there isn’t a regular second story to this old bungalow.
+The rooms above are in a half story,—mighty
+near <em>all</em> dormer window. We don’t use those rooms
+unless we are hard put to it. But on this occasion
+they were full,—even cots and pallets on the floor.
+Well, in the bedroom on the left hand side as you
+ascend the stairs were a lady and three children.
+They were nearly related to the bridegroom, but
+strangers to us,—they had never been here before—and
+one of the kids took advantage of the opportunity
+to make himself conspicuous by getting exceedingly
+ill. My mother suggested that, to have
+help near at hand in the night, the nurse should sleep
+on a pallet in the hall. The nurse was cheerful and
+agreed; there was a big, bright moon, and all the
+dormer windows were very festive. About midnight
+this lady was awakened by the nurse, who came and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>asked leave to draw her pallet into the bedroom,
+because she could not sleep for the continual passing
+up and down the stairs,—tip, tip, tip,—slyly slipping
+up and slyly slipping down.” He paused to
+listen apprehensively, then recommenced. “The good
+lady’s nerves were racked with anxiety, I dare say,
+for she declared that it was very ill-bred in the other
+guests not to let the house get quiet, when there was
+illness and a chance that her child would die. Then
+she told the nurse to return to her pallet,—that the
+room was too crowded already with herself and the
+three children, and the sick boy needed air. After a
+time the nurse, an intelligent, patient, reasonable
+woman, came back, declaring that she was afraid.
+There was something strange in this passing. It
+was not the other guests. The people were all still,
+asleep; the house was as silent as death; but yet—slip,
+slip, slip—something shuffling along so silently,
+so slyly,—she was fit to scream. She was once more
+rebuked and sent to her place. Presently she did
+scream! The moon had traveled over the house and
+the beams began to fall through the window over
+the staircase, and there she saw what had been going
+up and down the stops,—a man in fancy dress, she
+declared,—my uncle thinks it was some antique
+costume—”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Did he see the apparition, too?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Sure! the whole house came running, scared to
+death,—in just what they had on,—a beautiful lot
+they were, too! but the thing had vanished. Only the
+nurse and her mistress, who, being awake, had run out
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>instantly upon the alarm, saw it distinctly. They both
+said that it was a man in fancy dress, with powdered
+hair. My uncle had just opened his door on the lower
+floor, and, looking upward at the landing, his view
+was indistinct, but his impression was the same.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond pondered for a moment. “Did it never
+occur to any of them that it was some wag of the
+house-party frightening the nurse for a freak.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I have heard of making a long arm, but I can’t
+imagine making a long enough leg to keep a footstep
+going up and down a staircase, when none of
+our guests have been in the county, or even in the
+State, for four or five years.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“It is strange,” said Desmond, at last. “But all the
+same I am sure that there must be some reasonable
+natural explanation,—if it could be found.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I wish I shared your belief, or disbelief,” said
+Reginald. He looked up doubtfully at the candle
+burning low now on the mantelpiece. It was not the
+regulation bedroom light, but in a tall, silver candlestick,
+that offered no protection against the drops
+which its guttering state sent dripping down its sides.
+The fire was sinking; the room had taken on a shadow
+and a sense of gloom; the wind suddenly rose in a
+shrill skirl; then one could hear some slight débris
+of leaves or twigs skittering across the grass as if in
+a weird dance without. Any suggestion of uncanny
+footsteps was in jeopardy to the maintenance of
+equilibrium. Desmond, fatigued from his journey
+and his vigils, was growing heavy-eyed and disposed to
+slumber. For some time he had been sensible of the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>increasing chill of the air, and was beginning to canvass
+the propriety of himself terminating the interview,
+and in his character of tutor authoritatively bidding
+the boy to betake himself to his own bedroom instead
+of awaiting his exit as a guest. But Reginald suddenly
+resumed. “I wish I could agree with you that
+there is a natural explanation,—if we could light
+upon it. I believe in its supernatural quality enough
+to wonder how I mustered the courage to come through
+the hall when I heard you call. I was afraid that if
+you spoke again, mamma would be roused. I don’t see
+how I am to get back. I am something of a man in
+the daytime, but a regular baby about it at night,—and—if
+you don’t mind—I’ll just climb over there
+in the back of the bed and stay with you till the rising
+bell. Oh, thanks, muchly. You have saved my reason,
+if not my life. Suppose—oh, just suppose—I was
+to meet old Slip-Slinksy in the hall,—and he was
+to—to—to blow out the candle.”</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER III</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c006'>The breakfast-table showed little correlation to a
+haunted house. It was surrounded with bright and
+smiling faces when Desmond, to his chagrin a trifle
+tardy, opened the door. The sunshine lay among the
+potted plants blooming in wire stands at the two
+casements opposite the great bay-window, and through
+its broad outlook one could see the immense shining
+expanse of the king of rivers, with a golden glister on
+its ripples, and in the distance a line of tender brownish
+gray to denote the growth of cottonwood fringing
+the farther banks against the blue sky. The sylvan
+hunt on the wall-paper, in the medley of scrolls and
+fantastic tracery, had a realistic effect of motion as
+the sunshine and shadow shifted over it through the
+stirring boughs of the great live-oak tree close without.
+A fire of light wood glowed on the hearth, more
+it might seem for gladsome cheer than needed warmth,
+this balmy day of the southern winter, and old Joel,
+the butler, was holding on a silver tray a large, low
+basket of ripe figs and brilliant hothouse flowers,
+while Mrs. Faurie read a note that had come with the
+fruit. She paused for a moment and glanced up as
+the tutor entered.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Good-morning, Mr. Desmond. I hope you rested
+well.” Then, rustling the missive, she read aloud:
+“‘Congratulations on the date’—what the mischief
+is the date, Uncle Clarence?—the 5th of December?—Heavens
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>and earth! The cruel woman! She is
+reminding me of my birthday.” She tossed the note
+aside with a gesture of mock desperation. “Let me
+give you some coffee, Mr. Desmond,—I can swallow
+my mortification later,—or will you have chocolate?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>As she sat at the head of the table, moving the
+pieces of the large old-fashioned silver service, that
+glittered with polish, but showed here and there an
+indentation that bespoke the battering proclivity of
+years of daily usage, the light from the several windows
+was full on her face. Her complexion was more
+than ever like a white rose in its softness and delicacy
+thus displayed. Her fine, long throat was shown by the
+surplice cut of her plain white lawn blouse, of which
+the sleeves reached only to the elbow of her softly
+rounded arms, with their slim, dainty hands; her skirt
+was of plain pleated black voile, and her brown hair
+was rolled straight up from her forehead. Nothing
+could be more homelike, more simple; but the effect
+of her eyes as she looked at him from under her long
+lashes, her level brows slightly drawn, had a vaguely
+bewildering effect on Desmond. He had seen charming
+women heretofore, but none to parallel her loveliness.
+His mind was acclimated to the idea, the
+tradition of incomparable beauty, but not in these
+close relations. To breakfast with Helen of Troy, to
+receive a cup of chocolate from the hand of Diana
+herself, to reply to a word of simple inquiry and assured
+authority from the embodiment of the ideal that
+poets have sung and painters have limned in all ages,
+was disconcerting. Had she seemed herself more
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>aware of her preëminent endowment, had she been
+self-conscious, he could have better adjusted himself
+to its continual contemplation; but he had the sentiment
+of a unique discovery, of perceiving somewhat
+unknown, unnoted.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I can’t see any cause for mortification; it seems
+to me a very pretty compliment, mamma.” Reginald
+had taken the note up with some anxiety and
+was perusing it with a clearing brow.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“A compliment!—to be reminded of my dreadful
+age.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Ah, Honoria, you are absurd, my dear,” Mr.
+Stanlett protested, with an air of concern. “Thirty-four
+is still young,—still young, my dear.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh, how can you mention it, Uncle Clarence?
+Let me forget the exact number! I feel one foot in
+the grave! I am the prey of time!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>She cast up her beautiful eyes in an affectation of
+distress; then, catching the serious regards of the
+youngest boy fixed upon her, dubiously, uncertain of
+her mood, she looked at him intently for a moment,
+and burst into a ripple of smiles, to which, reassured,
+he responded with a callow chuckle, infinitely alluring.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“But we will have the basket in the centre of the
+table,” she continued. “All of you who have the
+heart can eat a fig. I’ll bet there are just thirty-four
+of them.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The two younger boys strained over the table to
+count.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Dead to rights, mamma,” said Rufus, the tenyear
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>old, who enjoyed the preëminence of “baby.”
+“Just thirty-four figs.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“A very pretty compliment, mamma,” protested
+Reginald again. “For my part, I am obliged to Mrs.
+Kentopp, and I am ashamed that I did not remember
+the date myself.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh, ho! You bet I did!” said Rufus, with a
+triumphant nod.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mrs. Faurie put down her spoon, and cast a look
+across the silver service so replete with maternal affection,
+so embellishing to her proud beauty, that it
+seemed indeed a pity that the face on which it was
+bestowed should be so round, so freckled, so jocosely
+creased, so facetiously winking.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“What have you got for me, Chubby?” she asked.
+Her look was angelic.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“You’ll see,—you’ll see!” He smiled widely.
+The dentist had been at work on that smile, and had
+eliminated two teeth, and the interval interfered with
+the happiest expression of filial affection.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The other two brothers, though manifestly disconcerted
+and deprecatory, looked at him with the quizzical
+contempt with which an elder boy cannot refrain
+from tormenting his junior. “Chub, don’t be such a
+chump,” Horace admonished him. “You ought to
+be ashamed to give mamma a birthday offering of
+some of the trash that you have collected in your
+European <em>towers</em>,”—with a leer to emphasize the
+taunting mispronunciation,—“a last year’s calendar
+or a cigarette tag.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“’Tain’t no old European bibelot!” Chubby declared,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>his round cheeks no longer distended with
+happy smiles. His eyes were grave and flashing fire,—he
+was consciously on the defensive. He breathed
+hard and deep.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh, to be sure,—some of his chiffons from the
+Rue de la Paix,—souvenir de Paree,” Reginald
+twitted him, with a nettling laugh.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“’Tain’t,—it’s brand-new,” Chub protested.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Where did you get it?” the other two asked in
+a breath.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I bought it with my own money,”—there was an
+intonation of pride in this assertion.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“But where?—bloated capitalist!” asked Reginald,
+really curious, for there was scant opportunity
+to spend money at Great Oaks Plantation, forty miles
+distant from any town larger than a hamlet or a railroad
+way-station.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Where do you reckon?”—with temper. Then
+with a gush of pride, “From the trading-boat,—that’s
+where!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond could not understand why the two elder
+boys stared at each other for a moment, then collapsed
+into inextinguishable laughter, scarlet in the
+face, nerveless, well-nigh helpless. Even Mr. Stanlett
+laughed with merry relish, and Chub looked from
+one to another, pitiably crestfallen. A “shanty-boat,”
+that had been tied up at the landing, was not of the
+usual type of trading-boat, offering provender and
+provisions and assortments of merchandise in localities
+remote from railway and packet connection, but
+a mere travesty on this mercantile craft, hardly more,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>indeed, than a raft, drifting with the current, bearing
+a little cabin in which the owner lived, and from
+which he sold a medley of stock,—pins, needles,
+stale candies, tobacco, whiskey, snuff, ribbons, plated
+jewelry,—such as might meet the needs or strike
+the taste of the humbler dwellers about the river-side,
+or the backwoods population among the bayous,
+along the sluggish current of which it was sometimes
+poled.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh,—oh, mamma,—the <em>trading-boat</em>!” cried
+Reginald, barely recovering the power of speech.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But Horace was altogether beyond words.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“It <em>is</em> a trading-boat!” Chub protested. “Anyhow,
+they have lots of things to sell. They pole and
+row along the bayous and lakes, and they get towed
+by a steamboat once in a while, and go up any of the
+rivers they like. Then they drift down again. They
+have been selling along all the rivers in the State of
+Mississippi,—they <em>told</em> me so.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“They must have been well able, then, to pay the
+considerable privilege tax to the State,” Mr. Stanlett
+commented dryly.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Did it occur to you to inquire into that question,
+Chubby?” asked Reginald, still gasping with merriment.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Ha! I’ll engage that the very word ‘license’
+would make that boat’s crew cast off in a trice!” exclaimed
+Mr. Stanlett, with a significant nod. “That
+‘trading-boat’ would be swallowed up from sight in
+the twinkling of an eye.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“But we have no right to take that for granted,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>Uncle Clarence,” Mrs. Faurie remonstrated. “Their
+trade along the bayous and bogues and lakes, where
+no other boats come, may be considerable and aggregate
+enough to justify the tax. The swampers in
+such out-of-the-way places have no other way to buy
+goods.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Ah, well,—perhaps so,—I’m not a collector.
+We will be charitable and hope for the best. And
+they may have some exemption from the tax.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The proud Chub, suddenly brought down, was near
+to tears.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mrs. Faurie, all unmindful of the ridicule, was looking
+at him with eyes aglow. “With your money,
+Chubby,—your own little money?—and you always
+so hard up,—you dear little spendthrift! And you
+really remembered my birthday, and bled your precious
+nickels to commemorate it! Where is my present?
+I can’t wait to see it! I’ll value it above everything
+I have in the world. I’ll always treasure it as beyond
+price,—my lovely Chubby’s gift.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>And then it developed that “lovely Chubby,” intent
+on surprise, had been seated throughout the
+meal with the present in a paper bag poised on his
+knee under his napkin. He was reassured in some
+sort by the cessation of the laughter of the fraternal
+torments. He was too young and too ingenuous to
+realize that it was only a momentary respite that
+they might better view the pomp of the presentation.
+Their physical condition might have alarmed
+one unused to view the ecstasies of adolescent mirth
+when the paper bag parted to disclose a large, round,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>wooden apple, highly tinted with the colors of nature,
+the upper section of which opened to reveal within
+an assortment of needles, pins, a cake of wax, a brass
+thimble, a bodkin, and an emery masquerading as a
+realistic strawberry.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“An apple,—oh, ye gods and little fishes!” cried
+Horace.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“An apple,—presented to mamma,—my prophetic
+soul! Didn’t I say it must be a souvenir
+of Paris,—to the fairest?” exclaimed Reginald,
+convulsed.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Ah, ha,—very good,—classical allusion,” said
+Mr. Stanlett, appreciatively. He cast a glance of
+pride at the tutor, as if calling his attention to this
+point of precocity.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mrs. Faurie silently examined every detail with deliberate
+gravity, while the two elder sons went from
+one spasm into another of mute laughter, deeming
+the episode too funny for words, and the breathless
+Chub looked seriously and expectantly at her.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Very useful, no doubt,” said Mr. Stanlett, taking
+his cue from the gravity of her manner. “Valuable,—always
+ready,—needle-case.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But when Mrs. Faurie lifted her eyes, Desmond
+could but note how brilliant they were with unshed
+tears.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Come here, Chubby,” she said, with a break in
+her voice. “I can’t wait to hug you!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He was a big boy for ten years of age, and looked
+bigger in his mother’s lap. She had pushed her chair
+a trifle back from the table, and as he sat enthroned
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>and cherished beyond his fellows, some qualm of
+jealousy terminated their convulsions of mirth.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“You have not touched your plate, mamma,” said
+one. “I have heard of people living on bread and
+cheese and kisses, but I never saw its demonstration
+before. Sweet Chub,—lovely breakfast food!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“You two must quit that thing of calling Rufus
+‘Chub,’” remonstrated Mr. Stanlett.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Yes,” said Chub, whisking around in his mother’s
+lap, and facing the party from behind the silver
+service; “makes me feel like a fish,—chub and
+dace always mentioned together.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Chub is a first-rate item on a bill of fare; serve
+him out, mamma,” suggested Horace.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I am coming down myself,” said Chub, with a
+final exasperating hug and kiss.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“And—quite a coincidence!—the waffles are
+coming in,” jeered Horace.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“And now,” said Chub, once more settled in his
+place at table, and feeling in fine fettle and high
+favor, “I move that, being mamma’s birthday, we
+have a holiday.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond was altogether unused to being so set
+aside and passed over and made of scant account.
+He was aware that he could not expect aught else in
+a family life in which he had no part; nevertheless,
+he felt all the uneasiness incident to a false position
+and a new experience. He had scarcely spoken a word
+since he had entered the room. He could not expect
+the conversation to be guided with a special consideration
+of him in this circle of family privacy, and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>he had submitted to eat his breakfast among them,
+but not of them, with what grace he might. Chub’s
+last remark, however, trenched upon his own peculiar
+province, and he spoke uninvited and to the point:
+“And I move that we have no holiday.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Chub glanced up, his eyes both grieved and indignant.
+“Oh, why?” he said,—a phrase that is in
+more frequent use in remonstrance than any other in
+the English language by all American youth under
+twenty years of age,—a plea to which Desmond then
+and there resolved that he would never reply. There
+ensued a moment of awkward silence.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Horace suddenly answered for him. “Because,
+Chub, we have to be classified, you know. Mr. Desmond
+might be expecting you to read Greek, if he
+started you without examination, you know.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Don’t look so downcast, Chubby,” said Mrs.
+Faurie, with a caressing intonation; and Desmond
+was aware that, but for the pose of supporting his
+authority, the coveted holiday would have been
+granted without another moment’s consideration.
+“Mr. Desmond is not such an ogre.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Chubby wagged his head with a sorrowful monition
+of experience and forecast. “Tutors are all
+alike—when it comes to ogreing.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Despite her partiality, Mrs. Faurie evidently thought
+this hardly civil. She came hastily to the rescue.
+“And we have all the preliminaries to arrange; this
+must be a busy day.” Then, obviously with a lingering
+hope for Chubby’s release, for his appealing look was
+very touching, “But perhaps it might be best to
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>begin to-morrow. I should think it would be well for
+you to look about you a little before going to work,
+Mr. Desmond,—familiarize yourself with your surroundings.”
+She ended with a rising inflection that
+required an answer, and her evident bias would seem
+to dictate its import. It was short, succinct.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Nothing whatever is gained, Mrs. Faurie, by the
+waste of time,” he said, “and much is lost by the
+bad precedent.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>She was rising from the table. “Then we will at
+once consider the choice of a schoolroom,” she said,
+as she preceded the party out of the dining-room.
+At the intersection of the entry with the main hall
+she paused; here was an outer door which opened on
+a broad veranda, from which the glittering Mississippi
+could be seen through the vistas of the trees.
+This veranda ran quite around the front portion of
+the house, and passed through it, dividing the main
+building from the two wings. At one point this airy
+structure widened, the flooring extending into a roofless
+circular space, built around the great trunk of
+a live oak, that made a dense canopy of evergreen
+boughs above it, and let fall drooping shady branches
+all about it. The balustrade of the veranda was fitted
+with a circular bench, and one could scarcely imagine
+a more attractive bower.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“This would make a fine schoolroom,” suggested
+Chub, and Desmond was irritated to observe that Mrs.
+Faurie actually seemed to consider it.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“The less there is to distract the attention, the
+better,” he said promptly.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>“The passing of a steamboat,—or a squirrel,
+would put Chub out of the game for the day, I suppose,”
+she conceded, with evident reluctance.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“We could come in if it rained,” persisted Chub.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“We could if we had enough sense,” said Horace;
+“I have always understood that it required sense to
+know enough to come in out of the rain.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond was feeling more interest in his unwelcome
+vocation as he followed Mrs. Faurie into the
+main hall. He was apprehensive lest some puerile
+folly of his pupils and the facile leniency of their mother
+jeopardize the practicability of his mission, and
+his vocation be riven from him when he had come to
+depend solely upon it. He looked about the place critically,
+noting facts that might have escaped him otherwise
+in a cursory, uninterested survey. The house
+bore little or indeed no token of the extensive wanderings
+of its inmates in foreign lands. There were a
+few good paintings on the walls, but their frames were
+old and tarnished and in several instances marred,
+and he fancied they were trophies of the travels of previous
+generations. Other canvases were devoted to
+the portraits of the family, some evidently painted
+by brushes of distinction, and others only redeemed
+from the imputation of being daubs by the facility and
+freedom with which the likeness had been caught,
+the art subordinate to the lifelike portrayal. The
+ornaments, clocks, vases, were rich and represented
+the expenditure of money, but were obviously the
+haphazard aggregations of years and successive owners,
+and with no system of collection or interest of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>suggestion. He divined that Mrs. Faurie cared too
+little for life in the mansion house of the hated plantation
+to spend time, or thought, or money on its
+decoration. Hence, in lieu of rich oriental rugs and
+polished floors, the old velvet carpets still did service,
+being of good quality, seemingly imperishable, covering
+every inch of the wood; the old satin damask
+curtains, with lace beneath, draped the windows as of
+yore. The furniture of carved rosewood, and especially
+that of ponderous mahogany, was better in
+countenance in view of the modern craze for ancient
+relics, but its owner valued it no whit more for the
+fashion. There was nowhere the museum-like effect
+to be seen so often in the home of a traveled proprietor.
+Except for a casual mention, no one could
+imagine that any of the household had sojourned in
+Japan, or journeyed on camels in remote deserts, or
+voyaged on the Nile and the Ganges. It was an old
+house, distinctly of its locality, in a fat, luxurious
+country, replete with the suggestions of decorous
+antecedents; and one might seem ungrateful to be so
+loath to come to it, and so eager to be gone again, as
+was Mrs. Faurie. The sons had evidently lost all sense
+of preference, small citizens of the world. Home was
+with each other and their mother; and it hardly mattered
+if it were in Rome, or in the light of the midnight
+sun, or on the banks of the great Mississippi.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond had felt himself somewhat expatriated
+in surroundings so foreign to the world of letters, of
+art, of public interest, of intellectual activity, until he
+came into the library. Unconsciously he drew a long
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>breath of relief. On every hand he knew were friends.
+He was not sorry to see that the books were old
+and evidently long undisturbed. They bore the marks
+of some previous owner’s loving care. They were all
+under glass, the shelves built into the walls; below,
+extending up three feet from the floor, were solid
+doors betokening cabinets, fitted with locks, and
+doubtless containing treasures of old files of newspapers,
+pamphlets, magazines. These were all collections
+of elder members of the house of Faurie, and
+little troubled by the present generation. Two big
+globes, one terrestrial, the other celestial, could indeed
+give to the experienced young travelers of to-day
+only the information how very little was known of
+the world at the time of the construction of these
+microcosms.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There was a great fireplace, vacant now, the room
+being out of use, with the usual glittering brasses of
+andirons and fender. The sun streamed in at the
+tall windows at the eastern side; on the other,—for
+the apartment was in one of the wings separated from
+the main building by the veranda,—one could look
+out through the vistas of gigantic trees at the great
+embankment of the levee in the foreground, the splendid
+scroll of the Mississippi emblazoning the middle
+distance, and far, far away the low line of the forests
+at the horizon meeting the blue sky. The windows
+were draped only by some old-time lambrequins,
+short and of a grape-blue, and below were suspended
+the slatted shades called Venetian blinds. A heavy
+mahogany desk, with innumerable pigeon-holes, and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>a wide writing-shelf, covered with grape-blue leather,
+looked tempting and scholarly. A long table with
+drawers was in the centre of the floor, and on each
+side some chance hand had arranged chairs high and
+stiff and ready for writing or reading.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“This seems made for us. Could you spare this
+room?” Desmond asked, feeling nevertheless the
+assurance of the demand.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>She hesitated. Though she cared little for Great
+Oaks, the incongruity struck her. This was indeed a
+fine room to devote to the uses of pupils and pedagogue,
+and it might be that all that Chub would ever
+learn would not be worth the wear and tear that his
+acquisitions here would cost it.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“But why not?” she asked in turn. “Certainly
+the parlors are ample for so little company as we see
+here.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“And we shall keep regular hours; the room can
+be at the service of the family in the evenings”; he
+rather pressed the point. “The library is separate from
+the rest of the building, and less liable to interruption,
+out of earshot of anything that may be going
+forward in the household; the books are all at
+hand; the atmosphere is inspiring.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“By all means, then,” she assented.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But later, when she mentioned the decision to her
+uncle, he looked dismayed, and she half regretted her
+compliance.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“He selected the library as a schoolroom!” exclaimed
+Mr. Stanlett. “Well, he <em>is</em> moderate!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“He showed the first vestige of emotion that I
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>think it is possible for him to entertain when he saw
+the books,” she said. “I want him to be satisfied at
+Great Oaks,—if anybody <em>can</em> be satisfied in the
+Mississippi swamp.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“What sort of impression does he make upon your
+mind?” asked Mr. Stanlett, solicitously.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I think he is an iceberg; he lowers the temperature
+whenever he approaches.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But the value of the library as an educational influence
+was not immediately apparent, and Desmond,
+who had never taught, was destined to find that
+there is far more requisite for success than the equipment
+for instruction. The poignancy of the relinquishment
+of his dear ambitions, his sensitive appreciation
+of his reduction to an unsuitable, subsidiary
+position in the esteem of the world, the tingling sense
+of personal isolation, of humiliation in a sort, as of
+an unwelcome, disregarded, yet necessary supernumerary
+in the family circle, so apart themselves as to
+render his presence always felt,—he thought these
+elements of his poverty a sufficient handicap on satisfaction
+in the present and hope for the future. He
+might have been still further dismayed at the outset
+to realize that education is a cooperative function,
+and the receptivity of the student is as essential as
+the radiation of the professor. He had been himself
+so eager in the acquisition of knowledge, so earnest,
+so alertly intelligent, his mind assimilating as by an
+involuntary process the pabulum that the curriculum
+set forth in courses, that he did not readily grasp
+the idea of a different point of view. He was totally
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>unaware of the luxury of mental inaction, the atrophy
+of the industrial muscles, the dead levels of the lack
+of ambition, of supine content with the least achievement
+compatible with the least exertion. He had
+given his instructors no occasion to seek to stimulate
+his aspirations to the goal of his best possibilities, and
+he had not even turned the eye of casual contemplation
+upon their labors as they herded their unwilling
+and loitering flocks along the dusty approaches to
+learning, fain to be content with such progress as
+their charges could be prevailed upon to make.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Even in the preliminaries for instruction in the
+big, luxurious room, friction supervened. A fresh fire
+blazed on the hearth, the places at the table were assigned,
+the box of schoolbooks was unpacked, and the
+stationery deposited in appropriate drawers. Chub’s
+joy in the acquisition of a fountain pen it was necessary
+to moderate, and his plea to inaugurate his scholastic
+labors by experimenting with a writing lesson
+was tabooed.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“You are not here to do what you wish, but
+what is best for you,” Desmond said finally, and
+Chub cast the pen from him on the table with an air
+of permanent repudiation and a sullen pout of disaffection.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>For a time Horace, with the puerile mania to be
+stirring something, must needs turn in his chair and
+with a meddlesome finger revolve again and again
+the terrestrial globe that stood near by, contemplating
+not its charted surface, but merely its pleasing
+semblance to a big ball, and its satisfactory poise that
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>so slight a touch would compass the revolution of the
+earth. Twice Desmond politely requested him to desist.
+Horace was still for a little while, but soon
+his careless mood had lost the memory of the command,
+the world was briskly awhirl anew, and in his
+lazy consciousness he was scarcely aware of his own
+agency in the fact.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond hesitated. He gazed at the forgetful
+Horace for a moment, then he commented: “I hope
+that you are fond of the study of geography. If
+you turn that globe again, you shall map out every
+country on it and chart every body of water, working
+all the afternoons while the others are out of
+school till you practically own the earth and the
+boundaries thereof. Are you a pretty expert cartographer?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Horace, amazed and insulted, grew round-eyed and
+red. “Mamma would not permit it,” he said stiffly.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“We shall see. This is <em>my</em> schoolroom, and what
+I say here—goes!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Now, Horace, I hope that you have got it!”
+Reginald exclaimed in reproach.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Horace was motionless, mutinous in dubitation.
+Then with a fling he turned his back upon the allurements
+of the world and joined the silent and pouting
+Chub in fixedly regarding the grape-blue leather cover
+inlaid in the table, and spotted here and there with the
+ink of old-time chirographers.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond himself had his distractions. He was interested
+in the old sand-box, full of metal filings, formerly
+used instead of blotters to dry the ink on the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>page. He was surprised when a bronze bust on the
+table revealed an inkstand, as the helmet of the head
+of Pallas was lifted,—a series of inkstands, it contained,
+for different tints, and his set and joyless face
+relaxed as he refilled them. “This is a quaint fancy,—this
+inkstand,” he said.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Then he must needs be quick to check Reginald’s
+intention to throw into the fire a bundle of carefully
+made quill pens of a bygone date. These came from
+a small drawer, evidently long disused, that had a
+trick of sticking. There were also some wafers here,
+for the sealing of letters, and a stick of sealing-wax.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond sought to inaugurate a more agreeable
+topic than had hitherto distinguished the incidents of
+the morning. He took these relics of the past as a
+suggestion. He said that it ought to be peculiarly
+pleasant to them to work here, where those of their
+own blood had read, and written, and thought out
+the problems of their day; and that this was home
+in the truest sense, a oneness of mind and heart and
+effort. They should have a sentiment to retain the
+inkstand, sand-box, and bunch of quills, these tokens
+of the mental activity of their forbears, hallowed by
+their usage; and the stiff, unnoticed, forgotten drawer
+of the table, where these writing-materials had been
+found, might cause them to think how yesterday always
+leaves a trace on to-day, and to take heed that
+it is not a vain regret nor the disaster of the waste
+of time.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>They listened in blank silence and unresponsiveness.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>Desmond, somewhat taken aback, for he had
+had a purpose of talking to his pupils to mould the
+form of their thought, to fashion their habit of phrasing,
+to direct their outlook and give the values of
+viewpoint, to accomplish their improvement insensibly
+even in their leisure hours, felt a disposition to recur
+to the line and rule of the text-book. “Let them
+learn, then, just what is set down for them,” he said,
+disappointed with the first experiment.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But even thus his expectations were so suddenly
+dashed that he had a sense of helplessness,—an incapacity
+to reach that volition of mind that makes it
+a motive power. Words were all ineffective, argument
+thrown away. Already he began to perceive that he
+might teach in vain if they would not, and therefore
+could not, learn. His heart sank within him as he
+noted the look of dull disinclination, desolation indeed,
+with which Reginald turned the leaves of the
+Greek Reader.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“What is the use of the classics, Mr. Desmond?”
+he asked in a tone of dreary protest. “Nobody speaks
+the languages any more. Why, when I was in Greece
+last winter, even I could see that what I had learned
+of ancient Greek was miles away from modern Hellenic.
+And I spoke Italian, not Latin, in Rome. As
+to Greek literature,—why, we have the finest translations,—better
+than any I can ever make. Now what
+gentleman ever sits down to read Euripides in the
+original? Now, honestly, Mr. Desmond, what good
+has Greek ever been to you?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This was indeed a home-thrust,—the contrast of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>his splendid and complete intellectual armament and
+the field of its employment.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“It has given me the distinguished opportunity of
+teaching you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There was dead silence for a few moments as the
+group sat around the table. The two sullen youngsters,
+apprehending rather the tone of the retort than
+its full significance, lifted their lowering eyes and
+looked in blank wonder from one of the speakers to
+the other. Reginald continued to turn the volume
+listlessly in his hand, but a scarlet flush was suffusing
+his face, and stealing to the roots of his auburn hair.
+Presently he said, with the air of venturing a suggestion,
+“It must be a language particularly rich in
+satire; it must cultivate the faculties for sarcasm, at
+all events.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The work got under way at length, and perhaps
+progressed as satisfactorily as if there had been a more
+genial understanding. Each faction was cautious,
+being uncertain of the other, and hence experiments
+were not in favor. There was much of the genuine
+gentleman in Reginald; he was averse to occasioning
+needless inconvenience or annoyance to others,
+and had he no further reason, he would have exerted
+himself to curb the vagaries of his wandering attention,
+so little accustomed to concentration. But he
+had, too, a proper pride. Without the opportunity of
+cramming for the examination, the disadvantages of
+his erratic training and the irregular development
+of his immature mind were to be discerned without
+palliation. This, however, gave token how solid an
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>intellectual endowment he possessed. As he struggled
+with the questions and bent every faculty to the endeavor
+to do himself as little discredit as he might,
+Desmond felt somewhat encouraged. There was good
+material here, if it could be disengaged from the
+tangle of puerile folly, superficial observation, false
+standards, and a total lack of the habit of application.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The other two promised less well, and Desmond
+had with them far less sympathy and less patience.
+Horace, still swelling with wrath for the indignity of
+the geographical threat, was merely biding his time,
+and temporizing with his tyrant till the close of the
+diurnal session should permit him to bear his tale of
+woe to his mother, who he doubted not would
+avenge him summarily. But Chub had capitulated.
+He adopted propitiatory tactics. Now and again he
+quitted his place and came around and stood beside
+Desmond’s chair, with a plump and pleading hand on
+his arm, and explained carefully that he could not
+really hope to master fractions because they had a
+peculiar effect on his head. He thought it would be
+much better to review long division, until his health
+was fully confirmed,—he was a crackerjack at long
+division. He would like to show Mr. Desmond what
+he could do; he could cover a slate with figures to
+beat the band. And would Mr. Desmond make those
+two boys quit laughing at him, and agree that he
+might skip fractions altogether. He had heard people
+say that fractions were of no use,—upon his word of
+honor, he had.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>“Some small people like unto yourself, I dare say,”
+Desmond retorted.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Chub was always so disappointed and surprised
+when he was sent back to his place, his errand fruitless,
+to bend the round integer of his head over the
+tantalizing fractions on his slate, so eagerly abounding
+in renewed hope as he came out again with his
+plump paw to be laid persuasively on Desmond’s arm,
+as he stood by the tutor’s chair, advancing his enlightened
+views,—all of which tended to eliminate
+study from the scheme of things at Great Oaks mansion,—that
+it began to be very obvious that this
+was the pupil most difficult to contend with and for
+whose idiosyncrasies Desmond would have least toleration.
+For scholastic attainment was a very large and
+noble endeavor in Desmond’s mind, despite the reasons
+he had latterly perceived to minimize its worldly
+utilities. And to this effect did Mrs. Faurie express
+herself that evening at dinner when they were all
+grouped around the table.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I should judge from the children’s report, Mr.
+Desmond, that you have all had a rather serious time
+of it, to-day. And that is just what I desire,—that
+you should maintain your authority,”—she cast her
+beautiful coercive eyes on each of the youthful faces,
+shown in the candle-light intently regarding her—“and
+that they should exert themselves to do their
+duty.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>They seemed to accept the fiat as law according
+to their several interpretations of duty,—Reginald
+with a sort of manly serenity, Horace as reduced to
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>order, and the little Chub as so distressful and helpless
+and a-weary of the world that Mrs. Faurie could
+not refrain from reaching out her long fan, and with
+its downy tip touching him playfully under his chin
+to bring out his dimples and win from him once
+more a smile.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER IV</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c006'>The insubordination of the youthful students at
+Great Oaks was happily at an end, but their educational
+problems remained. These promised Desmond
+food for much thought for an indefinite time, and
+roused him to an ingenuity of expedients to secure
+the best efforts of the young scholars themselves.
+For a time success swayed in the balance indeterminate.
+Sometimes it seemed impossible to break to
+habits of application, to harness the attention of
+these wildly roving minds. He did not love the spectacle
+of wounded pride, but the heroic treatment of
+bluff ridicule had the happiest effect.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“For a fellow to have passed through the Suez Canal,
+to have seen the Assouan Dam, and the Sault
+Canal, and the Segovia Aqueduct, and the Ganges
+Canal, and the Solani Aqueduct, and have no more
+conception of the principles of hydraulics than a
+mule shipped in a stock-car has of the motive powers
+of a steam-engine! You didn’t notice?—neither does
+the mule.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Reginald was letter perfect the next day in such
+elementary exposition as the text-book on Natural
+Philosophy afforded concerning locks, dams, jetties,
+and the varied utilities of controlled waters; and
+Desmond, with a touch of self-reproach, called him
+into the library that evening after dinner, and made
+himself very gay and entertaining with stories of college
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>life, details of hazing, rushes, athletics, such as
+had but a bitter flavor to his memory now, though
+likely to please the fancy of a destined collegian.
+Once or twice afterward Reginald dropped in again,
+his eyes bright and expectant; but the tutor had no
+immediate cruelties to atone for, and was dreary and
+sad himself, and of no mind to lacerate his sensibilities
+with reminiscences of happier days. He gave
+himself up to such solace as he could find in a book,
+and Reginald, quick of apprehension, sat on the
+other side of the table, a book in his own hands,
+albeit his attention wandered now and again to the
+black panes of the windows, where he could see the
+moon in the sky and a brilliant and shattered luminary
+fallen below, which he knew was the lunar reflection
+in the Mississippi River. The very touch of
+a book Desmond considered salutary, and thus he did
+not rebuke Reginald’s failure of attention.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In truth, Desmond felt that he needed his evenings
+apart. He worked so hard with his difficult
+and unmalleable material during the day that he was
+likely to forget his disappointments, his perverted
+destiny, his many feuds with Fate. But he had not
+ceased when alone to set them in order before him, to
+canvass futile ways and means for a counter-stroke, to
+ponder with rancor on men who had made settlement
+of the financial difficulties impossible, and others who
+had found profit in pushing him to the wall. He
+would have his revenge, he resolved; he would pay
+them back in their own coin, some day,—some day,—and
+suddenly he would feel the sting of his own
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>sharp ridicule as he would bitterly laugh aloud and
+demand of his utter helplessness how this might betide.
+Though it was now little more than a year
+since his father had died at the critical moment of a
+business enterprise of magnitude, which wrecked in its
+collapse his other interests, it had been already demonstrated
+that, had he lived, it would have succeeded
+signally,—indeed, in the hands into which it had
+gone, it was more than justifying the confidence of its
+projector. Desmond, who could not retain a single
+share for the lack of means, meditated ruefully on
+the sums spent in completing his course of study according
+to his father’s directions, before the condition
+of the decedent’s estate was definitely ascertained,
+and how these funds might have been applied to
+more utilitarian purposes. He was often too depressed,
+too distrait, too irritated by the untoward
+results of the day’s labor, to care to read; but a book
+in the hand was a protection from the intrusion of
+the family on the polite theory of not seeming to
+exclude him from their social life. He had been sent
+for once or twice in the evening to join a game at
+cards with Mr. Stanlett, Mrs. Faurie, and Reginald;
+but afterward, when he saw the boy’s figure appear
+on the veranda without and flit away softly from the
+library window, he was glad that the report that he
+was busy with books and papers had protected him
+from that irksome interruption. His leisure was not
+of pleasant flavor with his embittered memories, but
+it was his own bit of time with himself, and if he
+had come to be not a merry man, he could make
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>no compact with a new identity. Sometimes he had
+a sudden thought, an abstract thought, as unsolicited,
+as unexpected, as beneficent as an angel’s visit, and
+he wrote. So late the light burned from the library
+windows night after night, so consecutively, that the
+pilots of the river craft came to reckon that stellular
+gleam among their nocturnal bearings betokening the
+Great Oaks mansion.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond soon began to take little note of other
+interests save indeed his pedagogic duties. He had
+begged off several times when guests, strangers of
+course to him, had come to dine. He was writing
+something, he once told Mrs. Faurie, confidentially;
+then he was offended by the eager alacrity with which
+she had excused his presence at the table, and the
+promptness and deftness with which the brisk waiter
+had served his dinner alone in the library. He did not
+write at all, that night. He smoked pipe after pipe
+of his own strong tobacco, instead of Mr. Stanlett’s
+fine mild cigars sent in with the dinner tray, although
+he esteemed it in the nature of “breaking training”
+as much now as when he was a star “half-back” on a
+crack Eleven. He meditated much and long over the
+bitter problems of the various degrees of want and
+woe expressed in poverty absolute and poverty relative,
+and in what actual wealth consists, and if the
+rich are not often paradoxically the poor, and if the
+poor,—but he felt that the converse was a more
+difficult proposition to be maintained, to demonstrate
+that the poor are ever by any fortuitous circumstance
+to be considered the rich.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>The winter was wearing away,—the passing of
+time marked only by the gradual development of
+approximate symmetry in the minds of the pupils;
+the slow budding of the trees of the grove, that had
+been the favored haunt of deer some fifty years earlier,
+before the marauding currents of the river had
+carried away the point called formerly “Faurie’s
+Landing,” amounting to near a thousand acres, thus
+bringing the mansion house forward on the banks of
+the stream, within half a mile of the levee, indeed;
+the adding of page after page to the record of the
+thought that had come to him in the deserted library
+in the midnight;—when there suddenly befell one
+of those incidents in which he played an important
+part, that were as links in a chain of events, fettering
+the lives and fortune of all in the house and many
+besides. This, the first of these significant happenings,
+came about in the simplest way, its importance
+all unrecognized at the time.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It was morning, and in the library his pupils sat
+at their books, when there sounded a sudden tap at
+the door. Desmond turned, frowning, and looked
+over his shoulder. In response to his summons the
+footman entered, his face irradiated by subdued excitement;
+he presented formally, however, the compliments
+of Mrs. Faurie, who would be glad to see
+Mr. Desmond and his pupils in the parlor, Colonel
+and Mrs. Kentopp having arrived.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Chubby sprang up with a whoop. It would be difficult
+to say whom he would not have welcomed with
+like enthusiasm to rescue him from the grisly lessons.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>Desmond rebuked him sternly, while the young servant
+looked on in amaze.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Say to Mrs. Faurie that Mr. Desmond and his
+pupils beg to be excused, as the hours for lessons
+are not over.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It is impossible to describe the look of wall-eyed
+remonstrance with which the footman hearkened to
+this message, and to emphasize his own opinion of it
+he closed the door so slowly that Desmond was sorely
+tempted to bound up and kick it to after him.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Chub, on the verge of tears, was tempestuous in
+argument,—his mother had sent for him, he plained,
+and he was not allowed to go,—in the midst of which
+a second tap at the door heralded the footman, with
+a change of face if not of heart. Mrs. Faurie begged
+Mr. Desmond’s pardon for the interruption, but would
+be glad if Mr. Desmond would shorten the study
+hours by ten minutes in order to meet Colonel and
+Mrs. Kentopp in the parlor before luncheon.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Hi, Bob, they goin’ to stay to lunch?” cried
+Chub, hilariously. “Did the children come?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Bob’s grin of assent was petrified on his face.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Take your seat, Rufus,” said Desmond, sharply.
+“You must want to do some extras for penance.”
+Then to Bob, “Shut—that—door!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>A great gush of talk and laughter issued from the
+parlor as Desmond approached it before luncheon. It
+scarcely seemed as if so limited a coterie could keep
+astir so cheery a conversational breeze, but Mrs.
+Kentopp was vivacity itself. She was about thirty-eight
+years of age, of medium height, but very slight.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>She impressed him at first as somewhat haggard, but
+he soon perceived that this was the effect of the dye
+or blondine, which heightened the natural tint of her
+light hair to a golden hue, that required special freshness
+of complexion to accord with this embellishment.
+This disparagement was obviated when she laughed,
+for a becoming flush came and went in her cheeks,
+and her light blue eyes danced. She was handsomely
+gowned in pastel-blue cloth, heavily braided, with a
+hat of the same shade trimmed with the breast of the
+golden pheasant. She wore long tan gloves on a hand
+so small and soft that Desmond almost thought the
+fingers boneless, for despite her air of condescension,
+she shook hands with him in the cordial southern
+fashion on informal occasions.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“You have not given us the opportunity to welcome
+you earlier to this benighted region, Mr. Desmond,”
+she said, laughing always. “Misery loves
+company!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Her husband was tall, portly, fair, and flushed, with
+a bright, round, brown eye, dark hair, and a clean-shaven,
+square face. He was dressed in sedulous conformity
+to the dictates of the most recent fashion of
+gentleman’s garb, and this dudish suggestion was
+queerly accented by his peculiarly open and genial
+manner and his ringing, hearty voice. He strode quite
+across the room, and most cordially clasped the stranger’s
+hand. But Desmond appreciated that it was a
+very keen, searching, and business-like glance that
+Colonel Kentopp bent upon him, singularly unrelated
+to his jovial, haphazard manner and joyous tones.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>Desmond felt that it held an element of surprise, and
+that he was altogether different, for some reason, from
+what Colonel Kentopp had expected to see. Mrs.
+Kentopp, too, turned after a moment and seriously
+surveyed him through her gold-handled lorgnette, as
+he was replying to the civilities addressed to him by
+her husband. Concerning the newcomers Desmond
+made his own cursory deductions, almost mechanically,
+for they did not interest him in the least. He
+fancied that Colonel Kentopp rather valued himself
+upon his amiability and popularity, and was even
+prone to make it evident that his two children, a
+girl and a boy, were fonder of him than of their
+mother. They came in ever and anon from the veranda,
+where they raced and chased with Chubby, to
+acquaint him with some juvenile news, some change
+of moment to them, such as they had fed the parrot,
+or that Chubby had a Shetland pony, and they hung
+upon him, one on either side, their cheeks against his
+hair, their arms around his neck. Their neglected
+mother seemed no whit disconcerted by her supersedure
+in their affections, and talked on blithely
+to Mrs. Faurie and Mr. Stanlett—especially to the
+old gentleman, with whom Mrs. Kentopp exchanged
+many compliments and affected to hold a very gay
+flirtation.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>At the lunch-table Desmond would have felt quite
+apart from the occasion, since they were all old friends
+and had many subjects in common of which he knew
+naught, but that Colonel Kentopp, with his genius for
+geniality, persisted in drawing him out, making him
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>talk, appealed again and again directly to him, and
+would not suffer him to be ignored by Mrs. Kentopp,
+who seemed disposed now to flaunt her condescension
+and now to give him the cold shoulder, albeit ever
+and anon she fixed upon him a surprised, contemplative
+gaze that temporarily stilled her brilliant, laughing
+face. Desmond could not imagine and he did not
+care in what respect he did not meet their expectations,
+and although he responded in good form to Colonel
+Kentopp’s lead, he was not sorry when the meal, unusually
+prolonged, was over at last, and he was free
+for the afternoon.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He betook himself, as soon as the party had scattered
+sufficiently, to the library, where he sank down
+in one of the easy chairs to rest, not his bodily frame,
+but his tired mind and heart. He had not wished to
+seem to hold aloof from the family by withdrawing
+to his own room, yet he felt intrusive with them and
+their friends, who were no friends of his. He found
+the library a neutral ground; in some sort it befitted
+him and his calling. The quiet solaced him; the atmosphere
+of the books was always friendly; the traces
+of the scholastic labors were all effaced, shut up in
+the deep abysses of the drawers of the table; the fire
+glowed upon the hearth. He was more and more at
+ease as he rested, and the slow hours of the afternoon
+wore on. The shadows began to slant on the level
+reaches of the long vistas under the oaks; the sunlight
+had that dreamy, burnished splendor that embellishes
+the southern winter; it loitered slow, content,
+its progress imperceptible. All was still; not a sound
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>reached his ear save the distant chatter of paroquets
+flitting about the pecan trees as if still in search of
+nuts. He could see from where he lounged in the great
+armchair the long stretch of the Mississippi River,
+the light reddening the hue of its murky floods, the
+ripples tipped with a sparkle like gold; he noted as
+often before the peculiar conformation of its surface,
+the curving centre rising apparently so much
+higher than the margins, which slanted downward
+still toward the interior after the manner of the banks
+of deltaic rivers; the opposite shores were merely distinguishable
+as a line of soft, tender green. Here and
+there a trio of white sea-gulls poised, then winged
+away, and again darted down toward the water, evidently
+roving hundreds of miles up from the Gulf intent
+on fishing. He was not reading; his mind seemed
+quiescent, blank. The intensity of his emotions, the
+dull discouragements of his position, had worn on him
+more than he was aware. He was mentally resting.
+He had no conscious thought, no recognized intellectual
+process, when suddenly he gave a start to
+perceive a figure standing at the French window that
+came down to the floor of the veranda. It was Mrs.
+Faurie. She opened one of the long sashes from outside,
+and entered without ceremony.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Why, how cosy you look in here!” she exclaimed.
+“‘There are none so deaf as those who will not hear.’
+No wonder you did not answer.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Were you calling me?” he asked, with an apologetic
+cadence. He had started to rise, but Mrs. Faurie
+had herself sunk into a chair, and he resumed his seat.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>She was looking about her with an intent, bright
+interest. “I think that we never quite appreciated this
+old room. What a scholarly look your rearrangement
+has brought into it! That old telescope,—why, you
+have mounted it again! How nice to put it in the
+centre of the bay-window—it is just the right height
+for observations of the sky, and can sweep it in three
+directions. Somebody yanked it off its stand long ago
+to read the names on passing steamboats from the
+veranda.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>As she leaned her elbow on the arm of the chair
+and turned her beautifully poised head, he could not
+keep his eyes from her. She embodied to his mind
+the poetic ideal of all the beauties of fable or history.
+She was as a flout to the commonplace aspect
+of the day, to her associates, her surroundings, her
+own words and identity, and to himself. He could not
+accustom his eyes to such peculiar and preëminent
+perfection. Her charms seemed heightened at the
+moment by the embellishments of dress; for since
+luncheon she had made a toilet for the afternoon, of
+a richness which she had not hitherto affected,—a
+note of compliment to her guests. She was younger
+of aspect; her face seemed that of some radiant girl,
+though proud, assured, dominant. Her gown was of
+gray silk, quiet in tone and not heavy of texture, the
+brocaded pattern being a plume shading from darker
+gray to a tip of white. She wore on her richly tinted
+brown hair a velvet picture-hat of the same gray
+hue, with a line of vivid white about the brim, and
+apparently the ostrich plume of gray, that the brocaded
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>gown simulated, coiled about the crown, its
+white tip drooping to her shoulder. And against this
+neutral background the splendor of her beauty glowed,
+her complexion so exquisite, her lips scarlet, her gray
+eyes so full and fine and lordly in their expression,
+and with those imperious brows so delicately drawn
+above. Somehow he could not hold his own before
+them. Never heretofore had eyes challenged him that
+he dared not meet. Her evident unconsciousness of
+the impression her beauty must make upon him added
+to his embarrassment. It was like talking to one in a
+mask or under a disguise. He could not speak to mother
+of hobbledehoys, householder, butterfly of fashion,
+while these incongruous characters were blended into
+the personality of Juno, or the ideal of the moon, or a
+muse of poetry. He was glad that she busied those
+radiant glances in scanning the sombre old room, and
+his chance bedizenment of it with such cast-off gear
+as had come to his hand.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Are the lenses of the telescope all right? Well,
+that’s a blessing! And you have brought out that
+old geological cabinet.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“It contains some quite valuable specimens,” said
+Desmond. He deprecated his tone; it seemed to him
+as if he were making excuses. “A few are genuinely
+rare.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mrs. Faurie nodded her comprehension. “So I
+suppose; an uncle of Mr. Faurie’s had quite a fad in
+that direction.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Mr. Stanlett?” asked Desmond, surprised.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“No,—Mr. Stanlett is my uncle. This was a relative
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>of Mr. Faurie’s, with quite literary tastes; and
+oh,—that old screen!—I had forgotten it completely,—skeleton
+leaves mounted between plates of
+crystal.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“There is nothing so symmetrical, to my mind, in
+all nature as the various tree-forms,” Desmond commented;
+“those outlines are grace itself, both in the
+denuded shape of the leaf and the tracery of the
+veins. Their preparation is exquisitely done.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“They look like lace!” she remarked. “If you
+are fond of tree-forms, you ought to have a beautiful
+time in the woods at Great Oaks”—she drew a deep
+sigh. “We have little else to offer as entertainment;
+but we are long on wilderness! Will the children
+study botany?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Perhaps,—as a reward of merit,—when they
+shall have learned something in the indispensable
+branches.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mrs. Faurie hastily changed the subject. “I am
+glad that you find enough interest in these things to
+resurrect them. I remember now that they were in
+that big old mahogany press in the alcove.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>She rose suddenly, opened the door of the press,
+and looked in, her head poised inquiringly. There
+seemed nothing to attract her explorations, and she
+returned to her chair.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“That’s where you found the frames for those old
+steel engravings; the arrangement of them is very
+inspiring, much better than that ragged old portfolio,
+which I see you have relegated to the press, where
+it ought to be. I wonder what used to be in those
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>frames; but they are the very thing for steel engravings.”
+For between the bookshelves and the row of
+cupboards below, a blank space of paneled wood had
+received a series of small framed portraits of the great
+men in the world of letters and scientific achievement.
+The pictures were unharmed by time, save for spotted
+and yellowed margins, but the suggestion of antiquity
+better accorded with the old and worn fittings of the
+place than fresher equipment.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“What did you find of interest in the cupboards
+of the bookcases?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“They are locked,” said Desmond, a trifle out of
+countenance to have tried doors obviously closed
+against intrusion.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Why, how odd! There must be lots of things in
+them which would interest you.” As if she could not
+trust the vigor of his experiment, she rose once more
+and flitted across the room, trying first one, then
+another of the small doors. They were without knobs,
+and only a key that might fit could open them. She
+had evidently broken a nail in her efforts to draw the
+doors ajar by the moulding, and she was looking
+somewhat ruefully at her dainty fingers as she returned.
+Not to remain seated at ease while she labored
+to open the obdurate cabinets, Desmond had followed
+her about the room, making similar efforts wherever
+the door seemed a less close fit; and as she took her
+chair by the fire he resumed his place near her, listening
+attentively as she talked on. “I remember that
+there are many old English periodicals there,—the
+‘Gentleman’s Magazine,’ the ‘London Magazine,’
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>the ‘Annual Register,’ all from the beginning of
+their issue, and a thousand old scientific and literary
+pamphlets. Why should they be locked up? Perhaps
+Uncle Clarence may have the key; if not, we may find
+one about the house that will fit, or on that little
+trading-boat where Chubby bought my apple, don’t
+you know?”—with an animated glance. “It has
+been off on the bayous and lakes since then, and it
+dropped down the river to-day and tied up at our landing—it
+may have a bunch of keys among its treasures
+of junk. We must try that expedient, at all events. I
+know you would enjoy exploring those nooks, and
+you might find something that would interest you.
+What are you writing?—something for publication?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He drew back in surprise, embarrassed, half flattered,
+protesting. “Oh, no,—only jotting down a few
+thoughts that struck me,—of no value to the public,—for
+my own entertainment, or rather my own satisfaction,—a
+sort of argument, pro and con, on some
+questions of political economy that were never clear
+to my own mind, never justified to my own point
+of view. It is in a sort a dialogue, thoughts that,
+expressed otherwise, would bore the life out of any
+interlocutor.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“But why don’t you arrange to write something
+for publication while you are here, Mr. Desmond?—not
+history, for of course this library is too general
+in selection to afford you the data requisite, but—something
+else; why won’t questions of political
+economy do? something—I don’t know what,—but
+something for publication and permanent interest.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>“Why, I couldn’t,” said Desmond, flushing painfully,
+so close had she come to his grief for the relinquished
+ambitions of achievement. “I am not capable
+of that kind of thing. Besides, I came here to
+teach—”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Surely you don’t have to sit up o’ nights to prepare
+for Chubby’s lessons! And you can’t work the
+boys all day; you have to let them stretch their muscles
+in the afternoon. You think that more consecutive
+time would be necessary,—more concentration—well,
+perhaps,—I am not up to such things myself.
+Such ideas as I have are originated in the
+twinkling of an eye. At all events, you have made
+this a mighty pleasant place to read and rest and jot
+down any vagrant ideas that may be roaming around
+when your day’s work is done.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>She lay back in her chair and let her eyes rove
+smilingly about the changes in the aspect of the
+room. “I shouldn’t be surprised if you will have to
+share the library now. I dare say that all the rest
+of us will want to ‘butt in,’ as the boys say.” She
+laughed with a mischievous relish of the grotesque
+phrase and its unseemliness on her dainty lips.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>On the low marble mantelpiece were figures in
+bronze of two of the muses, Clio and Calliope, evidently
+costly and of some artistic merit, and Desmond
+had crossed on the wall above them two long swords,
+that had stood in a corner of the room, genuine
+relics of warfare that had seen grim service, and in
+their way carved out records in both history and
+poetry. An oil painting, a spirited battle-piece, was
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>still above, the scarlet uniforms giving an intense
+note of color among the prevailing tints of grape-blue
+with which the room was furnished. Desmond
+had not inquired as to its subject, and the signature
+of the painter was not familiar to him. Its execution
+did not rise above a respectable mediocrity, save for
+the central figure, a commanding officer, who, with
+raised hat and mounted on a white charger, seemed
+galloping down the line of troops and straight out of
+the picture at the spectator.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>All these details did Mrs. Faurie successively scan
+as she sat languidly pulling on a pair of long gray
+gloves; all were brought into new significance, into
+added harmony, in the readjustment of the room.
+She seemed at great leisure, and it was some time
+before she spoke again.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“You give a very beguiling aspect to scholastic
+labor. I don’t think that I should mind learning a
+thing or two, myself, from you here.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>She looked at him with a smile touching the curving
+lines of her lips. His cheek flushed. He lifted
+his head as he returned her look. It was a fine head,
+and was well poised on his broad shoulders. That
+wonderful magnetic smile of hers was addressed to
+him, and he must needs have been more than human
+had he not responded to its subtle, unconscious
+flattery. He had been so reduced in pride, in the
+esteem of the specious world, so thwarted, agonized,
+deprived, humiliated, that this look of interest, of
+rallying mirth, of alluring charm, was singularly
+suave to his sensitive perceptions. For a moment
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>his face was as it used to be; his dark blue eyes
+had a serene light, confident, spirited; they were
+smiling in their turn. His expression was lifted out
+of its wonted cold constraint,—it was earnest, ardent;
+and he seemed to Colonel Kentopp, pausing
+at the window on the veranda, as handsome a man as
+could be found between Lake Itasca and the Balize;
+he was stricken with amaze by the mutual expression
+of the two.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“It would be my place and privilege to sit at your
+feet, Mrs. Faurie,” said Desmond.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Perhaps because she was acclimated to the language
+of admiration and missed it sorely at Great Oaks,
+perhaps because she was so genuinely pleased with
+the tutor as a tutor that she could but approve him
+as a man, she cast upon him a warm radiance from
+her beautiful eyes, and broke out laughing and flushing
+as a much younger woman might have done.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“What a pretty speech, Mr. Desmond,—and how
+pitifully insincere! What under heaven could you
+hope to learn from me?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He had not seen before that exquisite dimple in
+her cheek, for she seldom laughed with such exuberant
+mirth, or perhaps he might not have answered
+with such definite aplomb.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I should learn those higher things beyond the
+ken of books,” he declared.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Before the fire was quenched in Desmond’s eyes,
+the pose of his head shifted, the flush on his cheek
+faded, while yet the whole changed aspect of the man
+was patent, Colonel Kentopp conceived it beneath his
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>dignity to stand on the veranda and look in the
+library window at what seemed to him singularly like
+a flirtation between his hostess and the tutor of her
+sons. He forthwith laid his hand on the window-catch,
+and as it clicked in opening, Mrs. Faurie turned
+and burst into a peal of silvery laughter while he
+slowly and ponderously entered.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“How funny!” she exclaimed. “Where is our
+walk on the levee? Have all our party fallen by the
+way or dispersed? I took upon me the mission to find
+Mr. Desmond, and I suppose the rest sent you to
+find me.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Colonel Kentopp could not smooth out the frown
+that would gather and be dissipated to corrugate his
+brow anew as he listened. She seemed all joyous
+unconsciousness and insouciance, yet this might be
+affected. He could not judge whether she was
+merely carrying off the awkwardness of having been
+so absorbed in the tutor’s conversation as to forget
+her waiting guests and her own errand, which was to
+invite him to join the party in a walk along the levee,
+or whether she was genuinely interested as she called
+Colonel Kentopp’s attention to the changes by which
+Mr. Desmond had so enhanced the attractions of the
+library. Colonel Kentopp, who was as far removed
+from the possibility of the appreciation of any literary
+point as a man of intelligence and education can
+well be, surveyed with blank assent the details which
+she indicated to him.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I thought,” he could not refrain from saying,
+“that you always declared that you did not care
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span><em>un sou marqué</em> how things look at Great Oaks Plantation.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“But this is not ‘things’—it is thought; it was
+done with an idea,—an inspiration. There never was
+a duller and a dowdier old room, and now it is replete
+with suggestion, with charm, with all the allurements
+of learning; and miracle of all, without the
+expenditure of a cent of money.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Take care, Mrs. Faurie,” said Colonel Kentopp,
+laughing in that mirthless, rallying way in which
+privileged friends give themselves the pleasure of
+saying a disagreeable thing in the guise of jest;
+“after all your open-handed career, you may become
+a miser yet.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Heaven send the day!” she exclaimed. And
+long, long afterward Desmond remembered the phrase
+and her look as she uttered the words. “It might be
+better for me and mine if the open hand had been
+always the close fist.” Then she broke off suddenly,—“Why,
+there is Mrs. Kentopp.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>For that lady was coming in, laughing very much,
+which always started her pink flush to justify her
+blonded hair, and declaring that she had almost gone
+to sleep on the sofa in the parlor, while they neglected
+her and kept her waiting. If Colonel Kentopp
+had had scant appreciation of the esthetic value of
+the changes that Desmond had wrought in the aspect
+of the library, Mrs. Kentopp’s glacial, superficial
+glance at its details implied absolute disregard. It
+might have been a lesson to reduce the vanity of those
+purblind insects denominated men of science, who
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>grope about the hidden meanings of the universe, who
+seek to “unclench from the granite hand of Nature her
+mighty secrets,” to bring near the stars, to revive the
+dead life of the rocks, to discern the brush that paints
+the flower and leaf, to descry whence comes the
+fashion of the cloud, to find out the paths of the trackless
+oceans, could they have appraised the degree of
+Mrs. Kentopp’s contempt for their objects as her
+eyes rested upon the insignia afforded by the telescope,
+the geological cabinet, the skeleton leaves, the
+epitome of history and poetry above the mantelpiece.
+Her flout of intentional inattention was so patent,
+her air of minimizing, almost ridiculing the importance
+of the tutor and all which to him pertained, that
+it became obvious to the other two that the afternoon
+walk was in order, and they were presently sauntering
+down the veranda, while Desmond ran for his hat.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>To Desmond’s surprise, he was not in the slightest
+degree mortified, nor intimidated, nor crushed by
+Mrs. Kentopp’s manner, as she had doubtless intended
+he should be. He was noting the fact that,
+despite their apparent intimacy, these people did not
+call each other by their Christian names after the
+manner of their sort elsewhere. It had never been
+the custom in this region, where a certain formality
+of the old regime still lingers, and he felt a kind of
+special gratitude that he was not called upon to endure
+to hear Mrs. Faurie address Colonel Kentopp as
+“Tom,” and his wife as “Annetta,” and their responsive
+familiarity to her as “Honoria.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The four walked abreast along the winding avenue
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>under the boughs of the dense trees of the grove,
+which was perfectly clear of undergrowth and as level
+as a floor. Now and again the colonnades formed by
+the great boles parted to show beautiful open, grassy
+vistas amongst the gigantic growths that had given
+the place its name; but the eye could reach no limits
+of the forest, save on one side where the river had
+come “cranking in and cut a monstrous cantle out.”
+The party struck off presently into a byway, which at
+length brought them into the road at the base of the
+levee. Here they climbed the great embankment covered
+with Bermuda grass. The short, dense growth
+was evidently feeling the spring of the year in its
+thick mat of roots that held the earth together, being
+an almost impervious network of innumerable, interlacing
+fibres, and of special utility because of its imperviousness
+in times of “fighting water.” As they
+took their way along the broad path upon the summit,
+they could view from the elevation, of peculiar
+advantage in so flat a country, a vast circuit of the
+surrounding landscape. The water was high and the
+river was still on the rise. The space outside the levee
+seemed to Desmond to have shrunken very perceptibly
+since he had seen it a few days before. This strip
+varied greatly in width; now it looked at the distance
+as if it might measure a mile or more, and at certain
+points it showed only a few hundred yards, with here
+and there marshy intimations and disconnected pools
+where the water stood and reflected the light like oval
+mirrors. The sun, down-dropping, vermilion red, had
+turned all the currents of the great stream to crimson,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>and as it sunk lower and lower the shadows began to
+gloom in the dense woods on the hither shore, albeit
+there was still a line of gilding sunlight glinting
+along the forest summits.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It was all very quiet; not a craft was visible on
+the currents; the vast river was absolutely mute. Despite
+the fact that this is one of the great highways
+of the world, a natural channel from boreal to subtropical
+climes, designed, one might fancy, to bring
+man near his brother man, without reference to his
+own ingenuity of device,—in conquering the wilderness,
+harnessing the steam, annulling time, and obliterating
+distance,—it could have seemed no lonelier
+were theirs the first of human eyes to rest upon it.
+There was no trace, no suggestion of man’s presence,
+save the great embankment of the levee along the
+river-side, now and again receding so far inland as to
+elude the sight, and the newly arrived “shanty-boat”
+lying at the landing.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This craft held the degree of comparison with the
+usual trading-boat of these waters that a junk-shop
+bears to a warehouse. Desmond’s attention was first
+attracted to the humble and grotesque nondescript
+vessel when Chub, nimbly footing it in his trim little
+knickerbockers and well-filled stockings and natty
+Paris shoes, to overtake the group, joined his mother;
+he began to bang upon her, his arm about her waist,
+his head lolling against her arm, begging and pleading
+with her to buy him a bicycle,—a beautiful
+second-hand wheel,—which the amphibious trader
+had assured him was as good as new.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>“But you have your own wheel,” she remonstrated.
+“You actually want another? You would have to be
+a quadruped to ride both.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“And a long-eared one at that!” Colonel Kentopp
+declared, somewhat nettled; for his own small
+son had come up on the other side, casting up lustrous,
+anxious eyes, beseeching that if Chub did not
+secure this treasure, dear, <em>dear</em> papa would open his
+heart and purse and bestow it upon him; for woe to
+tell! he had no bicycle whatever,—he had only a
+tricycle, and a bitter blow it was to his pride when
+Chub rode a safety and he could only accompany
+him, bowed to the earth, as it were, on a humiliating
+three-wheeler.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“My wheel?—Gracious! my wheel is all out of
+whack!” cried the tumultuous Chub. “Just look at
+it, mamma,—that is all I ask. Just go down to the
+trading-boat and look at the wheel,—a—beautiful—second-hand—bike!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“But, Chubby, it would be out of the question for
+you to own two wheels and both already used—”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Mine’s got a punctured tire,” wailed Chub.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Gimme second choice,—if Chub don’t make it;
+lemme have it, papa dear,” beguiled the Kentopp
+hopeful.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It had been Desmond’s firm determination, rigidly
+observed so far, that he would have no concern with
+his pupils other than scholastic. He would consider
+the trend of the conversation in their presence, as
+indeed is necessary always in association with young
+persons, that the equilibrium of their moral, political,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>or religious convictions be not shaken till they are
+of sufficient age and discretion to exercise a sober
+and independent judgment. He would direct their
+thoughts to subjects of value in their general reading.
+He would impart information or correct mistaken
+impressions in the course of casual chat. He would
+in moments of recreation narrate details of special
+interest or amusement, and thus further incidentally
+the judicious development of their mental faculties.
+But with the problems of their control outside the
+schoolroom, their sports, their manners, their moral
+training, he would not tax himself. This was in a
+manner interference, however salutary, and might be
+resented by those in actual authority, resulting in anarchy
+for the youths, and their last estate would be
+worse than their first. He thus argued that he did
+not stand in <em>loco parentis</em>; he was simply a machine
+for the furtherance of learning, a paid purveyor of
+wisdom, and when his day’s work was ended his
+responsibility ceased for the day. Therefore he was
+surprised at himself when he stepped forward briskly,
+as Mrs. Faurie, with a somewhat doubtful and disconsolate
+air, yielded so far as to agree to examine the
+treasure, and turned to the descent of the levee on
+the outer side.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Let me go and examine the wheel, Mrs. Faurie,
+and report its condition to you; I understand these
+machines better, probably, than you do.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>She turned back with a wave of the hand,—a fine,
+free gesture at arm’s length. “A rescue!” she exclaimed.
