Marriage? Was he not young for that? He asked himself that question many times. One did not marry, ideally, without love; love true and deep and trustful; love founded on acquaintance, appreciation, some conviction of permanence. Those were the backgrounds of marriage.
Some daughter of one of the gentry planters, perhaps? Those girls had the domestic virtues. But—he was comfortable enough with his good servants at Fairfield House. His yearnings had little relation to somebody to preside over his household. Somehow, to Cornelis, these young ladies of the planter gentry were not alluring, vital. The most attractive of them, Honoria Macartney, he could hardly imagine beside him perpetually. Honoria had the dead-white skin of the Caucasian creole lady whose face has been screened from the sun since infancy.
“And how are you enjoying the island?” she had asked him on an afternoon when he had been visiting the Macartney’s, eating some of Honoria’s perfect small frosted cakes; drinking her rather too-strong tea on the east gallery of her father’s estate-house near Christiansted.
Cornelis reassured her. He was enjoying himself very much indeed. Everything Honoria said, did, wore—he felt instinctively—was—suitable.That was the English word for it. Yes.Looking at her, as he had looked at her various other afternoons, Cornelis was certain his mother in Copenhagen would approve of her as a daughter-in-law. Most of the Crucian young gentry ladies were like that. Suitable—that was the precise word.…
That night he lay, sleepless, on the mahogany bed. The grass on the rolling hillsides seen through the opened jalousies under the full moon of February was at its palest, more than ever suggesting snow. That he had observed driving up the straight road from the sea to his house less than an hour before. He had dined with the Macartneys—a placid, uneventful evening. Mrs. Macartney had mentioned that Honoria had made the dessert. It had been Danish dessert, for him: “red grout”—sago pudding purple with cactus-fruit. Honoria had made it perfectly. He had complimented her upon her pudding.
The warm, pulsing breath of the sweet grass surged through the open windows in a fashion to turn the head of a stone image. It was exotic, too sweet, exaggerated, like everything else in this climate! Cornelis turned over again, seeking a cool place on the broad bed. Then he sat up in bed, impatiently throwing off the sheet. A thin streak of moonlight edged the bed below his feet. He slipped out of bed, walked over to a window. He leaned out, looking down at the acres of undulating grass. There seemed to be some strange, hypnotic rhythm to it, some vague magic, as it swayed in the night wind. The scent poured over him in great, pulsing breaths. He shut his eves and drew it in, abandoning his senses to its effect.
Instinctively, without thought or plan, he walked out of his open bedroom door, down the stairs, out upon the south gallery below. The smooth tiles there felt caressingly cool to his bare feet. Jessamine here mingled with the sweet grass. He drew a light cane chair to the gallery’s edge and sat, leaning his arms on the stone coping, his shadow sharply defined in the cold moonlight. He looked out at the sea a long tune. Then he shut his eyes, drinking in the intoxicating, mixed odors.
A sound secured his attention. He raised his head, looked down his narrow private road toward the sea. Clearly outlined in the moonlight a girl, possibly fifteen, came along the road toward him. About her lithe body hung a loose slip, and around her head, carelessly twined, turban-wise, was draped a white towel. She was quite close, making no sound on the sandy road with her bare feet.
His shadow moving slightly, perhaps, startled her. She paused in her languorous stride, a slender neck bearing erect a fawnlike head, nostrils wide, eyes open, taken unawares.
Then the girl recognized him and curtsied, her sudden smile revealing white, regular teeth set in a delicate, wide mouth, a mouth made for love. In the transforming magic of the moonlight her pale brown skin showed like cream.
“Bathing in de sea,” she murmured explanatorily.
Lingeringly, as though with reluctance, she resumed her sedate, slow walk, the muscles flowing, rippling, as though to pass around the house to the village at the rear. Her eyes she kept fixed on Cornelis.
Cornelis, startled, had felt suddenly cold at the unexpected, wraith-like sight of her. Now his blood surged back, his heart pounding tumultuously. A turbulent wave of sea air sweetened from acres of sweet grass surged over him. He closed his eyes.
“Come!” he whispered, almost inaudibly.
