The two men, left alone, turned each
toward the interior of the store, and their eyes met.
Alike in gray eyes and in dark blue there was laughter.
“Kittle folk, the Quakers,” said the storekeeper,
with a shrug, and went to put away his case of pins
and needles. Haward, going to the end of the
store, found a row of dusty bottles, and breaking the
neck of one with a report like that of a pistol set
the Madeira to his lips, and therewith quenched his
thirst. The wine cellar abutted upon the library.
Taking off his riding glove he ran his finger along
the bindings, and plucking forth The History of a
Coy Lady looked at the first page, read the last paragraph,
and finally thrust the thin brown and gilt volume into
his pocket. Turning, he found himself face to
face with the storekeeper.
“I have not the honor of knowing
your name, sir,” remarked the latter dryly.
“Do you buy at this store, and upon whose account?”
Haward shook his head, and applied
himself again to the Madeira.
“Then you carry with you coin
of the realm with which to settle?” continued
the other. “The wine is two shillings; the
book you may have for twelve-pence.”
“Here I need not pay, good fellow,”
said Haward negligently, his eyes upon a row of dangling
objects. “Fetch me down yonder cane; ’t
is as delicately tapered and clouded as any at the
Exchange.”
“Pay me first for the wine and
the book,” answered the man composedly.
“It’s a dirty business enough, God knows,
for a gentleman to put finger to; but since needs
must when the devil drives, and he has driven me here,
why, I, Angus MacLean, who have no concerns of my own,
must e’en be faithful to the concerns of another.
Wherefore put down the silver you owe the Sassenach
whose wine you have drunken and whose book you have
taken.”
“And if I do not choose to pay?”
asked Haward, with a smile.
“Then you must e’en choose
to fight,” was the cool reply. “And
as I observe that you wear neither sword nor pistols,
and as jack boots and a fine tight-buttoned riding
coat are not the easiest clothes to wrestle in, it
appears just possible that I might win the cause.”
“And when you’ve thrown me, what then?”
“Oh, I would just draw a rope
around you and yonder cask of Jamaica, and leave you
to read your stolen book in peace until Saunderson
(that’s the overseer, and he’s none so
bad if he was born in Fife) shall come. You can
have it out with him; or maybe he’ll hale you
before the man that owns the store. I hear they
expect him home.”
Haward laughed, and abstracting another
bottle from the shelf broke its neck. “Hand
me yonder cup,” he said easily, “and we’ll
drink to his home-coming. Good fellow, I am Mr.
Marmaduke Haward, and I am glad to find so honest
a man in a place of no small trust. Long absence
and somewhat too complaisant a reference of all my
Virginian affairs to my agent have kept me much in
ignorance of the economy of my plantation. How
long have you been my storekeeper?”
Neither cup for the wine nor answer
to the question being forthcoming, Haward looked up
from his broken bottle. The man was standing with
his body bent forward and his hand pressed against
the wood of a great cask behind him until the finger-nails
showed white. His head was high, his face dark
red and angry, his brows drawn down until the gleaming
eyes beneath were like pin points.
So sudden and so sinister was the
change that Haward was startled. The hour was
late, the place deserted; as the man had discovered,
he had no weapons, nor, strong, active, and practiced
as he was, did he flatter himself that he could withstand
the length of brawn and sinew before him. Involuntarily,
he stepped backward until there was a space between
them, casting at the same moment a glance toward the
wall where hung axe and knife and hatchet.
The man intercepted the look, and
broke into a laugh. The sound was harsh and gibing,
but not menacing. “You need not be afraid,”
he said. “I do not want the feel of a rope
around my neck, though God knows why I should
care! Here is no clansman of mine, and no cursed
Campbell either, to see my end!”
“I am not afraid,” Haward
answered calmly. Walking to the shelf that held
an array of drinking vessels, he took two cups, filled
them with wine, and going back to his former station,
set one upon the cask beside the storekeeper.
“The wine is good,” he said. “Will
you drink?”
The other loosened the clasp of his
hand upon the wood and drew himself upright.
“I eat the bread and drink the water which you
give your servants,” he answered, speaking with
the thickness of hardly restrained passion. “The
wine cup goes from equal to equal.”
