The creek that ran between Fairview
and the glebe lands was narrow and deep; upon it,
moored to a stake driven into a bit of marshy ground
below the orchard, lay a crazy boat belonging to the
minister. To this boat, of an early, sunny morning,
came Audrey, and, standing erect, pole in hand, pushed
out from the reedy bank into the slow-moving stream.
It moved so slowly and was so clear that its depth
seemed the blue depth of the sky, with now and then
a tranquil cloud to be glided over. The banks
were low and of the greenest grass, save where they
sank still lower and reeds abounded, or where some
colored bush, heavy with bloom, bent to meet its reflected
image. It was so fair that Audrey began to sing
as she went down the stream; and without knowing why
she chose it, she sang a love song learned out of
one of Darden’s ungodly books, a plaintive and
passionate lay addressed by some cavalier to his mistress
of an hour. She sang not loudly, but very sweetly;
carelessly, too, and as if to herself; now and then
repeating a line twice or maybe thrice; pleased with
the sweet melancholy of the notes, but not thinking
overmuch of the meaning of the words. They died
upon her lips when Hugon rose from a lair of reeds
and called to her to stop. “Come to the
shore, ma’m’selle!” he cried.
“See, I have brought you a ribbon from the town.
Behold!” and he fluttered a crimson streamer.
Audrey caught her breath; then gazed,
reassured, at the five yards of water between her
and the bank. Had Hugon stood there in his hunting
dress, she would have felt them no security; but he
was wearing his coat and breeches of fine cloth, his
ruffled shirt, and his great black periwig. A
wetting would not be to his mind.
As she answered not, but went on her
way, silent now, and with her slender figure bending
with the motion of the pole, he frowned and shrugged;
then took up his pilgrimage, and with his light and
swinging stride kept alongside of the boat. The
ribbon lay across his arm, and he turned it in the
sunshine. “If you come not and get it,”
he wheedled, “I will throw it in the water.”
The angry tears sprang to Audrey’s
eyes. “Do so, and save me the trouble,”
she answered, and then was sorry that she had spoken.
The red came into the swarthy cheeks
of the man upon the bank. “You love me
not,” he said. “Good! You have
told me so before. But here I am!”
“Then here is a coward!”
said Audrey. “I do not wish you to walk
there. I do not wish you to speak to me.
Go back!”
Hugon’s teeth began to show.
“I go not,” he answered, with something
between a snarl and a smirk. “I love you,
and I follow on your path, like a lover.”
“Like an Indian!” cried the girl.
The arrow pierced the heel. The
face which he turned upon her was the face of a savage,
made grotesque and horrible, as war-paint and feathers
could not have made it, by the bushy black wig and
the lace cravat.
“Audrey!” he called.
“Morning Light! Sunshine in the Dark!
Dancing Water! Audrey that will not be called
‘mademoiselle’ nor have the wooing of the
son of a French chief! Then shall she have the
wooing of the son of a Monacan woman. I am a
hunter. I will woo as they woo in the woods.”
Audrey bent to her pole, and made
faster progress down the creek. Her heart was
hot and angry, and yet she was afraid. All dreadful
things, all things that oppressed with horror, all
things that turned one white and cold, so cold and
still that one could not run away, were summed up for
her in the word “Indian.” To her the
eyes of Hugon were basilisk eyes, they
drew her and held her; and when she looked into them,
she saw flames rising and bodies of murdered kindred;
then the mountains loomed above her again, and it
was night-time, and she was alone save for the dead,
and mad with fear and with the quiet.
The green banks went by, and the creek
began to widen. “Where are you going?”
called the trader. “Wheresoever you go,
at the end of your path stand my village and my wigwam.
You cannot stay all day in that boat. If you
come not back at the bidden hour, Darden’s squaw
will beat you. Come over, Morning Light, come
over, and take me in your boat, and tie your hair
with my gift. I will not hurt you. I will
tell you the French love songs that my father sang
to my mother. I will speak of land that I have
bought (oh, I have prospered, ma’m’selle!),
and of a house that I mean to build, and of a woman
that I wish to put in the house, a Sunshine
in the Dark to greet me when I come from my hunting
in the great forests beyond the falls, from my trading
with the nation of the Tuscaroras, with the villages
of the Monacans. Come over to me, Morning Light!”
