The Leveretts were at their breakfast
in the large sunny room in Derby Street. It had
an outlook on the garden, and beyond the garden was
a lane, well used and to be a street itself in the
future. Then, at quite a distance, a strip of
woods on a rise of ground, that still further enhanced
the prospect. The sun slanted in at the windows
on one side, there was nothing to shut it out.
It would go all round the house now, and seem to end
where it began, in the garden.
Chilian was very fond of it.
He always brought his book to the table; he liked
to eat slowly, to gaze out and digest one or two thoughts
at his leisure, as well as the delightful breakfast
set before him. He was a man of delicate tastes
and much refinement, for with all the New England
sturdiness, hardness one might say, there was in many
families a strain of what we might term high breeding.
His face, with its clear-cut features, indicated this.
His hair was rather light, fine, with a few waves
in it that gave it a slightly tumbled look far
from any touch of disorder. His eyes were a deep,
clear blue, his complexion fair enough for a woman.
His father and grandfather had lived
and died in this house. He had bought out his
sister’s share when she married, and she had
gone to Providence. He had asked the two relatives
of his father termed cousins by courtesy to
continue housekeeping. They were the last of their
family and in rather straitened circumstances.
Miss Elizabeth was nearing sixty, tall, straight,
fair, and rather austere-looking. Eunice was
two years younger, shorter, a trifle stouter, with
a rounder face, and a mouth that wore a certain sweetness
when it did not actually smile.
Chilian was past thirty. He was
a Harvard graduate, and now went in two days each
week for teaching classes. His father had left
some business interests in Salem, rather distasteful
to him, but he was a strictly conscientious person
and attended to them, if with a sort of mental protest.
For the rest, he was a bookworm and revelled in intellectual
pursuits.
The day previous had been desperately
stormy, this late March morning was simply glorious.
The mail, which came late in the afternoon, had not
been delivered, causing no uneasiness, as letters were
not daily visitors. But now the serving-man,
with a gentle rap, opened the door and said briefly:
“Letters.”
Eunice rose and took them.
“An East Indian one for you,
Chilian, and why one from Boston for
you, Elizabeth. It is Cousin Giles’ hand.”
Elizabeth reached for it. They
were both so interested that they took no note of
Chilian’s missive. She cut carefully around
the big wafer he had used. It was a large letter
sheet, quite blue and not of over-fine quality.
Envelopes had not come in and there was quite an art
in folding a letter unfolding it as well.
“Really what has started Cousin
Giles? I hope no one is dead ”
“There would have been a black seal.”
“Oh, yes, m’m;”
making a curious sound with closed lips. “They
are well. Oh, the Thatchers have been visiting
them and are coming out here for a week why,
on Saturday, and to-day is Thursday. Chilian,
do you hear that?”
“What?” he asked, closing his book over
his own letter.
“Why, the Thatchers are
coming on Saturday, not a long notice, and
I don’t know how many. They have had a
nice time in Boston and Cousin Giles has
been beauing them round and seems to like it.
He might have sent you word on Tuesday, when you were
in;” and Elizabeth’s tone expressed a
grievance.
“And the house not cleaned! It’s
been so cold.”
“The house is always clean.
Don’t, I beg of you, Cousin Bessy, turn it upside
down and scrub and scour, and wear yourself out and
take a bad cold. There are two guest chambers,
and I suppose half a dozen more might be made ready.”
“That’s the man of it.
I don’t believe a man would ever see dirt until
some day when he had to dig himself out, or call upon
the women folks to do it.”
Elizabeth always softened, in spite
of her austerity, when he called her Bessy. The
newer generation indulged in household diminutives
occasionally.
“Well, there is to be no regular
house-cleaning. We shall want fires a good six
weeks yet.”
“I don’t see why Cousin
Giles couldn’t have said how many there were.
Let me see, Rachel Leverett, who married the Thatcher,
was your father’s cousin. They went up
in Vermont. Then they came to Concord. He” which
meant the head of the house “went
to the State Legislature after the war. He had
some sons married. Why, I haven’t seen them
in years.”
