Works of Robert W Chambers

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Works of Robert W Chambers Page 139

by Robert W. Chambers


  “Who thaw me?” shouted Benny.

  “Hush! Be quiet!” said Dorothy.

  Benny lay back in his chair and beat upon the table, howling defiance at his sister through Harry’s shouts of laughter.

  “Silence!” cried Dorothy, rising, flushed and furious. “Is this a corn-feast, that you all sit yelping in a circle? Ruyven, hold that door, and see that no one follows us—”

  “What for?” demanded Ruyven, rising. “If you mean to keep our cousin Ormond to yourself—”

  “I wish to discuss secrets with my cousin Ormond,” said Dorothy, loftily, and stepped from her chair, nose in the air, and that heavy-lidded, insolent glance which once before had withered Ruyven, and now withered him again.

  “We will go to the play-room,” she whispered, passing me; “that room has a bolt; they’ll all be kicking at the door presently. Follow me.”

  Ere we had reached the head of the stairs we heard a yell, a rush of feet, and she laughed, crying: “Did I not say so? They are after us now full bark! Come!”

  She caught my hand in hers and sped up the few remaining steps, then through the upper hallway, guiding me the while her light feet flew; and I, embarrassed, bewildered, half laughing, half shamed to go a-racing through a strange house in such absurd a fashion.

  “Here!” she panted, dragging me into a great, bare chamber and bolting the door, then leaned breathless against the wall to listen as the chase galloped up, clamoring, kicking and beating on panel and wall, baffled.

  “They’re raging to lose their new cousin,” she breathed, smiling across at me with a glint of pride in her eyes. “They all think mightily of you, and now they’ll be mad to follow you like hound-pups the whip, all day long.” She tossed her head. “They’re good lads, and Cecile is a sweet child, too, but they must be made to understand that there are moments when you and I desire to be alone together.”

  “Of course,” I said, gravely.

  “You and I have much to consider, much to discuss in these uncertain days,” she said, confidently. “And we cannot babble matters of import to these children—”

  “I’m seventeen!” howled Ruyven, through the key-hole. “Dorothy’s not eighteen till next month, the little fool—”

  “Don’t mind him,” said Dorothy, raising her voice for Ruyven’s benefit. “A lad who listens to his elders through a key-hole is not fit for serious—”

  A heavy assault on the door drowned Dorothy’s voice. She waited calmly until the uproar had subsided.

  “Let us sit by the window,” she said, “and I will tell you how we Varicks stand betwixt the deep sea and the devil.”

  “I wish to come in!” shouted Ruyven, in a threatening voice. Dorothy laughed, and pointed to a great arm-chair of leather and oak. “I will sit there; place it by the window, cousin.”

  I placed the chair for her; she seated herself with unconscious grace, and motioned me to bring another chair for myself.

  “Are you going to let me in?” cried Ruyven.

  “Oh, go to the—” began Dorothy, then flushed and glanced at me, asking pardon in a low voice.

  A nice parent, Sir Lupus, with every child in his family ready to swear like Flanders troopers at the first breath!

  Half reclining in her chair, limbs comfortably extended, Dorothy crossed her ankles and clasped her hands behind her head, a picture of indolence in every line and curve, from satin shoon to the dull gold of her hair, which, as I have said, the powder scarcely frosted.

  “To comprehend properly this war,” she mused, more to herself than to me, “I suppose it is necessary to understand matters which I do not understand; how it chanced that our King lost his city of Boston, and why he has not long since sent his soldiers here into our county of Tryon.”

  “Too many rebels, cousin,” I suggested, flippantly. She disregarded me, continuing quietly;

  “But this much, however, I do understand, that our province of New York is the centre of all this trouble; that the men of Tryon hold the last pennyweight, and that the balanced scales will tip only when we patroons cast in our fortunes, ... either with our King or with the rebel Congress which defies him. I think our hearts, not our interests, must guide us in this affair, which touches our honor.”

  Such pretty eloquence, thoughtful withal, was not what I had looked for in this new cousin of mine — this free-tongued maid, who, like a painted peach-fruit all unripe, wears the gay livery of maturity, tricking the eye with a false ripeness.

