The Gay Rebellion

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The Gay Rebellion Page 21

by Robert W. Chambers


  XX

  HE went, first depositing his suit-case on the step outside by the cats,and followed her into a large, comfortable sitting room.

  "By jove," he said, "you know this is really mighty pretty! What acorking collection of old furniture! Where in the world did you find--orperhaps this is the original furniture of the place?"

  She said, looking around the room as though slightly perplexed: "Thisfurniture was made to order for me in Boston."

  "Then it isn't genuine," he said, disappointed. "But it's a very cleverimitation of antique colonial. It is really a wonderful copy."

  "I don't think it is a copy."

  "It certainly doesn't look like it; but it must be if it was made inBoston for you. They're ingenious fellows, these modern makers ofcolonial furniture. Every antique shop in New York is loaded up withexcellent copies of this sort--only not nearly as well done."

  She assented, apparently with no very clear understanding of what hemeant.

  "What a charming setting this old house makes for such things," he said.

  She nodded, looking doubtfully at the rag carpet.

  "The Manor House was much finer," she observed. "Come to the window andI'll show you where it stood. They were fine folk, the Lockwoods, Hunts,and Fanchers."

  They rose and she laid one pretty hand on his sleeve and guided him intoa corner of the window, where he could see.

  "Hello," he said uneasily, "there is a main travelled road! I thoughtthat here we were at the very ends of civilisation!"

  "That is the Bedford road," she said. "Over there, beyond thosechestnuts, is the Stamford road. Can you see those tall old poplars?Beyond the elms I mean--there--where the crows are flying?"

  "Yes. Eight tall poplars."

  "The Manor House stood there. Tarleton burnt it--set it afire with allits beautiful furniture and silver and linen! His hussars ran through it,setting it afire and shooting at the mirrors and slashing the silks andpictures! And when the Major's young wife entered the smoking doorway totry to save a pitiful little trinket or two, an officer--never mind who,for his descendants may be living to-day in England--struck her with theflat of his sword and cut her and struck her to her knees! That is thetruth!"

  He said politely: "You are intensely interested in--er--colonial andrevolutionary history."

  "Yes. What else have I to think of--here?"

  "I suppose many interesting memories of those times cluster around thisold place," he said, violently stifling a yawn. He had risen early andrun far. Hunger and slumber contended for his mastery.

  "Many," she said simply. "Just by the gate yonder they captured youngAlsop Hunt and sent him away to the Provost Prison in New York. In theroad below John Buckhout, one of our dragoons, was trying to get awayfrom one of Tarleton's dragoons of the 17th Regiment; and the Britishtrooper shouted, 'Surrender, you damned rebel, or I'll blow your brainsout!' and the next moment he fired a bullet through Buckhout's helmet.'There,' said the dragoon, 'you damned rebel, a little more and I shouldhave blown your brains out!' 'Yes, damn you,' replied John, 'and a littlemore and you wouldn't have touched me!'"

  Brown looked at her amused and astonished to hear such free words slip soeagerly from a mouth which, as he looked at it, seemed to him the sweetmouth of a child.

  "Where did _you_ ever hear such details?" he asked.

  "People told me. Besides, the house is full of New York newspapers. Youmay read them if you wish. I often do. Many details of the fight arethere."

  "Reading such things out of old newspapers published at the timecertainly must bring those events very vividly before you."

  "Yes. . . . It is painful, too. The surprise and rout of Sheldon's 2nddragoons--the loss of their standard; the capture, wounding, and death ofmore than two score--and--oh! that young death there in the wheat! theboy lying in the sun with one arm across his face and the broken pistolin his hand! and his wife--the wife of a month--dragging him back to thishouse--with the sunset light on his dead face!"

  "To _this_ house?"

  She dropped her hand lightly on his shoulder and pointed.