As he spoke he took up the peace offering,
eyed it for a moment with a bitter smile, then flung
it with force over his shoulder. The earthen
floor drank the wine; the china shivered into a thousand
fragments. “I have neither silver nor tobacco
with which to pay for my pleasure,” continued
the still smiling storekeeper. “When I am
come to the end of my term, then, an it please you,
I will serve out the damage.”
Haward sat down upon a keg of powder,
crossed his knees, and, with his chin upon his hand,
looked from between the curled lengths of his periwig
at the figure opposite. “I am glad to find
that in Virginia, at least, there is honesty,”
he said dryly. “I will try to remember the
cost of the cup and the wine against the expiry of
your indenture. In the mean time, I am curious
to know why you are angry with me whom you have never
seen before to-day.”
With the dashing of the wine to earth
the other’s passion had apparently spent itself.
The red slowly left his face, and he leaned at ease
against the cask, drumming upon its head with his
fingers. The sunlight, shrinking from floor and
wall, had left but a single line of gold. In the
half light strange and sombre shapes possessed the
room; through the stillness, beneath the sound of
the tattoo upon the cask head, the river made itself
heard.
“For ten years and more you
have been my master,” said the storekeeper.
“It is a word for which I have an invincible
distaste. It is not well having neither
love nor friendship to put in its place to
let hatred die. When I came first to this slavery,
I hated all Campbells, all Whigs, Forster that betrayed
us at Preston, and Ewin Mor Mackinnon. But the
years have come and the years have gone, and I am older
than I was at twenty-five. The Campbells I can
never reach: they walk secure, overseas, through
Lorn and Argyle, couching in the tall heather above
Etive, tracking the red deer in the Forest of Dalness.
Forster is dead. Ewin Mackinnon is dead, I know;
for five years ago come Martinmas night I saw his
perjured soul on its way to hell. All the world
is turning Whig. A man may hate the world, it
is true, but he needs a single foe.”
“And in that capacity you have
adopted me?” demanded Haward.
MacLean let his gaze travel over the
man opposite him, from the looped hat and the face
between the waves of hair to the gilt spurs upon the
great boots; then turned his eyes upon his own hand
and coarsely clad arm stretched across the cask.
“I, too, am a gentleman, the brother of a chieftain,”
he declared. “I am not without schooling.
I have seen something of life, and of countries more
polite than the land where I was born, though not
so dear. I have been free, and have loved my freedom.
Do you find it so strange that I should hate you?”
There was a silence; then, “Upon
my soul, I do not know that I do,” said Haward
slowly. “And yet, until this day I did not
know of your existence.”
“But I knew of yours,”
answered the storekeeper. “Your agent hath
an annoying trick of speech, and the overseers have
caught it from him. ’Your master’
this, and ‘your master’ that; in short,
for ten years it hath been, ‘Work, you dog,
that your master may play!’ Well, I have worked;
it was that, or killing myself, or going mad.
I have worked for you in the fields, in the smithy,
in this close room. But when you bought my body,
you could not buy my soul. Day after day, and
night after night, I sent it away; I would not let
it bide in these dull levels, in this cursed land of
heat and stagnant waters. At first it went home
to its own country, to its friends and
its foes, to the torrent and the mountain and the music
of the pipes; but at last the pain outweighed the
pleasure, and I sent it there no more. And then
it began to follow you.”
“To follow me!” involuntarily exclaimed
Haward.
“I have been in London,”
went on the other, without heeding the interruption.
“I know the life of men of quality, and where
they most resort. I early learned from your other
servants, and from the chance words of those who had
your affairs in charge, that you were young, well-looking,
a man of pleasure. At first when I thought of
you the blood came into my cheek, but at last I thought
of you constantly, and I felt for you a constant hatred.
It began when I knew that Ewin Mackinnon was dead.
I had no need of love; I had need of hate. Day
after day, my body slaving here, my mind has dogged
your footsteps. Up and down, to and fro, in business
and in pleasure, in whatever place I have imagined
you to be, there have I been also. Did you never,
when there seemed none by, look over your shoulder,
feeling another presence than your own?”
He ceased to speak, and the hand upon
the cask was still. The sunshine was clean gone
from the room, and without the door the wind in the
locust-tree answered the voice of the river. Haward
rose from his seat, but made no further motion toward
departing. “You have been frank,”
he said quietly. “Had you it in mind, all
this while, so to speak to me when we should meet?”
“No,” answered the other.
“I thought not of words, but of”
“But of deeds,” Haward
finished for him. “Rather, I imagine, of
one deed.”
