I
The morrow was one of those rare days
when all nature seems to invite one to go forth and
enjoy the good things within her keeping. The
sunrise was menacing; unless the wind shifted before
noon it would be uncomfortably warm. Still, the
air was bracing and fragrant with the soft perfume
distilled by the pines.
Stephen felt in tune with nature as
he made his early morning toilet. He gazed the
while into the garden from his widely opened window,
and responded instinctively to the call of the countryside.
The disagreeable episode of the preceding day had
left unpleasant recollections in his mind which disconcerted
him not a little during his waking hours, the time
when the stream of consciousness begins to flow with
an unrestrained rapidity, starting with the more impressive
memories of the night before. He did not repent
his action; he might have repeated the performance
under similar circumstances, yet he chided himself
for his lack of reserve and composure and his great
want of respect to a superior officer.
He was early mounted and on his way,
striking off in the direction of the Germantown Road.
He had left word with his landlady of his intended
destination, with the added remark that he would be
back in a short time, a couple of hours at the most,
and that he would attend to the business of the day
upon his return. What that might amount to he
had no idea at all, being preoccupied entirely with
what he had to do in the immediate present, for he
made it a point never to permit the more serious affairs
of life to intrude upon his moments of relaxation.
He was a pleasant figure to look upon;
smooth-faced and athletic, well mounted and dressed
with great preciseness. On his well shaped hands
he wore leathern gauntlets; he was in his uniform
of buff and blue; beneath his coat he had his steel-buckled
belt with his holster and pistol in it; he wore his
cocked hat with a buff cockade affixed, the insignia
of his rank in the service.
The road lay in the direction of Marjorie’s
house. Perhaps he chose to ride along this way
in order that he might be obliged to pass her door,
and then again, perhaps, that was but of secondary
import. This was no time for analysis, and so
he refused to study his motives. He did know
that he had not seen her for a long time, the longest
time it seemed, and that he had had no word from her
since their last meeting, save the intelligence received
from her father yesterday in response to his repeated
inquiries concerning her welfare and that of her mother.
“Let us turn up here, Dolly,
old girl.” He leaned forward a little to
pat the mare’s neck affectionately as he spoke;
while at the same time he pulled the right rein slightly,
turning her head in the direction indicated.
“And, if we are fortunate, we shall catch a glimpse
of her.”
Dolly raised her ears very erect and
opened full her nostrils as if to catch some possible
scent of her, of whom he spoke. She pierced the
distance with her eyes, but saw no one and so settled
herself into an easy canter, for she knew it to be
more to her rider’s advantage to proceed at
a slowing pace until they had passed the house in question.
“You are an intelligent old
girl, Dolly, but I must not let you too far into the
secrets of my mind. Still, you have shared my
delights and woes alike and have been my one faithful
friend. Why should I not tell you?”
And yet they had been friends for
no great length of time. It was at Valley Forge
they had met, shortly after Stephen’s appointment
to General Washington’s staff. As an aide
he was required to be mounted and it was by a piece
of good fortune that he had been allowed to choose
from several the chestnut mare that now bore him.
He had given her the best of care and affection and
she reciprocated in as intelligent a manner as she
knew how.
“You have served well, but I
feel that there is much greater work before us, much
greater than our quest of the present.”
They were nearing the house.
For some reason or other, Dolly whinnied as he spoke,
probably in acquiescence to his thought, probably in
recognition of the presence of her rival. She
might have seen, had she cared to turn her head, a
trim, lithe form passing to the rear of the house.
Stephen took pains to see her, however, and, as she
turned her head, doffed his hat in salute. The
next moment Dolly felt the reins tighten, and, whether
she desired it or not, found her head turned in that
direction. Her rider was soon dismounted and was
leading her to the side of the road.
“You are early astir, Mistress
Marjorie. I had anticipated no such pleasure
this morning.”
“It is indeed mutual,”
replied Marjorie, smiling as she offered him her hand.
“How came you so early? No new turn of events,
I hope!”
“Not in the least. I desired
a few hours in the saddle before the heat of the day
set in, and my guardian angel must have directed me
along this path.”
Dolly raised both her ears and turned
towards him, while she noisily brought her hoof down
upon the sod.
“What a rascal!” she thought to herself.
The girl dropped her eyes demurely and then asked
hurriedly:
“There are no new developments?”
“None that I know of.”
“Nothing came of the trouble at the Inn?”
“Then you know?”
“All. Father told me.”
“He should not have told you.”
“It was my doing. I gave him no peace until
I had learned all.”
Dolly grew weary of this pleasantry
and wandered away to gladden her lips on the choice
morsels of the tender grass.
“I deeply regret my indiscretion, though it
was for his sake.”
“You mean ?”
