Anxious, she hovers o’er the web
the while,
Reads, as it grows, thy figured story
there;
Now she explains the texture with a smile,
And now the woof interprets with a tear.
Fawcett.
All Maud’s feelings were healthful
and natural. She had no exaggerated sentiments,
and scarcely art enough to control or to conceal any
of the ordinary impulses of her heart. We are
not about to relate a scene, therefore, in which a
long-cherished but hidden miniature of the young man
is to play a conspicuous part, and to be the means
of revealing to two lovers the state of their respective
hearts; but one of a very different character.
It is true, Maud had endeavoured to make, from memory,
one or two sketches of “Bob’s” face;
but she had done it openly, and under the cognizance
of the whole family. This she might very well
do, indeed, in her usual character of a sister, and
excite no comments. In these efforts, her father
and mother, and Beulah, had uniformly pronounced her
success to be far beyond their hopes; but Maud, herself,
had thrown them all aside, half-finished, dissatisfied
with her own labours. Like the author, whose fertile
imagination fancies pictures that defy his powers
of description, her pencil ever fell far short of
the face that her memory kept so constantly in view.
This sketch wanted animation, that gentleness, another
fire, and a fourth candour; in short, had Maud begun
a thousand all would have been deficient, in her eyes,
in some great essential of perfection. Still,
she had no secret about her efforts, and half-a-dozen
of these very sketches lay uppermost in her portfolio,
when she spread it, and its contents, before the eyes
of the original.
Major Willoughby thought Maud had
never appeared more beautiful than as she moved about
making her little preparations for the exhibition.
Pleasure heightened her colour; and there was such
a mixture of frank, sisterly regard, in every glance
of her eye, blended, however, with sensitive feeling,
and conscious womanly reserve, as made her a thousand
times measuring amounts by the young man’s
sensations more interesting than he had
ever seen her. The lamp gave but an indifferent
light for a gallery, but it was sufficient to betray
Maud’s smiles, and blushes, and each varying
emotion of her charming countenance.
“Now, Bob,” she said,
opening her portfolio, with all her youthful frankness
and confidence, “you know well enough I am not
one of those old masters of whom you used to talk
so much, but your own pupil the work of
your own hands; and if you find more faults than you
have expected, you will have the goodness to remember
that the master has deserted his peaceful pursuits
to go a campaigning there that
is a caricature of your own countenance, staring you
in the face, as a preface!”
“This is like, I should think was
it done from memory, dear Maud?”
“How else should it be done?
All our entreaties have never been able to persuade
you to send us even a miniature. You are wrong
in this, Bob” by no accident did
Maud now ever call the major, Robert, though Beulah
often did. There was a desperate sort of familiarity
in the Bob, that she could easily adopt; but
the ‘Robert’ had a family sound that she
disliked; and yet a more truly feminine creature than
Maud Meredith did not exist “You
are wrong, Bob; for mother actually pines to possess
your picture, in some shape or other. It was this
wish that induced me to attempt these things.”
“And why has no one of them
ever been finished? Here are six or eight
beginnings, and all, more or less, like, I should think,
and not one of them more than half done. Why
have I been treated so cavalierly, Miss Maud?”
The fair artist’s colour deepened
a little; but her smile was quite as sweet as it was
saucy, as she replied
“Girlish caprice, I suppose.
I like neither of them; and of that which a woman
dislikes, she will have none. To be candid, however,
I hardly think there is one of them all that does
you justice.”
“No? what fault have
you to find with this? This might be worked up
to something very natural.”
“It would be a natural,
then it wants expression, fearfully.”
“And this, which is still better.
That might be finished while I am here, and I will
give you some sittings.”
“Even mother dislikes that there
is too much of the Major of Foot in it. Mr. Woods
says it is a martial picture.”
“And ought not a soldier to
look like a soldier? To me, now, that seems a
capital beginning.”
“It is not what mother, or Beulah or
father or even any of us wants. It
is too full of Bunker’s Hill. Your friends
desire to see you as you appear to them; not
as you appear to your enemies.”
“Upon my word, Maud, you have
made great advances in the art! This is a view
of the Knoll, and the dam and here is another
of the mill, and the water-fall all beautifully
done, and in water-colours, too. What is this? Have
you been attempting a sketch of yourself! The
glass must have been closely consulted, my fair coquette,
to enable you to do this!”