But the girl heard. She paused, looked up at him, hesitating. He managed to nod his head at her. The blood pounded in his veins; he felt detached, weak, drowned in the odor of sweet grass and jessamine.
The girl ran lightly up the gallery’s stone steps. The pattern of the small jessamine leaves played grotesquely upon her when she paused, as moonlight filtered through them and they moved in the light, irregular sea breeze.
Cornelis rose and looked down into the girl’s eyes. Their amber irises were very wide and eery light played in them; a kind of luminous glow, a softening.…
Trembling, he placed a tentative hand on her shoulder, gently. She leaned toward him; his arms went about her firm, slender body. Young Cornelis Hansen felt, for the first time, a girl’s heart tumultuously beating against his breast.
A hush enveloped the quiet of the pure, clear night. No dog muttered from the sleeping estate-village. A fresh breath, enervating, redolent of the acres of waving grass, fanned the gallery. A delicate beam of moonlight seemed to young Cornelis, entranced, bewitched, to usher them into the open doorway of his house.…
Then, suddenly, almost brutally it seemed, even to him, he thrust this pale, brown, girl of gossamer and moonlight away from him. He stood clear of her, no longer bemused by the witchery of the breeze and the moonlight’s magic.
With more of gentleness he laid again his hand on the delicate, rounded shoulder. As gently he turned the girl about and marched her, resolutely—like a Dane—toward the gallery steps. His fastidiousness had reasserted itself.
“Good night—my child,” said Cornelis.
The girl looked up at him shyly, out of the corners of her eyes, puzzled and resentful.
“Good night, sar,” she murmured, and slipped down the steps and like a shadow around the corner of the house.
Cornelis walked firmly into his house and shut the door behind him. He went into his dining-room and poured himself a glass of French brandy and rinsed out the glass from the earthenware water-gugglet, throwing the water onto the stone floor. Then he mounted the stairs to his bedroom, got into bed, rolled over on his side, and went to sleep.
On the morning after his tea he was riding about his fields so early that he was finished with his managerial inspection before nine. Ten o’clock saw him, very carefully shaved, and wearing spotless white drill and his best Danish straw hat instead of a sun helmet, driving a pair of horses in the light phaeton toward Christiansted.
That same afternoon, during the period devoted to swizzels of old rum or brandy and, especially among the Danes, tea and coffee and cakes—the period of sociability before the company at the various great houses broke up before its various dinner- parties—Cornelis called at the Nybladhs’. The Administrator and his wife were pleased to see him, as always. Several others were present, quite a company in fact, for the swizzel-hour at Nybladhs’ was almost an official occasion.
After a quarter of an hour, Cornelis drew the Administrator aside and they spoke together briefly, then returned to the company gathered about an enormous mahogany table which held the silver swizzel jug and the afternoon’s lunch.
At the next pause in the conversation Nybladh rose, focusing his guests’ attention upon himself. He held up his glass.
“Be pleased to fill all glasses,” he commanded, importantly.
There was a considerable bustle about the great round table. Nybladh noted the fulfilling of his command. Servants hurried about among the guests. When all were freshly served he cleared his throat and waved his own glass ceremoniously.
“I announce”—he paused
, impressively, all eyes dutifully upon him. “I announce—the engagement of Herr Hansen and Miss Honoria Macartney. Skoal!” He boomed it out sonorously. Every glass was raised.
Cornelis bowed from the waist, deeply, to each of his pledgers, as they drank the health of himself and his bride-to-be.
Thus did Honoria, daughter of the great Irish-West Indian family of the Fighting Macartneys, become Fru Hansen, after an exceptionally brief engagement, and leave her father’s house to live at Estate Fairfield with her husband who was the nephew of Old Strach.
A West Indian family does not pick up titles from populace by knocking about their estates and doing nothing. The Fighting Macartneys were well worthy of theirs. Even Saul Macartney, their ancient black sheep, who had paid the penalty of piracy by hanging in St. Thomas in 1824 along with the notorious Fawcett, his chief, and who, as some believed, had been strangely magicked even after his death by his cousin Camilla Lanigan who was believed to practise obeah and was immensely respected by the negroes—even the disgraced Saul was no poltroon. The jewels Saul and Captain Fawcett buried under Melbourne House, Saul’s Santa Cruz mansion, had not been handed that miscreant over the counter!
