In the moment in which she sprang
to her feet she saw that it was not Hugon, and her
heart grew calm again. In her torn gown, with
her brown hair loosed from its fastenings, and falling
over her shoulders in heavy waves whose crests caught
the sunlight, she stood against the tree beneath which
she had lain, gazed with wide-open eyes at the intruder,
and guessed from his fine coat and the sparkling toy
looping his hat that he was a gentleman. She
knew gentlemen when she saw them: on a time one
had cursed her for scurrying like a partridge across
the road before his horse, making the beast come nigh
to unseating him; another, coming upon her and the
Widow Constance’s Barbara gathering fagots
in the November woods, had tossed to each a sixpence;
a third, on vestry business with the minister, had
touched her beneath the chin, and sworn that an she
were not so brown she were fair; a fourth, lying hidden
upon the bank of the creek, had caught her boat head
as she pushed it into the reeds, and had tried to
kiss her. They had certain ways, had gentlemen,
but she knew no great harm of them. There was
one, now but he would be like a prince.
When at eventide the sky was piled with pale towering
clouds, and she looked, as she often looked, down
the river, toward the bay and the sea beyond, she
always saw this prince that she had woven warp
of memory, woof of dreams stand erect in
the pearly light. There was a gentleman indeed!
As to the possessor of the title now
slowly and steadily making his way toward her she
was in a mere state of wonder. It was not possible
that he had lost his way; but if so, she was sorry
that, in losing it, he had found the slender zigzag
of her path. A trustful child, save
where Hugon was concerned, she was not
in the least afraid, and being of a friendly mind
looked at the approaching figure with shy kindliness,
and thought that he must have come from a distant
part of the country. She thought that had she
ever seen him before she would have remembered it.
Upon the outskirts of the ring, clear
of the close embrace of flowering bush and spreading
vine. Haward paused, and looked with smiling eyes
at this girl of the woods, this forest creature that,
springing from the earth, had set its back against
the tree.
“Tarry awhile,” he said.
“Slip not yet within the bark. Had I known,
I should have brought oblation of milk and honey.”
“This is the thicket between
Fair View and the glebe lands,” said Audrey,
who knew not what bark of tree and milk and honey had
to do with the case. “Over yonder, sir,
is the road to the great house. This path ends
here; you must go back to the edge of the wood, then
turn to the south”
“I have not lost my way,”
answered Haward, still smiling. “It is pleasant
here in the shade, after the warmth of the open.
May I not sit down upon the leaves and talk to you
for a while? I came out to find you, you know.”
As he spoke, and without waiting for
the permission which he asked, he crossed the rustling
leaves, and threw himself down upon the earth between
two branching roots. Her skirt brushed his knee;
with a movement quick and shy she put more distance
between them, then stood and looked at him with wide,
grave eyes. “Why do you say that you came
here to find me?” she asked. “I do
not know you.”
Haward laughed, nursing his knee and
looking about him. “Let that pass for a
moment. You have the prettiest woodland parlor,
child! Tell me, do they treat you well over there?”
with a jerk of his thumb toward the glebe house.
“Madam the shrew and his reverence the bully,
are they kind to you? Though they let you go
like a beggar maid,” he glanced kindly
enough at her bare feet and torn gown, “yet
they starve you not, nor beat you, nor deny you aught
in reason?”
Audrey drew herself up. She had
a proper pride, and she chose to forget for this occasion
a bruise upon her arm and the thrusting upon her of
Hugon’s company. “I do not know who
you are, sir, that ask me such questions,” she
said sedately. “I have food and shelter
and and kindness. And I
go barefoot only of week days”
It was a brave beginning, but of a
sudden she found it hard to go on. She felt his
eyes upon her and knew that he was unconvinced, and
into her own eyes came the large tears. They
did not fall, but through them she saw the forest
swim in green and gold. “I have no father
or mother,” she said, “and no brother
or sister. In all the world there is no one that
is kin to me.”
Her voice, that was low and full and
apt to fall into minor cadences, died away, and she
stood with her face raised and slightly turned from
the gentleman who lay at her feet, stretched out upon
the sere beech leaves. He did not seem inclined
to speech, and for a time the little brook and the
birds and the wind in the trees sang undisturbed.
“These woods are very beautiful,”
said Haward at last, with his gaze upon her, “but
if the land were less level it were more to my taste.
Now, if this plain were a little valley couched among
the hills, if to the westward rose dark blue mountains
like a rampart, if the runlet yonder were broad and
clear, if this beech were a sugar-tree”
He broke off, content to see her eyes
dilate, her bosom rise and fall, her hand go trembling
for support to the column of the beech.
“Oh, the mountains!” she
cried. “When the mist lifted, when the cloud
rested, when the sky was red behind them! Oh,
the clear stream, and the sugar-tree, and the cabin!
Who are you? How did you know about these things?
Were you were you there?”
She turned upon him, with her soul
in her eyes. As for him, lying at length upon
the ground, he locked his hands beneath his head and
began to sing, though scarce above his breath.