“It will be just like meeting
strangers,” declared Eunice. “It’s
almost as if we kept an inn.”
Chilian turned. “When I
am in Boston to-morrow I will hunt up Cousin Giles.”
“Oh, that will be good of you.”
He slipped his letter into the Latin
book he had been going over, and with a slight inclination
of the head left the room. The hall was wide,
though it ended just beyond this door, where it led
to the kitchen. The woodwork was of oak, darkened
much by the years that had passed over it. The
broad staircase showed signs of the many feet that
had trodden up and down.
Chilian’s study was directly
over the living-room, and next to the sleeping-chamber.
This part had been added to the main house, but that
was years ago. Bookshelves were ranged on two
sides, but the windows interfered with their course
around, two on each of the other sides. There
was a wide fireplace between those at the west, and
under them low closets, with cushions ancestors
of useful window-seats. A large easy-chair, covered
with Cordovan leather, another curiously carved with
a straight narrow strip up the back, set off by the
side carving. The seat was broad and cushioned.
Then one from France, as you could tell by the air
and style, that had been in a palace. A low splint
rocker, and one with a high back and comfortable cushions,
inviting one to take a nap.
The bookcases went about two-thirds
of the way up and were ornamented by articles beautiful
and grotesque from almost every land, for there had
been seafaring men in the Leverett family, and more
than one home in Salem could boast of treasures of
this sort.
Chilian stirred the fire, sending
a shower of sparks up the chimney, and put on a fresh
log. Then he settled himself in his chair and
fingered his letter in an absent way. The last
time Anthony wrote he vaguely suggested changes and
chances and the uncertainty of life, rather despondent
for a brisk business man who was always seeing opportunities
at money-making. Had he been unfortunate in some
of his ventures? And it was odd in him to write
so soon again. Not that they were ever frequent
correspondents.
He opened the letter slowly.
It was tied about with a thread of waxed silk and
sealed, so he cut about the seal deliberately; he had
a delicate carefulness in all his ways that was rather
womanly. Then unfolding it, he began to read.
Was this what the previous letter
had meant? Was Anthony Leverett nearing the end,
counting his days, finishing up his earthly work, and
delegating it to other hands? There was something
pathetic in it, and the trust in the uprightness and
honor that Anthony Leverett reposed in him touched
him keenly. But this part surprised and, at first,
annoyed him. He drew his fine brows in a repellent
sort of frown.
“Do you remember, Chilian,
when you were a lad of eighteen, in your
second year at Harvard, you came to Salem
to recruit after a period of rather severe
study? And you met Alletta Orne, who was
four-and-twenty and engaged to me. In
some sort of fashion we were all related.
Your father had been like a father to me
in my later boyhood. And, with a young
man’s fervor, you fell in love with her.
I was sorry then for any pain you suffered,
I am glad now; for there is no one else
in the wide world I would as soon trust
her child and mine to.
“We had been away nearly
three years, when we came back, and the
baby was born in the house endeared to me
by many tender recollections. You were away then,
but on our second visit we were the most congenial
friends again. I did not think then it would
be our last meeting. I had meant, after making
my fortune, to return and end my days in my birthplace.
My greatest interest was in the commercial
house I had established. My first mate, John
Corwin, took my place and sailed the vessel.
Then my dear wife died, and I had only my
little girl left.
“I could hardly believe
six months ago that I must die. Should
I return, or remain here and sleep beside
the one who had filled my soul with her serene
and lovely life and her blessed memory? I could
not endure the thought of leaving her precious
body here alone. So I chose to remain. And
now I send my little girl to your care and guardianship
without even consulting you. She is amply
provided for, though the business this side of
the world cannot be settled in some time. I send
her with a trusty maid and Captain Corwin, because
I do not want her to remember the end. Some
day you can tell her I am sleeping beside her dear
mother and that we are together in the Better Land.
She has been separated considerably from me of
late, I have had to be journeying about
on business, therefore it will
not come so hard to her, and though children
do not forget, the sorrow softens and has
a tender vagueness from the hand of time.
