Leaves of yellow and red and brown
were falling, and the wind that came up the valley
played on the boughs like a bow on the strings of a
violin. The mountain ridges piled against each
other cut the blue sky like a saber’s edge,
and the forests on the slopes rising terrace above
terrace burned in vivid colours painted by the brush
of autumn. The despatch bearer’s eye, sweeping
peaks and slopes and valleys, saw nothing living save
himself and his good horse. The silver streams
in the valleys, the vivid forests on the slopes and
the blue peaks above told of peace, which was also
in the musical note of the wind, in the shy eyes of
a deer that looked at him a moment then fled away to
the forest, and in the bubbles of pink and blue that
floated on the silver surface of the stream at his
feet.
Prescott had been into the far South
on a special mission from the Confederate Government
in Richmond after his return from the Wilderness and
complete recovery from his wound, and now he was going
back through a sea of mountains, the great range that
fills up so much of North Carolina and its fifty thousand
square miles, and he was not sorry to find the way
long. He enjoyed the crisp air, the winds, the
burning colours of the forest, the deep blue of the
sky and the infinite peace. But the nights lay
cold on the ridges, and Prescott, when he could find
no cabin for shelter, built a fire of pine branches
and, wrapping himself in his blanket, slept with his
feet to the coals. The cold increased by and
by, and icy wind roared among the peaks and brought
a skim of snow. Then Prescott shivered and pined
for the lowlands and the haunts of men.
He descended at last from the peaks
and entered a tiny hamlet of the backwoods, where
he found among other things a two-weeks-old Richmond
newspaper. Looking eagerly through its meager
columns to see what had happened while he was buried
in the hills, he learned that there was no new stage
in the war no other great battle. The
armies were facing each other across their entrenchments
at Petersburg, and the moment a head appeared above
either parapet the crack of a rifle from the other
told of one more death added to the hundreds of thousands.
That was all of the war save that food was growing
scarcer and the blockade of the Southern ports more
vigilant. It was a skilful and daring blockade
runner now that could creep past the watching ships.
On an inside page he found social
news. Richmond was crowded with refugees, and
wherever men and women gather they must have diversion
though at the very mouths of the guns. The gaiety
of the capital, real or feigned, continued, and his
eye was caught by the name of Lucia Catherwood.
There was a new beauty in Richmond, the newspaper said,
one whose graces of face and figure were equaled only
by the qualities of her mind. She had relatives
of strong Northern tendencies, and she had been known
to express such sympathies herself; but they only lent
piquancy to her conversation. She had appeared
at one of the President’s receptions; and further
on Prescott saw the name of Mr. Sefton. There
was nothing by which he could tell with certainty,
but he inferred that she had gone there with the Secretary.
A sudden thought assailed and tormented him.
What could the Secretary be to her? Well, why
not? Mr. Sefton was an able and insinuating man.
Moreover, he was no bitter partisan: the fact
that she believed in the cause of the North would not
trouble him. She had refused himself and not many
minutes later had been seen talking with the Secretary
in what seemed to be the most confidential manner.
Why had she come back to Richmond, from which she
had escaped amid such dangers? Did it not mean
that she and the Secretary had become allies more
than friends? The thought would not let Prescott
rest.
Prescott put the newspaper in his
pocket and left the little tavern with an abruptness
that astonished his host, setting out upon his ride
with increased haste and turning eastward, intending
to reach the railroad at the nearest point where he
could take a train to Richmond.
His was not a morbid mind, but the
fever in it grew. He had thought that the Secretary
loved Helen Harley: but once he had fancied himself
in love with Helen, too, and why might not the Secretary
suffering from the same delusion be changed in the
same way? He took out the newspaper and read
the story again. There was much about her beauty,
a description of her dress, and the distinction of
her manner and appearance. The President himself,
it said, was charmed with her, and departing from his
usual cold reserve gave her graceful compliments.
This new reading of the newspaper
only added more impetus to his speed and on the afternoon
of the same day he reached the railroad station.
Early the next morning he entered Richmond.
His heart, despite its recurrent troubles,
was light, for he was coming home once more.
The streets were but slightly changed perhaps
a little more bareness and leanness of aspect, an
older and more faded look to the clothing of the people
whom he passed, but the same fine courage shone in
their eyes. If Richmond, after nearly four years
of fighting, heard the guns of the foe once more,
she merely drew tighter the belt around her lean waist
and turning her face toward the enemy smiled bravely.
The President received the despatch
bearer in his private room, looking taller, thinner
and sterner than ever. Although a Kentuckian by
birth, he had been bred in the far South, but had
little of that far South about him save the dress
he wore. He was too cold, too precise, too free
from sudden emotion to be of the Gulf Coast State that
sent him to the capital. Prescott often reflected
upon the odd coincidence that the opposing Presidents,
Lincoln and Davis, should have been produced by the
same State, Kentucky, and that the President of the
South should be Northern in manner and the President
of the North Southern in manner.