“His Excellency.”
“I might have done likewise,
were I able. Colonel Forrest is most disagreeable.”
“He was not wholly culpable
and so I forgave his insulting remarks against us,
but I forgot myself entirely when General Washington’s
name was besmirched.”
“I fear further trouble,” she sighed.
“From him?”
She nodded her head.
“Nonsense! There will be
naught said about the whole affair and it will end
where it began. Forrest is no fool.”
“I have other news for you,
Captain,” announced Marjorie, her eyes beaming
at the prospect.
“And how long have you been preserving it for
me?” asked Stephen.
“But a few days.”
“And you made no attempt to see me?”
“Had I not met you now, I would
have done so this day,” answered Marjorie.
“You would have written?”
“Perhaps.”
“It is my forfeiture to your reserve.”
“And made gallantly.”
“Come now! What had you to tell?”
“This. Peggy desires the
honor of your company. You will receive the invitation
in a day or two. Just an informal affair, yet
I sensed the possibility of your pleasure.”
“You did right. I am pleased
as I am honored, but neither so much as I am elated
at the hopes for the future. Of course, I shall
accept, but you will have to promise to denote my
path for me in the tangled maze of society, in whose
company I am as yet merely a novice.”
“Lud! I ne’er heard one so illiberal
of his graces.”
“Nor one more candid,”
Stephen rejoined as quickly. If he were good at
repartee he had met with one who was equally as apt.
“You know the Governor will
be in attendance,” she declared in a matter-of-fact
manner.
“How should I know that?
Is it unusual for him to frequent the company of the
gay?”
“Not of late, the more especially
where the presence of Peggy is concerned,” added
the little tale-bearer with a keen though reckless
wit.
“And why Peggy?” He was innocent enough
in his question.
“Have you not heard of His Excellency’s
courting? Mr. Shippen has already made public
the rumor that a certain great General is laying close
siege to the heart of Peggy. And I have Peggy’s
own word for it.”
“To Peggy?” He asked with
evident surprise. “Why, she but halves his
age, and he is already a widower.”
“With three sons,” Marjorie
gayly added. “No matter. Peggy will
meet the disparity of ages by the disparity of stations.
She has avowed to me that no one dares to question
the social preeminence of the Military Governor, nor
the fact that he is the most dashing and perhaps most
successful general of the Continental Army. Position
in life is of prime importance to her.”
“Is that so? I had not so judged her,”
was the comment.
“She admits that herself, and
makes no secret of it before any one. Did you
not observe her sullen silence at the Ball upon learning
of the identity of her inferior partner? And
that she sat out the major portion of the dance in
company with the Military Governor?”
“It escaped my attention, for
I was too deeply concerned with another matter which
distracted me for the entire evening,” he answered
with a smile.
She pretended to take no notice, however, and continued.
“Well, he has been calling regularly
since that evening, and this quiet and informal function
has been arranged primarily in his honor, although
it will not be announced as such. You will go?”
she asked.
“I shall be pleased to accept
her invitation. May I accompany you?”
“Thank you. I almost hoped
you would say that. Men folks are so sadly wanting
in intuition.”
“Friday, then? Adieu!
The pleasure that awaits me is immeasurable.”
“Until Friday.”
She extended to him her hand, which
he pressed. A moment later he was mounted.
“My kindest to your mother.
She will understand.” Dolly broke into a
gallop.
II
Marjorie stood at the gate post until
he was quite lost from view around the turn of the
road. He did not look back, yet she thought that
he might have. She slowly turned and as slowly
began to walk towards the house, there to resume the
duties which had suffered a pleasant interruption.
Meanwhile, she tried to analyze this
young man. He was rather deep, of few words on
any given subject, but wholly non-communicative as
regards himself. He perhaps was possessed of
more intuition than his manner would reveal, although
he gave every appearance of arriving at his conclusions
by the sheer force of logic. His words and deeds
never betrayed his whole mind, of that she was certain,
yet he could assert himself rather forcibly when put
to the test, as in the painful incident at the Coffee
House. He would never suffer from soul-paralysis,
thought she, for want of decision or resolution, for
both were written full upon him.
That she was strangely attracted to
him she knew very well, but why and how she was unable
to discover. This was but their third meeting,
yet she felt as if she had known him all her life,
so frank, so unreserved, so open, so secure did she
feel in his presence. It seemed the most natural
thing in the world for her to have waved her hand in
salute to him that morning as he passed; she did it
with the same unconcern as if she had known him all
her life. She felt it within her, that was all,
and could give no other possible interpretation to
her action.
