“’Brave Derwentwater
he is dead;
From his fair
body they took the head:
But Mackintosh
and his friends are fled,
And they’ll
set the hat upon another head’”
chanted the Fair View storekeeper,
and looked aside at Mistress Truelove Taberer, spinning
in the doorway of her father’s house.
Truelove answered naught, but her
hands went to and fro, and her eyes were for her work,
not for MacLean, sitting on the doorstep at her feet.
“‘And whether
they’re gone beyond the sea’”
The exile broke off and sighed heavily.
Before the two a little yard, all gay with hollyhocks
and roses, sloped down to the wider of the two creeks
between which stretched the Fair View plantation.
It was late of a holiday afternoon. A storm was
brewing, darkening all the water, and erecting above
the sweep of woods monstrous towers of gray cloud.
There must have been an echo, for MacLean’s
sigh came back to him faintly, as became an echo.
“Is there not peace here, ’beyond
the sea’?” said Truelove softly. “Thine
must be a dreadful country, Angus MacLean!”
The Highlander looked at her with
kindling eyes. “Now had I the harp of old
Murdoch!” he said.
“’Dear is that
land to the east,
Alba of the lakes!
Oh, that I might
dwell there forever’”
He turned upon the doorstep, and taking
between his fingers the hem of Truelove’s apron
fell to plaiting it. “A woman named Deirdre,
who lived before the days of Gillean-na-Tuaidhe,
made that song. She was not born in that land,
but it was dear to her because she dwelt there with
the man whom she loved. They went away, and the
man was slain; and where he was buried, there Deirdre
cast herself down and died.” His voice changed,
and all the melancholy of his race, deep, wild, and
tender, looked from his eyes. “If to-day
you found yourself in that loved land, if this parched
grass were brown heather, if it stretched down to a
tarn yonder, if that gray cloud that hath all the
seeming of a crag were crag indeed, and eagles plied
between the tarn and it,” he touched
her hand that lay idle now upon her knee, “if
you came like Deirdre lightly through the heather,
and found me lying here, and found more red than should
be in the tartan of the MacLeans, what would you do,
Truelove? What would you cry out, Truelove?
How heavy would be thy heart, Truelove?”
Truelove sat in silence, with her
eyes upon the sky above the dream crags. “How
heavy would grow thy heart, Truelove, Truelove?”
whispered the Highlander.
Up the winding water, to the sedges
and reeds below the little yard, glided the boy Ephraim
in his boat. The Quakeress started, and the color
flamed into her gentle face. She took up the distaff
that she had dropped, and fell to work again.
“Thee must not speak to me so, Angus MacLean,”
she said. “I trust that my heart is not
hard. Thy death would grieve me, and my father
and my mother and Ephraim”
“I care not for thy father and
mother and Ephraim!” MacLean began impetuously.
“But you do right to chide me. Once I knew
a green glen where maidens were fain when paused at
their doors Angus, son of Hector, son of Lachlan,
son of Murdoch, son of Angus that was named for Angus
Mor, who was great-grandson of Hector of the Battles,
who was son of Lachlan Lubanach! But here I am
a landless man, with none to do me honor, a
wretch bereft of liberty”
“To me, to all Friends,”
said Truelove sweetly, halting a little in her work,
“thee has now what thee thyself calls freedom.
For God meant not that one of his creatures should
say to another: ’Lo, here am I! Behold
thy God!’ To me, and my father and mother and
Ephraim, thee is no bond servant of Marmaduke Haward.
But thee is bond servant to thy own vain songs; thy
violent words; thy idle pride, that, vaunting the cruel
deeds of thy forefathers, calls meekness and submission
the last worst evil; thy shameless reverence for those
thy fellow creatures, James Stewart and him whom thee
calls the chief of thy house, forgetting
that there is but one house, and that God is its head;
thy love of clamor and warfare; thy hatred of the
ways of peace”
MacLean laughed. “I hate
not all its ways. There is no hatred in my heart
for this house which is its altar, nor for the priestess
of the altar. Ah! now you frown, Truelove”
Across the clouds ran so fierce a
line of gold that Truelove, startled, put her hand
before her eyes. Another dart of lightning, a
low roll of thunder, a bending apart of the alder
bushes on the far side of the creek; then a woman’s
voice calling to the boy in the boat to come ferry
her over.