  “I have thought,” she said, “that if the issues of this war depend on us, we patroons should not draw sword too hastily — yet not to sit like house-cats blinking at this world-wide blaze, but, in the full flood of the crisis, draw! — knowing of our own minds on which side lies the right.”

  “Who taught you this?” I asked, surprised to over-bluntness.

  “Who taught me? What? To think?” She laughed. “Solitude is a rare spur to thought. I listen to the gentlemen who talk with father; and I would gladly join and have my say, too, but that they treat me like a fool, and I have my questions for my pains. Yet I swear I am dowered with more sense than Sir John Johnson, with his pale eyes and thick, white flesh, and his tarnished honor to dog him like the shadow of a damned man sold to Satan—”

  “Is he dishonored?”

  “Is a parole broken a dishonor? The Boston people took him and placed him on his honor to live at Johnson Hall and do no meddling. And now he’s fled to Fort Niagara to raise the Mohawks. Is that honorable?”

  After a moment I said: “But a moment since you told me that Sir John comes here.”

  She nodded. “He comes and gees in secret with young Walter Butler — one of your Ormond-Butlers, cousin — and old John Butler, his father, Colonel of the Rangers, who boast they mean to scalp the whole of Tryon County ere this blood-feud is ended. Oh, I have heard them talk and talk, drinking o’ nights in the gun-room, and the escort’s horses stamping at the porch with a man to each horse, to hold the poor brutes’ noses lest they should neigh and wake the woods. Councils of war, they call them, these revels; but they end ever the same, with Sir John borne off to bed too drunk to curse the slaves who shoulder his fat bulk, and Walter Butler, sullen, stunned by wine, a brooding thing of malice carved in stone; and father roaring his same old songs, and beating time with his long pipe till the stem snaps, and he throws the glowing bowl at Cato—”

  “Dorothy, Dorothy,” I said, “are these the scenes you find already too familiar?”

  “Stale as last month’s loaf in a ratty cupboard.”

  “Do they not offend you?”

  “Oh, I am no prude—”

  “Do you mean to say Sir Lupus sanctions it?”

  “What? My presence? Oh, I amuse them; they dress me in Ruyven’s clothes and have me to wine — lacking a tenor voice for their songs — and at first, long ago, their wine made me stupid, and they found rare sport in baiting me; but now they tumble, one by one, ere the wine’s fire touches my face, and father swears there is no man in County Tryon can keep our company o’ nights and show a steady pair of legs like mine to bear him bedwards.”

  After a moment’s silence I said: “Are these your Northern customs?”

  “They are ours — and the others of our kind. I hear the plain folk of the country speak ill of us for the free life we lead at home — I mean the Palatines and the canting Dutch, not our tenants, though what even they may think of the manor house and of us I can only suspect, for they are all rebels at heart, Sir John says, and wear blue noses at the first run o’ king’s cider.”

  She gave a reckless laugh and crossed her knees, looking at me under half-veiled lids, smooth and pure as a child’s.

  “Food for the devil, they dub us in the Palatine church,” she added, yawning, till I could see all her small, white teeth set in rose.

  A nice nest of kinsmen had I uncovered in this hard, gray Northern forest! The Lord knows, we of the South do little penance for the pleasures a free life brings us under the
Southern stars, yet such license as this is not to our taste, and I think a man a fool to teach his children to review with hardened eyes home scenes suited to a tavern.

  Yet I was a guest, having accepted shelter and eaten salt; and I might not say my mind, even claiming kinsman’s privilege to rebuke what seemed to me to touch the family honor.

  Staring through the unwashed window-pane, moodily brooding on what I had learned, I followed impatiently the flight of those small, gray swallows of the North, colorless as shadows, whirling in spirals above the cold chimneys, to tumble in like flakes of gray soot only to drift out again, wind — blown, aimless, irrational, senseless things. And again that hatred seized me for all this pale Northern world, where the very birds gyrated like moon-smitten sprites, and the white spectre of virtue sat amid orgies where bloodless fools caroused.

  “Are you homesick, cousin?” she asked.

  “Ay — if you must know the truth!” I broke out, not meaning to say my fill and ease me. “This is not the world; it is a gray inferno, where shades rave without reason, where there is no color, no repose, nothing but blankness and unreason, and an air that stings all living life to spasms of unrest. Your sun is hot, yet has no balm; your winds plague the skin and bones of a man; the forests are unfriendly; the waters all hurry as though bewitched! Brooks are cold and tasteless as the fog; the unsalted, spiceless air clogs the throat and whips the nerves till the very soul in the body strains, fluttering to be free! How can decent folk abide here?”