There was something prepossessing
about him. Perhaps it was his faculty for doing
the unexpected. Most women desire to meet a man
who is possessed of a distinctive individuality, who
lends continual interest to them by his departure
from the trite and commonplace. What Stephen
might say or do was an entirely unknown quantity until
it had actually taken place, and this attracted her
on the instant, whether she was conscious of it or
not. His manner, too, was affable, and gave him
an air at once pleasing and good-natured. He
never flattered, yet said most agreeable things, putting
one perfectly at ease and inspiring sympathy and courage.
He bore himself well; erect, manly, dignified, without
ostentation or display. His seriousness, his evenness,
his gravity, his constancy and his decision stamped
him with a certain authority, a man of marked personality
and character.
So she mused as she entered the door,
her thoughts in a lofty hegira to the far off land
of make believe her better self striving
to marshal them to the cold realities of duty that
lay before her. She had been cleaning the little
addition at the rear of the dwelling proper, used as
a kitchen, and her work took her into the yard.
Dolly’s whinny had caused her to turn her head,
and the next moment cares and responsibilities and
all else were forgotten. Now she wondered what
she had been about! Seizing a cloth she began
to dust industriously. The crash of one of the
dishes on the kitchen floor brought her to her senses.
Her mother heard the noise from the adjoining room.
“What ails thee, child? Hast thou lost
thy reason?”
“I believe so, mommy. I
must have been thinking of other things.”
And she stooped to gather the fragments.
“Was it Captain Meagher? I saw you two
at the gate.”
A guilty smile stole over the corners of her mouth.
“He was passing while I was
in the yard, and he stopped only to wish me the greetings
of the day. I was right glad that he did, for
I had an opportunity of extending to him the invitation
from Peggy.”
“He will go, I suppose?”
she queried, knowing well what the answer might be.
She did not spare the time to stop for conversation,
but continued with her duties.
“He is quite pleased. And, mommy, he will
call for me.”
“Be careful, now, to break no more dishes.”
“Lud! I have not lost my
head yet. That was purely an accident which will
not happen again.”
“That poor unfortunate Spangler made a better
defense.”
“He deserved what he got.
So did Lieutenant Lyons and the other officers of
the Ranger who deserted to the enemy. But my sympathies
go out to the old man who kept the gates under the
city. These court-martials are becoming too common
and I don’t like them.”
“That is the horrible side of
war, my dear. And until our people learn the
value of patriotism, the need of abolishing all foreign
ties and strongly adhering to the land that has offered
them a home and a living, the necessity of these dreadful
measures will never cease.”
“A little power is a dangerous
weapon to thrust into a man’s hand, unless he
be great enough to wield it.”
“Now you are going to say that
General Arnold is to blame for these tragedies.”
“No, I am not. But I do
think that a great deal more of clemency could be
exercised. Many of those poor tradesmen who were
convicted and sentenced to be hanged could have been
pardoned with equal security.”
“That is the law, my dear, and
the law is God’s will. Leave all to Him.”
Mrs. Allison was one of those good
souls who saw no harm in the vilest of creatures;
faults were hidden by her veil of sympathy. When
distressing reverses or abject despair visited any
one, Mrs. Allison’s affability and indescribable
tenderness smoothed over the troubled situation and
brought forth a gleam of gladness. Quiet, kindly,
magnanimous, tolerant, she could touch hearts to the
depths in a manner both winning and lasting.
Whether the fault entailed a punishment undeserved
or inevitable, her feeling of pity was excited.
She always sympathized without accusing or probing
the source of the evil. She stretched forth a
helping hand merely to aid. No nature, however
hard, could be impervious to the sympathy and the
sweetness of her affectionate disposition.
Motherly was the quality written full
upon Mrs. Allison’s face. Her thoughts,
her schemes, her purposes, her ambitions of life, were
all colored by this maternal attribute. In her
daily homage and obeisance to God, Whom she worshiped
with the most childlike faith and simplicity; in the
execution of the manifold duties of her home, Marjorie
was to her ever a treasure of great price. She
was sustained in her aims and purposes by an enduring
power of will, a power clothed with the
soft, warm, living flesh of a kindly heart.
Her marriage with Matthew Allison
had been happy, a happiness intensified and concretely
embodied in Marjorie, the only child vouchsafed to
them by the Creator. How often, at the time when
the deepening shadows moved their way across the dimming
landscape, announcing to the work worn world the close
of another day, would she sit for a brief while in
silence and take complacence in the object of her
hopes and aspirations! It was Marjorie for whom
she lived and toiled and purposed. And it was
Marjorie who embodied the sum-total of her fancies
and ambitions and aspirations, and translated them
into definite forms and realities.
III
A beautiful landscape unrolled itself
before Stephen as he leisurely rode along the Germantown
road. The midsummer sun was now high in the heavens,
with just a little stir in the air to temper its warmth
and oppressiveness. Fragments of clouds, which
seemed to have torn themselves loose from some great
heap massed beyond the ridge of low hills to the westward,
drifted lazily across the waste of blue sky, wholly
unconcerned as to their ultimate lot or destination.