  "Tarleton's troopers came stamping and cursing in by that very door afterthey had burned Judge Lockwood's and the meeting house--but they left heralone with her dead, here on the floor where you and I are standing. . .. She was only seventeen; she died a few months later in child-birth.God dealt very gently with her."

  He looked around him in the pleasant light of the room, striving tocomprehend that such things had happened in such a sleepy, peacefulplace. Sunlight fell through the curtains, casting the wild roses' shadowacross the sill; the scent of lilacs filled the silence.

  "It's curious--and sad," he said in a low voice. "How odd that I shouldcome here to the very spot where that old ancestor of mine died----"

  "He was only twenty when he died," she interrupted.

  "I know. But somehow a fellow seems to think of any ancestor as a snuffyold codger----"

  "He was very handsome," she said, flushing up.

  There was a silence; then she looked around at him with a glint of humourin her pretty eyes--one hazel-brown, one hazel tinged with grey; and thedelicious mouth no longer drooped.

  "Can't you imagine him as young as you are? gay, humorous, full ofmischievous life, and the love of life? something of a dandy in hisuniform--and his queue tied smartly a la Francaise!--gallant--oh,gallant and brave in the dragoon's helmet and jack-boots of Sheldon'sHorse! Why, he used to come jingling and clattering into this room andcatch his young wife and plague and banter and caress her till she fledfor refuge, and he after her, like a pair of school childrenreleased--through the bed-rooms, out by the kitchen, and into the garden,till he caught her again in the orchard yonder and held her tight andmade her press her palms together and recite:

  _I love thee_ _I love thee_ _Through all the week and Sunday_

  --until for laughing and folly--I--they----"

  To his amazement her voice broke; into her strange eyes sprang tears, andshe turned swiftly away and went and stood by the curtained window.

  "Well, by gad!" he thought, "of all morbid little things! affected totears by what happened to somebody else a hundred and thirty odd yearsago! Women are sure the limit!"

  And in more suitable terms he asked her why she should make herselfunhappy.

  She said: "I _am_ happy. It is only when I am here that I am lonely andthe dead past lives again among these wooded hills."

  "Are you not--usually--here?" he asked, surprised. "I thought you livedhere."

  "No. I live elsewhere, usually. I am too unhappy here. I never remainvery long."

  "Then why do you ever come here?" he asked, amused.

  "I don't know. I am very happy elsewhere. But--I come. Women do suchthings."

  "I don't exactly understand why."

  "A woman's thoughts return eternally to one place and one person. _One_memory is her ruling passion."

  "What is that memory?"

  "_The Place and the Man._"

  "I don't know what you mean."

  "I mean that a woman, in spirit, journeys eternally to the old, oldrendezvous with love; makes, with her soul, the eternal pilgrimage backto the spot where Love and she were first acquainted. And, moreover, awoman may even leave the man with whom she is happy to go all alone fora while back to the spot where first she knew happiness because of him.. . . You don't understand, do you?"

  Brown was a broker. He did _not_ understand.

  She looked at him, smiling, sighing a little--and, in spite of her freshand slender youth--and she was certainly not yet twenty--he feltcuriously young and crude under the gentle mockery of her unmatchedeyes--one hazel-brown, one hazel tinged with grey.

  Then, still smiling wisely, intimately to herself, she went away into aninner room; and through the doorway he saw her slim young figure movinghither and thither, busy at shelf and cupboard. Presently she came backcarrying an old silver tray on which stood a decanter and a plate ofcurious little cakes
. He took it from her and placed it on a tip-table.Then she seated herself on the ancient sofa, and summoned him to a placebeside her.

  "Currant wine," she said laughingly; "and old-fashioned cake. Will youaccept--under this roof of mine?"

  He was dreadfully hungry; the wine was mild and delicious, the crispcakes heavenly, and he ate and ate in a kind of ecstasy, not perfectlycertain what was thrilling him most deeply, the wine or the cakes or thisslender maid's fresh young beauty.

  On one rounded cheek a bar of sunlight lay, gilding the delicate skin andturning the curling strands of hair to coils of fire.