  I hesitated, then broke into a harsh laugh, for my cousin sat staring at me, lips parted, like a fair shape struck into marble by a breath of magic.

  “Pardon,” I said. “Here am I, kindly invited to the council of a family whose interests lie scattered through estates from the West Indies to the Canadas, and I requite your hospitality by a rudeness I had not believed was in me.”

  I asked her pardon again for the petty outburst of an untravelled youngster whose first bath in this Northern air-ocean had chilled his senses and his courtesy.

  “There is a land,” I said, “where lately the gray bastions of St. Augustine reflected the gold and red of Spanish banners, and the blue sea mirrors a bluer sky. We Ormonds came there from the Western Indies, then drifted south, skirting the Matanzas to the sea islands on the Halifax, where I was born, an Englishman on Spanish soil, and have lived there, knowing no land but that of Florida, treading no city streets save those walled lanes of ancient Augustine. All this vast North is new to me, Dorothy; and, like our swamp-haunting Seminoles, my rustic’s instinct finds hostility in what is new and strange, and I forget my breeding in this gray maze which half confuses, half alarms me.”

  “I am not offended,” she said, smiling, “only I wonder what you find distasteful here. Is it the solitude?”

  “No, for we also have that.”

  “Is it us?”

  “Not you, Dorothy, nor yet Ruyven, nor the others. Forget what I said. As the Spaniards have it, ‘Only a fool goes travelling,’ and I’m not too notorious for my wisdom, even in Augustine. If it be the custom of the people here to go mad, I’ll not sit in a corner croaking, ‘Repent and be wise!’ If the Varicks and the Butlers set the pace, I promise you to keep the quarry, Mistress Folly, in view — perhaps outfoot you all to Bedlam!... But, cousin, if you, too, run this uncoupled race with the pack, I mean to pace you, neck and neck, like a keen whip, ready to turn and lash the first who interferes with you.”

  “With me?” she repeated, smiling. “Am I a youngster to be coddled and protected? You have not seen our hunting. I lead, my friend; you follow.”

  She unclasped her arms, which till now had held her bright head cradled, and sat up, hands on her knees, grave as an Egyptian goddess guarding tombs.

  “I’ll wager I can outrun you, outshoot you, outride you, throw you at wrestle, cast the knife or hatchet truer than can you, catch more fish than you — and bigger ones at that!”

  With an impatient gesture, peculiarly graceful, like the half-salute of a friendly swordsman ere you draw and stand on guard:

  “Read the forest with me. I can outread you, sign for sign, track for track, trail in and trail out! The forest is to me Te-ka-on-do-duk [the place with a sign-post]. And when the confederacy speaks with five tongues, and every tongue split into five forked dialects, I make no answer in finger-signs, as needs must you, my cousin of the Se-a-wan-ha-ka [the land of shells]. We speak to the Iroquois with our lips, we People of the Morning. Our hands are for our rifles! Hiro [I have spoken]!”

  She laughed, challenging me with eye and lip.

  “And if you defy me to a bout with bowl or bottle I will not turn coward, neah-wen-ha [I thank you]! but I will drink with you and let my father judge whose legs best carry him to bed! Koue! Answer me, my cousin, Tahoontowhe [the night hawk].”

  We were laughing now, yet I knew she had spoken seriously, and to plague her I said: “You boast like a Seminole chanting the war-song.”

  “I dare you to cast the hatchet!” she cried, reddening.

  “Dare me to a trial less rude,” I protested, laughing the louder.

  “No, no! Come!” she said, impatient, unbolting the heavy door; and, willy-nilly, I followed, meeting the pack all sulking on the stairs, who rose to seize me as I came upon them.

  “Let him alone!” cried Dorothy; “he says he can outcast me with the war-hatchet! Where is my hatchet? Sammy! Ruyven! find hatchets and come to the painted post.”

  “Sport!” cried Harry, leaping down-stairs before us. “Cecile, get your hatchet — get mine, too! Come on, Cousin Ormond, I’ll guide you; it’s the painted post by the spring — and hark, Cousin George, if you beat her I’ll give you my silvered powder-horn!”