“Who may that be?” asked Truelove wonderingly.
It was only a little way to the bending
alders. Ephraim rowed across the glassy water,
dark beneath the approach of the storm; the woman stepped
into the boat, and the tiny craft came lightly back
to its haven beneath the bank.
“It is Darden’s Audrey,” said the
storekeeper.
Truelove shrank a little, and her
eyes darkened. “Why should she come here?
I never knew her. It is true that we may not think
evil, but but”
MacLean moved restlessly. “I
have seen the girl but twice,” he said.
“Once she was alone, once It is my
friend of whom I think. I know what they say,
but, by St. Kattan! I hold him a gentleman too
high of mind, too noble There was a tale
I used to hear when I was a boy. A long, long
time ago a girl lived in the shadow of the tower of
Duart, and the chief looked down from his walls and
saw her. Afterwards they walked together by the
shore and through the glens, and he cried her health
when he drank in his hall, sitting amongst his tacksmen.
Then what the men whispered the women spoke aloud;
and so, more quickly than the tarie is borne, word
went to a man of the MacDonalds who loved the Duart
maiden. Not like a lover to his tryst did he
come. In the handle of his dirk the rich stones
sparkled as they rose and fell with the rise and fall
of the maiden’s white bosom. She prayed
to die in his arms; for it was not Duart that she loved,
but him. She died, and they snooded her hair
and buried her. Duart went overseas; the man
of the MacDonalds killed himself. It was all wrought
with threads of gossamer, idle fancy, shrugs,
smiles, whispers, slurring speech, and
it was long ago. But there is yet gossamer to
be had for the gathering; it gleams on every hand
these summer mornings.”
By now Darden’s Audrey had left
the boat and was close upon them. MacLean arose,
and Truelove hastily pushed aside her wheel. “Is
thee seeking shelter from the storm?” she asked
tremulously, and with her cheeks as pink as a seashell.
“Will thee sit here with us? The storm will
not break yet awhile.”
Audrey heeded her not, her eyes being
for MacLean. She had been running, running
more swiftly than for a thousand May Day guineas.
Even now, though her breath came short, every line
of her slender figure was tense, and she was ready
to be off like an arrow. “You are Mr. Haward’s
friend?” she cried. “I have heard
him say that you were so call you a brave
gentleman”
MacLean’s dark face flushed.
“Yes, we are friends, I thank God
for it. What have you to do with that, my lass?”
“I also am his friend,”
said Audrey, coming nearer. Her hands were clasped,
her bosom heaving. “Listen! To-day
I was sent on an errand to a house far up this creek.
Coming back, I took the short way home through the
woods because of the storm. It led me past the
schoolhouse down by the big swamp. I thought
that no one was there, and I went and sat down upon
the steps to rest a moment. The door behind me
was partly open. Then I heard two voices:
the schoolmaster and Jean Hugon were inside close
to me talking. I would have run away,
but I heard Mr. Haward’s name.” Her
hand went to her heart, and she drew a sobbing breath.
“Well!” cried MacLean sharply.
“Mr. Haward went yesterday to
Williamsburgh alone without Juba.
He rides back alone to Fair
View late this afternoon he is riding now.
You know the sharp bend in the road, with the steep
bank above and the pond below?”
“Ay, where the road nears the river. Well?”
“I heard all that Hugon and
the schoolmaster said. I hid behind a fallen
tree and watched them leave the schoolhouse; then I
followed them, making no noise, back to the creek,
where Hugon had a boat. They crossed the creek,
and fastened the boat on this side. I could follow
them no farther; the woods hid them; but they have
gone downstream to that bend in the road. Hugon
had his hunting-knife and pistols; the schoolmaster
carried a coil of rope.” She flung back
her head, and her hands went to her throat as though
she were stifling. “The turn in the road
is very sharp. Just past the bend they will stretch
the rope from side to side, fastening it to two trees.
He will be hurrying home before the bursting of the
storm he will be riding the planter’s
pace”
“Man and horse will come crashing
down!” cried the storekeeper, with a great oath
“And then”
“Hugon’s knife, so there
will be no noise.... They think he has gold upon
him: that is for the schoolmaster.... Hugon
is an Indian, and he will hide their trail. Men
will think that some outlying slave was in the woods,
and set upon and killed him.”