The creek widened and widened, then
doubled a grassy cape all in the shadow of a towering
sycamore. Beyond the point, crowning the low green
slope of the bank, and topped with a shaggy fell of
honeysuckle and ivy, began a red brick wall.
Half way down its length it broke, and six shallow
steps led up to an iron gate, through whose bars one
looked into a garden. Gazing on down the creek
past the farther stretch of the wall, the eye came
upon the shining reaches of the river.
Audrey turned the boat’s head
toward the steps and the gate in the wall. The
man on the opposite shore let fall an oath.
“So you go to Fair View house!”
he called across the stream. “There are
only negroes there, unless” he came
to a pause, and his face changed again, and out of
his eyes looked the spirit of some hot, ancestral French
lover, cynical, suspicious, and jealously watchful “unless
their master is at home,” he ended, and laughed.
Audrey touched the wall, and over
a great iron hook projecting therefrom threw a looped
rope, and fastened her boat.
“I stay here until you come
forth!” swore Hugon from across the creek.
“And then I follow you back to where you must
moor the boat. And then I shall walk with you
to the minister’s house. Until we meet again,
ma’m’selle!”
Audrey answered not, but sped up the
steps to the gate. A sick fear lest it should
be locked possessed her; but it opened at her touch,
disclosing a long, sunny path, paved with brick, and
shut between lines of tall, thick, and smoothly clipped
box. The gate clanged to behind her; ten steps,
and the boat, the creek, and the farther shore were
hidden from her sight. With this comparative
bliss came a faintness and a trembling that presently
made her slip down upon the warm and sunny floor, and
lie there, with her face within her arm and the tears
upon her cheeks. The odor of the box wrapped
her like a mantle; a lizard glided past her; somewhere
in open spaces birds were singing; finally a greyhound
came down the path, and put its nose into the hollow
of her hand.
She rose to her knees, and curled
her arm around the dog’s neck; then, with a
long sigh, stood up, and asked of herself if this were
the way to the house. She had never seen the
house at close range, had never been in this walled
garden. It was from Williamsburgh that the minister
had taken her to his home, eleven years before.
Sometimes from the river, in those years, she had
seen, rising above the trees, the steep roof and the
upper windows; sometimes upon the creek she had gone
past the garden wall, and had smelled the flowers
upon the other side.
In her lonely life, with the beauty
of the earth about her to teach her that there might
be greater beauty that she yet might see with a daily
round of toil and sharp words to push her to that escape
which lay in a world of dreams, she had entered that
world, and thrived therein. It was a world that
was as pure as a pearl, and more fantastic than an
Arabian tale. She knew that when she died she
could take nothing out of life with her to heaven.
But with this other world it was different, and all
that she had or dreamed of that was fair she carried
through its portals. This house was there.
Long closed, walled in, guarded by tall trees, seen
at far intervals and from a distance, as through a
glass darkly, it had become to her an enchanted spot,
about which played her quick fancy, but where her
feet might never stray.
But now the spell which had held the
place in slumber was snapped, and her feet was set
in its pleasant paths. She moved down the alley
between the lines of box, and the greyhound went with
her. The branches of a walnut-tree drooped heavily
across the way; when she had passed them she saw the
house, square, dull red, bathed in sunshine. A
moment, and the walk led her between squat pillars
of living green into the garden out of the fairy tale.
Dim, fragrant, and old time; walled
in; here sunshiny spaces, there cool shadows of fruit-trees;
broken by circles and squares of box; green with the
grass and the leaves, red and purple and gold and white
with the flowers; with birds singing, with the great
silver river murmuring by without the wall at the
foot of the terrace, with the voice of a man who sat
beneath a cherry-tree reading aloud to himself, such
was the garden that she came upon, a young girl, and
heavy at heart.
She was so near that she could hear
the words of the reader, and she knew the piece that
he was reading; for you must remember that she was
not untaught, and that Darden had books.