This young Honoria was of that sanguine blood, even though her sheltered life had made her walk somewhat mincingly and there was no color in her cheeks. She began her reign at Fairfield like a sensible young housewife, studying Cornelis’ likes and dislikes, satisfying him profoundly, beyond his very moderate expectations. The ardent yet self-contained young man had linked to himself something compounded of fire and silk. Honoria brought to her housekeeping, too, great skill and knowledge, from her young lifetime in her mother’s great house near Christiansted.
She was a jewel of a wife, this young Honoria Hansen, born Macartney. Cornelis came suddenly to love her with an ardency which even he had never dreamed of as possible, like flame. Then their love was tempered in a fearful happening.
One morning when Cornelis was riding early about his sugar fields, it came to him, traversing a cane-range on his black mare, Aase, that never, before or since that sleepless night when he had called the girl to him on the gallery, had he laid eyes upon that girl. That he would recognize the girl whom, for a moment of abandoned forgetfulness of his fastidious reserve, he had held in his arms, whose body had lain against his heart, was beyond question in his mind. Then it occurred to him that he had thought of the girl as living in his village. That night when he had dismissed her, she had walked away around the house toward the cabins at the rear. He shuddered—those cabins!
Yet the fact remained that, cogitate the matter as he might, riding along at Aase’s delicate walking pace, he could not recollect having laid eyes upon her, either before or since that night when he had sent her away. It was very curious, inexplicable indeed—if the girl lived in his village. There was really no way to inquire. Well, it did not greatly matter, of course! A brown girl was—a brown girl. They were all alike. Cornelis rode on to another cane-field.
Telepathy, perhaps! When he arrived at Fairfield House toward eleven under the mounting brilliance of the late-morning sunlight, and tossed his bridle-reins to Alonzo his groom at the front gallery steps, the girl stood beside the door of Fairfield House, inside the high hallway. She curtsied gravely to him as he passed within.
Cornelis’ mouth went dry. He managed to nod at the girl, who reached for his sun helmet and hung it on the hallway hatrack.
“Mistress say de brekfuss prepare’ in few moments, sar,” announced the girl.
Honoria, in his absence, it appeared, had engaged this girl as a house servant. There was no other explanation of her presence in the house. She had been carefully dressed, rustling with starch, the very picture of demureness. Cornelis strode upstairs to wash before late breakfast, which came at eleven.
His equanimity was sufficiently restored after breakfast to enquire of Honoria about the new housemaid. The girl had been engaged that morning, taking the place of one Anastasia Holmquist, a Black girl, who had sent a message by this girl, Julietta Aagaard, that she was leaving service of Fru Hansen, and had obtained Julietta to take her place.
“She seems a very quiet, good girl,” added Honoria, “and she knows her duties.”
“She is not of our village, eh?” enquired Cornelis, tentatively.
“No. She says she lives with her mother, somewhere up in the hills.” Honoria indicated with a gesture the section of the island behind Fairfield.
Cornelis found his mind relieved. The girl was not of his village. Only one thing remained to be explained. He understood now why he had not observed the girl about the estate. But what had she been doing “bathing in the sea” at night? Such a practise was unheard of among the negroes. Few, indeed, would venture abroad or even out of their houses, unless necessity compelled, after dark. The houses themselves were closed up lightly, at nightfall, the doors of the cabins marked with crosses to keep out Jumbee—ghosts; their corrugated-iron roofs strewed with handfuls of sea-sand, the counting of which delayed the werewolf marauding nightly. A vast superstition ruled the lives of the Santa Crucian negroes with chains of iron. They believed in necromancy, witchcraft; they practised the obeah for sickness among themselves, took their vengeances with the aid of the Vauxdoux; practises brought in through Cartagena and Jamaica; from Dakar to the Congo mouths in the slave days; Obayi from Ashantee; Vauxdoux, worship of the Snake with its attendant horrors, through the savage Dahomeyans who had slaved for King Christophe in the sugar fields of Black Haiti.