The blood had rushed into Maud’s
face, covering it with a rich tell-tale mantle, when
her companion first alluded to the half-finished miniature
he held in his hand; then her features resembled ivory,
as the revulsion of feeling, that overcame her confusion,
followed. For some little time she sate, in breathless
stillness, with her looks cast upon the floor, conscious
that Robert Willoughby was glancing from her own face
to the miniature, and from the miniature to her face
again, making his observations and comparisons.
Then she ventured to raise her eyes timidly towards
his, half-imploringly, as if to beseech him to proceed
to something else. But the young man was too much
engrossed with the exceedingly pretty sketch he held
in his hand, to understand her meaning, or to comply
with her wishes.
“This is yourself, Maud!”
he cried “though in a strange sort
of dress why have you spoilt so beautiful
a thing, by putting it in this masquerade?”
“It is not myself it
is a copy of a miniature I possess.”
“A miniature you possess! Of
whom can you possess so lovely a miniature, and I
never see it?”
A faint smile illumined the countenance
of Maud, and the blood began to return to her cheeks.
She stretched her hand over to the sketch, and gazed
on it, with intense feeling, until the tears began
to stream from her eyes.
“Maud dear, dearest
Maud have I said that which pains you? I
do not understand all this, but I confess there are
secrets to which I can have no claim to be admitted ”
“Nay, Bob, this is making too
much of what, after all, must sooner or later be spoken
of openly among us. I believe that to be a copy
of a miniature of my mother.”
“Of mother, Maud you
are beside yourself it has neither her features,
expression, nor the colour of her eyes. It is
the picture of a far handsomer woman, though mother
is still pretty; and it is perfection!”
“I mean of my mother of
Maud Yeardley; the wife of my father, Major Meredith.”
This was said with a steadiness that
surprised our heroine herself, when she came to think
over all that had passed, and it brought the blood
to her companion’s heart, in a torrent.
“This is strange!” exclaimed
Willoughby, after a short pause. “And my
mother our mother has given you the
original, and told you this? I did not believe
she could muster the resolution necessary to such
an act.”
“She has not. You know,
Bob, I am now of age; and my father, a month since,
put some papers in my hand, with a request that I would
read them. They contain a marriage settlement
and other things of that sort, which show I am mistress
of more money than I should know what to do with,
if it were not for dear little Evert but,
with such a precious being to love, one never can
have too much of anything. With the papers were
many trinkets, which I suppose father never looked
at. This beautiful miniature was among the last;
and I feel certain, from some remarks I ventured to
make, mother does not know of its existence.”
As Maud spoke, she drew the original
from her bosom, and placed it in Robert Willoughby’s
hands. When this simple act was performed, her
mind seemed relieved; and she waited, with strong
natural interest, to hear Robert Willoughby’s
comments.
“This, then, Maud, was your
own your real mother!”
the young man said, after studying the miniature,
with a thoughtful countenance, for near a minute.
“It is like her like you.”
“Like her, Bob? How
can you know anything or that? I suppose
it to be my mother, because I think it like myself,
and because it is not easy to say who else it can
be. But you cannot know anything of this?”
“You are mistaken, Maud I
remember both your parents well it could
not be otherwise, as they were the bosom friends of
my own. You will remember that I am now eight-and-twenty,
and that I had seen seven of these years when you
were born. Was my first effort in arms never
spoken of in your presence?”
“Never perhaps it
was not a subject for me to hear, if it were in any
manner connected with my parents.”
“You are right that
must be the reason it has been kept from your ears.”
“Surely, surely, I am old enough
to hear it now you will conceal
nothing from me, Bob?”
“If I would, I could not, now.
It is too late, Maud. You know the manner in
which Major Meredith died? ”
“He fell in battle, I have suspected,”
answered the daughter, in a suppressed, doubtful tone “for
no one has ever directly told me even that.”
“He did, and I was at his side.
The French and savages made an assault on us, about
an hour earlier than this, and our two fathers rushed
to the pickets to repel it I was a reckless
boy, anxious even at that tender age to see a fray,
and was at their side. Your father was one of
the first that fell; but Joyce and our father
beat the Indians back from his body, and saved it
from mutilation. Your mother was buried in the
same grave, and then you came to us, where our have
been ever since.”
Maud’s tears flowed fast, and
yet it was not so much in grief as in a gush of tenderness
she could hardly explain to herself. Robert Willoughby
understood her emotions, and perceived that he might
proceed.
“I was old enough to remember
both your parents well I was a favourite,
I believe, with, certainly was much petted by, both I
remember your birth, Maud, and was suffered to carry
you in my arms, ere you were a week old.”