“So I give my little girl
to you. If so be you should marry and
have children of your own, she will not
be crowded out, I know. In the course of years, for
girls grow rapidly up to womanhood, she
may love and marry. Direct her a little
here and see that no one takes her for the mere
money. I want her to know the sweetness and richness
of a true satisfying love.”
All important papers, and a sort of
diary Anthony Leverett had kept, were to come in the
vessel that would bring the little girl in the charge
of Captain Corwin.
Chilian Leverett sat for a long while
with the letter in his hand, until the log broke in
the middle and one end fell over the andiron.
Then he started suddenly.
Had he been dreaming of the sweetness
of the woman who had so captivated his youthful fancy,
almost a dozen years agone? He never thought she
had led him astray, and had no blame for her.
Perhaps the love for her betrothed had so permeated
her whole being that she shed an exquisitely fascinating
sweetness all about. He was to her as if he had
been her betrothed’s younger brother. And
when the engagement was confessed he allowed himself
no reprehensible longing for the woman so soon to be
another’s. All his instincts were pure and
high, perhaps rather too idealized, though there was
much strength and heroism in the old Puritan blood.
Right was right in those days. Lines were sharply
drawn among those of the old stock.
But there had been years of what one
might call living for self, indulgence in studious
habits and tastes and the higher intellectual life,
much solitary dreaming, although he was by no means
a recluse. And to have a little girl come into
his life! He would have liked a boy better, he
thought. The boy would be out of doors, playing
with mates. And now he bethought himself how
few small children there were in his branch of the
Leverett line. Some of the men and women had not
married. His brother and one sister had died
in childhood. The first cousins were nearly all
older than he, many of them had dropped out of life.
A little girl! No chance to decline the trust well,
he would hardly have done that. He knew Anthony
Leverett had counted on a serene old age in his native
town. And he was not much past middle life.
What had befallen him?
Well, there was nothing to be done.
He read the letter over again. Then he turned
to some papers to compose his mind. There was
a stir in the next room, his sleeping-chamber.
He always opened the windows and closed the door between.
After the dishes were washed and the dining-room and
hall brushed up, Elizabeth came upstairs and made the
two beds. When he had gone to Cambridge she opened
the door between. So she did not disturb him
now, but crossed the hall and inspected the two guest-chambers.
She had swept them a week or so ago and had settled
in her mind that they would do until house-cleaning
time. To be sure, if she cleaned them now they
would need it when the guests were gone. And
Chilian had a man’s objection to house-cleaning.
It was hardly time to put away blankets. She
wished she knew how many guests there would be.
The rooms were full of old Colonial
furniture that had been in the family for generations.
Every spring Elizabeth polished the mahogany until
it shone. She dusted now, though there was hardly
a speck visible. The snow through the winter
had laid it, and the spring rains had not allowed
it to rear its head.
Chilian put on his coat presently
and sallied out for his morning exercise. The
family had been connected with shipbuilding to a certain
extent, and there was the old warehouse where vessels
came in with their precious cargoes from civilized
and barbaric lands. For at the close of the Revolutionary
War the men of note, many of whom had not disdained
privateering, found themselves in possession of idle
fleets, that with their able seamen could outsail
almost anything afloat. So they struck out for
new ventures in unknown seas and new channels of trade.
Calcutta, Bombay, Zanzibar, Madagascar, Batavia, and
other ports came to know the American flag and the
busy enterprising traders.
But the old Salem that was once the
capital of the state, the Salem of John Endicott and
Roger Williams, of stern Puritanism, of terrible witchcraft
horrors, and then of the sturdy and vigorous stand
in her differences with the mother country, her patriotism
through the darkest days, was fast fading away, just
as this grand commercial epoch was destined to merge
into science and educational fame later on, and give
to the world some master spirits. But as he wended
his way hither and thither in a desultory fashion,
one thought almost like spoken words kept running
through his mind “A little girl a
little girl in Old Salem” for the
almost two hundred years gave her the right to that
eminence, and a little girl from a foreign land seemed
incongruous. Not but that there were little girls
in Salem, but their life-lines did not touch his.