  Cecile and Sammy hastened up, bearing in their arms the slim war-hatchets, cased in holsters of bright-beaded hide, and we took our weapons and started, piloted by Harry through the door, and across the shady, unkempt lawn to the stockade gate.

  Dorothy and I walked side by side, like two champions in amiable confab before a friendly battle, intimately aloof from the gaping crowd which follows on the flanks of all true greatness.

  Out across the deep-green meadow we marched, the others trailing on either side with eager advice to me, or chattering of contests past, when Walter Butler and Brant — he who is now war-chief of the loyal Mohawks — cast hatchets for a silver girdle, which Brant wears still; and the patroon, and Sir John, and all the great folk from Guy Park were here a-betting on the Mohawk, which, they say, so angered Walter Butler that he lost the contest. And that day dated the silent enmity between Brant and Butler, which never healed.

  This I gathered amid all their chit-chat while we stood under the willows near the spring, watching Ruyven pace the distance from the post back across the greensward towards us.

  Then, making his heel-mark in the grass, he took a green willow wand and set it, all feathered, in the turf.

  “Is it fair for Dorothy to cast her own hatchet?” asked Harry.

  “Give me Ruyven’s,” she said, half vexed. Aught that touched her sense of fairness sent a quick flame of anger to her cheeks which I admired.

  “Keep your own hatchet, cousin,” I said; “you may have need of it.”

  “Give me Ruyven’s hatchet,” she repeated, with a stamp of her foot which Ruyven hastened to respect. Then she turned to me, pink with defiance:

  “It is always a stranger’s honor,” she said; so I advanced, drawing my light, keen weapon from its beaded sheath, which I had belted round me; and Ruyven took station by the post, ten paces to the right.

  The post was painted scarlet, ringed with white above; below, in outline, the form of a man — an Indian — with folded arms, also drawn in white paint. The play was simple; the hatchet must imbed its blade close to the outlined shape, yet not “wound” or “draw blood.”

  “Brant at first refused to cast against that figure,” said Harry, laughing. “He consented only because the figure, though Indian, was painted white.”


  I scarce heard him as I stood measuring with my eyes the distance. Then, taking one step forward to the willow wand, I hurled the hatchet, and it landed quivering in the shoulder of the outlined figure on the post.

  “A wound!” cried Cecile; and, mortified, I stepped back, biting my lip, while Harry notched one point against me on the willow wand and Dorothy, tightening her girdle, whipped out her bright war-axe and stepped forward. Nor did she even pause to scan the post; her arm shot up, the keen axe-blade glittered and flew, sparkling and whirling, biting into the post, chuck! handle a-quiver. And you could not have laid a June willow-leaf betwixt the Indian’s head and the hatchet’s blade.

  She turned to me, lips parted in a tormenting smile, and I praised the cast and took my hatchet from Ruyven to try once more. Yet again I broke skin on the thigh of the pictured captive; and again the glistening axe left Dorothy’s hand, whirring to a safe score, a grass-stem’s width from the Indian’s head.

  I understood that I had met my master, yet for the third time strove; and my axe whistled true, standing point-bedded a finger’s breadth from the cheek.

  “Can you mend that, Dorothy?” I asked, politely.

  She stood smiling, silent, hatchet poised, then nodded, launching the axe. Crack! came the handles of the two hatchets, and rattled together. But the blade of her hatchet divided the space betwixt my blade and the painted face, nor touched the outline by a fair hair’s breadth.

  Astonishment was in my face, not chagrin, but she misread me, for the triumph died out in her eyes, and, “Oh!” she said; “I did not mean to win — truly I did not,” offering her hands in friendly amend.

  But at my quick laugh she brightened, still holding my hands, regarding me with curious eyes, brilliant as amethysts.

  “I was afraid I had hurt your pride — before these silly children—” she began.

  “Children!” shouted Ruyven. “I bet you ten shillings he can outcast you yet!”

  “Done!” she flashed, then, all in a breath, smiled adorably and shook her head. “No, I’ll not bet. He could win if he chose. We understand each other, my cousin Ormond and I,” and gave my hands a little friendly shake with both of hers, then dropped them to still Ruyven’s clamor for a wager.

 

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