Composed as ever in voice and manner,
he drew out his watch, and held it aslant that the
light might strike upon the dial. “’T is
after six,” he remarked as he put it away, “and
I am yet a mile from the house.” The wine
that he had poured for himself had been standing, untouched,
upon the keg beside him. He took it up and drank
it off; then wiped his lips with his handkerchief,
and passing the storekeeper with a slight inclination
of his head walked toward the door. A yard beyond
the man who had so coolly shown his side of the shield
was a rude table, on which were displayed hatchets
and hunting knives. Haward passed the gleaming
steel; then, a foot beyond it, stood still, his face
to the open door, and his back to the storekeeper
and the table with its sinister lading.
“You do wrong to allow so much
dust and disorder,” he said sharply. “I
could write my name in that mirror, and there is a
piece of brocade fallen to the floor. Look to
it that you keep the place more neat.”
There was dead silence for a moment;
then MacLean spoke in an even voice: “Now
a fool might call you as brave as Hector. For
myself, I only give you credit for some knowledge
of men. You are right. It is not my way to
strike in the back an unarmed man. When you are
gone, I will wipe off the mirror and pick up the brocade.”
He followed Haward outside. “It’s
a brave evening for riding,” he remarked, “and
you have a bonny bit of horseflesh there. You’ll
get to the house before candlelight.”
Beside one of the benches Haward made
another pause. “You are a Highlander and
a Jacobite,” he said. “From your reference
to Forster, I gather that you were among the prisoners
taken at Preston and transported to Virginia.”
“In the Elizabeth and Anne of
Liverpool, alias a bit of hell afloat; the
master, Captain Edward Trafford, alias Satan’s
first mate,” quoth the other grimly.
He stooped to the bench where lay
the debris of the coast and mountains he had been
lately building, and picked up a small, deep shell.
“My story is short,” he began. “It
could be packed into this. I was born in the island
of Mull, of my father a chieftain, and my mother a
lady. Some schooling I got in Aberdeen, some
pleasure in Edinburgh and London, and some service
abroad. In my twenty-third year being
at home at that time I was asked to a hunting
match at Braemar, and went. No great while afterwards
I was bidden to supper at an Edinburgh tavern, and
again I accepted the invitation. There was a
small entertainment to follow the supper, just
the taking of Edinburgh Castle. But the wine was
good, and we waited to powder our hair, and the entertainment
could hardly be called a success. Hard upon that
convivial evening, I, with many others, was asked across
the Border to join a number of gentlemen who drank
to the King after our fashion, and had a like fancy
for oak boughs and white roses. The weather was
pleasant, the company of the best, the roads very noble
after our Highland sheep tracks. Together with
our English friends, and enlivened by much good claret
and by music of bagpipe and drum, we strolled on through
a fine, populous country until we came to a town called
Preston, where we thought we would tarry for a day
or two. However, circumstances arose which detained
us somewhat longer. (I dare say you have heard the
story?) When finally we took our leave, some of us
went to heaven, some to hell, and some to Barbadoes
and Virginia. I was among those dispatched to
Virginia, and to all intents and purposes I died the
day I landed. There, the shell is full!”
He tossed it from him, and going to
the hitching-post loosed Haward’s horse.
Haward took the reins from his hand. “It
hath been ten years and more since Virginia got her
share of the rebels taken at Preston. If I remember
aright, their indentures were to be made for seven
years. Why, then, are you yet in my service?”
MacLean laughed. “I ran
away,” he replied pleasantly, “and when
I was caught I made off a second time. I wonder
that you planters do not have a Society for the Encouragement
of Runaways. Seeing that they are nearly always
retaken, and that their escapades so lengthen their
term of service, it would surely be to your advantage!
There are yet several years in which I am to call
you master.”
He laughed again, but the sound was
mirthless, and the eyes beneath the half-closed lids
were harder than steel. Haward mounted his horse
and gathered up the reins. “I am not responsible
for the laws of the realm,” he said calmly,
“nor for rebellions and insurrections, nor for
the practice of transporting overseas those to whom
have been given the ugly names of ‘rebel’
and ‘traitor.’ Destiny that set you
there put me here. We are alike pawns; what the
player means we have no way of telling. Curse
Fate and the gods, if you choose, and find
that your cursing does small good, but
regard me with indifference, as one neither more nor
less the slave of circumstances than yourself.