+“I was just wondering if I could survive the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>unmitigated boredom of the tires, and the bell, and
+the handle-bar, and the pedals, and the saddle. Is the
+date set for your canonization, Mr. Desmond? Go, by
+all means, and add another to your deeds of grace.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But Chub emitted a disconcerted whine. “I don’t
+wish you to go, Mr. Desmond,” he plained, with the
+unwitting insolence of juvenile sincerity.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond was not out of countenance; he even
+sustained the furtive sneer in Mrs. Kentopp’s face.
+“Just as it happens, I don’t care in the least what
+you wish.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Now, there it is, mamma. I want the bike, and
+Mr. Desmond doesn’t care what I want; <em>he says
+so</em>.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“It ought to be little trouble to teach the logical
+ideas of the clever Chub to shoot straight,” commented
+Colonel Kentopp.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Well, then,” Mrs. Faurie could not resist, “suppose
+I go, too. Mr. Desmond can instruct me as to
+the perfection of the tires and the bell and the
+handle-bar, and the tumbling guaranty, warranted
+to give the best headers in the market,”—she was
+looking down with her gracious maternal smile at
+Chub, as in his tumultuous callowness he clamored
+and clung about her skirts (“Oh, rats! mamma, it’s
+got no tumbling guaranty,” he interposed),—“and
+in the mean time I can meditate on the price.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“But, mamma, it is cheap, it is dirt cheap, it
+is dog cheap.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“What is the price?” Desmond demanded.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>When Chub responded, the tutor might have had
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>a salutary monition of the discretion of his resolution
+to keep apart from the affairs of his pupils outside
+the schoolroom. “You just wait and see,” said
+Chub, sullenly.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Come!” cried Mrs. Faurie, her foot poised on the
+verge of the outer descent of the levee, her skirts
+held daintily clear of the grass with her left hand,
+her right about the shoulders of the enterprising
+Chub. She looked back with bright expectation at
+the Kentopps as they stood motionless.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Thank you, no,” said Colonel Kentopp. “We
+will await you here. I shan’t put myself in temptation’s
+way. To be dragooned into buying a crippled
+bike from such a trading-boat as that would be the
+final blow to my paternal authority.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He and his wife looked gravely after the pedestrians
+while standing together on the summit of the
+levee. The sparkle and suavity of their countenances,
+addressed to the exigencies of society, were
+dying out. They both seemed years older in a moment.
+Mrs. Kentopp’s haggard pallor was unrelieved
+by the flush that was wont to come and go as she
+laughed, and a certain pendulous effect of the cheeks
+became noticeable in the immobile contemplativeness
+of her expression. Her husband was more saturnine
+than one could have imagined from his arrogations
+of bonhomie. He had a spark of irritation in his
+eyes, too sharply flashing to have been kindled
+merely by the persistence of his little son, now picking
+his way after the group bound toward the trading-boat,
+now pausing irresolute.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>“Mr. Stanlett is certainly in his dotage!” Colonel
+Kentopp exclaimed acridly. “I never could have
+imagined him guilty of such folly as to bring that
+man here.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Why, what is the matter with the man?”—his
+wife had a short, crisp tone, level and direct, and all
+devoid of the little aspirations and sudden rising
+inflections and exclamatory interludes which interspersed
+the tenor of her usual discourse.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“The matter,—why, he is as handsome as a picture!
+He has the dignity of a lord, and I never saw
+a man who seemed more highly bred.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Well,”—she drawled, “don’t you consider those
+facts advantages? A stranger in one’s house is always
+a nuisance, but it is better that a tutor or governess
+should be as genteel as possible.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Great Scott! Annetta, how can you be so dense?
+He is a man whom Honoria Faurie might very well
+elect to fall in love with and marry.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mrs. Kentopp laughed in derision,—not her
+breathy, flushing, becoming laughter, but a simple
+cackle of scorn. “Why, he is young enough to be
+her son.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“He is ten years younger,—that is all.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“<em>All!</em> Ten years is enough. No doubt she seems
+an old lady to him.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“You wouldn’t think so if you had caught a
+glimpse of his face as I saw them talking together
+in the library. They would make a very comely married
+couple.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Why, Tom Kentopp, you are wild! She would
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>have to give up that big income if she married, thirty
+thousand dollars of it every year are as certain
+as taxes, chargeable on the whole estate, and the
+Great Oaks crops besides,—and take instead only
+her dower rights in Tennessee,—just a life-interest
+in a third of the real property, with that old Nashville
+residence, in a locality that is awfully unfashionable
+nowadays,—she has never lived there since Mr.
+Faurie’s death,—and a fourth of the Mississippi
+property. And such a sacrifice for such a man,—a
+penniless tutor! Why, if it were not way down
+here in the swamp, he would seem hardly of more
+consequence than a courier.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Exactly; it is a mighty lonesome country for a
+pretty widow, and he is a mighty fine man.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mrs. Kentopp grew grave. “I never was more
+surprised than when he came into the parlor. I expected
+to see a little lean, wizened body, like the man
+they had last,—little Mr. ——, Mr. ——, I have
+forgotten the little animal’s name. This man is not
+at all what a tutor should be in appearance; he carries
+himself as if he owned the world. And his look of
+cool, assured gravity is positively insulting. I don’t
+think that he gave himself the trouble to fetch out
+a smile throughout luncheon.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“He was not amused, perhaps,” Colonel Kentopp
+suggested.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“But he should be amused when his betters choose
+to be merry,” the lady retorted.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“It would be a deuced unpleasant thing for us,”
+her husband resumed the matrimonial speculation.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>“As long as Mrs. Faurie is in the world among her
+peers, and the value of that large and certain income
+is forever in her mind, with the bliss of spending it,
+and living like a princess, I am not afraid. Besides,
+the lords and counts would back out the instant the
+settlements would reveal the awful trap that Faurie
+set for his successor. But this man, this Desmond,
+would be mighty well satisfied with the division that
+gives her a life-interest in one third of the Tennessee
+real estate and a fourth part of the personalty there,
+and a fourth absolutely of everything in Mississippi.
+It would be a long sight better than tutoring. He
+would be mighty glad for another fellow to be hired
+to teach Chub,—especially with Chub’s own money.
+Mrs. Faurie is at no expense on her sons’ account—except
+such as is voluntary; she gives them those
+costly foreign trips, for instance.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“But <em>she</em>,—she wouldn’t be satisfied with that
+provision;—she would not give up her income for
+any man living.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“This is a very exceptional man, and this is the
+jumping-off place of all creation,” persisted Kentopp.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mrs. Kentopp’s shallow eyes scanned the far
+reaches of the Mississippi. The sun was no longer
+visible, but the vermilion reflection was still red upon
+the rippling waters, for the afterglow was in the sky.
+“I don’t see how Honoria Faurie manages so badly
+as to come to the end of her income in this way; it
+is positively ridiculous,” she said, with a sort of petulance.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Colonel Kentopp bit off the end of his cigar and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>spat it forth with an expression that suggested it
+might be bitter, but his thought was wormwood.
+“Oh, she even anticipates her income as far as she
+can,—she spends at such a clip! She bought her
+steam yacht with her <em>savings</em>, Chub told me.” He
+smiled derisively. “It is in dock now; it ought to
+have been chartered while she is on dry land.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“And her automobile is another extravagance;
+why couldn’t she hire a touring-car for the little
+time that she is rusticating while abroad?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Princesses don’t stoop to such economies, that is,
+abroad. Economy befits the swamp. I have nothing
+to say against the diamonds, although I think she
+might well have been satisfied with the Faurie family
+jewels,—nor yet those wonderful emeralds, for such
+‘savings’ have an intrinsic value. But it does seem a
+most mischievous mischance that she should have to
+<em>faire maigre</em> here in the swamp just at this time,
+with such a hero of romance as Mr. Stanlett has
+introduced as tutor.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Mr. Stanlett never saw him till he was engaged
+and had arrived. I heard him say that the whole
+matter was arranged by correspondence through Mr.
+Keith, the boys’ guardian. It seems that he and the
+tutor had some mutual friends. I understand that
+this fellow has an exceptional collegiate record,—though
+if he has, I should think he could get a better
+place. But why should his presence here concern
+us, do you think?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Because if there were a prospect that the Faurie
+property might come on the market for division, as
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>the result of her marriage, at any reasonably early
+day, we should never be able to sell Dryad-Dene
+Plantation to Jack Loring. He evidently much prefers
+Great Oaks.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Her face lowered heavily. “I was just beginning
+to think of that,” she said, now dully out of sorts.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“There are actual advantages,” he argued. “Dryad-Dene
+Plantation is subject to overflow, and Great
+Oaks rarely goes under unless their cross levee breaks.
+Our lands are cut up with bayous and sloughs, while
+Great Oaks has thousands of acres as level as a floor
+and as dry as a bone. And then the old house, the
+groves and the glades. Loring is as new as yesterday,
+himself, but he wants a place reeking of ancestors
+and aristocratic traditions.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I don’t see why; it is his one merit that he grew
+in a single night! It is Jack that has shot up so surprisingly
+this time, and not the beanstalk,” said Mrs.
+Kentopp, sourly.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“He isn’t going to stay new. That is the reason
+he does not locate somewhere else. The Great Oaks
+air of the <em>ancien régime</em>, its shabbiness and out-at-elbows
+look of romantic poverty, the ruin of princes,
+on account of that woman’s grudging neglect, when
+it is really bursting with richness and luxury, would
+fill his bill exactly. Loring would be furnished with
+all manner of aristocratic hereditaments, and in ten
+years people would forget that he was not born at
+Great Oaks. His people were natives of this region,
+and his name is familiar in Deepwater Bend; he
+would rather own Great Oaks than anything else his
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>millions can buy. Let him once hear of that prince-in-disguise-looking
+tutor, of fine family and exceptional
+cultivation, in constant association with the
+beautiful Mrs. Faurie! He is not precipitate at best.
+He will wait till the division of the Faurie estate
+consequent upon a second marriage puts Great Oaks
+up at auction to the highest bidder.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mrs. Kentopp’s face seemed in anxiety to suffer
+somewhat of a collapse. How, it might be impossible to
+describe, but now her blonde hair showed that much
+of it near her face was false, when its naturalness of
+arrangement had rendered this suspicion impossible
+hitherto. She was one of the women not pretty, but
+who contrive to compass that reputation by assuming
+the pose, the conscious attire, the bridling expression.
+As she looked now, the coquettishness of her equipment
+was a painful commentary upon her appearance,
+haggard with disappointment and foreboding. For
+the Kentopps had scant affinity with this secluded life
+in the Mississippi bottom, and they had not had
+such resources as Mrs. Faurie for shaking its mud—one
+cannot say its dust—from their feet for indefinite
+periods of absence. The sale of Dryad-Dene Plantation,
+with its elaborate industrial equipment and
+beautiful modern residence, would make possible the
+dream of their lives,—its transmutation into a handsome
+town house in New Orleans and a summer cottage
+on the Gulf coast, with lands enough somewhere
+at the minimum price to rent out to tenants to make
+cotton, as lands are created to do, to furnish an income
+for the absentees. But purchasers for a property
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>of such value as Dryad-Dene are rare, and the <em>ci-devant</em>
+swamper, Loring, who had grown very rich
+by speculation, was one of the few men who cared to
+invest in so inconvertible an asset as a fine house
+and large plantation in Deepwater Bend. A species of
+self-assertion it was to him, perchance. Here where he
+was born, as poor as poverty, though of genteel and
+respectable parentage, he could, as a bit of luxury, own
+the finest estate around which the river curved, and in
+the scene of his early privations have its magnates in
+hot competition to place their splendid holdings in the
+best light for his somewhat supercilious appraisement.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“It would be idiotic,—it would positively be
+ridiculous—and she ten years older,” Mrs. Kentopp
+declared bitterly.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Suddenly, like the lightning-change effect of a performer
+on the stage, she resumed her wonted aspect
+as if by magic. Her cheeks rounded out; her flush
+came and went; her lips were again curving and
+plump with distending smiles over her white teeth;
+her eyes were all a-sparkle; and she was waving the
+end of her long feather boa in a response of exaggerated
+mirth to a fancied greeting from the door of
+the “shanty-boat” far below. Mrs. Faurie was issuing
+thence, lifting one of her delicate hands, gloved
+to the elbow in gray kid; but the gesture was one of
+protest. She was not looking at her guests, but after
+a loutish, grotesque, thick-set man, of amphibious
+suggestions, who was springing with great leaps up
+the bank with an open knife in his hand. With this
+he so swiftly cut die rope that held the boat to a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>gnarled old tree, that the craft, feeling the impulse
+of the current, began to move from the shore before
+Mrs. Faurie could step from the gang-plank of the
+deck to the ground. As it was, the ripples ran over her
+feet, and she exclaimed aloud in agitation and sudden
+fright. She was safely on the bank when Desmond, still
+on the deck, sprang lightly across the ever-widening
+interval of water, now almost impracticable, swinging
+Chub ashore with a hand under each of the boy’s arms.
+As the boatman came running down the bank Desmond
+paused, and meeting him at the margin, struck
+him between the eyes a blow so fair and furious that
+the fellow was weltering saurian-like in the water
+before he scarcely realized that he had been felled.
+Perhaps the deficiencies of his craft, with no propelling
+power, constrained his attention; perhaps the
+vigor of the blow tamed his rancorous rage. He made
+no effort at reprisal, though Desmond lingered on the
+bank, but struck out swimming after his boat, and
+turned, only when once more safe on deck and out of
+Desmond’s reach, to gaze lowering and askance across
+the water, with a look at once vengeful, amazed, and
+dismayed.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“What can have happened?” exclaimed Mrs. Kentopp,
+watching the scene from afar with wondering
+eyes. “Mr. Paragon is a muscular Christian, it
+seems.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“He is very injudicious,” said Colonel Kentopp,
+gravely. “These water-side vagrants are often dangerous
+rascals,—river pirates. Their good-will is
+safer than their grudges.”</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER V</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c006'>The errand within the cabin of the shanty-boat
+had not proved swift or easy of dispatch. When
+Desmond and Mrs. Faurie had approached the dingy
+and plebeian craft along the muddy bank, he once
+more urged that she should wait without and permit
+him to make the preliminary examination.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“The boat is clean!” cried Chub, on the defensive.
+“It is as clean as any other old place. Mr. Desmond
+is so particular. It <em>isn’t</em> damp. Its smell is just doolicious.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Chub continued insistent, and Mrs. Faurie once
+more yielded.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Oakum, tar, and the peculiar and distinctive odor of
+junk were the blended perfumes thus lauded which
+floated out to them from the open door of the cabin.
+The boat was gently oscillating on the current, teetering
+as if with the instinct of dance, for the river was
+at flood height, and even thus close to the shore the
+encroaching waters were deep. As Mrs. Faurie and
+Desmond made their way along the gang-plank to the
+deck, she glanced over her shoulder at the great cable
+that held the craft to the bank, passed again and
+again around the girth of a tree. “I hope she is
+tied up fast and hard; I should object of all things
+to go floating down the Mississippi River, the involuntary
+guest of such a trading-boat, impossible to
+land except by the uncovenanted grace of the current.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>The cabin seemed dark at first, by contrast with
+the pellucid atmosphere without. A formless hodgepodge
+of barrel and box, of bunk and junk, it presented,
+until the eye was sufficiently accustomed to its
+comparative obscurity to discern such degree of symmetry
+as informed its arrangement. One end was
+dedicated to the domestic life of the proprietor; holding
+the cooking apparatus, expressed in a monkey
+stove that furnished heat as well, a tier of bunks on
+either side, a few broken-backed chairs grouped around
+a table, a gaunt, pale woman in a tattered gray
+woolen skirt and a man’s ragged red sweater, with a
+mass of dull, straight brown hair “banged” across
+her freckled forehead and hanging unkempt down
+upon her shoulders. She held in her arms a wan, puny
+baby, bent on sucking its thumb, and giving the universe
+only such attention as it could spare from that
+absorbing occupation. Knowing this habit to be an
+infringement of juvenile etiquette, the woman had
+tried to effect a diversion the instant she saw the flutter
+of Mrs. Faurie’s gray silk gown at the door. But
+a house cannot be set in order for distinguished inspection
+on the spur of the moment, and still less can a
+neglected infant’s conduct be immediately brought up
+to standard. A piercing, heart-rending wail made the
+air hideous, and as the released thumb, all curiously
+translucent and blanched and reduced in size, went
+back into the child’s mouth, Mrs. Faurie, entering,
+whirled around and saw both the effort to save appearances
+and its failure.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>She shook her head in indignant rebuke. “That
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>will never do!” she said imperiously. “You ought
+not to let the child spoil its hand. That is a bad habit,
+and keeps it from being bright. It just sogs away
+over that old thumb, and you don’t care so long as it
+is quiet and doesn’t worry you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The woman rose with a belligerent toss of the head.
+“Mighty easy to talk!—mighty easy! But you just
+wait, young lady, till you gits some childern of yer
+own, an’ see if you won’t be sorter lax todes anythink
+that will keep ’em from yellin’, when yer head is
+achin’ fit ter bust. I been havin’ chills and ager all
+winter.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“<em>Some children of my own!</em>” Mrs. Faurie drew
+herself up, majestic and boastful. “I have <em>three</em> of my
+own,—nearly as tall as I am—<em>three</em>! This”—pulling
+Chub forward—“is my baby,—and doesn’t
+suck his thumb, and never did. And that reminds
+me,” she continued, as the forlorn river nymph stared
+amazed at this rich and brilliant apparition of health,
+and wealth, and beauty, and transcendent youth that
+might have seemed immortal, feeling the contrast
+God knows how poignantly, “there are a lot of baby clothes
+left over up at my house—I am Mrs. Faurie
+and live close by;—they will fit that fellow out for a
+year or two to come. I will send them down to you
+this evening if you will promise to put some pepper
+on that child’s thumb to keep it out of his mouth.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The woman murmured her thanks, but she did not
+feel her gratitude so acutely, rags and dirt being the
+natural concomitants of her life, as her interest in
+this resplendent personage, and the error as to her
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>age and state of life. “Lord!”—she smiled broadly,
+showing the devastations of a mouth whence many
+aching teeth had been “rotted out with bluestone” in
+default of a dentist’s care—“I thought you was
+just a girl,—turned twenty, mebbe; and this”—she
+pointed at Desmond—“was your courtin’ beau.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mrs. Faurie for once looked embarrassed. “Oh,
+no,” she recovered herself swiftly; “I’m getting middle-aged
+now. And where is the bicycle, Chubby?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The other end of the cabin was fitted up as a store,
+with shelves about the walls and a sort of counter.
+Here were displayed toys and gewgaws of imitation
+jewelry and beads, some bolts of coarse cloth, a glitter
+of tinware, some earthen and wooden bowls, an
+assortment of candies and canned goods, tobacco,
+fine cut and plug, snuff, and some boxes of cheap
+cigars. Incongruously enough, among these things
+was a fine, fresh bicycle, with pneumatic tires, evidently
+perfectly new.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond looked sharply across the counter as the
+sodden, amphibious, nondescript animal that the raftsman
+seemed, hardly frog, hardly fish, hardly water-rat,
+yet partaking of the characteristics of all three,
+eyed the party furtively from his place among his
+medley of wares. His straight red hair was pulled
+forward in wisps on his brow as if it had been wet
+in a ducking and matted there. His big black hat was
+on the back of his head. His freckled, red, mottled
+face had a sort of soaked, bloated suggestion. He hesitated
+for a very perceptible interval before he named
+the price, and Mrs. Faurie exclaimed in surprise:—</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span>“Ten dollars! Why, Chubby, you told me that the
+price was five”; for Chub had waxed confidential
+with his mother as they had approached, her opposition
+withdrawn.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Chubby’s earnest, eager countenance scarcely
+showed above a pile of cigar boxes on the counter
+over which he peered. He was genuinely surprised,
+yet not willing to seek to take advantage of any
+mistake that he might have made.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I understood you to say that you would sell the
+wheel for five dollars”; he addressed the boatman
+directly, with a sober but unflinching gaze.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The trader’s broad face did not change, but there
+was a furtive gleam in his quick, sharply glancing,
+rodent-like eye, which sought to measure Chub’s simplicity.
+“No, sport, I said ten,” he declared, with a
+smile showing teeth singularly sharp and closely set
+together in his wide mouth, appearing as if he had
+more than the ordinary complement.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Another man in the background, big and raw-boned,
+but young, leaning against the door of a
+cubby-hole at the rear, which from some obstruction,
+apparently hastily thrust within, would not shut fast,
+seemed to bear witness to this statement. He grimaced
+affirmatively at Chub with the familiarity of previous
+acquaintance. He had a large face, which seemed
+somehow out of drawing, as if swollen here and there,
+and with uninflamed red spots. One eye and one eyebrow
+were higher than the other, and he had a half-witted
+or mentally weak appearance, suddenly confirmed
+when he abruptly licked out a large red tongue
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>in grotesque triumph in the conclusion of the dicker,
+as Chub responded:—</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Well, ten dollars is cheap anyhow,—dirt cheap,—dog
+cheap. We will buy it at ten, won’t we,
+mamma?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The proprietor had taken Desmond’s measure the
+instant he entered the cabin. Silently gazing at one
+another across the counter, both knew as well as if
+the fact had been put into words that the price had
+been doubled to meet his scrutiny. It would have
+been still further advanced had the trader better
+understood the quality of the wheel.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Why, ten is <em>very</em> cheap,” Mrs. Faurie began.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“We cannot buy it at ten,” Desmond interrupted
+swiftly,—“in fact, not at any price.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mrs. Faurie turned toward him in angry surprise,
+her eyes blazing. He met them without flinching.
+“You must take my word for it!” he said sternly.
+“Chubby shall not have it! It is useless to discuss
+prices.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond had laid his hand on Mrs. Faurie’s arm
+and was about to lead her forth, when the flatboat-man
+in sudden fury flung the machine down behind
+the counter with a great clatter of the spokes and
+pedals.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“No, no!” he vociferated to Chubby, the insurgent,
+who was hopefully emptying his pockets and
+counting his cash; “<em>you</em> can’t buy it at any price.
+Clear out!—the whole bunch of ye. I’m about to
+cast off. I’ll souse any stowaways in your old Mississippi
+bilge-water. I’ll cut the rope and see how ye’ll
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>get ashore then! I’ll land you all in the Gulf of Mexico!”
+As he voiced his frenzied, disconnected, incoherent
+threats he suddenly ran past the group, sprang
+from the deck, and with deer-like swiftness sped up
+the bank, his open knife in his hand.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Within the cabin Mrs. Faurie started back in dismay
+as the half-witted creature left the door he had
+held closed, now showing within the cubby a glimpse
+of coarse bagging, intimating a surreptitious cotton
+bale, the corner of which had prevented the slipping
+of the bolt. He jumped up and down before the
+group with a capering step and a wild and foolish
+eye, now to the right as they pushed toward the door,
+and as they turned aside, now to the left, evidently
+with the intention of preventing or delaying their
+exit. Even the woman pushed a chair in front of Mrs.
+Faurie so suddenly that her knees struck painfully
+against it. “Take a seat, lady,” she said mockingly.
+“Oh, <em>do</em> take a seat!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond scarcely could credit his senses. It was
+like a disordered scene of a dream. His logical faculties
+grasped but the one idea of flight. “Make haste,”
+he cried out to Mrs. Faurie. “Get off the boat even
+if you jump into the water.” For he felt that the
+craft was already loosed and moving from the bank.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“For God’s sake, hurry!” he adjured her.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Then as the great gawk of an idiot sprang again
+in front of them, Desmond seized him, with an effort
+to sway him back and forth and fling him from his
+feet; but the river man was as strong and heavier,
+with a stolidity and lack of expectancy that seemed
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>to add sensibly to his weight and immovableness;
+and when he was finally thrown, it was after a series
+of struggles that carried them locked and swaying
+together around the room, both coming down at last
+with a tremendous crash, bringing with them not
+only the stove-pipe but the monkey stove itself. This
+spewed forth a cataract of live coals over the floor,
+and as the clouds of soot and smoke circled about
+the rafters, obscuring still further the dingy quarters,
+the woman exclaimed loudly and resentfully her fears
+of fire in notes of woe and injury, and left off such
+schemes of hindrance as she had furthered to run for a
+bucket of water from the shelf. A coal had touched
+the gigantic idiot, and he was bleating like some
+great calf in a wide open-mouthed blare of sound till
+admonished by her to lend his aid in extinguishing
+the fire.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In the midst of the confusion Desmond seized Chub,
+and though doubting if he could compass the space as
+the current swung the boat ever farther and farther
+from the bank, he leaped ashore. The flatboat-man
+was at the moment running down the bank for the
+purpose of reëmbarking. Despite the limit on his
+time which the receding craft imposed, he suddenly
+swerved from his intention, and made a swift lunge
+at Desmond, intending to stab him in the back. The
+attack was not altogether unexpected. Desmond, on
+the alert, sprang lightly aside, and, being unarmed,
+struck the boatman with his clenched fist, the blow
+landing between the eyes.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It was a short, sharp fracas and an easy victory.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>Desmond was a trained boxer, and here he had light
+and air and elbow-room, which he had lacked in the
+wrestle within the cabin. There was not a word spoken
+between the two; but after the boatman had dragged
+himself out of the water where he was tossed, to his
+jeopardy of drowning in the suction, and regained
+the deck, Desmond, breathless and agitated, took his
+way up the bank to rejoin Mrs. Faurie, muttering to
+himself, and now and again pausing to look back over
+his shoulder at the progress of the boat.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“He ought to be apprehended. If Kentopp had
+a pistol and had been nearer, we might together have
+held them both. Perhaps the miscreant might be
+stopped by a shot if we can get a rifle at Great Oaks
+mansion; but no,—he’ll be too far down the river
+by that time. The boat is crossing in the current;
+he is going to try to get screened behind the towhead,
+and then the boat will hug the Arkansas shore,
+and it will be too dark and far to risk a shot. Is there
+no chance to overhaul him? Is there no telegraph
+station nearer than Fairglade, Mrs. Faurie?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But Mrs. Faurie, pale and bewildered, did not reply
+directly. “Why, Mr. Desmond, that man tried to
+abduct us all! What could have been his object?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Nefarious enough, no doubt; but I don’t understand
+it at all.” Desmond’s eyes had now a more
+definite expression of heed, yet she was aware that
+she only shared his attention.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“And upon my word, Mr. Desmond, I don’t understand
+your high-handed interference,” she exclaimed.
+“What was the matter with the bicycle? It seemed
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>a very good wheel. It was your refusal to allow us to
+buy it that made all the difficulty.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“The wheel was too good,” said Desmond,—“too
+good entirely for the price. It was perfectly new and
+obviously stolen. It was worth fifty dollars at least,
+and was offered at five. Chubby is no fool to mistake
+a price. The trader doubled the price when he saw
+me. But the rise was not enough.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh, how fortunate that you were with us! I know
+nothing of the value of these things. No, Chubby,
+you must never buy from a doubtful source an article
+far below its value; it implies that you profit by
+a fraud that you understand.” Then looking over
+her shoulder, “How distant they are down the river.
+Mr. Desmond, <em>look</em> how fast the current is running.
+Do you suppose they were afraid that we would
+report the suspicious bargain bicycle?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There was something evidently more than this.
+No mere effort to avoid the imputation of receiving
+stolen goods would justify such violence, Desmond
+was reflecting. The Great Oaks party were to be
+drowned, as if by accident, before the eyes of their
+friends; or they were to be carried off by a similar
+unlucky chance apparently, and among some trackless
+network of sloughs and bayous and lakes of the
+swamp country, of which such craft is the only voyager,
+the rickety flatboat would be sunk, with all on
+board save only the murderous crew, surviving not
+to tell the tale, and disappearing without a trace,—or
+was the whole demonstration the expression only
+of the wild, ungovernable rage of the miscreant, that
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>such a clue to some terrible and heinous crime had
+been thus fortuitously discovered?</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond could not judge, and he looked with a
+sense of baffled mystery at the craft as it swung
+along in midstream, smoke issuing not only from the
+stove-pipe, evidently once more in place, but from
+the windows and door as well. There was in this
+obviously no menace, for the proprietor was seated
+upon the deck at large leisure, manipulating an old
+violin in a style of very jaunty bravado. The strains
+floated far on the transmitting medium of the water,
+and the tune was easily distinguishable as again and
+again the catgut reiterated “A hot time,—a hot
+time in the old town to-night.” Desmond was of
+the opinion that the incident should be forthwith
+reported to the authorities. But Mr. Stanlett, hearing
+the details with some concern, demurred to the
+proposition.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“You cannot be certain that the bicycle was stolen,—at
+any rate, by that particular flatboat-man. He
+may have bought it among a lot of stolen stuff, to be
+sure, but offered it for sale again, not knowing its
+value or suspecting its history,—a <em>bona-fide</em> purchaser
+himself.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond listened in surprise, for Mr. Stanlett had
+not impressed him as of a particularly charitable
+nature nor lenient in his judgments.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>They were sitting around the hearth in the front
+parlor after dinner; the fire was blazing in cheery
+wise, more in accord with the chill of the night and
+the record of the calendar than the springlike atmosphere
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>of the day just closing in. The Kentopps were
+staying overnight, and the topic had been for some
+time up for discussion, after the manner of those
+whose lives are leisurely affairs and of little distraction.
+It had come in with the cigars, for the gentlemen
+had been sociably permitted to bring them into
+this sanctum after the service of the coffee.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“We want to hear you talk,” said Mrs. Kentopp,
+with a pretty <em>moue</em>.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Yes, indeed,” cried Mrs. Faurie; “a man never has
+an idea in his head unless he has a cigar in his mouth.
+There is some obscure psychological connection between
+facility of cerebration and blowing rings, and
+some day when I am not too busy, I’ll think it out.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“As to the boatman’s casting off in that hasty way,”
+said Mr. Stanlett, pursuing the subject, “that is not
+an infrequent trick with better craft. Why, in my
+time I have been inadvertently left at a wayside landing
+ten miles from a habitation,—no joke in this
+country way back in the fifties,—and I have been
+carried off halfway to Vicksburg before I knew that
+the boiler had steam up. It is a pity that you floored
+the men. You overrated the provocation. Rough river
+rats can’t be expected to show drawing-room manners.
+That is one disadvantage of college athletics,—it
+makes a gentleman as handy with his fists as a
+professional bruiser.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>When Mrs. Faurie interposed to protest her fright
+and danger, the temper of the party who did not participate
+in the turmoil within the cabin made it seem
+as if she were ambitious of the pose of heroine.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>“Why, my dear,” Mr. Stanlett reasoned with her,
+“you said yourself that the man who danced about
+and sought, as you supposed, to detain your party
+was a poor simpleton, a weak-minded creature; he
+doubtless meant no offense, though perhaps they were
+all nettled at Mr. Desmond’s refusal to buy the bicycle
+when he had heard it priced.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I should have asked no questions about the bicycle,
+and therefore should have been told no lies,” said
+Mrs. Kentopp, with airy recklessness. “I should have
+taken the bicycle at the very cheap asking price, and
+in my innocent ignorance suffered no qualms of conscience.
+A little learning of the law is a dangerous
+thing.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Quite right, quite right, madam,” commented Mr.
+Stanlett. “Really, I feel that we have no obligations
+in the premises, and our riparian situation here, so
+isolated, renders it peculiarly necessary for us to be
+on our guard against collision with the rougher river
+element.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Colonel Kentopp waved away the smoke that had
+thickened about his massive head. “Very true, very
+true!” he said, with a definiteness of assent welcome
+indeed to the old gentleman, who had spoken with
+some hesitation, for no man likes to express a fear
+that others may decline to entertain. Relieved of the
+imputation of timorousness, Mr. Stanlett went on
+with decision:—</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“These water-rats, many of them really river pirates,
+enjoy such immunity that I wonder that they
+are not more daring and enterprising than they are. I
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>should not like to provoke personal animosity and
+possible reprisal for injuries, real or fancied, among
+them.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“That is just how our house at Dryad-Dene is so
+much more safely situated than you are here at Great
+Oaks. Why,”—Colonel Kentopp leaned forward
+with dilated eyes and lowered voice,—“a handful
+of marauders could loot Great Oaks mansion any
+foggy night; and once an oar’s length or two off the
+landing, they would be as completely lost in the mist
+and their pursuit as impracticable as if they were in
+the desert of Sahara.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mr. Stanlett looked uncomfortable.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Yes, indeed,” declared Mrs. Kentopp, dimpling,
+“a bit inland,—as Great Oaks mansion used to be
+in the old time, before the bank caved in and the
+river carried off the whole point,—and this place
+would be Paradise! I sometimes wish that the river
+would make another grab at it and take it off—off—away
+down to the Gulf of Mexico!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Thank you for your very queer wishes,” began
+Mrs. Faurie.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Only that you might move inland and rebuild
+near us,—we are <em>so</em> far apart as it is,” said Mrs.
+Kentopp, with her head askew and her sweetest smile.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Never because of river pirates. What are our
+peace officers for, if we are not to take our ease
+under our own vine and fig tree?” retorted Mrs.
+Faurie.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Ah, but evil is inherently stronger than good.
+Hence the difficulty in the administration of the law
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>and the conservation of the peace,” said Colonel Kentopp,
+magisterially. “Otherwise, of course, the cause
+of right and justice would have a clear walk-over.
+It is unfortunately far easier to conceal a crime than
+to detect it,—though skill and practice and persistence
+in ferreting out misdeeds go a long way and
+ultimately triumph in most instances, no doubt. But
+then, think of that affair last fall at Whippoorwill
+Landing,—nefarious business,—the malefactors still
+at large! Two men killed inside a good trig house,—big,
+healthy, hearty fellows. I knew Patton well,—used
+to keep a store in Arkansas;—and not a
+sign nor a clue yet as to how or why,—both wiped
+off the face of the earth,—touched off as lightly as
+the ash of this cigar,” suiting the action to the word,
+then shaking his head solemnly.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh, oh! raw head and bloody bones! Not another
+word! You will give the whole house awful dreams,”
+cried Mrs. Kentopp. “Come, Mr. Stanlett, let us show
+this worshipful company what bridge whist really is.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>She rose with a great rustle of silk skirts and
+whisked away to the centre table, where she opened
+a drawer with an affectation of busy and sly peering,
+and thence produced a pack of cards. Desmond could
+not understand why Colonel Kentopp should look so
+disconcerted and annoyed. He had an air of positive
+concern as he said with pointed emphasis, “Choose
+some other game, Annetta, that perhaps we play
+better,”—with a heavy attempt at mirth. “We are
+too many for bridge. <em>I</em> would sit out willingly, but
+I know that Mrs. Faurie will not permit me in my
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>quality as guest,—distinguished stranger!—and
+Mr. Desmond being ‘home-folks’ here.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Bridge mote it be,” Desmond responded lightly,
+perceiving that Mrs. Kentopp, usurping the initiative
+of her hostess, had arranged the party expressly for
+his exclusion as if he were of no consideration, and
+caring little or naught what the tutor might think or
+feel; and to his surprise, Desmond cared naught for
+her demonstration. “I have letters to write,—I hear
+the packet passes near daylight to-morrow. I was
+just about to ask to be excused.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The straight, level brows above Mrs. Faurie’s fine
+eyes were drawn into something like a frown. It was
+inconsistent with her high-bred sense of courtesy that
+this exclusion should have been suggested. She would
+not willingly have ignored the gentleman, poor and
+proud, whose dignity should have been the more jealously
+regarded because of its jeopardy in his subsidiary
+position. As Desmond, on his way to the library,
+passed on the veranda without, he glanced through
+the window at the group, now settled at the table,
+a cheery scene, with the glow of the old-fashioned
+crimson curtains and velvet carpet, the sheen of gilt-framed
+mirrors, the elusive flicker of the fire, the
+rich dresses of the two women. He could but note
+that the frown was not altogether effaced from those
+level brows, somewhat formidable of expression in
+their <em>rapprochement</em>, and he discerned that Mrs.
+Kentopp had found it necessary to be even more resolutely
+alluring in her sparkle and flushing laughter
+and insistent gayety than her wont.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER VI</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c006'>Desmond’s conviction that the matter of the bicycle
+was eminently fit for report to the authorities was
+shared by the party who was most intimately concerned,
+the flatboat-man himself. The jovial pose
+which Jedidiah Knoxton conserved that afternoon
+while he sat on a coil of rope on the deck and sawed
+on the fiddle, as the friendly current carried him
+farther and farther toward the centre of the stream,
+had no relation to the attitude of his mind. It was
+dismayed, intimidated, as he now reflected upon the
+episode and its possible consequences. He did not
+welcome the realization that his thought was shared by
+his wife, as he noted that she was standing with the
+child in her arms, staring with a sort of dull, apprehensive,
+quelled contemplation at the receding scene,
+for it seemed to move instead of the craft,—the
+bight of the great river bend, where the roiled water
+gave token of the path of the boat; the strip of level
+territory outside the levee; the immense, green, serpentine
+embankment where the group of “quality
+folks” stood dwindling till they seemed but a bunch
+of bright-hued fabric; the heavy, tangled growths of
+a stretch of swamp country to the north, and to the
+south, with no apparent limits to their extent, the
+seigneurial groves of Great Oaks.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>And here could be seen the mansion itself, with
+its score of red chimneys, its long, low white façade,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span>each remove showing its many appanages,—now a
+wing and then, swinging into view, an ell, and straggling
+away the kitchen and offices, and dove-cote, and
+dairy and bell-tower, and stables, and orchards and
+vineyards; farther still was the village-like cluster
+of buildings for hired hands and tenants, formerly
+the “quarter” for slaves; and yet beyond appeared
+the steam-gin, the saw-and-grist mill, the potato-houses,
+the sheds for cows, and the work animals,
+mules, and horses; then thousands of acres of cotton-fields,
+orderly and neat as a flower border, already
+ploughed and bedded up, ready for the planting
+of the great staple,—a principality indeed, the
+realm of the rich and powerful and learned;—and
+was it wise to excite the just wrath, and the dangerous
+suspicion, or even to court the notice of those
+whose stake in the country was so large, whose
+hand was so heavy, whose ascendency was so complete!</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Mighty fine folks, Jedidiah,” she said at length,
+still staring at the moving landscape. Her voice
+reached him even amidst the discordant sawings and
+scrapings of the horsehair and catgut. His hat was
+thrust back; his red forelock tossed to and fro as his
+head wagged in unison with his raucous performance.
+He did not speak, and presently, still eyeing
+the receding scene, she said, “Mighty rich folks,
+Jedidiah!” Her voice was pitched high, and its penetrating
+quality made itself insistent throughout the
+hubbub of the “hot time in the old town.” The discordant
+strain ceased suddenly. The bow, still held
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span>after the fiddler’s fashion, was shaken at her in emphasis
+as he drawled malignantly:—</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Ye-es,—an’ if this fallin’ weather in the upper
+country holds a week longer, I can take a cool thirty
+thousand dollars outer that sucker’s pocket with three
+strokes of a spade; an’ by gum, I’ll do it, too!—if
+I gits a chanst.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He lifted his hand to the abrasions of his bruised
+and swollen face, which he had hitherto disregarded
+with an assumption of hardihood as naught. The
+last building of the “quarter” was disappearing in
+the distance, glistening with whitewash,—it was
+said on the river that the manager at Great Oaks
+whitewashed all creation when he was informed that
+Mrs. Faurie was returning from abroad, <em>even the
+under side of the horse-block</em>!—but the flatboat-man’s
+wife still stood staring, some vague premonition
+of trouble in her mind. Jedidiah, the frog-like
+suggestions of his face emphasized as he crouched
+his body forward, his legs doubled up among the
+coils of rope, stared, too, blinkingly. The light in
+the sky was a keen saffron gleam now; it dazzled his
+eyes; he was thinking hard, eagerly, fearfully, maliciously.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The next moment the whole world seemed resonant
+and rocking with a wild, pervasive turbulence,—a
+steamer was rounding the point, and the little helpless,
+drifting leaf of a boat lay directly in her course.
+How he should not have heard the respiration of her
+engines, like that of an immense breathing creature
+which she resembled, he never knew, or how he had
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span>not felt the vibrations of the water pouring like a
+cataract over the great wheel at her stern,—for formidable
+as she moved upon the currents, loftily as
+she towered in her white, glistening presence, her
+chimneys seeming to vie with the forest heights of
+Great Oaks, she was not one of the fine packets plying
+between the cities. She was destined for one of
+the smaller tributaries, and the Mississippi made only
+a part of her course. But she looked to the flatboat-man
+like the scourge of God. She was materialized
+Fate! She was Terror, Doom, and Death in one to
+the wretched man whom momently she threatened
+to run down. He could never have described what he
+felt as now and again she lifted anew her frightful
+voice and spoke to him,—he could only feel,—spoke
+of warning, of smug and exact compliance with the
+law, of due notification of the death that she must
+presently mete out to him. He seemed all apart from
+the straining wretches that toiled, one at the pole and
+two at the rowlocks, as the two men and the woman
+strove against the current to bring the raft aside from
+the path of the domineering monster that bore straight
+down upon them,—for as far as consciousness was
+concerned, he could not have moved a muscle. It was
+a matter of instinct which controlled his labor, a
+mechanical effort, with which heart and brain had no
+part. He began to tremble when he perceived that
+the steamboat was slightly sheering to the left. Then
+for the first time he was sufficiently in command of
+his faculties to realize that the pilot’s bell was continually
+jangling, that the throbs of the engines were
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span>disjointed, feebler, that there was a desperate effort
+making to back, to sheer, to change the course.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It was all useless,—too late! He saw as his frenzied
+muscles still strove against the impossible that
+the guards were filled with people, passengers, calling
+out undistinguished words of commiseration, of encouragement;
+the roustabouts stood on the lower
+deck, scarcely higher out of the river than himself in
+his humble craft level with the surface, and roared
+out advice.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Suddenly with a wild scream the woman despaired.
+She rose, dropping her oar, and held up the child at
+arm’s length, with a gesture of appeal, toward the
+captain, who was standing on the hurricane deck. He
+waved his hand in encouraging response, and then
+the sheer was sufficient for Jedidiah to see that the
+yawl was unslung and sliding from the davits, and
+that the Flora F. Mayberry proposed to have the
+credit of humanely picking up their carcasses, after
+she had sent to the bottom their floating home and
+all their pitiful store of goods and chattels.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>For this was the aspect the episode took to his
+mind when, almost within the suction of the steamer,
+the flatboat struck a swift swirl of current, made,
+heaven only knows how. Some obstruction on the
+bottom may have caused it,—the smokestack of
+an old sunken boat, long since forgotten; a tree
+of former swamp growths, too deeply whelmed to be
+known to snag-boats or river charts, barely sufficient
+to turn a ripple. With the vast strength of the Mississippi
+River currents the deflecting ripple swung
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>the flatboat around like a leaf in an eddy, and, as
+safe as if he had miles of sea-room, Jedidiah Knoxton
+stood on his raft, with his face corrugated and lined
+with rage, and his mouth stretched wide and distorted,
+and shook his fist at the towering steamer,
+and called out frenzied curses upon the craft and her
+captain, and passengers, and crew, and consigned
+them all to hell, a deep and fiery hole in his version.
+Meantime the passengers, their sympathy reacting,
+laughed and sneered; the deck-hands yelled out gibes
+of derision and responsive defiance; the captain
+shrugged his shoulders in silent contempt and ordered
+the yawl once more to its place.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The woman, her arms akimbo, the baby, wailing
+unheeded now on the dancing, teetering floor, looked
+bitterly after the greater craft as she passed, the water
+playing in cascades of white foam over the wheel at
+her stern, her moving chimneys seeming to describe
+scrolls of mystic import among the clouds, punctuated
+here and there by the faint spark of a star.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“It is allus the way, Jedidiah,” she said. She could
+scarcely get her breath as yet, and her voice had a
+catch like a sob. “It is allus the way! The big folks
+is safe, an’ high, an’ dry, while us pore folks take
+water, an’ skim the edge of hell.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>His pride, if he might have claimed such an endowment,
+his self-sufficiency, had been grievously cut
+down by the incident; but since it had not culminated
+in death or disaster, it had seemed to resolve itself into
+a flout, an injury, a wanton insult. This view was
+confirmed in an illogical sort by the evident revulsion
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>of the sentiment of the passengers and crew, their
+sympathy naturally enough checked, however, by
+his rage and futile venom as he volleyed his curses
+at them.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Not <em>allus</em> so safe an’ sound,” he protested, “the
+rich folks ain’t. Them galoots up there at Whippoorwill
+Landing didn’t skim the edge of hell,—that’s
+true; they went teetotally in,—kerplunk!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The woman had been wringing out her hair and
+shaking out her skirts, all damp with the spray of
+the stern wheel of the steamer and the churning wake
+of her passage in which the raft yet rocked. An
+awed stillness though fearful delight came over her
+face at his words, and she softly drew near, and sat
+down on a coil of the ropes with the baby in her arms.
+The child had ceased to cry aloud bewailing his
+desertion, but as if silence were too great a boon to
+accord, he kept up a sort of absent-minded whimpering
+or crooning, reciting in some sort a theme of
+woe, learned by rote, the significance of which had
+been forgotten or was uncomprehended.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Yes, sir!” Jed Knoxton exclaimed with hearty
+satisfaction, “<em>they</em> got the butt end of the club, sure!
+Providence was right after them at a two-forty clip!”
+He sneered as he laughed. “I tell you the way it was
+meted out to <em>them</em>, you might have thought they was
+pore folks, fur sure.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I never could make out how ’t was they never suspicioned
+nothing,—how it was so easy done,” she
+speculated.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There was not a soul within a mile of the boat, yet
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span>he glanced fearfully over his shoulder before he answered.
+His brother, the idiot, had gone back into
+the cabin, and now and again a long-drawn snore and
+at times a sputtering gasp told that he had sought his
+bunk for the night. The broad Mississippi stretched
+silent and deep, vacant on either hand, so broad that
+they could only see the line of the hither shore a mile
+away as they drifted along on the swift current.
+There was no other craft in view; no motion save the
+long, elastic undulations of the waves, here and there
+crisping into ripples when a flaw of the chill night
+breeze struck the water. Sometimes they were tipped
+with a shifting scintillation, the reflection of a star,
+and again only a sense of a dark, transparent lustre
+betokened the depths. A world, it was, and all to
+themselves; yet he looked over his shoulder, fearfully.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“They got into the store by purtendin’ to be customers,—that’s
+how.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“But stores don’t keep open past midnight,” she
+remonstrated.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He ducked his red head and chuckled into the
+bosom of his checked hickory shirt. It seemed so
+funny,—so very funny! “Of course ’twas outer
+business hours; but they was ailin’—oh, my, how
+ailin’ they was! Becburn give out that he had
+ptomaine pizenin’;—when they landed in the skiff,
+an’ came up the bank, Danvelt told me that they
+hallooed the store bold as brass, same as if they was
+in earnest. An’ them two, the proprietor of the store
+and his clerk, they took it all in, for gospel sure.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>Becburn <em>had</em> swallowed something mighty nigh as
+bad,—a power o’ ipecac,—and he was jus’ a-vomitin’
+an’ retchin’ as he come,—an’ sure enough
+them suckers opened the door, to give him something
+to ease him off!” He paused again to laugh silently,
+holding his head down. “That light-haired, slim fellow,
+Oscar Patton, the clerk, he said that common
+kitchen sody was the antidote; an’ all bar’foot as he
+was, he run into the back room to git a box,—they
+dealt with him there.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The child still crooned its plaint, though forgetting
+its sorrow; the woman’s face was illumined by
+the light of the moon, only a mere segment of pearl,
+but all else was so dark,—the silent river running
+like the stream of Time, the glooms of the forest
+crowning the nearer banks towering dimly into the
+night, the opposite shore lost in distance,—that its
+lineaments were easily discerned by one familiar with
+them. Even one not accustomed might have noted
+the peculiar slant of the eyes, the snake-like contour
+of the countenance, the long, serpentine curve of the
+throat,—she seemed not out of place clinging to the
+slimy timbers of a raft in the midst of the murky
+Mississippi. She listened in cold-blooded interest to
+this tale of a deed of dread, but now and again she
+shuddered.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“The t’other fellow, Ackworth, was harder to kill,
+they say. He got his chanst and fit. He got on to the
+game, whenst he heard Patton yell out ‘Oh, my
+God!’ an’ drap to the floor. Ackworth made a break
+for the drawer of the counter then,—he had just
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span>been pourin’ out a glass of whiskey for the sufferer
+from ptomaine; Becburn declares now he ain’t responsible
+for nothin’ ’bout it all, for he done nothin’
+but turn himself wrong side out with that ipecac!—an’
+when Ackworth laid holt of the knob of the
+drawer, they knowed there was a pistol in it, an’ they
+jumped on him. Ben Danvelt jes’ held him by the
+nape o’ the neck, an’ though he got the drawer open,
+they pushed him down an’ shut his head up in it.
+He couldn’t git a purchase on himself to pull his
+head outer it. Tom Turfin stabbed him twicet, while
+the t’others held him thar with his head in the
+drawer,—stabbed him twicet in the back just under
+the shoulder-blade. He wasn’t dead, though, when
+they let the drawer loost an’ he drapped,—he died
+hard. Tom say that he wriggled an’ writhed on the
+floor like a wum. He only spoke once; he lifted up
+his voice an’ he says, says he, ‘My blood shall be a
+testimony against you.’ An’ his mouth was full of
+it, then. But Ben Danvelt he spoke up,’ Incompetent
+testimony in this court.’ He’s a funny feller, full
+of his jokes! Then he let Ackworth have the knife
+agin,—right in the throat, this time. An’ they got
+no more o’ his jaw then. A slick job, it was,— done
+right.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The progress was swift down the great, pulsing
+river; they could see the dark forests upon the bank
+all a-journeying northward as so elastically, so noiselessly,
+they swung along toward the south. Now and
+again the braided currents carried the craft close in
+shore, and they could smell the dank, rich vernal odor
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>of the earth, the pungent tang of herb and tree;
+once in a deep, oozy tangle where a bayou went sluggishly
+forth into the woods, an outlet from the Mississippi,
+they heard a sudden resounding splash in the
+water. The woman started nervously, and with a sharp
+exclamation let her snuff-brush drop from her mouth
+into her lap.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Shucks, Jocelinda,” the man sneered, “don’t you
+know a ’gator takin’ to water yit?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The ripples of the great saurian’s stir as he swam
+along the marge were perceptible now in the moonlight
+as the boat shot past, down and down the
+stream, and they seemed far away and faint the sound
+when they heard the alligator’s resonant call to his
+mate in the lagoon, and presently another roar hardly
+more than some dull blast of a distant horn, so fast
+the river swept them on.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“It ain’t seemin’ no slick job to me,” Jocelinda
+commented at length, “else it would never have been
+found out.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh, <em>you</em>’d have done it mighty different,
+wouldn’t you, now?” he sneered. “<em>You</em> are up to
+all sorts o’ tricks.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I can kindle a fire that won’t go out,” Jocelinda
+declared.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“But the fire didn’t go out; ’twas <em>put out</em>,—that’s
+whut! The light gin the alarm so denied quick.
+That old hussy, the Swamp Lily, came scootin’ down
+the river a full day behind time; an’ headin’ for the
+landin’, the pilot seen the store afire. He sounded the
+whistle fit to wake the dead,—waked all the swamp
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>country for miles around. The old boat jes’ sot there
+on the water a-pipin’ an’ a-blowin’ as if she’d bust.
+Then all the galoots round about got inter their
+breeches an’ boots an’ run to the landing to help
+put it out. The Swamp Lily sent out all the deck-hands,
+an’ the Mississippi River had a leetle water to
+spare,—no reason why they couldn’t throw the
+water on the fire an’ put it out. <em>You</em> couldn’t kindle
+a fire that the Mississippi River can’t squench, hey,
+‘smart Aleck’?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“But then the folks found the bodies right there,”
+she objected.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Ye-es,” he drawled. “They had their own reasons
+for not having walked off.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“An’ so the folks found the bodies fresh killed, an’
+seen that the store had been stripped of mighty nigh
+all the goods an’ all the money in the cash drawer.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Ye-es, the boys loaded up all they could kerry on
+the steam-launch an’ set the shebang afire. But for
+the accident of the Swamp Lily comin’ along out
+of turn, the whole caboodle would have been ashes
+and cinders before the sun had riz. They would
+have thought the proprietor an’ his clerk was burned
+by accident, or in tryin’ to save something, or was
+drunk an’ didn’t wake. I ‘member Danvelt said he
+thought that Ackworth had the name of takin’ a
+glass too much once in a while.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“’Twas a big fire,” she remarked, as if making a
+concession. “It lighted up the whole country. The
+river shone like a stream of flames in the fog,—just
+seemed to split the world in two.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>“<em>’Twas</em> a big fire—an’ a slick job, too,” he protested.
+“They got away with the goods an’ some
+cash,—consid’ble spondulix,—an’ nobody ain’t
+’spicioned ’em yit. ’Twas way last fall, too.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Them bodies ought not to have been found,” she
+argued dolorously. She felt that it was the one disparagement
+to the artistic achievement.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He did not reply. They were now passing between
+a small island and the shore. The water, thus compressed
+in volume, ran with still more turbulent
+rapidity. He was not sure how their voices might
+carry on the still air and the transmitting medium
+of the silent river. They were too near the land on
+either hand to risk such words as might phrase the
+thoughts of their dark hearts. The island was in progress
+of swift building. At no distant day it would be
+the shore. The great, restless river—now sweeping
+away hundreds of acres, that melted into nothingness
+in the floods; now cutting channels through points of
+land in an inconceivably short time, transmogrifying
+them into islands far from their ancient affiliations—was
+here filling up with silt the shallows
+and rifts and chasms into solid continuity with the
+bank. This island was what is locally called “a towhead,”
+a spit of white sand, sparsely covered with
+brush; and one might imagine so desolate a loneliness
+could shield no human being who could lend
+the ear of comprehension to a chance word floating
+over the water. But Jedidiah Knoxton and his wife
+Jocelinda kept their dubious counsels, till once more
+they swung along between distant banks of the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>deep and lonely river below and the unpeopled skies
+above.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Jed, warn’t that bicycle one of the Ackworth
+stock?” she queried, in a mere whisper.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Ax me no questions an’ I’ll tell you no lies,” he
+retorted gruffly.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I allus believed them was ’spensive things,—heap
+mo’ ’spensive than you knowed. I b’lieve Danvelt
+let you have ’em jus’ to let you git tracked
+by ’em,” she suggested, “ter keep s’picion off ’n
+him.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Shet yer mouth, Jocelinda,” he vociferated furiously,
+“else I’ll break it in.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Why, <em>you</em> had nothin’ to do with thar trick,” she
+expostulated. “I ain’t taxin’ <em>you</em> with nothink.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>She was quiescent for a time, as if knowing that
+her silence would stimulate him to speech. The surest
+way to reopen the discussion was paradoxically to
+close it. The child was sleeping now, and once and
+again she patted its back, as it lay on her breast,
+with a fragmentary “Bye-oh, Bye-oh.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Them things ain’t labeled,” Knoxton recommenced,
+as if there had been no cessation of the discussion.
+“They are as common as crayfish. Folks are
+wheelin’ all over the country.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Not at no five dollars, Jed,—nor yit ten. I tole
+you that I priced them jiggermarees whenst I was in
+Vicksburg, an’ some was as high as fifty dollars.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“An’ I tole you that the store folks was stuffin’
+you,” he cried, with a sort of turbulence that was akin
+both to rage and woe. “A tacky body like you to go
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>pricin’ wheels an’ such fixin’s!—they was makin’
+game of you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Mebbe so, mebbe so,”—she yielded a facile acquiescence,
+apparently without sensitive vanity; “but
+I <em>did</em> see this evening that ten dollars was a power
+too low. That man wouldn’t let Mrs. Faurie risk
+herself with it,—rich as she is! He knowed it war
+new and stole.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Well, damn Mr. Faurie,—that is all I have got
+to say,” the flatboat-man cried, his hand going up to
+his bruised face tingling with pain as his rancor roused
+at the recollection of the incident. Then tremulous
+with a nervous rage, that yet contended with a cold
+chill of fear, “But if this wheel was to be tracked to
+me, what would ail me not to split on Danvelt and
+Turfin and the others?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I reckon they are too far by this time to be
+caught; it all happened last October, and here it is
+nigh the spring o’ the year agin. I reckon they think
+that nobody would believe you. The law would have
+you safe by the laig, an’ the goods found on your
+boat. ’Twas only a blind if anybody took after them.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There was a long silence. The boat was again approaching
+the shore of its own accord, it seemed,
+yielded as it was to the whim of the current. The
+dark forests were coming down to the verge of the
+stream with beckoning, sheltering suggestions in
+their wild, tangled glooms. Her breath was short, so
+ardently she hoped what she dared not say. He divined
+her hope, but with that perverse sense of domination,
+so characteristic of the domestic tyrant, he
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span>would say naught to encourage it. He pursued the
+subject. “If I believed that, I’d sink the wheels in
+the river without more ado,” he declared.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“They are too light,” she protested. “I dunno
+how them cur’ous injer-rubber rims might make ’em
+float.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Again there were no words between them for a
+time, while the river clove through the night as silent
+as the stars vibrating above in the sky. The moon
+was sinking toward the western bank. A vague sense
+of yearning, of wistful sadness, pervaded the lunar
+light that began to suffuse the summits of the great,
+gloomy, primeval forests. This glister seemed to respond
+to the slow down-dropping of the weary one
+who had finished her course through the skies,—no
+joyous welcome this, but replete with solemnity, with
+weird silence, with aloof suggestions such as might
+typify the down-dropping into a grave. The wind had
+grown more chill. Jocelinda wrapped closer a ragged
+petticoat of red flannel, which the baby wore about
+its shoulders like a mantle. The touch of the fabric
+reminded her of the infant’s wardrobe which Mrs.
+Faurie had promised her,—not that she cared for
+such comforts and means of tidy array; it would
+have been far too much trouble to keep the child
+clothed and tended in many whole and clean garments.
+The recollection merely brought to her mind
+a collocation of ideas that had earlier occurred to
+her. “I don’t believe that man was Mr. Faurie!” she
+said suddenly.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It was an unlucky topic. The very name roused
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span>Knoxton’s rancor. “What for no?” he exclaimed,
+in a sudden gust of anger. His knowledge that the
+bicycle had been instantly recognized as stolen goods;
+the possibility that his possession of the machine
+might connect his identity with the miscreants who
+had plundered the store at Whippoorwill Landing,
+and murdered the proprietor and clerk; the fear that
+this was their nefarious intention in shunting off on
+him these costly wares so easily detected, so rare
+among the humbler population among whom his
+trade lay, so incongruous with his stock of goods
+and character of custom, filled him with a bewildered
+dismay. His was not a trained mind to think consecutively,
+to deduce correct conclusions; he blundered
+upon his convictions; his plans were founded on impulse,
+inclination. Ignorance is not compatible with
+a just and accurate foresight. His resolves, taken in
+a tumult of angry volition, he would seek to execute
+without due regard to feasibility or perception of
+sequences, and he had no sense of justice and could
+maintain no poise of temper. “What for no?” he
+reiterated, striking at his wife with the rope’s end.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Thong-like it curled around her body, the end
+lashing her arm, bare to the elbow, with force enough
+to raise a welt. Experience had ripened such wisdom
+as she possessed, and in self-defense she forbore
+to exasperate further her brutal husband. She said
+naught of the smart of the lash, but recanted hastily.
+“I just took up the idee that he was somebody else.
+I thought that old man Faurie was dead. Ain’t this
+his widder?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>“Widder?—rats! old Faurie’s widder? That slim,
+handsome, high-steppin’ gal! She is his son’s wife,—she
+’lowed to you that her name was Mrs. Faurie.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Mebbe so; they hev been gone to Europe so long
+I lost the run of ’em,” the woman meekly admitted.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Naw, that ain’t it,” Jedidiah sneered. “Ye are
+grudgin’ her them good looks an’ brash, high-handed
+ways; draggle-tailed vixens like you can’t stand for
+other women to be young an’ sniptious.” He spat
+moodily into the Mississippi. “That was young Faurie
+an’ his brand-new wife—the old man is dead long
+ago. I’m thinkin’ the brat mus’ be his leetle brother.
+I remember that there was a new baby at Great Oaks
+mansion about ten year ago; I noticed it ’cause the
+old plantation bell was rung like mad for rejoicing,
+like it had an ager fit, an’ the Swamp Lily an’ other
+boats whistled a salute when they passed, though such
+is agin the regulations.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I hedn’t never been hereabouts in them days,”
+she stipulated, by way of excuse for her lack of readiness
+to confirm these vagrant and erratic recollections
+of his wandering experiences as he floated down the
+river with his store of goods, or poled his craft laboriously
+in and out of the bogues and bayous. “I lived
+then over in the Arkansas.” She held her head down
+for a moment. A scene had arisen before her mind
+best discerned with eyes closed: a little cabin in a bit
+of clearing in the dense, dark woods; a filthy, miry
+dooryard; the fowls and hogs and lean old mule, all
+clustered about the rickety porch; a stationary home
+on dry land,—all seemed paradise at this instant to
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_130'>130</span>the amphibious nomad, for the rope’s end stung, and
+her indurated sensibilities had yet some nerve a-tingle
+to the coarse taunt and the bitter fling.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Why, any fool but <em>you</em> would know. Didn’t <em>she</em>
+say that she was Mrs. Faurie? And didn’t he tell the
+brat he shouldn’t have the wheel at no price? And
+didn’t he tell her she must take his word for it? And
+didn’t he grab the woman by the elbow and the cub
+by the collar, like they belonged to him, an’ start them
+off the boat, him looking as fierce as Judgment Day?
+An’ ain’t that the Faurie plantation, Great Oaks,
+where we was tied up? Answer me that,—answer me,—answer
+me,—ye tongue-tied slut,—or I’ll cut yer
+tongue out.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh, laws, Jed,” said Jocelinda, her nerve shaken
+and very near to tears. “I ’lowed that she was a widder
+lady. She spoke of her kids. I ’lowed that boy
+was one of ’em. I hearn her say that—”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Ye <em>’lowed</em> an’ ye <em>hearn</em> like a dod-rotted fool.
+That man is Faurie and owns Great Oaks! An’ ye
+can bet yer immortal soul I’ll give <em>him</em> somethink
+to think about soon that’ll make him forgit he ever
+seen a bike or a tradin’-boat, air one.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He had risen from the coil of rope and was stepping
+about elastically on the deck as if he intended
+to pole the craft in to the shore. She silently followed
+his example, first placing the child in the centre of the
+coil of rope, and taking her turn at the work with
+strength and activity as muscular as if she were a man.
+Perhaps an infusion of cheerfulness aided her exertions,
+for they were making for a bayou that the river
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>sent sluggishly wandering down with scant impetus
+from its currents through the swamps and the heavy
+glooms of a cypress slough, and she welcomed the
+sense of added safety in the deep seclusions of the
+wilderness. Before the Faurie party, with the utmost
+expedition which the isolated situation of Great Oaks
+Plantation permitted them, could contrive to notify
+the authorities of any suspicion they might have entertained,
+the shanty-boat would have quitted the thoroughfares
+of the river, leaving not a trace. The story
+of the imminent danger of being run down by the
+Flora P. Mayberry would suggest some similar disaster
+as a reason for the disappearance of the flatboat-man
+and his craft. The bicycles—there were only
+three—could be hidden, destroyed, buried in the
+deep, murky, marshy tangles of the lagoons. Here it
+would be scarcely possible that the fugitives should
+be seen or followed,—a succession of cypress brakes,
+of swampy pools, a network of bayous and sloughs
+with scarcely a dry acre for miles, the land of no value
+and impracticable, the locality the deepest solitude,
+the aquatic growths of an impenetrable density. She
+had not expected to sleep that night with so grateful
+a sense of security, for it was not long before the boat
+was tied up in a jungle of young cottonwood trees,
+awaiting the passing of the hours till dawn should
+bring the light necessary for the navigation of such
+tortuous ways. But she was up and ready at the first
+glimmer, her energies recruited as much by the surcease
+of suspense as by the physical rest.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>As the gray day began to break, dim and clouded,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span>it might seem to a sophisticated sense a desolate
+scene, for even such symmetry as the sluggish bayou
+possessed was obliterated; and now the boat was poled
+along a stream-like channel, and now it threaded a
+series of lakelets connected by narrow straits, full of
+half submerged growths, and again it seemed almost
+aground in a slough where the medium was mud
+rather than water. These lakelets were of an inky
+blackness, and in their midst stood forlorn forests
+of gigantic cypress; upon the dark, mirror-like surface
+of the water the white boles of the trees, long
+ago deadened by a permanent inundation from some
+freak of the changeful river, were reflected with weird
+distinctness and a spectral effect. The boat was as if
+afloat in a world of dead vegetation, the duplication of
+the lifeless trees below, the ghostly white forest towering
+above. Now and again a sharp bit of steering
+became necessary to keep the craft clear of the cypress-knees,
+as the conical, protruding excrescences of the
+roots are called, rising considerably above the surface
+of the water. Hanging moss depended in vast
+masses and heavy festoons from the bare white boughs
+far, far above, and served to deepen the gloom of the
+eerie effect of the scene. More than once the voyagers
+saw an alligator lying half embedded in ooze and mud,
+looking as lifeless as the log it resembled; but one
+had awakened apparently from the period of hibernation,
+and was swimming down the centre of the black
+lake. Jedidiah Knoxton, watching his approach, was
+dubious which course he might take, in meeting the
+boat, in the narrow passage.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_133'>133</span>“He don’t understand the code of signals nohow,”
+he demurred. “’Twouldn’t be no good to whistle if
+I could.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The alligator solved the problem as far as he was
+concerned by diving suddenly, and doubtless embedded
+himself in the refuge of the mud. The question
+as to where he might come up again presented another
+doubt to the mind of Jed Knoxton, but he prodded
+boldly with his pole, and presently they had passed,
+the huge saurian still invisible.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There were other tokens of the spring besides the
+awakening of the alligators from their wintry torpors.
