Early in the fresh April morning,
the party at Riverside manor were congregated in the
hall, doing full justice to Aunt Nancy’s substantial
breakfast.
“Oriana,” said Beverly,
as he paused from demolishing a well-buttered batter
cake, and handed his cup for a second supply of the
fragrant Mocha, “I will leave it to your savoir
faire to transform our friend Arthur into a thorough
southerner, before we yield him back to his Green
Mountains. He is already half a convert to our
institutions, and will give you not half so much trouble
as that obstinate Harold Hare.”
She slightly colored at the name, but quietly remarked:
“Mr. Wayne must look about him
and judge from his own observation, not my arguments.
I certainly do not intend to annoy him during his visit,
with political discussions.”
“And yet you drove Harold wild
with your flaming harangues, and gave him more logic
in an afternoon ride than he had ever been bored with
in Cambridge in a month.”
“Only when he provoked and invited
the assault,” she replied, smiling. “But
I trust, Mr. Wayne, that the cloud which is gathering
above our country will not darken the sunshine of
your visit at Riverside manor. It is unfortunate
that you should have come at an unpropitious moment,
when we cannot promise you that perhaps there will
not be some cold looks here and there among the townsfolk,
to give you a false impression of a Virginia welcome.”
“Not at all, Oriana; Arthur
will have smiles and welcome enough here at the manor
house to make him proof against all the hard looks
in Richmond. I prevailed on him to come at all
hazards, and we are bound to have a good time and
don’t want you to discourage us; eh, Arthur?”
“I am but little of a politician,
Miss Weems,” said Arthur, “although I
take our country’s differences much at heart.
I shall surely not provoke discussion with you, like
our friend Harold, upon an unpleasant subject, while
you give me carte blanche to enjoy your conversation
upon themes more congenial to my nature.”
She inclined her head with rather
more of gravity than the nature of the conversation
warranted, and her lips were slightly compressed as
she observed that Arthur’s blue eyes were fixed
pensively, but intently, on her face.
The meal being over, Oriana and Wayne
strolled on the lawn toward the river bank, while
the carriage was being prepared for a morning drive.
They stood on the soft grass at the water’s edge,
and as Arthur gazed with a glow of pleasure at the
beautiful prospect before him, his fair companion
pointed out with evident pride the many objects of
beauty and interest that were within view on the opposite
bank.
“Are you a sailor, Mr. Wayne?
If so, we must have out the boat this afternoon, and
you will find some fairy nooks beyond the bend that
will repay you for exploring them, if you have a taste
for a lovely waterscape. I know you are proud
of the grand old hills of your native State, but we
have something to boast of too in our Virginia scenery.”
“If you will be my helmswoman,
I can imagine nothing more delightful than the excursion
you propose. But I am inland bred, and must place
myself at the mercy of your nautical experience.”
“Oh, I am a skillful captain,
Mr. Wayne, and will make a good sailor of you before
you leave us. Mr. Hare will tell you that I am
to be trusted with the helm, even when the wind blows
right smartly, as it sometimes does even on that now
placid stream. But with his memories of the magnificent
Hudson, he was too prone to quiz me about what he called
our pretty rivulet. You know him, do you not?”
“Oh, well. He was Beverly’s
college-mate and mine, though somewhat our senior.”
“And your warm friend, I believe?”
“Yes, and well worthy our friendship.
Somewhat high-tempered and quick-spoken, but with
a heart like your brother’s, Miss
Weems, as generous and frank as a summer day.”
“I do not think him high-tempered
beyond the requisites of manhood,” she replied,
with something like asperity in her tone. “I
cannot endure your meek, mild mannered men, who seem
to forget their sex, and almost make me long to change
my own with them, that their sweet dispositions may
be better placed.”
He glanced at her with a somewhat
surprised air, that brought a slight blush to her
cheek; but he seemed unconscious of it, and said, almost
mechanically:
“And yet, that same high spirit,
which you prize so dearly, had, in his case, almost
caused you a severe affliction.”
“What do you mean?”
“Have you not heard how curiously
Beverly’s intimacy with Harold was brought about?
And yet it was not likely that he should have told
you, although I know no harm in letting you know.”
She turned toward him with an air
of attention, as if in expectation.
“It was simply this. Not
being class-mates, they had been almost strangers
to each other at college, until, by a mere accident,
an argument respecting your Southern institutions
led to an angry dispute, and harsh words passed between
them. Being both of the ardent temperament you
so much admire, a challenge ensued, and, in spite of
my entreaty and remonstrance, a duel. Your brother
was seriously wounded, and Harold, shocked beyond
expression, knelt by his side as he lay bleeding on
the sward, and bitterly accusing himself, begged his
forgiveness, and, I need not add, received it frankly.
Harold was unremitting in his attentions to your brother
during the period of his illness, and from the day
of that hostile meeting, the most devoted friendship
has existed between them. But it was an idle quarrel,
Miss Weems, and was near to have cost you an only
brother.”