“Then you have known me for
an impostor from the beginning, Bob must
have often thought of me as such!”
“I have known you for the daughter
of Lewellen Meredith, certainly; and not for a world
would I have you the real child of Hugh Willoughby ”
“Bob!” exclaimed Maud,
her heart beating violently, a rush of feeling nearly
overcoming her, in which alarm, consciousness, her
own secret, dread of something wrong, and a confused
glimpse of the truth, were all so blended, as nearly
to deprive her, for the moment, of the use of her
senses.
It is not easy to say precisely what
would have followed this tolerably explicit insight
into the state of the young man’s feelings, had
not an outcry on the lawn given the major notice that
his presence was needed below. With a few words
of encouragement to Maud, first taking the precaution
to extinguish the lamp, lest its light should expose
her to a shot in passing some of the open loops, he
sprang towards the stairs, and was at his post again,
literally within a minute. Nor was he a moment
too soon. The alarm was general, and it was understood
an assault was momentarily expected.
The situation of Robert Willoughby
was now tantalizing in the extreme. Ignorant
of what was going on in front, he saw no enemy in the
rear to oppose, and was condemned to inaction, at
a moment when he felt that, by training, years, affinity
to the master of the place, and all the usual considerations,
he ought to be in front, opposed to the enemy.
It is probable he would have forgotten his many cautions
to keep close, had not Maud appeared in the library,
and implored him to remain concealed, at least until
there was the certainty his presence was necessary
elsewhere.
At that instant, every feeling but
those connected with the danger, was in a degree forgotten.
Still, Willoughby had enough consideration for Maud
to insist on her joining her mother and Beulah, in
the portion of the building where the absence of external
windows rendered their security complete, so long
as the foe could be kept without the palisades.
In this he succeeded, but not until he had promised,
again and again, to be cautious in not exposing himself
at any of the windows, the day having now fairly dawned,
and particularly not to let it be known in the Hut
that he was present until it became indispensable.
The major felt relieved when Maud
had left him. For her, he had no longer any immediate
apprehensions, and he turned all his faculties to
the sounds of the assault which he supposed to be going
on in front. To his surprise, however, no discharges
of fire-arms succeeded; and even the cries, and orders,
and calling from point to point, that are a little
apt to succeed an alarm in an irregular garrison, had
entirely ceased; and it became doubtful whether the
whole commotion did not proceed from a false alarm.
The Smashes, in particular, whose vociférations
for the first few minutes had been of a very decided
kind, were now mute; and the exclamations of the women
and children had ceased.
Major Willoughby was too good a soldier
to abandon his post without orders, though bitterly
did he regret the facility with which he had consented
to accept so inconsiderable a command. He so far
disregarded his instructions, however, as to place
his whole person before a window, in order to reconnoitre;
for it was now broad daylight, though the sun had
not yet risen. Nothing rewarded this careless
exposure; and then it flashed upon his mind that,
as the commander of a separate detachment, he had
a perfect right to employ any of his immediate subordinates,
either as messengers or scouts. His choice of
an agent was somewhat limited, it is true, lying between
Mike and the Plinys; after a moment of reflection,
he determined to choose the former.
Mike was duly relieved from his station
at the door, the younger Pliny being substituted for
him, and he was led into the library. Here he
received hasty but clear orders from the major how
he was to proceed, and was thrust, rather than conducted
from the room, in his superior’s haste to hear
the tidings. Three or four minutes might have
elapsed, when an irregular volley of musketry was
heard in front; then succeeded an answering discharge,
which sounded smothered and distant. A single
musket came from the garrison a minute later, and then
Mike rushed into the library, his eyes dilated with
a sort of wild delight, dragging rather than carrying
his piece after him.
“The news!” exclaimed
the major, as soon as he got a glimpse of his messenger.
“What mean these volleys, and how comes on my
father in front?”
“Is it what do they mane?”
answered Mike. “Well, there’s but
one maning to powther and ball, and that’s far
more sarious than shillelah wor-r-k. If the
rapscallions didn’t fire a whole plathoon, as
serjeant Joyce calls it, right at the Knoll, my name
is not Michael O’Hearn, or my nature one that
dales in giving back as good as I get.”
“But the volley came first from
the house why did my father order his people
to make the first discharge?”
“For the same r’ason that
he didn’t. Och! there was a big frown on
his f’atures, when he heard the rifles and muskets;
and Mr. Woods never pr’ached more to the purpose
than the serjeant himself, ag’in that same.