“’When from the
censer clouds of fragrance roll,
And swelling organs
lift the rising soul,
One thought of
thee puts all the pomp to flight,
Priests, tapers,
temples, swim before my sight’”
The greyhound ran from Audrey to the
man who was reading these verses with taste and expression,
and also with a smile half sad and half cynical.
He glanced from his page, saw the girl where she stood
against the dark pillar of the box, tossed aside the
book, and went to her down the grassy path between
rows of nodding tulips. “Why, child!”
he said. “Did you come up like a flower?
I am glad to see you in my garden, little maid.
Are there Indians without?”
At least, to Audrey, there were none
within. She had been angered, sick at heart and
sore afraid, but she was no longer so. In this
world that she had entered it was good to be alive;
she knew that she was safe, and of a sudden she felt
that the sunshine was very golden, the music very sweet.
To Haward, looking at her with a smile, she gave a
folded paper which she drew from the bosom of her
gown. “The minister sent me with it,”
she explained, and curtsied shyly.
Haward took the paper, opened it,
and fell to poring over the crabbed characters with
which it was adorned. “Ay? Gratulateth
himself that this fortunate parish hath at last for
vestryman Mr. Marmaduke Haward; knoweth that, seeing
I am what I am, my influence will be paramount with
said vestry; commendeth himself to my favor; beggeth
that I listen not to charges made by a factious member
anent a vastly magnified occurrence at the French
ordinary; prayeth that he may shortly present himself
at Fair View, and explain away certain calumnies with
which his enemies have poisoned the ears of the Commissary;
hopeth that I am in good health; and is my very obedient
servant to command. Humph!”
He let the paper flutter to the ground,
and turned to Audrey with a kindly smile. “I
am much afraid that this man of the church, whom I
gave thee for guardian, child, is but a rascal, after
all, and a wolf in sheep’s clothing. But
let him go hang while I show you my garden.”
Going closer, he glanced at her keenly;
then went nearer still, and touched her cheek with
his forefinger. “You have been crying,”
he said. “There were Indians, then.
How many and how strong, Audrey?”
The dark eyes that met his were the
eyes of the child who, in the darkness, through the
corn, had run from him, her helper. “There
was one,” she whispered, and looked over her
shoulder.
Haward drew her to the seat beneath
the cherry-tree, and there, while he sat beside her,
elbow on knee and chin on hand, watching her, she told
him of Hugon. It was so natural to tell him.
When she had made an end of her halting, broken sentences,
and he spoke to her gravely and kindly, she hung upon
his words, and thought him wise and wonderful as a
king. He told her that he would speak to Darden,
and did not despair of persuading that worthy to forbid
the trader his house. Also he told her that in
this settled, pleasant, every-day Virginia, and in
the eighteenth century, a maid, however poor and humble,
might not be married against her will. If this
half-breed had threats to utter, there was always the
law of the land. A few hours in the pillory or
a taste of the sheriff’s whip might not be amiss.
Finally, if the trader made his suit again, Audrey
must let him know, and Monsieur Jean Hugon should
be taught that he had another than a helpless, friendless
girl to deal with.
Audrey listened and was comforted,
but the shadow did not quite leave her eyes.
“He is waiting for me now,” she said fearfully
to Haward, who had not missed the shadow. “He
followed me down the creek, and is waiting over against
the gate in the wall. When I go back he will follow
me again, and at last I will have to cross to his
side. And then he will go home with me, and make
me listen to him. His eyes burn me, and when his
hand touches me I see I see”
Her frame shook, and she raised to
his gaze a countenance suddenly changed into Tragedy’s
own. “I don’t know why,” she
said, in a stricken voice, “but of them all
that I kissed good-by that night I now see only Molly.
I suppose she was about as old as I am when they killed
her. We were always together. I can’t
remember her face very clearly; only her eyes, and
how red her lips were. And her hair: it
came to her knees, and mine is just as long.
For a long, long time after you went away, when I could
not sleep because it was dark, or when I was frightened
or Mistress Deborah beat me, I saw them all; but now
I see only Molly, Molly lying there dead.”
There was a silence in the garden,
broken presently by Haward. “Ay, Molly,”
he said absently.
With his hand covering his lips and
his eyes upon the ground, he fell into a brown study.