She remained silent for a few moments,
and was evidently affected by the recital. Then
she spoke, softly as if communing with herself:
“Harold is a brave and noble fellow, and I thank
God that he did not kill my brother!” and a
bright tear rolled upon her cheek. She dashed
it away, almost angrily, and glancing steadily at
Arthur:
“Do you condemn duelling?”
“Assuredly.”
“But what would you have men
do in the face of insult? Would you not have
fought under the same provocation?”
“No, nor under any provocation.
I hold too sacred the life that God has given.
With God’s help, I shall not shed human blood,
except in the strict line of necessity and duty.”
“It is evident, sir, that you
hold your own life most sacred,” she said, with
a curl of her proud lip that was unmistakable.
She did not observe the pallor that
overspread his features, nor the expression, not of
anger, but of anguish, that settled upon his face,
for she had turned half away from him, and was gazing
vacantly across the river. There was an unpleasant
pause, which was broken by the noise of voices in
alarm near the house, the trampling of hoofs, and the
rattle of wheels.
The carriage had been standing at
the door, while Beverly was arranging some casual
business, which delayed him in his rooms. While
the attention of the groom in charge had been attracted
by some freak of his companions, a little black urchin,
not over five years of age, had clambered unnoticed
into the vehicle, and seizing the long whip, began
to flourish it about with all his baby strength.
The horses, which were high bred and spirited, had
become impatient, and feeling the lash, started suddenly,
jerking themselves free from the careless grasp of
the inattentive groom. The sudden shout of surprise
and terror that arose from the group of idle negroes,
startled the animals into a gallop, and they went
coursing, not along the road, but upon the lawn, straight
toward the river bank, which, in the line of their
course, was precipitous and rocky. As Oriana
and Arthur turned at the sound, they beheld the frightened
steeds plunging across the lawn, and upon the carriage
seat the little fellow who had caused the mischief
was crouching bewildered and helpless, and screaming
with affright. Oriana clasped her hands, and
cried tearfully:
“Oh! poor little Pomp will be killed!”
In fact the danger was imminent, for
the lawn at that spot merged into a rocky space, forming
a little bluff which overhung the stream some fifteen,
feet. Oriana’s hand was laid instinctively
upon Arthur’s shoulder, and with the other she
pointed, with a gesture of bewildered anxiety, at
the approaching vehicle. Arthur paused only long
enough to understand the situation, and then stepping
calmly a few paces to the left, stood directly in
the path of the rushing steeds.
“Oh, Mr. Wayne! no, no!”
cried Oriana, in a tone half of fear and half supplication;
but he stood there unmoved, with the same quiet, mournful
expression that he habitually wore. The horses
faltered somewhat when they became conscious of this
fixed, calm figure directly in their course.
They would have turned, but their impetus was too great,
and they swerved only enough to bring the head of
the off horse in a line with Arthur’s body.
As coolly as if he was taking up a favorite book,
but with a rapid movement, he grasped the rein below
the bit with both hands firmly, and swung upon it
with his whole weight. The frightened animal
turned half round, stumbled, and rolled upon his side,
his mate falling upon his knees beside him; the carriage
was overturned with a crash, and little Pompey pitched
out upon the greensward, unhurt.
By this time, Beverly, followed by
a crowd of excited negroes, had reached the spot.
“How is it, Arthur,” said
Beverly, placing his hand affectionately on his friend’s
shoulder, “are you hurt?”
“No,” he replied, the
melancholy look softening into a pleasant smile; but
as he rose and adjusted his disordered dress, he coughed
painfully the same dry, hacking cough that
had often made those who loved him turn to him with
an anxious look. It was evident that his delicate
frame was ill suited to such rough exercise.
“We shall be cheated out of
our ride this morning,” said Beverly, “for
that axle has been less fortunate than you, Arthur;
it is seriously hurt.”
They moved slowly toward the house,
Oriana looking silently at the grass as she walked
mechanically at her brother’s side. When
Arthur descended into the drawing-room, after having
changed his soiled apparel, he found her seated there
alone, by the casement, with her brow upon her hand.
He sat down at the table and glanced abstractedly
over the leaves of a scrap-book. Thus they sat
silently for a quarter hour, when she arose, and stood
beside him.
“Will you forgive me, Mr. Wayne?”
He looked up and saw that she had
been weeping. The haughty curl of the lip and
proud look from the eye were all gone, and her expression
was of humility and sorrow. She held out her
hand to him with an air almost of entreaty. He
raised it respectfully to his lips, and with the low,
musical voice, sadder than ever before, he said:
“I am sorry that you should
grieve about anything. There is nothing to forgive.
Let us forget it.”
“Oh, Mr. Wayne, how unkind I
have been, and how cruelly I have wronged you!”
She pressed his hand between both
her palms for a moment, and looked into his face,
as if studying to read if some trace of resentment
were not visible. But the blue eyes looked down
kindly and mournfully upon her, and bursting into
tears, she turned from him, and hurriedly left the
room.