+Birds were flitting through the air; frogs were all
+a-croak about the logs; the slimy, nondescript medley
+of vegetation and muck was here and there pierced by
+tender spears of delicate yet intense green, the folded
+leaves and shoots of the swamp lily. Suddenly the first
+ray of the sun struck upon a wide expanse of silver
+sheen in the distance,—it was a lake evidently miles
+in length, of the peculiar horseshoe contour characteristic
+of the lacustrine waters of the region, surrounded
+by dense and gloomy forests, and fringed
+with saw-grass. This thick, prickly growth, so heavily
+notched as to suggest its name, caught Jed Knoxton’s
+attention. It was a keen glint of green at this season,
+almost as intense as light itself. Jed Knoxton stood
+still and held his hand above his eyes as he gazed;
+then he turned to scan some landmark which he identified
+toward the west, and again he shifted toward
+the east.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I done los’ my bearin’s somehow in the swamp,”
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_134'>134</span>he muttered. “I been polin’ todes the north ‘stead o’
+south. An’ damn that old corkscrew of a river. We
+drifted thirty miles las’ night to make five miles o’
+distance.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He still stood absorbed and pondering when his
+wife issued from the little cabin on the deck. “What’s
+the matter, Jed?” she asked apprehensively. Smoke
+was curling from the stove-pipe thrust through the
+roof, and the sizzling of frying pork came with its
+pungent odor from the open door. She held in her
+hand a long iron spoon coated with meal batter while
+she fixed expectant and anxious eyes upon him.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Jes’ as well, jes’ as well!” he muttered.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“What is it, Jed; what you studyin’ about?” she
+persisted.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“We made no distance las’ night scarcely on that
+twisted sarpient of a river,” he said. “It is blamed
+like that old joke of the fool drummers,—travel
+fifty mile down the Mississippi, an’ then take your
+gripsack an’ walk half a mile back to where you
+started from.” He grinned in surly mirth. “Then I
+done shortened it some more by missin’ my way in
+the swamp.” He looked about in dull speculation, as
+if he were wondering anew how this mischance should
+have betided him, and she dreaded lest he might fail,
+in considering this problem, to disclose the intention
+evidently slowly forming in his mind. But for him
+its interest was paramount. It struck her as a blow
+in the face might have done when she heard it voiced
+anew, for she had hoped that time and distance had
+combined to obliterate it, and it boded ill, she knew.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span>“We ain’t more’n five miles from the edge of Great
+Oaks Plantation,—I know it by the earmarks o’
+that old White Deer Lake. An’ it’s just as well,—<em>just
+as well</em>—p’intedly convenient, in fac’. I’m
+goin’ to give Mr. Faurie of Great Oaks Plantation
+something to study about that will make him forgit
+there was ever sech a thing as a bike or a tradin’-boat,
+air one.”</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER VII</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c006'>The ensuing days were bland and soft, and the
+Faurie family life gravitated insensibly to the wide
+verandas of the Great Oaks mansion, where much
+time was spent in futile chat, and where one could
+take the air without the exertion of exercise and be
+out-of-doors without the trouble of quitting the
+house. It was a fine illustration of the best method
+of <em>dolce far niente</em>. The favorite rendezvous was
+beneath the canopy of live-oak boughs on the extension
+of the veranda just outside the library windows,
+and here Desmond often joined the group, saying to
+himself that it had an air of churlish avoidance to
+hold himself aloof when they were all so near. In
+these days he heard no little of Mrs. Faurie’s plaints
+of the limited capacities of Great Oaks for rational
+entertainment.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Nothing to do,—nothing to say,—nothing to
+see. ‘Oh, give me to drink of mandragora, that I
+may sleep away this gap of time!’” she exclaimed,
+as she reclined languidly in her garden chair.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There was something to see in the Great Oaks
+avenues,—the sward was rich and fresh, and all the
+vague, sparse, spring foliage of the trees sent out
+a glitter now of gold and now of green. Hyacinths,
+pink and white and blue, shook their fairy bells
+in a parterre near the house, and the trellises in the
+old-fashioned garden were delicately sprayed with
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_137'>137</span>green, lace-like leafage. There was much to see in
+the vast, murky floods of the Mississippi River; the
+opposite banks had wholly disappeared in the encroachments
+of the water on the swampy Arkansas
+shore, and as its limits were beyond the reach of
+vision, its aspect was that of some great inland sea.
+When Desmond remarked on the phenomenon, Mr.
+Stanlett stated, with the pride which the dwellers on
+the banks of the river take in its arbitrary and
+monarchical exhibitions of power, that sometimes
+here, in high water, it measured sixty miles wide, and
+always in the Bend its average depth was not less
+than one hundred and eighty feet.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“And just beyond the point the lead-line often
+marks scant four feet on the sandbars,” Mrs. Faurie
+interpolated iconoclastically.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The words suggested a lurking danger to the
+larger craft visible, the possibility of getting aground
+even in such a vast welter of waters. A great tow
+of coal was in midstream, bound from Pittsburgh
+to New Orleans, the steamboat pushing before her
+a score of broad, laden barges, ranged elliptically
+about her prow, and gliding slowly and majestically
+down the current. Seen above the summit of the
+dense forests in the distance, against the bland, blue
+sky, a whorl of black smoke uncoiling from lofty
+chimneys announced the approach of the steamer of
+the regular packet line rounding the point; and the
+upward course of a snag-boat had its own suggestion
+of yet another of the jeopardies of the navigation of
+the great, lawless river.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_138'>138</span>“Talking about something to drink,” said Mr.
+Stanlett, a bit uneasily, “I had a queer experience
+yesterday. I was out riding, and when that sudden
+shower came up, I was pretty far from home and got
+soaking wet. And—you know my rheumatism—I
+stopped at the first house I could reach; it was Jessop’s
+shack, and I went in to dry off by his fire.
+Well,—Jessop is a friendly fellow, and would have
+me take a drink to keep from catching my death of
+cold. You know he is only an Irish wood-chopper,—makes
+a scanty living by furnishing wood from
+anybody’s land who will give it to him for the clearing,
+and selling it to anybody who will buy it; but I
+accepted because I don’t like to refuse a civility from
+such a person,—and, bless my soul! it was French
+brandy,—good sound Cognac. He was mightily surprised
+when I told him so. He said he knew that it
+was a tipple to which he was unaccustomed, but it
+cost the same as ‘bust-head whiskey’; he said it was
+all the same to him so long as it fired up all right,—‘made
+drunk come.’ He bought it from that shanty-boat.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond looked up significantly at Mr. Stanlett,
+who resumed: “You are right, sir,—stolen, no
+doubt! I fear from the Whippoorwill Landing stock.
+I remember that though Ackworth kept a general
+assortment of goods, he had a limited class of fine
+custom. Some rich people live near Whippoorwill
+Landing, and they preferred to give him their orders
+instead of dealing elsewhere. Ackworth was of the
+gentry himself,—came of good people,—broken up
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_139'>139</span>by the Civil War. He put what he had left into this
+store; he had been in the Confederate army, though
+one of the youngest veterans—distinguished himself—was
+very popular—and as the planters round
+about gave him all their custom instead of sending
+to Memphis or New Orleans, he kept in stock such
+choice grades of articles as they would require. I
+fear this brandy was stolen and that bicycle also;
+I wish that I had taken your view and given notice
+of our suspicions to the police authorities.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“To be quite candid, I did not think it prudent to
+abide by the theory of non-action,” said Desmond.
+“I wrote that evening,—and the mail-boat took the
+letter next morning.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mrs. Faurie sat up straight in her chair and looked
+about her with widening eyes,—that a tutor in her
+house should take the initiative in its direction! Mr.
+Stanlett’s delicate face flushed. Even through his
+sparse silver hair one could see the polished scalp, all
+roseate. He said nothing, however, looking down at
+his cigar as he flipped off the ash.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond noticed their evident attitude of mind
+both with humiliation and indignation. Then he
+roused himself,—for his paltry salary they did not
+buy his identity, annul his personality.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“The responsibility was mine,” he said icily, more
+in self-assertion and in response to their offended
+silence, their mien of rebuke of his presumption, than
+because of any sense of obligation to give account of
+his motives. “It was I who discovered the quality
+of the article offered at a mere fraction of its value.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span>Knowing that it must have been stolen, I did not feel
+justified, as far as I was concerned, in remaining
+silent.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“There is a grave responsibility in unwarranted
+interference,” remarked Mr. Stanlett, dryly.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“And in bringing down suspicion on innocent people,
+perhaps,” Mrs. Faurie said, with cold reproach.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“If the proprietor of the trading-boat came honestly
+by a wheel, perfectly new and a favorite make,
+which he is able to offer for sale at five dollars, he
+will have no difficulty in making the fact clear. It is
+not my prerogative to judge.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I should be sorry to provoke the enmity of a
+rude, lawless man such as that, by putting upon him
+an unnecessary affront and hardship,” Mr. Stanlett
+coldly urged. He had no longer his genial drawl of
+leisure and luxury. His intonation was crisp, clear-cut.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“As I understand it, a heinous and brutal murder
+was committed only last fall at Whippoorwill Landing,”
+Desmond said, his pride pulsing in his temples,
+his own restiveness under expressed displeasure showing
+haughtily in his flushed face. “To have knowledge—or
+such grounds of suspicion as amount to knowledge—of
+stolen merchandise being vended through
+the country at fantastic prices and yet say nothing,
+in my opinion comes perilously near conniving at the
+escape of the villains,—accessory after the fact.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mrs. Faurie turned and surveyed the tutor with
+wide eyes and a look of such affronted amazement
+that even he quailed before them. Desmond was impressed
+with the fact, noted by him for the first time,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_141'>141</span>but doubtless often perceived before by others, that
+the very rich are fearless of the ordinary operations
+of disaster. The ægis of great possessions overshadows
+them. The law is their ally, for their protection; the
+imputation that by their negligence, or assumptions,
+or bravado, or inconsiderateness it could be arrayed
+against them is in itself a ridiculous impossibility, a
+sort of grotesque parody on fact, a distortion of the
+powers of established order. All other menace is likewise
+abated in their favor. The dangers of travel are
+minimized for them; the distresses of sickness are
+mitigated; every ill that flesh is heir to is softened
+and alleviated and embellished till they are scarcely
+to be identified with the woes, savage and hideous,
+that rack the multitude; and death itself is so bedizened
+and beautified and exalted that it ceases to
+be the great leveler. Mrs. Faurie’s astonishment that
+anything that she or hers thought proper to do could
+be liable to misconstruction, to question, to disparagement,
+was beyond words.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mr. Stanlett, however, stared at him with a sort
+of dawning comprehension in his watery blue eyes.
+“Upon my word, I never thought of it in that light!—ridiculous
+aspersion—impossible, though, as far
+as we are concerned; but, I believe,—in respect
+to the law, the bare facts of the case,—silence might
+aid the murderers, shedding the goods of which they
+stripped that store among the flatboat-men, woodcutters,
+ditchers, and niggers.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Then Mr. Desmond was right?” asked Mrs.
+Faurie, seriously.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_142'>142</span>“Yes,—yes,—though I deprecate anything that
+tends to draw upon this house the enmity of the
+wretches.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“The law is its best protection,” declared Desmond.
+“To make them feel the power of the law is the real
+resource. To let them and their fences and pals get
+away with impunity is to invite depredations.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Yes, yes,—true, true!” said Mr. Stanlett. “But
+you take a good deal on yourself, Mr. Desmond.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“It was imposed upon me by good conscience and
+good citizenship.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Ah, well, now,—I don’t know about good conscience,”
+said Mr. Stanlett, drawing hard at his cigar,
+but with renewed satisfaction. “Batting the eye is
+necessary sometimes. It won’t do to see so much, and
+deduce so correctly, and act so promptly. Let sleeping
+dogs lie.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Do you call these sleeping dogs?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“So far as we are concerned they are. Quiet,
+peace, security,—we have them all at Great Oaks.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“And a dullness that has no parallel outside the
+grave,” declared Mrs. Faurie, once more falling back
+in her graceful reclining posture. She had never
+seemed to Desmond so beautiful as to-day. She wore
+the daintiest of afternoon dresses, of delicate lavender
+broadcloth, and the dazzling purity of her complexion
+was even more radiantly asserted in the full light.
+Her gray eyes, with their dense, long black lashes,
+seemed more expressive in their petulant, slumberous
+disaffection. From her white brow her hair rose in
+the usual pompadour effect, but its rich brown tint was
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_143'>143</span>heightened by the broad illumination of out-of-doors,
+and her lips had all the lustre of wet coral. Into the
+meshes of the lace of her high “transparent collar”
+and chemisette, that showed the gleam of her snowy
+white neck and throat, was thrust a set of stick-pins
+of amethyst. She held some wands thickly studded
+with pink almond blooms in her hand. “Great Oaks
+leads the field for monotony,” she said disconsolately.
+“It might be a gentle distraction to be called upon
+to defend the mansion against river pirates.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>She suddenly sat up straight, her eyes dilating
+and brightening, her infrequent flush, an incomparable
+tint, mounting into her cheeks. “Think how it
+would sound in the deep midnight,—if the old
+plantation bell should boom out on the air, up the
+river and down the river, and across the Bend, calling
+on all who ever stood on the pay-roll of Great Oaks
+Plantation, or owed it a good turn, or wished it well,
+to lend a hand at its utmost need. I can hear it now!
+It would sound so far! It would shake the moss on
+the cypress trees in the White Deer Swamp, where
+ghosts have been seen. It would rouse the gangs at
+the engineering work who are trying to raise the river
+on jackscrews, or sinking a revetment mat, or building
+a dyke at the point, or whatever they are up to over
+yonder in the chute. It would even start up the
+loafers from the card-tables at the old Shin-Plaster
+Landing, way down on the Arkansas side, where
+everybody says they gamble half the night. And the
+Swamp Lily would be climbing up the current, and
+old Captain Cleek—who dropped me into the Mississippi
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_144'>144</span>River once when I was a baby and he was
+a mud clerk, and my parents were leaving the steamboat
+in midstream to make the landing in a yawl,
+and who has always declared he owed me indemnity
+for a ducking—would signal to head for the shore
+with every pound of steam that his engines can carry.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mr. Stanlett moved uneasily, and now and again
+cast a furtive, anxious glance at her sparkling, girlish
+face. This badinage was far from appealing to him.
+He had sought once or twice to interrupt, but in the
+very desperation of idleness and lack of interest she
+found a sort of entertainment in the picture that she
+had conjured up, and persisted:—</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“What would you two do? All out here in the
+grove where it is so egregiously dark of a moonless
+night—we shan’t have this function on till the moon
+changes—there would appear occasionally a sudden,
+funnel-shaped flare of light and a sharp report,”—she
+put her hands over her ears for a moment as if
+to shut out the sound,—“and Mr. Desmond would
+be winning his spurs, and Uncle Clarence would be
+wanting to show how worthy he is of his, already
+won, and the babies would be telling each other, and
+everybody else, how wrong and wicked and purblind
+I was never to let them learn to shoot so that they
+might now fill the marauders full of lead; and I—why
+I—would just open the door a bit ajar, and—‘Gentlemen,’”—with
+the most gracious bow and an
+airy waving of the hand,—“‘the goods and chattels
+in this house are somewhat antique, but with a lot of
+wear in them yet. They are racy of the soil, and the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span>trail of the European serpent is over none of them.
+They are all at your service. As to the people,—Mr.
+Stanlett is a man wise in counsel, gentle in manner,
+and a genial companion at dinner; Mr. Desmond will
+teach you “to speak Greek as naturally as pigs
+squeak”; and you are welcome to <em>both</em> of them until
+I can ransom them, which I will do as soon as I can
+save something from my next year’s income!—all
+for the slight consideration that you will give me and
+my squabs a free passage down to Natchez on the
+Swamp Lily,—and no questions asked!’” She paused
+breathless, triumphant. “Now, Uncle Clarence, don’t
+you think that would wake us up?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He turned to throw his cigar stub over his shoulder
+into the grass. The wind was stirring the long,
+drooping branches of the live oak above their heads,
+and little, fluttering ripples ran through the folds of
+the skirt of her gown. “I think that we may have
+yet something to disturb us, not so sensational, but
+sufficiently perturbing. There is no necessity to ‘raise
+the river on jackscrews.’ Colonel Kentopp thinks we
+are going to have an overflow in Deepwater Bend.
+The river is at flood height, and in several localities
+above, the water is standing against the levee. There
+have been recent rains all through the upper country.
+He says that since the rise, the work of the River
+Commission on the other side has had the effect of
+throwing a water of overwhelming weight against the
+levee above his place, and if it breaks at Ring-fence
+Plantation, where it was always liable to crevasses,
+considerable territory in the Bend must go under too.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span>“So poor Colonel Kentopp makes his moan! We
+never go under on account of the cross levee. I am
+mighty sorry for his anxiety; an overflow, especially
+if it were not general, would hurt the sale of Dryad-Dene,
+and he has been negotiating that place so long
+with that rich Mr. Loring. For my part, I believe
+that man will need only so much land as he can lie
+down in,—he will be dead before he makes up his
+mind to buy,” Mrs. Faurie prophesied.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>She gazed silently out for a time at the tawny
+sweep of the Mississippi at flood height, beyond
+the vivid variant tints of the bourgeoning spring
+growths. “I wish the Mississippi River were drained.
+Such a torment as it has been. What a queer thing
+its channel would be, though. Just think of it! Boats
+unnumbered, of all sizes and pretensions, from the
+first little stern-wheeler to the floating palaces of the
+days of the Robert E. Lee and the Great Republic.
+Then the bones of all the people that have gone down
+in the fires and collisions and swampings and sinkings
+to their watery graves! The nations, the races,
+they are all represented there, and who knows what
+prehistoric people! And in modern times the English,
+the French, the Spaniard,—De Soto, himself,
+must be there yet. He could not be swept with
+the current down to the Gulf, for he was buried in
+his armor, encased in a hollow log, and he must be
+lying still, oh, very still, the great wanderer! bound
+to one restricted spot,—the great explorer! under
+tons and tons of the ooze and mud of the Mississippi,
+that he came so far to find, and that has held him
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_147'>147</span>fast so long! Yes,—the bottom of the Mississippi
+River must be a strange sight indeed.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Might try a diving-bell; that would put an end
+to the dullness!” suggested Reginald, who had come
+up and was leaning over the high back of her chair
+as she talked. Now and again his eyes wandered to
+the tennis-court at one side of the house, where Horace
+and Chubby were playing a match, running very
+nimbly, but serving the balls badly enough from the
+standpoint of his superior expertness. Mrs. Faurie
+did not reply. Her eyes were fixed on a mounted
+figure approaching through the grove, presently
+identified as a groom from Colonel Kentopp’s place.
+Dismounting at the foot of the steps, he presented a
+note with the request for an answer.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“An answer?” said Reginald, who had run down
+the flight of steps to receive it. “Then you had better
+ride around to the kitchen and wait.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>As the groom rode off and Reginald turned to
+ascend the steps he remarked: “From the Kentopps,
+mamma,” holding up the envelope, showing the elaborate
+crest. Then, as she extended her hand, he
+continued in the accents of an extreme but half-suppressed
+surprise: “It is addressed to Mr. Desmond.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The tutor looked up in blank amaze, the expression
+deepening on his face as, after a request for permission,
+he read the contents. The note was from Mrs.
+Kentopp, in a tone of the suavest urbanity and the
+most friendly and informal cordiality, begging that
+he would give Colonel Kentopp and herself the pleasure
+of his company at Dryad-Dene for the week-end.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span>“We have some very charming young friends staying
+with us whom we wish you to meet, and especially we
+wish to give them the pleasure of knowing you. I have
+selected the week-end, thinking that this will not much
+conflict with your schoolroom duties with the little
+Faurie torments. So I beseech you to let us have you
+Thursday evening, Friday, Saturday, and Sunday. We
+will return you, with no disparagement of your wisdom,
+early Monday morning, though we don’t intend
+to be very serious and staid at Dryad-Dene either.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He could not command the muscles of his face in
+his surprise as he read, and his disconcerted doubt
+and dismay were so patent that Mrs. Faurie cried out
+gleefully:—</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Have mercy on our curiosity! What are the
+Kentopps doing to you?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Without a word he handed her the note. Her brilliant
+eyes scanned the lines with a brightening interest
+over all her face. “Why, how perfectly delightful!
+A dance after dinner Thursday evening—Mercy! in
+Lent?—oh, I remember,—it is Mi-Carême. Will
+they have enough?—Yes, with Miss Allandyce and
+the Mayberrys and Miss Dennis and Rupert Regnan
+and those two young gentlemen who were landed from
+the Primrose last night, and Miss Kelvin, and she suggests
+others whose names she does not mention,—and
+a camp hunt on Friday and Saturday,—‘the
+young ladies are wild to go!’—Oh, I know they
+are, and I will bet everything that they do go, and
+spoil the fun for the men.—No shooting Sunday,—but
+only the sylvan pleasures of the camp; for if
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>the ladies don’t go earlier, they will then join the
+hunters for a day in the woods. How delightful!
+How perfectly delightful! But,”—a shadow crossed
+her face, quizzical, but nevertheless a shadow—“how
+very strange that she doesn’t invite me!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I was thinking of that,” Desmond remarked. “It
+must be an oversight.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“How can it be?—‘Cordial remembrances to dear
+Mrs. Faurie.’”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I don’t understand it,” he said helplessly.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I do,” Mrs. Faurie declared; “she is relegating
+me to my proper place as an old woman. This entertainment
+is given for the young people; ‘gay youth
+loves gay youth.’”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond flushed. “I think it an extreme impertinence
+on the part of the Kentopps.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Well,—in a way. I shouldn’t take up much
+room,—and oh, how I should have enjoyed it,—the
+days are so long!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“If you will excuse me, I will step into the library
+and answer the note,” said Desmond, rising slowly
+from his chair.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Do; and I am sure that you will have a charming
+time,—it will be a delightful break in the
+monotony for you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond stood aghast. “I have not the most remote
+idea of accepting.” He had his hand on the
+back of his chair, and he leaned slightly upon it as he
+looked down at her. His expression seemed reflected
+upon her face.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“But, my dear child, you must accept,” she exclaimed
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span>in dismay. “I wouldn’t have you miss it for
+any consideration.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I don’t think an acceptance is appropriate—with
+you excluded.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>She laughed lightly. “Can’t you see that it is a
+party of young people, and that it is only my incurable
+frivolity that makes me frenzied to go to it? You
+are the only member of the household of the appropriate
+age for such volatile amusements. The children
+are too young for society such as this, and Uncle
+Clarence and I are too old. I insist upon it. I will
+not have it otherwise. Go write your acceptance, or
+I will do it for you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Still he leaned on the back of his chair, and still
+he looked at her doubtfully. Rarely indeed since his
+advent at Great Oaks had his face shown its natural
+lines of expression. It was frank, gentle, almost appealing
+now, without the cool constraint, the aloof
+dignity, the critical reserve, it generally wore. “The
+Kentopps did not particularly attract me,—and, to
+be candid, I think that I perceived that I was not
+acceptable to Mrs. Kentopp. It would be distasteful
+to me to go.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mrs. Faurie remembered suddenly Mrs. Kentopp’s
+pointed exclusion of Desmond in her proposition for
+a game at cards, her manner of airy, unseeing indifference.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“But you must perceive from this note that there
+was nothing intentional,—it is cordiality and consideration
+itself. Mrs. Kentopp’s manners are so affected
+and she is so self-absorbed that it is easy to
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>take her amiss. One should not be too exacting; we
+must take the people in this world as we find them.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Obviously, however, he was not placated, and she
+resumed with a note of decision: “Now, I make this
+a personal matter. As a favor to <em>me</em> I hope that you
+will accept this invitation. The Kentopps are exceedingly
+civil to you,—and you have no excuse. They
+would think a declination very strange. And, besides,
+I want you to have the little bit of entertainment that
+you can get from a neighborhood visit, while you are
+consigned to this slough of despond yclept Great Oaks
+Plantation. I only wish I had an invitation, too,—”
+She dropped her hands in her lap with a gesture of
+mock despair, then she laughed out gayly at herself.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Couldn’t you go without it,” he suggested.
+“There seems such an established friendship between
+the families, formality might be dispensed with.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“If the note had been addressed to me,—perhaps.
+If I had been charged with the transmission of the
+message to you, I might have stretched a point and
+interpreted it as inclusive. But no!—I am expressly
+and of set purpose excluded. I am out of the game!
+There is nothing for me but to sit down in the chimney-corner
+and just be old.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>She turned her radiant face up toward him, the
+most apt interpretation of beauty in its fullest expression
+he had ever imagined, the bloom of perfect development
+upon it, the rare ripe fulfillment of the
+promise of first youth. She was apart from the idea
+of time. There were more lines about Chubby’s eyes,
+from much crinkling with laughter; her fair, smooth
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>lids showed naught but the form of their perfect design.
+Reginald had a vertical crease between his
+brows, from a frown of perplexity he sometimes wore
+in moments of cogitation; but his mother’s face was
+as free from the trace of care as of age, and morning
+itself looked out of her eyes.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The point of exclusion was so preposterous an incident,—it
+was so jejune, and lacking in social tact
+and appropriateness, that Desmond, try as he might,
+could not interpret it. He did not give over his impressions
+of Mrs. Kentopp, for all her fair words now;
+he did not easily forgive or forget, but the ground
+of offense was untenable. It was infinitely unpalatable
+to accept, yet it was not practicable to decline, and
+he was as little in a holiday mood as ever in his life
+when, two days later, the Kentopps’ phaeton, which
+had been sent for him, rolled up to the porte-cochère
+of the mansion at Dryad-Dene Plantation.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>If Great Oaks were reminiscent of the past, it might
+seem that Dryad-Dene was a respecter only of the
+morrow. It could hardly be said to be up-to-date,—it
+was an earnest of the future. Certainly it was the
+most modern house in all that portion of Mississippi;
+and but that the surrounding woods, with the peculiarity
+of harboring no shoots nor underbrush, betokened
+the locality, one could scarcely have identified
+the vicinage. The river was out of sight; the levee,
+unseemly, utilitarian, suggestive of jeopardy in its
+promise of protection, held its serpentine course far
+beyond the range of the windows of Dryad-Dene.
+There were no forest trees immediately about the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span>house; the grounds were laid off in the formal Italian
+style, with conventional walks in the midst of a fine
+green turf embellished with cone-shaped evergreens
+and other ornamental shrubs, white stone vases, terraces
+with stone copings and steps; and pleasing
+though the effect was to the eye, it was as foreign to all
+suggestions of Mississippi as if it had been hundreds
+of miles from the dominant old river. Only when its
+beauty might compensate for its old-fashioned savor
+was aught brought into use of merely domestic suggestions.
+These walks were covered with tiny, fine
+white shells, brought up by steamer in hogsheads from
+the Gulf coast; and charming as was their aspect, this
+entailed not more expense than ordinary gravel,
+which must needs have been imported also, for there
+was not a pebble to be found in all this stoneless region.
+A crystalline glitter from one side betokened
+the slanting glass sashes of the conservatory, and great
+ornamental plants—palms and Japanese tree-ferns—were
+ranged on either side of the stone flight of steps
+of the main entrance, as well as the porte-cochère.
+The house was of brick, with stone facings, the roof
+of fantastic device, of many peaks and gables; a tower
+was at the eastern corner; a deep loggia, an oriel
+window, a balcony, embellished the façades elsewhere,
+breaking up every suggestion of regularity in
+the architectural effect.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The large reception hall, into which Desmond was
+ushered, had a fire blazing in a deep chimney-place,
+so huge as to be of mediæval suggestion, and a grand
+staircase in massive oak, descending in devious turns,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span>with here a landing below a great, stained glass window,
+and here a niche in which was a marble bust on
+a tall pedestal; on the lowest step was lolling a young
+lady, a cup of tea in her hand and a riding-crop across
+her knee. There were several other figures turning at
+gaze as he entered; in fact, the apartment seemed full
+of people to Desmond, coming into an unaccustomed
+entourage from the brighter light without. It was a
+moment or two before his dazed sight disintegrated
+the group. Most of the party were sipping tea, as they
+stood about, their whips under their arms, for they
+were in riding costume. Two ladies sat chatting in the
+high-backed antique chairs on either side of the fire.
+A little beyond, in a deep bay-window, was a tea-table,
+a rich gleam of color with its choice ware and lustre
+of silver, where Mrs. Kentopp, in a blue-and-white
+striped silk tea-gown, long and flowing, was handling
+the sugar-tongs, while a tall, blond youth was holding
+out his cup toward her, apparently facetiously dickering
+for an extra lump. She suddenly caught sight
+of Desmond, and sent the sugar-bowl falling to the
+tray and scattering its treasures as she rose precipitately.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“There, now!” she exclaimed, “I said I heard
+horses’ hoofs, and this greedy thing said I didn’t,”—for
+the young man had possessed himself of the
+tongs and was sweetening his tea to his own taste.
+“I can’t hear the phaeton’s wheels for the rubber
+tires.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>She swept toward Desmond, the skirt of her gown
+trailing behind her, and the white lace which veiled
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span>its front from yoke to hem all shimmering above
+the broad blue-and-white stripes of the silk foundation.
+“Mr. Desmond,” she cried, “how good of you
+to come!” She pressed his hand cordially, and turned
+about to the group with her most coquettish air, her
+fluffy flaxen curls above her forehead somewhat more
+deeply tinted in the glow of the fire and the light
+through the ruby “jewels” of the stained glass window.
+“This is the Mr. Desmond with whom we all
+fell in love over at Great Oaks,” she exclaimed joyously.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Is it the regulation thing to fall in love with Mr.
+Desmond?” one of the young ladies asked, as Mrs.
+Kentopp, having concluded her flaring collective introduction,
+began to mention the names of the guests
+nearest at hand.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Miss Allandyce was standing beside the tall newel-post,
+and he noted in surprise that she wore the
+dark cloth “cross-saddle riding-breeches” affected
+by progressive horsewomen, with boots to the knee
+and a riding-coat, in lieu of the habit in which he
+was accustomed to see fair equestrians. The costume
+was not utterly unknown to his observation, but
+never should he have expected to see it here, and
+affected by a lady with the unmistakable southern
+accent. She was tall and thin, though of a large frame,
+and wore her masculine gear as successfully as a
+big, bony boy might have done. She was not without
+charm; her gauntleted hands were small, her boots
+were shapely and slender and displayed a high instep.
+She had a Derby hat in one hand, while she held her
+crop under her arm, and nibbled at a sandwich from
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>the other. She had a fair, frank, freckled face; her
+auburn hair was packed high on her head to be well
+out of the way of the Derby, and amidst the mass two
+or three fleecy short curls escaped from a richly tinted
+tortoise-shell comb. She seemed much at ease, and
+moved about with great freedom among the petticoats,
+though there was no other costume similar to
+her attire. The delusive draperies of a divided skirt,
+which one of the party wore, came to the floor, and
+were even fuller and much less graceful than the
+familiar riding-habit of the girl who sat upon the
+step, and who was of the type so usual in that country,—the
+woman who looks like a white rose, with dark
+eyes and hair and very fair, delicate skin; who spends
+the summer-time resting indoors, with a novel, taking
+care of her complexion; who would as soon consign
+herself and her complexion to Tophet as bathe in
+the sea, or climb a mountain, or walk out without
+a veil or a mask of chamois after April. She had
+an oval face, her lips were red, and her high silk hat
+had all the chic which the contrast with exceeding
+femininity is expected to afford.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Can I bow upward?” she asked, with a ripple of
+lazy laughter. “Is it polite to bow when you are sitting
+on the floor?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“You are perfectly horrid, Gertie,—the idea of
+pretending to be so worn out as all that by a little
+horseback exercise!” Mrs. Kentopp declared, with
+an assumed air of pettish displeasure. “Please don’t
+speak to Miss Kelvin, I beg of you, Mr. Desmond.
+Remember that I haven’t introduced you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>“I am saving up for the dance this evening, Mr.
+Desmond,” the young lady declared. “You ought
+to be glad that you did not get here in time for the
+drag-hunt. We have had a run after an old bag, that
+we made believe was a fox,—and I never knew before
+how many bones I had to ache.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Would you ache any less if you had had a fox
+instead of an anise-seed bag?” Mrs. Kentopp reproached
+her. “Let me give you some tea, Mr. Desmond”;
+and with all her silken train a-flutter she
+whisked back to the tea-table.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Yes, indeed,—glory would have sustained me,”
+Gertrude Kelvin declared. “I was ahead of the
+hounds, Mr. Desmond,” she protested, still in her soft
+collapse on the lowest step of the stairs. “The field
+was nowhere. I can’t say that I was in at the death,
+for there was nothing to die; but if I could have
+had the brush, I should have been forever happy. Nobody
+could call me lazy any more! I can’t say that I
+captured the bag—Is that sportsmanlike, Mr.
+Desmond?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Did the hounds run well?” asked Desmond, seeking
+to seem interested, now equipped with a cup of
+tea and a sandwich, and free to stand about at a
+distance from Mrs. Kentopp.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh,—they did that!” exclaimed Miss Gertrude
+Kelvin, wagging her head and widening her eyes to
+express great speed; “and I was in—with the bag
+to hold!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh, the hounds make me mad,—they are so
+easily deceived! I hate a fool!” Miss Allandyce
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_158'>158</span>came up in a gentlemanly fashion near Desmond and
+Miss Kelvin, looking down at that young lady, who
+was secretly a bit out of countenance at her proximity
+in this novel attire. She said no more, and
+Miss Allandyce went on presently, moving one of her
+handsome feet with a heel and toe alternation, to
+which she was accustomed with her skirts, but which
+now had a style of brazen indifference in the mind
+of the young lady clumped up in her habit at the
+foot of the stairs. “It is a pretty good pack, though.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Colonel Kentopp’s kennels, or do they belong to
+a neighborhood hunt?” asked Desmond.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Both girls opened wide eyes to horrify and impress
+him.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Neither!” replied Miss Kelvin, significantly.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Isn’t that ridiculous?” exclaimed the strong-minded
+Allandyce, whirling half around on her heel.
+“The pack belongs to an old wood-chopper named
+Sloper,—and ‘the quality’ <em>borrow</em> his dogs.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Isn’t that low?” Miss Kelvin cast up her dark
+eyes from her humble posture. “<em>He</em> is all right—for
+a wood-chopper! Is he Irish,—or Scotch? He has
+a queer accent.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Plain Mississippi,—without any foreign frills,”
+replied Miss Allandyce.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“He lives all alone,—got no relatives,—and
+keeps such a lot of dogs for company, he says. They
+are just friends of his,—guests, a permanent house-party,
+and oh!—think of it!—when they all ask
+together to be helped first at breakfast.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“And the neighborhood planters object to it, for
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_159'>159</span>he won’t take a cent, and they don’t want him in the
+run; but if they borrow his dogs, they have to invite
+him and treat him as a guest for the time being. So
+about a year ago they thought they would make up
+a good pack—” explained Miss Allandyce.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Went at it in great style—” interpolated Miss
+Kelvin.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Imported dogs,—English—”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Colonel Kentopp bought some beauties—”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Great price—”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh,—oo—oo—!” said Miss Kelvin, but beyond
+that enigmatic syllable she could not express her sentiments.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh,—oo—oo!” echoed Miss Allandyce.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Their eyes filled with tears of laughter, as one
+looked down and the other looked up.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Well, how did they run?” asked Desmond.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Miss Kelvin in her lowly posture took refuge in
+the safety of silence. She began to manifest renewed
+interest in her sandwich, and proceeded to eat it up
+on both sides of its bit of encircling ribbon.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Perhaps even the assumption of manly attire imparts
+a degree of courage. Miss Allandyce chose a
+bolder course. She walked first to the tea-table and
+put down her cup,—Desmond realizing too late that
+the influence of her boyish aspect had prevented
+him from offering that service. As she came back,
+her Derby in her hand and flecking her boots with
+her riding-whip, she looked over her shoulder once or
+twice to make sure of Mrs. Kentopp’s distance. Then
+she said: “I’ll tell you, but you must never mention
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_160'>160</span>it to her, and above all things never to the colonel,—he
+is a sweet dear and I love him! His English hounds
+ran like fun; they gave tongue like a bell,—the
+most mellow, searching, thrilling, musical sound you
+ever heard,—and the first staked-and-ridered rail
+fence they came to—”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“They could as easily have climbed a tree, the
+poor foreigners!” giggled Miss Kelvin, sly in her
+corner.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Such a fence as our swamp dogs would just
+scramble over,” explained Miss Allandyce; “but
+the imported English hounds ran hither and thither,
+squeaking and wheezing, and Colonel Kentopp—”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“They say his language was awful!”—Miss
+Kelvin had crumpled herself up very small.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I never see him so decorous in church without
+thinking of it,” said Miss Allandyce, and the two
+exchanged a glance of extreme relish.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“The hounds climbed the fence at last?” asked
+Desmond, impatient for the sequel.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There was a moment of silent and speechless mirth.
+Then Miss Allandyce said, in a husky voice and with
+eyes full of tears, “Colonel Kentopp and the huntsman
+dismounted and <em>lifted</em> the imported English
+hounds over the fence,—and by that time the fox
+had run to Issaquena County!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Why, what a gay time you are having over
+there! What’s the fun? Don’t keep the joke to
+yourselves,” called out Mrs. Kentopp, in the midst of
+their laughter. But she did not approach the group,
+and presently the two recovered their composure.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_161'>161</span>“I wonder,—I have often wondered what did
+ever become of those imported hounds,” speculated
+Miss Allandyce.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Perfect dears, too.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“So handsome! But they were seen here no more,
+and whenever ‘the quality’ have a run, they borrow
+old man Sloper’s house-party, and put the old wood-chopper
+up on as good a horse as there is in the
+county.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“They don’t indulge in riding to hounds about
+Great Oaks, do they, Mr. Desmond?” asked Miss
+Kelvin, still resting her bones.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Not since I have been there,” replied Desmond.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“How long will you be at Great Oaks?” asked
+Miss Allandyce.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Why, I hardly know,” replied Desmond, slightly
+embarrassed.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh, they make it so delightful to guests, I don’t
+wonder you can’t say when you will get your visit
+out,” Miss Kelvin remarked.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>A sudden illumination broke in upon Desmond’s
+mind. Mrs. Kentopp had not acquainted her house-party
+with their fellow guest’s vocation.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“But I am not a guest at Great Oaks,” said Desmond,
+quickly. “I am the tutor.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>An appalled astonishment was on the face of both
+young girls for an instant. Miss Kelvin remained silent,
+but Miss Allandyce rejoined in a tone which
+obviously sought to keep the key of the previous chat,
+“Oh, yes,—Mrs. Faurie has three children,—what
+a charming household it is there!” Then she drew
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_162'>162</span>a tiny watch from her fob and said in a low tone to
+Miss Kelvin: “I wonder that Mrs. Kentopp doesn’t
+let us go and dress. I shall be a fright if I don’t
+have at least an hour.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“We have to dance, too, in our dinner-gowns,”
+Miss Kelvin murmured a trifle absently.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond silently upbraided his folly in yielding
+to the insistence that had brought him here. Despite
+his gentle breeding, the position of his family, the
+opportunities of wealth that he had hitherto enjoyed,
+his culture, he felt that he was at a disadvantage in
+general society. His poverty, his station as a private
+tutor,—to small boys, mere children,—rendered his
+presence an incongruity among frivolous people who
+could not know and could not appreciate him fairly.
+He had no opportunity to make his value and quality
+felt. It was only in some cultured coterie capable
+of going deeper than the shallow appraisement of
+fashion that he could ever hope to find again his level.
+He could not forgive himself that he had laid himself
+liable to this misapprehension, and for his life
+he could not imagine why Mrs. Kentopp had given
+her guests no intimation of his position, to avoid such
+a contretemps as he had encountered. For their own
+sake, and for hers, they would have been civil in any
+event. Had she intended to pass him off as a man of
+their world, of wealth and leisure and luxury? And
+why, indeed? For his own part he had no desire to
+pose in a guise that must coerce their respect. But
+the malapropos incident had made him feel out of
+place, as if he were a presuming aspirant, patronized
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_163'>163</span>by the Kentopps, and foisted upon their guests’ society
+without warrant. Neither of the young ladies
+had spoken again, both apparently absorbed in their
+eagerness to be off to dress, and the negligence of
+Mrs. Kentopp, still flirting at the tea-table, to give
+them the opportunity.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Suddenly Colonel Kentopp entered and rushed forward
+with an enthusiastic extended hand. “Why,
+my dear sir,” he exclaimed heartily, “I didn’t know
+that you had yet arrived. Glad to see you! How well
+you are looking! The sight of you is good for sore
+eyes.” His left hand had crept up to Desmond’s
+shoulder, which he patted affectionately as he spoke.
+“Wish you could have been with us on the run
+to-day,—great time!—But what are you all dawdling
+around here for? It is time to dress for dinner.
+The Mayberrys and Timlocks will be here long before
+you are ready. Joyce, keep those sweet nothings that
+you are whispering into my spouse’s ear for a season
+of more leisure.” And he advanced upon the tea-table,
+where Mrs. Kentopp was mildly carousing, so to speak,
+in a flirtation with a man almost young enough to
+have been her own son. She broke out into a peal
+of her affected, coquettish laughter, and Desmond in
+their midst looked on with as unresponsive a pulse,
+with as alien and unrelated a mien, as if among some
+mystic crew of Comus.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_164'>164</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c006'>The room to which Desmond was assigned was
+never intended for an unimportant guest. As he
+looked about him, he could not understand the incongruity.
+The Kentopps were neither of them such
+people as value a man for his own sake, regardless
+of wealth or station; they had no fine perceptions
+that could discriminate the higher attributes; they
+were devoid of that gift of generosity which belittles
+self to make the more of greater worth; they could
+not even understand a lofty poise of mind, and it
+amazed him that they should seem to strain after it,—to
+ignore the trivial incident of the vital fact.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It was a spacious, airy apartment at one of the corners
+of the building, and the sharp angle was decorated
+with a dainty oriel window, though large enough to
+hold a fauteuil, a writing-desk, and a shelf of books;
+from this outlook one might see down a deep bosky
+dell artificially beautified, with a tangle of vines and
+interlacing shrubs, amongst which was visible here
+and there an elusive face, with the pointed ears
+of the fauns and elves of garden statuary. There
+were no trees of tall growth, and hence he caught a
+repeated glimpse of jets of leaping water among
+the leafage, and in the stillness he could hear the
+splashing of a fountain. At the end of a pleached
+alley was a rustic pavilion, evidenced by its conical
+roof, and in the opposite direction a life-size figure in
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_165'>165</span>marble on a pedestal had suggestions befitting the
+classic ideal of sylvan nymphs. The new fad of an
+old dial was illustrated in a shadowy nook where the
+sun might make scant register of time. This, Desmond
+was sure, was the “dene” which gave the place its
+name. The preciousness of its design affronted him,
+despite its prettiness. In his unconsciousness he
+did no homage to the ingenuity of Kentopp, who,
+after the burning of his simple farmhouse, inherited
+from his father, at the other end of the place,
+had utilized this desirable building-site despite the
+proximity of an old “bear wallow,”—the swampy
+depression thus drained, civilized, and made ornamental
+and even poetic. Any declivity or acclivity
+was rare in this level region, and the “dene” was
+greatly admired; its original status was wholly forgotten
+in the success of the landscape gardener’s
+achievement, save when some blunt yeoman neighbor
+sought a rift in the armor of the Kentopps’ satisfaction
+and the relish of a crude joke by directing a
+note or other paper-writing to “Kentopp Bear Wallow”
+instead of “Dryad-Dene.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>As Desmond turned from the window and again
+surveyed the room, he was struck anew by the elaborate
+aspect of its appointments. A reclining-chair
+invited to lounging, with foot-rest and book-holder.
+There was the daintiest of toilet tables draped with
+lace, instead of the heavy old mahogany bureau such
+as the gentry of Deepwater Bend were accustomed
+to use; and in place of the immemorial mahogany
+four-poster was a brass bedstead, also canopied and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_166'>166</span>covered with lace, and furnished with a duvet of delicate,
+embroidered blue silk. The polished floor had
+rugs in which this azure hue predominated; an open
+door gave on a bath-room tiled in blue and white, and
+the cut-glass candlesticks among the other crystal accessories
+of the toilet table held faint blue wax tapers,—never
+intended for use, however, for a flood of
+gas-light illumined the room, and made his preparations
+an easy matter, in contrast with the usual labors
+of dressing in the country for a festive occasion by
+the light of a kerosene lamp, however decorated.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond had earlier experienced a natural youthful
+gratulation that his evening clothes, relic of his
+London visit the previous June, seeming a thousand
+years ago and in a different state of existence, were
+so fresh and unworn, and a specially handsome garb.
+He could at least appear to personal advantage and be
+no discredit to his entertainers. Now he did not care!
+He fretfully adjusted the diamond studs, a gift that
+he had not parted with in all the exigencies of the
+financial stress he had known, and the choice and fine
+sleeve-links, also mementos of happier days. He would
+as soon wear jeans, he said to himself, as he stood, tall
+and conspicuously imposing, before the long mirror,
+tying his cravat with a touch that grudged its practiced
+deftness, for in his undergraduate days he had
+been something of a dude, despite the roughening
+influences of the “Gridiron.” He called out in a peremptory
+tone when a tap fell upon the door, and as
+it opened admitting a young gentleman, one of the
+guests of the house, the leisurely drawl with which
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_167'>167</span>he entered upon his mission received an impetus from
+the imperious gravity and challenge of the eyes fixed
+upon him.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Mrs. Kentopp requested that as I was going
+by—Great Scott! they do you immensely proud.”
+He was young, and blond, and of slight figure, and
+had already a tendency to baldness. He was not tall,
+but very erect, deported himself with conscious chic,
+and spoke with a superficial, negligent enunciation.
+It was with an air of surprised amusement that he
+paused to look about the room. “They haven’t put
+me up half so fine. I feel slighted,” with an airy laugh.
+“Well,—Mrs. Kentopp asked that as I was going by
+I would stop for you, to—to”—he was beginning
+to feel the influence of Desmond’s eyes—“to show
+you where the drawing-rooms are located.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Lest I should lose my way without chart or compass,”
+Desmond commented.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Well,—they seemed actually to try to twist things
+when this house was planned,—nothing is where you
+would expect to find it,” said Mr. Herndon.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I am beholden to you, then, for towing me to a
+safe harbor,” said Desmond.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Young Herndon had recovered his equanimity.
+“Kentopp is such an incorrigible dawdle that she dare
+not trust him. But I have a special virtue of promptness,—among
+my many other virtues. My friends
+say that I will die some day twenty minutes before
+my time comes.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Notwithstanding this vaunted promptitude, there
+were several gentlemen already in the large drawinging-rooms
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_168'>168</span>when the two entered. The glitter of gas
+and crystal from the chandeliers, the gloss of the floors,
+the richness of the oriental rugs, the gilded chairs and
+sofas, upholstered in cream and terra-cotta satin brocade,
+the glow, deep yet delicate, of costly pictures,
+the scattered ornaments, vases of Venetian glass and
+choice porcelain, tall urns of Persian ware, Chinese
+curios in carved ivory,—there was not a suggestion
+of home but the great fire blazing behind a brass
+fender and andirons, and this was so bedizened by a
+modern “high-art” mantel, that the leaping hickory
+flames had much ado to make the domestic note
+heard in the bizarre medley; and indeed the fire itself
+was a mere matter of ornament, for the house was
+heated by a furnace fed by Pittsburgh coal, even more
+convenient in this riparian locality than wood which
+must be hewn, and incredibly cheap by reason of the
+low rates of water-carriage as compared with railway
+freightage. Neither of the Kentopps had yet appeared,
+and as Desmond entered the room, though
+maintaining his manner of proud composure, he was
+grateful for the fact. Their overwhelming cordiality
+daunted him in the realization of its superficiality.
+He fumbled vainly for his identity in the midst of
+their soft deceits and unimagined intention, beyond
+his ken, but unmistakable. He could meet their
+guests, to whom he was not even conventionally beholden,
+on a level as man to man, and he would make
+no concessions. He would maintain his sense of his
+own dignity.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In the sensitiveness and self-consciousness incident
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_169'>169</span>to an unaccustomed and in a degree a false position,
+he did not reflect that beyond his name he was wholly
+unknown to the party, and that the momentary interval
+after his appearance was instinct only with uncertainty
+and a preliminary effort to “place him” in
+evolving some suitable phrase introductory to conversation
+with a stranger. He interpreted the silence
+as cool, critical, not to say supercilious, and he had
+no mind humbly to await his adjustment to such place
+in the coterie as the sense of the meeting, so to speak,
+might consign him. He walked to one side of the
+hearth, and stood for a moment as if in contemplation
+of the group. Then singling out one, a man of mature
+years, conventional of aspect, with a long, thin face
+and a most unenthusiastic expression, he remarked,
+“I think I have not met you earlier.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“And what of that?” was in the countenance of
+all the amazed group, as Desmond held the centre
+of the stage,—even in the impassive, wooden countenance
+of the gentleman whom he had addressed.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Mr. Loring, Mr. Desmond.” The youthful Herndon
+was no reluctant scholar; as he often remarked,
+when he had had a thing demonstrated to him forty
+thousand times, he had learned it. He had now mastered
+the fact that the tutor, for whatever reason
+placed in the position of Colonel Kentopp’s guest, was
+by no means disposed to interpret this as patronage,
+nor to capitulate to good-fellowship on anything short
+of the full honors of war. “Mr. Loring has just arrived,”
+Herndon further explained.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>As they shook hands Desmond’s next remark brought
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_170'>170</span>a sudden gleam of expression into the wooden grooves
+of Mr. Loring’s immobile face. “I have heard you
+mentioned at Great Oaks Plantation,” he said, recalling
+vaguely Mrs. Faurie’s account of the dilatory
+methods of the prospective purchaser of Dryad-Dene.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Great Oaks? Are you visiting at Great Oaks?
+Charming old place.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I am living there. I am the tutor of the Faurie
+boys.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mr. Loring could not control the surprise in his face,
+for this princely presence was not to his mind the way
+the tutor of unlicked cubs should look. It was no intentional
+discourtesy, for he said with more animation
+than an article so apparently manufactured might be
+expected to show: “Do you intend to make teaching
+your regular profession?” He could but think that
+there must be something unexplained. This was some
+friend of the Fauries, perhaps taking a pose for a
+freak; there was some lure that had induced a pretended
+lodging in a humble position at Great Oaks.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“My present intention,—certainly.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Nevertheless, Mr. Loring did not for one moment
+relegate this imposing personage to the situation of
+a mere pedagogic drudge for small boys, because, if
+it were true, what did he here? The Fauries, with
+their ancient traditions and high standards, might
+annul and obliterate all worldly differences in their
+intercourse with a poor gentleman, refined and intellectual,
+but never the recent and purse-proud Kentopps.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>And here suddenly they both were, overflowing
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_171'>171</span>with cordial greetings and exclamatory apologies and
+with elaborate rustlings and bows. Colonel Kentopp
+showed such a glittering expanse of white shirt front
+over his broad bosom that the sight of so much linen
+suggested undress; and his wife showed so much
+collar-bone and sternum independent of fabric and
+almost of flesh that she suggested no dress at all.
+She wore, however, a ruby-tinted brocade, and a fine
+pendant of rubies and diamonds swung from a delicate
+chain about her throat. Her hair had a deeper
+hue of blondine than usual, and she wore in it a cluster
+of ruby-tinted ostrich tips, at the base of which
+a very large diamond scintillated.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But diamonds were all at a discount in comparison
+with those that glimmered like dewdrops in the dark
+masses of Gertrude Kelvin’s hair. They were not
+many nor of great size, but they were set artfully to
+quiver and glitter at every movement of her head,
+and the midnight of her hair gave them a stellular
+brilliancy. She was attired in a gown of delicate
+green tissue over silk of the same shade, and the
+exquisite whiteness of her shoulders and arms and
+face, heightened by the dainty tint of the dress,
+seemed worth some deprivation of the garish light
+of the summer sun and outdoor joys.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Come, Mr. Desmond, you will take out Miss
+Kelvin,” said Mrs. Kentopp, busied in arranging her
+party. Then in an aside to Mr. Loring behind her fan
+of ruby-tinted ostrich plumes: “He was just dying
+with suspense!” She played her blue eyes at him
+significantly, and Mr. Loring was thus given to understand
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_172'>172</span>that Mr. Desmond’s lure in Deepwater Bend
+was Miss Kelvin.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“But how old man Kelvin will cut up if there is
+really no money,” he thought sagely.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In slow and stately wise they filed out in couples
+to the dining-room; and even if the predilections of
+Mr. Loring were already engaged by the traditions
+of the <em>ancien régime</em>, he must needs have admitted
+to himself that the entourage at Dryad-Dene was
+most attractive, embellished by this glittering company,
+which set off the house in its gala aspect to
+the greatest advantage.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The dining-room was large, and its appointments betokened
+that its owners gave serious heed to the problems
+and the pleasures of the table. “My house was
+built around my refrigerator,” Mrs. Kentopp was fond
+of saying; and Colonel Kentopp might have added,
+with a significance not altogether literal, that his house
+was built over his cellar. For the Kentopps, though
+not sages of wisdom, were quite indisposed to depend
+largely upon the attractions of their personality and
+the feast of reason and the flow of soul to commend
+their entertainments. The wines were choice and had
+been long in bottle, and distance and inaccessibility
+worked no impairment upon the menu. All the delicacies
+of the season, and many out of season, graced
+the successive courses, and the decorations of rare
+exotics—the spring flowers were left to bloom in
+their thousands out-of-doors—had indeed scant affinity
+with the backwoods.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“These are from our own hothouses,” Mrs. Kentopp
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_173'>173</span>was saying, in reply to a comment. “Yes,—we
+have the world at command at Dryad-Dene. This
+is the newly discovered site of the Garden of Eden,
+between the waters of the Mississippi and Bogue
+Humma-Echeto; they used to be called the Pishon
+and the Gihon rivers, you know.” She held her head
+down and looked up under the rims of her eyelids
+to emphasize the felicity of her remark. “If there
+is any little item that we haven’t got, the Mississippi
+River on one side and the railroad on the other will
+bring it to us.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mr. Loring sat at her right hand and was subject
+to all her beguilements. Opposite at a little distance
+was Desmond, between Miss Kelvin and Miss Allandyce,
+with Herndon on the farther side. Desmond
+had been presented to the Mayberry and Timlock
+contingent, but he had taken only a vague impression
+of pink and blue draperies and blonde hair and
+roseate smiles, with the usual complement of attendant
+cavaliers; for in the place to which he had been
+assigned he was absorbed in an effort, more or less successful,
+to explain to Miss Allandyce a reason for not
+recognizing her that should be something less blunt
+than the statement that her riding-costume had quite
+disguised her at their earlier meeting in the afternoon.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I have heard that the cultivation of the powers
+of memory is considered important in modern education,”
+she twitted him. “I should think your pedagogical
+laurels would wilt after this. How can you
+urge upon Chub Faurie the value of such discipline
+of the faculty of—of—”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_174'>174</span>“Observation,” suggested Miss Kelvin, on his
+other hand.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Yes,—observation and—and tabulation of traits
+as to enable you to recognize an object—”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“In the landscape—” prompted Miss Kelvin.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Yes—in the landscape—an object with a red
+head, after the lapse of an interval of time,—an
+hour, say—”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Arithmetically, sixty minutes, to be exact,” Miss
+Kelvin urged her on.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond had no sense of amusement as he realized
+that he had tabulated her equestrian garb in his
+mind and would never forget it. The predicament
+he was in was far too critical for that. He made a
+gallant struggle for a diversion of interest. “I saw
+no object with a red head,” he stipulated. “I should
+never tabulate it as red, but auburn.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Then you would be most discourteous; for red
+heads are very fashionable, and mine is treated with
+chemicals at stated intervals to make it seem redder
+than it is,” she said gravely, assuming an air of
+staid and offended decorum.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He wondered in his desperation whether it would
+be permissible to tell her frankly that she was not
+half so gentlemanly in her gown of white silk. A
+necklace of seed pearls of fantastic device hung
+about her delicate white neck. Her short sleeves had
+a fall of lace that met the tops of her long white kid
+gloves, which she had slipped off her hands without
+disturbing the upper section, tucking the fingers beneath
+her bracelets. She wore a comb of seed pearls
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_175'>175</span>in her auburn hair, and she looked very handsome.
+He had an idea, curious enough to him, that she
+did not in the least grasp the reason of his failure
+to recognize her, his apparent lapse of memory, but
+that Miss Kelvin had divined it in an instant, and
+had a mischievous delight in his plight. Although
+Miss Kelvin would not have alluded to the riding-costume
+her friend affected,—for she thought it
+a horrifying, strong-minded notion, worthy of the
+woman who wants to vote, who engages in business,
+who preaches, who practices medicine and law, and
+its adoption by a southerner an apostasy, abominably
+uncharacteristic,—her eyes dwelt upon him with a
+luminous mirth, and now and then, as she caught
+his glance, she burst into a ripple of involuntary
+laughter.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Her recurrent observation of him, her smiles in
+response to his glance as oysters and soup, and fish
+and entrée, successively filed past him, almost untouched,
+were remarked by Mr. Loring, and these
+apparently tender passages between the two were
+interpreted to further Mrs. Kentopp’s plan even more
+than she had anticipated. She had expected to artfully
+give Mr. Loring such an idea of mutual interest
+as their propinquity might suggest, aided by some
+crafty phrases of her own. But she had not dared
+to hope for these bright glances from Gertrude, for
+her half-suppressed delighted laughter, for the attitude
+of the girl, leaning half across Desmond to whisper
+and prompt Miss Allandyce to further jocose
+upbraidings of the mischance. Gertrude seemed, indeed,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_176'>176</span>throwing herself at his head; and to her demonstration
+he ardently responded, now and again
+turning to take her counsel in a low voice how he
+might best plead his excuses, often misadvised to his
+detriment and setting Selina Allandyce off on a new
+score of rebukes and reproaches. For they found
+the tutor great fun. After the first shock of disappointment,
+they resigned themselves with a good grace
+to his impecunious state and ineligibility. He was too
+handsome a man to view with indifference, and too
+interesting, for his manner attracted no less than his
+presence. There was something, too, below the surface
+of his talk, and while they did not discriminate its
+quality, they were aware of its submergence there.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>As the gay chat grew in interest and animation,
+Mrs. Kentopp in her elation could not leave the aspect
+of the trio to produce its own impression; she
+must needs give it a nudge.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Love’s young dream,” she murmured sentimentally
+to Mr. Loring, her head held down, the iris of
+her eyes under the upper lids. “‘There’s nothing half
+so sweet in life.’”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mr. Loring for some time had seemed quite attentive
+to the champagne and the roast, but he was not
+altogether absorbed.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Not so young, I take it, as far as the gentleman
+is concerned,” he replied discerningly.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh,—oh,”—Mrs. Kentopp could hardly contradict
+this conclusion fast enough. “Why, <em>he</em> is just
+a boy,—a collegian,—graduated last June,—just
+twenty-four.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_177'>177</span>“Rather old for a collegian,” commented Mr.
+Loring, dryly.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Took a very elaborate course, all sorts of elective
+extras as well as the regular curriculum. Has a degree
+from <em>two</em> great universities.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“One is more than enough,” sneered Mr. Loring,
+who had matriculated with much brilliancy on ’Change.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh, yes,—he is a mere boy!” Mrs. Kentopp
+emphasized her insistence.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“He looks fully thirty,” said Mr. Loring, wondering
+why olives were not always “pitted,”—otherwise
+it seemed more decent to swallow the pits, if the possibilities
+of appendicitis did not hinder.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh, he has had so much sorrow,”—and Mrs.
+Kentopp conjured an appealing sadness into her eyes
+and shook her flaxen head as she bent it to look
+down in token of sympathetic woe.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Hasn’t turned his hair gray,” said Mr. Loring.
+“He is the finest-looking man I ever saw.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh, do you think so?” asked Mrs. Kentopp,
+with a surprised and negative tendency.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Certainly; he has a noble head, and a very fine
+and impressive face. They must be long on looks at
+Great Oaks. I always thought Mrs. Faurie the most
+beautiful woman in the world.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“‘The most beautiful woman in the world!’”—one
+of the Mayberry group caught the words and
+tossed them back. “I know just whom you are talking
+about.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The attention became concentrated. Mrs. Kentopp
+sought to divert it. “I want you to observe the mould
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_178'>178</span>of the sorbet,” she interrupted, bespeaking notice for
+the red ices. “Somebody said that this looks like a
+melon and ought not to be striped this deep red. Do
+you think it is a melon?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Why, no,” said Desmond. “It is a pomegranate.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“There,—what did I tell you?” She clapped her
+hands in juvenile glee, as she spoke across the length
+of the table to her husband.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“The first time I ever tasted a real pomegranate was
+down at Great Oaks,” said Miss Mayberry. “They
+have them in their old-fashioned garden yet. You
+have got the flavor, too,” she added, as she daintily
+tasted the ice.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“And who do you say is the most beautiful
+woman in the world?” queried Mr. Loring, his inelastic
+countenance reluctantly crinkling in his smile,
+sure of her answer.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Mrs. Faurie, of course! I have always heard her
+called that, and everywhere as well as at home. I
+remember when we were at Vevey we met some Italians,—high-class
+people who knew the Berkeleys,—oh,
+they were very agreeable,—and one day we
+were talking at random of pictures and pose and elements
+of beauty, and one of the gentlemen, who was
+quite an art connoisseur, said that he believed he knew
+the most beautiful woman in all the world. He had
+met her in Chamouni, doing Mont Blanc, and that sort
+of thing; and when he said that she lived in Paris,
+Madame Honoria Faurie, we all screamed! He didn’t
+even know that she was an American.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_179'>179</span>“But she has gone off a good deal in her looks of
+late,” Mrs. Kentopp suggested.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I hoped that I would meet her here to-night,”
+said Mr. Loring, without even ordinary tact; everything
+connected with Great Oaks, the embodiment of
+his ideal, for which his soul sighed, was interesting to
+him. “Is Mrs. Faurie not well?” He fixed his eyes
+on Desmond and asked the question directly across
+the table.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh, yes,—quite well,” Desmond replied, a trifle
+embarrassed.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There was a pause. The general attention was
+apparently required by the game course, which was
+just being served. The inference was too plain.
+Mrs. Faurie, it seemed, had not cared to honor the
+diversion at Dryad-Dene with the distinction of her
+presence. For who could imagine Mrs. Kentopp’s
+purblind folly in failing to invite her!</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The tact of all the party seemed to have suffered
+a collapse. “I suppose that Mrs. Faurie has gone so
+much, and seen so much, and had so much, that she
+does not care for our neighborhood gatherings,” said
+Gertrude Kelvin at length.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“She finds Great Oaks as dull as the grave,”
+snapped Mrs. Kentopp, the pendulous tendency of
+her cheeks reasserted without the dimpling breadth
+of laughter. “Doesn’t she, Mr. Desmond?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He was a little at a loss. “She complains of its
+monotony,” he said.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“The idea!” exclaimed Mr. Loring, indignantly;
+“one of the finest places in the whole Mississippi
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_180'>180</span>River country. From Memphis to the Balize you
+couldn’t find its superior. To my mind it is the loveliest
+place I ever saw. I wish it was mine! Monotony!
+I’d like to own that kind of monotony.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>From the foot of the table Colonel Kentopp, in all
+his pose of geniality, with his glass of Chambertin in
+his hand, lowered upon Mrs. Kentopp.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The woman rallied first from the contretemps.
+“The land I know is fine and there is a deal of it,
+and the outbuildings are good and stanch, but the
+old mansion is a rattle-trap,—so out of repair,
+and built on any kind of an old plan. It has no style
+about it, no modern improvements and embellishments
+and—”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“It simply crystallizes the past,” Mr. Loring declared
+solemnly. “It is an epitome of the old South,—its
+comfort, its space, its disregard of ostentation;
+its broad acres about it can keep the tally of its
+values; it takes you back a hundred years; it has
+yesterday in every line. I wish it was mine!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He talked on and on, the taciturn man, over the
+salad and the sweets, the theme unvaried, throughout
+the service of the dessert with the notable ancient
+Madeira, till at last his voice was lost in a silken rustle.
+Mrs. Kentopp had given the signal for rising, and the
+young girls were presently flitting along the big square
+hall, still visible from the dining-room, making a picture
+that enhanced the charming setting which should have
+appealed to any man with an eye for beauty, who
+did not cultivate a distorted squint backward toward
+the exploded past instead of the sophisticated present.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_181'>181</span>The ballroom was in the third story,—another
+intimation of the intensely modern spirit of Dryad-Dene.
+There was all out-of-doors to build on, and
+surely there was scant reason to economize space when
+the value of land was contemplated by the quarter
+section instead of the running foot. The destined use
+and cost of building materials alone might limit the
+size of any structure in Deepwater Bend. But though
+there was no need to climb stairs, there was much
+that was picturesque in this airy ballroom, and it was
+indeed a great contrast to the long, low wing devoted
+to the same purpose at Great Oaks, with its green
+shutters closed, the spiders weaving in the corners,
+and the wide, smooth spaces of its polished flooring
+devoted to the humble purposes of miscellaneous
+storage; for there was not a dance at Great Oaks
+mansion in all the quiet years while Mrs. Faurie had
+been the admired cynosure in palatial assemblages in
+many foreign capitals.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Here the decorated ceiling had a fine pitch, and all
+the architectural embellishments of the house below
+culminated on this level; the cupola of the tower gave
+a circular alcove to the ballroom, and on the opposite
+side the French windows issued upon a long, flat roof
+that, furnished with a balustrade, offered a charming
+promenade between the waltzes for the young people
+under the white, palpitating stars and in close familiarity
+with the gentle night wind. It offered also every
+opportunity to the overheated dancers for pneumonia
+and influenza; but as they gave this fact no heed,
+it might scarcely be considered one of the choice
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_182'>182</span>advantages of the ballroom. The hothouses had sent
+hither their offering of palms and banana trees and
+ferns for a tasteful scheme of decoration, and an
+Italian band, brought up from New Orleans for the
+occasion, tossed lilting melodies from behind a leafy
+screen. The stringed vibrations found in Desmond’s
+heart a thrilling response of poignant memory, reviving
+in contrast with the present all the happy past,
+the cherished prospects, the vanished faces, the hallowed
+home. But he was young, and his pulses were
+astir with vitality and vigor. The rhythm, the motion,
+the sweet, swinging melody, imparted their own jubilant
+effects, and he could but enjoy with his muscles
+all the buoyancy of his stalwart young frame, while
+with a curious duality his heart’s sorrows were unassuaged
+and his mental indifference and aloofness were
+no self-deceit. It was perhaps the mental attitude of
+many a reveler in joyous scenes that awoke no sense
+of mirth, but it had no parallel among the dancers
+at Dryad-Dene. The young ladies were all a-weary
+of the dull season spent at the abominated plantations;
+it was too late for New Orleans, being mid-Lent,
+indeed, and yet too early for the White Sulphur
+Springs or the Gulf coast.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“How delicious!” Gertrude Kelvin exclaimed. “I
+should have thought I had forgotten how to ‘two-step,’—I
+have scarcely stood on my feet since Mardi-Gras.”
+For it was with the charming white rose that
+Desmond found himself chiefly awhirl. He danced
+specially well, and more than once, as the music recommenced,
+she looked from a chatting group toward
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_183'>183</span>him, with so bright and expectant a smile that he was
+fain to ask the pleasure once more. And indeed it
+was no great constraint. She was as light, as airy, as
+poetic of movement, swinging as rhythmically as a
+blossom on a bough, with as little suggestion of effort.
+Her delicate green tissue draperies floated diaphanous
+in the breeze of their motion; her white arms and
+neck were fairer still in the moony gleams of the
+shades of the gas-jets; her ethereal pallor took on
+no unbecoming flush with the exertion; her movement
+was as devoid of the idea of fatigue as the flitting
+of a butterfly or the noiseless winging here and
+there of one of the white moths that, allured by the
+lights, came in, now and then, from out of the night.
+The sparkle of the diamonds in her hair flashed into
+his eyes occasionally as her head was poised so close
+to his shoulder, for she was tall despite her small
+and feminine ways, and they made a pretty couple
+to look at, as Mrs. Kentopp did not omit to point
+out to Mr. Loring when at length he came into the
+apartment.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He had been loitering at the table over Kentopp’s
+good wine and fine cigars with his martyrized host,
+although the younger men had earlier joined the
+ladies, who had had coffee in the drawing-rooms, and
+together they had trooped up to the ballroom at the
+first long-drawn, plangent cadence of the violins.