Audrey sat very still for fear that she might disturb
him, who was so kind to her. A passionate gratitude
filled her young heart; she would have traveled round
the world upon her knees to serve him. As for
him, he was not thinking of the mountain girl, the
oread who, in the days when he was younger and his
heart beat high, had caught his light fancy, tempting
him from his comrades back to the cabin in the valley,
to look again into her eyes and touch the brown waves
of her hair. She was ashes, and the memory of
her stirred him not.
At last he looked up. “I
myself will take you home, child. This fellow
shall not come near you. And cease to think of
these gruesome things that happened long ago.
You are young and fair; you should be happy. I
will see to it that”
He broke off, and again looked thoughtfully
at the ground. The book which he had tossed aside
was lying upon the grass, open at the poem which he
had been reading. He stooped and raised the volume,
and, closing it, laid it upon the bench beside her.
Presently he laughed. “Come, child!”
he said. “You have youth. I begin
to think my own not past recall. Come and let
me show you my dial that I have just had put up.”
There was no load at Audrey’s
heart: the vision of Molly had passed; the fear
of Hugon was a dwindling cloud. She was safe in
this old sunny garden, with harm shut without.
And as a flower opens to the sunshine, so because
she was happy she grew more fair. Audrey every
day, Audrey of the infrequent speech and the wide
dark eyes, the startled air, the shy, fugitive smiles, that
was not Audrey of the garden. Audrey of the garden
had shining eyes, a wild elusive grace, laughter as
silvery as that which had rung from her sister’s
lips, years agone, beneath the sugar-tree in the far-off
blue mountains, quick gestures, quaint fancies which
she feared not to speak out, the charm of mingled
humility and spirit; enough, in short, to make Audrey
of the garden a name to conjure with.
They came to the sun-dial, and leaned
thereon. Around its rim were graved two lines
from Herrick, and Audrey traced the letters with her
finger. “The philosophy is sound,”
remarked Haward, “and the advice worth the taking.
Let us go see if there are any rosebuds to gather from
the bushes yonder. Damask buds should look well
against your hair, child.”
When they came to the rosebushes he
broke for her a few scarce-opened buds, and himself
fastened them in the coils of her hair. Innocent
and glad as she was, glad even that he
thought her fair, she trembled beneath
his touch, and knew not why she trembled. When
the rosebuds were in place they went to see the clove
pinks, and when they had seen the clove pinks they
walked slowly up another alley of box, and across a
grass plot to a side door of the house; for he had
said that he must show her in what great, lonely rooms
he lived.
Audrey measured the height and breadth
of the house with her eyes. “It is a large
place for one to live in alone,” she said, and
laughed. “There’s a book at the Widow
Constance’s; Barbara once showed it to me.
It is all about a pilgrim; and there’s a picture
of a great square house, quite like this, that was
a giant’s castle, Giant Despair.
Good giant, eat me not!”
Child, woman, spirit of the woodland,
she passed before him into a dim, cool room, all littered
with books. “My library,” said Haward,
with a wave of his hand. “But the curtains
and pictures are not hung, nor the books in place.
Hast any schooling, little maid? Canst read?”
Audrey flushed with pride that she
could tell him that she was not ignorant; not like
Barbara, who could not read the giant’s name
in the pilgrim book.
“The crossroads schoolmaster
taught me,” she explained. “He has
a scar in each hand, and is a very wicked man, but
he knows more than the Commissary himself. The
minister, too, has a cupboard filled with books, and
he buys the new ones as the ships bring them in.
When I have time, and Mistress Deborah will not let
me go to the woods, I read. And I remember what
I read. I could”
A smile trembled upon her lips, and
her eyes grew brighter. Fired by the desire that
he should praise her learning, and in her very innocence
bold as a Wortley or a Howe, she began to repeat the
lines which he had been reading beneath the cherry-tree:
“‘When from the
censer clouds of fragrance roll’”
The rhythm of the words, the passion
of the thought, the pleased surprise that she thought
she read in his face, the gesture of his hand, all
spurred her on from line to line, sentence to sentence.
