The sun was lifting above the tree-tops
when the count’s valet called me that morning
at the Chateau Le Ray. Robins were calling under
my windows, and the groves rang with tournaments of
happy song. Of that dinner-party only the count
was at breakfast with me. We ate hurriedly,
and when we had risen the horses were at the door.
As to my own, a tall chestnut thoroughbred that Mr.
Parish had brought over from England, I never saw
him in finer fettle. I started Seth by Caraway
Pike for Ogdensburg with the count’s message.
Mine host laid hold of my elbow and
gave it a good shake as I left him, with D’ri,
taking a trail that led north by west in the deep
woods. They had stuffed our saddle-bags with
a plenty for man and horse.
I could not be done thinking of the
young ladies. It put my heart in a flutter when
I looked back at the castle from the wood’s edge
and saw one of them waving her handkerchief in a window.
I lifted my hat, and put my spurs to the flank with
such a pang in me I dared not look again. Save
for that one thing, I never felt better. The
trail was smooth, and we galloped along in silence
for a mile or so. Then it narrowed to a stony
path, where one had enough to do with slow going to
take care of his head, there were so many boughs in
the way.
“Jerushy Jane!” exclaimed
D’ri, as he slowed down. “Thet air’s
a gran’ place. Never hed my karkiss
in no sech bed as they gin me las’ night-softer
‘n wind, an’ hed springs on like them new
wagins ye see over ’n Vermont. Jerushy!
Dreamed I was flyin’.”
I had been thinking of what to do
if we met the enemy and were hard pressed. We
discussed it freely, and made up our minds that if
there came any great peril of capture we would separate,
each to take his own way out of the difficulty.
We halted by a small brook at midday,
feeding the horses and ourselves out of the saddle-bags.
“Ain’t jest eggzac’ly
used t’ this kind uv a sickle,” said D’ri,
as he felt the edge of his sabre, “but I ’ll
be dummed ef it don’t seem es ef I ’d
orter be ruther dang’rous with thet air ’n
my hand.”
He knew a little about rough fighting
with a sabre. He had seen my father and me go
at each other hammer and tongs there in our door-yard
every day of good weather. Stormy days he had
always stood by in the kitchen, roaring with laughter,
as the good steel rang and the house trembled.
He had been slow to come to it, but had had his try
with us, and had learned to take an attack without
flinching. I went at him hard for a final lesson
that day in the woods-a great folly, I
was soon to know. We got warm and made more
noise than I had any thought of. My horse took
alarm and pulled away, running into a thicket.
I turned to catch him.
“Judas Priest!” said D’ri.
There, within ten feet of us, I saw
what made me, ever after, a more prudent man.
It was an English officer leaning on his sword, a
tall and handsome fellow of some forty years, in shiny
top-hoots and scarlet blouse and gauntlets of brown
kid.
“You are quite clever,”
said he, touching his gray mustache.
I made no answer, but stood pulling myself together.
“You will learn,” he added,
smiling, with a tone of encouragement. “Let
me show you a trick.”
He was most polite in his manner,
like a play-hero, and came toward me as he spoke.
Then I saw four other Britishers coming out to close
in upon us from behind trees.
He came at me quickly, and I met him.
He seemed to think it would be no trick to unhand
my weapon. Like a flash, with a whip of his
sabre, he tried to wrench it away. D’ri
had begun to shoot, dodging between trees, and a redcoat
had tumbled over. I bore in upon my man, but
he came back at me with surprising vigor. On
my word, he was the quickest swordsman I ever had
the honor of facing.
But he had a mean way of saying “Ha!”
as he turned my point. He soon angered me, whereupon
I lost a bit of caution, with some blood, for he was
at me like a flash, and grazed me on the hip before
I could get my head again. It was no parlor play,
I can tell you. We were fighting for life, and
both knew it. We fought up and down through
brakes and bushes and over stones-a perilous
footing. I could feel his hand weakening.
I put all my speed to the steel then, knowing well
that, barring accident, I should win. I could
hear somebody coming up behind me.
“Keep away there,” my
adversary shouted, with a fairness I admire when I
think of it. “I can handle him. Get
the other fellow.”
I went at him to make an end of it.
“I’ll make you squint, you young cub,”
he hissed, lunging at me.
He ripped my blouse at the shoulder,
and, gods of war! we made the sparks fly. Then
he went down, wriggling; I had caught him in the side,
poor fellow! Like a flash I was off in a thicket.
One of the enemy got out of my way and sent a bullet
after me. I could feel it rip and sting in the
muscle as it rubbed my ribs. I kept foot and
made for my horse. He had caught his reins, and
I was on him and off in the bush, between bullets
that came ripping the leaves about me, before they
could give chase.
Drums were beating the call to arms
somewhere. I struck the trail in a minute, and,
leaning low in the saddle, went bounding over logs
and rocks and down a steep hillside as if the devil
were after me. I looked back, and was nearly
raked off by a bough. I could hear horses coming
in the trail behind with quick and heavy jumps.