+Mrs. Kentopp had a freshened, elated mien as she
+surveyed the scene, standing in the ballroom door
+beneath the vines of an elaborate hanging-basket,
+with the most feathery of trailing ferns, and plying
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_184'>184</span>her fan of ruby ostrich plumes, though she felt the
+cool breeze from the widely opened windows.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“A handsome couple; that will be a match,” she
+commented, smiling sentimentally.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“No doubt,—no doubt,” replied Mr. Loring. He
+smelled very strong of tobacco: when the cigars were
+mild, he smoked a good many of them. He was
+a self-made man, the architect of his own fortune,—a
+massive structure on which little ornament
+had been bestowed. He was apt to consider market
+prices, potential bargains, possible rebates, and equivalent
+values, even in social affairs, although his
+interest in social affairs scarcely seemed actively concerned
+with an adequate return for the outlay at
+present. He was bent upon enjoying his money, but
+he wanted the best article of pleasure that the market
+could afford. He saw an opportunity of richly rewarding
+himself at a very great bargain in buying
+one of the fine old estates in Deepwater Bend far below
+its value in the shrunken estimates of post-bellum
+ratings, where he might retire to enjoy the pose of
+magnate and millionaire within a few miles of where
+he had been born of poor but eminently respectable
+parents. His father, who had been one of the subordinate
+clerks, “mud clerk” it was called in those
+days, on a steamboat, had secured for him by favor
+a place in the office of a broker in New Orleans, and
+stood amazed by the portentous growth of his scion
+in that hotbed of speculation. Loring felt always
+much at his ease, assumed to be as “good as anybody,”
+yet he was very definitely aware that his consequence
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_185'>185</span>would be much enhanced in the neighborhood
+that he desired to dominate by the possession of one
+of the fine old places, at whose seigneurial splendor he
+had once gazed as at fairyland, without a thought of
+entrance. He had little sympathy with poverty,—it
+was never romantic, or picturesque, or appealing to
+him. Wealth had been his ambition, and wealth was
+now his admiration. His study was how to seem not
+less magnificently endowed than he really was with
+this world’s goods. He was a bachelor, and could not
+express his riches in the splendor of a wife’s equipment.
+He could not afford to marry when he would,
+and since he had been able to consult his wishes, he
+had lost the impulse toward domesticity. His eyes
+roamed over the charming scene of the decorated
+room, the whirling dancers, the dark blue night looking
+in with a myriad stars from the windows of balcony
+and long, railed promenade, with no fixity of
+interest and no undercurrent of sentiment.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Yes,” he reiterated, “no doubt it will be a match.
+Naturally, Mr. Desmond will recoup his disasters by
+marrying money.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>For Mrs. Kentopp had effaced the dullness of his
+propinquity at table by talking much of Desmond. The
+matter just now nearest her heart was her scheme to
+divert Loring from the theory that Mrs. Faurie might
+become interested in the tutor, and she was sure that
+the peculiar quality of Desmond’s personality would
+soon set such a rumor afloat, were it not forestalled
+by one more credible. Mrs. Kentopp was one of those
+women whose shallow minds are reflected in their
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_186'>186</span>talk. She could no more have kept a secret without a
+word to play about it than she could have emulated
+the Spartan boy and without a sign held the gnawing
+fox beneath her cloak. She would never give
+such an intimation of her plan that Loring might
+discover and rush in upon it; but she needs must
+chat of Desmond, his recent history, his father’s
+death, the ensuing financial disasters, his relinquished
+career, the incongruity of his collegiate record with
+his humble position.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh,—I didn’t give you the idea that Mr. Desmond
+is a fortune-hunter, did I? Why, I wouldn’t
+have you think that for the world!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mrs. Kentopp had a peculiar aversion to the character
+of a fortune-hunter. As a girl she had been rich
+in her own right, and Colonel Kentopp had not escaped
+the suspicion of a lively perception of the side
+on which his bread was buttered.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Why not? Are we not all fortune-hunters?” demanded
+Mr. Loring, dryly. “What else do we hunt?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“But not in that sense—a mercenary marriage!
+Oh, no!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mr. Loring had a touch of perversity, or perhaps
+Mrs. Kentopp, with her <em>arrière pensée</em> concerning
+the disinterestedness of her own marriage, had been
+heavy-handed enough to permit him to feel rebuked.
+“I can’t look on Miss Gertrude Kelvin as such a hardship,—even
+if she would tack a tidy little fortune on
+to a wedding-ring,” he retorted, his wooden countenance
+smiling satirically.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Gertie? why, she is adorable!” cried Mrs. Kentopp,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_187'>187</span>seeking in a frenzy to find her feet in this slough
+of misapprehension. “Any man would be too lucky
+to talk about to win her, even if she would not have
+a cent!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Just <em>my</em> opinion,” said Mr. Loring, as if he had
+enforced its adoption. “But if Miss Kelvin has not
+enough money for our gentleman, perhaps his good
+looks, and his great learning,” his lip curled cynically,
+for Mr. Loring was very short on the classics, “and his
+collegiate honors, and his interesting dumps and douleur
+over the fling that Fate has given him, might appeal
+to Mrs. Faurie,—she will give up that nice income
+some day for a life-interest in a third of the estate
+and a husband,—and the third will be a deal more
+money than our tutor will ever see otherwise.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mrs. Kentopp suddenly felt a cold chill stealing up
+and down her spine, to which her dress, cut low and
+loose in the neck, left her liable. But it was not the
+inclemency of the wind! Her heart sank at this deliberate
+wording of the fear which her husband had
+evolved and she had adopted. If this idea were seriously
+entertained, the sale of Dryad-Dene was indeed
+a distant and doubtful prospect, for there were few
+investors able to compass a purchase of such magnitude,
+and fewer still with a disposition toward property
+of this character. And Dryad-Dene was not
+always gay like this. With half the rooms shut up,
+and the gilt and brocade furniture in hollands, and
+the visitors few and far between and always the same,
+and no excitement, and naught to do, and her eyes
+forever fixed on a house in New Orleans in the winter
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_188'>188</span>and a cottage on the coast in summer,—oh,
+Dryad-Dene was but a dreary imprisonment indeed
+in the depths of the backwoods! The crisis was so
+acute that it imparted to Mrs. Kentopp a touch of
+dignity.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“You forget, Mr. Loring, how very distasteful such
+a suggestion would be to Mrs. Faurie were she to
+hear of it. This man occupies a very humble position
+in her household,—a paid retainer,—not exactly
+like a courier—”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Why no, indeed,—I should say not!” cried Mr.
+Loring, as indignant with this perversion of his suggestion
+as with its affront to the dignity of the tutor.
+“He is a gentleman, of fine family, and a learned
+man.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“So <em>I</em> said; but he <em>is</em> a paid and humble attaché
+of her household, and the idea that she could unbend
+to consider such a person, ten years her junior,—”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“<em>That</em> makes no difference,” interrupted Mr.
+Loring, who took this schooling rather aversely.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“—And sacrifice her great income for a man so
+egregiously beneath her,—why, the suggestion is
+belittling, Mr. Loring.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“It is belittling to get rid of money, sure!—and
+she <em>may</em> hang on to her money yet,” Mr. Loring
+conceded.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Except that we are all so deadly dull down here
+and value any new face,” she began once more.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Especially such a handsome one,” Mr. Loring
+stipulated, with a knowing grin.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Yes,—and a dancing man, too.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_189'>189</span>Mr. Loring did not dance. At the period when he
+might have had the opportunity to learn the latest
+Terpsichorean quirks and kicks, he was absorbed in
+the saltatory vagaries of the stock market and the
+fandangoes of cotton futures.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“And there is always such a dearth of cavaliers
+that we have admitted him among us as one of ourselves.
+Otherwise and elsewhere, as you know, the
+tutor would be in his place in the schoolroom.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“<em>Though</em> a gentleman and a learned man!” sneered
+Loring.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Yes,—and I hope that he may marry Gertie
+Kelvin, and get a chair in some good college, and one
+day be the president of it.” Mrs. Kentopp benevolently
+smiled.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“And what will old John Kelvin be doing all that
+time?” asked Mr. Loring, with a sidewise twist of his
+mouth, of which his wooden face seemed incapable.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh, Mr. Loring, in an argument you always vanquish
+me—Why, certainly, Mr. Herndon,—I am
+<em>dying</em> to waltz.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>And thus, perhaps because she had the only blondined
+coiffure in the room, was considerably rouged,
+and floridly attired in her rich, ruby-tinted brocade,
+Fate maliciously decreed that she should dance with
+Mr. Herndon, the slightest of spindling young gentlemen,
+wan of face, thin of flaxen hair, of incipient
+involuntary tonsure, altogether pallid and fragile of
+effect by contrast with the artificially heightened
+charms of his partner, and together they furnished
+the aptest illustration of “before and after.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_190'>190</span>Mr. Loring still stood in the doorway, apparently
+casting the eye of appraisement over the festive scene.
+He was of so monetary a personality, of so speculative
+a reputation, that it was impossible to disassociate his
+presence with a deal. It had a certain incongruity and
+incompatibility with the remainder of the company,
+and even Mrs. Kentopp, who had not the most delicate
+perceptions of tact, was vaguely aware of this
+with an irritating subconsciousness as she whirled and
+whirled. She had hoped that, being a single man, Mr.
+Loring would be at once assimilated in the merry party
+as one of the beaux, and while she could count with
+security upon his conventional acceptance, on the footing
+at which she proposed him, by the well-bred young
+people, she had not reckoned upon the lack of malleability
+of Mr. Loring’s own predilections in the matter.
+He was not one of them, he had no pulse in common,
+no affinity with their tastes, no social ambitions to
+which their warmth of reception might minister. He
+made no pretense of being a young man; he claimed
+naught of the courtesy that thus reckons one scarcely
+yet of middle age. He was not sensitive on the point;
+his record on ’Change kept the tally of the years, and
+he was proud of the events as they totted up. His
+age was known to people of more importance in his
+mind than these inexperienced girls just liberated
+from the schoolroom, and their cavaliers still with a
+lingering dependence on the paternal purse-strings.
+He had no response for the graceful coquetry of the
+young ladies, nor for the jejune opinions of the
+youths, financially mere cumberers of the ground, for
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_191'>191</span>he had no method of rating other than financial. He
+was too rich a man, too dominant, too self-centred
+and consciously important, to submit himself unnecessarily
+to boredom, and he had not that altruistic impulse
+of high social culture that would constrain him to
+sacrifice his preference for the sake of his hostess.
+Hence it pleased him to stand in isolation in the doorway,
+under the feathery fronds of the drooping ferns,
+and stare moodily, absently, silently, at the revolving
+dance, taking no part.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He was never intentionally frank, but the unavowed
+reason of his presence became very definitely
+outlined as the evening wore on, and Mr. Loring associated
+with every appearance of satisfaction with himself.
+Mrs. Kentopp, now and again, fluttered up to
+him and made a great show of talk, aided by a waving
+fan and upturned eyes, and he had then the grace
+to respond; but to Colonel Kentopp, who must needs
+sometimes take her place, he had not a word to throw.
+Being of a festive temperament and relishing the
+joyous occasion, the host was obviously a martyr, in
+the long intervals when he felt constrained to stand
+beside the wooden figure and ply him with artful
+talk, so constructed as to need no response other than
+the absent grunt or nod which Loring vouchsafed in
+recognition of his character as quasi-guest.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“‘How doth the little busy bee improve each shining
+hour,’” quoted Gertrude Kelvin, as she and Desmond,
+breathless from the final whirls of the waltz,
+issued into the tower alcove to find already standing
+there, enjoying the breezes of the open space, Selina
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_192'>192</span>Allandyce and Rupert Regnan. He was a tall fellow,
+with an outdoor complexion suffused with a constant
+red flush, brightly glancing gray eyes, and dark hair.
+He had served in the Spanish War, and had acquired,
+besides the title of lieutenant, a military carriage
+which would be his proud possession for all time, and
+which added a certain stiff stateliness to his appearance
+in evening dress. His father, a veteran of another
+war, one of the Unreconstructed Rebels, was
+wont to look askance at him, tabooed his title at home,
+and had informed him that he could not set foot on
+the plantation while he wore a blue uniform. But the
+son cheerfully responded that he had shed the uniform
+when he had quitted the service, and that the
+title of lieutenant was too tight a fit for him,—he
+was out for bigger game! He had developed a sense
+of his own importance, and he now felt it jeopardized
+in some sort.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“What is that man here for, do you suppose?”
+he said to Miss Allandyce. The coterie was quite
+confidential in the restricted space, which, with the
+windows all open between the pilasters on three
+sides, seemed to poise them in the midst of the cool,
+dark night, the airy roof of the cupola above.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“For the same reason that you are here, I fancy,—for
+the pleasure and honor of your company,” she
+responded, looking in the dim light very sweetly feminine
+in her white silk gown and her pearl-crowned
+auburn hair.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“But there isn’t any pleasure in <em>his</em> company,
+I should judge from Colonel Kentopp’s countenance,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_193'>193</span>and I should judge from his own that he isn’t disposed
+to confer any honor. I imagine that he has
+come to look at the house,—people say that he is
+going to buy it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“You seem to object; are you a prospective purchaser,
+too?” Miss Kelvin twitted him with this
+incongruity in view of his youth and financial inexperience.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I do object. I may be exacting, but it strikes me
+that this party was made up to give him an opportunity
+to see Dryad-Dene to the best advantage. I
+can’t imagine what else he is doing here. He scarcely
+makes a feint toward the manner of a guest.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“And you object to dancing for a purpose,—how
+wrong! You know that the reproach of dancing is
+that it is at best but an idle amusement. You ought
+to be glad to convert it to some use.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I object to being made use of without reference
+to my feelings,” he protested, as he wagged a somewhat
+round and close-cropped head with an emphatic,
+not to say affronted air.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“And are you not willing to skip and leap like a
+young lamb to make Mr. Loring think this is a pretty
+house?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I am not! The pleasure of my company was requested,
+and I came to compliment my hosts, and to
+enjoy myself, and to see you all,”—he included the
+whole group with a bow,—“and to contribute my
+little possible to the general entertainment.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“And you are frustrated!” Gertrude Kelvin
+averred. “Now, if I were you, I’d take it all back;
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_194'>194</span>I’d cancel my services. I’d make the whole thing
+ridiculous. You ought to go right out there in the
+middle of the ballroom floor and throw a somersault!
+Then you would undo all that you have done.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh, do it, Mr. Regnan,—or rather undo it!”
+cried Selina Allandyce.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He laughed, but did not stir.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“He’s afraid!” Gertrude exclaimed. “You know
+that he must have been a coward in the Spanish War,—for
+see now, he’s afraid.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I’m sure that he ran at the battles,—I’d be
+willing to take my affidavit to it,” Selina goaded
+him.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“It’s a mere pretense that he got a presentation
+sword after the war—for he’s <em>afraid</em>!” said Gertrude.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“He couldn’t have got it for gallant conduct, for
+he’s afraid!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Regnan looked from one to the other, but only
+laughed.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“He is deceitful, too,” Gertrude recommenced,
+“and he encourages deceit in others. He lets Mr.
+Loring accredit Dryad-Dene with all the chic and
+style of his presence—”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“And all the grace and agility of his waltzing,”
+Selina interrupted.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“And all the bonhomie and sparkle of his conversation,”
+Gertrude added.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh, let up on me; I’ll be good! I’ll be good!”
+Regnan pleaded; but he made no saltatory intimations
+toward the required somersault.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_195'>195</span>“And all the distinction of his military record,”
+persisted Gertrude.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“And all the prestige of his hereditary position,”
+Selina supported her contention.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“And when Mr. Loring buys this house, the title-deeds
+will call for more than they cover,—oh, poor
+defrauded Mr. Loring!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“But now, seriously,—” Regnan began.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Seriously,” Gertrude interrupted, “in fair dealing
+you ought to throw a somersault in the middle of
+the ballroom floor, in order that its lack of style and
+its grotesquerie and awkwardness, if <em>you</em> can make it
+awkward, may condone for your unwitting alacrity in
+palming off a house, entitled to none of your signal
+attractions, on Mr. Loring, who will pay a bonus for
+the grace your presence lends to it!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“But now, seriously,— doesn’t it seem to you
+that this is not an appropriate time to show off the
+house to a buyer?” Regnan appealed to Desmond.
+“I may be exacting, but yet—”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond, who was aware that he himself was here
+for a purpose he could not fathom, had a monition
+of caution.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Don’t ask me; I am a stranger here, and—”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Hesitate to express an opinion, of course. Well,—we
+are all old friends, and but that it might seem
+a disrespect to Mrs. Kentopp’s feelings, and in so far
+uncivil, I should be willing to tax her with it myself.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The soft rustling of the treetops below in the
+bosky, benighted “dene” impinged upon the talk;
+the freshening breeze coursed through the tower, at
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_196'>196</span>this height inclosed only by the slight pilasters which
+upheld the conical roof. The sense of altitude, the
+vision of the lonely, starlit sky, and the dark, far-stretching
+wilderness on every side beyond the
+plantation clearings, were incongruous with the ballroom
+scene close at hand, the graceful figures promenading
+the glossy hard-wood floor with its mirror-like
+reflections. More akin was the romantic, languorous
+theme of the waltz, with a sort of melancholy yearning
+in its sentimental iteration, and presently a high-heeled
+white satin slipper was beginning to move
+unconsciously in rhythm as the quartette still stood
+in the tower together.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“If your scruples against adorning the premises
+of Mr. Loring’s prospective purchase are not too great
+a restriction on this waltz,” Desmond suggested to
+Miss Allandyce, with whom he had not danced hitherto.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh, I repudiate the responsibility,” she exclaimed.
+“I am neither the bargainer nor the bargainee, and
+Mr. Loring is popularly supposed to be able to take
+care of himself financially.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>She had lifted her hand to Desmond’s arm before
+they issued from the tower alcove, and as they came
+waltzing out of its seclusion together, Mr. Loring
+noted the change of partners. “He is making himself
+generally agreeable, and probably has no special
+idea of Miss Kelvin,” he commented within himself.
+“There is no money in his line of business. If he
+marries it, of course he will marry all he can. He
+would be mighty well pleased with the Faurie third,—which
+maybe Madame Honoria’s dukes and princes
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_197'>197</span>wouldn’t look at after they had seen her flourishing
+around on the income of so much more.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mrs. Kentopp’s spirits were wilting; the lassitude
+of brain-fag was evident. She looked her thirty-eight
+years. Her cheeks were pendulous, so seldom did
+the distention incident to the redeeming smile visit
+them. She realized she had taken great pains to a
+doubtful end. She began to think that she might
+have better commended Dryad-Dene without the
+house-party. She could have managed Mr. Loring to
+greater advantage without its distractions. It had
+not made the excuse and occasion to get him here
+incidentally without obviously putting the house on
+parade. He assumed none of the pose and port of
+a guest. He seemed to consider that he was invited
+for business reasons only, and this doubtless suited
+his easy interpretations of the obligations imposed
+by hospitality as well. And why else should he have
+been invited? He was no friend of the Kentopps,
+and he had no desire to be friend of their friends.
+Why should they ask him here, save to show him the
+house to advantage? and to-morrow, on the camphunt,
+he would have every opportunity to see the land.
+The house certainly did appear to great advantage,
+but Mr. Loring was a discreet and discerning operator,—he
+could easily divest it of such attractions as were
+added to it by the fascinations of Mr. Regnan’s two-step
+and Miss Kelvin’s sylphine charms. He was
+appraising the woodwork, the quality of the plate-glass,
+the hand-carving on the newel-posts, with their
+long shafts holding up lily-like sprays of gas-jets.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_198'>198</span>He condemned what he had learned to phrase as
+precious or Brummagem, and he regretted that it
+was all so new, so glossy, so like a fine hotel. He
+was ambitious of the pose of grand seigneur. He
+had now as much money as any one of the Mississippi
+princelings in the palmy days of the old plantation
+times. He coveted their entourage; it represented
+taste to him; wealth, family, culture, all the majesty
+of the magnate, as he rated the great in the world.
+A few modern conveniences kept as carefully as might
+be out of sight, a touch of modern frugality,—“I’d
+never throw away money with both hands like those
+old ducks,”—and this would comprise all the improvements
+that he thought would befit the domicile
+of eld. Still it was not to be had, and he addressed
+himself to contemplating the tower balcony, with
+the white-draped figures hanging on the balustrade,
+now gazing down into the dark shrubbery of the
+“dene,” where the fountain splashed rhythmically,
+and now chatting with the cavaliers while the group
+discussed the delectable ices. Mr. Loring partook of
+his selection with a meditative mien. It was of a
+mint flavor and was stiffly laced with old Bourbon,
+and a long, fragrant sprig of the newly budded herb
+stood in the midst of the delicate glass. Very perfect
+were the beautifully served refreshments, with accessories
+of daintiest device; but he knew full well that
+he would not have command of Mrs. Kentopp’s deft
+arrangements here if the house were his, for money
+itself could not buy good-will to equal her efforts in
+the interests of getting Dryad-Dene off on him. “Not
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_199'>199</span>even here will the larks fall all roasted into one’s
+mouth.” He remembered the old French proverb
+with a sardonic smile. He took no part in the outcry
+of protest with which, after one more entrancing
+waltz, the dancers greeted the strains of “Sleep well,
+Sweet Angel,” wafted out from the leafy screen embowering
+the Italian orchestra, with which the dinner
+dance was obviously brought to a close.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Regnan followed Mrs. Kentopp here and there,
+insisting that she should look at his watch, which he
+had drawn from an inner pocket, and which marked
+but ten o’clock. She was doubtful for one moment;
+so little agreeable had she found the evening that
+she would not have been surprised to know that it
+had dragged as slowly as this witness maintained.
+Then she recognized the artifice.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“It is a gay deceiver,—just like you!” she cried.
+“But if you did but know at what unearthly time
+you will have to rise, you would have been off to bed
+long ago. I expect to hear that old swamper’s halloo
+under the windows any moment, and the baying of
+his pack.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>And so presently, reflected in the polished flooring,
+the procession wended its way through the ballroom
+and down the many turns of the elaborate staircase,
+pausing only once, at the first <em>entresol</em>, when Mrs.
+Kentopp called the attention of Mr. Loring to the
+electric button in the wall by means of which the
+gas-jets in the upper story were instantaneously
+extinguished, and the ballroom and the Mi-Carême
+dance were in a moment in the darkness of the past.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER IX</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c006'>It seemed indeed to Desmond that his head had
+scarcely touched the pillow when he was roused by
+the baying of hounds from the stable-yard at the
+rear of the house. He was on his feet in a moment,
+for Mr. Herndon did not monopolize the virtue of
+promptness at Dryad-Dene, and Desmond was zealously
+heedful that his distaste to the occasion and
+his entertainers should induce no breach of observance
+on his part. He was half dressed when the
+screech of the speaking-tube summoned him within
+the sound of Colonel Kentopp’s voice, urgently asking
+if he were awake, then with equal urgency if
+he were risen,—which demonstrated that Colonel
+Kentopp’s brain was not very completely cleared of
+the vapors of slumber.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond arrayed himself in his equestrian togs,
+which he considered the most appropriate gear at his
+command, and finding the halls alight and following
+the sound of voices, he soon made his way to the dining-room,
+where a hasty breakfast was going forward.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Just a snack,” Colonel Kentopp was saying to
+the gentlemen seated at the table, or standing at the
+sideboard helping themselves to cold mutton or ham
+as they would. He himself seemed to be breakfasting
+on brandy, and he went around the table, decanter
+in hand, administering a nip here and there, willy-nilly,
+like the Squeers treacle.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_201'>201</span>“For the stomach’s sake,” he would insist to
+youths whose hearty young stomachs could with
+impunity have begun the day with ice-cold buttermilk.
+There was hot coffee, but no hot breads, and
+therefore, in Mississippi estimation, no breakfast.
+“We shall have a hot breakfast ready for us at the
+camp. We just want a snack here to enable us to
+get away. Those girls will be wild to go, and they
+couldn’t keep the saddle half the distance.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Why, Miss Kelvin rides as well as any man,”
+said Rupert Regnan, displeased; “and Miss Allandyce—”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Rides just like a man,” Kentopp finished, with
+a laugh. “The truth is,” he spoke mysteriously, “we
+expect a rough day. We hope to get up a bear, and
+it isn’t safe to have ladies along in such a harum-scarum
+expedition. This is our last chance,—the
+game laws, you know. Monday is the first of March!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There was a touch of the <em>preux chevalier</em> about
+Regnan. It was distasteful to him to sneak off and
+debar the young ladies of the pleasure they had set
+their hearts upon. If there had been any means of
+rousing them to the deceits practiced upon them,
+other than inappropriately appearing at their bedroom
+doors, he would have availed himself of it. What
+cared he for such stereotyped fun as was comprised
+in pulling through sloughs and cane-brakes with a
+lot of men after a bear, if one could be found! They
+were not of metropolitan life; the wilderness and its
+incidents were an every-day story; they were veritable
+“swampers,” as much old “residenters” as the bear
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_202'>202</span>himself! Such amusement as the day might offer lay,
+to his mind, in the incongruity of feminine society,
+and the enjoyment at second-hand of these hackneyed
+details, wonderful and new to the young girls’ experience.
+He would fain have afforded them this joy,
+which they childishly craved.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He realized, however, that it was not his place to
+dictate, and presently the men had all trooped out to
+a small room, ambitiously denominated the armory,
+and were busied over the choice of weapons and supply
+of ammunition. A great array of antique blades,
+helmets, shields, more or less genuine or suggestive
+of the junk-shops of New Orleans, hung upon the
+walls, with some really interesting specimens of the
+blunderbusses and cutlasses of the buccaneers of early
+times on the Gulf coast; of bows and arrows, beaded
+quivers, scalp-knives, tomahawks, from the date of the
+Chickasaw and Choctaw occupation of this region; and
+of the flintlock rifles, powder-horns, and shot-pouches
+of the pioneer days. Two or three of the party had
+brought their own guns, but others had depended
+on a chance furnishing forth from Kentopp’s armory.
+The modern repeating shotgun, holding in its
+magazine five cartridges, each with a dozen buckshot,
+permitting the discharge of sixty balls within five
+seconds, was a prime favorite with the sportsmen in
+preference to the staunch old double-barreled breechloader;
+only those who boasted special accuracy of
+aim were content with rifles; Desmond, not very
+enthusiastic in pressing forward, found his choice
+limited to necessity.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_203'>203</span>“I hope that you are a good shot, Mr. Desmond,”
+said Colonel Kentopp, with polite concern, “for these
+fellows have left nothing but two rifles for us. First-rate
+make, though not repeaters.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond’s outdoor accomplishments were limited
+to the “Gridiron.” He fancied the swamp game destined
+to be long-lived indeed, if they were to die from
+the chances of a single rifle-ball directed by his
+unaccustomed aim. For he was no sportsman. He
+did not thirst for victory over the sylvan folk. He
+accepted the rifle as graciously as if he were a dead
+shot and confident of his powers, secured his share
+of the appropriate ammunition, and rejoined the
+others, who had already repaired to the stable-yard.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It was an animated scene. The gas-jet over the
+stable-door brought it out in high lights and black
+shadows. A number of fresh, restive horses had been
+led out of their stalls still in their blankets; others
+were bare and shivering in process of being saddled.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Will you ride with a curb, Desmond, or just with
+a snaffle?” asked Kentopp, as he bustled about, as
+busy as any of his negro grooms, who, with shining
+eyes and glittering teeth, entered into all the spirit
+of the occasion. The dogs were literally beside themselves,
+and with their dark, whisking shadows seemed
+twice as numerous as in reality. Now they leaped in
+a series of ecstatic gambols as if they could not keep
+their feet to the ground, and again they manifested
+strange proclivities not to be accounted for on a basis
+of human reasoning. One suddenly planted himself
+in front of a young and spirited steed and treated
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_204'>204</span>him to a succession of frenzied bayings and elastic
+boundings that sent the horse, restricted to a limited
+space, quite wild with surprise and dismay,—now
+leaping aside with the hope of evading his queer tormentor,
+and now rearing and threatening to bolt.
+Another of the dogs, with a yelp so shrill that it
+menaced the integrity of every tympanum within
+reach of the sound, urged the setting forth without
+more delay, scampering around among the hoofs of
+the horses and the legs of the men, and so to the
+gate and away!—looking over his shoulder presently,
+seeing that he was not followed, and returning
+to repeat the demonstration, calling “Come on!
+Come on! Come on!” as distinctly as if he had the
+powers of human speech.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The horses, sniffing the morning air and the promise
+of adventure, again and again sent forth neighs
+shrill and clear and as matutinal of effect as a cock’s
+crow; there was a great stamping and champing;
+the voices of the stable-men were loud with calls for
+gear within the buildings, and admonitions to the
+horses, and adjurations to Mr. Sloper to take some
+order with his pack.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“’Fore Gawd, them scandalous hound-dogs don’t
+show no more manners than if they were so many
+rapscallion childern,” the head of the stable averred.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The guests discussed bits and saddles and chose
+according to their liking, and went in and out of the
+harness-room with grooms and lanterns. Often, in
+the midst of the turmoil, Colonel Kentopp looked up
+with apprehensive forecast at the house, which seemed
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_205'>205</span>with its three stories and tower very tall and stately in
+this region of the bungalow preference, expecting to
+hear a sash lifted and a voice, sweet but imperious,
+demand a stay of the proceedings. “Wait for us!
+Wait for us!” seemed to sound in his ears, until
+with the quick, assured tramp of a body of horse, a
+frenzied crescendo of the skirling of the dogs, a wild
+jocose “Yah! Yah!” of the stable-men left in the
+deserted yard, the hunters were mounted and gone.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It was still so dark that Desmond could not have
+kept the road had it not been for the horsemen on
+either side, and the voices of those valiant precursors,
+the dogs, some of whom, however, now moderated
+their transports and were trotting silently forward.
+The tones of their owner, or entertainer it might
+seem, so honored were they in his domicile, came
+from the van, where he rode abreast with Colonel
+Kentopp, who had ceased his attentions to Mr. Loring
+to ply old Sloper with his courtesies. He really felt
+under special obligations to the old swamper for the
+loan of his pack of hounds, though, as in the case
+of many other politic people, his gratitude included
+a lively sense of favors yet to come. It was the
+opportunity for a day of sport preëminently appropriate
+to the region, which without Sloper’s coöperation
+it would have been impossible to offer to the
+house-party. Hence Colonel Kentopp had put up
+Mr. Sloper on the best horse in his stable, well knowing
+that the old swamper would be keen to discern
+and quick to resent any invidious distinction in the
+matter. Mr. Loring rode only the second best, a point
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_206'>206</span>which doubtless ministered to the swamper’s satisfaction
+and jealous sense of his own consequence. Therefore
+in fine fettle he led the cavalcade, continuously
+talking, his high-pitched voice, with its frequent
+breaks into a snuffling chuckle of falsetto laughter,
+coming back on the keen, dank, matutinal air with
+great distinctness.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He was definitely of the class known as the “poor
+whites” of that region, and his company was not
+acceptable to Mr. Loring. The man who rises in the
+world is not tolerant of lower conditions. It is only
+the acknowledged aristocrat who can really unbend.
+Sloper’s estate in life did not duplicate or approximate
+Loring’s origin, which was in all essentials distinctly
+genteel,—in the fact of educated parents, in refinement
+of early association, in point of social connection;
+for although his immediate family were of small
+means, he was related to well-to-do people of good
+middle-class standing. Sloper, however, distinctly expressed
+the “common folks” of that region as contrasted
+with the baronial planter, and as Loring had
+no affiliations with the latter class, it offended him to
+be brought into familiar juxtaposition with the representative
+of the widely different lower order.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Colonel Kentopp could suffer no reduction of personal
+consequence in hobnobbing as man to man with
+the old plebeian, but as far as Loring was concerned,
+familiarity might seem an outcropping of quondam
+tastes and associations and similarity of station. Hence
+he said naught as Colonel Kentopp’s jovial laughter
+rang out at the conclusion of one of Jerry Sloper’s
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_207'>207</span>stories that he had heard a score of times heretofore.
+As the old swamper’s high falsetto cackle punctuated
+the applausive mirth of the others, one might have
+thought that he was himself too noisy to distinguish
+the fact that Mr. Loring had not relaxed his risibles
+in compliment to the gifts of the raconteur; it was
+still too dark to discriminate facial expressions, and
+the lantern, which one of the colored grooms carried,
+was too far ahead to afford its gleams. There is not
+always that submission in the minds of the lowly in
+estate which would seem an appropriate concomitant
+of that humble condition.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Powerful glad to see you here, Mr. Loring,—though
+I don’t rightly see you yit,” Sloper remarked,
+holding in the spirited steed on which he was mounted
+to range alongside the millionaire. “We feel here in
+the Miss’ippi bottom that you jes’ nachully b’long to
+us. Why, I knowed yer dad way back in the fifties.
+<em>Yes</em>, sir! He used ter run the river in them days. He
+was mud clerk on the old Cher’kee Rose. I kep’ a
+wood-yard up yander on the p’int, an’ Gus Loring an’
+me had chummy old times when he would come ashore
+to medjure the wood. That was before he married—considerable
+looking up his match was, for a mud
+clerk, ye know! Yer mother was a tidy gal,—plump
+as a partridge,—and I used to set up ter her considerable
+myself. He! he! he! She turned me off,
+though, for Gus Loring! An’ she done better, though
+I do say it myself. She done better to take Gus instead
+o’ me. She had a leetle chunk o’ money, an’ yer
+dad quit the river an’ bought a share in a store an’
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_208'>208</span>set out a-clerkin’. But Lawd! I reckon ye wouldn’t
+bat yer eye for no such stock o’ goods as he had.
+They tell me as ye have prospered considerable down
+yander in Orleans! I reckon if <em>ye</em> was ter store-keep,
+like yer dad, ye could show forth as good a stock as
+they had at Whippoorwill Landing,—that would ha’
+made Gus Loring stare! I don’t mean ye could <em>own</em>
+it all—part credit o’ course! But I reckon from all
+I <em>have</em> heard tell that ye could get a note in bank,—an’
+that is mo’ ’n yer dad ever could do.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Regnan loved his fellow-man. “For God’s sake,
+pull that old fox off the Spartan’s vitals,” he said in
+a low voice to Kentopp. “I can’t abide for a fellow
+to be gnawed like that.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Then, curse him,—why can’t he show some
+sense!” Kentopp growled <em>sotto voce</em> in return.
+“Who but a fool would try to top old Jerry Sloper
+with his <em>nil admirari</em> millionaire airs. <em>He</em> knows what
+Loring cut his teeth on! I am afraid of my life to
+say a word.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Lieutenant Regnan had missed his billet as the
+destroyer of life. His instincts were all for first aid
+to the injured. He presently began melodiously to
+hum, and suddenly as he rode in the clump of horsemen
+he broke forth: “Say, Mr. Sloper, how does the
+tune go to that old high-water song:—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c008'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“Step light, neighbor,—<em>don’t</em> jar the river!</div>
+ <div class='line'>Rising, rising, brimful and over—”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>Forthwith the old swamper was blissfully chanting as
+he rode at the head of the cavalcade, and Mr. Loring had
+time to readjust the expression of his face and to conceal
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_209'>209</span>the ravages of the onslaught on his pride before
+a certain pallid influence began to annul the darkness.
+A sense of mist was in the atmosphere, yet great,
+towering trees were visible, and far along apparently
+infinite vistas, level and devoid of woodland débris as
+a royal park, some vague presence shifted continually,
+never so distinct, so definitely embodied, as to be formulated
+to the vision, and at last realized as the impalpable
+medium of the dawning light. Suddenly day was
+revealed in the woods. The sun was up, not seeming
+to rise on those infinite levels, but to spring at once
+like a miracle into the place of darkness. It filled the
+world with the amplitudes of a glorious golden glow,
+so fresh, so elated, yet pervaded with a sort of awe, a
+splendid solemnity. Stillness characterized its earlier
+moments, but presently, in the chill morning, the
+spring birds were singing from the branches of the
+trees, which rustled with the sudden stir of the wind.
+Through the vistas to the west the great Mississippi
+was agleam with thousands of wavelets tipped with
+dazzling scintillations, and the rising mist that veiled
+the Arkansas shore shimmered with opalescent reflections.
+Beyond the limits of the forest one could see
+here and there a scattered growth of cottonwood
+trees and the serpentine line of the levee, its great
+embankment covered to the summit with the thick
+growth of Bermuda grass, the interlacing roots of
+which were considered of much avail in strengthening
+the earthwork to resist the action of the current in
+times of high water. At one point, where the river
+turned in its corkscrew convolutions, the horsemen
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_210'>210</span>could see that the encroaching flood had crossed the
+intervening space and was beginning to stand against
+the base of the levee. This premonitory symptom of
+overflow Mr. Loring was prompt to notice.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I have a cross levee half a mile back,” Colonel
+Kentopp said, with a jaunty air. “I don’t think we
+will go under, even if that stretch of levee should
+give. And if we do,” still more jauntily, “crawfish
+and river detritus are fine fertilizers.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Best crops ever made in Deepwater Bend was
+after the biggest water I ever see,” interrupted Jerry
+Sloper, exceedingly glib. “Levees broke in March,
+and water stood sixty miles wide. Plantations were
+under till mighty nigh May. River was not in its banks
+till nigh May. Then the crop was planted and—”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I have heard my grandfather tell about that,”
+interposed Regnan. “The fields were so thick with
+cotton that they laughed and sang,—and the planters
+laughed and sang, too.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Still, I’d rather Dryad-Dene should keep dry
+feet,” said Colonel Kentopp, turning in his saddle
+to look over his shoulder at the water lapping about
+the verdant spaces at the base of the levee. Nevertheless,
+he felt very cheerful. The cavalcade could
+hear the plantation bell at Dryad-Dene ring forth its
+strong, mellow acclaim, calling out the hired force to
+work, as well as the tenant farmers, who were under
+the same regimen. The broad expanse of fields was
+now and again visible, all prepared for the planting of
+cotton,—as carefully laid off and with the earth as
+thoroughly pulverized as if for a flower-bed. It was
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_211'>211</span>impossible for the heart of a proprietor of so fine a
+plantation not to swell at the sight, and while away
+from Annetta and her eager fostering of their mutual
+ambitions toward metropolitan life, Kentopp felt a
+sort of independence of the millionaire’s doubtful
+attitude. Let the event fall out as it would, he had
+here a mighty good thing.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In the midst of these more vital and manly interests,
+Loring’s phlegm and pose of indifference
+could but give way. He knew the country and its
+possibilities thoroughly, and now and again he made
+searching inquiries into local conditions, which showed
+that his mind was genuinely occupied with the proposition,
+and caused Colonel Kentopp to think that he
+did not half care to sell at all. Repeatedly the richness
+of the opportunity was demonstrated. A turn in
+the road suddenly gave to view a lovely level of pasturage
+inclosed by hedges of the Cherokee rose, over
+whose wide-spreading evergreen brambles the horsemen
+could look upon a green plain, dotted with trees
+of gigantic girth, and embellished with as fine a flock
+of sheep as ever wore wool. Three or four black pickaninnies,
+already absorbed in a game of mumble-the-peg,
+and several collie dogs were entered upon their
+guardian duties for the day, and Colonel Kentopp
+was descanting upon varieties and pedigrees, weight
+of shearings and flavor of mutton.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“We raise everything at Dryad-Dene, as a model
+plantation should. The world is within the bounds
+of Dryad-Dene. We buy nothing but gunpowder,
+salt, iron, and sugar.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_212'>212</span>This was, of course, the ancient brag of the great
+river principalities; but the immense drove of hogs
+which the horsemen passed after a time, crowding
+about a gate where swineherds were throwing out as
+breakfast the contents of a wagon loaded with corn
+over the high fence of the inclosure, the wide expanse
+of the potato-fields, harvested long ago, their
+yield garnered into the potato-sheds that stretched
+along on one side like the roofs of a little street, the
+saw-and-grist mill, the cotton-press and steam-gin,
+with the obeliscal smokestack towering above the
+plain,—all the appurtenances of the industry, went
+far to confirm the boast.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>And now into the depths of the wilderness, primeval,
+apparently illimitable, with the wind footing it
+featly alongside. There were clouds in the densely
+blue sky, but high, white, flocculent, and lightly
+floating. The odors of spring vegetation, of early
+blooms, came on every breath; and when the first of
+the sloughs was reached, it was so draped in lace-like
+willows, so full of verdant moss and ooze, so
+still and dreamy in its marshy pools, mirroring the
+sky, that one might have accounted it a valued
+feature of the landscape, but for the experience of
+fording it.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“We can’t hunt bear in a parlor,” Colonel Kentopp
+declared, as he forced Ringdove to wet her dainty
+hoofs. The rest were soon splashing after, unmindful
+of mire and solicitous only of quicksands. But on the
+farther side they were on dry and level ground once
+more, cantering alertly amidst the great forest trees,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_213'>213</span>the horses scarcely breathed, and the courage of the
+cavalcade rising to the summons of exertion. And
+now,—deepest shades, great overhanging, swamp-like
+growths! The dense cypress, festooned by the
+gray Spanish moss, rose towering out of ink-black
+water; a white heron, standing motionless beside a
+clump of the protuberances known as “cypress-knees,”
+looked as if it might have been sketched into the
+scene with a bit of chalk; logs, moss-covered and
+dripping with slime, lay half buried in the ooze; the
+canopy of foliage was so thick, the boughs of the trees
+so densely interlacing, that the light of the brilliant
+day was cut off and the hunters rode as if in a
+dream-shadow. Lakes presently opened alongside,
+series of glassy stretches, blue under the azure sky,
+and connected by a bayou so dully flowing that, gaze
+as one might, the motion of a current could not
+be discerned. Once wild ducks were glimpsed, and
+though old Jerry Sloper protested, he could not
+hinder the prompt discharge of one of the shot-guns.
+On the crash of the report ensued the whizzing of
+wings in the flurry of terrified flight, and two of the
+birds floated dead upon the water. A handsome setter
+sprang into the lake, and presently swam out
+with his feathered trophy; while the dogs of different
+breeds wheezed uneasily about the margin, and one
+of them, a famous bear hound of a singular bluish
+tint, his hide about his jaws hanging in loose folds,
+sat down and contemplated the feat with head askew,
+as much as to say, “Now, how did <em>you</em> find out how
+to do that?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_214'>214</span>Jerry Sloper was beside himself with indignation.
+“Now, you fellers air goin’ to spile the chances fur
+the whole day! How fur d’ ye think this here piece
+o’ water ’ll carry the crack o’ that thar gun? Old Pa
+Bear will hide in the cane-brake an’ old Ma Bear will
+gather the children up in the hollow tree, an’ they
+won’t ventur’ out ’fore June. An’ then the manners
+of my dogs! I been tryin’ ter get it out o’ that thar
+Lightfoot’s fool head that he is expected to go arter
+what I shoot. <em>I</em> don’t kill fowels with a gun.” His lip
+curled with scorn, showing his long, tobacco-stained
+teeth. “I go ter my hen-cup an’ chop off thar heads
+with a hatchet. I am a man, I am! An’ when I play,
+I take my sport like a man. I shoot deer an’ bear
+an’ wolves an’ sech animals. The last time I killed
+a bear, ’twas by accident. I hed nobody with me but
+Lightfoot, thar. An’ the crittur,—durn his little old
+cranky soul!—he p’inted. Came to a stand, with his
+forefoot crooked,—jes’ so”—and Jerry Sloper
+crooked his great hairy paw in clumsy imitation of
+Lightfoot’s graceful instinct—“else I wouldn’t
+have seen old Bruin. I ’lowed a’ fust ’twar jes’ a
+hawg over in the brake. An’ all of a suddenty, lo an’
+behold, ’twas revealed to me that thar was a bear!
+An’ I fired,—an’ o’ course he fell. An’ off skittered
+Lightfoot ter <em>bring him in</em>, mind ye! Thar I was
+hollerin’ arter the child, thrown to the wild beast,—I
+warn’t able to stir hand or foot,—I was jes’ palsied
+with skeer. Lightfoot tuk him gently by the ear,—not
+to spile him with gnawing,—jes’ like he done
+that duck—Gimme that thar fowel, <em>you</em> distracted
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_215'>215</span>beast!” and the setter, with half-squatting hind-legs
+and wriggles of delight and pride, and lifted, liquid,
+shining eyes, relinquished the game into his hand.
+“An’ what happened? The bear warn’t plumb dead!
+And Lightfoot come back tore mighty nigh ter the
+breastbone. See them scars on his chist? An’ ez soon
+as he was able to stand it, I gin him a beatin’ besides
+ter teach him better. An’ now,—ye have set him at
+his old tricks ag’in. I wouldn’t own a dog with sech
+a mania, if he warn’t a present ter me. An’ till ye
+fellers tuk to triflin’ with him, I ’lowed I’d got him
+plumb sensible. You see that duck?”—he looked
+down sternly at his accomplished retainer, who, discerning
+the change of tone, began to cringe miserably,
+thoroughly crestfallen. “Oh, ho! ain’t forgot
+what I told you, eh? Well, then,—want some mo’
+slipper pie?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Oh, he did not! He did not, indeed,—his pleading
+countenance protested. But the threat was a mere
+feint; and as the old swamper turned to take up the
+route once more, the setter, with a shrill yelp of delight
+to get off from the colloquy with no painful sequence,
+dashed ahead, and was presently trotting nimbly with
+his companions of various families and traditions,
+the only bird dog, and the only one whose record
+comprised the heady effort to retrieve a bear.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I’d buy that setter, Mr. Sloper, if you’d put a
+price on him,” said Regnan, who sometimes descended
+to the trifling sport of bird hunting.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“An’ <em>I’d</em> buy the State of Miss’ippi, if ’twas layin’
+around loose,” was the not too encouraging response.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_216'>216</span>Sloughs, lagoons, bayous unnumbered! The horses
+were soon mired to their girths; the men were splashed
+from head to foot, and those inexpert at swimming a
+horse when suddenly out of his depth, had their high
+riding-boots full of water. More than once an alligator
+was viewed, half embedded in the ooze, only distinguished
+from the rotting log that he resembled when
+he would rouse himself to swim slowly a few yards,
+tempting the knights of the magazine shot-guns.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Don’t ye know that a bullet from a forward
+shot will glance off as if he wore chain armor!” old
+Sloper remonstrated. “The only chance is a rifle-ball
+behind the eye.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“And when did <em>you</em> become acquainted with chain
+armor?” asked one of the Mayberry youths, in merry
+wonderment and with a twinkling eye.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“About twenty-five years before you was bawn,”
+retorted the old swamper. He paused to spit forth an
+enormous volley of tobacco-juice against the trunk of
+a tree, with a seeming solicitude for the accuracy of his
+aim; then resumed with the greatest deliberation.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I holped in a jewel that was fought by two tremenjious
+swells, who got themselves landed by the
+Great Republic for that purpose. They tuk up an
+insult to each other while on the boat. They came up
+to my wood-yard—I used ter furnish fuel ter the
+packets reg’lar. They said all they wanted was a man
+ter see fair play an’ shut his mouth. They plastered
+mine good an’ tight with a double eagle. One of the parties
+was tremenjious brash an’ overbearin’; I could see
+that the other looked into death’s eyesockets at close
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_217'>217</span>quarters. I medjured the ground for them with the
+Flying Cloud’s wood-staff that the mud clerk had left
+at the yard,—miserable, unshifty, keerless cuss! Bet
+he needed it himself before he got ter New Orleans!
+An’ these two dandy fellers tuk thar stand an’ fired.
+An’ the one that was so cocksure missed his aim,
+though his hair-trigger was as fine a weepon as ever
+I see. An’ the t’other, that thought he had come to
+his las’ minit, shot straight. But he aimed at the man’s
+mouth, as it ’peared to me. He threw up his pistol at
+the last second. The ball tuk the gentleman right
+through the throat. Ought to have seen the blood
+spurt out ’n his jugular! Mighty nasty way to kill a
+gentleman, I thought! An’ as we both run to the body
+on the ground, one on either side, the winner’s hand
+shook so he could hardly undo the vest. So I laid back
+the fine linen shirt, though I knew it was no use to
+feel his heart, for he was as dead as a buckeye; I seen
+between it an’ his silk underwear a shirt of fine steel
+rings. ’T would turn a bullet; ’t would break a knife!
+An’ the s’vivor says,—his chin shook so that he could
+hardly talk,—‘What do you think of that? I s’picioned
+from the fust that he would give me no fair
+chance in a fight, an’ he forced it upon me.’ An’ I
+say, ‘Let’s put this murderer in the bayou. Thar’s
+some fierce catfish thar, an’ snakes, an’ slimy beasts
+to eat the flesh from his bones. The mud is deep an’
+will hold him down, an’ the mire is fit for his last
+home! The Miss’ippi is too tricky to trust,—floats
+things, ye know. The bayou for me, every time!’”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Why, Mr. Sloper,” cried young Mayberry, suddenly
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_218'>218</span>grave and aghast. “I should think that you
+would have been afraid.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Well, he ain’t never got up from thar,—so fur
+as I have heard tell. What’s to be afeard of?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Was that <em>all</em> you did? To bury him in the bayou?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Naw, sir; I went down to Natchez an’ spreed away
+the double eagle, the twenty dollars.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“But I mean about notifying the authorities?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The old swamper’s face had a bewildered look.
+“Whar was they? What call had they ter meddle?
+I done nothin’ but the heftin’.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Didn’t the Great Republic say anything the next
+time she passed?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh, yes! I told the mud clerk that the price of
+wood had riz, an’ he told me to go to hell. That’s
+the last word with the Great Republic.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Suddenly a sound smote the sylvan silence. A keen
+note of query, a wide blare of discovery,—and all the
+pack opened on the scent, baying as rhythmically as
+if trained to this woodland music. The horn rang out
+its elated, spirited tones, the sound leaping like a live
+thing along the far reaches of the levels. The horsemen,
+in a frenzy of excitement, were separating, each
+taking his own course and riding as if the rout of
+some swift pursuit were upon his track. Desmond
+hesitated for a moment, bewildered, the only stranger
+to the wilderness of all the party, forgotten utterly
+by his host, by old Sloper, by the huntsman on ahead
+with the dogs, by the youthful sportsmen. Presently,
+however, Regnan bethought himself of the tutor and
+his imminent danger of being lost in the fastnesses,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_219'>219</span>and paused after an instant of frantic plunging
+through a narrow bogue that issued from a swamp
+where there was promise indeed of scant solid ground.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Come with me,” he called. “I am going to try an
+old stand on a deer path I know. The hounds have
+got up a buck—I think so from the tongue they are
+giving. Follow me. Swim your horse when he begins
+to flounder in the bayous.”</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_220'>220</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER X</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c006'>There was no choice. Desmond had scant interest
+in this tumultuous sport of coursing deer with hounds,
+but he was fain to follow. He could not have retraced
+his way for his life, and to be lost in the wilderness—for
+every horseman had disappeared—was
+taking all the jeopardy of disaster and even of
+death. He congratulated himself that the excellent
+brute he bestrode seemed to know more about the
+matter than he. Suddenly Regnan, who had been for
+a few minutes lost to him, appeared in glimpses
+through the redundant vegetation about the lagoon,
+which could be characterized as neither water nor
+land, consisting now of one and now of the other,
+and again of a treacherous combination of both, that
+afforded neither footing nor the medium for swimming.
+The young sportsman was thrashing through
+brake and slough at a breakneck speed that presently
+carried him out of the reach of vision.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The glimpse was sufficient for the powerful red
+roan that Desmond rode, and he needed no prompting.
+He sprang instantly into the water in the essay
+to follow, swimming with great spirit, now and then
+stretching his legs to gain a firm footing, and, with
+a splashing flounder that nearly shook Desmond out
+of the saddle, striking out again to swim with alert
+vigilance and stalwart strength. Desmond was used
+to equestrian exercise in milder form and found a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_221'>221</span>need for all the principles of equitation that he had
+been taught, for the most progressive of mounts can
+hardly act on his own initiative throughout the incidents
+of such a drive as this promised to be. Desmond
+gave the horse his head as to direction, but checked
+him according to his own judgment at impassable
+obstacles, and held him up firmly when he threatened
+to go to his knees. A little later, in a deep
+quagmire, where he showed signs of sinking, and,
+losing courage, began to snort in fright, Desmond
+used bit and heel to such effect as to reinstate his
+confidence and bring him leaping lightly out of his
+floundering instabilities to good dry ground.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>When the wild, disordered turmoils of the alluvial
+wilderness gave way on the borders of a fine bit of
+water, Desmond was surprised himself to note how
+reassured he felt to perceive Regnan on his swimming
+horse nearly in the centre of the lakelet. In the swift
+transit he had scarcely had time to speculate if he
+were on the right track, but confirmation was welcome.
+Regnan had evidently felt a doubt, for he was
+looking over his shoulder; and as Desmond and the
+red roan galloped down to the margin, the horse
+sending forth a gleeful whinny at the sight of his
+swimming comrade in advance, Regnan waved his
+hand and pressed on to the opposite shore, where
+the dense shadows of a great stretch of forest gloomed.
+Here there was good going. Desmond pressed his
+horse to added speed to overhaul his precursor, and
+side by side they galloped at their utmost capacity,
+with scarcely a word exchanged, through miles of level
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_222'>222</span>woods, at last reaching the almost impenetrable densities
+of a cane-brake, skirting the growth rather than
+striking across it; this was the outpost of sluggish
+bayous and cypress sloughs, almost impassable, seeming
+impracticable, till suddenly they stood on a fair
+sheet of water. The blue sky looked down suavely
+upon it, and so serene it was that one might have
+thought the wild tangles through which the way
+hither had lain were some vision of a distraught imagination.
+All around the dense woods were silent,
+primeval. Something of the redundant swamp growths
+were about its margin and cloaked the approach to
+its placid waters, but beyond stretched the endless
+forests.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Regnan was dismounting. “It is too wide to swim
+with a horse,” he said. “I suppose that is the reason
+the deer take to it. And once get this body of
+water between them and the dogs, and the scent is
+lost.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He was hitching his horse among the tangled
+growths at a little distance, where he would be invisible,
+and cautioned Desmond to follow his example.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“See that deer path?” he said. A narrow line
+threaded the luxuriant marshy grasses about the
+margin,—scarcely a path,—yet a keen eye might
+discern the imprint of a cleft hoof in the moist
+ground at the water’s edge. “I have shot deer here
+before,” added Regnan.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>With the butt of his gun he beat down the boughs
+of evergreen shrubs to afford an elastic couch; and
+here they lay them down and rested and talked spasmodically
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_223'>223</span>and dully drowsed, while they awaited the
+sound of hound and horn.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“He’s giving them a good run for the money,”
+opined Regnan, as time wore on and brought no
+change. The placid lake gleamed serene; the dark
+forest gloomed. But for their own languid voices they
+heard naught, and sometimes long pauses intervened
+in the desultory talk.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Fond of this sort of thing?” asked Regnan.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond was more comfortable since he had taken
+off his high riding-boots and poured the water from
+them, being advised by Regnan to put them on immediately,
+lest they so stiffen in drying that their
+resumption would be impossible. The amusement did
+not seem so disagreeable to Desmond as he lay
+stretched out at his long length, his soft hat over his
+eyes, and his gloves also dutifully drying into shape
+on his hands. He was able to answer both veraciously
+and courteously.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I am not used to it. I like the violent exercise
+well enough. But I don’t want to kill anything. I
+am glad I can’t.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Why can’t you?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh, I never shot at anything in my life but with
+a handful of bird-shot.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Regnan, also recumbent, with his hat over his eyes
+to be rid of the combined glare of lake and sky,
+lifted himself suddenly to look about him.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“What a pity! We both have rifles! Kentopp
+ought to have given you a shotgun. I wish I had mine.
+I don’t know why I should have brought this thing.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_224'>224</span>Then he lay back once more and shaded his eyes.
+A long silence ensued. The glare on the lake had
+dulled; a network of clouds gathered gradually, the
+meshes weaving continually until dense, dark, impervious
+to any gleam, it hung unbroken above the lake.
+The woods had fallen into deeper gloom; only the
+green of the saw-grass fringing the water-side seemed
+lifted into an intenser chromatic grade by the lowering
+of a gray sky. When a sound smote the mute quietude
+of the woods, it was a muttering of thunder.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Rain! We are going to have it in plenty,” suggested
+Regnan.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“It has been demonstrated to-day that we are
+neither sugar nor salt.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“But it will disperse the scent; the hounds will
+run counter.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Hallo!” exclaimed Desmond, in sudden excitement,
+lifting himself on his elbow. He could not
+have said why it should thrill him; but that sound of
+a horn, elastically leaping along the distance, so signally
+clear, so searchingly vibrant, so infinitely sweet,
+sought out every fibre of the romantic in him. Then
+rose the melody of the dogs in full cry, rhythmic,
+mellow, musical, softened by the distance, significant,
+unceasing, echoing with the sentiment of the sylvan
+chase of all the days of eld. It was not old Sloper’s
+“house-party” that Desmond heard, but every pack
+of high degree that ever coursed through the realms
+of poesy or the liberties of tradition. He was on his
+feet,—a light in his eyes, a flush on his cheek, his
+hands trembling, his muscles alert.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_225'>225</span>“They are coming this way! They are heading for
+the lake!” he exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Regnan listened for a moment. “Right you are!”
+he cried.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>As they took up their position at the stand, ambushed
+beside the deer path, Regnan insistently
+waived precedence.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“You fire first. <em>You</em> are company! If you miss,
+I’ll fire. Buck ague?” he whispered.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The undulating sound of the cry of the hounds,
+emitted rhythmically with each bound, came ever
+nearer and nearer, and suddenly there was close at
+hand a crashing through the bushes down the deer
+path. Desmond threw up his rifle, conscious that he
+must catch the aim as quick as light. To his own surprise
+he was singularly cool and steady. A flash, the
+sharp report rang out; something clouded white and
+brown and gray leaped high into the air, issuing from
+the brush, and fell dead at the water’s edge,—a
+gigantic wildcat.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“A crack shot you are!” Regnan exclaimed,
+amazed. The ball had taken the creature just beneath
+the ear and pierced the brain. “And this cat
+is the finest ever!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He bent over the magnificent specimen. “I didn’t
+know such a fellow as this was left in the country.
+But oh, how old Sloper will swear!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Why?” asked Desmond, the excitement cooling
+only gradually.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“His hounds are to run only deer and bear, no
+matter what’s the purpose of their creation and previous
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_226'>226</span>education. He lets them chase a fox, now and
+then, with a great palaver of explanation, and keeping
+right up with them. But a cat! He’ll be worth
+hearing!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>When the pack came presently, swiftly loping
+through the brake, and beheld their prey, it was difficult
+indeed to reduce them to order; and as old
+Sloper raged, and fumed, and indignantly rebuked
+them, their air suggested contradiction as they
+whisked about their prostrate foe, their gait as if they
+could not keep feet to ground—lifting them as if it
+were hot—in the flutter and excitement, and they
+noisily yelped with delight every time he spoke to
+them. It would seem that the subtle current of comprehension,
+the medium of communication, was
+broken. They so valiantly protested that they had
+done a fine thing, and piqued themselves so pridefully
+on their prowess, that he was fain to end the
+discussion in his own interest in the prey.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Git out’n my way, or I’ll punch the nose off’n
+ye,” he roughly adjured them, as he dismounted to
+lay out at length the savage beast, in order to take
+its measure from its muzzle to the tip of the tail.
+“Thar! I’ve stepped on your foot, and I’m glad of
+it!” as a piercing squeak split the ears of the party.
+But the sufferer was game and hopped joyously about
+on three legs, participating in the event, despite his
+plaintive disabilities.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“What you goin’ to do with this here cat, Mr.
+Desmond?” he asked, an added respect for so fine
+a shot unmistakable in every line of his face and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_227'>227</span>every inflection of his voice. “Better git it off the
+ground—the dogs mought tear it; they air so durned
+sassy over it, I can’t govern ’em none. And ’tis the
+finest thing I ever see. My! how handsome that
+fur is!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Why,” exclaimed Desmond, suddenly roused to
+the possibilities of his possession, “I’ll have it stuffed
+and present it to Mrs. Kentopp as an ornament to
+the armory and a memento of the occasion.” He had
+not eaten much of her bread, but he distrusted the
+motive of her hospitality, and his pride welcomed the
+opportunity to make a requital so promptly and in
+a guise which he knew would be so acceptable. He
+began to take an interest in the exceptional beauty
+of the specimen.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Then it ought to be skun right now, before the
+critter stiffens. An’ I’ll do it fur ye and send the
+pelt to ye.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Down old Sloper went on his hands and knees to
+the work <em>con amore</em>, his sharp hunting-knife gingerly
+tracing the lines where the cuticle and fur could be
+separated with least injury to the appearance of the
+integument. It was a long job and a careful one, but
+none of the other sportsmen had put in an appearance
+when it was finished. He straightened up and
+looked about him doubtfully.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“They all lost out somehows,” he said. “Mighty
+rough ridin’ in them slashes. I reckon they’ve all
+rid off to camp, mightily interested in that thar barbecued
+shoat fur dinner.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The mention elicited a responsive interest and a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_228'>228</span>desire to minimize the distance between the hunters
+and this dainty, time-honored of the <em>al fresco</em> feast.
+The hounds, old Sloper, and the huntsman set out
+by way of the deer path, as they had come.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I’ll try a short cut,” suggested Regnan, “if you
+don’t mind a bit more wading and swimming.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond protested his indifference to a renewal
+of their amphibious experience, and, mounting their
+horses, the two rode off through the saw-grass, which
+fringed the borders of the lake. Suddenly the slate-tinted
+clouds, darkening and still sinking lower, were
+cleft by a vivid forked flash; the thunder crashed
+with an appalling clangor; the horses were snorting
+in fright and plunging wildly, and the floodgates
+were unloosed. The rain descended in sheets; there
+was not a breath of wind, and the torrents fell vertically.
+It seemed for a time as if they were menaced
+by a cloud-burst. The quantity of water liberated was
+incalculable. The swamp which they now threaded
+was inundated so swiftly that Regnan more than
+once paused and looked back as if he canvassed the
+possibility of retracing their way to the solid earth
+they had quitted. But the rainfall was no translucent
+medium. He could distinguish naught beyond
+its opaque curtain. In serried lines in undiscriminated
+myriads the torrents fell, yet seemed always
+stationary. It hardly mattered which course they
+adopted, for each was soaked to the very bones. On
+and on they plodded, the horses dully drudging in
+the progress, making special exertion when they
+needs must, but obviously showing that they were of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_229'>229</span>opinion the fun was at an end, and that there could
+be too much of a good thing. Like human beings,
+they found a vastly different animus in going forth
+full of expectation and coming back exhausted with
+the day’s run. They held down their heads in meek
+endurance as the rain beat upon them, and when
+they stumbled in the shifty, marshy soil, there was
+great danger both to the animal and his rider in the
+lack of that alertness of muscle to recover a footing
+or bound with his burdened saddle beyond the limits
+of the quagmire. Once or twice this recovery was so
+precarious, so clumsy a floundering, and sinking was
+so imminent, that both horsemen were alarmed and
+prescient of disaster.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“We have done this thing once too often, I am
+afraid,” said Regnan.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond, too, had been looking over his shoulder,
+though not in the forlorn hope that they might be
+able to see the point from which they had started,
+for they had pressed the horses forward, against their
+will, with such energy that they had made it as impossible
+to retrace their way as to reach satisfactory
+footing in going on. Some injutting point of land
+in the irregular outline of the swamp, or one of the
+ridges of higher ground whereon switch cane grew
+luxuriantly, and which here and there traversed it,
+might yet afford them rescue, but if he could have
+discovered such opportunity in ordinary weather, the
+tumultuous, blinding downpour rendered it invisible
+now.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“There is nothing for it but to go on,” he said in
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_230'>230</span>a depressed cadence, for his heart had a sensation of
+sinking. He was growing desperate. The rain had in
+its midst great shifting clouds of thin vapor. Now
+it so inclosed them that they lost sight of each other.
+Yet when they called out in alarm, fearful of the
+disaster of unwittingly parting company, the changing
+mist gave a vision of the head of the other
+horse close at hand, though a moment earlier it could
+not be discerned.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Suddenly as Desmond shifted his position in the
+saddle, looking straight over his horse’s ears, he gave
+a start and an abrupt exclamation, staring as if he
+doubted his senses; for before him, in the pallid, hovering
+mists, half revealed and half concealed by the
+immaterial investitures of the curtaining rain and the
+cloaking cloud, like the travesty of a ship under full
+sail which tantalizes the desperate hope of wrecked
+or castaway mariners, he beheld as if suspended in
+the air between heaven and earth the outline of a river
+craft, a boat of some humble sort, a refuge.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Look, Regnan, what is that in the sky?” he exclaimed
+hastily.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Regnan lifted his head and put up his hand to hold
+away the flapping brim of his drenched hat. His
+voice suddenly rang out with a thrill of good cheer:
+“In the sky? Why, it’s in the bayou, thank God!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“It is a flatboat?” Desmond hesitated.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“A flatboat it is!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Regnan’s face had not regained its florid tint; the
+chill of the fog and the rain, that had not left a dry
+thread on his body, and the effluvia of the swamp, penetrating
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_231'>231</span>his lungs, had turned his lips blue. But he
+laughed out gayly, although as his lineaments moved
+he swallowed the rills of rain that ran down his face.
+“It is rescue, my boy! That’s what it is! The boat
+is half a mile off, and we can just about make it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Half a mile! A flatboat!” Even yet Desmond
+was hardly convinced that it was not a delusion.
+“What makes it so high!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“What makes us so low!” laughed Regnan. “Because
+we are away down in the swamp, and the flatboat
+is away up in the bayou.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I should think the bayou would overflow and
+convert this swamp into a lake.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“And so it would but for the conformation of its
+banks. And so it will if this cloud-burst keeps on a
+bit longer and swells the waters of the bayou.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>They shifted their direction and pushed on with a
+good heart, despite the difficulties that increased at
+every step; and though the horses, with their bent
+heads and drenched coats and drudging plod, had not
+seen the craft so high above their own level, now indeed
+obliterated from all view by the encircling cloud,
+they obviously felt the recruited hopes and energy of
+their riders. The revived spirits of the men were
+subtly imparted to the steeds, and the improved progress
+caused the distance to seem less than Regnan’s
+estimate when again the cloud lifted so much as
+to disclose the mirage-like craft, now lower on the
+limited horizon by reason of the nearer approach.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“To tell you the truth, Desmond,” said Regnan,—the
+two had become chummy, despite the tutor’s
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_232'>232</span>sensitive reserve and repellent dignity, for there was
+no justification in holding Regnan at arm’s length,—“I
+thought our hour had come. I thought we
+were destined to leave our bones in the bayou with
+the caitiff of the shirt of mail.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond shuddered. “Oh, give me better company!”