And now she was not herself, but that other woman,
and she was giving voice to all her passion, all her
woe. The room became a convent cell; her ragged
dress the penitent’s trailing black. That
Audrey, lithe of mind as of body; who in the woods
seemed the spirit of the woods, in the garden the spirit
of the garden, on the water the spirit of the water, that
this Audrey, in using the speech of the poet, should
embody and become the spirit of that speech was perhaps,
considering all things, not so strange. At any
rate, and however her power came about, at that moment,
in Fair View house, a great actress was speaking.
“’Fresh blooming
Hope, gay daughter of the skies,
And Faith’”
The speaker lost a word, hesitated,
became confused. Finally silence; then the Audrey
of a while before, standing with heaving bosom, shy
as a fawn, fearful that she had not pleased him, after
all. For if she had done so, surely he would
have told her as much. As it was, he had said
but one word, and that beneath his breath, “Eloisa!”
It would seem that her fear was unfounded;
for when he did speak, there were, God wot, sugar-plums
enough. And Audrey, who in her workaday world
was always blamed, could not know that the praise that
was so sweet was less wholesome than the blame.
Leaving the library they went into
the hall, and from the hall looked into great, echoing,
half-furnished rooms. All about lay packing-cases,
many of them open, with rich stuffs streaming from
them. Ornaments were huddled on tables, mirrors
and pictures leaned their faces to the walls; everywhere
was disorder.
“The negroes are careless, and
to-day I held their hands,” said Haward.
“I must get some proper person to see to this
gear.”
Up stairs and down they went through
the house, that seemed very large and very still,
and finally they came out of the great front door,
and down the stone steps on to the terrace. Below
them, sparkling in the sunshine, lay the river, the
opposite shore all in a haze of light. “I
must go home,” Audrey shyly reminded him, whereat
he smiled assent, and they went, not through the box
alley to the gate in the wall, but down the terrace,
and out upon the hot brown boards of the landing.
Haward, stepping into a boat, handed her to a seat
in the stern, and himself took the oars. Leaving
the landing, they came to the creek and entered it.
Presently they were gliding beneath the red brick
wall with the honeysuckle atop. On the opposite
grassy shore, seated in a blaze of noon sunshine, was
Hugon.
They in the boat took no notice.
Haward, rowing, spoke evenly on, his theme himself
and the gay and lonely life he had led these eleven
years; and Audrey, though at first sight of the waiting
figure she had paled and trembled, was too safe, too
happy, to give to trouble any part of this magic morning.
She kept her eyes on Haward’s face, and almost
forgot the man who had risen from the grass and in
silence was following them.
Now, had the trader, in his hunting
shirt and leggings, his moccasins and fur cap, been
walking in the great woods, this silence, even with
others in company, would have been natural enough
to his Indian blood; but Monsieur Jean Hugon, in peruke
and laced coat, walking in a civilized country, with
words a-plenty and as hot as fire-water in his heart,
and none upon his tongue, was a figure strange and
sinister. He watched the two in the boat with
an impassive face, and he walked like an Indian on
an enemy’s trail, so silently that he scarce
seemed to breathe, so lightly that his heavy boots
failed to crush the flowers or the tender grass.
Haward rowed on, telling Audrey stories
of the town, of great men whose names she knew, and
beautiful ladies of whom she had never heard; and she
sat before him with her slim brown hands folded in
her lap and the rosebuds withering in her hair, while
through the reeds and the grass and the bushes of
the bank over against them strode Hugon in his Blenheim
wig and his wine-colored coat. Well-nigh together
the three reached the stake driven in among the reeds,
a hundred yards below the minister’s house.
Haward fastened the boat, and, motioning to Audrey
to stay for the moment where she was, stepped out
upon the bank to confront the trader, who, walking
steadily and silently as ever, was almost upon them.
But it was broad daylight, and Hugon,
with his forest instincts, preferred, when he wished
to speak to the point, to speak in the dark. He
made no pause; only looked with his fierce black eyes
at the quiet, insouciant, fine gentleman standing
with folded arms between him and the boat; then passed
on, going steadily up the creek toward the bend where
the water left the open smiling fields and took to
the forest. He never looked back, but went like
a hunter with his prey before him. Presently
the shadows of the forest touched him, and Audrey and
Haward were left alone.