It has been long since I went this way. Is there
yet the path by the river?”
“Ay,” answered the other. “It
is your shortest road.”
“Then I will be going,”
said Haward. “It grows late, and I am not
looked for before to-morrow. Good-night.”
As he spoke he raised his hat and
bowed to the gentleman from whom he was parting.
That rebel to King George gave a great start; then
turned very red, and shot a piercing glance at the
man on horseback. The latter’s mien was
composed as ever, and, with his hat held beneath his
arm and his body slightly inclined, he was evidently
awaiting a like ceremony of leave-taking on the storekeeper’s
part. MacLean drew a long breath, stepped back
a pace or two, and bowed to his equal. A second
“Good-night,” and one gentleman rode off
in the direction of the great house, while the other
went thoughtfully back to the store, got a cloth and
wiped the dust from the mirror.
It was pleasant riding by the river
in the cool evening wind, with the colors of the sunset
yet gay in sky and water. Haward went slowly,
glancing now at the great, bright stream, now at the
wide, calm fields and the rim of woodland, dark and
distant, bounding his possessions. The smell
of salt marshes, of ploughed ground, of leagues of
flowering forests, was in his nostrils. Behind
him was the crescent moon; before him a terrace crowned
with lofty trees. Within the ring of foliage was
the house; even as he looked a light sprang up in
a high window, and shone like a star through the gathering
dusk. Below the hill the home landing ran its
gaunt black length far out into the carmine of the
river; upon the Golden Rose lights burned like lower
stars; from a thicket to the left of the bridle path
sounded the call of a whippoorwill. A gust of
wind blowing from the bay made to waver the lanterns
of the Golden Rose, broke and darkened the coral peace
of the river, and pushed rudely against the master
of those parts. Haward laid his hand upon his
horse that he loved. “This is better than
the Ring, isn’t it, Mirza?” he asked genially,
and the horse whinnied under his touch.
The land was quite gray, the river
pearl-colored, and the fireflies beginning to sparkle,
when he rode through the home gates. In the dusk
of the world, out of the deeper shadow of the surrounding
trees, his house looked grimly upon him. The
light had been at the side; all the front was stark
and black with shuttered windows. He rode to the
back of the house and hallooed to the slaves in the
home quarter, where were lights and noisy laughter,
and one deep voice singing in an unknown tongue.
It was but a stone’s throw to
the nearest cabin, and Haward’s call made itself
heard above the babel. The noise suddenly lessened,
and two or three negroes, starting up from the doorstep,
hurried across the grass to horse and rider.
Quickly as they came, some one within the house was
beforehand with them. The door swung open; there
was the flare of a lighted candle, and a voice cried
out to know what was wanted.
“Wanted!” exclaimed Haward.
“Ingress into my own house is wanted! Where
is Juba?”
One of the negroes pressed forward.
“Heah I is, Marse Duke! House all ready
for you, but you done sont word”
“I know, I know,”
answered Haward impatiently. “I changed
my mind. Is that you, Saunderson, with the light?
Or is it Hide?”
The candle moved to one side, and
there was disclosed a large white face atop of a shambling
figure dressed in some coarse, dark stuff. “Neither,
sir,” said an expressionless voice. “Will
it please your Honor to dismount?”
Haward swung himself out of the saddle,
tossed the reins to a negro, and, with Juba at his
heels, climbed the five low stone steps and entered
the wide hall running through the house and broken
only by the broad, winding stairway. Save for
the glimmer of the solitary candle all was in darkness;
the bare floor, the paneled walls, echoed to his tread.
On either hand squares of blackness proclaimed the
open doors of large, empty rooms, and down the stair
came a wind that bent the weak flame. The negro
took the light from the hand of the man who had opened
the door, and, pressing past his master, lit three
candles in a sconce upon the wall.
“Yo’ room’s all
ready, Marse Duke,” he declared. “Dere’s
candles enough, an’ de fire am laid an’
yo’ bed aired. Ef you wan’ some
supper, I kin get you bread an’ meat, an’
de wine was put in yesterday.”
Haward nodded, and taking the candle
began to mount the stairs. Half way up he found
that the man in the sad-colored raiment was following
him. He raised his brows, but being in a taciturn
humor, and having, moreover, to shield the flame from
the wind that drove down the stair, he said nothing,
going on in silence to the landing, and to the great
eastward-facing room that had been his father’s,
and which now he meant to make his own. There
were candles on the table, the dresser, and the mantelshelf.