+he cried. “Death is a leveler, but it can never
+lay me so low as that.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now and then each looked up from beneath his sodden
+hat-brim to discern if their approach had been
+noticed from the craft, but as yet she gave no sign of
+observation. There was no one on deck, as they soon
+perceived. The rain beat down heavily upon it, and
+the water washed over its low gunwales as if it were
+the waves of the bayou. The stream, however, showed
+even yet no motion, no current; it was covered by a
+myriad of tiny bosses, so to speak, the rain being so
+persistent, the fall so regular, as to make the drops
+seem to stand stationary on its surface. It had risen
+several feet, as was evinced by the half submerged
+vegetation along the banks, the tips fresh and green,
+with no token of having been long under water. Beneath
+that black cloud, with the sinister effect of the
+white trunks of the cypress trees on either hand,
+deadened by repeated overflows, their weird reflections
+in the trembling black water, the funereal aspect
+of the pendent Spanish moss hanging from the high
+limbs and even festooning the trees from one side
+of the stream to the other,—the world, the past,
+life itself, annihilated by the clouds,—the dark and
+gloomy watercourse might have suggested the river
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_233'>233</span>Styx, and the shadowy, visionary, ill-defined boat the
+craft of Charon. They both felt an averse curiosity
+as they approached still nearer, striving to disintegrate
+from the rain and the cloud some individual
+characteristic or sign of occupation of the phantom
+craft. Regnan began to think it a derelict, an old
+abandoned hulk; but he soon saw that it sat the
+water much too jauntily, a stout, dry hull, tight and
+serviceable. Presently their keen young eyes discriminated
+a curl of smoke amidst the vapors that
+lay on the roof of the cabin. This was little more
+than a shed of upright boards, very flimsily put together,
+and a tiny square window along the eaves
+promised little for light. It served the purpose of
+a lookout, however. A pale face appeared there. It
+seemed to scan disconsolately the rain-lost world without,
+the encroaching cloud, the swamp with its sinking
+aspect; and suddenly, with transfixed attention, to
+become aware of the approaching sportsmen, the horse
+of the one up to the girth as he plodded through
+the half submerged morass, that of the other out of
+his depth and beginning to swim.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>For one spectral moment the face stared as if confronted
+by doom. Then the door of the cabin opened,
+and disregarding the downpour, with skirts lashing
+about her, with long hair loose and flying, a tall,
+sinuous young woman appeared, sprang from the deck
+upon the marshy bank, cast loose the line about a tree,
+leaped back upon the deck in a moment, caught up
+a pole, and with a stalwart effort had pushed off an
+oar’s length or two before the man whom her shrill
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_234'>234</span>cries had summoned stumbled out of the cabin and
+stood staring at the newcomers, with little apparent
+inclination to lend a hand to the effort of clearing
+the harbor.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It was vain. The horsemen were too close upon
+them. Such motive power as kept the sluggish bayou
+on its course from the Mississippi River was too slight
+to aid the pole to evade the speed of a swimming
+horse. Desmond, indeed, had boarded the craft while
+the imbecile face of the boat-hand was still bent upon
+him.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“What do you mean by this behavior?” he demanded
+angrily, not as yet recognizing either the
+man or the woman. “Tie up the boat again, and
+show us your bar.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Jocelindy! Jocelindy! ye fool, ye!” cried the
+boat-hand, striking the struggling woman on the
+shoulder with his heavy hand. But for this repulsive
+brutality it might have been pathetic to hear him tax
+another with his own obvious infirmity. “Don’t ye
+see the gentleman’s goin’ ter spen’ money with us!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He busied himself in tying up the boat in quick
+order, and found a place where the two horses could
+stand on pretty staunch ground under the interlacing
+boughs of cottonwood, so thick as to afford some
+shelter from the rain. He had fodder aboard, too,
+he said.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Some fodder we had to pack a lot o’ chany,”
+interposed the woman, suddenly and shrilly, “becase
+there wasn’t no straw convenient.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond had no mind to linger on ceremony.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_235'>235</span>Without waiting for an invitation, he turned toward
+the cabin door. The woman, still standing in the torrents,
+a secret thought in her face, her head askew,
+her draggled attire dripping with rain, her mouth
+bent down upon her clenched fist, suddenly asked:—</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Tell me one word,—is your name Faurie?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“No,” said Desmond, frowning at the identification
+with his employers as if he were of no importance
+in himself; “my name is Desmond.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Thar now, Jocelindy, ye told Jed that very word,”
+exclaimed the boat-hand, mowing and laughing with
+imbecile and extravagant glee. “Ye told him that
+this very mornin’ before he set out with his spade.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There was an incongruity in any mutual utilities
+between a boat and a spade, but Desmond was new
+to the river country and did not appreciate this fact.
+It struck Regnan at once, but he had no reason to
+place inimical construction upon the acts of the boat’s
+company, and it passed without comment.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Though what is called “not right bright,” Ethan
+Knoxton was discriminating enough to preside very
+acceptably at a bar when two storm-drenched wights
+stood before it, and he ranged the glasses with an
+extra polish and tipped a decanter. It was a dull,
+squalid little hole, with a permanent aroma of the
+greasy fumes of many breakfasts fried on the monkey
+stove at the farther end of the cabin, and the heavy,
+oily flavor of the untrimmed wick of a kerosene lamp
+swinging above the bar. The water dripped dismally
+from their coats and riding-breeches into the already
+well-filled legs of their high boots, that gave a squashing
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_236'>236</span>sound at every step. From their hats chilly little
+streams trickled into their collapsed shirt collars and
+down their shivering spines; and as the first drop of
+liquor touched their palates, the surprise to find that
+instead of rank, coarse whiskey it was good French
+brandy was so grateful that they could but look at
+each other with glistening eyes over the rims of their
+glasses as they drank.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The boat-hand watched them expectantly.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“My! Ain’t that fine!” Then as they set the
+glasses down, he whooped out his vicarious joy and
+smote his leg with the palm of his open hand.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond had insisted on paying by right of his
+discovery of the bar, and he laid down the price of
+three drinks. “You will oblige me,” he said politely
+to the boat-hand, struggling with his distaste and
+disgust. One should not despise the poor, and the
+uncouth, and the deprived, who may have more value
+in their Maker’s eyes than one wots of. Therefore, because
+the semblance of humanity was not always disdained,
+he sought to have a regard to the mere image.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“For me?” The protuberant, grotesque eyes of
+the boat-hand were stretched. “For <em>me</em>!” He could
+hardly realize the rich opportunity. “For <span class='fss'>ME</span>!” And
+at last convinced, he exclaimed, “Lord love ye!
+Lord bless ye! Lord save ye!” and gulped down
+the French brandy, casting up the gloating eyes of
+extreme ecstasy at every swallow. He smacked his
+lips again and again, to be heard in the remotest
+corner of the cabin, then stood comfortably smelling
+the glass while the others turned toward the stove.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_237'>237</span>“Isn’t that queer—French brandy?” Desmond
+suggested.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Smuggled, I suppose,” said Regnan.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Stolen, I’m afraid,” said Desmond, <em>sotto voce</em>,
+mopping the rain from his cold face and shaking the
+rills from his drenched hat. The jeopardy, the confusion,
+the exhaustion attendant on the moment of
+rescue from the sinister menace of the swamp and
+the cloud-burst engrossed his faculties, but he was
+vaguely recollecting that he had recently heard of
+the dispensing of this choice liquor among a class of
+swampers to whom its market price rendered it unaccustomed
+and unattainable.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Well, I was not <em>particeps criminis</em> till it was
+halfway down,—too far to catch it. And it feels just
+as good where it is as if it was honestly come by,”
+Regnan laughed.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The woman had utilized the interval while their
+backs were turned, and perhaps the shelter of a curtained
+bunk, to slip into a dry gown and a clean
+apron, and she, too, seemed to have determined on
+a change of tactics. She would fry for the gentlemen
+some rashers of bacon and eggs, if they liked; and
+set on a strong pot of coffee, she said.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Are you afraid of spoiling your appetite for that
+barbecued shoat?” Regnan asked Desmond, with a
+rallying eye.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“No; are you?” For the day was wearing on into
+the afternoon. There were already dulling intimations
+in the clouds, as if the limits of light in their midst
+were curtailed. The woman listened intently as she
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_238'>238</span>set forth her poor and humble board with its best;
+and when they were seated on either side and she
+whisked about serving them, her strange, snake-like
+face had a more propitiatory and pleasing expression
+than seemed possible, with her high cheek-bones, her
+eyes aslant, her long, serpentine neck.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>She suddenly addressed Desmond. “You see he
+ain’t quit suckin’ his thumb yit,” she said, as an infantine
+babbling caused Desmond to turn his head
+to perceive sitting bolt upright in a bunk behind him
+an infant in a red gown with his thumb in his mouth,
+regarding the feasting with slobbering admiration,
+but making no effort to partake and no demand to
+be served.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond recognized her now for the first time.
+He had given her but little notice since coming
+aboard, and on the occasion of his previous visit to
+the shanty-boat, partly because of the dimness of
+the light in the little cabin, partly because of the
+sensational development of the interview, he had not
+sufficiently observed the subsidiary members of the
+crew—the woman, the child, and the boat-hand—to
+remember their faces. If Jedidiah Knoxton had
+been present, there would have been no delay in
+recalling the personnel of the whole party.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“That lady, Mrs. Faurie,” continued the woman,
+speaking in a very propitiatory manner, “told me
+how to break him of it, too. She’s powerful handsome,
+sure, ain’t she?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Yes,” said Desmond to this direct appeal. “And
+she is a very kind lady.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_239'>239</span>“Sure! She told me she’d gin little Ikey some
+baby clothes.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“But you left very suddenly,” said Desmond, significantly.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Regnan continued to eat silently, surprised at the
+evidence of previous acquaintance, but comfortable
+enough that it made no conversational demands upon
+him, so keen an appetite had the vicissitudes of the
+day given him.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I want to tell you about that,” said the woman,
+winningly. “Jed’s a mighty techy kind o’ man an’
+he got sorter nettled ’bout that thar wheel. He ’lowed
+you b’lieved it was stole. An’ truth was, he knowed
+he didn’t come by it right straight. A young boy
+nigh Ring-fence Plantation traded it to him fur mighty
+little money. His dad had give it to him fur Chris’mas,
+an’ the chile had got tired of it an’ had ruther
+have a few dollars. I begged Jed not to humor him;
+’twas wuth mo’. But Jed said a plaything a boy is
+tired of ain’t wuth nothin’. ’Twas a good bargain
+fur him, an’ he gits a heap o’ trade ’mongst the young
+fry. But he oughtn’t ter helped the boy sell his
+wheel unbeknownst to his folks.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Her serpentine aspect was not altogether unjustified.
+As she charmed so wisely, Desmond’s conviction
+was shaken. She laughed a little, as if embarrassed,
+passing the hem of her apron back and forth
+in her hand.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Truth is, he was mad ’cause it carried out my
+warnings; an’ sorter skeered, too, ’cause he seen how
+it mought look to other folks. Jed’s real helterskelter.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_240'>240</span>He pulled loose and drapped down the river,
+but he hadn’t gone a mile before he was sorry.
+That’s Jed.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The boat-hand, listening, and now quite won to
+complaisance by the unusual prosperity that had befallen
+the “trading-boat,” here in its cache, echoed
+loudly, “That’s Jed!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“So I didn’t git my duds the beautiful lady promised
+me.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Mrs. Faurie would no doubt send them to you if
+she knew where you would be,” said Desmond, mechanically
+meditating on his suspicions. The story
+was very glib. The shanty-boaters might have had no
+complicity with the tragedy at Whippoorwill Landing
+and no culpability as the receivers of stolen goods,—thus
+accessory after the fact. But the flavor of the
+French brandy still lingered about his palate; evidently
+they did not know its value as a beverage,
+and this was suspicious. Still, smuggling was comparatively
+a venial matter, and he had a vague regret
+that he had been so quick to direct the suspicion of
+the authorities upon so poor and defenseless a group.
+But he had had no word how the information had
+been received, or whether it was to be acted upon.
+Nevertheless, it would be easy to prove the truth of
+her story, provided her story was true.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Just as well she is where she is to-day,” Regnan
+declared. He was leaning back in his chair, having
+finished his meal with a good relish, and feeling
+about in his cigar case to make sure that its contents
+had escaped without injury in the general flood.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_241'>241</span>“Try one of these,”—he held it across the table
+to Desmond. “They seem to be all O. K.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond selected one, and, leaning over, struck a
+match on the lid of the stove. “The luckiest thing
+imaginable for us,” he said in jerks, as he held the
+light to the end and pulled hard to set it aglow,
+“that we happened to see the boat when we did.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Fires up all right?” Regnan queried. Then—“You
+must charge us a good round price for this
+dinner, madam. We are paying for not being at the
+bottom of the bayou,”—he laughed. “We have a
+special reason for not wanting to meet up with something
+we know is there.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>His face changed suddenly; he looked at her in
+consternation. Never had he seen such an expression
+as settled upon her countenance. Fear it was at first.
+“For God’s sake, what!” she gasped. Then—anger.
+“Ye’d better mind yer tongue, now!” Her fingers
+closed on the handle of a great butcher knife on
+the meat block in the corner. And now—venom.
+“Ye’re jes’ two cowardly, lying rapscallions! Ye
+dunno <em>what’s</em> in the bayou! An’ ye ain’t got no call
+to know! An’ besides,”— with a realization of self-betrayal,—“thar
+ain’t nuthin’ thar fur ye to know—ha!
+ha! ha!—te, he, he!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Regnan had risen, startled and wondering; but
+Desmond sat perfectly still, looking steadily at her,
+convinced that, added to the unstoried crimes and the
+unsavory detritus that the bayou hid under its black
+waters and its deep, unstable mire, lay the stolen wheel,
+and heaven knew what gear besides, from the looting
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_242'>242</span>of the store at Whippoorwill Landing by the merciless
+murderers.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It was a painful moment. He was glad to walk to
+the door of the cabin and look out once more at the
+steadily falling rain; at the spurious palpitation that
+the drops set up on the surface of the immobile
+stream; at the dark, encompassing forest, the water-side
+vegetation still in the pallid green of spring,
+seeming to hold all the light and color of the neutral-tinted
+landscape; at the slow circling of the vapors
+about the deck of the shanty-boat. There was a projection
+above the door like the shelter of eaves, and
+as he stood, only an occasional drop of water fell
+upon his head. He was all unprescient; he was conscious
+merely of distaste, the exhaustion from exertion,
+a sense of inexpressible boredom, the discomfort of
+his half-dried garb, and an impatient desire to be
+through with the whole episode. It met him like
+fate!—the muffled boom of a distant bell!</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_243'>243</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XI</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c006'>It was a strange thing to Desmond. Try as he
+might, Regnan could not hear it. Summoned to the
+door, he stood and looked out, and bent his attention
+to discern only the rhythmic throb of the rain, only
+the waves splashing across the deck, only the slow drip
+of the water through a leak in the flimsy roof. He
+looked curiously at his companion as Desmond, every
+fibre alert, his eyes afire with excitement, his lifted
+hand trembling, and the cigar between his fingers
+dead in its ash, would exclaim “Now!” and stand
+motionless again, listening acutely as if to an echo.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I hear nothing but the rain,” said Regnan. “But
+even if there were no rain, we couldn’t hear the bell
+at Dryad-Dene so far as this.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“But this might be the bell at Great Oaks,” argued
+Desmond.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“They wouldn’t ring unless they were overflowed.
+We left Dryad-Dene high and dry this morning, and
+Great Oaks never goes under until Dryad-Dene is
+half drowned, hardly ever even then; for the Fauries
+have a private cross levee that protects Great Oaks,
+to a considerable extent. Besides, there is no danger
+yet from high water,—all talk and the usual spring
+scare.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“There!” The bell boomed again, shaking the
+mists. And Desmond looked into the face of Regnan
+in triumphant confirmation, to find his companion fixing
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_244'>244</span>agitated, half-compassionate, half-questioning eyes
+upon him.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“My dear fellow,” laying his hand on Desmond’s
+arm, “you don’t hear a sound but the rain.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I must go! I must return at once to Great Oaks.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Regnan remonstrated. They would be bogged
+down; the continued exposure would kill them; he
+would not be a party to so foolhardy a hazard.
+“What good could you do? If they are going under
+water, they are ringing up the force to bring out the
+gunny-sacks and patch up the break.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“It might be something else. There!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Along the dark waters the sound was borne. It
+filled the fall of the rain with a distant undiscriminated
+vibration.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I ought to be able to restrain you by reason,
+Desmond,” Regnan urged seriously. “Don’t let me
+have to appeal to these people for aid.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Look out,” said Desmond, with a dangerous flash
+of the eye. “They are river pirates. I have cause
+to know.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“So have <em>I</em>,” declared Regnan, bursting with
+laughter. “I saw two bales of cotton tucked away in
+that closet when that rascal opened the door to get
+the brandy.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>A word, a nod, an inferential phrase, and Regnan
+was in possession of the story of the bicycle and of
+the suspicions of the shanty-boat’s complicity as a
+“fence” with the marauders of the looted store at
+Whippoorwill Landing.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“If you are minded to trust yourself to such
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_245'>245</span>creatures, I can only deplore your lack of judgment.
+If you will come with me, I know they will be glad
+to put you up at Great Oaks.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I’m afraid of getting my feet wet,” Regnan
+whimsically protested.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“You had much better come with me to Great
+Oaks.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I’m all right here. There is nothing to gain by
+meddling with me. These people won’t dare. If I
+should be missing, they know that you would give
+information where I was last seen. I am perfectly
+safe. I am going to take up my abode on this trading-boat,
+my ark, as it seems, till the waters subside.
+The dove is apparently something of the fiercest.
+And the lunatic yonder sends cold chills down my
+spine. But I will risk them, rather than that treacherous
+swamp. So will you, if you are wise.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Boom! Desmond had already paid his score without
+question, to the surprise of the boat’s company,
+accustomed to dicker on a price.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Make my excuses to the Kentopps,” he said
+to Regnan, ending the discussion and turning to
+leave.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“If ever I see them again,” cried Regnan. “I
+feel my feet spreading out in webs. I think my
+wing feathers are sprouting. I’ll be transformed
+into some sort of waterfowl and never get beyond
+Bogue Humma-Echeto any more!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I’ll send the horse back to-morrow,” Desmond
+called out. He sprang through the rain from the deck
+to the dark and marshy soil. But his horse lifted
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_246'>246</span>his head with a glad neigh of recognition, and as he
+put foot in stirrup and rode off, the animal set out
+at a swift gait and with a stout willingness of heart
+that showed his eagerness for a comfortable stall and
+manger, and his weariness of the detention that had
+nevertheless rested him well. Under these conditions
+the inundated swamp proved a less difficult proposition,
+albeit the water had risen almost girth high and
+the wading was slow,—the horse splashing along
+with a distinct impact of the mire, pulling with a sort
+of suction under his hoofs.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond, prescient of disaster, he knew not what,
+fired with the ardor of a rescue, he knew not from
+what, ready to sacrifice comfort, safety, life itself, in
+this wild, adventurous sort in his premonition that
+Honoria Faurie had summoned assistance, that the
+bell had rung for help at Great Oaks Plantation,
+resolved that no aid should come more willingly, more
+instinct with protective spirit, than from him. It did
+not once occur to him that this was a superfluous
+hazard which it was no part of his duty to encounter.
+His only care, his only hope, was to reach the plantation
+safely, that he might reach it swiftly. He took no
+risks, less with a realization of his own interest than
+a prudence in compassing his object. He exerted a
+judgment that might have been thought impossible
+in one so unused to woodland experience; and though
+the sense of loneliness settled down heavily upon him
+when he could no longer see Regnan on the deck of
+his ark, and at last not even the outline of the trading-boat,
+rising ever higher and higher in the sky as he
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_247'>247</span>went down and down into the swamp till indeed it
+seemed caught up into the clouds, he kept a stout
+heart. He resolutely turned his mind from the knowledge
+of the coming of darkness, only an hour or so
+distant, the savage animals of this primeval aqueous
+wilderness, the probable chance that he might
+lose his way, the indefinite data by which he might
+keep it, his burning impatience of the slow progress
+which might yet fail to put him ere benighted beyond
+the immediate region of slough and swamp and
+bayou, now infinitely increased in extent by the rainfall.
+The small compass in his pocket which he had
+used in a lesson with the redoubtable Chub was of
+great advantage in keeping him to his direction.
+Straight to the south, Regnan had declared, and he
+would come at last to the cross levee which usually
+protected Great Oaks in time of overflow from receiving
+a share of the neighboring inundations, backing
+up as the waters were reinforced. Southward he went,
+struggling through sloughs, swimming bayous, scrambling
+up steep banks. On one of these his stout horse
+fell backward almost upon his rider, and Desmond,
+throwing himself to one side, escaped but for a
+bruised shoulder and arm, while the animal was badly
+shaken. He could hardly endure the delay as he stood
+on the edge of the water by the trembling creature
+and they had some conversation, as one may say, over
+the mischance and the necessity of pressing on. But
+the red roan was a good plucked brute, and before
+long they were forging ahead once more, man and
+horse in perfect mutual confidence.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_248'>248</span>Desmond could have shouted with joy when at last
+he saw the great winding earthwork, covered with its
+green Bermuda grass; and when they climbed its steep
+slope and gained the path on the summit, the horse
+of his own accord struck a jaunty little canter, glad
+of the good going and the sight once more of a civilized
+landscape; for presently within view were great
+stretches of cotton-fields. And what was that immense
+expanse in the distance? Desmond could not
+distinguish for the rain and the mist, and for a phenomenon
+of far more import. In the shadow of a stretch
+of forest a huge gully intervened in the levee,—fresh,
+the earth on the sides showing a degree of dryness
+despite the rain, the sod of Bermuda ripped through,
+and the turf, still green, thrown aside. The levee had
+been cut, and Desmond received an illumination in the
+recollection of the boat-hand’s words that Jed Knoxton
+had gone forth that morning with his spade. He
+began to have an appalling sense of the extent of the
+disaster even before he came upon a counterpart excavation
+and realized that the levee had been cut in
+more than one place. The nefarious job had been
+thoroughly done, and though in broad daylight, the
+cloaking fog and blinding rain offered an impunity
+that a dark and clear night could scarcely have
+afforded. He understood now the significance of that
+broad expanse of copper-hued glister of which he had
+caught but a glimpse through the aisles of the woods
+and the serried ranks of the rainfall; it was overflow,
+miles of overflow, submerging the wide tilled and
+orderly fields of Great Oaks Plantation. And that
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_249'>249</span>roar in the air—what was it? Tumultuous, loud, with
+a petulant dash and a sinister sibilance, blended with
+episodic crashes and sudden wild clamors, like the
+frenzied turbulence of savage beasts. It was the voice
+of the Mississippi River, silent no longer in its deep
+channel, but rioting in shallow floods over the aghast,
+despoiled plains, crying out in its license and its mad
+joy, seeming now and again to smite against the sky.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The wind was rising. The gusts, coming down the
+great, unimpeded highway of the stream, gave impetus
+to its currents surging against miles of levee
+still unbroken, and lashing and sweeping away, melting
+in a moment, the embankments that collapsed
+under its force. The water nearest at hand, he perceived,
+was backing up; it was not long before he
+had reached it, lapping playfully about the base of
+the cross levee on which he stood. How long this
+path would continue practicable he could not compute.
+The horse, more accustomed to the river and
+its incidents, was showing evident signs of uneasiness,
+and in fact he stopped presently, with tossing
+head and startled eyes and planted hoofs, before Desmond
+perceived through the rain and the distance a
+white flashing in the dun evening light, which, had
+he no experience of the locality, he might have mistaken
+for a cataract. The inference was obvious. It
+was the foam of raging waters as they tore through
+an excavation intersecting the cross levee once more.
+The great volume of the flood was surging over its
+summit. It was a question of only a very short time
+when the levee, along which he had come and where
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_250'>250</span>he now stood, would be swept away. Both he and the
+horse were in imminent danger of death by drowning.
+His first impulse was to turn back and retrace
+his way. But at this moment of hesitation his attention
+was caught by a moving object on the face of
+the waters, emerging from the fog and the rain, and
+gradually materializing as a man in a very small boat.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Hello!” cried Desmond, peremptorily.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The man ceased to paddle and looked about him
+doubtfully, at first on his own level, only descrying
+the mounted figure on the embankment at a second
+stentorian roar from Desmond.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Fur de Lawd’s sake, is dat you, Mr. Desmond!”
+he cried out in instant recognition. “In de name o’
+sense, what you gwine do up dar on dat levee?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Is that you, Seth?” for the negro was a hostler
+on Great Oaks Plantation, a very black fellow, looking
+as he sat in the dugout like a silhouette against
+the gray rain and the white mist and the yellow
+water. “I don’t know what to think—”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I does,” Seth promptly interrupted. “I think you
+gwine git yo’se’f drownded, an’ Colonel Kentopp’s
+hawse, too.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“How deep is the water?” Desmond had the instinct
+of remonstrating against this as a decree of
+fate.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Six feet along dar, an’ risin’ every jump. I ain’t
+never seen the contrary old ribber on sech a bender,
+an’ I been knowin’ her gwine on fawty year.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond was alarmed at the idea of jeopardizing
+the valuable horse. He hardly noticed Seth’s plaints.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_251'>251</span>“We-all’s levee done cut—’fore de Lawd, dem
+planters in Deepwater Bend below Great Oaks would
+be mighty glad if dey could cotch dat varmint dat cut
+de levee. Dey nachully depends on Great Oaks cross
+levee to keep the ribber off ’n dem, when Dry’-Dene
+goes under. Oh, my Lawd A’mighty, dis am a drefful
+day, shore!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I had better ride back along the levee,” said
+Desmond, ponderingly.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“It’ll be under water in ten minutes.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“But I must take the horse to some place of
+safety.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Whar is dat?” demanded Seth, walling his great
+eyes, with the whites very prominent as he gazed up
+at his interlocutor at long range; the distance was
+constantly lessened, however, for he paddled closer
+and closer to the base of the levee as he talked.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“What is the safest way to the stables? I will
+take the horse there.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“What you gwine dar fur? You hatter charter a
+steamboat. Water up ter de mangers.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“In the Great Oaks stables? Is the mansion
+flooded, too?” Desmond, in keen alarm for the household,
+trembled to hear the reply.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>These disasters and their concurrent dangers were
+so new to his experience and even traditions that he
+could scarcely contemplate their encounter with composure.
+Seth seemed to him a stolidly unfeeling
+clod, hardly able to stretch his limited faculties to an
+adequate comprehension. But indeed, though there
+was no lack of water hereabout, Seth had contributed
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_252'>252</span>a tear or two to the floods in his woe and despair for
+the destruction of these familiar values by which he
+lived and in which he had such vicarious pride.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“The stable under water? Why, how about the
+mansion?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“De gret house is safe!” Seth snapped out, as if
+the question were imputatious; even the insubordinate
+Mississippi River would not venture upon the
+presumption to meddle with the dignified mansion
+house of Great Oaks Plantation. “I jes’ seen Bob,
+an’ he ’lowed de water had filled de grove, an’ air
+lappin’ ‘round de underpinnin’, but ’tain’t riz yit inter
+de veranda.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond was aghast at this intimation of jeopardy.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“De gret house is on high groun’, an’ dough dey
+tuk up de kyarpets wunst, de overflow ain’t never
+been rightly in de mansion house.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Bob ought to be there; it is the footman’s station,”
+Desmond exclaimed, thinking how few the inmates
+to cope with any unusual danger.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Dey ain’t none o’ de house sarvants dar, ’cept de
+cook-woman. Mis’ Honoria sont de rest ob dem ter
+holp dar famblies at de quarter. Bless de Lawd, boss,
+ye oughter see de quarter!” Seth’s voice rose to a distressful
+quaver. “’Twas so suddint—the cross levee
+never gave way before, an’ we-all ain’t never had no
+sich water as dis here. Some o’ de tenant folks is
+sittin’ on de ridge-poles ob dar cabin roof, savin’
+nuttin’ but dar bedclothes; dar funicher is floatin’ ‘way
+like ’twar ’witched an’ gone swimmin’. The chillen
+wuz mighty nigh drownded. One dem pickaninnies ob
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_253'>253</span>Liza Jane’s war cotched by the tail ob its coat an’
+hung in a cottonwood tree. Hit hollered! But hit
+never squirmed. Hit knowed catfish an’ yalligator
+war smackin’ dar lips an’ sharpenin’ dar teeth for
+hit. Lawd! Lawd! We ain’t never had no sech time.
+Mis’ Honoria sont ebery sarvant from de gret house
+ter holp dar folks, ’cept de cook-woman—an’ <em>she</em>
+say she is feared ter ride ter de quarter in de overflow
+in a dugout.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“That was why the bell was ringing, then; to
+summon help?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The darkey paused, leaning on his paddle, and
+looked up at Desmond with a curious and searching
+eye.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Bell!” he exclaimed. “The Great Oaks plantation
+bell ain’t rung since daybreak.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There was a pause. Desmond knew the superstition
+concerning bells,—the ancient universal tradition of
+mystic summons. There was no habitation nearer the
+bayou whence some great brazen casting could send
+forth that coercive tone; the distance from the river
+was too great to admit the sound from a passing
+steamer.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Naw, sir; if you hearn bells callin’ you to-day,
+they ring in your mind. Somebody in heaven or hell,
+or somebody in yearth or air, is callin’ you, callin’
+you by spirit bells—thoughts reach furder’n sound.
+Mighty cur’us, but that’s sure true. Bells!” Seth
+raised himself on his paddle and looked up with a
+face distorted by query and fear into the rain and
+fog. “<em>Bells!</em>” he said again. Then he lent himself
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_254'>254</span>to the work of the paddle, and was soon within leaping
+distance of the levee.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“You gimme dat hawse, boss, an’ I’ll take him ter
+de risin’ ground whar we got what we is saved. Lawd!
+ye ought ter see de cattle drownded! My Gawd! De
+cows mooin’ an’ de calves a-blatin’, all swimmin’ as
+long as dar legs could work ’em along—an’ de sheep!
+Ef I had time, I’d jes set down an’ moan an’ weep
+an’ preach dar funeral. Some ob de best head ob our
+Great Oaks cattle! Dar carcases floatin’ down de
+ribber or cotched in de bushes in de swamp! Gimme
+dat hawse. Colonel Kentopp’s a perlite man, but I’d
+hate fur anything belongin’ ter him ter git lost on
+Great Oaks Plantation. <em>You</em> couldn’t find yer way.
+I’ll take tacks an’ short cuts, an’ I know whar is
+risin’ ground. You an’ de hawse would lose yer way
+an’ both be drownded. You git in de dugout an’ go
+ter de mansion house. You kin find dat, ef ye kin
+see ter keep ter de west.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The immemorial dugout, peculiar to the Mississippi
+River country, is a primitive craft, nothing more, indeed,
+than a log, roughly hollowed out and shaped as
+to stern and prow. It is quite adequate, however, to
+the purposes of its creation, for skirting banks, navigating
+bayous and lakes, rarely venturing into midstream
+or crossing the great river. It is safe enough
+in accustomed hands, but it is doubtful if Desmond
+were not in more danger of drowning thus embarked
+than returning on his precarious route along the summit
+of the levee. The dugout wallowed portentously
+as Desmond stepped within its restricted space, but
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_255'>255</span>after a few words of instruction from Seth he righted
+the craft and presently paddled off easily enough, the
+darkey standing beside the horse, watching the boat
+till it was lost to sight in the rain and the approaching
+dusk and the fog closing down.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I ’spec’ dat ar man is safe in de dugout,” he muttered,
+“dough his kind is used ter de saloon ob a
+side-wheel steamboat, an’ dat’s de fac’. We done loss
+enough cattle drownded dis day, ’dout him ter top
+off wid.” So saying, Seth mounted and rode away
+into the rain.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Though the dugout was a new proposition to Desmond,
+he had had some experience with the paddle
+as a propelling agent. His Alma Mater was situated
+on a watercourse, and at one time the Indian canoe
+and paddle was a favorite fad. Thus his progress was
+swift through the rain and the fog, despite the fact
+that for the first time he felt the strength of the current
+of the Mississippi; for he was soon out of the
+limits of the back water and in the direct course of
+the overflow. He would have scorned the acceptance
+of a superstition, but the premonition of a summons
+was so strong upon him that he stretched every muscle
+to his task. The glimpse of the wide expanse of
+water, that might have appalled him, alone and without
+guidance in the midst of its willful, riotous turbulence,
+was but limited. The fog shut in, and but for
+a few boat-lengths he could see naught but the surging
+yellow current of a restricted space and the pallid
+curtain of the cloudy dusk. Sometimes a shadowy
+looming near at hand intimated a building half submerged,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_256'>256</span>invisible in the fog and rain. More than
+once he thought he heard voices, whether far or near
+he could not determine. An incident of the high
+water, on which he had not counted, was the débris
+aloose and afloat, which invested navigation with undreamed-of
+dangers, with which he could make no
+covenant of caution. More than once flotsam shot
+past him in the gloom on the swift current, with a
+force as if flung from a catapult; sometimes it was the
+lumber of a wrecked building; once it was a capsized
+boat, adrift, telling either of the strain of the current,
+breaking it loose from its moorings, or of a hapless wight
+lost upon the turbulent waves; once it was a drift log,
+which was upon him almost as soon as seen, shooting
+out of the white invisibilities of the mist and striking
+the dugout amidships with a force that threatened to
+send it to the bottom. It rocked so violently that
+Desmond had much ado to keep it right side up.
+When the drift log had disappeared and he was once
+more paddling on in clear water, it seemed so deep,
+the current was so strong, night was closing in so
+fast, that he began to fear he had been swept out to
+the main river; at length, however, the mist gave
+intimations here and there of vertical, shadowy objects
+at close intervals, which he only discriminated
+as the trees of the grove when he came in sudden
+contact with the bole of a gigantic oak. The dugout
+rebounded from the collision with a violent recoil
+that seemed to stir all the fibres of the hollowed log,
+but Desmond could hardly realize the shock which
+had jarred his every bone, so rejoiced was he to feel
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_257'>257</span>himself near his journey’s end. He steered more
+deftly after this, with more heed, with less effort at
+speed, perhaps because the mists were lightening,
+or that now he had his faculties better in hand
+since his plunging, frantic haste under the spur
+and lash of suspense was abated, as his object was
+achieved. Soon he was able to discern that he was
+surely and swiftly approaching the house, which to
+his surprise, massive and wide and low in the gloom,
+showed not a single gleam of light. He saw the live
+oak at one side, which the veranda encircled, towering
+up into the air, and suddenly he lifted his paddle
+and let the dugout drift without a sound. For there,
+in front of the main entrance, a yawl swung at a distance
+of a few oars’ length, kept from drifting by
+the occasional stroke of half a dozen rowers. At the
+bow a man was standing, holding a colloquy with the
+inmates of the house. Desmond had not heard his
+words, the husky, gruff voice and defective articulation
+had masked them, but his heart plunged responsive
+to the clear, vibrant tones, thrilled with fright,
+as Mrs. Faurie spoke as boldly as she might.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“But they are not here,” she said.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The man gave a sort of derisive chuckle and the
+oarsmen laughed together. One of them, a thick-set
+fellow with matted red hair, vaguely familiar to
+Desmond, sitting crouched in the place of the stroke-oar,
+spat contemptuously in the water.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Well, Mrs. Faurie, whar mought you be willin’
+to say they are?” the spokesman asked.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Another, pale, wiry, hatchet-faced, and evidently a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_258'>258</span>meddlesome lout, intruded a sneer. “I reckon,” he
+said, with a simpering, brisk intonation,—“I reckon
+ye won’t purtend that you disremember whar you
+put thutty thousand dollars wuth o’ emeralds.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I will not, indeed! I put them into a bank in
+New Orleans.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond realized that she was standing at the open
+window of the parlor, and from such shelter as it
+afforded was holding parley with the villains,—it was
+doubtless the identical gang of river pirates who had
+looted the store at Whippoorwill Landing with such
+signal impunity.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Then, madam, we will take your order for them,”
+said the flippant intermeddler, airily.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Keep yer face out of it,—ye’re bug-house, Danvelt!”
+said the thick-set man. “What good would
+the order do? She would signal the fust steamboat
+that passed,—she would telegraph as soon as we
+were gone!—send a nigger in a dugout across the
+river to the railroad flag station in the Arkansas.
+Either one would overhaul us.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Mightn’t be ekal to signalin’ an’ telegraphin’.
+Might be gagged an’ under lock an’ key—ef still
+alive!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The man in the bow spoke authoritatively. “Sorry
+not to take a lady’s word. But biz is biz! We will
+search the house, an’ if the jools are not thar, sure
+enough, you will obleege us with your order on your
+bankers, and the key of your deposit box.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mrs. Faurie had lost control of her voice. It was
+high and shrill in the dank, misty air. “I will not permit
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_259'>259</span>you to enter. I warn you of the consequences if
+you set foot on that veranda. You will all bear witness,”
+she added, as if she addressed an unseen group
+within.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The feint, gallant-hearted as it was, failed of conviction.
+The spokesman, openly scornful, disdained
+response other than threats. “The Miss’ippi River is
+mighty convenient, here.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Tain’t gone dry noways that I can see,” said
+the pert wit of the party, and there was a tumult
+of chuckling and shaking shoulders in the boat.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“We have a lot of rope handy,” the spokesman
+continued, holding up a coil in his hand, his hard
+face white and fierce against the gray waters and
+lowering sky. “Look at them iron vases!”—the rims
+of the great lawn ornaments, six in number, showed
+above the surface of the swirling waters, where they
+stood at the end of the broad walk and at the intersections
+of the driveways on either side of the mansion.
+“They will make capital weights, enough to sink
+every soul in the house,—the three boys, old man
+Stanlett, yerself, and even that big fat nigger cook-woman,
+for that is all ye have got in the house,—sink
+ye, every one; the Miss’ippi River is one hunderd
+and eighty feet deep in Deepwater Bend, even
+at low water.” He shook his head ominously, and
+the rills of rain ran off the wide slouched brim of
+his hat with the sinister energy of his motion.
+“Never be heard tell of no more,—if ye don’t see
+yer way to accommodate us with the order and the
+key.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_260'>260</span>And, sooth to say, if she should! There was no
+alternative. It was only a subterfuge of inducement.
+Desmond’s blood ran cold. He perceived in aghast dismay
+the symmetry and perfection of the plan of the
+miscreants. They had doubtless made sure of the absence
+from the plantation of the manager, who was in
+Vicksburg on a business trip, and of the visit of the tutor
+to Dryad-Dene, before they ventured to cut the levee.
+The inundation of the plantation quarter with its flimsy
+low houses menaced its inhabitants, especially women
+and children, with drowning, and would draw to its
+succor every available man from the stanch mansion
+house, which was amply able to cope with floods.
+When the servants should return, the absence of the
+family would be accounted for variously in their minds
+and without apprehension of evil: some passing steamboat
+might have responded to a signal and sent out
+a yawl to assist them to a refuge in Natchez or Memphis,
+there to abide till the overflow should abate;
+some neighbor, the Kentopps, the Mayberrys, perchance
+still on dry ground themselves, might have
+come and delivered them from their inundated domicile.
+There would be no one among the tenants and
+servants left in authority, no one fitted to act. Days
+might well elapse before aught would be suspected.
+The order upon the bankers would be duly honored;
+the fence in New Orleans—for doubtless in an affair
+of such magnitude the robbers were provided with a
+respectable seeming <em>deus ex machina</em>, some shyster at
+the bar, some trickster of a loan agent, some defaulting
+bank official on the eve of detection and flight—would
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_261'>261</span>be upon the high seas with the famous emeralds,
+before the Faurie mystery, as the disappearance
+of the family would be called, should set the river
+country agog with horror and baffled wonder and
+impotent despair.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond’s strong head was dizzy; his stout heart
+fluttered as he realized the peril and the tenuous possibility
+of succor,—a single hair to which he might
+cling, the fraction of a minute of time! If only he
+could enter the house first! From without he could
+hope for naught. He could not cope here with six
+brutal and hardened villains, doubtless the miscreants
+who had wrought robbery and arson and malignant
+murder in the tragedy at Whippoorwill Landing. He
+could not show himself here, for he would only sacrifice
+his life, worth more at this moment than ever
+before,—than it could be again. He dared not shoot
+from ambush; for a failure of aim would result fatally
+to her, to him, to all in the house. He could not venture
+to step on the veranda, lest his footfall be heard
+or even his form be dimly descried from the yawl
+continually oscillating to and fro.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Oh, for one impulse of courage in that fainting feminine
+heart! Could she but rally her forces to withstand
+their demand, to brave their hideous threat, to
+hold them in parley but one moment longer. His own
+heart leaped as he heard her voice again. It was full
+of quavering vibrations, high and shrill and strangely
+out of tune. But she spoke stanchly and with the
+poise of dignity. “This is my house. I forbid you to
+set foot in it,—to trespass one inch on this veranda.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_262'>262</span>I warn you that I shall not be answerable for the
+consequences. I call you all to witness,” she seemed
+to address the group within. “And I have help at
+hand.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>She uttered the words with such apparent confidence
+in the midst of her direful extremity that they
+seemed to carry somewhat of conviction, to stir the
+suspicion, the cowardice of the marauders. They did
+not at once move forward, but hung as it were in the
+wind on the oscillating water.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It was a failure of judgment which induced her
+on noting the effect of her words to repeat them, for
+instantly interpreting them as a bluff, the oars struck
+the water and the craft moved forward. “I have help,”
+she piteously repeated. “I have help at hand.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“You have,—you have, indeed!” Desmond’s
+heart responded, for his plan was perfected in those
+few minutes of final parley. He let the dugout drift
+away while he caught the drooping branches of the
+live-oak tree that swept the surface of the water.
+The stir of the foliage, as with his rifle he clambered
+through the boughs, was not to be distinguished
+from the rustling of the wind. He lifted the sash of
+one of the dormer windows and was safe in a room
+he had never seen. A wan gleam of the twilight fell
+through the glass, barely enough to disclose the surroundings,
+for the window was curtained with some
+floriated opaque stuff. An unused room it apparently
+was, with an unfurnished bed, a few chairs, a table,
+and in the jamb of the chimney on either side tall
+presses built in the wall, one of which stood half
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_263'>263</span>open and was seemingly full of bundles of papers.
+A mere glance afforded these details as he dashed
+to the door. It gave easily under his touch; he had
+had one dreadful moment, faint with fear, lest it
+might prove to be locked. He was still trembling as
+he groped along the dark hall, his weapon in hand.
+He paused for an instant at the head of the unfamiliar,
+vaguely descried stairs, feeling with his foot
+for the edge of the first of the flight.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He could hardly control his agitation, his wonder,
+as he heard a strange, muffled stir, that sibilant, lisping
+step on the stair which he remembered from the
+early days of his stay at Great Oaks Plantation, the
+silken sound of the invisible patrol.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_264'>264</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XII</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c006'>It shook his nerve, strained to the tension of breaking.
+But he rallied his faculties. This was no time
+for vague terrors, for theories, for hesitation. He
+moved on swiftly, silently. Nevertheless, as he hurried
+down the dark flight, he could have sworn he passed
+some mute presence, some sense of moving.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He burst into the dim twilight of the parlor, but
+still without a sound. There were two figures at the
+window, infinitely incongruous of aspect with the
+scene without, with the frightful crisis, with the imminence
+of their danger. Both were dressed with some
+touch of elegance for the evening; Reginald with an
+incipient relish for his own good points, and in the wan
+light from the window and the dark shadows within
+the room Mrs. Faurie was like some antique picture,
+her gown of a light Pompeian-red silk, of a quasi-Empire
+effect, a girdle of dark red velvet, and a guimpe
+of thick, fine white lace to the throat,—yet robbery,
+arson, murder, faced her at the moment. Reginald,
+pale with a realization of his helplessness, nevertheless
+stoutly stood his ground, his arm around her waist.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Without a thought, Desmond passed his arm around
+her from the other side. “Be quiet, be very quiet. I
+am here,” he said in a low tone.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Her head drooped on his shoulder and she burst
+into tears. “How I have wished for you! How I
+have prayed for you!” she murmured.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_265'>265</span>“I am here! I am here!” he said again and again.
+He could only repeat these words. The fact filled the
+universe.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He was cool, confident, triumphant, despite the
+desperate odds, despite the awful responsibility that
+hung upon his judgment. He made his preparations
+without an instant’s flutter. He waited the significant
+moment without a pulse of impatience.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mrs. Faurie, quieted, reassured, in perfect confidence
+did as he bade her. She stood well up against
+the wall under the folds of the long and heavy silken
+curtains, while he placed himself in front of the
+window, too far withdrawn for his presence to be
+suggested in the dim light. Not until the yawl had
+almost reached the steps, not until several of the men
+had risen to spring upon the veranda, did he raise
+his rifle and fire. For one moment the flash, the
+smoke, the report,—deafening in the restricted space
+of the room,—were the only elements that could
+claim attention. The next instant the result was apparent.
+That accurate aim, that steady hand, that
+cool nerve, had come to Desmond as gifts, unknown
+until to-day. The ball crashed into the skull of the
+red-headed, thick-set man he had recognized as Jed
+Knoxton. He swayed to and fro for a moment, then
+fell like a stone into the water, leaving the yawl
+violently rocking, and the rowers doing all they could
+to prevent her from capsizing.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The return fire came whizzing through the window,
+but Desmond had stepped aside and the ball crashed
+against a mirror on the opposite wall. The yawl’s
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_266'>266</span>party seemed to have recovered from the surprise at
+finding a defense attempted for the house, expected
+to be so easy a prey. They gave no heed to the welterings
+and writhings of Jed Knoxton in the water at
+their very gunwales, not able to recover himself, and
+yet not dead, until at last the relentless Mississippi
+drowned out the flickerings of life that the rifle had
+failed to extinguish.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Once more, as they approached, this time with a
+heady rush, the rifle got in its work. One of the assailants
+sank down on the very steps of the veranda,
+and the blood flowed higher than the palpitant waves.
+An attack from an unexpected quarter further demoralized
+them. A charge of buckshot from the window
+across the hall rattled against the timbers of
+the yawl—with not the best aim in the world, it is
+true. Reginald had been stationed there in the short
+interval with a shotgun which happened to be in the
+hall, and which Desmond hurriedly loaded, directing
+him to blaze away at random, being careful, as Reginald
+loved to tell afterward, to warn him to keep
+from between the muzzle of the gun and himself!</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The apparent demonstration of adequate force to
+make good the defense of the house was too much
+for the nerve of the river pirates. The yawl was no
+longer water-tight; the buckshot had riven the wood,
+here and there, old and rotten. It was filling fast, and
+this fact threatened their safe retreat. They had intimations
+of more pressing personal interests than had
+centred in Mrs. Faurie’s famous emeralds. Suddenly
+putting about, they disappeared in the mist, leaving
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_267'>267</span>one of their comrades drowned in six feet of water at
+the bottom of the veranda steps, and another lying
+on the floor, apparently dying, the blood flowing
+from his mouth and tinging all the waves as they
+lapped about with a deeper hue than the copper tint
+of the great river.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It would seem that no cheer of evening could ensue
+on so grisly a primordium of horrors. Honoria Faurie
+wrung her hands as she reflected, appalled, that a
+man had met a terrible doom at her door, and his
+bloating corpse still lay at the foot of the steps to
+await there the action of the coroner’s jury, and that
+another had stretched his lacerated body on her veranda
+to die a lingering death. But Desmond seemed
+to have no affinity or toleration for shuddering or
+tears. He came and went noisily, ordering fires to be
+rebuilt in the library and parlor. When Bob reappeared,
+having made the transit from the quarter in
+an old dugout, the footman was aghast to hear the
+startling news.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Ought to have been here, Bob; you missed the
+time of your life!” cried Desmond, cheerily. “Oh,
+it was great! And Mr. Reginald Faurie is a <em>man</em>,
+all right, and don’t you forget it. Equal to downing
+any kind of pirate! Pretty nearly sunk their yawl
+for them. They will all knuckle down to Great Oaks,
+after this. We are the pirate tamers here.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mrs. Faurie had sunk into a chair before the dead
+ashes of the parlor fire, her face pallid, her chest
+heaving, her hands nerveless.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I wish you would give me a little brandy,” Desmond
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_268'>268</span>said to her, “and you would be the better for
+what Colonel Kentopp calls ‘a weeny teeny nip,’ yourself.”
+She walked with him to the dining-room, where
+he detained her upon the pretext that he, himself,
+wanted to order the belated dinner.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I need a <em>good</em> dinner,” he said. “I have hardly
+had a bite since a daylight breakfast.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The cook was summoned, an immense woman, so
+tall and so fat that she was apparently immovable.
+She had been in the house throughout the turmoils.
+If the skies should fall, she would continue to sit
+in the open kitchen window and await events. She
+seemed to do nothing but sit on the sill of the kitchen
+window, but when she did move it must have been
+to the purpose, for she was a famous expert,—of an
+unparalleled excellence. So long did they discuss each
+dish and compare views and criticise sauces that Mrs.
+Faurie could scarcely compose herself to wait and
+listen to these trivial details. It was a distinct hint
+when she sank into a chair at one side of the old-fashioned
+mahogany table, the cloth not yet laid,
+and put her dimpled elbows on the glittering dark
+red surface and supported her chin in her clasped
+hands; while Desmond, still booted and spurred and
+holding his brandy glass, stood before the sideboard,
+and the cook filled the doorway, beaming with smiles
+upon a gentleman who knew so well how to appreciate
+the delicate miracles of her art.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>When at last the menu was settled, he turned for
+its approval to Mrs. Faurie.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh, how can you think of such things at such a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_269'>269</span>moment”—and she shook her head to and fro while
+the ready tears came—“with a man dying at my
+door and another dead!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“The dying man is very comfortable upstairs in
+a nice clean room and a fresh, tidy bed, where Bob
+and Seth have no doubt put him by this time, as I
+ordered. And the other man got his deserts, as no
+doubt Providence intended he should. We are not
+going to sentimentalize about them. On the contrary,
+we are going to ask for the thanksgiving for
+special mercies to us to be said in the public prayers
+in our little neighborhood church next Sunday, and
+I should think you would write to the rector at once
+so that the request may be received in time. Go into
+the library, won’t you? and write the note at my desk,—the
+fire must be blazing there,—while I dress for
+dinner.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Do you have to take the trouble to dress for
+dinner?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He spread out his hands in dismay. “Do you want
+me to come to the table like this,—with my boots
+full of water and all over mud?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>She still sat at the table and looked at him through
+her tears, realizing his vital aid, his courageous rescue
+at the most crucial moment of her life. But his little
+devices to divert her mind, to sustain her composure,
+to prevent a morbid reaction of sensibility, all of
+which she appreciated, touched her in a different way.
+The one was essential salvation, but the other had so
+tender, so careful, so individual a thought for her.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“You are so dear!” she said abruptly; “I shall
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_270'>270</span>never call you ‘Mr. Desmond’ any more. What is
+your Christian name? Yes, Edward. You are my
+dear, <em>dear</em> Edward; like a dear, <em>dear</em> son!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>As she sat at his desk in the library, she was surprised
+to find how she liked to be there. She wrote
+her note, and wept some happy tears of gratitude over
+the occurrence which had taken on the aspect of a
+merciful deliverance rather than a tragedy; she lingered,
+fingering the little objects of chirographical
+use that belonged to him—the paper-weight, the
+pen, the blotter-holder—and thinking of his thought
+for her. But for the wholesome influence of his sound
+intellect her nerves would be shattered by the reaction,
+she would endure agonies of foolish regret and
+terror; she would not now have this glow of earnest
+love to God and confidence and gratitude that made
+her heart so warm. Yet her equanimity was not entirely
+restored, and she had a sentiment of recoil
+when Mr. Stanlett brought a very pallid, harassed,
+and tremulous face to the window and looked in;
+then entered by the long sash.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I am hunting for you, Honoria,” he said in a
+strained, husky voice. “I am much worried.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“There is no need, Uncle Clarence.” She was surprised
+by her full, steady tones. “Edward Desmond
+will attend to all these troubles. See what a miracle
+he wrought to-day, by the favor of God. We were at
+the end of our capacity even to hope.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Yes—but, Honoria,” the old man leaned forward
+as he stood and laid an impressive finger upon
+the edge of the desk. “This man, Desmond,—I had
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_271'>271</span>forgotten his name was Edward, if I ever knew it,—he
+takes a deal on himself! Without a word to anybody,
+he ordered this marauder to be put in the blue
+room upstairs. And there he is now—in the <em>blue</em>
+room!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>She stared at him in amaze. “And why not the
+blue room as well as any other?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He shook his head, and with a gesture of despair
+struck his high, bony forehead with his outstretched
+palm.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I forget! I forget! You do not know!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>She looked at him steadily, sternly, for a moment.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“What is it I do not know, Uncle Clarence?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He had come around the desk and sat down on a
+sofa on the opposite side of the crackling fire. It was
+necessary to turn in her chair to face him, and she
+looked over her shoulder at him as she sat at the desk.
+He met her eyes miserably, with a detected, hangdog
+look, but he had closed his lips resolutely; she
+saw that he would say no more. His face was bloodless,
+deathlike in its pallor. He looked very old, with
+his spare frame, his clear-cut, bony lineaments, his
+thin, silver hair.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There is something infantile in the infirmities of
+age. It touched her maternal spirit. No one was
+making enough of Uncle Clarence,—he had been
+neglected. He, too, was to-day greatly threatened
+by overpowering odds; and a man disabled by age
+and infirmity must feel an appalling helplessness, a
+pathetic shame, to be no longer of force, of availing
+courage in the face of physical danger, a source of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_272'>272</span>refuge and protection to the weak. And so great had
+been the peril, of so terrible an aspect, that it might
+well have touched his intellect for the time being.
+She did not press for his answer, albeit she was of an
+imperious spirit and not accustomed to have her will
+gainsaid or her words set at naught. She rose and
+advanced toward him, pained to see how he cringed
+at the idea of her persistence while he yet massed his
+pitiful resources, his face hardening, his eyes aglow
+with an excited gleam, yet terrorized lest his steadfastness
+fail. He watched with doubt and expectancy,
+like a beast at bay, as she sat down beside him and
+laid her hand on his shoulder.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Don’t be troubled, Uncle Clarence,” she said, in
+a dulcet tone. “You are hardly yourself, you have
+been put through so much agitation and suspense
+to-day.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He glanced at her ever and anon with excited
+and furtive eyes, and moistened his lips, but kept
+silence.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I will ask no questions that you do not want to
+answer.” She passed one of her soft white arms around
+his wrinkled old neck, feeling it stiff and rigid with
+his tense resolve. Then she laid her cheek on his
+shoulder. “I love you so much. I can’t endure to
+see you worried.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“It is just for you, Honoria. Just for you,” he
+protested huskily.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Don’t worry for me, I feel so happy to-night—so
+happy! as if I had the world in a sling! I think
+it so strange. To-night—of all the nights in the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_273'>273</span>year! I suppose it is because we had such an escape.”
+Yet when she thought of the escape, she shuddered.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I am much worried, Honoria. The—blue—room!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“If you loved me as much as I love you, you
+would not worry. Think, Uncle Clarence, how much
+we are to each other,—almost like father and
+daughter. We ought to stand by each other.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“That’s why, Honoria, I have taken my course.
+For you, my dear! And—the—blue—room!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Let it pass for the time, Uncle Clarence,—for the
+moment. We will ask Mr. Desmond if the man can
+be moved without injury, and set your mind at rest;
+though for my life I can’t see that the blue room
+is less to be desecrated by his presence than any
+other.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He held his lips together once more as if afraid of
+disclosure, and sat stiff, immovable, furtively glancing
+about with absorbed eyes; and as she with maternal
+patience drew her soft arm closer about his neck,
+her head on his shoulder, the glow of the shaded lamp
+and the flaring fire on the rich tints of her dress, her
+beauty embellished by her softened expression, the
+two were a charming illustration of reverend age and
+filial youth when Desmond, freshly groomed once
+more, stood a moment by the window ere he entered
+by the sash.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond was in no mood for concessions. He had
+assumed control of the household, and he had a strong
+if not a heavy hand. He declined at once to interfere
+with the wounded man.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_274'>274</span>“It might be as much as his life is worth to move
+him. I am not competent to judge. I am not willing
+to risk it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Her sympathies went out to the old man, inadequate
+to cope with this masterful, youthful usurper.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Uncle Clarence seems to desire it,” she said, not
+without emphasis.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I cannot imagine a reason sufficient to jeopardize
+the man’s life,” Desmond rejoined.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I am not informed, sir, by what theory I am to
+submit my reasons to you,” said Mr. Stanlett, with
+stately and satiric dignity.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh, Uncle Clarence,”—Mrs. Faurie started up in
+alarmed remonstrance,—“think what we owe to Mr.
+Desmond—how grateful we should be!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“That is neither here nor there,” said Desmond,
+maintaining his placidity. “You are the arbiter of
+events here, Mrs. Faurie, but you <em>must</em> not suffer this
+man to be moved, and perhaps sacrifice his life—”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Heavens—no!” she interpolated.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“—Especially before he can be interrogated by the
+authorities. The information he may give will cause
+the apprehension and the breaking up of this gang
+of river pirates, and avoid the accomplishment of such
+disasters as menaced this house to-day.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He turned toward Mr. Stanlett, who had risen and
+stood stiffly, a sort of blight on his face, at one side
+of the low, old-fashioned marble mantel. “I am disturbed
+to differ with you, Mr. Stanlett, to urge my
+views against your preference when you have been
+so kind to me.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_275'>275</span>“My kindness is returned in a way I had not anticipated,”
+said Mr. Stanlett, coldly.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh, Uncle Clarence, I protest. <em>Don’t</em> mind it,
+Edward!” She smiled and, leaning over, patted Desmond
+maternally on the coat-sleeve.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I <em>do</em> mind it very much—to incur Mr. Stanlett’s
+disapproval. But, my dear sir, it will be only for a
+short time. The officers will reach here in the morning.
+I have sent Jacob off in a dugout with an imperative
+note to the constable and the coroner; they
+must come. If the man can be moved, he will be taken
+to jail; at all events, he can’t be long dying with that
+hole bored through his lungs. Then the blue room
+will be once more at your service.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“<em>At my service!</em>” the old man sneered. “You know
+nothing about it! You only show your ignorance.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The announcement of the belated dinner put an
+end to the discussion, and as they filed out, Mrs.
+Faurie’s face was pale and drawn and altogether unlike
+itself. But Desmond seemed in high spirits. He
+begged pardon for asking for a cocktail before the
+soup, and he praised a certain different combination
+so that Mr. Stanlett requested that a glass be mixed
+for him, remonstrating sharply against any dilution,
+when Desmond good-naturedly diverted his interest
+by reminding him of the classical apportionment of
+water with wine, smilingly quoting “Hail, Dionysus:
+are you Five-and-two?” The mixture proved sufficiently
+potent, and sent the blood to the old gentleman’s
+pale cheeks and brought out a gentle dew on
+his forehead, and predisposed him to enjoy and digest
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_276'>276</span>his dinner, to postpone his unrevealed trouble, and
+to hope for the best.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond developed a spirit of gossip. He recounted
+the details of the house-party at Dryad-Dene,
+and Mrs. Faurie and Mr. Stanlett laughed,
+though slyly, at Chub, who seemed to think that
+Desmond had committed a great impropriety in mentioning
+Miss Allandyce’s boyish equestrian costume
+and describing his embarrassment that he did not
+later recognize her when accoutred in white silk skirts.
+Reginald and Horace indulged in great hilarity at
+this demonstration of the prudish Chub, and Mr.
+Stanlett was immensely “tickled” by the description
+of Loring’s sufferings because of the unwelcome
+reminiscences of the old wood-chopper, Sloper, concerning
+the millionaire’s family.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Shows just what a snob Loring has graduated
+into,” said Mr. Stanlett, his face now pink from Clos
+Vougeot, the blue room forgotten. “His parents
+were most reputable, educated, respected people, even
+if they were not well off, and the only reason they
+were ever acquainted with such a party as Sloper, as
+every one knows, is that in this sparsely populated
+country everybody is acquainted with everybody else.
+But social differences are now and always have been
+rigorously maintained.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He had a keen commercial interest in Desmond’s
+detail of Regnan’s suspicions that the house-party
+had been made up to show Dryad-Dene to advantage
+to Mr. Loring, with charming young people in gala
+attire enlivening all its highly decorated apartments,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_277'>277</span>and how Regnan resented the idea that he had danced
+not for his own pleasure, but like a trained dog, for
+a purpose.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mrs. Faurie dimpled and beamed, and asked him
+how the ladies looked and what they wore, now and
+then checking his description with the exclamation
+“Impossible!” and setting him to rights with apt
+conjectures as to fabrics and styles.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“If I were mamma, I’d give a house-party that
+would mash the Kentopps flat,” said Chub, sturdily.
+“I’d have up a lot of swell guys from New Orleans
+and down from St. Louis and Memphis, and then I’d
+open the ballroom and dance all one day and one
+night on a stretch, and have a party supper and dinner
+and breakfast,—and leave the Kentopps out!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The older boys collapsed over this truculence of
+the vengeful Chub and his idea of a fashionable
+entertainment. Mrs. Faurie checked him, though
+smiling. “Mustn’t bear malice, Chubby. I am too
+old for a young people’s party.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Prettier’n anybody, ain’t she, Mr. Desmond?”
+said the confident Chub, with his mouth full of salad.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>To the tutor’s amazement, he flushed to the roots of
+his hair at this appeal. He felt the blood mounting
+and pulsing as it rose, but he was ready with the repetition
+of Miss Mayberry’s compliment to the “most
+beautiful woman in the world,” albeit he doubted his
+good taste in the rehearsal. Mrs. Faurie, however,
+who had often heard similar appraisements of her attractions,
+took the remark quite simply, and was absorbed
+in the interest of recollecting details concerning
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_278'>278</span>this Italian count, who was a man of talent and high
+position, and whom she had often met in notable circles
+while she was living in Paris. This brought them
+to a harmonious end of the feast, and when they rose
+from the table, Desmond proposed a return to the
+parlor, where Mrs. Faurie countenanced the cigars,
+and seated herself before the fire in a great fauteuil,
+her Empire gown of rich yet delicate red enhancing
+her beauty, her eyes fascinated by the flames, her
+lovely neck glimpsed through the lace guimpe, her
+quiet respiration rising and falling calmly, the tumult
+of fear assuaged that had shaken her heart so few
+hours ago.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond had taken his station on one end of the
+sofa, where Chubby also ensconced himself, for out
+of school hours he had developed a great disposition
+to loll on his tormentor. The other two boys had seats
+here too, facing the window, but only the inconsiderate
+youngest spoke out his sudden surprise.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Where does all that light come from?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mrs Faurie turned her head apprehensively. The
+verandas were under a steady illumination, and for a
+distance the murky waters of the overflow showed their
+constant, sinister palpitation.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I had those lamps filled and the brackets fastened
+to the posts,” Desmond said coolly. “I found them
+by rummaging around upstairs. I suppose they must
+have been used in some entertainment in the house.
+There were some reflectors, too, in the ballroom.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mr. Stanlett raised himself in his chair, his cigar
+held out at arm’s length.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_279'>279</span>“You have no call to go rummaging around the
+house. It—it—is outrageous! It is—is—intrusive!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mrs Faurie had paled. “Do you anticipate another
+attack on the house to-night?” she asked in agitation.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“No,” said Desmond, “for I am prepared for it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Beneath his gay and cheerful exterior, sustaining
+the spirits of the household lest the palsy of panic
+overwhelm them and bring down undreamed-of disaster,
+Desmond had wrestled with some sombre fears,
+distressing doubts, troublous paucity of resource.
+There was no boat due to pass, or he would have
+braved the maddening floods in the primitive dugout
+to put Mrs. Faurie on board. He had thought of the
+neighbors, to ring the plantation bell and summon
+aid. But the neighbors by this time were struggling
+with the overflow, or seeking to patch sodden and
+threatened levees. Their own families were exposed to
+the manifold distresses of high water, and the very
+fact that marauders were abroad had homing promptings.
+Besides, he did not wish thus to advertise to the
+river pirates that the occupants of the mansion felt
+incapable of its defense. The garrison had already
+demonstrated its efficiency; the pirates no doubt
+believed that they had been misinformed as to the
+unprotected condition of the house; and though Desmond
+feared an attempt at the rescue of the wounded
+man, in order that he might not turn state’s evidence,
+inculpate the gang, and compass their capture, he
+could rely only on such means as had been equal to
+the emergency in the afternoon, hoping that this would
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_280'>280</span>prove adequate to whatever the night might bring
+forth. The idea that Mrs. Faurie was the focus of their
+schemes, the suggestion of wresting from her an order
+on her bankers and by some nefarious plan rendering
+her incapable of giving the alarm till it should
+be honored, filled him with dismay. The possibility
+suggested abduction, imprisonment, even murder.
+He had provided against surprise. No boat, no swimmer,
+could approach the house without becoming
+instantly visible,—the old ballroom lights playing
+a part undreamed of in their festive design. He
+had posted one of the most reliable of the house servants
+as a lookout on each veranda, and a relief sat
+in the kitchen, finding royal good cheer in the remainder
+of the big dinner he had ordered with this
+view. His rifle was loaded, his pistols at hand, and
+Reginald had been called aside and, as he protested,
+given some points concerning the best method of distinguishing
+the muzzle from the butt of the gun. He
+had in fact been taught to load, aim, cock the hammer,
+and pull the trigger, and he had a half dozen
+buckshot cartridges in his pocket as he lounged on
+the sofa.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Won’t the lights attract attention and make
+navigation easy?” she asked.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Perhaps; but they will show that we are on the
+alert and ready for all comers,” said Desmond. Then
+after a moment of hesitation, “It was an accident
+that they did not reach the veranda before I did
+this afternoon. Now, any approach would be detected
+at a considerable distance.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_281'>281</span>Her level eyebrows were drawn. “I had hoped the
+danger was over,” she said, with a sort of plaintive
+patience.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“But not the precautions,” he replied, with a smile.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Why don’t we have up some of the tenants from
+the quarter? they could spare ten or twelve men.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He did not tell her that he had already attempted
+a levy from the quarter, and that the tenants had revolted.
+For the dead flatboat-man lay alongside the
+veranda steps with a dog collar and chain around his
+neck, to keep him from floating away while awaiting
+the coming of the coroner; this Desmond had been
+compelled to attach with his own hands. The negroes
+did not so much fear the living as the dead. They
+would not undertake to touch the floating body and
+lift it to the shelter and security of the veranda, there
+to await the coming of the coroner; they would not
+wittingly approach the house so long as it was there,—nay,
+until it should be removed to a distance and
+to an unknown place. They did not believe that the
+pirates would dare return, and were not actuated by
+fear of them, but they were sure that Jed Knoxton
+would haunt them to their dying day! “I think
+they are perhaps shy of meddling in our feud,” Desmond
+replied to her suggestion. “The darkeys always
+seem doubtful as to whether they are fairly instructed
+as to the points at issue in any disturbance
+among white people, and are afraid of getting into
+trouble with the authorities. They would merely give
+the sense of strength in numbers, anyhow. We had
+enough, to-day, and to spare.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_282'>282</span>Nevertheless, he had not permitted to depart those
+whose vocation had caused them to return to the
+mansion, and who, upon discovering the facts, would
+have been glad to get away again. They were fain
+to reconcile themselves to the grim necessity as best
+they might. The old butler, whose attachment to the
+family dated from before the war, a man of experience
+and intelligence, pinned his faith to the Faurie
+banner in weal or woe. He smartly admonished Bob,
+his son, to “show some manners,” when the footman
+was insisting upon putting a goodly quantity of the
+Mississippi River between himself and the locality
+where such dreadful deeds were done and which harbored
+such ghastly visitants, and withdrawing to the
+quarter. It was not merely that the old butler knew
+that special duty rendered in time of stress received
+a special and proportionate reward, for he was long
+past his prime and had no ambitions disconnected
+with an aspect of distinction in the Faurie dinner
+service. But a word to the wise Bob was sufficient.
+Though under constraint indeed, he cheerfully consented
+to watch in turn with his father on one side
+of the house, while Desmond and Reginald kept a
+lookout through the parlor windows from the front.
+The cook insisted that naught could approach undiscovered
+from the east while she sat on the sill of
+the kitchen window, and Seth, the old-time hostler,
+who dwelt in a world of Houyhnhnms and rated as
+slight matters any disasters that did not concern the
+frog and the fetlock, or threaten spavin or sprain,
+found his sympathy with mere humanity so indurated
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_283'>283</span>by disuse as to be able to stand guard over the
+wounded pirate to make sure that he did not attempt
+to escape, that he wanted for naught in comfort, and
+that no shadowy approach was made toward the house
+upon the waters viewed from the dormer window,
+from the hood of which Seth continually scanned the
+expanse.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Too many people make confusion and get into
+each other’s way,” Desmond explained to Mrs. Faurie.
+“I need only one steady lieutenant like Reginald
+here. I invited Regnan to return to Great Oaks with
+me, and I was sorry at first that he did not come.
+But we are all right without him.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I wish I could shoot,” plained Chubby.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I am going to put a stop to this mollycoddle
+business, anyhow,” said Desmond, waving away the
+smoke from his cigar and looking at Mrs. Faurie
+with challenging, laughing eyes. “Just as soon as
+we get out of our ark, I am going to have regular
+target practice three times a week, and teach these
+boys how to shoot, and then we will borrow Mr.