He sang the song of Amiens:
“Under the greenwood
tree,
Who loves to lie with
me.”
When he had come to the end of the
stanza he half rose, and turned toward the mute and
breathless figure leaning against the beech-tree.
For her the years had rolled back: one moment
she stood upon the doorstep of the cabin, and the
air was filled with the trampling of horses, with quick
laughter, whistling, singing, and the call of a trumpet;
the next she ran, in night-time and in terror, between
rows of rustling corn, felt again the clasp of her
pursuer, heard at her ear the comfort of his voice.
A film came between her eyes and the man at whom she
stared, and her heart grew cold.
“Audrey,” said Haward, “come here,
child.”
The blood returned to her heart, her
vision cleared, and her arm fell from its clasp upon
the tree. The bark opened not; the hamadryad had
lost the spell. When at his repeated command
she crossed to him, she went as the trusting, dumbly
loving, dumbly grateful child whose life he had saved,
and whose comforter, protector, and guardian he had
been. When he took her hands in his she was glad
to feel them there again, and she had no blushes ready
when he kissed her upon the forehead. It was sweet
to her who hungered for affection, who long ago had
set his image up, loving him purely as a sovereign
spirit or as a dear and great elder brother, to hear
him call her again “little maid;” tell
her that she had not changed save in height; ask her
if she remembered this or that adventure, what time
they had strayed in the woods together. Remember!
When at last, beneath his admirable management, the
wonder and the shyness melted away, and she found
her tongue, memories came in a torrent. The hilltop,
the deep woods and the giant trees, the house he had
built for her out of stones and moss, the grapes they
had gathered, the fish they had caught, the thunderstorm
when he had snatched her out of the path of a stricken
and falling pine, an alarm of Indians, an alarm of
wolves, finally the first faint sounds of the returning
expedition, the distant trumpet note, the nearer approach,
the bursting again into the valley of the Governor
and his party, the journey from that loved spot to
Williamsburgh, all sights and sounds, thoughts
and emotions, of that time, fast held through lonely
years, came at her call, and passed again in procession
before them. Haward, first amazed, then touched,
reached at length the conclusion that the years of
her residence beneath the minister’s roof could
not have been happy; that she must always have put
from her with shuddering and horror the memory of
the night which orphaned her; but that she had passionately
nursed, cherished, and loved all that she had of sweet
and dear, and that this all was the memory of her
childhood in the valley, and of that brief season
when he had been her savior, protector, friend, and
playmate. He learned also for she
was too simple and too glad either to withhold the
information or to know that she had given it that
in her girlish and innocent imaginings she had made
of him a fairy knight, clothing him in a panoply of
power, mercy, and tenderness, and setting him on high,
so high that his very heel was above the heads of
the mortals within her ken.
Keen enough in his perceptions, he
was able to recognize that here was a pure and imaginative
spirit, strongly yearning after ideal strength, beauty,
and goodness. Given such a spirit, it was not
unnatural that, turning from sordid or unhappy surroundings
as a flower turns from shadow to the full face of
the sun, she should have taken a memory of valiant
deeds, kind words, and a protecting arm, and have created
out of these a man after her own heart, endowing him
with all heroic attributes; at one and the same time
sending him out into the world, a knight-errant without
fear and without reproach, and keeping him by her side the
side of a child in her own private wonderland.
He saw that she had done this, and he was ashamed.
He did not tell her that that eleven-years-distant
fortnight was to him but a half-remembered incident
of a crowded life, and that to all intents and purposes
she herself had been forgotten. For one thing,
it would have hurt her; for another, he saw no reason
why he should tell her. Upon occasion he could
be as ruthless as a stone; if he were so now he knew
it not, but in deceiving her deceived himself.
Man of a world that was corrupt enough, he was of
course quietly assured that he could bend this woodland
creature half child, half dryad to
the form of his bidding. To do so was in his
power, but not his pleasure. He meant to leave
her as she was; to accept the adoration of the child,
but to attempt no awakening of the woman. The
girl was of the mountains, and their higher, colder,
purer air; though he had brought her body thence, he
would not have her spirit leave the climbing earth,
the dreamlike summits, for the hot and dusty plain.
The plain, God knew, had dwellers enough.
She was a thing of wild and sylvan
grace, and there was fulfillment in a dark beauty
all her own of the promise she had given as a child.
About her was a pathos, too, the pathos
of the flower taken from its proper soil, and drooping
in earth which nourished it not. Haward, looking
at her, watching the sensitive, mobile lips, reading
in the dark eyes, beneath the felicity of the present,
a hint and prophecy of woe, felt for her a pity so
real and great that for the moment his heart ached
as for some sorrow of his own. She was only a
young girl, poor and helpless, born of poor and helpless
parents dead long ago. There was in her veins
no gentle blood; she had none of the world’s
goods; her gown was torn, her feet went bare.