And this one came so near, for the sake of both parents
he had loved.
When he came in to dinner, he had
made up his mind to say nothing of his letter until
the guests had come and gone. He did not wish
to be deluged with questions.
He hunted up Cousin Giles the next
day, who was quite a real-estate dealer, investing
his own and other people’s money in sound mortgages,
who had been a widower so long that he had quite gone
back to bachelorhood.
And he found three Thatcher cousins a
widow, a married one, and a single one, the youngest
of the family, but past girlhood. He was asked
to take luncheon with them and they proved quite agreeable
and intelligent, and much pleased at the prospect
of seeing Elizabeth and Eunice Leverett.
“We have been hunting up several
of the Boston relatives,” said Miss Thatcher,
with a kind of winsome smile. “Cousin Giles
has been a good directory. We’ve kept in
with so few of them. Father hunted up some of
them while he was in the Legislature, but they are
so scattered about and many of them dead. Mother
was your father’s cousin, I believe.”
Chilian gave a graceful inclination of the head.
“Elizabeth and Eunice visited
us years ago, along after the war when I was first
left a widow,” explained Mrs. Brent. “Henry
went all through it, but was worn out, and died in
’88. But I’ve two nice sons, who are
a great comfort. Father was very good to them
and me. And they’re both promising farmers.”
“I tell her that’s a good
deal to be thankful for,” remarked Cousin Giles.
“It is indeed,” commented Chilian.
“And I have a lad who is all
for study and wants to come in to Harvard. He
has been teaching school this winter. His father’s
quite set against it, and I don’t know how it
will end. He will be only nineteen in August,
and his father thinks he has a hold on him two years
longer.”
Mrs. Drayton looked up rather appealingly.
“If his mind is made up to that,
he will work his way through,” said Chilian,
and he thought he should like to know the boy.
“You see the next two are girls
and they can’t help much about a farm.
Father really needs him. And I seem to stand between
two fires. His teaching term will end in May,
but he has planned to take the school next winter.
He has made quite a bit of money.”
Chilian thought he would be a lad
fully worth helping, and made a mental note of it.
He liked the mother.
It was settled that they would reach
Salem about noon in the stage, the only mode of conveyance,
and they parted with a pleased friendliness.
Chilian rehearsed the interview at
home to the great delight of the household. Indeed,
he had been very well pleased with the prospective
visitors and he felt rather thankful for the respite
from the shadow the coming event was casting.
A little girl! It did annoy him.
He did not allow it to interfere with
his duties as host, however. The three ladies
had a most delightful visit at Salem, looking up points
of interest and hearing old history concerning the
Leveretts. Chilian’s father had jotted
down many facts. There were seafaring uncles,
who had brought home trophies; there were men in the
family, who had died for their country if they had
not filled eminent positions; others who had.
How this branch of the family seemed to have dwindled
away!
Serena Thatcher was more than pleased
with her cousin, though she felt somewhat awed by
his attainments and his rather punctilious ways.
Mrs. Brent set him down as a good deal of a Miss Nancy.
But the ladies had a delightful time going over family
histories and getting relationships disentangled.
When the eventful day of parting came
it brought a very real sorrow. They made promises
that they would renew their meetings and keep each
other in mind.
It was Saturday evening when the Leverett
household sat around the cheerful fire in the cozy
room where the small family gathered on this evening
of the week with their work all done, after the fashion
of the past, still strictly observed by many of the
older Puritan families. The industrious ladies
sat with folded hands. Sometimes Chilian read
aloud from a volume of the divines who had finished
their good fight.
This night he was gazing idly in the
fire, the lines in his face deepening now and then.
“I suppose he is tired
with all the talk, and rambles, and confusion of the
week,” Elizabeth thought, stealing furtive glances
at him.
He straightened himself presently
and made a pretence of clearing his throat, as an
embarrassed person often does.
“I have something to tell you,”
he began. “I thought I would not disturb
you while our relatives were here. We found enough
to talk about;” with a short half-laugh.