+Sloper’s dogs and go on a camp hunt of our own.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh, little Chubby,” protested Mrs. Faurie, while
+Chub fairly rolled himself into a ball of chuckling
+delight, hugging himself as if he felt that he might
+fly to pieces in the centrifugal force of so much
+ecstasy.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Little Chubby is a good plucked one! I was
+proud of Chub and Horace,—to stand here in the
+parlor, and hold still without a word, and get in nobody’s
+way, and make no confusion, and face danger
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_284'>284</span>without a protest. Oh, this is a great day for the
+house of Faurie! We have three men here, rather
+small-sized and callow as yet,—but <em>men</em>, for all
+that!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh, you make me feel so proud of them!” cried
+Mrs. Faurie, laughing and flushing with pleasure.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Suddenly a drear sound—knock! knock! knock!
+at the front of the house.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_285'>285</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c006'>Mrs. Faurie sprang up with white lips and a
+half scream. The old gentleman, who had sunk into
+a placid doze, was roused from slumber to vague but
+terrible fright.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Knock! knock! knock! again reiterated at the
+door. The three boys gazed in questioning suspense
+at the tutor’s face.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“It is not”—Reginald began—he had held
+the chain while Desmond locked the dog collar—“it
+is not—it could not be—”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh, no! <em>Impossible!</em>” cried Desmond, bewildered
+nevertheless, and at a loss.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The strain of the events of the evening was telling
+on the tutor,—even the stress of the effort to
+sustain the equilibrium of the household was making
+its impression. Some moments elapsed before his mind
+could evolve a conjecture, a reasonable solution of the
+mystery, and all the time the heavy, dull knocking
+was renewed at ominous intervals.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“It must be—it is—a drift log!” he exclaimed at
+length. “No, you must stay here,” he insisted, as Mrs.
+Faurie started forward; “Reginald and I will see.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He led her back to her chair, and was not sorry
+that he had done so when he opened the door into
+the hall and saw there all the negro watchmen, trembling
+and agitated, with a look of abject terror
+shown in the swinging chandelier.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_286'>286</span>“No, no! Nathan,—I am astonished at you.
+You know that a dead man cannot knock at the
+door! No, Bob! You can’t have the dugout. I
+have got it chained and padlocked. If you leave us
+here, you will have to swim. Seth—you, too! It
+<em>must</em> be a drift log. I am going to see. I might
+have been afraid of that man alive, but I have got a
+cinch on him, sure, now that he is dead. Nobody in
+the house knows that he is there, but Reginald and
+me. You tell that fat old cook in the kitchen that
+the Mississippi River hasn’t swept him away from
+here, or that the other pirates didn’t take him with
+them, and she’ll die of fright. I should want no
+ghost of her size after me, if I were you. Keep quiet
+here and I’ll see.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It proved to be a drift log, and with the aid of
+a stout cane Desmond leaned over the railing and
+pushed it clear of the entrance to the house. The
+body of the flatboat-man had not yet risen, and as
+the log was on the surface, it struck against the floor
+of the veranda. Unluckily, as it floated down a little
+farther on, it caught in the angle between the flooring
+and the projection of the steps, and there it
+swung on the oscillations of the current,—knock,
+knock, knock,—and there it was destined to hang
+and, as if it were the dead man clamoring for admittance,
+knock, knock, knock in a dull monotone at
+intervals all the livelong night.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond could not rally his energies again for a
+show of cheerful spirits. He could no longer direct
+the trivial conversation and evolve ebullitions of satisfaction
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_287'>287</span>and pleasure. Despite his gratitude for the
+crowning mercy of his rescue of the household, he
+had a sentiment of infinite repugnance for the taking
+of life, necessary, justifiable, even laudable though it
+was. That dull knock, knock, knocking at the door
+where lay the man he had killed beat upon more
+sensitive nerves than he had yet known he possessed,
+and set them all a-quiver.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>When Desmond induced the negroes to return to
+their posts, old Joel made a great show of self-ridicule
+and abasement that so little a matter should have
+shaken his equilibrium. “’Fore Gawd, boss, I done
+turned fool, fur a fack! <em>Drift log!</em> Gawd A’mighty!
+I wuz cradled in a <em>drift log</em>! I been paddlin’ in dugout
+hollowed out’n <em>drift log</em> dese six or seben hunderd
+years. I been loadin’ up an’ firin’ powder fur
+Chris’mus in de <em>drift log</em>—Lawd! eber sence Noah
+fust went a-wadin’ in de overflow. An’ now—done
+took a skeer ob a <em>drift log</em>! Ye-all will have ter hire
+somebody to wait on de table at Great Oaks besides
+a <em>dee</em>stracted ole nigger whut is afeard ob a <em>drift
+log</em>.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Seth was retreating up the stairs, chuckling at
+the causeless fright, and Bob was mightily entertained
+to see the old butler at fault, who was so rich
+and ready in caustic reproof to the young and flighty.
+Desmond and Reginald turned from the servants and
+repaired to the parlor, where the tutor was able laughingly
+to explain the cause of the sound to the group
+waiting by the fireside, and to apologize for having
+awkwardly towed the log into the angle of the steps
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_288'>288</span>so that it could not shake free, and thus the melancholy
+iteration of its oscillations against the flooring
+would probably continue all night. “But I move that
+we pay as little attention to the sound as possible, and
+adjourn for the present,” Desmond continued, looking
+at his watch.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I feel as if I could never sleep again,” said Mrs.
+Faurie, pressing her hands to her temples.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“What a pity that you sent your maid down to the
+quarter. She could have a cot in your dressing-room
+and be company for you so close at hand,”
+suggested Reginald.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Yes, she is afraid to come back. She made all
+sorts of excuses, but <em>that</em> is the truth,” said Mrs.
+Faurie. “I sent her to help her people save their
+things; their household furniture and bedclothes are
+so important to them,—hard to come by and difficult
+for them to replace,—the accumulations of many
+years.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Suppose you let Chub have a cot in your room,”
+suggested Desmond.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I won’t,” said Chubby, stoutly. “I won’t sleep in
+a room with a lady!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The collapse of the two elder boys over this demonstration
+of Chub’s delicate modesty was shared
+in less degree by the others, while Chub sat gravely
+on the edge of the sofa and ejaculated—“The <em>idea</em>!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“He’d be no good, anyhow. He is a perfect dormouse,”
+said Reginald.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Leave him alone in his propriety,” added Horace.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Let things be as usual,” said Mrs. Faurie. “Anything
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_289'>289</span>different might get on my nerves and make me
+wakeful.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond was rummaging in a drawer. “There is
+a hammer here. Will you let me nail up the window-shutters
+so that the room can be entered only from
+the hall?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>That idea of a coerced order on her banker operated
+on his mind like an obsession. Should the pirates
+return, in view of their peril by state’s evidence, to
+attempt the rescue of their comrade, they would
+have the opportunity for a renewed effort to secure
+the paper with its rich guerdon in case of success.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Nail up the windows!” exclaimed Mrs. Faurie.
+“Heavens! I feel like a pampered lunatic.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“It would do no harm except to the shutters, and
+would mightily set my mind at rest,” urged Desmond.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Work your will on the shutters, then, and peace
+to your mind!” she said, laughing a little at his
+impetuous haste, as Reginald caught up a lamp to
+light him and the two made off together.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>When they were through with the windows, it would
+have been as easy to tear down a section of the house
+as to effect an entrance there.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>As the group stood together in the hall for the last
+few words, the knock, knock, knocking was renewed,
+as of solemn clamors for admittance. None of them
+mentioned the sound, and presently they were all gone
+except Desmond and Reginald, who seemed to linger,
+but really intended to wait and watch all night.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“The lights are better out,” said Desmond, reaching
+up and extinguishing the swinging lamp in the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_290'>290</span>hall chandelier. “If they should come, which God
+forbid, they could not so easily get about the house
+in darkness, and we could fire at better advantage
+from the shadow than in the full glare of the veranda
+lights.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>They closed the window-shutters of all the house as
+they patrolled the verandas. The width of these was
+great enough to limit the light sent across the rooms,
+but thence through the slats one could look out almost
+as with the distinctness of daylight on the great brown
+welter of water palpitating with the rainfall and undulating
+with the current.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“You had better lie down for a while in the parlor,”
+Desmond said to Reginald. “No—you will play out
+long before day, if you have no rest at all. You
+will be well within call here, with your gun beside
+you, and you can watch through the slats for any
+approach from the front of the house.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>They had arranged that one or the other should
+remain in the hall outside Mrs. Faurie’s door—unknown
+to her, however, lest this precaution excite her
+alarm anew—throughout the night. Reginald was in
+a tremor of terror to perceive that it was she against
+whom the schemes of the marauders were most directed.
+He had earlier thought of the family silver
+and the scattered valuables about the house, and had
+fancied that these had allured them hither, but that
+most appalling suggestion of a coerced order on her
+New Orleans bankers and the extremest measures
+to insure its being honored was of far more sinister
+import. The silver in its present form was easily identified;
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_291'>291</span>melted down, it would be mulcted of half its
+value in the loss of the rich chasing of the ornamentation
+and the fine workmanship. Moreover, the water-rats
+might well fear their own discrimination between
+what was real and what might be a heavy plate and for
+their purposes worthless. But there could be no possible
+doubt as to her order on her bankers. Without
+question they were in communication with fences and
+graduated rogues in New Orleans of such a quality
+as to be able to present such an order without fear
+that it would not be honored. Truly, the possibility
+invested the menace that hung over the house with a
+terror which he could scarcely contemplate without a
+complete collapse of all his faculties, and which drove
+every impulse of sleep from his heavy eyelids. He
+sank down obediently on the sofa, however, and sought
+to compose his mind, his eyes staring into the gloomy
+waters, his gun on the floor beside him within arm’s
+reach, his ears acutely discerning every sound within
+the house, and the splashing of the water against the
+foundations as the rain fell and the currents of the
+overflow rose ever higher and higher, and now and
+again the sombre vibrations of the knock, knock,
+knocking at the door before which the dead man lay.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond had thrown himself at full length on the
+long, old-fashioned, mahogany hall sofa, that he,
+too, might find some repose for his exhausted limbs,—now
+beginning to ache and stiffen from the stress
+of the day’s exertion,—if not solace for his racked
+and anxious mind.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The dark house had grown still—so still that the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_292'>292</span>silence seemed sinister, as if some portentous crash
+must break this unnatural hush. The lapping of the
+water had become monotonous, the ear so accustomed
+to it that it scarcely impinged upon the sense of
+silence. The ghostly knock, knock, knocking had its
+sombre echo, and the interval relapsed into muteness.
+There was no stir of whatever sort from the bedrooms;
+the inmates were all lost in slumber. The house might
+have seemed tenantless, when suddenly Desmond became
+conscious of a sense of motion. He raised himself
+on his elbow and stared about him.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The hall was absolutely dark. The glass half-moon
+above the solid panels of the double front door, and
+the panes in the long side-lights on either hand, were
+covered with some quilled stuff that tempered the
+light to gloom by day, and utterly excluded the glimmer
+of night. He could not have said how or when
+it came, but something was astir, he knew, even
+before he heard that lisping sibilance of the ghost
+of a step on the padded velvet carpet of the stair.
+Again and again it sounded, sometimes regular for
+several steps; then silence; once more the sibilant
+tread, sliding on the silky pile of the velvet. Farther
+and farther it receded, unmolested; he thought it
+was gone! And once more—the impact! And now
+all was silence; he listened in vain. As he laid himself
+back on the sofa, the cold touch of the haircloth
+with which it was covered caused him to withdraw
+his hand with a jerk and start violently. Then he
+composed himself anew and sought the rest his
+fagged-out system so needed.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_293'>293</span>At another moment he would have sprung up to
+challenge the presence, but in this juncture he remembered
+the alarm a sudden commotion in the hall
+would rouse. Mrs. Faurie was aware of the peculiar
+jeopardy in which she stood. The demand for the
+emeralds, for the order on her bankers, had apprised
+her that she was the special mark for the enterprise
+of the marauders. So extreme a terror as a sudden
+awakening to more turmoil and suspense might prove
+too much for her nerves, for her overstrained heart,—might,
+indeed, be fatal. This demonstration marked
+no intrusion, no new menace; it was only the old
+unexplained, inexplicable spectral mystery which he
+had encountered when he first reached Great Oaks
+Plantation,—almost forgotten until this afternoon
+when he had sprung into the window and rushed
+downstairs, hearing a sibilant descent and passing
+an unseen presence.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In the midst of the lull induced by the uncanny
+associations, he felt a rush of impatience that this
+fantastic demonstration should be forced upon his
+attention now,—at this time, when any slight lapse
+of vigilance on his part, any failure of judgment
+under circumstances so strange to all his training and
+experience, might cost the life of every one in the
+house. He believed that there must be some natural
+explanation for the manifestation; but since it baffled
+reason and conjecture, it mattered little to the
+fact that he did not fully accept it. He had as distinct
+a thrill quivering icily along his spine as if he had
+no philosophy whatever, and as he placed his hand
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_294'>294</span>on his brow, he felt that cold drops were standing
+there.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Suddenly he sprang to his feet. There was a
+commotion upstairs, not so much a tread or a movement,
+but a husky, half-smothered voice crying out.
+In the tremendous crisis that the moment was to him,
+he remembered to open the front parlor door, and with
+a whisper he motioned Reginald to take his post on
+the hall sofa while he bounded noiselessly up the
+stairs, three steps at a time. He burst into the room
+where the wounded man lay—expecting he hardly
+knew what. It was the only chamber alight in the
+house, yet full of distorted shadows. The kerosene
+lamp had been extinguished, and the dim illumination
+came from that primitive contrivance known as
+a button lamp,—a bit of cloth tied over a button,
+the end lighted and set afloat in a saucer of lard, giving
+a clear, tiny flame peculiarly adapted to a sick-room.
+Seth had placed this on the fireless hearth, and
+thus shining upward, all the furnishings cast gloomy
+shadows on the wall. They seemed curiously out of
+proportion,—out of drawing, so to speak, because
+of the slant of the walls of the half-story structure
+and the deep recesses of the dormer windows.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In the middle of the room Seth stood staring, evidently
+just roused from slumber; his starting eyes
+were on the wounded man, who had struggled into a
+sitting posture, wildly gesticulating toward the door,
+every fresh exertion sending the blood spurting over
+the bosom of the white night-shirt furnished him, and
+trickling down the white coverings of the bed.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_295'>295</span>“Who is that thar guy?” he exclaimed huskily.
+“An’ what’s he comin’ after me fur?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He fixed wild eyes on Desmond, who marveled
+whether it was yet time for the delirium and fever
+attendant upon a gunshot wound to set in.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>As he spoke in a soothing voice, the incongruity of
+the situation could but strike him. He had sought to
+kill this man and had nearly compassed his object;
+but now he was laying the gentlest hands on the marauder’s
+shoulder, and trying to place him back in his
+recumbent posture. The danger was all gone out of
+him, but the semblance of kindness seemed strange.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Nobody is going to disturb you. Take your
+night’s rest. Lie down and be quiet.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The marauder grasped Desmond’s arm with a sunburned
+hand garnished with broken nails. “But—say—<em>who</em>
+was he? Oh, my! he looked comical!
+What’s he want o’ me?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“There’s nobody here,” protested Desmond. “Lie
+down.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Can’t stuff me! Ain’t slep’ a wink ter-night.”
+A shadow crossed his face, which was young and
+broad, and with a “bang” of straight sandy hair, a
+square jaw, and a long, thin mouth. “I got too much
+to study ’bout.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Don’t do it now,” Desmond kindly admonished
+him. “You have started that wound to bleeding.
+Lie down.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“That man looked comical; he didn’t look like
+folks hereabout! He had on a three-cornered hat.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond gave so palpable a start that the wounded
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_296'>296</span>marauder noticed it. “Ai-yi! <em>You</em> know him,” he
+said with significance. “Is he after me?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Did he have powdered hair?” Desmond asked,
+surprised at his own temporizing, and remembering
+Reginald’s description of the nurse’s vision.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Gunpowder on his hair!” the man said wonderingly.
+“Naw, ’twuz white! An’ Lord! he didn’t
+expect to see me lookin’ at him. He flipped in—an’
+when his eyes met mine, he flipped out. Say—I
+be ’feard o’ him,—he looked so comical! Say—is
+he <em>alive</em>!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond turned to the attendant. “Seth, who is
+this man?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Gawd A’mighty, boss, I dunno!” Seth gasped,
+the whites of his eyes distended and their pupils
+wildly rolling. “Ter tell de trufe, boss, an’ shame de
+debbil, I jes’ batted my eye one minit, an’ dar war
+dis man shyin’ an’ plungin’ an’ ’lowin’ dat he done
+seen—I reckon ’twuz dat ar Slip-Slinksy what de
+chillern talks about wunst in awhile. Lawe-a-massy,
+Mist’ Desmond, lemme go home! ’Fore Gawd, I can’t
+stay here no mo’! Lemme go’—leastways, down ter
+de kitchen, whar <em>he</em> ain’t neber been seen nor hearn.
+I can’t stay whar Slip-Slinksy—oh, yi! hi-i!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He was looking in affright over his shoulder at a
+sudden movement of Desmond’s shadow across the
+slanting wall. It was clearly demonstrated that the
+utility of Seth in the offices of sick nurse and lookout
+was at an end. So charging him to say naught to
+his fellows downstairs, on pain of being ordered to
+return to the sick-room, Desmond assigned him to a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_297'>297</span>post on the back piazza within call of the others, and
+within exchange of cheerful conversation with the
+corpulent old cook, always a fixture, half a-doze in the
+kitchen window.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The clumsy descent of the stairs by Seth, used
+only to the one-story dwelling so common in the region,
+Desmond thought was sure to advertise his withdrawal
+to all the house. But when the back hall door
+had closed upon him, absolute quiet succeeded. All
+the inmates were asleep,—a much needed rest, obviously.
+But the continued hush demonstrated how
+essential was the strict watch, since so turbulent and
+erratic a transit had failed to rouse the domicile. He
+reflected that the cautious methods of burglars could
+never have permitted so much noise. He began to
+doubt the vigilance of his sentinels. He had no blame
+for Seth, who had slept at his post. It had been a
+strenuous day of excitement and labor for the hostler,
+and indeed for all the household retainers. The
+exposure to rain and wind is always of a peculiar
+exhaustion to the physical energies. He began to fear
+that, thus absorbed by the strange manifestation of
+the troublous peripatetic spirit of Great Oaks Plantation,
+worse dangers might have been allowed to
+approach.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He went swiftly to one of the dormer windows, and
+looked out upon the great flood as upon an inland
+sea. Still the rain fell; the drops stood in bubbles,
+and again coursed lazily along the panes of the glass,
+and through their corrugations he could see the
+rippling waters in the wan light of the illuminated
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_298'>298</span>veranda; the vague boles of the trees in the shifting
+mist; the floating débris,—here and there uprooted
+bushes, logs, fence-rails, timbers of buildings; but
+never a boat, never a human suggestion. The ark
+could not have seemed more lonely, more aloof from
+all humanity in the floods that drowned the earth,
+than did Great Oaks mansion in that deep and memorable
+overflow in Deepwater Bend from the crevasse
+in the Faurie cross levee.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The tiny light of the primitive button lamp burned
+whitely on the hearth; the fire was dead some hours
+since, and no coal gleamed through the ash. The
+room had a comfortable aspect, though the blue and
+white curtains were still undrawn as when he had
+sprung through the window there. It was at the
+opposite side, and without shifting his posture, where
+he sat in the recess of the other window, he could
+see through it the sloping roof of the veranda, on
+which lay the boughs of the live-oak tree towering
+high above. A table at the foot of the bed held a
+glass from which restoratives had been administered,
+a bowl which had been filled with the soup in which
+the old cook excelled, some lint and home-made bandages
+from an old linen sheet, ready for use in case they
+might be needed for stanching the further flow of
+blood. The floor was covered with a blue and white
+matting; the woodwork was of the old china-white
+paint, as smooth as enamel. The white wall-paper
+bloomed with blue corn-flowers,—it was the blue
+room! There were presses in the jambs beside the
+fireplace, and these, too, were of the spotless white of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_299'>299</span>the door and chair-rail and wainscot. The bed was
+dressed in white, but from the half canopy long blue
+curtains depended, mottled with some indeterminate
+design in white. He rather wondered at the freshness
+of it all, considering its disuse; but there was
+little dust afloat amidst the densities of the woods
+and along the expanse of the river, and the traditions
+of Great Oaks were of famous housekeepers.
+A single sign of disorder the room showed!—one
+of the presses was open, and within was glimpsed a
+congeries of old account-books, bundles of papers,
+japanned boxes, all in a degree of confusion that
+implied long neglect or great haste.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>When he glanced again at the pillow, he was relieved
+to see that the wounded man had fallen asleep,
+doubtless from the exhaustion attendant upon the
+excitements of the last hour. The breath came with
+a queer whistling sound from his torn lung, and this
+gave Desmond a keen pang, notwithstanding the
+knowledge that the miscreant deserved far worse punishment
+than the wound he had received. His sunburned
+face was yet younger of aspect as he slept,
+and softer; his unkempt yellow hair, his stubbly,
+unshaven chin and upper lip, and his dirty face on
+the fine white linen of the pillow-case spoke the limitations
+of his low station; and the tutor, who had
+pinned his faith to training, had a reservation in
+his condemnation,—holding that this man might
+not have been what he was but for what his circumstances
+had made him.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond, in the deep, shadowy recess of the dormer
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_300'>300</span>window, thus meditating, looked out keenly at
+every shifting change of the watery expanse, listening
+acutely to every semblance of sound within the
+house, hearing even the recoil of the springs of the
+sofa in the hall below as Reginald altered his position;
+hearing the water rush futilely against the
+foundations and turn splashing aside; hearing every
+iteration of the knock, knock, knocking of the drift
+log caught at the veranda steps, and he was instantly
+aware when once more that scarcely to be discriminated
+impact of a sibilant footfall, so stealthy it was,
+sounded anew on the stairway of the hall. He could
+hardly control his impatience,—the inexplicable incident
+so jeopardized the fidelity of his watchmen, the
+composure of the rest of the household. He remembered
+that it was Reginald who had first told him
+the story of the strange step on the stair. He wondered
+if the boy heard it now, as he lay obediently
+waiting on the sofa in the hall below. He wondered
+that Reginald could hold himself motionless, for not
+a sound came save that lisping tread, soft, sibilant,—now
+still, now distinct once more, ascending the
+stairs.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond had an impulse almost uncontrollable to
+rush out into the hall, only checked by the fear that
+he would find nothing. Then, with an effort at self-control,
+he held himself quiet in the deep, curtained
+recess of the dormer window. Since the figure had
+entered this room before the unwilling vision of the
+wounded robber, perhaps the lure it then followed
+might again bring it hither. Desmond caught his
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_301'>301</span>breath as he heard the step approach nearer and yet
+nearer. When the footfall was just without, it paused,
+and Desmond fearfully heard the sombre knock, knock,
+knocking at the door below stairs before which the
+dead man lay. The next moment his heart was thumping
+so loudly that he thought the sound might betray
+his presence. For there entered slowly, cautiously,
+with a quick, nervous glance at the bed where the
+wounded robber slept, the apparition he had described
+hardly an hour ago,—the figure that patrolled the
+stairs in the wan moonlight in the tradition of the
+nurse’s vision.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>A tall man it was, and spare. He was muffled in
+a cloak to the chin. He had upon his head a hat,
+cocked as if accessory to a fancy costume; his hair
+was white, not powdered; he held in his hand a scroll
+of paper; his face was one that Desmond recognized
+instantly, despite the anxious, secret, blazing eye, the
+tension of excitement in every drawn feature. Mr.
+Stanlett, with that careful, soft tread, noiseless save
+for an occasional slipping shuffle incident to the step
+of age, crossed the room and stood for a moment scanning
+the face of the sleeping man. Desmond, invisible
+in the deep shadows of the curtained recessed
+window, trembled for him lest that peculiar mesmeric
+influence, responsive to an intent regard, rouse the
+sleeper to a moment of frenzied fright. But the man
+still slumbered, the breath still whistling in labored
+respiration from his torn lung. Mr. Stanlett evidently
+harbored no suspicion of the shadowed window recess.
+He was very old, and his age was telling on him in
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_302'>302</span>the draughts that this strange secret made upon his
+powers of endurance. He tottered as he approached
+the press, its door ajar, and as he paused and gazed
+at its disorder, he shook his head to and fro in dismay.
+He pulled the door back, and leaning within, he opened
+a drawer which Desmond fancied was a secret receptacle.
+He laid the scroll in this, and then with a cheering
+face and a brisk satisfaction of manner, his lips
+set firmly together, he began to push the bundles of
+papers and japanned boxes back into their places, his
+nervous, veinous old hands moving here and there
+with great diligence in his eager haste to be gone.
+As he forced the door to shut on the crowded shelves,
+he did not observe what the keen young eyes in
+the recess perceived, that the corner of one of these
+bundles so protruded that the door did not compactly
+close. He shot the bolt and turned the key, unaware
+that neither had gone home, whirled about with a
+jaunty air of capability, looked keenly at the sleeping
+face on the pillow, and went briskly but softly shuffling
+out of the door, leaving Desmond at once relieved,
+amazed, and dismayed.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He could not for a time collect his faculties to
+ponder on this strange chance. He sat silently listening
+to the stealthy footsteps that had so long baffled
+inquiry at Great Oaks Plantation. He was remembering
+that on the occasion when the spectre was declared
+to have been seen, Mr. Stanlett was one of those first
+present in the hall below, and could not recognize, it
+was said, the features of the apparition through looking
+upward at the landing. The steps retreated farther
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_303'>303</span>and farther, and at last their sibilance sounded no
+more.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In the silence Desmond took counsel with himself.
+There was something of mystery here, of an importance
+to justify some risk, of a continuance to warrant
+years of concealment. What it was, whom it might
+affect, he could not imagine. He had the sentiment
+that whatever is secret is wrong. And certainly this
+was in a keeping neither wise, nor consistent, nor competent.
+His nettling discovery, for he wished now he
+knew naught, entailed a certain responsibility. The
+old man imagined that the scroll was in a secret receptacle,
+locked and double locked. And, in fact, one
+man, perhaps indeed two—for Desmond could not feel
+sure of those half-closed eyes and whistling breath—knew
+that it was within reach of any deft and groping
+hand. He revolted at the assumption of responsibility
+with which he had no concern. Nevertheless, this had
+been thrust upon him, and in view of the personnel
+of all concerned, he could not shirk it.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He rose abruptly, crossed the room, and opened the
+door of the press. He, too, gazed doubtfully at the
+sleeping man in the bed, who did not stir. Presently
+Desmond’s deft hands were fingering the outline of
+the secret drawer. It was constructed after an old and
+ordinary type, and with one or two efforts his thumb
+pressed a spring and the drawer shook loose. Taking
+the scroll, for there were no other contents, Desmond
+slipped it without examination or a glance of scrutiny
+into his breast pocket.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>As he descended the stairs, Reginald rose from the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_304'>304</span>sofa to meet him. “Such a night,” he whispered.
+“As if we have not enough to bear already, I heard—I
+could almost swear it—old Slip-Slinksy going
+up and coming down the stairs!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond passed his arm around him and gave him
+a jocose hug. “And this is the fellow I have been
+calling a man. Afraid of nursery ghosts!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He was going into the library. The rain had ceased;
+the mist was lifting. A pale gray light was sifting
+through the slats of the shuttered windows. The
+veranda lamps burned queerly out of countenance before
+its definite, pervasive distinctness. As Reginald
+threw open the blinds, Desmond was lighting a wax
+candle that stood on his desk, and sealing in a large
+envelope a paper at which he scrupulously forbore
+to look; and as he lifted his head, he saw that the
+sun was striking long, red, shifting gleams across the
+great inland sea of the Mississippi overflow.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_305'>305</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c006'>The waters had not yet disappeared from the face
+of the earth when the routine at Great Oaks mansion
+was reëstablished. Those ghastly events, the coroner’s
+inquest, the identification and removal of the flatboat-man’s
+corpse, the ante-mortem statement of the
+wounded prisoner, and the subsequent capture and
+incarceration of the river pirates, followed in a rapid
+succession that seemed incongruous with their importance.
+The horrified and superstitious servants
+now went about their duties with casual cheerful
+faces; the tutor had resumed his pedagogic struggles
+with the young idea; Chubby, in the intervals of his
+labors as a student, sat upon the railing of the veranda
+and fished in the overflow, his skill being now and
+again rewarded by the splashing of a finny trophy at
+the end of his line, whereupon long and serious conferences
+ensued between him and the cook as to the
+best methods to prepare certain piscatorial dishes considered
+of small gustatory value by the epicure, and
+always served in a single platter for Chub alone. Mrs.
+Faurie had resumed her plaints against the dullness
+and general vapidity of Great Oaks, but not her lassitude.
+For there was much to do. The preparation
+for repairs and rebuilding incident to the destruction
+wrought by the overflow to the farm machinery, the
+miles of fencing, the tenants’ cabins, brought the
+manager of the place, now returned from Vicksburg,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_306'>306</span>almost daily to the house, with estimates and suggestions
+and discussions of ways and means. There were
+many problems presented, difficult of solution even to
+one of his experience, and Mrs. Faurie had come to
+dread the sight of him, with his perplexities, paddling
+up to the veranda in his dugout, the glister of the
+blinding sun on the expanse of waters narrowing his
+keen gray eyes to mere slits, corrugating his brow,
+burning his complexion almost to a scarlet hue, incongruous
+enough with his straight yellow hair and
+straw-colored full beard, for he wore his straw hat on
+the back of his head.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mrs. Faurie had begun to say often, “Let us ask
+Mr. Desmond,” when the alternative propositions of
+plans and computations of approximate expenses involved
+them both in doubt and anxiety, and he had
+found the clear-headed views of a man of judgment,
+progressive yet prudent, of value in appraising possibilities
+and reaching conclusions, despite Desmond’s
+inexperience in the questions at issue and need of information
+in the premises at every step. He was so
+quick to comprehend, so willing to take instruction,
+so cautious of precipitate decision, of such keen acumen
+and justice of reasoning, that Mr. Bainbridge
+was glad of his counsel and to be able to cease to confer
+only with a woman, albeit the owner of the interests
+involved. He broached the suggestion himself
+one day in his big, hearty voice, “Let’s submit the
+whole idee to Mr. Desmond”; then, abashed, perturbed,
+he looked up fearfully from under his bushy
+blond eyebrows, perceiving the many untoward inferences
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_307'>307</span>to be drawn from his reference to this arbitration.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But Mrs. Faurie discerned none of them. “The very
+thing,” she concurred, touching the bell. Then as the
+servant appeared, “Ask Mr. Desmond if he can’t
+come here for one tiny minute. Tell him to lock
+Chubby up in the mahogany cupboard, or fasten him
+in the letter-press, or kill him a little,—anything, to
+get rid of him,—and come here quick.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>She, too, relied upon Desmond’s judgment implicitly,
+and sometimes he was disposed to protest. “What
+will you two say if all this goes wrong? You know
+that I am as green as a gourd to this business.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Ah, but it cannot go wrong,—it is instinct with
+right reason. I couldn’t devise it myself, but I can
+discriminate its value. You have the happy hand;
+everything you touch is successful.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mr. Bainbridge sat demurely by, scarcely daring
+to breathe for the temerity of the thought in his
+mind, his eyes discreetly downcast. Would the widow
+really sacrifice her great income for this man of
+pinched conditions? “Mighty smart man, though!”
+he was sufficiently just to say to himself when out of
+her presence, as he flung himself into his dugout and
+took up his paddle. “Mighty glad he is here. Don’t
+know how in the world I’d ha’ made out to git along
+with all these perplexity fits with just a woman’s
+whims to control things.” For Desmond often boldly
+battled with Mrs. Faurie’s preferences and prejudices
+in the cause of her best interests, and demonstrated
+what was most worth while, and what was idle and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_308'>308</span>useless expense in the rehabilitation of the wreckage
+of the overflow; and though she disputed with spirit,
+she was open to reason, and if convinced, was willing
+to concede.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There were other visitors at Great Oaks in these
+days, and mightily surprised to find the trio in one
+of these heady discussions were Colonel Kentopp and
+Mr. Loring, rowing in a skiff up to the veranda steps
+and ushered into the parlor before the wranglers well
+knew that intruders were upon them. At the sight of
+the papers piled upon the table, the account-book in
+Desmond’s hand, and the budget of letters that Mr.
+Bainbridge held from Mrs. Faurie’s “machinery
+man,” as she dubbed a great factory, Colonel Kentopp’s
+face clouded.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“You have fallen upon evil days, Mr. Bainbridge,”
+he said, gripping the hand of the manager, for he
+made it a point to be hearty and cordial with all sorts
+and conditions of people in the conservation of his
+reputation for popularity. “You will raise more crayfish
+than cotton this year,” he continued, with that
+agreeable manner of making a distasteful remark
+which serves the double purpose of indulging one’s
+ill-humor at an interlocutor’s expense while complimenting
+him with conversation.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Not at all,” interposed Mrs. Faurie, for she had
+an affinity with success, and resented evil prognostications
+in her affairs as intrusive. “Mr. Desmond
+says that if the water recedes in time to get cotton
+planted properly, the alluvium of the overflow will
+enrich the land and materially increase the yield.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_309'>309</span>“Much virtue in an ‘if,’” Colonel Kentopp contended,
+as he came around the table with a rolling
+step and flung himself into one of the big armchairs.
+“I did not know that Mr. Desmond is an
+agricultural authority,” he continued with a large
+air of jocularity as he crossed his legs. “I thought
+his knowledge of rural matters was contained in the
+Georgics of Virgil—ha! ha! ha!” And he sent a
+glance of rallying laughter at Desmond from out his
+round, dark, glossy, unamused eyes.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Mr. Desmond knows a great deal about many
+things,” Mrs. Faurie retorted promptly, unaccustomed
+to contradiction or discipline, and restive under
+the slur of ridicule cast upon Desmond.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“So <em>we</em> found out who had the pleasure of being
+his fellow guests at Dryad-Dene,” said Mr. Loring,
+who had a very bland aspect for a wooden man, as
+he sat in the group before the fire. He had a great
+respect for money in the abstract, and Mrs. Faurie
+represented large aggregations of wealth and thus
+commanded his interest. He was disposed to soften
+to her liking the tone of the conversation, which he
+thought ill-taken. Moreover, he had not often had
+the opportunity of meeting her, and the sight of the
+great beauty was an event of moment. He was not
+a “ladies’ man” in the ordinary acceptation of the
+term, but he had the successful man’s reverence for
+preëminence in any form, and the splendor of her
+personal gifts appealed to his appreciation of the predominant.
+Her beauty was always so striking that
+whatever she wore seemed cunningly designed to enhance
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_310'>310</span>it,—even to-day, when her costume was a sheer
+lawn blouse and a plain black skirt. Her arms and
+shoulders were so dazzlingly white through the soft
+fabric; its absolute simplicity made so undeniable a demand
+to mark how the lack of effort or ornamentation
+brought into higher relief and added importance all
+the fine details of her perfect face, the exquisite tints
+of her long-lashed gray eyes, the lustre of her rich
+brown hair rolled up so plainly from her fair brow,
+the beautiful shape of her hands and arms, shaded
+only by a simple ruffle at the end of her elbow-sleeves.
+She was in Mr. Loring’s eyes a woman whose wishes
+were to be considered, whose station and wealth were
+to be respected, whose beauty was to be worshiped,
+and he wondered at Kentopp’s fatuity when, catching
+his cue, he said:—</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Indeed, Mr. Desmond was greatly appreciated at
+Dryad-Dene,—especially by the young ladies!” with
+an arch glance at the tutor.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Loring thought of the dim, pale attractions of Miss
+Kelvin and Miss Allandyce in comparison with the
+resplendent vision before him, and he deemed Kentopp
+mentally a poor creature.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Of course Mr. Desmond has not had agricultural
+experience, but he has a very good article of common
+sense, and with what mind Mr. Bainbridge and I
+have left, since the overflow fairly crazed us both, we
+think we are going to make out mighty well,” stoutly
+insisted Mrs. Faurie.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I’ll be bound you do,” said Mr. Loring, admiringly.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_311'>311</span>“But Mr. Desmond is due at Dryad-Dene,” protested
+Kentopp, now on the back track. “He took
+French leave of us, and our week-end party is not yet
+dispersed, though the week has. The overflow gave
+us that boon, at all events. They haven’t been able
+to get away.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“You are very kind, but it is impossible for me to
+return,” said Desmond, courteously.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh, I’m so glad,” cried out Mrs. Faurie, unexpectedly,
+and in a tone of girlish glee. “I was so
+afraid that Edward might accept.” Then, turning to
+the amazed Kentopp, she added. “You know that he
+is the source of all our courage. We were in a state
+of siege here. We look upon him as if he were as
+powerful as an army with banners.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Killed two of the men with your own hands; I
+believe the testimony at the inquest showed that,”—Colonel
+Kentopp’s lip curled as if in distaste. “Painful
+necessity.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Not all,—providential opportunity! Edward and
+I agreed that we would have no morbid sensibility
+over it,” declared Mrs. Faurie.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Why, I should smile!” said the wooden man, in
+hearty indorsement, his slang literal. It was not his
+place, and he knew it, but he rose from his chair with
+the intention of himself terminating the visit and
+taking the malapropos Kentopp home. “You have
+much to do here; we had best be going.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“If Mr. Desmond will not return with us,” said
+Kentopp, gathering his faculties together as best he
+could, and perceiving the light of elation in Loring’s
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_312'>312</span>eyes. Great Oaks Plantation would doubtless be soon
+on the market. Its overflow scarcely made against its
+value, though it might be utilized to cry down the
+asking price, since it was only the result of the nefarious
+crime of cutting the cross levee, that was hitherto
+a complete protection. Mrs. Faurie, evidently all
+unwitting of the future, was herself to defray the immense
+expense of its rehabilitation. Loring scarcely
+looked as wooden as was his wont, smoothing down
+his bristly mustache with a jaunty air, a secret smile
+behind his eyes, as it were, so confidential, so introspective,
+so self-communing was its expression. Of all
+the boons that his money had brought within reach
+of the millionaire, Great Oaks Plantation was the one
+he most coveted. Even its semi-grotesque amphibious
+aspect could not diminish his desire as he paused on
+the veranda, the water lapping about it, the great
+trees standing inundated, as if knee-deep, the glistening
+expanse of the overflow stretching out to the
+Mississippi proper, its channel only to be now discerned
+by the course of a steamboat ploughing her
+way through the illimitable floods, no vestige of a
+shore within view. He was cheerful in his leave-taking,
+and turned in the skiff, even after the darkey at
+the oars had rowed far down the submerged avenue,
+to wave his hand at the group on the veranda, while
+Colonel Kentopp moodily pulled his hat down over his
+eyes with a muttered “Confound this glare,” as the
+sun flashed blindingly upon the waste of waters.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The prominence of Desmond in the lady’s counsels
+was also noticed by old Mr. Stanlett, and he regarded
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_313'>313</span>it obviously with jealous distrust. He had been peculiarly
+favorably impressed by the young man during
+the earlier days of his stay at Great Oaks, and had
+taken pains to bestow upon him a kindly consideration
+and courteous attention, of which the tutor, then
+fresh to his duties and despondent, consciously out of
+his element, was very definitely sensible. Now, Mr.
+Stanlett seldom addressed Desmond, and when this was
+necessary he used a cold civility, in strong contrast to
+his former demeanor, and savoring very distinctly of a
+realization of the inferiority of the tutor’s position and
+a resolute intention of relegating him to his proper
+sphere. Whenever Mrs. Faurie spoke to Desmond, discussing
+her affairs and deferring to his opinion, Mr.
+Stanlett was wont to draw his heavy white eyebrows
+together in a very definite frown, scanning first one
+and then the other, an angry flush mantling his face,
+evidently minded to protest. One day at the table,
+when she chanced to address the tutor as “Edward,”
+Mr. Stanlett stared as if startled, then broke out with
+so satirical and frosty a laugh that she looked up in
+surprise, forgetting what she was about to say. She
+manifested no confusion nor self-consciousness, but
+Reginald flushed hotly to the temples, and Chubby
+paused, his fork in his hand, and remarked in callow
+affront: “Uncle Clarence seems to have a good joke
+that he keeps to himself.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Just so, Chubby,—a very good joke—ha, ha,
+ha!—and I wish to God I could keep it to myself!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mrs. Faurie had so far recovered her composure
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_314'>314</span>and the tone of her nerves, greatly imperiled in all
+the anxiety and jeopardy and stress of the tragic
+events of the overflow, that Desmond resolved on the
+evening after the visit of Kentopp and Loring to defer
+no longer to acquaint her with his discovery of the
+mystery of the spectral manifestations at Great Oaks
+mansion, and to surrender to her keeping the paper
+which he had seen so strangely and significantly concealed.
+From time to time he had furtively watched
+Mr. Stanlett, seeking to discern if he had become aware
+of the abstraction of the scroll from the secret drawer
+of the press in the blue room. He was sure that the
+old man would manifest such disquietude as would
+be ample evidence that his caution had gone amiss.
+But Mr. Stanlett maintained a genuine composure,
+absorbed in the simple routine of his day,—the mail
+from the packet, or the neighborhood news brought
+by some amphibian in a dugout scouting on various
+errands on the face of the waters; his cigars; sometimes
+humming an old song and looking from his easy
+chair placidly out on the waste of the overflow. Occasionally
+he occupied himself in telling one of the
+boys, or the three in conclave, old stories of war
+times, the gunboats on the Mississippi, the riders and
+raiders, the burning of cotton—bales, gin, and all—by
+the soldiers rather than let the precious staple
+fall into the enemy’s hands; and again he abounded
+in anecdotes of the palmy days of river travel and
+traffic, the tremendous loads of cotton the freighters
+carried, the choice company on the floating palaces,
+the phenomenally high play of the “gentleman gamblers,”
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_315'>315</span>the competitive speed of the steamers and details
+of the exciting races, the horrible accidents and
+the frightful picture a blazing boat presented, a tower
+of flames, as she came swinging around Deepwater
+Bend on her course. No; placidity was the keynote
+of his life save when his frown gathered as his eye
+fell on Desmond, and his manner stiffened, and his
+intonation grew crisp and icy.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>To-night, as they sat by the parlor fire, he was busied
+in a game of chess, the fashion of his youth in which
+he excelled. He had taught Reginald to play with
+such skill as to give him difficulty enough to maintain
+his interest in reaching the finality of checkmate. The
+other two boys were on the rug romping with an Irish
+setter, and the dog was most unwillingly learning to
+sit up and shake hands and make a feint of smoking
+an empty pipe. Desmond could count on their absorption
+for some time as he passed the window on the
+veranda and saw them there thus occupied. The moon
+was beginning to steer clear of a surge of clouds that
+had hung in the sky all the afternoon, presaging rain,
+and as its long, golden slant fell upon the waste of
+waters Mrs. Faurie rose from her chair, laid her book
+on the centre table, and went anxiously to the window.
+As she saw Desmond standing outside, she naturally
+supposed that he, too, was absorbed in scanning the
+signs of the skies. With more falling weather the
+waters would rise anew and postpone, perhaps past
+feasibility for the season, all the plans for the rehabilitation
+of the plantation, and all the possibility of making
+a crop or even a half crop of cotton.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_316'>316</span>“Don’t you think that it looks less like rain?”
+she asked, slipping the thumb-bolt of the sash of the
+long French window and joining him at the balustrade.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“The rain has gone around this time,” he said. “I
+am very sure of that.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It was difficult for him to bring his mind back to
+the weather signs, bent as he was upon the imminent
+disclosure, canvassing continually its best method. He
+was sensitive in submitting his own conduct for scrutiny,
+and eager for her approval. He was solicitous
+concerning matters of phraseology, knowing how she
+valued her uncle and cherished his age, fearful lest
+some unconsidered word offend, or, worse still, wound
+her. He was afraid that the disclosure might involve
+some shock to her nerves. He did not know, he could
+not imagine, what the paper so significantly hidden
+might contain, and how she might condemn his course
+in possessing himself of it. Indeed, she might deem
+that he had exceeded all the bounds of convention,
+and, declining to look at the paper, require him to surrender
+it to Mr. Stanlett and make confession of his
+unwarranted interference. He stood in silence, his
+meditative eyes on her face so long that she noted his
+absorption.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“What is it?” she said suddenly. “You look
+strange, troubled. Surely there is nothing more
+amiss.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Let us take a turn along the veranda. I have been
+waiting for days to tell you something.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>She assented in silent suspense, and together they
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_317'>317</span>walked along the broad, moonlit veranda, the shadows
+of the trees now and again falling athwart it, the
+sheen on the waters striking across the expanse for
+sixty miles, making a vast roadway of glister to the
+vague unknown of the shimmering distance. Her lustrous
+dark eyes with the moon in their depths were
+dilated, expectant, her face was ethereally white and
+quietly serious. Her dress was white, of a soft, clinging
+woolen fabric, with a stripe of satin at intervals, that
+shone itself with a moony lustre. The square-cut bodice
+was filled in with lace that rose and fell with the stir
+of her breath as she waited, intent and a trifle agitated.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond began without preamble. “When I first
+came to Great Oaks, one of the boys, Reginald it
+was, told me of the step on the stair.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>She laid her hand on his arm, and he felt the quiver
+in its slim fingers.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I had then heard the step, once,—it was about
+midnight; and I heard it again, twice,—the night of
+the attack on the house.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh, oh,—I cannot abide that idea,” she exclaimed,
+with a quiver of pain in her voice. “You
+never have heard me mention it. I am sure it must
+be some fallacy,—some”—She could not speak
+for gasping. Then she gathered her composure and
+resumed with dignity: “It is nothing,—it is some
+trick! It is an insult to the memory of the sacred
+dead. It was never pretended to be heard in the lifetime
+of Mr. Faurie.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond felt on difficult ground. “I think that no
+one has ever associated his name with the manifestation,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_318'>318</span>though it is very natural that you should deprecate
+that idea. But the step is genuine, for I heard it
+distinctly twice that night; the last time I waited for
+it to approach, and it entered the room, and I saw
+the presence in the light.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Wait,—wait!” she exclaimed, and he paused,
+for she seemed unable to advance a step. The waters
+lapped about the veranda; the shadows of the great
+trees were weird and strange, falling across the surface
+of the flood flowing in the midst of the grove;
+the continual melancholy rise and fall of the voices
+of frogs sounded from woodsy tangles in lagoons and
+submerged marshes; the broad lunar lustre quivered
+on the expanse of the gray waters, and the moon rode
+high,—high in the dark sky.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Let me tell you,” he urged. “I was standing at
+the window in the blue room—”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“The blue room,” she faltered, as if with some
+vague memory.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Yes,—where the wounded man lay. I heard the
+stealthy step on the stair, as I had heard it twice
+before; a mere slip and then silence, and again a
+suggestion of a footfall, coming and coming up the
+stair; and I waited in the curtained recess of the
+dormer window,—and the step paused at the threshold;
+the door noiselessly swung ajar,—the step entered,—and
+it was Mr. Stanlett.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Mr. Stanlett!” she cried, standing suddenly erect
+and strong, her moonlit face showing a haughty displeasure;
+“why should you connect him with such
+mummery?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_319'>319</span>“Because I had heard the step twice before and
+recognized it; because as I listened to this step it
+came straight to the door, and, as I say, Mr. Stanlett
+entered; because I identified his aspect with the description
+of an intruder who had silently appeared
+and disappeared at the door earlier in the evening,
+frightening the wounded man with a vague terror.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I am ashamed to listen, I am ashamed to question;
+but if only to have done with these mysteries,
+I will ask what action did you observe Mr. Stanlett
+to take while you lay <em>perdu</em>?” As she confronted
+him a proud indignation burned red in her cheeks
+and her eyes flashed in the moonlight.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond took umbrage at her tone. His spirit
+mounted as he felt that his motives were entitled to
+some consideration on that night of all nights, when
+he had done so much for her and hers at the risk of
+his life. It was in his mind in self-justification to tax
+her with this, and demand the respect for his deeds
+due to the integrity of his intentions. But he, too,
+was proud. If she could forget her gratitude, he
+could waive its cause. He continued to describe, with
+a certain constraint in his voice, how the old man
+cautiously advanced to the bedside, and with fantastic
+cocked hat and disguising, muffling cloak watched
+the sleeping man to make sure of his unfeigned unconsciousness.
+She winced as she learned that the
+swift, skulking step took him straight to the press,
+in which he hid within an interior drawer a scroll of
+paper.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond was surprised by her next words. “He
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_320'>320</span>locked the door of the press? I know that it has a
+key,” she stipulated.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“He <em>thought</em> he locked it; but I saw that the bolt
+did not go home.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>She had every trait of wild agitation. “Did you
+not speak to him? Did you not warn him?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Why should I? Would he not have resented my
+presence as spying on him? when even you resent
+my disclosure of the fact that you may give the
+matter such weight as it deserves.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Resent it?—oh, no! no!” She laid both her
+cold hands on his as she stood looking up into his
+face. “I resent nothing from you; we all owe you
+too much, far too much! But I am frightened, mortified,
+uncertain. Can’t you see that that paper must
+be of the first importance to be so secreted—setting
+such a superstition afloat in a simple, domestic household—by
+the frankest, the kindest, the most gentle
+of men? Don’t you connect and interpret now the
+story of the step?—always heard just before we complete
+our preparations to quit the country, for he carries
+the paper with him,—always heard just when
+we return, for he brings it back and hides it again.
+And last week, that dark and dreadful evening when
+you say you passed the presence, the step on the
+stair, he thought that we must quit the house and he
+was doubtless bringing it down. But after you had
+rescued us—never, never imagine that I forget it
+for one moment!—he felt safe again and took it to
+its hiding-place once more. And oh, Edward, how
+could you—so unthinking, so heedless!— let him
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_321'>321</span>leave the door ajar believing that he had locked it,—an
+old man, Edward, a very old man,—and make off
+with the useless key in his simple satisfaction while
+that scoundrel lay on the bed,—oh, I shouldn’t speak
+harshly of the unjudged dead!—and his suspicions
+had already been excited, and perhaps he secured it,
+only having pretended slumber,—and oh, we must
+see if it is really there still. Say nothing to Uncle
+Clarence; let us go up first to the blue room and see
+if it is gone; get a lamp,—let us go.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond laid a restraining hand upon her wrist.
+“It is not there,” he said, looking down into her wild,
+eager, agitated eyes. “I saw the danger of leaving it
+there, and I secured it for safe-keeping until I could
+consign it to your care.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“And what—what—is it?” she faltered.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Can you imagine that I would so much as glance
+at it?” he replied sharply. “Stop; here we are at
+the library. I will give it to you now.”</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_322'>322</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XV</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c006'>The fire was dully drowsing on the hearth; a lamp
+on the desk burned dimly with the wick turned low.
+Desmond had a quick, nervous touch as he stirred the
+embers into flames, threw on a fresh stick of wood,
+and set the lamp aglow. His sensibilities, despite his
+vigor and youth, had felt the inroads of all the agitation
+to which the household had been subjected.
+The renewed cheer of the room dispensed, however,
+its cordial influence. We are at last but animal mechanism,
+and must needs shiver with cold, and burn
+with heat, and gloom in darkness, and hope in the
+glad light. Everything seemed suddenly more facile
+of adjustment, more possible of optimistic interpretation,
+and at all events the period of suspense was
+terminated when, seated at the desk, he turned the
+key in the lock of the drawer and wheeled in his
+swivel-chair, the envelope in his hand.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Here it is, at last,—all safe,” he said, in his
+firm, clear voice.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mrs. Faurie, who had sunk down on the end of
+the sofa, almost collapsing in uncertainty and agitation
+and dubious foreboding, her hands pressed to
+her eyes, roused herself as the room sprang into its
+wonted cheerful guise and lifted her head. She did
+not immediately take the paper as Desmond held it
+out to her. She adjusted a sofa-pillow under her elbow,
+and set her dainty foot on a hassock on the floor,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_323'>323</span>and piled up the supporting cushions,—hesitating,
+contriving hindrance, postponing the evil moment.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I am afraid of entering upon some hasty action
+and that I may afterward regret my precipitancy,”
+she temporized.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I should advise you to be deliberate,” he rejoined.
+“From what we know of the history of this paper, it
+would not seem to press for action.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“And yet delay might be prejudicial,” she said,
+eager when not opposed. She held out her hand for
+it, and then drew back, once more doubtful. She had
+grown calm, and she looked deeply meditative as she
+leaned forward in her soft, clinging white dress from
+amongst the dull crimson silk cushions, her slim, jeweled
+hand extended, yet not touching the paper that
+he held out to her as he sat near by in the chair
+before the desk. “But have I the right to examine
+it?” she argued. “It may not concern me or mine.
+Mr. Stanlett has affairs of his own, no doubt, into
+which I am not privileged to intrude.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“His course has been very eccentric,” said Desmond,
+tingling with impatience to reach a conclusion,
+yet not willing to urge her decision, and weighing
+considerately her every argument and scruple. “He
+has carried on for years, apparently, a very elaborate
+and mysterious emprise of concealing a document
+which, if it were his own, might be considered safe
+enough among his valuable papers. His midnight
+comings and goings have given rise, as he knew, to
+a theory of spectral manifestation in the house which
+might be very injurious to young minds, and even,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_324'>324</span>in default of all explanation, to elder people. He
+went so far as to foster this theory by a semi-disguise
+as a precaution against recognition should he be
+unwarily glimpsed.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Then they both sat silent while the freshened fire
+glowed red in the room, and the lamp dispensed its
+steady, white light, and the great windows revealed
+the moon shoaling on the vast stretch of silvery
+water, with the shadows of the trees on its expanse
+below, and the dendroidal forms towering high into
+the pearl-tinted sky,—all seeming some strange,
+mystic, illuminated tangle of enchanted forest and
+lake, full of dreams and vagaries, of quivering radiance
+and yearning melancholy, under a spell, perpetual,
+somehow, and far away from to-morrow.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“But I feel as you do,” Desmond recommenced after
+a moment of reflection. “From the first I doubted
+my right to touch it. Still, it has occurred to me that
+in view of his age and its possible relation to his
+eccentric actions in this matter, and also in view of
+your position as the head of this house in which
+these practices have come to your knowledge, you
+might justifiably open the package, and glance at its
+contents sufficiently to discern if they concern you.
+If they do not, then I will restore the papers to him
+and apologize as well as I can for my interference.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I believe you are right,” she conceded. She took
+the envelope from his hand. Even then she drew back.
+“The seal!” she exclaimed. “I cannot break a seal.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“That is only my seal,” Desmond explained. “I
+put it on to protect the papers from interference.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_325'>325</span>She leaned toward the desk to catch the light
+on the papers, broke the seal, and drew out two inclosures,
+one a document of length, the other evidently
+a letter.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“It is mine!—mine!” she cried wildly. She gave
+a gasp, her free hand fluttering nervously. “It is my
+husband’s handwriting,” she whispered in a reverent,
+awed tone, as if consciously in an unseen presence.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Then, as her brilliant eyes scanned the lines, shifting
+from side to side as she read, the color surged
+up into her cheeks and her lips curved in a radiant
+smile. Suddenly she burst into a flood of tears, her
+words, as she sought to speak, breaking into gusts of
+happy laughter, her brimming eyes looking into his
+with eagerness to disclose the tenor of the papers, yet
+in her agitation her powers of speech failing, inadequate.
+“It is such happiness,—happiness,—happiness”
+was all that she could say.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Once more she strove to read, but her voice broke
+and trailed off into a sob that was yet like a gurgle
+of laughter. “Read it,”—she handed it to him.
+“Read the letter—I’d rather have it than all the
+diamonds of Golconda!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>As Desmond straightened the pages, he saw that
+it was addressed to a lawyer of Memphis, whom he
+knew to be the executor of the will of the late Mr.
+Faurie, and in fact this letter related to that instrument.
+He desired to alter certain dispositions of this
+will, the writer said, although mailed so recently as
+by the last packet, and he stated that he had set forth
+these changes in a paper that he inclosed, duly signed
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_326'>326</span>and witnessed, and which he pronounced a codicil to
+his last will and testament.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“It is, I doubt not, a poor performance,” he wrote,
+“in comparison with the admirable instrument that
+you drew with such care and skill; but it will hold,
+and I cannot hope to have a lawyer to come to Great
+Oaks in time to take my instructions for the codicil,
+for I fear that my days are at an end indeed.” The
+writer went on to explain that he had grown dissatisfied
+with the provision which he had directed to be
+made in the will for his wife. He had desired that she
+should enjoy as large an income as practicable, and
+that she should not be burdened with the management
+of real estate other than her home place, unless
+she should herself elect to make such investments with
+the surplusage of her income. Hence he had thought
+best not to assign to her the usual one third life-interest
+in his property, but an annuity of thirty thousand
+dollars during widowhood, which was a larger
+income than her statute right to dower in Tennessee
+could justify, and chargeable upon the whole estate,
+and he had given her also, subject to the same restrictions,
+his plantation, Great Oaks, the annual yield
+from which necessarily fluctuated according to the
+season. Under these circumstances, the interest of the
+three sons in the rest of the property was to remain
+undivided during minority, that the estate could be
+nursed to better advantage. It was to be partitioned,
+or sold for division, when the youngest became twenty-one
+years of age, the elder two, however, to receive a
+certain sum of money upon attaining majority, for the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_327'>327</span>purchase of business interests, that they might not
+pass in inaction the years of waiting for the division
+of the whole and the possession of their respective
+shares.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“So thoughtful,” murmured Mrs. Faurie.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It had seemed to him, the writer stated, that the
+three sons would be rich enough when they came
+severally to their majority, and could well spare the
+aggregations of such portion of the income of the
+estate as he had assigned to the use of their mother,
+over and above her rightful share, in order that she
+might have no reasonable wish ungratified.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh, to be thinking of that in those awful last
+days!” she interpolated, her flush fluctuating, and
+once more bursting into tears.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I should like her to travel, for this she enjoys,”
+the letter continued. “I should like her to see the
+world, and that others might have the privilege and
+benefaction of seeing her, as I could wish that no one
+should be beyond the reach of the sunshine. And
+with all this in view I directed you, as you know, to
+draw the will as it stands.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Forthwith he entered upon a systematic defense of
+his motives and views in the corollaries necessitated
+by these provisions embodied in the instrument.
+While he had no crude jealousy, he protested, and
+would not seek to curb his widow’s independence in
+making a second marriage, he was not willing that
+the extra income allotted to her should go into the
+control of a stranger at the expense of the estates
+of his sons. It was one thing, he argued, to restrict
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_328'>328</span>the wealth of his sons for their mother’s benefit.
+It was quite another thing to take from them to
+enrich a stranger, who might or might not be of
+mercenary motives, of ungenerous temper, or of undue
+domestic ascendency, and who might or might not
+permit her the free use of what was her own. Then,
+too, the subjection of the estates of the sons to the
+charge of her income under the circumstances of a
+second marriage was of discordant suggestion; possibly,
+in the unforeseen mutations of human affairs,
+even subversive of their independence, and inimical
+to family peace. Therefore he had had the clause inserted
+revoking the allotment of her income should
+she marry again, and substituting as her provision one
+fourth of the Mississippi property in fee, and a life-interest
+in one third of the Tennessee realty including,
+in lieu of Great Oaks, his town residence in the city
+of Nashville, the rest of the estate in that event to be
+sold for division, that the portion of each devisee
+might be ascertained and set apart.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>These were his reasons for such disposition as he
+had made of his property. Now, however, since he
+had executed and forwarded the will to his executor,
+he had begun to fear that this matrimonial clause
+would be misunderstood by Mrs. Faurie, whose feeling
+for him it might possibly affect, all unexplained
+as it was.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“But never!—never!” she sobbed. “I always
+realized that you were actuated by the best motives
+for what you deemed the welfare of all concerned.
+But I am so happy to know <em>why</em> you did it!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_329'>329</span>Desmond paused, a strange thrill at his heart as
+he gazed at her. She might have been some young
+girl in the childlike abandonment to her tears, as
+she leaned on the arm of the sofa, her long white
+dress a-trail on the dark carpet, her scarlet cheek
+against her upheld bare white arm, her lovely hands
+clasped above her drooping head. Desmond’s voice
+was strained, husky, with sudden breaks as he
+read on.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Upon further reflection, the writer stated, the provisions
+he had made in the will for Mrs. Faurie in
+the event of a second marriage had become obnoxious
+to him. He had accorded her merely the equivalent
+of her dower rights, such as the law would allow
+her were he to die intestate, or were she to dissent
+from the will. In effect, he seemed to make a point
+of giving her nothing in the contemplated contingency
+that he could avoid giving. He had not
+intended thus to interdict a second marriage, and her
+right to order her life after her widowhood as she
+chose, according to her most excellent judgment.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh,” cried Mrs. Faurie, with a little irrelevant
+laugh, not for Desmond, but as if she rallied the
+writer with the extravagance of his approval.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Therefore, the testator declared, he had revoked in
+set terms both the dispositions of a life-interest in the
+real estate in reference to a second marriage, and
+the imposition of a charge for her benefit upon the
+realty of the whole estate during widowhood. Instead,
+he had thought best to devise to her absolutely
+one fourth of the real estate in fee, inclusive of Great
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_330'>330</span>Oaks, which he considered particularly desirable because
+of its income-bearing values, the other three
+fourths to be equally divided between his three sons.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He added some words setting forth arrangements
+for the guidance of the executor in regard to disbursements
+for maintenance, emergencies, and education
+of the minors, pending an interval which he evidently
+anticipated would endure for a considerable time,
+before the estate could be fairly administered. This
+depended upon the conclusion of a certain litigation
+involving some conditional increments, then in abeyance.
+When a decision should be reached, and these
+assets realized upon, he directed that the whole estate
+should be partitioned; and in order that the several
+shares might be justly ascertained, the portion of each
+of the minors should be chargeable with such expenditures
+as had been made for him during the interim,
+and the portion of the widow should be chargeable
+with such sums as she had received from the funds of
+the estate; but she should not be obliged to put also
+into the common stock for division the profits from
+any investments that she had made, or accretions of
+value, of whatever sort, that had accrued from means
+derived from the estate.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond stared blankly at the paper for a few
+moments after he had concluded the reading of the
+letter. “Did the executor win the suit to which he
+refers?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh, yes,—in the infinitely leisurely legal fashion.
+It would go up to the Supreme Court and be remanded
+on a certain point, and then it would go up on another
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_331'>331</span>and come down as before. It was a sort of legal shuttlecock.
+I was amazed when I heard that the lawyers
+were through playing with it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond could not control the cadence of depression
+in his voice. “How long ago was it decided?”
+he asked, hoping against hope.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“A little more than a year, I believe.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Evidently, the lapse of time could not be a potential
+factor in the impending future. The contingent event
+on which the partitioning was conditioned by the codicil
+had just fallen out, and the rest of the estate, save
+for the aggregations of income and the depletion of
+expenditures, was much as the testator had left it,
+for the executor had no general powers of sale. Desmond
+could see no reason why this codicil should not
+be admitted to probate and at once subvert the existing
+status. Technically, it was itself a part of the will
+already in force, though its provisions were <em>pro tanto</em>
+a revocation of the previous testamentary disposition.
+The indeterminate interval after probate in common
+form allowed in Tennessee, where the bulk of the
+property was situated, for the institution of revocatory
+proceedings; the disability of non-age in the
+minors, to whom laches could hardly be imputed; the
+fact that it was manifestly impossible for their guardian
+to take any action in view of the unsuspected existence
+of the codicil of which the executor was the
+proper proponent, would seem to annul all obstacles
+to its effectiveness, despite any complications with
+which the conflict of laws in the two sovereign states
+might otherwise invest the situation, the statutes of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_332'>332</span>each of course controlling the realty within their respective
+borders.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There was silence for a time. Both looked out from
+the mellow light of the room through the windows on
+that pale scape of moonlit mist and water and mystic
+woods, all in pearly neutral tones, soft, sheeny, white,
+like some dream scene, full of weird suggestions and
+dim spectacular configurations. Now there was a floating
+island, distant, half descried; now a flying, gauzy,
+vaporous figure, with feet touching the surface of the
+water, and hands laid against the star-studded gates
+of the sky; now a phantom craft under full sail, with
+clouds of tenuous canvas and streaming pennants of
+mist. She saw naught, busied with her memories; and
+he, strangely grudging, sought for words to snatch
+her from them.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“You must look at the codicil,” he said, holding
+the document out toward her.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I don’t care for that—heavens, how I love that
+letter!” and once more she burst into tears. She rose
+after a moment to reach for it, and then she read it
+anew, with sudden gurgles of tender laughter and
+sobs and gushes of tears.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I suppose that this codicil will, to this extent, revoke
+the provisions of the will that has stood all this
+time,” he said. He was no lawyer, but he had a definite
+understanding of the ways of the business world
+and the justice of its methods. A very appalling possibility
+began to open before him. He leaned forward
+and turned the upper corner of the pages of the letter,
+still in her hands, to look once more at the date,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_333'>333</span>written evidently only the day before the testator’s
+death.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“It has been a good many years,” he said, in dismal
+forecast.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh, forever!” she exclaimed, the tears coursing
+down her cheeks.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He had begun to understand the quandary of the
+poor ghost, slipping slyly about the midnight quiet
+of the house to conceal this bit of paper, potent destroyer
+of its peace. He doubted the policy of putting
+into words the fear in his mind. But he must have
+her attention. He clutched at her thoughts with imperative
+insistence. Those memories, those gentle,
+tender memories in which he had no share,—how
+desolate, how deserted they left him! His jealous reproach
+was in his eyes, all unnoted. His indignation
+burned red in his cheek. A figment, a recollection,
+pervaded the room and annulled his presence. But he
+would not be ignored, forgotten, denied. He grasped
+at her attention as a child clutches the skirts of its
+unthinking mother, and persists in its plea.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“In this division the executor may make a claim
+on you for the income that you have spent. It strikes
+me that this will operate as the equivalent of a refunding
+bond.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Let them take everything. I have this letter!”
+and she clasped it to her bosom.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He had a sense of turning aside. He could not
+move her. He opened the codicil himself and scanned
+its contents. It duplicated the intendment of the letter,
+but in more formal and lucid phrase. A very
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_334'>334</span>exact and strict man of business Mr. Faurie showed
+himself to be in this paper. Desmond was impressed
+with this fact, yet dismayed in a sort, in regard to the
+accuracy of the accounting which the testator contemplated
+between the minors and widow at the partitioning
+of his estate. He even superfluously directed
+that the difference of age among the children should
+be considered and the actual outlay for each charged,
+and not merely an approximation of expense as applied
+to each of them; since the expenditure for the
+youngest might for a time be more, in view of extra
+attendance, elaborate attire, and special liability to ailments,
+and later less than the disbursements for the
+elder boys. Desmond might have laughed, yet he could
+have wept, that the testator, despite his evident astuteness,
+should have permitted himself the simplicity of
+anticipating that Mrs. Faurie would have applied any
+portion of her receipts from the estate to investments
+of real property or the acquisition of other assets that
+would yield “accretions of value.” As well might one
+expect the sun to hoard its gold or the bird its song of
+spring. No! nearly seven years of joyous, open-handed
+dispensing of all her income from the estate were thus
+chargeable against the one fourth in fee of realty and
+of the personalty that formed her liberal portion. How
+much this might be, Desmond of course was not qualified
+to judge; but the ravages in this provision which
+the restoration of that great income for nearly seven
+years must needs work might well appall the pallid
+Mr. Stanlett in his niece’s interest, and set as talk the
+storied spectre, the Slip-Slinksy of the midnight stairs.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_335'>335</span>“Mr. Stanlett must have found this paper in some
+unaccustomed receptacle,” Desmond hazarded.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mrs. Faurie sat stiffly erect. This phase troubled
+her more than the fear of the financial loss; it touched
+her pride. Her level eyebrows were corrugated into
+a frown. Her eyes were bright, hard, restlessly glancing.