To go from up in the hills to the sea, at night, for a bath—it was simply unheard of. Yet, the girl, seeing him there on the gallery, had been plainly startled. She had come from the sea. Her lithe body, the towel about her head, had been sea-damp that night. It was unheard of, unless—. Cornelis had learned something in the six months of his residence on Santa Cruz.
“Who is Julietta’s mother?” he enquired suddenly.
Honoria did not know anything about Julietta’s mother. This was the West End of Santa Cruz, and Honoria had lived all her life near Christiansted.
But, three days later, from a brow-beaten Alonzo, Cornelis learned the truth. The deference with which the young Julietta had been treated by the other servants, the Black People of his village, had been marked. Reluctantly Alonzo told his master the truth. Julietta’s mother was the mamaloi, the witch-woman, of this portion of the island.Beyond satisfying his curiosity, this news meant little to Cornelis. He was too much a product of civilization, too much Caucasian, for the possible inferences to have their full effect upon him. It was not until some days later, when he surprized the look of sullen hatred in Julietta’s swiftly drooped eyes, that it recurred to him; that the thought crossed his mind that Julietta had come into service in Fairfield House to retaliate upon him for her rejection. Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned! There was no Danish equivalent to the English proverb, or if there was, it lay outside Cornelis’ knowledge. Yet, although a European Dane—despite the fact that his residence on Santa Cruz had not been long enough for him to realize what such deadly dislike as he had surprized in Julietta’s glance might mean—Cornelis, no imbecile, did realize at the least a certain sense of discomfort.
Honoria, born on the island, could have helped the situation. But—there was no developed “situation.” Cornelis wished this girl at the bottom of the sea; transplanted to another and distant island of the archipelago, but beyond that there was no more than the sense of discomfort at the girl’s quiet, efficient presence about her duties in his house. He could not, of course, explain to his young wife his reasons for wishing lithe Julietta away.
But the sense of discomfort, somehow, persisted strangely. He could not see Julietta, demure, neat, submissive to her young mistress, without being unpleasantly reminded of what he came to think of as his folly.
Then, without rime or reason, the sense of discomfort localized itself. Cornelis, annoyed during the night by a vague itching on his upper arms, discovered in the early-morning light
a slight rash. Prickly heat, he told himself, and anointed his burning arms with salve. Useless. The rash persisted, annoyed him all through his morning field-inspection.
That late-morning, in his shower bath after his ride among the cane fields, he noticed that the rash was spreading. It ran now below his elbows, was coming out about his neck. It burned detestably. He was obliged to towel himself very softly on the arms and neck that morning before he dressed for breakfast in his spotless white drill.
Julietta, waiting on table, did not look at him; went about her duties like a cleverly made automaton, her look distant, introspective.
Honoria reported an annoyance. One of Cornelis’ shirts had disappeared. They discussed it briefly over breakfast.
“But—it must turn up.” Cornelis dismissed the topic, spoke of his plowing of the field abutting on Högensborg.
That night he was nearly frantic with his itching. Pustules, small, hard, reddish knobs that burned like fire, covered his arms and neck, were spreading across the firm pectoral muscles of his chest, down his sides.
Honoria offered sympathy, and some salve for prickly heat she had brought from her father’s house. Together they anointed Cornelis’ burning skin.
“You must drive in to Frederiksted and see Dr. Schaff in the morning,” commanded Honoria. She dusted her husband’s body with her own lady-like rice-powder.
The dawn after a sleepless night discovered Cornelis’ torso a mass of the small, red, hard pustules. He was in agony. Honoria it was who drove in the five miles to Frederikstad, fetched Dr. Schaff from his duties at his municipal hospital, leaving his assistant, Dr. Malling-Holm, in charge of the cases there assembled. Cornelis, Old Strach’s nephew, must not be kept waiting. Besides, Honoria had been insistent. She had seen something of the suffering of her man.
The Golden Age of Weird Fiction MEGAPACK™, Vol. 1: Henry S. Whitehead Page 32