But to think of them rapscallions answering a fire
that was ag’in orders! Not a word did his
honour say about shooting any of them, and they just
pulled their triggers on the house all the same as
if it had been logs growing in senseless and uninhabited
trees, instead of a rational and well p’apled
abode. Och! arn’t they vagabonds!”
“If you do not wish to drive
me mad, man, tell me clearly what has past, that I
may understand you.”
“Is it understand that’s
wanting? Lord, yer honour, if ye can understand
that Misther Strhides, that’s yon, ye’ll
be a wise man. He calls hisself a ‘son
of the poor’atin’s,’ and poor ’ating
it must have been, in the counthry of his faders,
to have produced so lane and skinny a baste as that
same. The orders was as partic’lar as tongue
of man could utter, and what good will it all do? Ye’re
not to fire, says serjeant Joyce, till ye all hear
the wor-r-d; and the divil of a wor-r-d did they
wait for; but blaze away did they, jist becaase a knot
of savages comes on to them rocks ag’in, where
they had possession all yesterday afthernoon; and
sure it is common enough to breakfast where a man
sups.”
“You mean to say that the Indians
have reappeared on the rocks, and that some of Strides’s
men fired at them, without orders? Is that
the history of the affair?”
“It’s jist that, majjor;
and little good, or little har-r-m, did it do.
Joel, and his poor’atin’s, blazed away
at ’em, as if they had been so many Christians and
’twould have done yer heart good to have heard
the serjeant belabour them with hard wor-r-ds, for
their throuble. There’s none of the poor’atin’
family in the serjeant, who’s a mighty man wid
his tongue!”
“And the savages returned the
volley which explains the distant discharge
I heard.”
“Anybody can see, majjor, that
ye’re yer father’s son, and a souldier
bor-r-n. Och! who would of t’ought of that,
but one bred and bor-r-n in the army? Yes; the
savages sent back as good as they got, which was jist
not’in’ at all, seem’ that no one
is har-r-m’d.”
“And the single piece that followed there
was one discharge, by itself?”
Mike opened his mouth with a grin
that might have put either of the Plinys to shame,
it being rather a favourite theory with the descendants
of the puritans or “poor’atin’s,”
as the county Leitrim-man called Joel and his set that
the Irishman was more than a match for any son of
Ham at the Knoll, in the way of capacity about this
portion of the human countenance. The major saw
that there was a good deal of self-felicitation in
the expression of Mike’s visage, and he demanded
an explanation in more direct terms.
“’Twas I did it, majjor,
and ’twas as well fired a piece as ye’ve
ever hear-r-d in the king’s sarvice. Divil
bur-r-n me, if I lets Joel get any such advantage
over me, as to have a whole battle to himself.
No no as soon as I smelt his
Yankee powther, and could get my own musket cock’d,
and pointed out of the forthifications, I lets ’em
have it, as if it had been so much breakfast ready
cooked to their hands. ’Twas well pointed,
too; for I’m not the man to shoot into a fri’nd’s
countenance.”
“And you broke the orders for
a reason no better than the fact that Strides had
broken them before?”
“Divil a bit, majjor Joel
had broken the orders, ye see and that settled
the matter. The thing that is once broken is broken,
and wor-r-ds can’t mend it, any more than for
bearin’ to fire a gun will mend it.”
By dint of cross-questioning, Robert
Willoughby finally succeeded in getting something
like an outline of the truth from Mike. The simple
facts were, that the Indians had taken possession of
their old bivouac, as soon as the day dawned, and
had commenced their preparations for breakfast, when
Joel, the miller, and a few of that set, in a paroxysm
of valour, had discharged a harmless volley at them;
the distance rendering the attempt futile. This
fire had been partially returned, the whole concluding
with the finale from the Irishman’s gun,
as has been related. As it was now too light
to apprehend a surprise, and the ground in front of
the palisade had no very dangerous covers, Robert
Willoughby was emboldened to send one of the Plinys
to request an interview with his father. In a
few minutes the latter appeared, accompanied by Mr.
Woods.
“The same party has reappeared,
and seems disposed to occupy its old position near
the mill,” said the captain, in answer to his
son’s inquiries. “It is difficult
to say what the fellows have in view; and there are
moments when I think there are more or less whites
among them. I suggested as much to Strides, chaplain;
and I thought the fellow appeared to receive the notion
as if he thought it might be true.”
“Joel is a little of an enigma
to me, captain Willoughby,” returned the chaplain;
“sometimes seizing an idea like a cat pouncing
upon a rat, and then coquetting with it, as the same
cat will play with a mouse, when it has no appetite
for food.”