+But she bent her faculties to the consideration
+calmly. “Perhaps,” she said thoughtfully, but her lips
+were stiff; they moved with difficulty to frame the words
+so distasteful to her. “It was understood that all Mr.
+Faurie’s important papers were already in the hands of
+his executor. He, himself, had them transferred some
+time before his death,—it was not unexpected.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>She was silent for a few moments, looking reflectively
+out of the window. “I remember that the rest
+of the papers, account-books, packages of letters,
+files, and all such things were taken out of the library
+soon after Mr. Faurie’s death and, without examination,
+placed in japanned boxes and locked in the
+press of the blue room. It was presumed that there
+was nothing of real importance among them, but
+they were preserved on the chance. He must have
+written this codicil and letter the day before his
+death,—both are dated on the 18th,—and had the
+paper witnessed and laid it aside among the other
+papers in his desk, intending to forward it to Mr.
+Hartagous in Memphis. The mail packet was due the
+next day, and passed about dusk; he died just before
+candle-light that evening, and I dare say this paper
+was among those in his desk that were packed away
+in the press of the blue room.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_336'>336</span>“I suppose that this codicil must have been found
+some years afterward,” Desmond dolefully suggested.
+“Mr. Stanlett seems to me to be a man of good business
+judgment. He would never have desired to conceal
+this paper if a great part of those liabilities had
+not been already incurred. Of course he had only your
+interest in view. He has sufficient means of his
+own. It is nothing to him.” She brought herself
+more willingly to follow his line of thought, since
+she perceived justification, in some poor sort, in the
+perspective, for Mr. Stanlett’s aberrations.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I remember,” she said drawlingly, as if the recollection
+had just begun to trail its dubious length into
+her mind, “that about three years ago the executor
+called for some old levee bonds, on which the estate
+was entitled to something, and asked that the papers
+here be searched for them.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Who made this search,—do you recollect?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>She visibly winced from the inquiry, but she answered
+with her usual directness: “I recollect very
+well that it was Uncle Clarence who made the search;
+and now that it seems to bear upon the question,
+I do recall that he was much out of sorts afterward.
+I remember that his petulance astonished me. He
+was never a profane man, but he swore violently
+because the executor had given him so much trouble,
+and declared that if he had wanted to be set to a clerk’s
+work, he would have asked for a clerk’s pay. And
+he said that the papers were disordered and dusty
+and devilish, and that he had broken himself down in
+working amongst them. I was a little hurt by the tone
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_337'>337</span>he was taking; and when I said that I was sorry he
+had put himself out to do a favor for me, he replied
+very significantly, ‘A favor,—for you, Honoria,—for
+<em>you</em>? Why, I would eat off my little finger for
+<em>you</em>.’ And oh, poor old Uncle Clarence! We must
+keep him from ever suspecting that we have discovered
+his course. It would humiliate him; it would
+bow him down to the earth with mortification.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond looked dumfounded. “I don’t see how
+we can prevent it. This codicil must be produced,
+and at once.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Of course; but will it be necessary to publish all
+the details, his fantastic masquerades and midnight
+vigils to protect its concealment?” she argued.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“His course has been very strange, certainly.”
+Then, after a pause, “In fact, I am confident that concealing
+a document of this sort, a will or codicil, to
+prevent it from being proved and becoming operative,
+is obnoxious to the law,—a very serious matter,” said
+Desmond, nerving himself for her storm of protest.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“He has not prevented it from becoming operative,”
+she retorted frostily. “The codicil is discovered
+and will be sent to-morrow to the executor, who
+will at once secure the two subscribing witnesses,—the
+same who swore to the will in force,—both still
+living, and will offer the codicil for probate. I will
+have to return the money that I have spent out of
+the different provision now made for me. I see no
+sense in telling our little yarn of Slip-Slinksy, and
+blue room, and secret drawers, for all the world to
+guy and laugh at, and mortify poor old Uncle Clarence
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_338'>338</span>to the soul. Oh, poor, poor Uncle Clarence,—how
+his discovery of the codicil must have tortured him!
+What must he have felt for me! It must have turned
+his brain,—it must have crazed him. That is the
+explanation of his course,—that is the solution of
+the mystery.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond did not conceive it necessary to contend
+on this theory. At first glimpse it seemed to him
+a remarkably coherent scheme for a disordered brain
+to evolve, and one which only a strange accident had
+frustrated. Mr. Stanlett, however, was very old, and
+it may have been that at first he had withheld the
+paper in the frantic, senile, foolish expectation that
+another will might be found, not so destructive to his
+niece’s interest as this codicil, which, by reason of the
+time that had elapsed in her enjoyment of the estate
+that was not hers by right, had practically beggared
+her. Doubtless he had postponed the disclosure from
+day to day, the disaster augmented by his delay, till
+perchance the pressure on his brain had resulted in
+subverting his reason. He had always intended to
+bring it forth, some day,—some day,—for he had
+carefully preserved it at great cost of anxiety and
+suspense and comfort, when its easy destruction would
+have given him security, and confirmed the existing
+status which was so happy for all concerned.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Realizing as Desmond did the magnitude of the
+disaster, that the interests of the widow so tenderly,
+so richly provided for, had been wrecked by the extreme
+of the solicitude exerted for her welfare, he was
+utterly unprepared for the airy lightness and consummate
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_339'>339</span>tact with which Mrs. Faurie made the disclosure
+without revealing the discovery of the concealment
+of the codicil.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>She came fluttering into the parlor the next morning
+when were present all the family, Mr. Bainbridge,
+the manager, and Colonel Kentopp, who had been
+out in a skiff to a passing packet and had paused on
+his way back to Dryad-Dene to leave some newspapers.
+“What do you suppose?” she cried. “I can
+tell you news more astonishing to our neighborhood
+than anything you are likely to hear from the outside
+world. You know that of course we had the blue
+room upstairs, where that wounded river pirate died,
+thoroughly overhauled, and in one of the big presses
+in the wall Mr. Desmond found a secret drawer, and
+in it a later will of Mr. Faurie’s,—are you not surprised?—a
+codicil it is, I should have said.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mr. Stanlett stared for a moment blankly, rose to
+his feet, essayed to speak, and sank back very pale
+and entirely unobserved amidst the excitement of the
+others.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Regularly executed?” Colonel Kentopp inquired,
+amazed.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“A codicil all in his own handwriting,” said Mrs.
+Faurie, “perfectly regular, with the same witnesses as
+the will.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“To your advantage, I hope,” said Colonel Kentopp,
+his glossy hazel-nut eyes glittering, his eager
+curiosity difficult to control.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh, I am perfectly satisfied,” Mrs. Faurie declared,
+smiling proudly; and Colonel Kentopp knew as
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_340'>340</span>well as if he had seen the instrument that Mrs. Faurie
+had been relegated to a designated share of the real
+estate, out of which she would be required to make
+good her lavish expenditures heretofore. He was not
+indisposed to rejoice after the manner of men of
+his kind in the disasters of others, but presently his
+spirits fell. This change boded doubtless the partitioning
+of the Faurie property, and with Great Oaks
+on the market, he knew that there was scant hope of
+Loring as a purchaser of Dryad-Dene. So ill at ease
+was he under this theory, so suddenly out of countenance,
+that he sought to avoid observation, and made
+haste to conclude his call and get himself away.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He was promptly followed by Bainbridge, dully
+pondering on the news, half stunned by the revelation,
+and apprehensive of a change in the ownership
+of Great Oaks and the jeopardy of his own employment
+there.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond breathed more freely when both were
+gone; he felt that he could not have summoned the
+nerve that Mrs. Faurie had shown in risking the disclosure
+in the presence of others, although he realized
+that, had Mr. Stanlett spoken inconsiderately, it would
+have been ascribed to the vagaries of age and his
+natural and extreme disappointment,—in effect, the
+overthrow of his reason in so signal a misfortune to
+his nearest and dearest relative, who had always been
+like a duteous daughter to him. Nevertheless, Desmond
+was glad that surprise and dismay had held the
+old gentleman silent till only the family group was
+present. In the disclosure Mrs. Faurie had stated the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_341'>341</span>literal truth, that Desmond had found the codicil in
+a secret drawer, and Mr. Stanlett accepted it without
+demur or suspicion of the further discovery of his
+knowledge of the cache, or agency and motive in
+its concealment.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“But why, and how, and when, in the name of all
+that is sacred sir,” the old man said, scarlet, trembling,
+his eyes blazing, and scarcely able to keep his
+feet, “should <em>you</em> go rummaging around into the
+secret drawers of a locked press?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“The press was not locked,” Desmond said, without
+looking up, and trifling with the violets in a glass
+bowl in the centre of the table beside which he sat.
+“The bolt did not reach the slot.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“And why did you send it off without consulting
+me, Honoria? Another will might yet be found. I
+have searched and searched. Another will and a later
+one is now right among those papers in the blue
+room. Oh, how many nights, how many nights I
+have searched!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Dear Uncle Clarence, the codicil was written and
+dated and witnessed on the 18th, and my husband
+died the night of the 19th.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Plenty of time for another will,—Faurie was a
+most expeditious man of business. He was not bedridden,
+as you know. He even slept in his chair
+toward the last, as you must remember. That heart
+trouble would not let him lie down in peace—queer,
+for a man of his physical strength. He died at last
+in his chair, in that library. Plenty of time for
+another will; it could be found! This Mr. Desmond
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_342'>342</span>seems to have a nose for game; set him after another
+will, and see what he can tree this time.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mrs. Faurie broke in to prevent the old man from
+indulging in further sarcasm along this line. “And
+oh, Uncle Clarence, such a dear letter was with the
+document! I want Reginald and Horace and Rufus,
+each one, to read that letter, and bless God for a
+father so good and generous and considerate for
+us all.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>As they sat and listened they had that look so
+pathetic in children old enough to appreciate their
+situation in matters of moment, yet realizing their
+helplessness in the hands of others, and not able to
+compass a full reliance on the direction of the course
+of events.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Do you understand, Honoria, that you will have
+to refund to the executor, the estate, the expenditures
+of all these years, the accumulated amount of
+the income, your annuity,—the money that you have
+been spending so royally with both hands for nearly
+seven years? It will certainly sweep away more than
+half your present provision, possibly the whole, into
+the craws of those vipers that you have warmed on
+your hearth.” The old man was piteous in his age
+and agitation, as he stood, lean, gray, wrinkled, half
+bent in his tremulous emphasis, his arm outstretched,
+the fingers quivering as he shook them at the group
+of aghast boys. “Do you understand that, woman?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Why, what else, Uncle Clarence? Would you
+have me rob my children?” She had reached out
+for Chub when he was denominated a viper with a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_343'>343</span>craw, and was now drawing him into that juxtaposition
+so unbecoming to his appearance, his fledgeling
+blond head on her bosom, his hard, round, freckled
+red cheek against the soft, exquisite whiteness of her
+neck. He struggled to speak through her tender
+kisses.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“You will oblige me, Uncle Clarence, by not calling
+my mother a woman,” he said, in callow affront.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“What else is she?—and a most ill-used, unlucky,
+and poverty-stricken woman.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“She is as ’spectable as any man!” protested
+Chub; and while the other two boys burst out laughing
+as usual at Chubby’s queer views, they were all
+three in tears presently, horrified that their mother
+should be impoverished to make restitution to them,
+and that they were powerless to hinder the sacrifice.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh, terrible! terrible!” the old man said as he
+strode to and fro before the fire, literally wringing his
+hands. “It is the duty of the executor to exact every
+mill, and he will do it. The executor has no option
+whatever in the matter. He is constrained by the
+terms of the codicil.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Then he fell to crying again and again, “Oh,
+terrible! terrible!” and wringing his hands as he
+wavered to and fro with his uncertain, senile step.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Uncle Clarence, why will you not set an example
+of composure and courage in adversity to these boys?
+The event must have fallen out this way, at any
+rate.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Why?”—he had paused abruptly. “Why, Honoria,
+why? If the codicil had not been found, you
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_344'>344</span>would not have had to refund under any circumstances.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I only meant that this codicil must have come to
+light sooner or later,” she explained.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But he went on unheeding: “Did you intend to
+give up the income for a life-interest in the third,
+under the provisions of the old will? Are you going
+to marry this man Desmond?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mrs. Faurie sat still and amazed for a moment.
+Then her buoyant laughter rang joyously through the
+room. “Marry?—a mere boy, like Edward? Uncle
+Clarence, you are funny,—positively funny!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“He is no boy,—he is as old as the almighty
+hills! And if you have not thought of such a possibility,
+<em>he has</em>,—take my word for it, <em>he has</em>. He has
+a keen eye for the main chance. He found the codicil,
+and now you have to give up the income whether
+or no. But he had better not be in too great a hurry
+for the fourth of the estate. Wait till you make good
+these expenditures. He hasn’t seen you spend money
+as I have done. Wait till you make good your refunding
+bond, for that is just what this amounts to.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond felt the flush rising to his forehead. His
+heart was beating furiously. In his agitation he had
+upset the bowl of violets and the blossoms were
+scattered over the table, while the water in which
+they were steeped began to drip slowly, slowly to the
+floor. He did not lift his eyes, not even when Mrs.
+Faurie spoke in apology.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I cannot express to him how grateful I am for
+his forbearance under these insults,” she said gravely.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_345'>345</span>“And, Uncle Clarence, you would never subject him
+to them and so tax his generosity were you yourself
+to-day—so scrupulous as you are in every relation in
+life,—so—”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“<em>Too</em> scrupulous! <em>Too</em> scrupulous! Scrupulous
+enough to be such a stupendous fool as not to tear
+a bit of paper when I had my chance, and save you
+a gigantic fortune, as fortunes go in this country,—ah,—ah,—when
+I had my chance!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He tottered out of the room, banging the door, the
+three boys staring in dismay after the lurching figure
+with the feeble impetuousness of gait, and listening
+to the mutter of his impotent wrath as he went stumbling
+and cursing down the hall.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_346'>346</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XVI</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c006'>Desmond had never experienced such dejection as
+now overwhelmed his spirits. He could not rally from
+it. He could not understand it. He had recovered
+from the strain of the physical fatigue, even from the
+stress of excitement. He had permitted little interruption
+to his pedagogic duties, and the routine of the
+schoolroom continued in force as regular as if no
+river pirates had ever assailed the house, and died in
+the commission of the intended robbery; as if no
+coroner’s jury had ever grimly deliberated on the
+veranda; as if no codicil of the will had ever been
+found to reverse all the orderly status with a presage
+of future financial chaos.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“We will take care of to-day,” Desmond had said
+to his restive, unsettled, agitated pupils, “and to-morrow
+will take care of itself.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>They were docile under his admonition, but he
+could not so easily press its sage philosophy upon
+himself. Now and again he struggled with this gloom
+when he was sufficiently at leisure to cope with it.
+He had been fortunate beyond any reasonable expectation,
+considering his status, he argued. In lieu
+of the position of a tolerated necessity in the house,
+a tutor to boys remote from schools, he had been
+treated first with respect and courtesy, then as a valued
+guest, made as one of the family, and now as the
+predominant controlling element, from whose decree
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_347'>347</span>there was no appeal. More and more did Mr. Bainbridge,
+with his papers, and a furtive eye, and a deprecating
+hand laid over his mouth, as if resolved to
+keep his conjectures from going further than his
+mustache, come directly to Desmond, to take his advice,
+as he said, in fact to secure the annulment of some
+impracticable order, or to obviate unwise dispositions
+of Mrs. Faurie’s in the readjustment of the wrecked
+plantation interests. He did not directly bespeak Desmond’s
+influence. He only showed the papers and set
+forth the facts, coughed discreetly behind his hand,
+and if securing Desmond’s promise to place the matter
+before Mrs. Faurie, would set forth confident
+and alert, acting on the rescission of the order as if it
+were received; for whatever Mr. Desmond undertook
+at Great Oaks Plantation was regarded as <em>un fait accompli</em>.
+The attitude of the servants toward him for
+some time past was compounded of a deep respect
+and some real liking, influencing swift feet and dexterous
+hands and willing smiles in his service. “He
+is a man, shore!” was the general comment. His
+pupils first obeyed, then esteemed, and now adored
+him, using their utmost diligence to win the meed of
+his approval. Even they, he thought, noted his gloom,
+which he could not disguise, and which rested upon
+his aspect as definitely as a pall. He lost his readiness
+to sleep, which, since he had become content in a
+measure with his lot, he had recovered—in his youthful
+health and vitality. Long, long after the house
+was lapsed in slumber, he would linger in a reclining-chair
+at his window, the candle burning down
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_348'>348</span>to the socket, his fingers in the pages of an unread
+book, looking out dully at the lustrous scene, now
+grown so familiar, of the expanse of gray, shimmering
+water under the white moon and the faint stars,
+while all the room about him dulled to indiscriminate
+gloom and the hours wore on and on toward dawn.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>What was this obsession? he sometimes angrily
+asked himself. Why should he wince in poignant pain
+at the very thought of the tender music in Honoria
+Faurie’s voice as she sobbed amidst joy and laughed
+amidst sorrow, in the blended ecstasy and woe in reading
+her husband’s letter, so replete with his love and
+thought for her? Was he jealous of the dead man—dead
+these seven long years!—the dead man he had
+never seen? And how did her tears and smiles concern
+him,—whom she deemed but a boy,—at whom she
+looked with such sweet, maternal eyes? Sometimes he
+felt that he was losing his reason. Why should this
+evidence of her love for the dead man who had been
+her husband set an exquisite pain a-quiver in his every
+fibre? Had he thought she had forgotten—that were
+not to her credit. Did he fear that if the dead still
+lived so in her heart there was no place in her affections
+for him? And why had he ever hoped this? And
+when, indeed, had he first thought of it? There had
+grown up in his mind so gradually from admiration
+of her beauty, from approval of her standpoint, from
+confidence in her principles, from interest in the disclosures
+of her charming mind, an absolute adoration
+so complete, so possessive, that he was hardly aware
+of it until it absorbed him wholly. He had no more
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_349'>349</span>identity of his own. He existed only in relation to her.
+The fact became apparent to him as he reviewed the
+last few months. He had come here penniless, as a
+tutor to teach her sons, mere children, to do designated
+work; he had stipulated and stood stoutly on
+these limits, defining exactly what were to be his
+duties, that he might not be called upon to exceed
+them, to become an overworked, underpaid drudge,
+with such expenditure of vitality that he might be
+unable to rise to higher things.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He recurred no more to these limitations. He controlled
+the boys in school and out, laying commands
+upon them with paternal freedom, restricting dangerous
+amusements, interdicting prejudicial reading,
+requiring salutary exercise, cutting off amusing associates
+sometimes, for no better reason than that their
+conversation tended to impair the grammar and parlor
+manners of his youthful charges,—all of which was
+out of his contract and beyond the bailiwick of his
+authority.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He had been inducted into even more exacting
+occupations. He had become the referee in all matters
+of dispute about the place, which required some nicety
+of discrimination; he was often put into a position
+of extreme doubt and embarrassment in deciding the
+small property interests between servants or the plantation
+hands, who had agreed together to abide by his
+decision, thus exerting, indeed, the functions of justice.
+Mrs. Faurie consulted him in business correspondence.
+He had been led, by the turn of events, to risk his life
+in defense of the mansion and to hold it out in a state
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_350'>350</span>of siege. He had kept up the good cheer by his genial
+arts, and preserved the calmness of all in the house
+that dreadful night when, but for his stanch composure
+and his resources of management, they might
+have fallen victims to causeless fright and ghastly
+horror in their isolation, and become the wreck of
+their own nerves in lieu of passing the ordeal with
+no result but the confirmation of their powers and
+their confidence in themselves. It was he who had
+conferred with the county officials by letter and in
+person when they came to the house. Mrs. Faurie
+and the younger boys had been spared the ghastly
+details of the inquest through his representations to
+the coroner, and were busied in a rear room opening
+some boxes of potted plants for the approaching summer
+decoration of the veranda, which had been shipped
+by the packet opportunely passing on this morning,
+and which he contrived should be brought off in a
+skiff simultaneously to the house; thus they were not
+aware of the event in progress till the inquisition was
+concluded. His own testimony, that of Reginald and
+Mr. Stanlett, the confessions of the wounded man,
+who died later the same day, the corroborative details
+of the servants as to the subsequent events, were
+deemed ample evidence, and the verdict of the jury
+was in accordance with the facts.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He had solved the mystery of the spectral manifestations
+that had terrorized the house for years;
+he had secured the cache from its possible wresting
+away by vandal hands; he was her confidant and
+counselor in all the troublous forecast of the complications
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_351'>351</span>to ensue upon the propounding of the
+codicil.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Surely these were the services of no hireling. They
+were the cheerful tribute of love that found danger
+dear for her behoof, and toil light, and the tangles
+of perplexity easy of unraveling since she might elude
+their intricacies, and responsibility a broadening of
+the shoulders, and his day all too short for its devotion
+to her interests.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>And to her—he seemed but a boy! a mere springald
+out of college, glad to teach for a time,—to repeat
+his own lessons recently conned as a stepping-stone
+to a man’s devoir.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>And yet—he looked at the long lane of light, the
+mystic avenue of the moon on the water in the
+glade between the lines of inundated trees. What
+alluring dreams, what soft deceits were coming to him
+along that roadway of shimmering pearl,—coming to
+him from the moon, the home of fantasies, to which
+it stretched at the limits of the perspective. Did she
+know her own heart? She had no mind but his. She
+adopted his views, and deferred her preferences, and
+abated her prejudices. He had no need to care for
+his dignity; she was quicker than he to resent aught
+that seemed to touch upon it. The whole house, the
+whole plantation, was relegated to his control. She
+seemed in a hundred ways to ask his permission,—might
+she do this? might the boys have that? She
+said that day,—that dreadful day,—when he and
+Reginald held her in their arms between them, that
+she had longed for him, that she had prayed for
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_352'>352</span>him. How strange that the bell, which had never
+rung through all the gloomy day, sounded her signal
+for him so far away! How was it that his ears
+quickened to a peal that had never vibrated,—that
+her wishes, her prayers, drew him from far, through
+sloughs and slashes, through bayous and lakes, to her
+side at her utmost, her extremest peril! And why for
+him had she prayed! She knew that the time set for
+his return was yet two days distant. The manager was
+overdue, however, and momently expected. She had
+not contemplated the coming of Mr. Bainbridge, a
+stalwart fellow and eminently capable of coping with
+these familiar conditions. She had not thought that a
+steamboat might chance to pass and discern and respond
+to a signal of distress. She had longed for Desmond—for
+<em>him</em>, as the protecting ægis in all her
+frenzied terror. And love—mysterious love—had
+clamored at his ears, annulled the distance, shaken the
+fogs, penetrated the rains, defied, set at naught plain
+fact, and sounded her summons, her wish, her frantic
+hope, till he needs must have heed and respond. It
+was strange, the accord between them. Surely, surely
+she did not translate aright the tenor of her own
+emotions.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Suddenly he noticed that the mystic illuminated
+avenue of pearly, shimmering waters between the giant
+oaks was dulling: a sort of gloating glister grew
+golden upon it; vague yearnings were in the air;
+unseen beings descended continually, their presence
+demonstrated only by the sense of motion. A wind
+from out the moon ruffled the surface into thousands
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_353'>353</span>of tiny wavelets, like twinkling feet half discerned.
+Fancies!—fancies hastening down, lest dawn come
+too soon, cut off communication with the ideal, and
+leave the poor world the prey, the possession of the
+prosaic. For, indeed, the light was fading to a glimmering
+steel, and now to an unillumined gray, and
+as he rose at last to seek an hour’s repose before the
+household should rouse for the day, he realized that
+with his griefs and anxieties, his fears and his waking
+dreams, he had worn the night away.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He did not mistake the character of his emotions—they
+were strictly paternal!—when it developed in
+the next few days that Reginald, of his own motion,
+had written, unknown to all but his brothers, a letter
+to the executor of the will, Mr. Hartagous, a lawyer of
+Memphis. The others had signed it, and thus unified
+the solemn requirement that in the execution of the
+newly discovered codicil he should make no demands
+upon their mother for the return to the estate of the
+funds that she had spent under the provisions of the
+will as hitherto in force, and now to be charged against
+her portion. It seemed that they had at first appealed
+to their guardian, Mr. Keith, who had declined the discussion
+by stating that the distribution of the property
+was wholly in the hands of the executor. Therefore
+they called the attention of Mr. Hartagous to the fact
+that they were the owners of the estate in his hands,
+and claimed that they had a right to waive this demand
+upon their mother, against which they protested, and
+to impose upon him their command. It would be contrary
+to the wishes of the testator, their father, they
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_354'>354</span>argued, to impoverish for a legal quibble the widow
+and mother; and even if they should restore to her—as
+they were fully resolved to do, as soon as the eldest
+came of age—anything that was taken from her,
+that was a distant date, and she would spend the best
+years of her life in poverty, restricted and deprived of
+the comfort and luxury to which she was accustomed.
+If the executor should persist in enforcing the codicil,
+the letter sternly concluded, it would be their resolve
+to seek to visit their wrath upon him, as his evil deed
+merited.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This truculent epistle came back to Great Oaks inclosed
+in a letter from Mr. Hartagous to Mrs. Faurie.
+Their sentiments did them honor, he declared, overlooking
+the puerile violence of their menace, and this
+heralded the coming of Mr. Hartagous to Great Oaks
+for a conference in the changed state of things.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The Faurie boys were somewhat startled to see
+their valiant demonstration in the hands of their
+mother, who kissed and hugged and wept over them
+till they, too, shed tears as they clung together.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“But will he, mamma, will he make you pay us all
+that money?” asked Reginald, leaning over the back
+of her chair and gripping hard the hand that she held
+up to him.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh, what a pity we are all so young,” plained
+Horace,—“so many years before we can give it
+back.” He knelt by her side and sobbed against her
+shoulder.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Chubby sunk from her lap to the floor and clung
+to her, hugging her knees. “Oh, mamma, will you
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_355'>355</span>be poor till I am a man? Oh, I will work for you,
+mamma. I will—I will—I will dig in the garden.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Reginald and Horace had no laugh to-day for
+Chub’s unintentional anticlimaxes, and as Mrs. Faurie
+sent them away, that she might consult with Desmond,
+they carried very dreary countenances, and she still
+pressed her handkerchief to her eyes.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“It is not as if the money were going to strangers,”
+said Desmond, craftily. “It will only advantage those
+dear fellows. I am so delighted with that letter of
+Reginald’s.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I didn’t realize that it was in him to do that,”
+she said, suddenly smiling radiantly.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I did,” said Desmond, promptly.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I believe you love him as much as I do,” she
+cried joyously.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“All three,” he protested. “I am jealous for the
+others.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Poor little Chubby,” she said, lingering lovingly
+on the words.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Dear old Chubby!” he exclaimed. “So you need
+not mind about the money. It is for them.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“But how am I to get it, Edward?” She drew
+her level brows together in her pretty frown. “You
+have no idea of the clip I went, spending money. I
+can see now the awful mistake I made; but it seemed
+not so unreasonably extravagant then, having a large
+income at my disposal for my lifetime, and my children
+all independently and handsomely provided for.
+And now,—to return all that money! And that man
+is coming! I have been staying here to economize,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_356'>356</span>you know, to get the old place to take care of me till
+the reservoir fills up again.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“You have something to show for the money, I suppose.
+Didn’t those wretches mention some famous
+emeralds?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Ye-es,—but don’t you think it <em>infra dig.</em> to sell
+jewelry?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“It is <em>infra dig.</em> not to have money,” he said
+bitterly.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Ah, how he wished that he were adequately equipped
+to come to her rescue; to let her relinquish to the
+Faurie estate all that the name had brought her; to
+offer commensurate resources.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I do not agree with you,” she said firmly, “<em>You</em>
+have no money, and you can discount the world for
+dignity.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He had never regarded himself in this light, and
+he flushed with pleasure. As her eyes rested on him
+she suddenly exclaimed: “Now you look a little bit
+like yourself. This torment is telling more on you
+than on me. I assure you that <em>I</em> shall not let myself
+go off in <em>my</em> looks for a few dollars, dimes, cents, and
+mills.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“About the emeralds?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Beauty when unadorned with emeralds is as green
+as grass. But needs must—let them go! Let them
+go!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Do you love them so much?” he said wistfully.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“You just ought to see them on me!” she bridled.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“They will never be the same on any one else,”
+he hazarded.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_357'>357</span>“And that is one comfort,” she acceded. Her pride
+in the preëminence of her attractions was like the
+innocent vanity of a child, so entirely was her beauty
+acknowledged and a matter of course.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“What will they bring at a forced sale?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Thirty thousand dollars, they cost.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond jotted down the sum and then went on.
+“About the yacht?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“The yacht? Must it be sold? Why, what will we
+do in the Mediterranean?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Obviously, she did not understand the situation. It
+must be brought home to her. He waved his hand
+to the waters of the overflow shimmering just outside
+the veranda balustrade. A dugout was rocking at a
+little distance. “There are all your facilities for voyaging
+for some time to come, Mrs. Faurie.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>She burst into laughter at the incongruity. Then
+she said, “I cannot realize that it is so serious as all
+that. My yacht is a beauty, and ought to bring a
+pretty penny.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Perhaps you will also have to give up the title to
+Great Oaks, which the codicil gives you in fee, to
+make good the sums which you have received from
+the estate,” he ventured.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Her face fell. “I have begun to love this life,”
+she declared unexpectedly. “I don’t want to change.
+I don’t want to give up Great Oaks. I have forgotten
+the world.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>A thrill stole through his heart. What had she
+said? She did not understand her own heart!</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_358'>358</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XVII</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c006'>Mr. Hartagous brought with him a metropolitan
+atmosphere, the manner of one used to good society,
+a portly stomach accustomed to fine feeding, a handsome
+gray-streaked beard parted in the middle, and
+a pair of searching, quickly glancing dark eyes. He
+landed at Great Oaks shortly before dinner, and it
+was at table that he made Desmond’s acquaintance.
+It was not he, but the guardian of the Faurie boys
+who had sought out Desmond, and through the
+offices of mutual friends secured his services as tutor,
+when Mrs. Faurie had placed a period to her European
+wanderings, but Mr. Hartagous, in the general
+family interests, had been apprised of all the details,
+and in meeting Desmond for the first time, inwardly
+congratulated all concerned upon the phenomenal
+opportunity of finding such a man for such a place.
+The meal was somewhat more elaborate than usual,
+in honor of the guest. Mrs. Faurie, in one of her
+Parisian gowns, was in great beauty. So marked,
+indeed, was the effect, that it seemed not inappropriate
+to take some notice of what was so obvious.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Upon my word, madam,” Mr. Hartagous declared,
+having progressed with great prosperity in
+feeding through the menu to the dessert, “you must
+surely lose the tally of the years as you go, else you
+would not have the effrontery to look younger than
+when I first met you as a bride.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_359'>359</span>“I was a skinny bride,” she smiled. “The years
+round out the angles. But they lay on fat and fads
+and frumpishness, and I feel really like an old country-woman.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He looked at her beamingly, his face flushed,
+partly from the reflection of the old-fashioned red
+Bohemian glass finger-bowls, and partly from Mr.
+Faurie’s Madeira, which he had laid down a good
+many years ago, and which had survived him to
+delight other palates. Mr. Hartagous was pleased
+and surprised to find how debonair was her carriage
+under the changed prospects. He had not thought
+she could sustain her equanimity in such cruel incertitudes,
+nothing positively established, but great
+loss,—financial ruin, more or less complete. He had
+feared the visit as a dismal experience; but her brilliant
+aspect, her joyous tones, might enliven even a
+board at which sat the three downcast and indignant
+Faurie boys, thoroughly schooled as to their
+civility, but showing in every facial line how they
+deprecated and resented his part in the untoward
+falling out of affairs. The two younger ones asked
+to be excused shortly after the entrance of the
+dessert; and as Mr. Stanlett had not appeared at
+all since the arrival of the guest, sending in by
+Bob a plea of indisposition, Mrs. Faurie felt some
+anxiety, and a desire to go and inquire into his
+malady.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I leave you in good hands with Mr. Desmond
+and Reginald,” she said to Mr. Hartagous, as she rose
+from the table with a rich stir of silks and laces; “I
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_360'>360</span>will go and see how Uncle Clarence feels now, and
+meet you later in the parlor.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Reginald, pale and disaffected, and all unlike himself,
+lingered listlessly for an interval, and presently
+asked Desmond if he might be excused also.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“What?—are you going to leave us, too?” Mr.
+Hartagous cried out genially, in a determinedly cheerful
+and friendly tone.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I am nothing of a boon companion,” said Reginald.
+“Mr. Desmond does not allow me to drink but
+one glass of light wine,—I shall not be missed.”
+And with a poor effort at a friendly smile, obviously
+insincere, he stayed for no more parley.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Ah, you seem to have the young fellows under
+good control,—excellent for them. A short tether,—best
+thing in the world for colts apt to feel their oats.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mr. Hartagous was now looking about the room
+with considerable freedom and a sort of disregard of
+the presence of the tutor, taking <em>faute de mieux</em> the
+part of host. “Everything is just as it used to be:
+old sylvan wall-paper, in design of tapestry hangings,
+hunting-scene; old racing-cups in that big mahogany
+cabinet. Faurie used to have a string of good horses.
+And there is the family silver,—very fine,—armorial
+bearings,—all just as it used to be. Can’t think
+what Mrs. Faurie did with her money,—didn’t put
+any of it on Great Oaks, at all events.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond cloaked his failure to respond in speculations
+on this theme by passing the bottle, and Mr.
+Hartagous promptly refilled his glass.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Severe stroke for her,—the finding of that codicil.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_361'>361</span>Pity it didn’t come into my hands earlier! There
+wouldn’t be the devil and all to pay as there is now.”
+He lifted his glass and refreshed himself bountifully.
+Perhaps he was used to livelier company at
+dinner, for he presently remarked Desmond’s serious,
+not to say dispirited expression, and, possibly because
+unable to appreciate that the tutor’s anxiety could be
+disconnected with a personal application, hastened to
+stipulate: “But it will not affect <em>you</em> at all. Your salary
+comes out of the minors’ estates. Mrs. Faurie is
+not at expenses, except such as may be voluntary in
+their education and maintenance.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mr. Hartagous was well aware that there had been
+some difficulty in catching an appropriate man to consign
+to the remote depths of an isolated plantation in
+the Mississippi bottom-lands. As Mrs. Faurie was not
+willing that her sons should be separated from her for
+their schooling, already much postponed, Mr. Keith,
+the guardian, must needs secure a college graduate,
+of irreproachable character, of elegant breeding, and
+so piteously poor as to be willing, for a small salary,
+to turn his back on the world at the outset of his
+career. As by signal good fortune the guardian had
+captured this <em>rara avis</em>, it was no part of the executor’s
+scheme to interfere to set him at liberty again,
+or to foster restlessness by any suspicion that his
+financial interest was threatened in the impending
+changes.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“But Mrs. Faurie will have to pay the piper for
+the dance that she has had,—a long and a lively one
+from all that I hear,—and I should think that it would
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_362'>362</span>sweep away the best part of her provision under this
+codicil. I do hope that she won’t make a fight for it,—very
+embarrassing the whole affair is for me, especially
+considering the attitude the boys take in the
+matter. Mr. Keith can afford to pooh-pooh it, and
+say they will think differently when they come to
+their majority. He is not called upon to sustain their
+resentment. Yet he would be ready at the drop of a
+hat to sue me, the executor, in their interest in this
+very matter that the little fools want to relinquish.
+As far as their interest is concerned, however, there
+will be no litigation in carrying out the provisions
+of the codicil. But I confess I dread the idea of Mrs.
+Faurie’s futile resistance.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I think Mrs. Faurie has no intention of making
+a contest,” said Desmond, fearing that his silence on
+the subject might be misconstrued.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The lawyer whirled around excitedly. “Turn over
+Great Oaks Plantation without a fight,—eh? She
+will have to lose it to make good.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mr. Hartagous had a brightening aspect. There
+had been already sufficiently discordant elements in
+the situation fomented by the conflict of laws in the
+two states where the properties lay, a pertinent instance
+of which came to mind in the incongruity of
+an indeterminate limit of twenty or thirty years in
+Tennessee for the revocation of probate in common
+form, and in Mississippi a prescription, with the
+statutory savings, of only two years, which had long
+ago elapsed. Though this was hardly conclusive, by
+reason of the exception of the statute, in favor of the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_363'>363</span>disability of the minors, and their financial interests
+in the revocation of the Mississippi probate, it might
+further be inoperative to render Mrs. Faurie secure
+in her local holdings, if her interest in Great Oaks,
+for life or widowhood, as under the will, could be
+subjected to levy as for debt to satisfy the requirements
+of the codicil in Tennessee. The guardian of
+the minors had been alert to perceive another phase
+of the situation incident to the discovery of the
+paper, and had indeed averred to Mr. Hartagous that,
+even could their rights of prescription be defeated,
+he felt that the long and incomprehensible delay
+to produce the codicil savored of concealment, and
+in the event of proof of this, the Mississippi statute
+allowed two years further for the revocation <em>pro
+tanto</em> of the probate. The lapse of time had wrought
+such ruin to Mrs. Faurie’s interests that, even apart
+from her high character, which precluded such a suspicion,
+she could never be supposed to have been a
+party to such a disastrous scheme of concealment; and
+the diligence of the search of Mr. Hartagous among
+the valuable papers of the decedent was protected by
+a letter from Mr. Faurie himself, dated a few days
+before his death, stating that all important papers
+had been transferred to his keeping, as the executor,
+in view of the settlement of the estate. Mr. Hartagous
+had not found it an easy task, with its diversified
+interests, its complicated litigation, its many details,
+and he welcomed the thought that perhaps after all
+Mrs. Faurie might yield at once to the inevitable, and
+the settlement of the estate might yet go cannily on,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_364'>364</span>including the provisions of the codicil, without raising
+the issue of <em>devisavit vel non</em> and repairing to
+the circuit court for probate in solemn form.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond was a trifle embarrassed. “It may not
+be necessary to relinquish Great Oaks,” he said uneasily.
+“Mrs. Faurie has other convertible assets.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The lawyer bent his brows and cast a keen glance
+at him. There was a significant silence. “So you are
+in her confidence, are you?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There was so much receptivity in his aspect as he
+waited for the reply, he was so evidently ready to discriminate
+and utilize all manner of subtle and diffusive
+impressions and information, that Desmond grew
+unwontedly wary. “Not to the extent of being able
+to speak for her,” he stipulated. “But Mrs. Faurie is
+very candid, as you know, and I am in a position to
+hear much of the family conversation.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He came to a dead halt. But Mr. Hartagous had
+not wrestled with reluctant witnesses for a matter
+of thirty years to be baffled at this late day by an
+after-dinner interlocutor with a bottle of choice wine
+between them. He gave it a push as he said: “And I
+also stand in a quasi-confidential relation to her, having
+long been the friend of her husband and herself, as
+well as the executor of his will. It would gratify me
+extremely to be able to adjust this difficult matter without
+contention and the rupture of long-established
+amicable sentiments.” He gazed keenly at the handsome
+face of the tutor, intellectual and powerful beyond
+his years and experience, the expression of mental
+value enhancing the effect of symmetry of feature.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_365'>365</span>He was about to suggest that it might be beneficial to
+Mrs. Faurie’s interests to canvass the matter between
+them, and from its incidents strike out some middle
+course of advantage to all parties concerned. But there
+was something in Desmond’s deep, steadfast eyes that
+admonished him that this confidence could come about
+only from inadvertence. Desmond would not of set
+purpose disclose Mrs. Faurie’s intentions. The executor
+began to realize that if he wanted such facts
+as the tutor knew, he must surprise them.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Mrs. Faurie would not want Great Oaks at any
+rate,” he hazarded. “I wonder at Faurie for that disposition
+of the plantation,—cumbrous property.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“It is a fine place,” said Desmond, non-committally.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Looks mighty pretty now,—a full fathom deep
+in water in the shallowest spot,” sneered the lawyer.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“The land is of fine quality,—raises good crops,
+I am told,” Desmond commented.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Don’t need fertile land to raise crawfish.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Why, even the floods that drowned the world dried
+off after a while; and Great Oaks is relying on precedent
+and Providence, and expects to raise cotton here
+again some day.” Desmond’s tone was crisp. He had
+no necessity that he recognized to submit to the acerbities
+of the executor. It was strain enough on his
+patience to make allowances for the infirmities and
+age of Mr. Stanlett.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>His tone, the vigor of his argument, shook the self-restraint
+of Mr. Hartagous. The lawyer’s spirit of contention
+responded. He wagged his head with an aspect
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_366'>366</span>of melancholy, not unrelated to his sentiment, when he
+said: “The overflow will cry down the price. I have
+a letter in my pocket now from a would-be purchaser,
+a Mr. Loring, formerly a resident of this county. His
+offer is low, but as much as the place can command for
+the next ten years to come.” He shook his head and
+filled his glass anew.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond quickly reviewed the events of the past
+weeks. Doubtless the news of the discovery of the
+codicil had been widely bruited abroad, and thus Mr.
+Loring, aware of the exigencies of the prospective refunding
+and of Mrs. Faurie’s depleted resources, had
+taken the field with the first offer. He had astutely
+approached the executor rather than its present
+owner, whose disposition to sell might be in inverse
+proportion to the necessity; and as the exacting creditor,
+Mr. Hartagous, knowing that such an opportunity
+of sale would not be easily duplicated, might
+press an acceptance as a ready solution of the emergency,
+which promised him a world of anxiety and
+perplexity. Little effort indeed might be requisite to
+urge, flatter, overpersuade a woman unaccustomed to
+the turmoils of hopeless debt and annoyed by business
+complications.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But poor Honoria Faurie! To have unwittingly dispensed
+her whole fortune as her income, her annuity.
+To be called upon now to surrender the roof above her
+head as penance of those years of plenty that had held
+out to her the deceit of perpetuity. Desmond trembled
+for her future, for her sons were mere children and
+helpless. He feared lest she be harassed into precipitancy
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_367'>367</span>and clutch at any prospect of speedy deliverance
+from these troublous toils, willing to concede anything,
+to relinquish everything, to have peace,—when, alas!
+there would he no more peace. He realized the immense
+capacity to clinch tight, to hold hard, of the
+genus of which Mr. Hartagous was a type,—cool, collected,
+with no personal interest involved that might
+affect his judgment, ready to stand on a quibble, to
+fight for the minutest fraction, to prolong the contention
+to the uttermost, to the extremest exhaustion
+of his adversary’s slender resources of resistance. And
+she had not a soul to whom she might appeal, save
+indeed some lawyer, earning his fee, and appreciative
+only of the surface conditions of her case,—but no
+one who cared for her, who would think for her. The
+realization roused Desmond in her behalf.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“You had best wait till morning to place the offer
+before her,” Desmond said, determined to be the first
+to acquaint her with the facts, determined that she
+should not meet her adversary in his guise of friend
+without consideration of the double identity in which
+he came. “There is always so much stir in the parlor
+after dinner,—the children and their dogs make a
+deal of noise. Mrs. Faurie always gives up her evenings
+to the entertainment of her sons.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He had no mind to offer the library, which indeed
+had been assigned to his exclusive use, and he hoped
+that Mr. Hartagous did not remember its facilities
+for quiet consultation, so long had it been dismantled.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mr. Hartagous was one of the most acute of men,
+and his facial traits were well under control. Few
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_368'>368</span>people could have interpreted the sudden cynical
+uplifting of his bushy eyebrows as he said casually,
+“Ah, well,—plenty of time,—plenty of time.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But Desmond’s perceptions were quickened in her
+interests and he knew that the hour was come, that
+before they separated for the night, Mrs. Faurie
+would be acquainted with the executor’s version of
+the facts,—that they were the most lucky of mortals!
+for property was slow of sale, plantations a drug upon
+the market, the labor questions impossible of solution;
+clouds, darkness, environed them on every side,
+and they knew not whither to grope,—and here suddenly
+a flood of financial sunlight was opening upon
+them in the midst of their night of despondency.
+Only the touch of her pen,—the title of Great Oaks,
+which she had always loathed, would be transferred.
+The millionaire’s cash and notes would make good
+her indebtedness to the estate to that extent, at least;
+the rest could be “carried”—fatal word!—arranged
+for a time with liens on smaller properties. Plausible
+representation!—the sense of a load of debt lifted,
+the turbulent apprehension of contention averted.
+She might adopt the executor’s conclusions, and indeed
+from his point of view there was naught else
+practicable. She had known him long, liked him well,
+and relied on his friendship. But his duty in the
+premises was to the estate, to make the most and the
+best of the testator’s dispositions as far as it was
+concerned. As to the widow, the wreck was her own
+work, unconscious though she had been, mistaken;
+he had no responsibility so far as she was interested
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_369'>369</span>save to enforce the provisions of the codicil, and to
+exact the terms of the refunding clause. She might
+be prevailed upon, in the first flush of relief that any
+solution of the problem was at hand, to sign at once,
+to-night, some agreement of sale; she might not commit
+herself beyond the possibility of withdrawal, but
+so far embrace the proposition as to be unwilling to
+recede from it. And indeed she might be persuaded
+into a coincidence of opinion. His representations
+might fix her resolution. Later, Desmond’s remonstrances
+might not avail. He was young, as she
+knew,—she had called him repeatedly a mere boy.
+He could not be sure that she seriously valued his
+business instincts, when he had no business experience.
+He desired only to put her on her guard, to
+excite her apprehension, to counsel reserve, above all
+delay. He could imagine the sequence, and it appalled
+him. The wishes of Mrs. Faurie, reduced to poverty,
+to insignificance, would no longer have such weight
+as when issued from her princess-like affluence and
+preëminence, and the wishes of the boys were as
+empty of influence as the disability of their minority
+would compel. He wondered dolorously as to her
+impending fate. Perhaps there might be accorded to
+her, from among the chips and blocks of the Faurie
+estate, saved from the cormorant clutch of the refunding,
+some cottage on a side street in the outskirts of
+Vicksburg or Natchez, some little farm of a few acres
+regularly overflowed, and raising indeed more crawfish
+than cotton.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It seemed as if Desmond had intentionally misled
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_370'>370</span>Mr. Hartagous when he opened the parlor door and
+they entered a room of absolute silence and stillness.
+Mrs. Faurie, in a gown of sage green silk brocaded
+in lighter tones, the lace at her throat coruscating
+with the delicate white fires of a diamond “sunburst,”
+leaned back in a large chair, her eyes on the hearth,
+evidently moody from argument and remonstrance
+with her sons. Their faces, as they sat in a row on
+a sofa, were downcast, full of distress, and marked
+with the distorting trace of nervous anxiety, which
+they could feel as if they were men, but unlike
+men could not hope to do aught to abate;—only
+Chub gazed up at Mr. Hartagous with childish, lowering,
+resentful eyes and a half-suppressed tendency
+to pout. Mr. Stanlett, pallid, seeming more lean than
+usual, shrunken, and very perceptibly aged by the
+shock of the excitements of finding the codicil, lay
+in a reclining-chair on the opposite side of the fire.
+He greeted Mr. Hartagous with courtesy indeed, but
+with noticeably few words, and protesting that his
+indisposition had passed, welcomed him to Great
+Oaks mansion. Desmond felt the future in the instant.
+It would require but little exertion of Mr.
+Hartagous’s tact to inaugurate one of the old-time
+reminiscences, which seemed the delight and the resource
+of Mr. Stanlett’s failing life. His eyes would
+flash, his thin cheek flush, the boys would listen in
+spellbound silence, and Mr. Hartagous, already seated
+beside her, would secure an uninterrupted tête-à-tête
+with Mrs. Faurie; for the tutor, in his subsidiary
+position and obligatory show of respect, must needs
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_371'>371</span>accord Mr. Stanlett’s narration his attention also.
+But even should Desmond so far forget himself as to
+interpose in the discussion of business in which he
+had no concern, Mr. Hartagous had arguments which
+on first view would easily discomfit his crude and
+inexperienced counsels. Nevertheless, Desmond resolved
+anew that she should not hear of the offer of
+Mr. Loring for Great Oaks first from the executor.
+He cast about him in desperation. Mr. Stanlett was already
+replying with some spirit as to the early history
+of certain localities that Mr. Hartagous had noticed
+from the guards of the steamboat in coming down
+the Mississippi River from Memphis, which itself
+was built on one of the famous Chickasaw Bluffs.
+Mr. Stanlett’s memory reached back to the days before
+the Chickasaws and Choctaws had generally vanished
+westward, and he had then gleaned from the
+chiefs some traditions at first hand which made him
+an authority on moot points of early history, and he
+piqued himself on his accuracy. It was easy indeed to
+engage him in a discussion as to the site of the old
+Chickasaw towns,—seven of them together in a
+row, the last called Ash-wick-boo-ma (Red Grass),—where
+they defeated D’Artaguette and later Bienville,
+and the details of the battle of Ackia and its
+famous last charge. The young Fauries’ faces had
+brightened. Suddenly Reginald asked a breathless
+question as to the boy-commander, the Canadian,
+Voisin, who at sixteen years of age conducted the
+safe and skilled retreat of the troops through many
+miles of wilderness from the field of the battle which
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_372'>372</span>his superior officer, the unfortunate D’Artaguette, had
+lost.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mr. Stanlett needed no more prompting, nor, Desmond
+feared, would he heed interruption. Mr. Hartagous
+presently leaned forward with his elbow on the
+table at Mrs. Faurie’s right hand, and had begun to
+speak to her in a low voice, when Desmond asked
+Mr. Stanlett if he knew the ancient French buglecalls,
+and said that one claimed a Merovingian origin.
+He declared that he would like to believe that the
+same strain which had rung from the famous “Olivant,”
+the horn of the Paladin at Roncesvalles, had
+served to rally D’Artaguette’s motley levies of Indians,
+and <em>coureurs des bois</em>, and French soldats along the
+banks of the Mississippi, and would forever continue
+to sound down the centuries, to find echoes in the
+heart of the enthusiast and the metre of the poet.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Let me see if you find the old calls familiar,”
+Desmond exclaimed, lifting the lid of the piano and
+tangling it in his haste with its crimson embroidered
+cloth cover. It was an old piano, with the felt of its
+hammers worn hard and thin. So much the better, since
+he desired to drown out the voice of Mr. Hartagous.
+The martial strain, instinct with its imperative mandate,
+throbbed through the room and then died away,
+and as they listened a note was repeated, and still a
+vibration, as from some vague distance.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“An echo!—an echo!” cried Chub, vociferously.
+“Oh, mamma, listen to our Mr. Desmond! He can
+do anything,—how he can play!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Now, what do you suppose is the date of that
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_373'>373</span>call?” Mr. Stanlett’s cheek had flushed; his interest
+was roused.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“The introduction of this one can be definitely
+fixed,” and once more a spirited lilting strain rang
+through the room. Then Desmond turned on the
+piano stool. “Where, Reginald, did you put that old
+book on the Ancient Military Orders of France? It
+gives some old calls. I found that rummaging about
+in the library.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“You find too much, sir, rummaging about!” said
+Mr. Stanlett, with a bent brow and a fiery eye.
+“You should curb your talents for rummaging
+about.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But Desmond had thrust an old folio into his hand,
+with a recommendation to examine the very quaint
+and antique illustrations of arms and accoutrements
+and military costume with which it was embellished.
+There were some extra inserts of military portraits,
+steel engravings, and Mr. Stanlett was turning the
+leaves, his thin mouth drawn in very small, his eye
+alight with a fervor of interest, his rebuke and its
+cause forgotten in an instant.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Not by Mr. Hartagous. He made the serious mistake
+of casting a merry, significant glance at the tutor,
+expecting it to be returned in like genial wise. He
+desired to establish confidential relations with Desmond.
+He might find so accomplished, so versatile,
+so lightning-quick a fellow of special use here, where
+diplomatic management might be necessary to smooth
+the way for readjustments. But Desmond did not
+respond, and Mr. Hartagous felt the rising surge of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_374'>374</span>anger. He realized that the young man was too observant
+to have lost the demonstration; he was far
+too keen to fail to appreciate its relish and its demand
+for the recognition of Mr. Stanlett’s pitiably funny
+allusion to the tutor’s instrumentality in discovering
+the codicil of the last will and testament of the late
+Mr. Faurie. Desmond’s studied insensibility was a
+covert rebuke, and the spirit of Mr. Hartagous revolted
+against this schooling, which he felt might
+befit some crude hobbledehoy. He would have liked
+to remind the tutor that he was the guardian’s employee
+and not Mrs. Faurie’s, and that the pedagogic
+office was held at his pleasure; to recall the
+fact that despite the young man’s learning and many
+accomplishments, it had been already demonstrated
+to him that one must have foothold, a starting-point,
+to make these felt by the world. A flood, quotha!—a
+sorry time a dove or any other fowl would have to
+find a perch, set adrift from this ark of Great Oaks
+mansion.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mrs. Faurie intercepted and interpreted the glance,
+and for a time she held her eyes down to the fan in
+her hand with which she seemed gracefully to toy, but
+Desmond had seen that they were full of tears. She
+felt that these two men, in the pride of their powers,
+in the flush of their prime, in the vigor of their
+health and strength, were ridiculing poor, dear Uncle
+Clarence for his distress in her loss, for his feeble,
+inadequate, unreasoning indignation at the officious
+intermeddling, as he thought it, which had brought
+the catastrophe about.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_375'>375</span>But Desmond had begun to sing,—she had not
+known that he could sing,—and the room was filled
+with surging waves of melody. A powerful baritone
+voice he had, of no great cultivation, enough only to
+temper the crudities of his rendering, but of correct
+intonation, and it was singularly, lusciously sweet.
+They were military songs that he sang, with the triumph
+of the trumpets, the gay clash of the cannikin,
+the impetuous speed of the high-couraged war-horse,
+all infused through them. Now they were French
+and again German, and some were in quaint old
+English phrase of mediæval suggestion.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Never, never let me hear you speak another
+word,” cried Mr. Stanlett, in senile delight. “You
+should go singing through the world like the mockingbirds
+in spring.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He looked across the room, smiling and nodding,
+expectant of sympathetic response from Mr. Hartagous,
+who was as weary of it all as if the evening
+were spent in that other ark to which Great Oaks
+mansion was so often likened. Under these circumstances
+he could have as easily communicated with
+the ladies of the patriarchal Noah as with Mrs. Faurie,—the
+terrible Chub chasing continually from the
+side of the piano and across the room to fling himself
+into his mother’s arms crying, “Ain’t it beautiful,
+mamma? Ain’t it beautiful? The grand opera in
+Paree don’t touch Mr. Desmond nowhere!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>So weary, indeed, did Mr. Hartagous presently
+look that the dispersal of the party for the night was
+obviously in order, although much earlier than usual.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_376'>376</span>“Can you find your way back to your room, do
+you think?” Mrs. Faurie said to the guest, as the
+group stood at a side table in the hall and she lighted
+their bedroom candles seriatim.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The house was so large and so rambling in its plan
+that he was not sure that he remembered his way
+about it, he replied. He had expected, and indeed so
+had she, that Desmond would come forward with his
+readiness for any emergency and officiate as guide.
+But Desmond, stolidly unmindful, snuffed out and
+then relighted his own candle, its tiny white blaze
+illumining his flushed, absorbed face, and after a
+moment’s hesitation Reginald offered to accompany
+the guest to his room. Thus Mr. Hartagous departed
+to his night’s rest, a little dissatisfied with the situation,
+and not a little doubtful of the tutor. He resented
+this incertitude, because it was partly his influence
+that had placed Desmond here. “And mighty
+glad he was to come, too,” he reflected. He rather
+wondered that Desmond should not discern his own
+interests more clearly than to seem to adhere to the
+losing side, for Mrs. Faurie’s power, always limited,
+was now definitely a thing of the past. “For she is
+not worth one red cent, as matters stand!” Mr.
+Keith, he was aware, had begun to doubt whether
+the redundant maternal coddling was the best thing
+for the boys, and had only agreed to their persistent
+retention under her wing in deference to her wish;
+but Hartagous was sure, did he so desire, that he could
+easily induce him to insist as their guardian upon
+packing them off summarily to boarding-school, where
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_377'>377</span>they might encounter some of the roughening and
+hardening phases of boy life. “Make men of them.”
+Although balked of the conversation which he had
+expected to have with Desmond when he should have
+reached the room assigned him, and feeling distinctly
+man-handled, he determined to have a definite understanding
+with the tutor on the morrow, and apprise
+him that he was expected to act in the interest of his
+employer, the guardian, which was identical with that
+of the executor, in smoothing the way to a pacific adjustment
+of the troublous toils in which the discovery
+of the codicil had entangled the household of Great
+Oaks,—and this signified, in the interpretation of
+Mr. Hartagous, an unconditional surrender of all the
+opposing interests.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“It is not late, though you seem tired,—and I
+must speak to you to-night,” Desmond said to Mrs.
+Faurie, when the young host and the guest had vanished
+down the cross-hall.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>She had her lighted candle in her hand, and the
+flame threw into high relief against the dull shadows
+her exquisite face, with the subdued green of her
+gown, the shimmer of the lace above her bosom, the
+diamond “sunburst” at her throat. “Won’t to-morrow
+answer?” she replied, stifling a yawn.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“No! Oh, no, indeed! Believe me, I would not
+insist, but the matter is urgent.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Heavens! More business!” she remonstrated. “I
+imagined that with the arrival of Mr. Hartagous all
+the bother would be over. He can think for us all.
+What else is a lawyer created for?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_378'>378</span>“Your lawyer,—yes! But this man is not acting
+in your interest. He is acting for the estate.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“It is the same thing,—my sons’ interest. He will
+settle everything.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond could scarcely have feared a more inert
+attitude of submission than this. How could the
+woman be so blind! “Come,” he said authoritatively,
+drawing her arm through his. “You shall hear first
+what I have to say.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>She turned back to the parlor with him, dragging a
+little unwillingly on his arm. “I have always appreciated
+‘gentlemen’s society,’ as it is called, and I have
+to a degree and with exceptions loved my fellow men,
+but I had no conception until lately that the creatures
+had it in them to be so wonderfully and fearfully dull
+and depressing as they are when they talk of their
+everlasting business. Hereafter, if I have my choice,
+I shall always prefer ‘hen parties’ as the lesser evil.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>With an elaborate air of patience she seated herself
+on the sofa while he stirred up the fire and brightened
+the lamp. As he began to talk, she was inattentive
+at first, and interpolated irrelevant remarks. “What
+a lovely voice you have,” she said, as her eyes wandered
+to the open piano. “I shall be wanting you to
+sing all day.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>As he began to recapitulate the details of the codicil
+and the executor’s requirements concerning the refunding
+clause, she broke out, “Wouldn’t you hate to be
+as chuffy and as stuffy as Mr. Hartagous when you
+come to be of his age, and look so like a weasel?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>When he disclosed the real mission of Mr. Hartagous,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_379'>379</span>to effect an immediate sale of Great Oaks, a light
+suddenly sprang into her face, and her voice broke
+into a sob. He saw that the situation bore far more
+heavily upon her than she had manifested. She had
+been whistling, as it were, to keep her courage up.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“How providential!” she cried. “It breaks my
+heart now to part from Great Oaks, but I see that it
+is the only way. And oh, for liberation! To be free
+from debt. The sense of it weighs upon me; I can
+understand the agony of the old torture of death by
+pressing.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He was still for a moment, looking at her in sombre
+thought. “This is what I feared,” he said at last,—“your
+precipitancy. I want you to think, to survey
+the ground first, to test the possibilities.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He had made out from the will a schedule of the
+properties, with their approximate values, and the
+amounts by years of the annual income that must be
+returned. He went across the room and sat beside her
+on the sofa, that they might look over the page together.
+Her face paled while scanning the estimates,—they
+seemed methodically to set forth financial
+ruin, absolute, hopeless.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Then why,—how <em>dare</em> that man come here and
+press Mr. Loring’s inadequate offer for Great Oaks?”
+she blazed out.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Because he is not acting in your interest, but
+against you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>She turned and looked Desmond in the face, her
+beautiful eyes bewildering at these close quarters.
+He dropped his own eyes on the paper in his hands.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_380'>380</span>“Mr. Hartagous must distribute the estate according
+to the terms of the codicil. As executor he is
+constrained by law to require the refunding of your
+receipts from it. He is coerced, too, by the position
+of the guardian, who also has no option, and who will
+in the changed state of things require this amount
+to be charged against your portion at the partitioning
+of the estate and the ascertaining and setting
+aside of the several shares of the minors. Naturally,
+Mr. Hartagous is anxious to seize the first opportunity
+of converting your assets to make good, whatever
+sacrifice it may impose on <em>you</em>.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“What shall I do?—oh, what shall I do?” she
+cried, in despairing realization of the situation. “But
+why should I ask? I can only yield.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“You can temporize,—stand out for the full value
+of the property,— fight for terms. Time is your ally.
+And you have this strength in your position, that
+you might give them a contest; a lawyer might find
+you sufficient grounds,—but, at all events, you are
+entitled to a fair valuation of your property.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“But even then, Edward,” she put her hand on his
+and pressed it convulsively, “there is not a competence,
+not a hope from the estate for me.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He did not seek to encourage her by false representations.
+He was looking the disaster squarely in
+the eye. “And the boys are powerless for years to
+come!” he admitted despondently.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Her lips were trembling piteously. “I have not a
+dollar that I can call my own. I have not a friend in
+the world.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_381'>381</span>“You have me,—such as I am,” he said, his eyes
+downcast, still on the papers.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I never think of you,—you are like another self.
+But you <em>are</em> my friend, and I am not alone! You
+think for me,—you rescued me at the risk of your
+life. You think for me,—you care for me,—I am
+not alone!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Care for you!” he broke out, tempted beyond
+all resistance. “I care for nothing else on God’s
+earth. I love you,—I love you,—I worship you!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>She turned, staring at him in quiet surprise; then,
+as if she thought he might come nearer, she put one
+hand against his shoulder, holding him at arm’s length.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh, I should have eaten out my heart in silence;
+I should never have said a word but for this strange
+change, when you seem as poor as I! But since you
+feel alone, you may care to know now how beloved,
+how cherished, how adored you are by me.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“But suppose,—suppose,”—she was still looking
+hard at him, into his very eyes—“but suppose it
+might have been grateful to me earlier to know so
+much—”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I could not have spoken then; I could not have
+asked you to make so great a sacrifice for me,—to
+relinquish your status under the will.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>She smiled radiantly at him. “It seems to me now
+that I might have been glad to make that sacrifice,—for
+you.” Once more her hand pressed against his
+shoulder to hold him at arm’s length. “But it can
+never be, now,” she stipulated, “when I can give
+you nothing.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_382'>382</span>“Nothing! You are all the world to me,” he protested.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“No, you have your own difficult way to make, and
+I shall not burden you. It was only a fleeting fancy
+that came over me,—a sentimental glimpse of what
+I <em>might</em> have felt for you had fortune favored us.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“You shall not decree the future,” he declared
+imperiously. “I shall fashion it for us both. It is not
+yours to say. You have said enough. I know your
+heart better than you do,—I believe you love me—”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Like a son,” she interrupted, with a gurgling
+laugh. “I am older than you by ten years.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“And younger by a century in spirit, and as beautiful
+as the angels in heaven. If you leave Great Oaks,
+we go forth together. Life in poor conditions would
+not be sordid with you. It would always be fresh and
+deliriously sweet and forever a blessing, whatever
+hardships fate might impose. I am strong and well
+equipped, and with this hand in mine I could make
+my way against all the world. I would have no false
+pride to hamper my efforts, so truly proud would I
+be in having the dear privilege of working for you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Like Chub,—would you dig in the garden?”
+The anticlimax was of conclusive import in the stress
+of the moment. She had not intended to yield, but
+she laughed in tender recollection of her little son’s
+childish offer of help, and in the instant of relaxation
+she burst into happy tears. Her head sank on Desmond’s
+shoulder, and his arm was around her.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Like Chub, I would even dig in the garden,” he
+protested.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_383'>383</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c006'>It was not yet a late hour when Desmond quitted
+the parlor, Mrs. Faurie having flitted away, joyously
+protesting that the consideration of such nonsense
+as his discourse was undermining to the reason. The
+evening had resulted in so signal a failure to entertain
+the guest acceptably that an earlier dispersal than
+usual had supervened. Nevertheless, as Desmond
+made his way down the veranda toward the library,
+intending to smoke and linger an hour or so in his
+chosen haunt, for with this tumult of joy and expectation
+and triumph in his brain and heart he knew that
+he could not soon compose himself to rest, he was
+surprised in turning the corner to see a light upon
+the waters at a little distance, in the midst of the
+dark, rippling expanse that surrounded the mansion.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The night wind blew dank and chill across the
+damp purlieus of the veranda, the flooring of which
+was always splashed and reeking from the tossing
+waves of the recent landing of some dugout at various
+points, but it brought no other sound than the
+monotonous voices of the night, so accustomed that
+they scarcely impinged upon the consciousness: the
+stir of the foliage of the great oaks, the effect of
+their stately avenues “queered” by their diluvian
+surroundings; the iterative batrachian chorus from
+some insular “high ground” far away; the sudden
+bellow of a bull alligator; and always the murmur
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_384'>384</span>of the widespread shallows of the overflow under the
+influence of the breeze.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The light was stationary, and though it was now
+the dark of the moon and Desmond had only the
+vague illumination of the myriad stars of the clear
+spring night, he made out behind it the dull outline
+of a small boat. A lantern was evidently carried at
+the prow, and despite the fact that the light annulled
+the suggestion of secrecy, Desmond fancied that the
+motionless pause bespoke observation. Suddenly he
+heard the impact of a paddle upon the water, and became
+aware that the craft was about to turn. The spy,
+if spy he were, intended to retrace his course;—not
+until he should have given an account of himself,
+Desmond resolved, and of his mission, scouting about
+on the dark waters of the overflow, making his secret
+observations of Great Oaks mansion when asleep and
+off its guard.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Hello, the boat!” Desmond’s strong young voice
+carried like a clarion across the flooded distance.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The answer came, hearty and reassuring: “Hello,
+the house!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The dugout swung around once more, and as its
+prow was presented to Desmond’s eye as it advanced
+in a direct line, its bulk was obliterated, and this gave
+the man who stood erect plying his paddle in the Indian
+fashion the weird effect of walking on the water
+as he approached the house in the clare-obscure.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“God! What <em>is</em> that?” exclaimed Mr. Hartagous,
+looking out from the dark window close at hand. He
+had been roused by the tutor’s ringing call to the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_385'>385</span>boatman, and, apprehending some disturbance, had in
+the instant’s time secured his trousers and his pistol,
+the two essentials to dignified midnight combat. The
+light from the lantern of the dugout, which now
+began to head for a landing at the veranda, was flung
+far out on the watery gloom, and sent a ray to the
+long window, illumining a tousled mass of gray hair
+and whiskers, and a puckered face of most discordant
+and disconcerted petulance.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Nare light do you show, Mr. Desmond,” said the
+voice of Bainbridge, the manager, from the dugout.
+“You are such owels up here at the big house that
+I made sure o’ findin’ you up, anyhow. Why, ’tain’t
+quite eleven o’clock.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“And what in hell do you mean by sidling up to
+Great Oaks mansion in the middle of the night in
+this enigmatic way without warning?” demanded the
+lawyer, testily,—he evidently considered Desmond a
+mere attaché of the household and with no prerogative
+to speak with authority. Therefore he took bold
+precedence. “And who are you?—and what mischief
+are you bent upon?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Ah-h-h! It’s <em>you</em> bent on mischief, Mr. Hartagous!