  He thought to himself, with his mouth a trifle fuller than conventionexpects, that he would not wish to resist falling in love with a girllike this. _She_ would never have to chase him very far. . . . In fact,he was perfectly ready to be captured and led blushing to the altar.

  Once, as he munched away, he remembered the miserable fate of his latecompanion Vance, and shuddered; but, looking around at the young girlbeside him, his fascinated eyes became happily enthralled, and matrimonyno longer resembled doom.

  "What are these strange happenings in New York of which I hear vaguerumours?" she enquired, folding her hands in her lap and lookinginnocently at him.

  His jaw fell.

  "Have _you_ heard about--what is going on in town?" he asked. "I thoughtyou didn't know."

  "They say that the women there are ambitious to govern the country andare even resolved to choose their own husbands."

  "Something of that sort," he muttered uneasily.

  "That is a very strange condition of affairs," she murmured, broodingeyes remote.

  "It's a darned sight worse than strange!" he blurted out--then askedpardon for his inelegant vehemence; but she only smiled dreamily andsipped her currant wine in the sunshine.

  "Shall we talk of something pleasanter?" he said, still uneasy,"--er--about those jolly old colonial days. . . . That's rather an oddgown you wear--er--pretty you know--but--_is_ it not in the styleof--er--those days of--of yore--and all that?"

  "It was made then."

  "A genuine antique!" he exclaimed. "I suppose you found it in the garret.There must be a lot of interesting things up there behind those flatloop-holes."

  "Chests full," she nodded. "We save everything."

  He said: "You look wonderfully charming in the costume of those days. Itsuits you so perfectly that--as a matter of fact, I didn't even noticeyour dress when I first saw you--but it's a _wonder_!"

  "Men seldom notice women's clothes, do they?"

  "That is true. Still, it's curious I didn't notice such a gown as that."

  "Is it _very_ gay and fine?" she asked, colouring deliciously. "I lovethese clothes."

  "They are the garments of perfection--robing it!"

  "Oh, what a gallant thing to say to me. . . . Do you truly find me so--soagreeable?"

  "Agreeable! You--I don't think I'd better say it----"

  "Oh, I beg you!"

  "May I?"

  "'Pray, observe my unmatched eyes.'"]

  Her cheeks and lips were brilliant, her eyes sparkling; she leaned atrifle toward him, frail glass in hand.

  "May not a pretty woman listen without offense if a gallant man praisesher beauty?"

  "You _are_ exactly that--a beauty!" he said excitedly. "The mostbewitching, exquisite, matchless----"

  "Oh, I beg of you, be moderate," she laughed--and picked up a fan fromsomewhere and spread it, laughing at him over its painted edge.

  "Pray, observe my unmatched eyes before you speak again of me asmatchless."

  "Your eyes _are_ matchlessly beautiful!--more wonderfully beautiful thanany others in all the world!" he cried.

  Yet the currant wine was very, very mild.

  "Such eyes," he continued excitedly, "are the most strangely lovely eyesI ever saw or ever shall see. Nobody in all the world, except you, hassuch eyes. I--I am going quite mad about them--about you--abouteverything. . . . I--the plain fact is that I love--such eyes--and--andevery harmonious and lovely feature that--that b-b-belongs to them--andto--to _you_!"

  She closed her painted fan slowly, slowly left her seat, took from theblue bowl on the window-sill the wild rose blooming there, turned andlooked back at him, half smiling, waiting.

  He sprang to his feet, scarcely knowing now what he was about; shewaited, tall, slender, and fresh as the lovely flower she held.

  Then, as he came close to her, she drew the wild rose through the lapelof his coat, and he bent his head and touched his lips to the blossom.

  "When she and you--and Love--shall meet at last, you will first know herby her eyes," she began; and the next instant the smile froze on her faceand she caught his arm in both hands and clung there, white to the lips.

 

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