“Och! he’s a precious
poor’atin’!” growled Mike, from his
corner of the room.
“If whites are among the savages,
why should they not make themselves known?”
demanded Robert Willoughby. “Your character,
sir, is no secret; and they must be acquainted with
their own errand here.”
“I will send for Strides, and
get his opinion a little more freely,” answered
the captain, after a moment of deliberation. “You
will withdraw, Bob; though, by leaving your door a
little ajar, the conversation will reach you; and
prevent the necessity of a repetition.”
As Robert Willoughby was not unwilling
to hear what the overseer might have to say in the
present state of things, he did not hesitate about
complying, withdrawing into his own room as requested,
and leaving the door ajar, in a way to prevent suspicion
of his presence, as far as possible. But, Joel
Strides, like all bad men, ever suspected the worst.
The innocent and pure of mind alone are without distrust;
while one constituted morally, like the overseer,
never permitted his thoughts to remain in the tranquillity
that is a fruit of confidence. Conscious of his
own evil intentions, his very nature put on armour
against the same species of machinations in others,
as the hedge-hog rolls himself into a ball, and thrusts
out his quills, at the sight of the dog. Had
not captain Willoughby been one of those who are slow
to see evil, he might have detected something wrong
in Joel’s feelings, by the very first glance
he cast about him, on entering the library.
In point of fact, Strides’ thoughts
had not been idle since the rencontre of the previous
night. Inquisitive, and under none of the usual
restraints of delicacy, he had already probed all he
dared approach on the subject; and, by this time,
had become perfectly assured that there was some mystery
about the unknown individual whom he had met in his
master’s company. To own the truth, Joel
did not suspect that major Willoughby had again ventured
so far into the lion’s den; but he fancied that
some secret agent of the crown was at the Hut, and
that the circumstance offered a fair opening for helping
the captain down the ladder of public favour, and
to push himself up a few of its rounds. He was
not sorry, therefore, to be summoned to this conference,
hoping it might lead to some opening for farther discoveries.
“Sit down, Strides” said
captain Willoughby, motioning towards a chair so distant
from the open door of the bed-room, and so placed as
to remove the danger of too close a proximity “Sit
down I wish to consult you about the state
of things towards the mills. To me it seems as
If there were more pale-faces than red-skins among
our visitors.”
“That’s not onlikely,
captain the people has got to be greatly
given to paintin’ and imitatin’, sin’
the hatchet has been dug up ag’in the British.
The tea-boys were all in Indian fashion.”
“True; but, why should white
men assume such a disguise to come to the Knoll?
I am not conscious of having an enemy on earth who
could meditate harm to me or mine.”
Alas! poor captain. That a man
at sixty should yet have to learn that the honest,
and fair-dealing, and plain-dealing, and affluent for
captain Willoughby was affluent in the eyes of those
around him that such a man should imagine
he was without enemies, was to infer that the Spirit
of Darkness had ceased to exercise his functions among
men. Joel knew better, though he did not perceive
any necessity, just then, for letting the fact reach
the ears of the party principally concerned.
“A body might s’pose the
captain was pop’lar, if any man is pop’lar,”
answered the overseer; “nor do I know that visiters
in paint betoken onpopularity to a person in these
times more than another. May I ask why the captain
consaits these Injins a’n’t Injins?
To me, they have a desperate savage look, though I
a’n’t much accustomed to red skin usages.”
“Their movements are too open,
and yet too uncertain, for warriors of the tribes.
I think a savage, by this time, would have made up
his mind to act as friend or foe.”
Joel seemed struck with the idea;
and the expression of his countenance, which on entering
had been wily, distrustful and prying, suddenly changed
to that of deep reflection.
“Has the captain seen anything
else, partic’lar, to confirm this idée?”
he asked.
“Their encampment, careless
manner of moving, and unguarded exposure of their
persons, are all against their being Indians.”
“The messenger they sent across
the meadow, yesterday, seemed to me to be a
Mohawk?”
“He was. Of his
being a real red-skin there can be no question.
But he could neither speak nor understand English.
The little that passed between us was in Low Dutch.
Our dialogue was short; for, apprehensive of treachery,
I brought it to a close sooner than I might otherwise
have done.”
“Yes; treachery is a cruel thing,”
observed the conscientious Joel; “a man can’t
be too strongly on his guard ag’in it. Does
the captain ra’ally calcilate on defending the
house, should a serious attempt be brought forward
for the day?”