+Mischief is the trade of all your tribe!” tartly
+retorted the manager, none of whose interests could
+be imperiled by the lawyer, and whose nerves were
+already exacerbated by the jeopardy of all his prospects
+in the impending changes.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh, is it Mr. Bainbridge, the manager? Beg pardon,
+my good man. I didn’t recognize you in the
+darkness,—but you should really let people sleep in
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_386'>386</span>peace”; then with an accession of acerbity,—“buccaneering
+around in the overflow at this time of night!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It hardly affected Desmond that Mr. Hartagous
+should take the pas, the air of control in these matters
+appertaining to Great Oaks Plantation, as if the power
+of its possessor and her staff were already a thing of
+the past; but Mr. Bainbridge was not used to such
+reversals of spiteful fortune. Wind and weather had
+worked him much woe in his agricultural experience;
+desperate calamities, such as the overflow, had visited
+him more than once; but these mischances supervened
+in his professional conflict with natural forces, and
+were the dispensations of established authority, the
+“hand of God,” to use the pious commercial phraseology,
+and he submitted to them with such broadening
+of his back to the burden and such patience as
+he could muster. The disaster, however, which menaced
+the tenure of Great Oaks Plantation, this flagrant
+injustice, this legalized mischief, was the artifice
+of man, the deflection of the will of the testator
+rather than its execution, and he entertained scant toleration
+of the operations of law that permitted it and
+the person of its representative. It threw Mr. Bainbridge
+out of an employment in which he was well
+satisfied and had given satisfaction these many years,
+for he had a ghastly prevision of the overthrow of all
+the existing status which would ensue under a new
+owner.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh,” he said with jaunty bravado, as he ran the
+nose of the dugout close to the veranda and sprang
+heavily upon the flooring, securing the trace chain
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_387'>387</span>that served as painter around one of the columns,
+“me and Mr. Desmond go on a ‘high old lonesome’
+most any time o’ night. We don’t keep reg’lar hours
+in the swamp, you see, like you cits do in Memphis,—early
+to bed and early to rise makes you-all so all-fired
+healthy, wealthy, and wise.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mr. Hartagous sputtered, but no immediate answer
+occurred to him, though presently he found cause
+to admonish Mr. Bainbridge of his heavy footfall.
+“You’ll wake up the whole house,—you tramp like
+a grenadier.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“And what sort o’ animal might that be,—fourfooted?”
+queried Mr. Bainbridge, affecting deep ignorance.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mr. Hartagous disdained to reply, but the admonition
+touching his resonant swinging gait had
+not been altogether lost on Bainbridge, and to avoid
+passing on the veranda, thus noisily, the vicinity of
+Mrs. Faurie’s room, he entered unceremoniously at the
+long French window at which Mr. Hartagous stood,
+intending to traverse the guest’s apartment and thus
+reach the cross-hall in order to take his way thence
+to the library, where he could discuss his errand with
+the tutor. Desmond followed, meditating some lubricating
+word of apology. But Bainbridge continued in
+sarcastic ill-humor: “I never <em>did</em> pretend to be one
+of your soft-steppin’, Slip-Slinksy sort o’ fellows. I
+could understand your objections to having him slying
+around the house of a night, but—” He paused
+abruptly as he opened the door leading into the cross-hall;
+the stoppage was a sort of galvanic shudder,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_388'>388</span>such as might befit a cessation of steam propulsion.
+He turned toward the others, over his big brawny
+shoulders, a face visibly paling beneath its sunburn
+in the gleam of the candle which the saturnine Hartagous
+had just lighted.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Hist,” he said, and silence fell. For outside in the
+distance and the darkness, so soft that one might
+wonder that it should be so distinct, was that vague
+sense of an unseen progression,—a step, or rather
+the impact of a foot with the pile of the velvet carpet
+of the padded stair, a silken sibilance, then silence,
+and again a footfall ascending the flight.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It was audible to Mr. Hartagous as he stood half
+dressed beside the table. A dismayed, protesting question
+was in the wrinkles and corrugations of his face
+as he turned it toward the door; a keen, excited gleam
+shone in his eyes, for he, too, had heard of the furtive
+spectre of Great Oaks. The blazing match in his
+hand burned unheeded to the tips of his fingers.
+When the flame touched the flesh he dropped the
+match, but without a word or sound. It seemed to
+have tangibly kindled his intention, his resolution.
+It was hardly possible to imagine a man of his age
+and so portly, who was now so light of movement.
+He had noiselessly thrust his bare feet into his bedroom
+slippers, great yawning foot-gear, placed his
+revolver in the pistol pocket of his trousers, while he
+held in his hand a thing that to the rustic Mr. Bainbridge
+seemed a pocketbook, but which Desmond
+recognized as one of the tiny electric lamps that have
+this semblance. He dropped the conical extinguisher
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_389'>389</span>over the newly lighted flame of the candle, and in a
+moment all was darkness and silence.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Each of the others recognized the lawyer’s determination
+to see the thing out. Bainbridge, for all his
+bold initiative in matters cognate to daylight, fell
+behind him as Mr. Hartagous briskly flung the door
+wide and shuffled noiselessly along the hall. For one
+moment Desmond felt an agony of indecision. He
+had an unreasoning instinct to call out and give
+the forlorn old spectre some warning of the fell
+forces of flesh and blood that were even now upon
+his elusive track, that he might craftily compass his
+disappearance as more than once heretofore. Then he
+hesitated. He had shrunk from such knowledge as
+had come to him as to the details in the concealment
+of the codicil of the will, and he had found its only
+extenuation in the doubt of Mr. Stanlett’s sanity and
+responsibility. It was impossible to judge how this
+might have stood in the beginning, but now, when
+it was so obviously futile and the ghostly step was
+once more wandering through the midnight quiet of
+Great Oaks mansion, he became afraid of interference,—discovery
+could only prove the mental unsoundness
+that was at last poor Slip-Slinksy’s protection.
+Moreover, Mr. Hartagous was now halfway up the
+stairs; Bainbridge, sitting on the bottom step, had
+pulled off his high boots and followed in his stocking
+feet as noiseless as a cat. Nevertheless, the crafty
+old spectre had become aware of their approach. Not
+a sound, not a stir, issued from above. He was still
+up there somewhere in the darkness. Surely he could
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_390'>390</span>scarcely have drawn a breath as the two below stood
+on the stairs, motionless also, watching, waiting.
+Desmond, lingering in the hall beneath, one hand on
+the newel-post, felt a rush of indignation, knowing
+what he did. The two spies, stalwart, alert, both more
+than a score of years younger, could easily wear out
+the endurance of the poor, patient, disappointed ghost,
+whose lawless mission had always been instinct with
+beneficent intention. Yet not so easily, perhaps; for
+presently, when a timber of the stair creaked, Desmond
+knew that Bainbridge, his muscles stiff and
+cramping, had been forced to shift his weight.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The house within was absolutely noiseless. The
+half-moon of glass above the doors at the front
+showed its presence in a dim gray contour, but shed
+no light. The splashing of the water of the overflow
+under the buffets of the wind was distinct in the
+pause. Once a gust went skirling with a wild, chill
+voice among the score of chimneys, and passed into
+the distance, and silence ensued. Suddenly a light
+cut the gloom like a knife. There, standing on the
+landing, was the spectre of the tradition, the cocked
+hat upon its white hair, powdered, alas! only by time,
+its cloak falling almost to its heels, its eyes blazing
+with that fierce yet consciously helpless anger of the
+aged, and its lips drawn close and thin to keep the
+secret that battered against their reticence.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mr. Hartagous had crept up the stairs like a panther
+in his eagerness for his prey, yet at the instant
+of discovery he slunk back amazed and disconcerted.
+“Mr. Stanlett,” he exclaimed, his finger failing for
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_391'>391</span>a moment in the pressure on the button, and the
+whole scene vanishing into darkness with a leaping
+suddenness, then as suddenly leaping into view, “I
+am astonished at you!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“And I cannot express <em>my</em> surprise,” the old gentleman
+said, with a crisp sarcasm that had an unexpected
+edge. His eyes ran deliberately over the details
+of the unconventional aspect and attire of Mr. Hartagous:
+his bushy, tousled gray hair and whiskers;
+his burly, much wrinkled throat, left bare without
+collar or cravat; his suspenders, all unadjusted, still
+hanging from the waistband of his trousers and
+dangling sashwise almost to his heels; his bare feet
+and ankles revealed nearly in their entirety by his
+loose, yawning bedroom slippers. And he had not
+the wit to take his thumb from the button of the
+lamp. “I cannot express my surprise to detect you
+skulking, noiseless, in this unshod condition, about a
+house in which you are a guest. Fie! Fie! Mr. Hartagous.
+If you have taken a fancy to any valuables
+of ours, why, speak out, man, and we will <em>give</em> them
+to you! We have lost too much lately not to realize
+the vanity of earthly hoardings.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mr. Hartagous might have seemed of the porpoise
+family, so resonant were the deep and gusty breaths
+he drew. “Before God, old man, I have a mind to
+throw you down these stairs,” he cried, in fury and
+amaze that such an imputation, though forced and
+satiric as it was, could be cast on his conduct. “I
+have a mind to throw you down these stairs!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Have a care, have a care of your fellow burglar,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_392'>392</span>then,” cried Mr. Stanlett, secure in the immunity of
+his age and his weakness. “Stand from under, my
+good Mr. Bainbridge.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mr. Hartagous had never dreamed how much of
+his acumen as a lawyer, his dignity as a man, his
+force as an individual, appertained to his usual smart
+metropolitan costume. He made a desperate effort to
+lay hold on his wonted identity.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“But you have your own conduct to explain, Mr.
+Stanlett,” he said severely.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Explain?—to whom?—to you?” the old man
+flouted contemptuously.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>And Mr. Hartagous was aware that this was not
+the noted cross-examiner whom he had hitherto recognized
+in himself.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“You surely know, Mr. Stanlett,” he began anew,
+“that your mysterious midnight rovings about this
+house have given rise to misinterpretations—”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Strange,—strange that you should think so, and
+yet go roving too!” said Mr. Stanlett, his eyes burning.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mr. Bainbridge, a good deal perturbed by the unexpected
+falling out of the event, yet nevertheless
+reassured too to find the familiar figure of the old
+gentleman in lieu of the unimagined spectre, in anticipation
+of which his stout heart had quailed, suddenly
+broke out in his burly voice: “Well, I ain’t
+faultin’ Mr. Stanlett, anyhows he chooses to do.” He
+had known him since his own early youth, and his
+veneration had the strength of long habit. “He can
+have his own way at Great Oaks. If he has a mind
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_393'>393</span>to sit up late of a night and loaf about the house, it
+is his own affair. No curfew here! If I had ha’
+known that Slip-Slinksy was <em>you</em>, sir, I’d ha’ been
+in my dugout and a mile away by now.” The tone
+of respect, of consideration, to which the old gentleman
+was accustomed, broke down his reserve. He
+could meet defiance with taunts, and reproaches with
+sarcasm, but he melted before kindness.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh, Jerry, Jerry Bainbridge,” he wailed, holding
+out both hands and shaking his old gray head,
+so fantastic in its cocked hat, dismally to and fro, “I
+was just hunting for a will,—a better will than that
+poisonous paper that is to destroy us all. Faurie never
+intended that such a will should hold. Night after
+night, year after year, I laid it away and hunted for
+a better one. And I’m hunting for it yet, and I’ll
+hunt for it till I die,—and maybe I’ll find it yet.”
+Then breaking off suddenly, with a look of proud
+and deep offense, “Slip-Slinksy,—that’s what they
+call me! Slip-Slinksy!” He repeated the distasteful
+word, while a vivid flush mounted to the roots of his
+silver hair.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“But nobody knowed ’twas you, Mr. Stanlett,”
+Bainbridge urged caressingly, yet with deep respect.
+“You are more looked up to than anybody in Deepwater
+Bend.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In view of the tone of this interlocutor, it seemed
+to Mr. Stanlett not derogatory to his dignity to defend
+himself. “It was my duty, Bainbridge, my duty.
+I had promised Faurie. My word was out.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mr. Hartagous cocked up his head to listen and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_394'>394</span>bent his brows. “What promise was this which you
+gave to Mr. Faurie, if I may ask?” he demanded,
+puzzled.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I recognize no obligation to inform you, Mr.
+Hartagous, and no coercion in your question,” replied
+Mr. Stanlett, with dignity. “But I would not
+willingly seem churlish and reticent. I have no objection
+to answer, now that that unfortunate codicil
+has been produced—none whatever. Mr. Faurie
+urged me to search for another will till I found it,—I
+say a ‘will,’ but ‘paper-writing’ was the word he
+used.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>A pause ensued, while his fantastic figure on the
+landing, with the divergent rays of the lamp full
+upon him, stood silent and stiff, as he looked down at
+the brilliant focus of the electric wire in the case,
+which dulled the dim group about it on the stairs.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“When did Mr. Faurie tell you that?” asked the
+wondering lawyer.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Just about four years after he died,” the old man
+replied, quite simply.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>A thrill of astonished comprehension quivered
+through the group on the stairs. Hartagous, accustomed
+to a sedulous facial control, did not change
+countenance or speak; his thumb, however, trembled
+on the button of the lamp, and the scene fluttered
+back and forth, ghostly-wise, through the darkness.
+But both the other listeners exclaimed, each after
+the fashion of his wonted phraseology, though neither
+could have remembered his own words a moment
+later. Mr. Stanlett apprehended the amazement in
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_395'>395</span>the tones, and his interest, which had seemed but
+a jaded familiarity with an old experience, pricked
+up suddenly.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Very remarkable, wasn’t it?” he said. “I remember
+that it surprised me extremely at the time,
+though really I don’t know that it should. Faurie
+was always different from anybody else. I was in the
+blue room up there, where after his death we had
+packed away all of his papers which he had seemed
+to consider of no particular account, till <em>you</em> sent
+here, as executor, for those cursed levee bonds.” He
+paused to glare down with sudden wolfish rancor at
+Hartagous, then resumed abruptly: “I was ransacking
+the papers again, for in searching for the levee
+bonds I had found that codicil to the will,—which
+I wish to God I had never seen or had burnt on the
+spot. I knew the havoc that four years of Honoria’s
+expenditures would make in her provision if they
+were chargeable against her portion in the partition
+of the estate. Four years’ income,—one hundred and
+twenty thousand dollars. It seemed immense then!
+And <em>now</em> it is nearly seven years’ income derived
+from the general estate that she must refund, and
+in addition all the yield of the crops of Great Oaks
+Plantation.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He paused, his dreary, sunken eyes lifted suddenly
+to the upper story opposite the landing, and Bainbridge
+began to quake so perceptibly for the thought
+of what might be leaning lightly over the balustrade,
+a graceful manly figure, which he could see well
+enough though he would not look toward it, that the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_396'>396</span>stout stair-rail shook responsive to the quiver of his
+brawny hand laid upon it. He kept instead his attention
+fixed resolutely on Mr. Stanlett’s lean, pallid face,
+with its fantastic headgear and its fiery eyes. There
+seemed naught more definite than mere memory before
+them, for he went on as if he had been only
+arranging the sequence of the events in his mind.
+“It surprised me then considerably, but now it seems
+no great matter. Faurie came in suddenly, as if it
+were the most natural thing in the world, and he
+said,—you know that way he had of demanding
+impossibilities of people and getting them too,—‘Keep
+back that codicil, Mr. Stanlett,—there is another
+paper-writing; find it and present them both
+together.’ He was pale and eager. He seemed desperately
+in earnest. He was dressed for riding,—he
+had come from far. I wonder which horse he had!
+He held a riding-crop in his hand, and he struck the
+codicil contemptuously with it,—you remember his
+tempestuous ways when he was angered, and he had
+that fine air of scorn that used to become him so
+well,—he struck the codicil as the paper lay open on
+the table. And you can see the welt of his riding-crop
+across it now.” Mr. Hartagous was conscious
+of a vague icy touch that seemed to delineate the
+course of his spinal column in successive shivers, for
+he was remembering that he had noticed an unaccountable
+diagonal indentation athwart the paper
+when it had been recently produced in court.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The recital had been to Mr. Stanlett a tremendous
+nervous strain; the old face began to quiver and the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_397'>397</span>voice broke into whimpers, and the thin hands were
+aimlessly fluttering. “And ’twas just like Faurie to
+set me to search and never tell me for what nor
+where. ‘<em>Paper-writing!</em>’ have looked—and looked—for
+the paper-writing,—and I have looked for
+<em>him</em>, too, but I have never seen him since,—though—sometimes”—Mr.
+Stanlett glanced furtively over
+his shoulder at the ascending flight of stairs—“I
+have heard his step behind me as I went hunting—hunting—for
+the ‘paper-writing.’ If I had met him
+once on these dark stairs, I’d have held on to him,
+dead or alive, till I got some data as to what and
+where.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>As the tall, thin figure wavered to and fro and
+seemed about to fall, Bainbridge pushed hastily past
+Mr. Hartagous on the stair and offered a supporting
+arm to the old gentleman. “Such tiresome times,
+Jerry Bainbridge, that I have, to be sure. I need my
+sleep,—I need my night’s rest,” he plained, looking
+out of the deep, pathetic, sunken eyesockets of the
+aged: “to watch, and wait, and listen, and slip, and
+search,—’twas mighty hard! And then to be heard,
+after all. To be followed and spied out by this lawyer,
+and Desmond, and you,—<em>Slip-Slinksy</em>!” he repeated
+with a repugnant mutter.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Suddenly the light went out, leaving the whole in
+darkness. Mr. Hartagous pressed the button in vain.
+“The battery is exhausted. It will have to be recharged,”
+he remarked impersonally, as he turned on
+the stair.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond was suddenly sensible of his position as
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_398'>398</span>quasi-host, and he felt the Great Oaks traditions of
+hospitality had hardly been maintained in the treatment
+that Mr. Hartagous had received on the stairs.
+“I will get a candle immediately. There is a fire in
+the library still, Mr. Hartagous; it has grown quite
+chilly. Perhaps you might care to have a cigar there.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He addressed the unresponsive darkness apparently,
+in which, however, the queer figure of Mr. Hartagous
+was scarcely invisible, so definitely had it impressed
+itself upon the memory; but it was shuffling along
+very systematically, for his voice came from out the
+gloom, far down the hall and near his own door:
+“Thanks, thanks, very much; I will put on something
+extra—I feel the change of the temperature—and
+join you presently.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mr. Stanlett was not altogether self-absorbed.
+“Why, Desmond, why don’t you offer him a nightcap?”
+he called out genially, from the darkness of
+the landing. “Make him mix you a toddy in the
+library, Hartagous. He hasn’t got so little sense as
+you might think! He knows how to do that, at any
+rate!” Then with a distressful quaver: “Take something,
+Hartagous. You ain’t used to the Slip-Slinksy
+business like me. <em>Slip-Slinksy</em>,—the very boys call
+me that!” And now again jocund, though ever and
+anon his voice broke, “Do a little rummaging around
+in the dining-room, Desmond, and see if you can’t
+put two and two together,—a sandwich and a decanter.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“But won’t you join us, Mr. Stanlett,” demanded
+Desmond, cheerily, for he judged from the diminishing
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_399'>399</span>distance of his voice that the old gentleman was
+approaching on the arm of Bainbridge; but Mr. Stanlett
+fell anew to whimpering, and said that he wanted
+to be in his bed, and indeed in his grave, that ought
+to have been made long ago with him laid at peace
+within it, for the days had come in which he could
+take no pleasure and the nights in which he could
+take no rest. Then he broke off, smartly to reprimand
+Bainbridge for stumbling, and pathetically averred,
+“But I have had more practice in walking in the dark.
+My conscience! I am familiar with the face of the
+night. Some terrible features it has, too. It is made
+up of grimaces!”</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_400'>400</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XIX</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c006'>When Mr. Hartagous repaired to the library, he
+scarcely compared in regard to apparel with the point-device
+Desmond, who was still in the attire that he
+had worn at the somewhat formal dinner early in the
+evening, but the guest’s aspect was far more conventional
+than during the episode on the staircase. As
+he blew a refreshing whiff of cigar smoke from his
+lips and allowed a second to curl in thin tendrils
+through his nose, he sank deep in his easy chair and
+stretched out his slippered feet luxuriously to the
+fire. They were now encased also in natty black
+silk socks, which came well up under the trousers and
+hid the ankles, erstwhile so frankly displayed. His
+hair had been hastily brushed, and though he still
+wore no collar nor tie, his iron-gray whiskers, parted
+and smoothed in his swift toilet, touched the edge
+of a jaunty smoking-jacket, just donned, of quilted
+bronze silk faced with cardinal red. He was more
+bland now than in his demeanor hitherto; perhaps
+because of the genial influence of the decanter and
+glasses on the library table, he had reached the conclusion
+that suavity was the best method to enlist the
+good-will of the tutor, and throw his influence in the
+household, which might be considerable, to the advantage
+of the executor in effecting the sale of Great
+Oaks Plantation and a pacific settlement under the
+terms of the codicil to the will.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_401'>401</span>“Why, I had no idea that Mr. Stanlett had aged
+so much,—greatly broken!” he remarked confidentially.
+“He is practically demented. Utterly irresponsible!
+Did you note what he said about having hidden
+the codicil? I wonder how long he has had it in his
+possession,—might approximate the time by the duration
+of the tradition of the ghostly footfall at Great
+Oaks.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“He couldn’t have had a nefarious intention, or
+he would have destroyed the paper; yet he must
+have known how disastrous delay in producing it
+would be to Mrs. Faurie’s interests,” argued Desmond,
+dispassionately.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“You are reasoning like a sane man, but his course
+is insanity,” rejoined Mr. Hartagous. “I suppose that
+the shock of the discovery impaired his powers of
+discrimination. There must have been some earlier
+cerebral lesion, some obscure affection of the brain,
+to which this incident gave expression. His delusion
+is very curious,—the apparition of Faurie; great
+verisimilitude in that character sketch,—I could
+almost see him myself!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“What strikes me as amazing is that he should
+never have shared his secret,—that he could guard
+his delusion and his search for a ‘paper-writing’
+through so many years with so many narrow escapes
+from detection,” said Desmond.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Well, insanity is essentially abnormal.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“He is insane in no other respect, apparently,”
+Desmond suggested.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“This is a case of ‘the fixed idea,’” said Hartagous.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_402'>402</span>“It is a good thing that he is not legally responsible,—that
+is, if his possession of the codicil
+was not also a delusion from the beginning.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“You think that possible?” said Desmond, with
+raised eyebrows.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Anything is possible in this connection. But it
+doesn’t matter,—he is wholly irresponsible. Bad
+thing he has made out of it for Mrs. Faurie! It will
+leave her practically stranded for life, unless indeed
+she should make an advantageous second marriage,
+which I hope to heaven she may.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“That is hardly likely,” said Desmond, with his
+eyes on the fire.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mr. Hartagous bent his bushy gray eyebrows in
+insistent argument. “And why not? She is extremely
+beautiful, and the years literally make no impression
+upon her. She is as young and as handsome as she
+was at nineteen. And she is very fascinating, in the
+best sense of the word. A very charming and delightful
+woman! Her piteous prospects in this change
+have worried me no little. Indeed, that is doubtless
+the one hope,—an advantageous second marriage.
+Among us we must try and save enough to her out
+of the estate to put her in a position—temporary,
+of course—to be able to make it,—go somewhere
+for a while, Memphis, or New Orleans, or New York.
+Buried here in the woods, she will never see anybody,—unless—unless—it
+were somebody slying
+around trying to buy Great Oaks.” Mr. Hartagous
+paused reflectively. He was essentially a business
+man, and could have succeeded signally in any line
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_403'>403</span>to which he had devoted his energies; he was now
+unconsciously showing great capacities to conduct a
+matrimonial agency. He let off a slow, meditative
+whiff of smoke, holding his cigar in one hand as he
+looked speculatively at the ceiling. “I wonder—I
+<em>do</em> wonder—whether Loring might not fill the bill!
+What a solution of the problem it would be, if we
+could capture Loring!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“We don’t want him,” said Desmond, in evident
+repugnance.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Why not?” Mr. Hartagous bent his brows in a
+cogitating frown as he surveyed the tutor. “Loring
+is a very worthy, honorable man, and agreeable, apart
+from his money,—and Mrs. Faurie will have absolutely
+nothing. He is a very brainy man, and of excellent
+moral character. I should think he could make
+himself very acceptable. You think that Mrs. Faurie
+would not marry him?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I know she would not. In fact, Mrs. Faurie has
+promised to marry me,” Desmond said succinctly.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In the scope of humane protection there ought to
+be some restraint on the administration of sudden
+shocks. The jerk, mental and moral, which Mr. Hartagous
+experienced was as if a galvanic current had
+thrilled through every sensibility. Even his physique
+was not exempt. As his hand on the arm of the chair
+mechanically flew up, it struck his cigar between his
+lips with such force as to break it in half, so that
+it hung bent at right angles in his mouth as he sat
+upright and stared at the tutor.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond wondered that he should have no qualms
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_404'>404</span>of conscience in thus interposing an insurmountable
+obstacle to the fair haven to which Mr. Hartagous
+was desirous of steering Mrs. Faurie’s future. But he
+only felt elated, delighted, triumphant. He did not
+even resent the indignant remonstrance, deprecation,
+amazement, in the executor’s face.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Did she intend really,” he demanded, in a low,
+tense, excited voice, “to relinquish her fine income during
+widowhood,—under the will,—for merely what
+amounts to her statute rights of dower—and <em>you</em>?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The tutor laughed aloud, so joyously, in such gay
+elation, that Worldly Wisdom could but bend its brows
+anew. “She never had the opportunity. I could not,
+I would not, ask her to relinquish anything for me.
+It was only when she had nothing to lose that I offered
+my heart and hand,—only this evening, in
+fact.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mr. Hartagous leaned forward, the bent cigar still
+between his lips, to survey the young man who, holding
+his own cigar between his finger-tips, lightly
+touched off the ash and smilingly returned the mentor’s
+look. He still smiled in imperturbable good-humor
+when Mr. Hartagous ejaculated, as if involuntarily,
+from the depths of his conviction: “You—poor—fool!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Thank you very much,” cried Desmond, in airy
+nonchalance.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“My dear boy, she is ten years older than you—”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“And she looks ten years younger,—but that is
+neither here nor there. I am not marrying her for
+her beauty any more than for her money.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_405'>405</span>“Certainly not for that,” said Mr. Hartagous,
+sourly. “But Mrs. Faurie’s friends will never consent
+to this; it would make her ridiculous in the eyes of
+the world.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“If I may judge by what I have learned in my
+own experience of friendship, as this world goes,
+Mrs. Faurie’s friends will let her very severely alone
+as soon as they are informed of the state of her exchequer.
+As to ridicule,—just as it happens, we do
+not care in the least for that.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“But you must consider her sons,—the very
+children will protest.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“And they alone have the right,” Desmond admitted.
+And Mr. Hartagous made a mental note to
+be early at their ear with crafty counsel.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He again hesitated for a moment, with the bent
+cigar now in his hand. “I know that you will not
+thank me for my interference,” he said gravely, “but
+as a mutual friend,—yours as well as Mrs. Faurie’s,—a
+friend of the family, indeed, I must remind
+you of your financial position. You know that it was
+difficult to find foothold for yourself,—how can
+you support an additional burden? I should be glad
+to advise Keith to continue you in your present employment—”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I am beholden to you!” laughed Desmond.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“But your common sense must show you that it
+would be untenable, unsuitable. You know that the
+learned professions are not paid in proportion to the
+equipment required and the talent employed. They
+ought to be—and, in fact, they generally are—filled
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_406'>406</span>by men who could at a pinch live by other
+resources. But what would <em>you</em> do if you should find
+no other opportunity?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Snap my fingers in the faces of the Nine Muses
+and come down from Olympus! I would do whatever
+fell to my hand. I would not now be so choice, so
+exacting, so determined on pursuing the course that
+I had laid out. If ‘letters’ are not for me, then I am
+not for ‘letters.’ I will work at anything. I will dig
+in a ditch. I will turn wood-chopper. I will ‘run the
+river.’”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“You will make a success of whatever you turn
+your hand to; but ‘run the river’—I hope you ain’t
+talkin’ of leavin’ us, Mr. Desmond.” Bainbridge’s
+rough voice broke suddenly on the colloquy, as he
+entered, hearing only the last words. “I don’t know
+how we would get on at Great Oaks without you now.”
+Then, bethinking himself of his own insecure tenure
+of office, his face clouded and his voice fell. “Well,
+gents,” he continued, after a pause, “I have got old
+Mr. Stanlett resting easy, and I believe I’ll finish out
+my yerrand here and take myself home. Mr. Desmond,
+do you know if there was any of them sticks
+o’ giant powder left here at the house after we blasted
+that last tangle?” For a recent development of the
+dangers of the overflow was the approach of floating
+débris dislodged from the inundated forests above,
+now merely drift logs, and again gigantic trees, long
+since dead and easily overblown in the high winds
+that had latterly prevailed. Sometimes they came
+slowly slipping along the sluggish flood of the back
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_407'>407</span>waters, sometimes swiftly hurtling, as if flung from a
+catapult, down the impetuous currents of the mid-channel
+of the great river. Now they appeared singly,
+and again entangled with other growths; and these
+fibrous masses, difficult of disintegration, offered a
+menace in collision with boats or buildings, which
+required all the ingenuity of the skilled in “fighting
+water” to ward off. To climb upon the floating tree,
+insert a dynamite cartridge in some convenient hollow,
+and speed off as fast as dugout might skim and
+paddle ply before the explosion rent the floating
+mass asunder, setting it adrift in hundreds of harmless
+fragments, had been found an effective measure,
+though not without dangers of its own.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Desmond said that he had reserved a few cartridges,
+which he had deposited in an out-of-the-way place
+for safety. He laid his cigar on the edge of the ash
+tray on the library table, searched one of the drawers
+for a key, and as he left the room, he remarked that
+dynamite was a commodity with which Mr. Bainbridge
+could not be too careful.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I ain’t going to set down on it, you can bet high
+on that!” the manager observed, with the kind of
+laugh attributed to the horse, with less than fair appreciation
+of equine manners. He slouched across the
+room in the big boots which he had resumed, having
+drawn them over his trousers to the knee according
+to his wont. His big hat was on the back of his straw-tinted
+hair, for since Mrs. Faurie was not present, he
+recognized no etiquette which required him to remove
+it, and he habitually wore it indoors; he sunk
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_408'>408</span>into a large chair of the reclining variety, furnished
+with a shelf at the side, which was available, turning
+on a pivot, for either book-rest or writing-desk. As
+he quietly waited, he began to eye Mr. Hartagous
+and his bent cigar, which was past all surgery. The
+lawyer discarded it into the smoking-tray, and spoke
+to avoid a question concerning it, for he realized that
+Mr. Bainbridge’s curiosity was unrestricted and his
+tact slight.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“They have made great changes here, Mr. Bainbridge,”
+he said, glancing about the room,—“and
+yet there is no especial difference when you come to
+examine,—a mere matter of rearrangement.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Yes, sir,—yes, sir. The kids recite here now.
+But Mr. Desmond has a way of putting his mark on
+things. This room reminds me only of him now, yet I
+can remember a time when it was as good as a photo
+of Mr. Faurie. He died here, you know,—and if I
+don’t forgit, it was in this very chair.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Yes, yes,—of heart failure. Yes,—a good while
+ago,” Mr. Hartagous replied, and fell silent.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The whole house had become silent, too, once more.
+If Desmond were astir in his search for the stick of
+dynamite, it was at a distance in the rambling old
+building, for there was no token of movement far or
+near. The clock on the mantelpiece was bringing the
+minute hand into occultation by the hour hand on the
+dial, and the silver tale of midnight presently rang
+out. The single log across the andirons, for it had
+been a bright fire rather than a great one, had charred
+through by the heat of the day’s embers below and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_409'>409</span>presently fell apart, sending up jets of sparks and
+tendrils of pungent smoke. Mr. Bainbridge rose and
+nimbly kicked the ends together between the dogs,
+and as the flames of the dry wood flared up cheerily,
+he returned to his seat, and seemed disposed to moralize
+and favor Mr. Hartagous with his views on the
+mutation of sublunary affairs. “But I useter never
+come in this room but what I could fairly pictur’
+Mr. Faurie sittin’ in this very chair. Lord! what a
+power o’ pains he did give himself about that will o’
+his and all his papers, Mr. Hartagous. And to think!
+it’s all turned out as he would have liked least. Not
+that I blame <em>you</em>, sir.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“No, of course not,” acceded Mr. Hartagous,
+promptly, conscious that his position did not commend
+itself to the manager’s favor.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Being the executor, you have to do as the law requires.
+But little did <em>he</em> think that he was leaving his
+pretty young wife a share of—river fog, to live off ’n
+all her days; no wonder it’s turned old Mr. Stanlett’s
+brain! She has been like a daughter to him. Well,
+well,—I don’t wonder that he thought he viewed
+Mr. Faurie up there amongst the old papers in the
+blue room. Mr. Faurie lived amongst his papers those
+few last weeks,—every lease, every lien, every mortgage,
+every promissory note, was examined in expectation
+of the administration of his estate. I useter
+look at him and wonder how he had the grit to fix
+and fix his papers when he warn’t able to work, so
+feeble as he was. He’d send for me as a subscribing
+witness in leases, and contracts, and such,—me and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_410'>410</span>the trained nurse; we witnessed a power o’ papers in
+those last days. They mostly seemed short,—little
+matters hereabouts. The important papers had been
+packed and sent to you in Memphis by that time;
+but these were some renewals he had promised, and
+he canceled some obligations he held. Mr. Faurie was
+not what a body would call a liberal man,—he was
+rather strict: but he executed a release for old man
+Tynes, whose debt wasn’t more than half paid out,
+and who was likely to ha’ been sold up; and he give
+a quittance to old Sloper; and he acknowledged a
+quitclaim deed on that tract o’ swampy woodland that
+that Irish wood-chopper Jessop hadn’t paid scarcely
+any purchase money on—’tain’t worth much, but
+’twas riches to old Axe-helve; and he relinquished
+his rights in that steamboat, the Swamp Lily, to
+Captain Cleek, for old acquaintance’ sake; and he
+remembered the old niggers variously; and he gimme
+my mule Lucy, finest mare mule I ever see, as good
+to-day as she was then, and two hundred dollars in
+gold in a bag,—but <em>he</em> didn’t care to stand for
+liberal. He wouldn’t ha’ put such little extras into
+his will for the public to know—indeed, no,—not
+for a pretty! He just settled his gifts beforehand.
+And every paper was just so!—and they all held together
+as tight as hell, except that will that he cared
+for more than all the rest. Things turn out cur’ous,
+they do,—for a fact!” Bainbridge shook his head
+drearily, and looked reflectively into the fire. Great
+Oaks Plantation had been home to him for many a
+year, and he was a man of scanty resources and narrow
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_411'>411</span>experience. He knew naught of the world beyond,
+and he deprecated change.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Of course I didn’t know the contents of the papers
+then,” he presently resumed his reminiscences.
+“I just heard about what they were in the gossip
+after his death, and in fact a good many were put
+on record in the court-house right away. I wasn’t expected
+to read ’em when he executed them. All I did
+was to witness his signature.” With his unemployed
+hands he drew before him the writing-shelf attached
+to the arm of the chair and took the position of the
+scribe as he meditated, drumming slightly on the wood
+with his fingers, that showed in their blunt, roughened
+tips and broken nails the hand of the toiler. “Mr.
+Faurie was a proud man,” he discriminated. “He
+didn’t openly admit that death itself could down him.
+He only used to remark, ‘No man can say that he will
+be here to-morrow, so I am setting some pressing affairs
+in order.’ He said that to me on that last night,
+just about a half hour before he died. Why, I hadn’t
+got home,—I was riding one of his horses,—do you
+remember Indian Chief, and how fast he could rack?—I
+hadn’t reached the willow slough when I saw the
+rocket go up at the landing to signal the Swamp Lily
+as she passed to stop and take on the orders for the
+funeral, you know.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Yes,—oh, yes,” said Mr. Hartagous, hastily,
+reminded of ghastly details. It was not a cheering
+subject; he had had a troublous day; he had been
+awaiting Desmond’s return that he might have an
+additional word with him in continuance of the discussion
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_412'>412</span>so suddenly sprung upon him; but the tutor was
+long away, scarcely sustaining his reputation for rummaging.
+The lawyer was about to comment with
+acerbity on the delay, for he felt the need of his well-earned
+night’s rest, when he was struck by the fidelity
+of the mimicry of voice and manner with which the
+manager was reproducing the scene so often enacted
+here, so replete with significance to all those whom
+these signatures concerned. “‘Witness my hand and
+seal,—witness my hand and seal,’” he repeated more
+than once. Then, with an imperative intonation,
+“‘Attest, Jeremiah Bainbridge. Sign here.’”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He glanced up with a mirthless laugh, and as he
+thrust the shelf away from him the elastic strap of a
+portfolio, attached on the under side, gave way in his
+rough handling and a flutter of papers slid from the
+receptacle to the floor.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Look at me!” exclaimed Bainbridge, in contrition
+for the mischance. “What’s these?—the kids’
+exercises.” He read aloud in a droning voice: “‘And
+when King Xerxes marched to the north he left’—a
+heap of confusion behind him, I reckon!” he remarked
+facetiously, gathering up the flying pages of
+writing, inscribed in a large, boyish hand, stopping now
+and again to peruse quizzically the inapposite theme
+with a sort of relish of its incongruity with the scene,
+the life, and the thought of to-day.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mr. Hartagous lent his aid. The accident was of
+a kind peculiarly irritating to his prepossessions, and
+to his mind suggested the bull in the china shop. He
+was less animated, however, by the desire to help the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_413'>413</span>worthy manager than to remove the débris and obviate
+thus any difficulty which might otherwise prevent
+Mr. Bainbridge from getting himself away immediately
+upon the return of Desmond with the stick of dynamite;
+Mr. Hartagous was capable of wishing that this
+might blow the manager into the Mississippi River,
+were there no other method of compassing his speedy
+withdrawal. To preserve the juvenile work from destruction,
+since several pages had flown within the
+big brass fender, he reached over it and secured them
+from the hearth. Then, seating himself in the chair
+just vacated by Bainbridge, who was now occupied
+in seeking fugitive papers under the table, the sofa,
+the globes, Mr. Hartagous addressed himself to replacing
+the pages in the portfolio.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>An awkward, old-fashioned device of desk arrangement,
+he thought it, for the portfolio attached to the
+shelf swung beneath, leaving the upper surface free
+for the writer’s needs, and it could only be drawn high
+enough to receive or disburse papers by means of the
+elastic strap which Bainbridge had burst. It now
+showed signs of letting the pages slip as soon as restored;
+and saying with a note of tense vexation,
+“Where did these belong, anyhow?—and how the
+devil does this go?” Mr. Hartagous drew the despoiled
+receptacle up on top of the shelf to aid his
+disposition of the collected sheets. As in most portfolios,
+the two gaping pockets were obvious, but as he
+was about to stow the remaining briefs concerning
+the Persian hero therein, another paper from an inner
+slit in a different handwriting was brought to view.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_414'>414</span>His face changed sharply as he drew it forth, all unnoticed
+by Mr. Bainbridge, laughing over the crude
+views of the boy’s work as he held a page to the lamp
+on the table, his big teeth a-glimmer in the midst of his
+straw-tinted beard, the big hat and broad shoulders
+thrown in a Brobdingnagian shadow on the wall.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Will you give me your attention for a moment,
+sir,” Mr. Hartagous said, in a low, repressed voice.
+“Is this your signature?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Bainbridge lumbered heavily forward in startled
+expectation. “By gum, it sure is!” he cried, excited
+to fever heat. “And that is the last paper which Mr.
+Faurie ever signed!” he added, leaning over to scan
+the document. “I am sure of that, because Mr.
+Dabney witnessed it with me,—’twas me and the
+trained nurse that always subscribed as witnesses together,
+except this once. And just before I reached
+the willow slough I seen the rocket go up at the landing
+to signal the death to the Swamp Lily, that was
+just rounding the point off the Arkansas shore.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There were a few other papers with the document,
+a canceled note of hand, a contract for the erection
+of buildings, a surveyor’s plat of land, all memoranda
+of completed purpose, which had evidently been returned.
+Mr. Hartagous was running them swiftly over,
+while Bainbridge’s attention was focused upon his
+own scrawl as a subscribing witness on the sheet on
+the portfolio.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I never thought of it again,” Bainbridge resumed;
+“and I suppose that whoever set the room to rights
+after he was carried out of it must have laid this away
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_415'>415</span>among the other papers in the portfolio and desk.
+He must have intended to mail it with other inclosures,—that
+will that Mr. Stanlett found, I reckon,—for
+see, here is a long, stamped envelope, with
+six cents postage and an immejet delivery stamp.”
+Bainbridge held it up to the light. “He must have
+weighed it with the inclosures,—but it has got no
+address. I remember now that after Mr. Dabney and
+I had said good-night to him and went out into the
+hall, I noticed the nigger waiting at the library door,
+with the bag for Mr. Faurie’s mail, ready to paddle
+in a dugout to the Swamp Lily just sighted nigh the
+point off the Arkansas shore.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mr. Hartagous was once more bending his bushy
+brows over the names of the witnesses to the document.
+“And who is this other party?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Mr. Dabney? Richard Dabney?—why, don’t
+you remember him? He used to run a store near
+Great Oaks. The land it was built on fell into the
+river not long after that, and he moved away. He
+was living in Arkansas the last I heard of him,
+running a sawmill. He had come to Great Oaks mansion
+that evening to inquire for Mr. Faurie, hearing
+that he had been ailing,—in fact, he was taken with
+a short rigor while Mr. Dabney was here. Mr. Faurie
+was still sitting in this chair when he wrote his name,
+which he did easily enough, but he seemed very faint
+when he called upon us to witness his signature, and
+pronounced the paper a little—little coddle-shell, I
+think he called it, to his will. I never thought of it
+since. I jus’ allowed it was some of his Tennessee
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_416'>416</span>business, because he remarked sorter mumbling to
+himself, ’twas situated there and that he s’posed this
+coddle-shell would take effect under the laws there, it
+being his domicile, so to say, him being a resident o’
+Nashville, and a regularly qualified voter of Davidson
+County,—though shucks! we claimed him here
+in the swamp country; he had been here so much at
+Great Oaks in the winters, as his health declined. I
+haven’t thought of it since. As he was always busy
+with his papers in them days, I didn’t taken any special
+notice of the circumstance. Is it any account,
+particularly,—cut any ice?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>A codicil, indeed, it proved; and while affirming
+and republishing the main testamentary provisions of
+the previous codicil, the testator made the single
+change of giving to his widow all his personal property
+of whatever sort,—in lieu of one fourth of it,—stocks,
+bonds, and some hoards of special deposits
+in Tennessee banks; and though the vital importance
+of this bequest was altogether unforeseen by the dying
+man, the crucial emergency being far beyond the
+purview of his vicarious precautions, it was evident
+that it would aggregate enough to solve the refunding
+problem of Mrs. Faurie’s receipts from the estate.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_417'>417</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XX</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c006'>It was a joyous household the next morning, and Mr.
+Hartagous genially participated in the prevailing good
+cheer. He had very heartily deprecated the hardships
+to be wrought by the execution of his duty, and was
+thankful indeed that they were mitigated to the extent
+of the benefactions of this codicil. Great Oaks under
+water, with valuable machinery and livestock, miles
+of fencing and indispensable buildings, to replace, was
+no boon in comparison with Mrs. Faurie’s former rich
+endowments, but at all events it was not to fall to his
+lot to turn the widow out of her shelter for the behoof
+of her young sons. Nevertheless, he resolved to
+remonstrate very seriously with her against the proposed
+marriage, and to stint himself no whit in forceful
+phraseology.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He did not meet her at the breakfast-table, for he
+was late, owing to the vigils of the preceding night,
+and when he presented himself to partake of the matutinal
+meal, he found that she had already departed,
+leaving him to the vicarious hospitality of Desmond,
+the jubilant Mr. Stanlett, and the three boys with
+their shining morning faces. He fortified himself
+with a good cigar after breakfast and a meditative
+stroll upon the veranda in the fresh, breezy, summery
+day, intending that his nerves should be well soothed
+and his tact whetted before he should enter upon his
+delicate mission.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_418'>418</span>The leafage of the wide-spreading grove was green
+and lush, and waved gilded in the sunlight; hanging
+baskets, with trailing ferns and laden with parti-colored
+foliage plants, swung in the arches between the vine-draped
+columns of the veranda. If one could imagine
+one’s self afloat, or in some Venetian entourage, the
+diluvian scene might have seemed, instead of the
+dreariest expression of disaster, to have elements of
+picturesque amphibious interest. What though the
+Arkansas shore were withdrawn from view—there
+was not much of it visible in its best estate!—and instead
+was an expanse of rippling sunlit sea of indefinite
+bounds, of a richly tawny hue, and with enlivening
+and unique incidents,—a couple of gayly whisking
+dugouts in the foreground, a steamboat in the middle
+distance, puffing columns of curling smoke as in
+the centre of the channel she steadily climbed the
+current, and in the offing a white flash of sea-gulls,
+describing eccentric curves, brilliant as stars against
+the depressed horizon, blue and hazy and dimly discriminated.
+There was an absence of briny odors,
+which are not always acceptable, however, and instead
+a pungent fragrance of bark came from the inundated
+woods, and the honeysuckle twining about the balustrade
+and bravely blooming from out the floods sent
+forth a subtile and delicious perfume.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“‘A life on the ocean wave,’” Mrs. Faurie exclaimed
+joyously, as he turned a corner and came suddenly
+upon her. She had been rifling a wire flower-stand
+that lifted its redundant growths against the wall of
+the house, and she held in her hand a cluster of pink
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_419'>419</span>and white carnations. As she stood in the blended
+sheen of the bland day and the refulgent reflection
+of the blazing waters, she looked not unlike the bloom
+itself. She had upon her head a wide hat of delicate
+pink organdy, the brim variously bent and shirred and
+frilled, and her morning dress was of sheer white lawn.
+He strove within himself to avoid its recognition as
+the simplest toilet, such as any country girl might
+wear, for she took no grace from it, but embellished
+its every suggestion. Her slim, lissome figure lent it
+such distinction; the exquisite fairness of her complexion
+was so emphasized by the unrelenting clarity
+of the tints of her costume; the shoaling lights and
+shadows of her beautiful gray eyes, her rich brown
+hair piled high amongst the carnation-like frills of the
+hat, her delicate dewy lips, her dainty hand and arm
+and throat, all were more assertive in their demand for
+homage in the simple not to say stereotyped attire.
+And she looked scarcely twenty years old, as her
+laughing, long-lashed eyes met his.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Can you keep your sea-legs in the contemplation
+of that weltering main?”—she glanced at the waterscape.
+“Will you feel less as if in an indigestible
+dream and more like a landlubber if I give you a
+boutonnière?” She selected a very perfect carnation
+from the cluster, and as she advanced to place it in
+the buttonhole of his coat, he caught her hand with
+the flower in it.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I want to say something very serious to you,” he
+protested. “I want to speak as freely to you as if
+you were my daughter.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_420'>420</span>She glanced up, gayly laughing. “Your sister, you
+should say.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He perceived his error,—on the very point of age,
+which was to be the gravamen of his remonstrances!
+But he had unconsciously been allured by her aspect,—as
+she looked scarcely twenty.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Well, hardly young enough to be my daughter,
+indeed,” he said craftily, “though Desmond is really
+young enough to be my son. My dear madam, you
+will make yourself a laughing-stock if you contemplate
+this marriage. You ought to remember that you
+are ten years older than this boy.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Should I mind that if he does not?” she queried,
+holding up the cluster of carnations no fresher than
+the flush in her cheeks.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“And now that, by the grace of God, you are to
+have Great Oaks unincumbered, you will put him into
+the position of making a mercenary marriage; he is
+sensitive on that score,—I can see that already,—though
+of course he is glad that your future comfort
+is assured, however meagrely in comparison with the
+old days.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“But ought we to consider the public,—if it will
+accord us so much distinction as to gossip about us as
+a nine days’ wonder,—or only ourselves, and our own
+mutual happiness?” She slipped the carnation into
+his buttonhole and drew off, standing in her graceful
+slimness, her head aslant, to observe the effect.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Ridicule deals a vicarious stab, which is peculiarly
+sharp. You should consider your children, dear Mrs.
+Faurie,” he urged.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_421'>421</span>“And I will,” she promised heartily. “Trust me
+for that! I will do nothing contrary to their wishes.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He made no secret of his intentions. He turned at
+once. She stood looking after him, smiling at his
+haste, as he went bustling down the veranda to find
+the boys. His method of busy progression was not
+unlike that of the puffing steamboat in the channel,
+bustling up the river. Though he had no fear of her
+interference or adverse influence, he was so impressed
+with the importance of his mission to enlist some potent
+opposition to the marriage that he made no effort
+to enliven the seriousness of the crisis with jocose
+preamble, in view of the juvenile character of his
+interlocutors, or to minimize its significance. In logical
+and definite fashion he set forth the fact and its
+aspect to the world at large, with its effect on their
+mother’s future and their own, in very unvarnished
+phrase. They silently heard him out, seated before
+him in a row on the sofa in the front parlor, very
+attentive, and with more friendly faces than he had
+heretofore seen them wear.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“It rests with you three,” he said in conclusion,
+seeking to impress them with a sense of their responsibility.
+“Your mother cares more for you than she
+ever did or ever will for any man. She is the most
+maternal woman I ever knew. You can prevent her
+from making a ridiculous marriage,—a foolish marriage,—a
+disastrous marriage, that will bring unhappiness
+upon everybody connected with it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh, no! Mr. Hartagous!” promptly responded
+the rosy and beaming Chub, taking the pas, perhaps
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_422'>422</span>instinctively on the principle that the youngest officer
+on a court-martial speaks first. “It is the very best
+thing that we can do. Ever since I have found out
+that Mr. Desmond was going to marry us, I have felt
+that we-all were so safe!” He gave himself an affectionate
+little hug to express his sense of security.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Horace administered a rude nudge with his elbow.
+“Nobody is going to marry <em>you</em>!” he admonished his
+junior, shamefaced for the ignorance he manifested.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Oh, yes,” protested Chub, wagging his round
+head, evidently having mastered the situation; “when
+a gentleman marries a widow lady, he marries the
+whole family!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“You certainly have an interest to consider,” said
+Mr. Hartagous, gravely. “Your affection for your
+mother, your respect for your father, ought to urge
+you to a course of discreet remonstrance,—nothing
+unfilial, or likely to estrange you, but to prevent an
+absurd and most unseemly marriage that must necessarily
+be, too, unhappy and unfortunate.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I don’t see it in that light, Mr. Hartagous,” said
+Horace, slowly. His face had an intimation of precocious
+force, and there was even a mutinous spark in
+the glance of his eye. His was the complex and difficult
+disposition of the three brothers. His convictions
+were obviously strong, and his opposition likely to
+be of a strenuous order. Mr. Hartagous hearkened
+with an access of attention. “I don’t see it that way.
+I think that Mr. Desmond cares more for her and for
+us than anybody else ever will. I think his proposal
+when he had reason to think her fairly bankrupt
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_423'>423</span>shows that he was willing to make every sacrifice for
+her. Then look at him! Why, you are obliged to
+see that he is head and shoulders above anybody—though
+he is not rich. But he is younger, just as you
+say, though he does not <em>seem</em> young. He is old in
+mind and disposition. And Lord! the heaps he knows
+about everything! As to your fear about what people
+will say,—well, <em>I</em> have seen a lot of the world, and
+it seems to me that if a certain kind of people don’t
+laugh at you for one thing, they will for another. If
+you stay at home, they call you ‘a swamper’; if you
+travel abroad, they call you a ‘globe-trotter’; if you
+dress well, they ridicule you as ‘a dude’; if you take
+it easy, they say you are ‘tacky.’ <em>My</em> idea is to go
+right ahead and do what you think is right and
+properest, and—let them laugh! I’d hate to deny
+myself anything good and valuable ’cause Mrs. Kentopp
+might giggle over it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“She left us out of her house-party,—and we
+ain’t dead yet!” said Chub, banging the heels of his
+shoes back and forth against the sofa.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Reginald took a deeper view. “I think, sir, that
+her happiness ought to be considered first. She is
+young, after all is said, and has many years yet to
+live, I hope. She ought to have her independence,—to
+be a free agent! When I was in India, there
+had been a recent case of suttee way off somewhere
+in some remote district,—I heard a great deal of talk
+about it. People had supposed the practice was suppressed.
+And without meaning any disrespect to
+my father’s will,—for I can understand how the idea
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_424'>424</span>of a stranger in the family circle would influence a
+division of property,—I always thought an objection
+to second marriage was a sort of civilized suttee. As
+to Mr. Desmond, himself, I should prefer him as a
+stepfather to all the world.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>And thus Desmond was welcomed without a dissentient
+voice.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>At first Mrs. Kentopp, who might be taken as
+representing the gossips at large, was so rejoiced that
+Great Oaks Plantation would not come immediately
+on the market in competition with Dryad-Dene
+that it mitigated the acerbity of her views, and although
+she twinkled and dimpled much in commenting
+on the disparity in age and fortune and prospects
+of the couple, her talk had not the rancor which it
+developed later when Mr. Loring seemed indisposed
+to console himself with Dryad-Dene, and gradually
+drew off without making any offer.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>A golden era of happiness had dawned on Great
+Oaks; the waters of the overflow gradually disappeared,
+and during the brief interval of the wedding
+journey Mrs. Kentopp drove over through the mud,
+bogging down once or twice in the alluvial sloughs,
+on a tour of discovery, and recounted with facetious
+distortions of effect afterward Chub’s simple boastings
+in great pride as to the preparations that were
+making for the reception of the couple on their return.
+Mr. Stanlett had designed and supervised
+these, and was very important and happily busy. “I
+hope he furnished the money to pay for the changes,
+for otherwise I don’t see where it was to come from,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_425'>425</span>for Desmond must have put all his pedagogic savings
+in the expense of the bridal tour,” she jovially speculated.
+Great Oaks was very judiciously embellished,
+and looked most genially hospitable on the day of
+her visit, for the old man had a pretty fancy and an
+accurate discrimination of the appropriate.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I always said there was another will or codicil,
+or, to be accurate, ‘paper-writing,’” he cheerily
+averred, as he handed Mrs. Kentopp into her carriage.
+“This is not of course the provision that was
+intended for Honoria, but it passes,—it passes fairly
+well, and Edward, my nephew, Mr. Desmond, you
+know, does not care for money.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>And when Mrs. Kentopp repeated this, she was
+wont to point out gayly the incongruity of this statement
+with the fact that “Edward,” Mr. Stanlett’s
+“nephew,” should have contrived to surround himself
+comfortably with that useful commodity in a wife
+so well endowed and three very rich stepsons, over
+whom he had now paramount influence. She found
+much joy, also, in Horace’s simplicity in believing
+that the sentimental interests between the two had
+been settled before the discovery of the last codicil
+which had put a new aspect on the financial status,
+and she sought to convince people in Deepwater Bend
+and elsewhere that the comfortable estate, more than
+the phenomenal beauty of the lady, had served to
+obviate the disadvantage of the disparity of years.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Prosperity supplemented happiness. There was a
+great crop of cotton produced by the overflowed
+lands; the debts were finally settled; the yacht was
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_426'>426</span>gone, indeed, when all was done, but the emeralds
+remained, and the next carnival season the famous
+beauty blazed in all her wonted splendor upon the old
+coterie in New Orleans which she had frequented in
+her girlhood. But she soon became secondary in the
+household. Colonel Desmond,—how Mrs. Kentopp
+laughed when that brevet of consideration was added
+to him instinctively, insensibly by the community, addicted
+to the bestowal of titles on those who so manifestly
+were entitled to the insignia of supremacy,—in
+the serene quiet of the ensuing winter, found in the
+desk of the library the scattered sheets of a manuscript
+which he had written in his lonely leisure in the
+early days of his stay at Great Oaks. He re-read it
+in surprise, and withal in self-conscious doubt, then
+again with growing appreciation. He thought that he
+could not now write its like. It had the concentrated
+strength of complete mental isolation. It was the
+work of the seer,—one who stands apart and judges
+justly without flinching, and it was instinct with the
+abstract truth. Much of it was bitter like life, much
+of it was sad; but it apprehended an unrealized purpose,
+a symmetry of design in life, a divine direction,
+and it shadowed this forth. So unfamiliar had the
+work grown in the lapse of time that he was flattered
+by the tone of its scholarship, its evidences of close
+reasoning, deep learning, and wide scope of thought,
+and the distinction of its literary style. For this reason
+he showed it to his wife and the eldest of the stepsons,
+and straightway the household clamor arose.
+Greatness unsolicited had knocked at their doors!
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_427'>427</span>Fame had been busy all this time gathering laurels
+for their brows. The younger sons, although uncomprehending,
+were equally elated, and though Desmond
+laughed at them all, he let them have their will, and
+he became grave and respectful toward their acumen
+when he read the letter of the publisher to whom it
+was submitted.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mrs. Kentopp said later that its vogue—an absolutely
+unreadable book, on all sorts of political conditions,
+for nobody had really read it—was because a
+notable English statesman, very meddlesome with pen
+and ink, had canvassed its positions in a London quarterly,
+duller, if possible, and less read than the book
+itself, and another English quarterly had published
+Desmond’s reply, and for some time the counter-arguments
+of other political economists who found the
+work of vital interest caused the effusion of much
+printers’ ink. And when the family went to London
+the next year, Colonel Desmond was lionized in distinguished
+circles, and was given an additional learned
+degree at a great English university where he had
+taken one in his earlier youth.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Deepwater Bend is a literary centre now, and
+don’t you forget it, and has its learned light,” Mrs.
+Kentopp dimpled, “though none of us of course have
+read or ever will read the Great Book.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But even Mrs. Kentopp’s flings were destined to
+disregard and discontinuance. A javelin, however
+skillfully aimed, must needs have a point to take
+effect. “I don’t think there seems a disparity in age,”
+a stranger in a social company had dubiously replied
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_428'>428</span>to her delighted mention of the ten years’ difference.
+“Colonel Desmond does not look so much as
+ten years older.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>And after the company’s somewhat mischievous
+burst of laughter had shown their comprehension of
+her intention and hopelessly mystified the stranger,
+who could not imagine what had been said amiss,
+Colonel Kentopp had taken occasion to admonish
+his wife in private. “You do yourself no good, Annetta,
+by harping on that woman’s age. People will
+only think you carping and jealous.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>And, indeed, Desmond was fast growing older and
+graver. Other books had succeeded the first; and
+while they added distinction in differing degrees, they
+added, too, the marks of thought on brow and mien.
+Now the light always burned late from the library
+window on the water-side, and the river pilots counted
+its faint, far glow in their midnight bearings. Often
+they pointed it out with pride to some passenger admitted
+to the wheel-house, seeing it shining with a
+sort of stellular isolation amidst the darkling riparian
+forests of Great Oaks, and repeated the titles of
+his volumes, although perhaps, like Mrs. Kentopp,
+they had read none of the works.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But this was really not the illuminated hour of the
+library, the time of its signal triumph. Regularly
+every afternoon when the western sunlight, striking
+in long, slanting bars athwart it, turned from burnished
+gold to ethereal, hazy red, his wife appeared,
+and seated one on each side of the fire in true Darby-and-Joan
+fashion, as Kentopp’s prophetic eye had
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_429'>429</span>long ago beheld them from the veranda, Desmond
+read aloud the result of his day’s labor, while her
+beautiful, listening, reflective eyes dwelt on the coals
+and his voice filled the quiet spaces of the scholastic
+old room. She never criticised. She gave no word of
+applause. She offered no monition of advice. When
+he laid down the papers and their eyes met, her
+comment was always the same.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“What did I tell you long, long ago, the first
+afternoon that you and I ever sat here before the
+fire?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Why, that I ought to write for publication,—to
+write books.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“And what did you say?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Well,” he always laughed as he replied,—“that
+I couldn’t,—that I was not capable of it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Then,” she was wont to solemnly rejoin, while
+her eyes danced with joy and mirth and pride, “do
+you never <em>dare</em> to contradict me again as long as you
+live.”</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c001'>
+ <div><span class='small'><span class='blackletter'>The Riverside Press</span></span></div>
+ <div><span class='small'>CAMBRIDGE . MASSACHUSETTS</span></div>
+ <div><span class='small'>U . S . A</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='border'>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c1'>
+<div class='nf-center c001'>
+ <div>BOOKS BY</div>
+ <div class='c004'>“<span class='blackletter'>Charles Egbert Craddock</span>”</div>
+ <div class='c004'>(MARY N. MURFREE)</div>
+ <div class='c003'><em>NOVELS AND STORIES</em></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>THE FAIR MISSISSIPPIAN. With frontispiece.
+Square crown 8vo, $1.50.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>THE FRONTIERSMEN. Crown 8vo, $1.50.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>A SPECTRE OF POWER. Crown 8vo, $1.50.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>IN THE TENNESSEE MOUNTAINS. 16mo, $1.25.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>THE PROPHET OF THE GREAT SMOKY
+MOUNTAINS. 16mo, $1.25.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>IN THE CLOUDS. 16mo, $1.25.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>THE DESPOT OF BROOMSEDGE COVE. 16mo,
+$1.25.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>WHERE THE BATTLE WAS FOUGHT. 16mo,
+$1.25.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>HIS VANISHED STAR. 16mo, $1.25.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>THE MYSTERY OF WITCH-FACE MOUNTAIN.
+16mo, $1.25.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>THE JUGGLER. 16mo, $1.25.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div><em>JUVENILES</em></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>THE CHAMPION. With a Frontispiece. 12mo,
+$1.20 <em>net</em>. Postpaid, $1.30.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>THE YOUNG MOUNTAINEERS. Illustrated.
+12mo, $1.50.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>THE STORY OF KEEDON BLUFFS. 16mo, $1.00.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>DOWN THE RAVINE. Illustrated. 16mo, $1.00.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY</div>
+ <div class='c004'><span class='sc'>Boston and New York</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c004'>
+</div>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c001'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><span class='xlarge'>MONTLIVET</span></div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in8'><span class='large'>By ALICE PRESCOTT SMITH</span></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>“The best American historical novel by a woman
+since ‘To Have and To Hold.’”</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><cite>New York World.</cite></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>“In dramatic force and in power and reality of dialogue
+this story is one of the best of the year.”</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><cite>San Francisco Chronicle.</cite></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>“The reader thrills under the spell of a well-sustained
+and adventurous tale.”</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><cite>Detroit Free Press.</cite></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>“The story of ‘Montlivet’ is as simple as it is absorbingly
+interesting—it is of a quality to rise above
+fads and fashions by virtue of its own power.”</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><cite>Chicago Journal.</cite></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>With frontispiece in colors, $1.50.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c001'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><span class='xlarge'>THE EVASION</span></div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in4'><span class='large'>By EUGENIA BROOKS FROTHINGHAM</span></div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in16'><span class='small'>Author of “The Turn of the Road.”</span></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>“The latest human products of a Puritan heritage and
+a Boston environment are portrayed in this novel with
+much the same sort of artistic realism that Mrs.
+Humphry Ward uses in her chosen field of London
+and English life.”—<cite>Boston Globe.</cite></p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“This novel has distinction, social, artistic and moral....
+Its social distinction is truly typical of Boston
+society.... Well-planned and constructed, it is yet
+never heavy.... The moral atmosphere of the book
+is clear and bracing.”—<cite>New York Mail.</cite></p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“<cite>The Evasion</cite> reflects Boston as accurately as New
+York was mirrored in ‘The House of Mirth.’”—<cite>Chicago
+Evening Post.</cite></p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“A fine story, showing vivid ability and power. Every
+page is absorbing.”—<cite>Chicago Record-Herald.</cite></p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>12mo, $1.50.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c001'>
+ <div><span class='xlarge'>NOVELS BY MRS. M. E. M. DAVIS</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c011'><span class='large'>THE LITTLE CHEVALIER</span>></p>
+
+<p class='c007'>A stirring and dramatic tale, full of color and movement, of the gay
+and adventurous life in New Orleans in the early part of the 18th
+century.... A most delightful and entertaining book.—<cite>New Orleans
+Picayune.</cite> Illustrated by <span class='sc'>H. J. Peck</span>. 12mo, $1.50.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'><span class='large'>THE QUEEN’S GARDEN</span>></p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It is a charming and most artistic piece of fiction&#160;... a delightful
+little romance, altogether as interesting as anything Mr. Cable has ever
+written.—<cite>Nashville Banner.</cite> 16mo, $1.25.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'><span class='large'>UNDER THE MAN-FIG</span>></p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mrs. Davis writes of Texas, of plantation life and character, of the
+ever-fascinating negroes and the gentle, lazy white children of Sunshine
+land, their pretty romance, and their patient suffering. Her
+story covers a number of years in time, and includes a wide and varied
+range of characters. It is full of romance and mystery, with an interest
+steadily cumulating to the close.—<cite>Chicago Interior.</cite> 16mo, $1.25.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'><span class='large'>THE WIRE CUTTERS</span>></p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The principal scenes of the novel are laid in Louisiana and Texas,
+and it takes its name from the desperate and prolonged struggle waged
+with indomitable energy and pluck by the rural classes of the latter
+state against what they deemed the outrageous and unwarranted fencing
+in of their broad acres, once as free as the very air. There is a
+love story in which the interest never flags.—<cite>New Orleans States.</cite></p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>Crown 8vo, $1.50.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c011'><span class='large'>THE PRICE OF SILENCE</span>></p>
+
+<p class='c007'>A romance of modern New Orleans, with a lively movement and a
+charming setting. Illustrated by <span class='sc'>Griswold Tyng</span>. 12mo, $1.50.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c001'>
+ <div><span class='xlarge'>BOOKS BY ANDY ADAMS</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>“Mr. Adams’s books are a unique contribution to the
+history of the country.” <cite>Boston Transcript.</cite></p>
+
+<p class='c011'><span class='large'>REED ANTHONY, COWMAN</span>></p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The autobiography of a cowboy, giving an interesting
+insight into the old-time cattle business.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'><span class='large'>THE LOG OF A COWBOY</span>></p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Breezy, natural, entertaining and racy of the soil.” <cite>Chicago Record-Herald.</cite></p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Illustrated by <span class='sc'>E. Boyd Smith</span>.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'><span class='large'>A TEXAS MATCHMAKER</span>></p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“A rattling good story, full of fun and the spirit of out-of-doors.” <cite>San Francisco Argonaut.</cite></p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Illustrated by <span class='sc'>E. Boyd Smith</span>.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'><span class='large'>THE OUTLET</span>></p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“A splendid description of a cattle-drive, vivid and
+well written.” <cite>New York Life.</cite></p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Illustrated by <span class='sc'>E. Boyd Smith</span>.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'><span class='large'>CATTLE BRANDS</span>></p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Clever, original and highly amusing tales.” <cite>Boston Transcript.</cite></p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>Each of the above, $1.50.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='lg-container-l'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>HOUGHTON</div>
+ <div class='line'>MIFFLIN</div>
+ <div class='line'>COMPANY</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='figcenter id002'>
+<img src='images/advertising_signet.jpg' alt='TOUT BIEN OU RIEN' class='ig001'>
+</div>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>BOSTON</div>
+ <div class='line'>AND</div>
+ <div class='line'>NEW YORK</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c004'>
+</div>
+<div class='tnotes x-ebookmaker'>
+
+<div class='chapter ph2'>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c001'>
+ <div>TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+ <ul class='ul_1 c003'>
+ <li>Typos fixed; non-standard spelling and dialect retained.
+ </li>
+ </ul>
+
+</div>
+
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 76784 ***</div>
+ </body>
+ <!-- created with ppgen.py 3.57e (with regex) on 2025-07-31 23:26:11 GMT -->
+</html>
+
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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 #76784
+(https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/76784)