She had youth, but not its heritage of gladness:
beauty, but none to see it; a nature that reached
toward light and height, and for its home the house
which he had lately left. He was a man older by
many years than the girl beside him, knowing good
and evil; by instinct preferring the former, but at
times stooping, open-eyed, to that degree of the latter
which a lax and gay world held to be not incompatible
with a convention somewhat misnamed “the honor
of a gentleman.” Now, beneath the beech-tree
in the forest which touched upon one side the glebe,
upon the other his own lands, he chose at this time
the good; said to himself, and believed the thing
he said, that in word and in deed he would prove himself
her friend.
Putting out his hand he drew her down
upon the leaves; and she sat beside him, still and
happy, ready to answer him when he asked her this or
that, readier yet to sit in blissful, dreamy silence.
She was as pure as the flower which she held in her
hand, and most innocent in her imaginings. This
was a very perfect knight, a great gentleman, good
and pitiful, that had saved her from the Indians when
she was a little girl, and had been kind to her, ah,
so kind! In that dreadful night when she had lost
father and mother and brother and sister, when in
the darkness her childish heart was a stone for terror,
he had come, like God, from the mountains, and straightway
she was safe. Now into her woods, from over the
sea, he had come again, and at once the load upon
her heart, the dull longing and misery, the fear of
Hugon, were lifted. The chaplet which she laid
at his feet was not loosely woven of gay-colored flowers,
but was compact of austerer blooms of gratitude, reverence,
and that love which is only a longing to serve.
The glamour was at hand, the enchanted light which
breaks not from the east or the west or the north or
the south was upon its way; but she knew it not, and
she was happy in her ignorance.
“I am tired of the city,”
he said. “Now I shall stay in Virginia.
A longing for the river and the marshes and the house
where I was born came upon me”
“I know,” she answered.
“When I shut my eyes I see the cabin in the
valley, and when I dream it is of things which happen
in a mountainous country.”
“I am alone in the great house,”
he continued, “and the floors echo somewhat
loudly. The garden, too; beside myself there is
no one to smell the roses or to walk in the moonlight.
I had forgotten the isolation of these great plantations.
Each is a province and a despotism. If the despot
has neither kith nor kin, has not yet made friends,
and cares not to draw company from the quarters, he
is lonely. They say that there are ladies in
Virginia whose charms well-nigh outweigh their dowries
of sweet-scented and Oronoko. I will wed such
an one, and have laughter in my garden, and other
footsteps than my own in my house.”
“There are beautiful ladies
in these parts,” said Audrey. “There
is the one that gave me the guinea for my running
yesterday. She was so very fair. I wished
with all my heart that I were like her.”
“She is my friend,” said
Haward slowly, “and her mind is as fair as her
face. I will tell her your story.”
The gilded streak upon the earth beneath
the beech had crept away, but over the ferns and weeds
and flowering bushes between the slight trees without
the ring the sunshine gloated. The blue of the
sky was wonderful, and in the silence Haward and Audrey
heard the wind whisper in the treetops. A dove
moaned, and a hare ran past.
“It was I who brought you from
the mountains and placed you here,” said Haward
at last. “I thought it for the best, and
that when I sailed away I left you to a safe and happy
life. It seems that I was mistaken. But now
that I am at home again, child, I wish you to look
upon me, who am so much your elder, as your guardian
and protector still. If there is anything which
you lack, if you are misused, are in need of help,
why, think that your troubles are the Indians again,
little maid, and turn to me once more for help!”
Having spoken honestly and well and
very unwisely, he looked at his watch and said that
it was late. When he rose to his feet Audrey did
not move, and when he looked down upon her he saw
that her eyes, that had been wet, were overflowing.
He put out his hand, and she took it and touched it
with her lips; then, because he said that he had not
meant to set her crying, she smiled, and with her
own hand dashed away the tears.
“When I ride this way I shall
always stop at the minister’s house,” said
Haward, “when, if there is aught which you need
or wish, you must tell me of it. Think of me
as your friend, child.”
He laid his hand lightly and caressingly
upon her head. The ruffles at his wrist, soft,
fine, and perfumed, brushed her forehead and her eyes.
“The path through your labyrinth to its beechen
heart was hard to find,” he continued, “but
I can easily retrace it. No, trouble not yourself,
child. Stay for a time where you are. I
wish to speak to the minister alone.”
His hand was lifted. Audrey felt
rather than saw him go. Only a few feet, and
the dogwood stars, the purple mist of the Judas-tree,
the white fragrance of a wild cherry, came like a
painted arras between them. For a time she could
hear the movement of the branches as he put them aside;
but presently this too ceased, and the place was left
to her and to all the life that called it home.
It was the same wood, surely, into
which she had run two hours before, and yet and
yet When her tears were spent, and she stood
up, leaning, with her loosened hair and her gown that
was the color of oak bark, against the beech-tree,
she looked about her and wondered. The wonder
did not last, for she found an explanation.
“It has been blessed,”
said Audrey, with all reverence and simplicity, “and
that is why the light is so different.”