“Do I! That is an extraordinary
question, Mr. Strides. Why have I built in this
mode, if I have no such intention? why palisaded? why
armed and garrisoned, if not in earnest?”
“I s’posed all this might
have been done to prevent a surprise, but not in any
hope of standin’ a siege. I should be sorry
to see all our women and children shut up under one
roof, if the inimy came ag’in us, in airnest,
with fire and sword.”
“And I should be sorry to see
them anywhere else. But, this is losing time.
My object in sending for you, Joel, was to learn your
opinion about the true character of our visiters.
Have you any opinion, or information to give me, on
that point?”
Joel placed his elbow on his knee,
and his chin in the palm of his hand, and pondered
on what had been suggested, with seeming good-will,
and great earnestness.
“If any one could be found venturesome
enough to go out with a flag,” he at length
remarked, “the whole truth might be come at,
in a few minutes.”
“And who shall I employ?
Cheerfully would I go myself, were such a step military,
or at all excusable in one in my situation.”
“If the likes of myself will
sarve yer honour’s turn,” put in Mike,
promptly, and yet with sufficient diffidence as regarded
his views of his own qualifications “there’ll
be nobody to gainsay that same; and it isn’t
wilcome that I nade tell you, ye’ll be to use
me as ye would yer own property.”
“I hardly think Mike would answer,”
observed Joel, not altogether without a sneer.
“He scurce knows an Indian from a white man;
when it comes to the paint, it would throw him into
dreadful confusion.”
“If ye thinks that I am to be
made to believe in any more Ould Nicks, Misther Strhides,
then ye’re making a mistake in my nature.
Let but the captain say the word, and I’ll go
to the mill and bring in a grist of them same, or
l’ave my own body for toll.”
“I do not doubt you in the least,
Mike,” captain Willoughby mildly observed; “but
there will be no occasion, just now, of your running
any such risks. I shall be able to find other
truce-bearers.”
“It seems the captain has his
man in view,” Joel said, keenly eyeing his master.
“Perhaps ’tis the same I saw out with him
last night. That’s a reliable person, I
do s’pose.”
“You have hit the nail on the
head. It was the man who was out last night,
at the same time I was out myself, and his name is
Joel Strides.”
“The captain’s a little
musical, this morning waal if
go I must, as there was two on us out, let us go to
these savages together. I saw enough of that
man, to know he is reliable; and if he’ll go,
I’ll go.”
“Agreed” said
Robert Willoughby, stepping into the library “I
take you at your word, Mr. Strides; you and I will
run what risks there may be, in order to relieve this
family from its present alarming state.”
The captain was astounded, though
he knew not whether to be displeased or to rejoice.
As for Mike, his countenance expressed great dissatisfaction;
for he ever fancied things were going wrong so long
as Joel obtained his wishes. Strides, himself,
threw a keen glance at the stranger, recognised him
at a glance, and had sufficient self-command to conceal
his discovery, though taken completely by surprise.
The presence of the major, however, immediately removed
all his objections to the proposed expedition; since,
should the party prove friendly to the Americans,
he would be safe on his own account; or, should it
prove the reverse, a king’s officer could not
fail to be a sufficient protection.
“The gentleman’s a total
stranger to me,” Joel hypocritically resumed;
“but as the captain has belief in him, I must
have the same. I am ready to do the ar’nd,
therefore, as soon as it is agreeable.”
“This is well, captain Willoughby,”
put in the major, in order to anticipate any objections
from his father; “and the sooner a thing of
this sort is done, the better will it be for all concerned.
I am ready to proceed this instant; and I take it
this worthy man I think you called him
Strides is quite as willing.”
Joel signified his assent; and the
captain, perceiving no means of retreat, was fain
to yield. He took the major into the bed-room,
however, and held a minute’s private discourse,
when he returned, and bade the two go forth together.
“Your companion has his instructions,
Joel,” the captain observed, as they left the
library together; “and you will follow his advice.
Show the white flag as soon as you quit the gate;
if they are true warriors, it must be respected.”
Robert Willoughby was too intent on
business, and too fearful of the reappearance and
reproachful looks of Maud, to delay. He had passed
the court, and was at the outer gate, before any of
the garrison even noted his appearance among them.
Here, indeed, the father’s heart felt a pang;
and, but for his military pride, the captain would
gladly have recalled his consent. It was too
late, however; and, squeezing his hand, he suffered
his son to pass outward. Joel followed steadily,
as to appearances, though not without misgivings as
to what might be the consequences to himself and his
growing family.