He lit them all, and the room changed from a place
of shadows and monstrous shapes to a gentleman’s
bedchamber, somewhat sparsely furnished,
but of a comfortable and cheerful aspect. A cloth
lay upon the floor, the windows were curtained, and
the bed had fresh hangings of green and white Kidderminster.
Over the mantel hung a painting of Haward and his mother,
done when he was six years old. Beneath the laughing
child and the smiling lady, young and flower-crowned,
were crossed two ancient swords. In the middle
of the room stood a heavy table, and pushed back, as
though some one had lately risen from it, was an armchair
of Russian leather. Books lay upon the table;
one of them open, with a horn snuffbox keeping down
the leaf.
Haward seated himself in the great
chair, and looked around him with a thoughtful and
melancholy smile. He could not clearly remember
his mother. The rings upon her fingers and her
silvery laughter were all that dwelt in his mind,
and now only the sound of that merriment floated back
to him and lingered in the room. But his father
had died upon that bed, and beside the dead man, between
the candles at the head and the candles at the foot,
he had sat the night through. The curtains were
half drawn, and in their shadow his imagination laid
again that cold, inanimate form. Twelve years
ago! How young he had been that night, and how
old he had thought himself as he watched beside the
dead, chilled by the cold of the crossed hands, awed
by the silence, half frighted by the shadows on the
wall; now filled with natural grief, now with surreptitious
and shamefaced thoughts of his changed estate, yesterday
son and dependent, to-day heir and master! Twelve
years! The sigh and the smile were not for the
dead father, but for his own dead youth, for the unjaded
freshness of the morning, for the world that had been,
once upon a time.
Turning in his seat, his eyes fell
upon the man who had followed him, and who was now
standing between the table and the door. “Well,
friend?” he demanded.
The man came a step or two nearer.
His hat was in his hand, and his body was obsequiously
bent, but there was no discomposure in his lifeless
voice and manner. “I stayed to explain
my presence in the house, sir,” he said.
“I am a lover of reading, and, knowing my weakness,
your overseer, who keeps the keys of the house, has
been so good as to let me, from time to time, come
here to this room to mingle in more delectable company
than I can choose without these walls. Your Honor
doubtless remembers yonder goodly assemblage?”
He motioned with his hand toward a half-opened door,
showing a closet lined with well-filled bookshelves.
“I remember,” replied
Haward dryly. “So you come to my room alone
at night, and occupy yourself in reading? And
when you are wearied you refresh yourself with my
wine?” As he spoke he clinked together the bottle
and glass that stood beside the books.
“I plead guilty to the wine,”
answered the intruder, as lifelessly as ever, “but
it is my only theft. I found the bottle below,
and did not think it would be missed. I trust
that your Honor does not grudge it to a poor devil
who tastes Burgundy somewhat seldomer than does your
Worship. And my being in the house is pure innocence.
Your overseer knew that I would neither make nor meddle
with aught but the books, or he would not have given
me the key to the little door, which I now restore
to your Honor’s keeping.” He advanced,
and deposited upon the table a large key.
“What is your name?” demanded
Haward, leaning back in his chair.
“Bartholomew Paris, sir.
I keep the school down by the swamp, where I impart
to fifteen or twenty of the youth of these parts the
rudiments of the ancient and modern tongues, mathematics,
geography, fortifications, navigation, philosophy”
Haward yawned, and the schoolmaster
broke the thread of his discourse. “I weary
you, sir,” he said. “I will, with
your permission, take my departure. May I make
so bold as to beg your Honor that you will not mention
to the gentlemen hereabouts the small matter of this
bottle of wine? I would wish not to be prejudiced
in the eyes of my patrons and scholars.”
“I will think of it,”
Haward replied. “Come and take your snuffbox if
it be yours from the book where you have
left it.”
“It is mine,” said the
man. “A present from the godly minister
of this parish.”
As he spoke he put out his hand to
take the snuffbox. Haward leaned forward, seized
the hand, and, bending back the fingers, exposed the
palm to the light of the candles upon the table.
“The other, if you please,” he commanded.
For a second no longer a
wicked soul looked blackly out of the face to which
he had raised his eyes. Then the window shut,
and the wall was blank again. Without any change
in his listless demeanor, the schoolmaster laid his
left hand, palm out, beside his right.