But I was up to rough riding and had little fear they
would get a sight of me. However, crossing a
long stretch of burnt timber, they must have seen
me. I heard a crack of pistols far behind; a
whiz of bullets over my head. I shook out the
reins and let the horse go, urging with cluck and
spur, never slacking for rock or hill or swale.
It was a wilder ride than any I have known since or
shall again, I can promise you, for, God knows, I have
been hurt too often. Fast riding over a new
trail is leaping in the dark and worse than treason
to one’s self. Add to it a saddle wet with
your own blood, then you have something to give you
a turn of the stomach thinking of it.
When I was near tumbling with a kind
of rib-ache and could hear no pursuer, I pulled up.
There was silence about me, save the sound of a light
breeze in the tree-tops. I rolled off my horse,
and hooked my elbow in the reins, and lay on my belly,
grunting with pain. I felt better, having got
my breath, and a rod of beech to bite upon-a
good thing if one has been badly stung and has a journey
to make. In five minutes I was up and off at
a slow jog, for I knew I was near safety.
I thought much of poor D’ri
and how he might be faring. The last I had seen
of him, he was making good use of pistol and legs,
running from tree to tree. He was a dead shot,
little given to wasting lead. The drums were
what worried me, for they indicated a big camp, and
unless he got to the stirrups in short order, he must
have been taken by overwhelming odds. It was
near sundown when I came to a brook and falls I could
not remember passing. I looked about me.
Somewhere I had gone off the old trail-everything
was new to me. It widened, as I rode on, up
a steep hill. Where the tree-tops opened, the
hill was covered with mossy turf, and there were fragrant
ferns on each side of me. The ground was clear
of brush and dead timber. Suddenly I heard a
voice singing-a sweet girl voice that thrilled
me, I do not know why, save that I always longed for
the touch of a woman if badly hurt. But then
I have felt that way having the pain of neither lead
nor steel. The voice rang in the silent woods,
but I could see no one nor any sign of human habitation.
Shortly I came out upon a smooth roadway carpeted
with sawdust. It led through a grove, and following
it, I came suddenly upon a big green mansion among
the trees, with Doric pillars and a great portico
where hammocks hung with soft cushions in them, and
easy-chairs of old mahogany stood empty. I have
said as little as possible of my aching wound:
I have always thought it bad enough for one to suffer
his own pain. But I must say I was never so
tried to keep my head above me as when I came to that
door. Two figures in white came out to meet me.
At first I did not observe-I had enough
to do keeping my eyes open-that they were
the Mlles. de Lambert.
“God save us!” I heard
one of them say. “He is hurt; he is pale.
See the blood running off his boot-leg.”
Then, as one took the bit, the other
eased me down from my saddle, calling loudly for help.
She took her handkerchief-that had a perfume
I have not yet forgotten-as she supported
me, and wiped the sweat and dust from my face.
Then I saw they were the splendid young ladies I
had seen at the count’s table. The discovery
put new life in me; it was like a dash of water in
the face. I lifted my hat and bowed to them.
“Ladies, my thanks to you,”
I said in as good French as I knew. “I
have been shot. May I ask you to send for a doctor?”
A butler ran down the steps; a gardener
and a stable-boy hurried out of the grove.
“To the big room-the
Louis-Quinze,” said one of the girls, excitedly,
as the men came to my help.
The fat butler went puffing upstairs,
and they followed, on each side of me.
“Go for a doctor, quick,”
said one of them to the gardener, who was coming behind-a
Frenchman who prayed to a saint as he saw my blood.
They led me across a great green rug
in a large hall above-stairs to a chamber of which
I saw little then save its size and the wealth of
its appointments. The young ladies set me down,
bidding one to take off my boots, and sending another
for hot water. They asked me where I was hurt.
Then they took off my blouse and waistcoat.
“Mon Dieu!” said one to
the other. “What can we do? Shall
we cut the shirt?”
“Certainly. Cut the shirt,”
said the other. “We must help him.
We cannot let him die.”
“God forbid!” was the
answer. “See the blood. Poor fellow!
It is terrible!”
They spoke very tenderly as they cut
my shirt with scissors, and bared my back, and washed
my wound with warm water. I never felt a touch
so caressing as that of their light fingers, but, gods
of war! it did hurt me. The bathing done, they
bound me big with bandages and left the room until
the butler had helped me into bed. They came
soon with spirits and bathed my face and hands.
One leaned over me, whispering, and asking what I
would like to eat. Directly a team of horses
came prancing to the door.
“The colonel!” one of them whispered,
listening.
“The colonel, upon my soul!”
said the other, that sprightly Louison, as she tiptoed
to the window. They used to call her “Tiptoes”
at the Hermitage.
The colonel! I remembered she
was none other than the Baroness de Ferre; and thinking
of her and of the grateful feeling of the sheets of
soft linen, I fell asleep.