Mr. Davis read the despatches while
their bearer, at his request, waited by. Prescott
knew the hopeless tenor of those letters, but he could
see no change in the stern, gray face as its owner
read them, letter after letter. More than a half-hour
passed and there was no sound in the room save the
rustling of the paper as the President turned it sheet
by sheet. Then in even, dry tones he said:
“You need not wait any longer,
Captain Prescott; you have done your part well and
I thank you. You will remain in Richmond until
further orders.”
Prescott saluted and went out, glad
to get into the free air again. He did not envy
the responsibility of a president in war time, whether
the president of a country already established or
of one yet tentative. He hurried home, and it
was his mother herself who responded to the sound
of the knocker his mother, quiet, smiling
and undemonstrative as of old, but with an endless
tenderness for him in the depths of her blue eyes.
“Here I am again, mother, and
unwounded this time,” he cried after the first
greeting; “and I suppose that as soon as they
hear of my arrival all the Yankees will be running
back to the North.”
She smiled her quiet, placid smile.
“Ah, my son,” she said,
and from her voice he could not doubt her seriousness,
“I’m afraid they will not go even when
they hear of your arrival.”
“In your heart of hearts, mother,
you have always believed that they would come into
Richmond. But remember they are not here yet.
They were even closer than this before the Seven Days,
but they got their faces burned then for their pains.”
They talked after their old custom,
while Prescott ate his luncheon and his mother gave
him the news of Richmond and the people whom he knew.
He noticed often how closely she followed the fortunes
of their friends, despite her seeming indifference,
and, informed by experience, he never doubted the
accuracy of her reports.
“Helen Harley is yet in the
employ of Mr. Sefton,” she said, “and the
money that she earns is, I hear, still welcome in the
house of the Harleys. Mr. Harley is a fine Southern
gentleman, but he has found means of overcoming his
pride; it requires something to support his state.”
“But what of Helen?” asked
Prescott. He always had a feeling of repulsion
toward Mr. Harley, his sounding talk, his colossal
vanity and his selfishness.
“Helen, I think,” said
his mother, “is more of a woman than she used
to be. Her mind has been strengthened by occupation.
You won’t object, Robert, will you, if I tell
you that in my opinion both the men and women of the
South have suffered from lack of diversity and variety
in interests and ambitions. When men have only
two ambitions, war and politics, and when women care
only for the social side of life, important enough,
but not everything, there can be no symmetrical development.
A Southern republic, even if they should win this war,
is impossible, because to support a State it takes
a great deal more than the ability to speak and fight
well.”
Prescott laughed.
“What a political economist
we have grown to be, mother!” he said, and then
he added thoughtfully: “I won’t deny,
however, that you are right at least, in
part. But what more of Helen, mother? Is
Mr. Sefton as attentive as ever to his clerk?”
She looked at him covertly, as if
she would measure alike his expression and the tone
of his voice.
“He is still attentive to Helen in
a way,” she replied, “but the Secretary
is like many other men: he sees more than one
beautiful flower in the garden.”
“What do you mean, mother?” asked Prescott
quickly.
His face flushed suddenly and then
turned pale. She gave him another keen but covert
look from under lowered eyelids.
“There’s a new star in
Richmond,” she replied quietly, “and singular
as it may seem, it is a star of the North. You
know Miss Charlotte Grayson and her Northern sympathies:
it is a relative of hers a Miss Catherwood,
Miss Lucia Catherwood, who came to visit her shortly
after the battles in the Wilderness the
‘Beautiful Yankee,’ they call her.
Her beauty, her grace and distinction of manner are
so great that all Richmond raves about her. She
is modest and would remain in retirement, but for
the sake of her own peace and Miss Grayson’s
she has been compelled to enter our social life here.”
“And the Secretary?” said
Prescott. He was now able to assume an air of
indifference.
“He warms himself at the flame
and perhaps scorches himself, too, or it may be that
he wishes to make some one else jealous Helen
Harley, for instance. I merely venture the suggestion;
I do not pretend to know all the secrets of the social
life of Richmond.”
Prescott went that very afternoon
to the Grayson cottage, and he prepared himself with
the greatest care for his going. He felt a sudden
and strong anxiety about his clothing. His uniform
was old, ragged and stained, but he had a civilian
suit of good quality.
“This dates from the fall of
’60,” he said, looking at it, “and
that’s more than four years ago; but it’s
hard to keep the latest fashions in Richmond now.”
However, it was a vast improvement,
and the change to civilian garb made him feel like
a man of peace once more.