“And it tired you out, I know.
We live so quietly that such an event quite upsets
us,” Eunice said in a gentle, deprecating tone.
“It was very pleasant,”
he added. “I was a good deal interested
in Anthony Drayton. But this is something quite
different. Can you recall that I had a letter
from the East Indies the morning the word came from
Cousin Giles?”
“Why, yes!” Elizabeth
started in surprise. “I had really forgotten
about it. Business, I suppose, with Anthony Leverett.
Why, I think it is high time he came home.”
Chilian sighed. “I am afraid though
I cannot see why we should fear so much to enter the
other portal, since it is the destiny of all, and we
believe in a better world. He was hopelessly ill
when he wrote and was winding up some business matters.
He is a brave man to meet death so composedly.
The only pang is parting from his child.”
“Oh, his little girl! Let
me see she must be eight or nine years old.
What will become of her?”
“He makes me executor and guardian
of the child. She was to start three weeks after
his letter with Captain Corwin in the Flying Star.
That will be due, if it meets with no mishap, from
the middle to the last of April.”
“But she doesn’t come
alone!” ejaculated Elizabeth in surprise.
“Yes. He wishes to be buried
there beside his wife. And he does not want her
to have the remembrance of his death. So he sends
her with the woman who has been her nurse and maid
the last three years, an Englishwoman.”
“Of all things! I wonder
what will come next! We seem in the line of surprises.
And it’s queer they should happen together.
A little girl! Chilian, do you like it?
Why, it will fairly turn the house upside down!”
There was an accent of protest in
Elizabeth’s tone, showing plainly her unwillingness
to accept the situation.
“One little girl can’t
move much furniture about;” with a sound of humor
in his voice.
“Oh, you know what I mean not
actually dragging sofas and tables about, but she
will chairs, as you’ll see. And lots of
other things. Look at the Rendall children.
The house always looks as if it had been stirred up
with the pudding-stick, and Sally Rendall spends good
half her time looking for things they have carted
off. Tom and Anstice were digging up the path
the day we called, and what do you suppose they had!
The tablespoons. And I’ll venture to say
they were left out of doors.”
“There are so many of them,”
Chilian said, as if in apology.
“And I don’t see how we
can keep this child away from them. It isn’t
as if they were low-down people. Sally’s
father having been a major in the war, and the Rendalls
are good stock. Let me see what’s
her name? Her mother was called Letty.”
“Cynthia. She was named
for my mother.” Chilian’s voice had
a reverent softness in it.
“I always thought it a pretty name,” said
Eunice.
“And I’ve heard people call it ‘Cyn.’
I do abominate nicknames.”
Elizabeth uttered this with a good
deal of vigor. Then she remembered she quite
liked Bessy.
No one spoke for some moments.
Chilian thought of the sister, whose brief married
life had ended in her pretty home at Providence, and
how she looked in her coffin with her baby sheltered
by one arm. The picture came before him vividly.
Elizabeth liked cleanliness and order.
It was natural after a long practice in it. Chilian’s
particular ways suited her. Year after year had
settled them perhaps she had settled him
more definitely, as he liked the way. Eunice
was thinking of the little girl who had neither father
or mother. She had some unfulfilled dreams.
In her youth there had been a lover, and a wedding
planned when he came home from his voyage. She
had begun to “lay by” for housekeeping.
And there were some pretty garments in the trunk upstairs,
packed away with other articles. The lover was
lost at sea, as befell many another New England coast
woman.
She had hoped against hope for several
years men were sometimes restored as by
a miracle but he never came. So she
sometimes dreamed of what might have been, of home
and children, and it kept her heart tender. Anthony’s
little girl would make a sight of trouble, she could
see that, but a little girl about would be a great
pleasure to her at least. She glanced
furtively at Elizabeth, then at Chilian. She could
not comfort either of them with this sudden glow and
warmth that thrilled through her veins.
“Well, we will be through with
house-cleaning before she comes,” said the practical
and particular housewife. Chilian simply sighed.
It was the usual spring ordeal, and did end.
But who could predict the ending of the other?