Breaths of sweet odor, from freshly cut hay or the
hidden foliage bounding the road, were wafted along
in the embraces of the gentle breeze. Away to
the left and before him, as his horse cantered along,
swelled the countryside in gentle undulations of green
and brown, disfigured now and again by irregular patches
of field and orchard yielding to cultivation; while
to the side a stone wall humped itself along the winding
road into the distance, its uniformity of contour
broken here and there by a trellis work of yellow
jasmine or crimson rambler, alternately reflecting
lights and shadows from the passing clouds and sunshine.
It was a day when all nature was in perfect tune,
its harmony sweetly blending with the notes of gladness
that throbbed in Stephen’s heart. Yet he
was scarce aware of it all, so completely absorbed
was he in the confusion of his own thought.
Stephen had a very clear idea of what
he was to do in the immediate present, but he had
no idea at all of what was to be done in the immediate
future. First of all he would attend Mistress
Marjorie at this informal affair, where, perhaps,
he might learn more about the Military Governor.
He half surmised that His Excellency was not kindly
disposed towards Catholics in general, although he
could not remember any concrete case in particular
to substantiate his claim. Still he knew that
he was avowedly opposed to the French Alliance, as
were many illustrious citizens; and he presumed his
feelings were due in part at least to the fact that
France was a recognized Catholic country. There
was a negative argument, too: no Catholic name
was ever found among his appointments. These
were but surmises, not evidence upon which to base
even a suspicion. Nevertheless, they were worthy
of some consideration until a conclusion of a more
definite nature was warranted.
That the Governor was becoming decidedly
more unpopular every day and that this unpopularity
was quite consequential, more consequential if anything
than preconceived, for it cannot be gainsaid
that many had frowned upon his appointment from the
very beginning, Meagher knew very well.
Unfavorable comparisons already had been drawn between
the gayety of life under a free country and that of
a colonial government. The fact that Arnold possessed
the finest stable of horses in the city, and entertained
at the most costly of dinners, at a time when the manner
of living was extremely frugal, not so much from choice
as from necessity, and at a time when the value of
the Continental currency had depreciated to almost
nothing, occasioned a host of acrid criticisms not
only in the minds of the displeased populace, but
also in the less friendly columns of the daily press.
Censures of the harshest nature were
continually uttered against the Governor’s conduct
of the affairs of the city government together with
his earlier order closing the shops. Now, the
use that he began to make of the government wagons
in moving the stores excited further complaints of
a more public nature, the more so that no particular
distinction was being made as to whether the stores
belonged to the Whigs or the offending Tories.
It was no idle gossip that he curried favor with the
upper Tory class of the city, now particular mention
was made of his infatuation with the daughter of Edward
Shippen. It was whispered, too, that the misuse
of his authority in the grant of safe passes to and
from New York had led to the present act of the Congress
in recalling all passes. Stephen knew all this
and he logically surmised more; so he longed for the
opportunity to study intimately this man now occupying
the highest military post in the city and the state.
For the present he would return home
and bide his time until Friday evening when he would
have the happiness of escorting Marjorie to the home
of Peggy Shippen.
“I wonder, Dolly, old girl,
if I can make myself bold enough to call her ‘Marjorie.’
‘Marjorie,’ Margaret,’” he
repeated them over to himself. “I don’t
know which is the prettier. She would be a pearl
among women, and she is, isn’t she, Dolly?”
He would ask her at any rate.
He would be her partner for the evening, would dance
with her, and would sit by her side. Peggy would
be there, too, and the General. He would observe
them closely, and perchance, converse with them.
Colonel Forrest and the General’s active aide-de-camp,
Major Franks, a Philadelphian, and a Jew would also
be present. Altogether the evening promised to
be interesting as well as happy.
He was musing in this manner when
he heard the hoof beats of a horse, heavily ridden,
gaining upon him in the rear. He drew up and half
turned instinctively at the strange yet familiar sound.
Suddenly there hove into view at the bend of the road
an officer of the Continental Army, in full uniform,
booted and spurred, whose appearance caused him to
turn full about to await him. It was not long
before he recognized the familiar figure of the aide,
Major Franks, and he lifted his arm to salute.
“Captain Meagher, I have orders for your arrest.”
“Sir?” answered Stephen in alarm.
“On charges preferred by Colonel
Forrest. You are to come with me at once.”
An embarrassing silence ensued.
Stephen then saluted, and handed over
his side arms. He wheeled his horse and set off
in the direction indicated, his thoughts in a turmoil.
The Major fell in at the rear.