He went into the street and found
Richmond under the dim cold of a November sky, distant
houses melting into a gray blur and people shivering
as they passed. As he walked briskly along he
heard behind him the roll of carriage wheels, and
when he glanced over his shoulder what he beheld brought
the red to his face.
Mr. Sefton was driving and Helen Harley
sat beside him. On the rear seat were Colonel
Harley and Lucia Catherwood. As he looked the
Secretary turned back and said something in a laughing
manner to Lucia, and she, laughing in like fashion,
replied. Prescott was too far away to understand
the words even had he wished, but Lucia’s eyes
were smiling and her face was rosy with the cold and
the swift motion. She was muffled in a heavy
black cloak, but her expression was happy.
The carriage passed so swiftly that
she did not see Prescott standing on the sidewalk.
He gazed after the disappearing party and others did
likewise, for carriages were becoming too scarce in
Richmond not to be noticed. Some one spoke lightly,
coupling the names of James Sefton and Lucia Catherwood.
Prescott turned fiercely upon him and bade him beware
how he repeated such remarks. The man did not
reply, startled by such heat, and Prescott walked
on, striving to keep down the anger and grief that
were rising within him.
He concluded that he need not hurry
now, because if he went at once to the little house
in the cross street she would not be there; and he
came to an angry conclusion that while he had been
upon an errand of hardship and danger she had been
enjoying all the excitement of life in the capital
and with a powerful friend at court. He had always
felt a sense of proprietorship in her and now it was
rudely shocked. He forgot that if he had saved
her she had saved him. It never occurred to him
in his glowing youth that she had an entire right
to love and marry James Sefton if fate so decreed.
He walked back and forth so angrily
and so thoroughly wrapped in his own thoughts that
he noticed nobody, though many noticed him and wondered
at the young man with the pale face and the hot eyes.
It was twilight before he resumed
his journey to the little house. The gray November
day was thickening into the chill gloom of a winter
night when he knocked at the well-remembered door.
The shutters were closed, but some bars of ruddy light
shone through them and fell across the brown earth.
He was not coming now in secrecy as of old, but he
had come with a better heart then.
It was Lucia herself who opened the
door Lucia, with a softer face than in
the earlier time, but with a royal dignity that he
had never seen in any other woman, and he had seen
women who were royal by birth. She was clad in
some soft gray stuff and her hair was drawn high upon
her head, a crown of burnished black, gleaming with
tints of red, like flame, where the firelight behind
her flickered and fell upon it.
The twilight was heavy without and
she did not see at once who was standing at the door.
She put up her hands to shade her eyes, but when she
beheld Prescott a little cry of gladness broke from
her. “Ah, it is you!” she said, holding
out both her hands, and his jealousy and pain were
swept away for the moment.
He clasped her hands in the warm pressure
of his own, saying: “Yes, it is I; and
I cannot tell you how glad I am to see you once more.”
The room behind her seemed to be filled
with a glow, and when they went in the fire blazed
and sparkled and its red light fell across the floor.
Miss Grayson, small, quiet and gray as usual, came
forward to meet him. Her tiny cool hand rested
in his a moment, and the look in her eyes told him
as truly as the words she spoke that he was welcome.
“When did you arrive?” asked Lucia.
“But this morning,” he
replied. “You see, I have come at once to
find you. I saw you when you did not see me.”
“When?” she asked in surprise.
“In the carriage with the Secretary
and the Harleys,” he replied, the feeling of
jealousy and pain returning. “You passed
me, but you were too busy to see me.”
She noticed the slight change in his
tone, but she replied without any self-consciousness.
“Yes; Mr. Sefton he
has been very kind to us asked me to go
with Miss Harley, her brother and himself. How
sorry I am that none of us saw you.”
The feeling that he had a grievance
took strong hold of Prescott, and it was inflamed
at the new mention of the Secretary’s name.
If it were any other it might be more tolerable, but
Mr. Sefton was a crafty and dangerous man, perhaps
unscrupulous too. He remembered that light remark
of the bystander coupling the name of the Secretary
and Lucia Catherwood, and at the recollection the
red flushed into his face.
“The Secretary is able and powerful,”
he said, “but not wholly to be trusted.
He is an intriguer.”
Miss Grayson looked up with her quiet smile.
“Mr. Sefton has been kind to
us,” she said, “and he has made our life
in Richmond more tolerable. We could not be ungrateful,
and I urged Lucia to go with them to-day.”
The colour flickered in the sensitive,
proud face of Lucia Catherwood.
“But, Charlotte, I should have
gone of my own accord, and it was a pleasant drive.”
There was a shade of defiance in her
tone, and Prescott, restless and uneasy, stared into
the fire. He had expected her to yield to his
challenge, to be humble, to make some apology; but
she did not, having no excuses to offer, and he found
his own position difficult and unpleasant. The
stubborn part of his nature was stirred and he spoke
coldly of something else, while she replied in like
fashion. He was sure now that Sefton had transferred
his love to her, and if she did not return it she
at least looked upon him with favouring eyes.