“Humph!” exclaimed Haward.
“So you have stolen before to-night? The
marks are old. When were you branded, and where?”
“In Bristol, fifteen years ago,”
answered the man unblushingly. “It was
all a mistake. I was as innocent as a newborn
babe”
“But unfortunately could not
prove it,” interrupted Haward. “That
is of course. Go on.”
“I was transported to South
Carolina, and there served out my term. The climate
did not suit me, and I liked not the society, nor being
of a peaceful disposition the constant
alarms of pirates and buccaneers. So when I was
once more my own man I traveled north to Virginia with
a party of traders. In my youth I had been an
Oxford servitor, and schoolmasters are in demand in
Virginia. Weighed in the scales with a knowledge
of the humanities and some skill in imparting them,
what matters a little mishap with hot irons?
My patrons are willing to let bygones be bygones.
My school flourishes like a green bay-tree, and the
minister of this parish will speak for the probity
and sobriety of my conduct. Now I will go, sir.”
He made an awkward but deep and obsequious
reverence, turned and went out of the door, passing
Juba, who was entering with a salver laden with bread
and meat and a couple of bottles. “Put down
the food, Juba,” said Haward, “and see
this gentleman out of the house.”
An hour later the master dismissed
the slave, and sat down beside the table to finish
the wine and compose himself for the night. The
overseer had come hurrying to the great house, to
be sent home again by a message from the owner thereof
that to-morrow would do for business; the negro women
who had been called to make the bed were gone; the
noises from the quarter had long ceased, and the house
was very still. In his rich, figured Indian nightgown
and his silken nightcap, Haward sat and drank his
wine, slowly, with long pauses between the emptying
and the filling of the slender, tall-stemmed glass.
A window was open, and the wind blowing in made the
candles to flicker. With the wind came a murmur
of leaves and the wash of the river, stealthy
and mournful sounds that sorted not with the lighted
room, the cheerful homeliness of the flowered hangings,
the gleeful lady and child above the mantelshelf.
Haward felt the incongruity: a slow sea voyage,
and a week in that Virginia which, settled one hundred
and twenty years before, was yet largely forest and
stream, had weaned him, he thought, from sounds of
the street, and yet to-night he missed them, and would
have had the town again. When an owl hooted in
the walnut-tree outside his window, and in the distance,
as far away as the creek quarter, a dog howled, and
the silence closed in again, he rose, and began to
walk to and fro, slowly, thinking of the past and the
future. The past had its ghosts, not
many; what spectres the future might raise only itself
could tell. So far as mortal vision went, it was
a rose-colored future; but on such a night of silence
that was not silence, of loneliness that was filled
with still, small voices, of heavy darkness without,
of lights burning in an empty house, it was rather
of ashes of roses that one thought.
Haward went to the open window, and
with one knee upon the window seat looked out into
the windy, starlit night. This was the eastern
face of the house, and, beyond the waving trees, there
were visible both the river and the second and narrower
creek which on this side bounded the plantation.
The voice with which the waters swept to the sea came
strongly to him. A large white moth sailed out
of the darkness to the lit window, but his presence
scared it away.
Looking through the walnut branches,
he could see a light that burned steadily, like a
candle set in a window. For a moment he wondered
whence it shone; then he remembered that the glebe
lands lay in that direction. The parish was building
a house for its new minister, when he left Virginia,
those many years ago. Suddenly he recalled that
the minister who had seemed to him a bluff,
downright, honest fellow had told him of
a little room looking out upon an orchard, and had
said that it should be the child’s.
It was possible that the star which
pierced the darkness might mark that room. He
knit his brows in an effort to remember when, before
this day, he had last thought of a child whom he had
held in his arms and comforted, one splendid dawn,
upon a hilltop, in a mountainous region. He came
to the conclusion that he must have forgotten her
quite six years ago. Well, she would seem to
have thriven under his neglect, and he saw
again the girl who had run for the golden guinea.
It was true that when he had put her there where that
light was shining, it was with some shadowy idea of
giving her gentle breeding, of making a lady of her.
But man’s purposes are fleeting, and often gone
with the morrow. He had forgotten his purpose;
and perhaps it was best this way, perhaps
it was best this way.
For a little longer he looked at the
light and listened to the voice of the river; then
he rose from the window seat, drew the curtains, and
began thoughtfully to prepare for bed.