The latter laughed. “If
his courage is of the quality of his lace What,
cowering, child, and the tears in your eyes! You
were braver when you were not so tall, in those mountain
days. Nay, no need to wet your shoe.”
He lifted her in his arms, and set
her feet upon firm grass. “How long since
I carried you across a stream and up a dark hillside!”
he said. “And yet to-day it seems but yesternight!
Now, little maid, the Indian has run away, and the
path to the house is clear.”
In his smoke-filled, untidy best room
Darden sat at table, his drink beside him, his pipe
between his fingers, and open before him a book of
jests, propped by a tome of divinity. His wife
coming in from the kitchen, he burrowed in the litter
upon the table until he found an open letter, which
he flung toward her. “The Commissary threatens
again, damn him!” he said between smoke puffs.
“It seems that t’other night, when I was
in my cups at the tavern, Le Neve and the fellow who
has Ware Creek parish I forget his name must
needs come riding by. I was dicing with Paris.
Hugon held the stakes. I dare say we kept not
mum. And out of pure brotherly love and charity,
my good, kind gentlemen ride on to Williamsburgh on
a tale-bearing errand! Is that child never coming
back, Deborah?”
“She’s coming now,”
answered his wife, with her eyes upon the letter.
“I was watching from the upper window.
He rowed her up the creek himself.”
The door opened, and Audrey entered
the room. Darden turned heavily in his chair,
and took the long pipe from between his teeth.
“Well?” he said. “You gave
him my letter?”
Audrey nodded. Her eyes were
dreamy; the red of the buds in her hair had somehow
stolen to her cheeks; she could scarce keep her lips
from smiling. “He bade me tell you to come
to supper with him on Monday,” she said.
“And the Falcon that we saw come in last week
brought furnishing for the great house. Oh, Mistress
Deborah, the most beautiful things! The rooms
are all to be made fine; and the negro women do not
the work aright, and he wants some one to oversee
them. He says that he has learned that in England
Mistress Deborah was own woman to my Lady Squander,
and so should know about hangings and china and the
placing of furniture. And he asks that she come
to Fair View morning after morning until the house
is in order. He wishes me to come, too.
Mistress Deborah will much oblige him, he says, and
he will not forget her kindness.”
Somewhat out of breath, but very happy,
she looked with eager eyes from one guardian to the
other. Darden emptied and refilled his pipe,
scattering the ashes upon the book of jests. “Very
good,” he said briefly.
Into the thin visage of the ex-waiting-woman,
who had been happier at my Lady Squander’s than
in a Virginia parsonage, there crept a tightened smile.
In her way, when she was not in a passion, she was
fond of Audrey; but, in temper or out of temper, she
was fonder of the fine things which for a few days
she might handle at Fair View house. And the gratitude
of the master thereof might appear in coins, or in
an order on his store for silk and lace. When,
in her younger days, at Bath or in town, she had served
fine mistresses, she had been given many a guinea for
carrying a note or contriving an interview, and in
changing her estate she had not changed her code of
morals. “We must oblige Mr. Haward, of course,”
she said complacently. “I warrant you that
I can give things an air! There’s not a
parlor in this parish that does not set my teeth on
edge! Now at my Lady Squander’s” She
embarked upon reminiscences of past splendor, checked
only by her husband’s impatient demand for dinner.
Audrey, preparing to follow her into
the kitchen, was stopped, as she would have passed
the table, by the minister’s heavy hand.
“The roses at Fair View bloom early,”
he said, turning her about that he might better see
the red cluster in her hair. “Look you,
Audrey! I wish you no great harm, child.
You mind me at times of one that I knew many years
ago, before ever I was chaplain to my Lord Squander
or husband to my Lady Squander’s waiting-woman.
A hunter may use a decoy, and he may also, on the
whole, prefer to keep that decoy as good as when ’twas
made. Buy not thy roses too dearly, Audrey.”
To Audrey he spoke in riddles.
She took from her hair the loosened buds, and looked
at them lying in her hand. “I did not buy
them,” she said. “They grew in the
sun on the south side of the great house, and Mr. Haward
gave them to me.”