As for himself, he had become an outsider. He
remembered her refusal of him. Then the impression
she gave him once that she had fled from Richmond,
partly and perhaps chiefly to save him, was false.
On second thought no doubt it was false. And
despite her statement she might really have been a
spy! How could he believe her now?
Miss Grayson, quiet and observant,
noticed the change. She liked this young man,
so serious and steady and so different from the passionate
and reckless youths who are erroneously taken by outsiders
to be the universal type of the South. Her heart
rallied to the side of her cousin, Lucia Catherwood,
with whom she had shared hardships and dangers and
whose worth she knew; but with the keen eye of the
kindly old maid she saw what troubled Prescott, and
being a woman she could not blame him. Taking
upon herself the burden of the conversation, she asked
Prescott about his southern journey, and as he told
her of the path that led him through mountains, the
glory of the autumn woods and the peace of the wilderness,
there was a little bitterness in his tone in referring
to those lonesome but happy days. He had felt
then that he was coming north to the struggles and
passions of a battleground, and now he was finding
the premonition true in more senses than one.
Lucia sat in the far corner of the
little room where the flickering firelight fell across
her face and dress. They had not lighted candle
nor lamp, but the rich tints in her hair gleamed with
a deeper sheen when the glow of the flames fell across
it. Prescott’s former sense of proprietorship
was going, and she seemed more beautiful, more worth
the effort of a lifetime than ever before. Here
was a woman of mind and heart, one not bounded by
narrow sectionalism, but seeing the good wherever
it might be. He felt that he had behaved like
a prig and a fool. Why should he be influenced
by the idle words of some idle man in the street?
He was not Lucia Catherwood’s guardian; if there
were any question of guardianship, she was much better
fitted to be the guardian of him.
Had he obeyed this rush of feeling
he would have swept away all constraint by words abrupt,
disjointed perhaps, but alive with sincerity, and
Miss Grayson gave him ample opportunity by slipping
with excuses into the next room. The pride and
stubbornness in Prescott’s nature were tenacious
and refused to die. Although wishing to say words
that would undo the effect of those already spoken,
he spoke instead of something else topics
foreign then to the heart of either of the
war, the social life of Richmond. Miss Harley
was still a great favourite in the capital and the
Secretary paid her much attention, so Lucia said without
the slightest change in her tone. Helen’s
brother had made several visits to Richmond; General
Wood had come once, and Mr. Talbot once. Mr.
Talbot and now she smiled was
overpowered on his last visit. Some Northern
prisoners had told how the vanguard of their army was
held back in the darkness at the passage of the river
by a single man who was taken prisoner, but not until
he had given his beaten brigade time to escape.
That man was discovered to be Talbot and he had fled
from Richmond to escape an excess of attention and
compliments.
“And it was old Talbot who saved
us from capture,” said Prescott. “I’ve
often wondered why we were not pursued more closely
that night. And he never said anything about
it.”
“Mrs. Markham, too, is in Richmond,”
Lucia continued, “and she is, perhaps, the most
conspicuous of its social lights. General Markham
is at the front with the army” here
she stopped abruptly and the colour came into her
face. But Prescott guessed the rest. Colonel
Harley was constantly in Mrs. Markham’s train
and that was why he came so often to Richmond.
The capital was not without its gossip.
The flames died down and a red-and-yellow
glow came from the heart of the coals. The light
now gleamed only at times on the face of Lucia Catherwood.
It seemed to Prescott (or was it fancy) that by this
flickering radiance he saw a pathetic look on her face a
little touch of appeal. Again he felt a great
wave of tenderness and of reverence, too. She
was far better than he. Words of humility and
apology leaped once more to the end of his tongue,
but they did not pass his lips. He could not
say them. His stubborn pride still controlled
and he rambled on with commonplace and idle talk.
Miss Grayson came back bearing a lamp,
and by chance, as it were, she let its flame fall
first upon the face of the man and then upon the face
of the woman, and she felt a little thrill of disappointment
when she noted the result in either case. Miss
Charlotte Grayson was one of the gentlest of fine
old maids, and her heart was soft within her.
She remembered the long vigils of Prescott, his deep
sympathy, the substantial help that he had given,
and, at last, how, at the risk of his own career,
he had helped Lucia Catherwood to escape from Richmond
and danger. She marked the coldness and constraint
still in the air and was sorry, but knew not what
to do.
Prescott rose presently and said good-night,
expressing the hope that it would not be long until
he again saw them both. Lucia echoed his hope
in a like formal fashion and Prescott went out.
He did not look back to see if the light from the
window still fell across the brown grass, but hurried
away in the darkness.