Her voice broke; then went on, gathering
strength: “It was so late, and I knew that
he would ride fast because of the storm. I remembered
this house, and thought that, if I called, some one
might come and ferry me over the creek. Now I
will run through the woods to the road, for I must
reach it before he passes on his way to where they
wait.” She turned her face toward the pine
wood beyond the house.
“Ay, that is best!” agreed
the storekeeper. “Warned, he can take the
long way home, and Hugon and this other may be dealt
with at his leisure. Come, my girl; there’s
no time to lose.”
They left behind them the creek, the
blooming dooryard, the small white house, and the
gentle Quakeress. The woods received them, and
they came into a world of livid greens and grays dashed
here and there with ebony, a world that,
expectant of the storm, had caught and was holding
its breath. Save for the noise of their feet upon
dry leaves that rustled like paper, the wood was soundless.
The light that lay within it, fallen from skies of
iron, was wild and sinister; there was no air, and
the heat wrapped them like a mantle. So motionless
were all things, so fixed in quietude each branch
and bough, each leaf or twig or slender needle of the
pine, that they seemed to be fleeing through a wood
of stone, jade and malachite, emerald and agate.
They hurried on, not wasting breath
in speech. Now and again MacLean glanced aside
at the girl, who kept beside him, moving as lightly
as presently would move the leaves when the wind arose.
He remembered certain scurrilous words spoken in the
store a week agone by a knot of purchasers, but when
he looked at her face he thought of the Highland maiden
whose story he had told. As for Audrey, she saw
not the woods that she loved, heard not the leaves
beneath her feet, knew not if the light were gold or
gray. She saw only a horse and rider riding from
Williamsburgh, heard only the rapid hoofbeats.
All there was of her was one dumb prayer for the rider’s
safety. Her memory told her that it was no great
distance to the road, but her heart cried out that
it was so far away, so far away! When
the wood thinned, and they saw before them the dusty
strip, pallid and lonely beneath the storm clouds,
her heart leaped within her; then grew sick for fear
that he had gone by. When they stood, ankle-deep
in the dust, she looked first toward the north, and
then to the south. Nothing moved; all was barren,
hushed, and lonely.
“How can we know? How can
we know?” she cried, and wrung her hands.
MacLean’s keen eyes were busily
searching for any sign that a horseman had lately
passed that way. At a little distance above them
a shallow stream of some width flowed across the way,
and to this the Highlander hastened, looked with attention
at the road-bed where it emerged from the water, then
came back to Audrey with a satisfied air. “There
are no hoof-prints,” he said. “No
marks upon the dust. None can have passed for
some hours.”
A rotted log, streaked with velvet
moss and blotched with fan-shaped, orange-colored
fungi, lay by the wayside, and the two sat down upon
it to wait for the coming horseman. Overhead
the thunder was rolling, but there was as yet no breath
of wind, no splash of raindrops. Opposite them
rose a gigantic pine, towering above the forest, red-brown
trunk and ultimate cone of deep green foliage alike
outlined against the dead gloom of the sky. Audrey
shook back her heavy hair and raised her face to the
roof of the world; her hands were clasped upon her
knee; her bare feet, slim and brown, rested on a carpet
of moss; she was as still as the forest, of which,
to the Highlander, she suddenly seemed a part.
When they had kept silence for what seemed a long
time, he spoke to her with some hesitation: “You
have known Mr. Haward but a short while; the months
are very few since he came from England.”
The name brought Audrey down to earth
again. “Did you not know?” she asked
wonderingly. “You also are his friend, you
see him often. I thought that at times he would
have spoken of me.” For a moment her face
was troubled, though only for a moment. “But
I know why he did not so,” she said softly to
herself. “He is not one to speak of his
good deeds.” She turned toward MacLean,
who was attentively watching her, “But I may
speak of them,” she said, with pride. “I
have known Mr. Haward for years and years. He
saved my life; he brought me here from the Indian
country; he was, he is, so kind to me!”
Since the afternoon beneath the willow-tree,
Haward, while encouraging her to speak of her long
past, her sylvan childhood, her dream memories, had
somewhat sternly checked every expression of gratitude
for the part which he himself had played or was playing,
in the drama of her life. Walking in the minister’s
orchard, sitting in the garden or upon the terrace
of Fair View house, drifting on the sunset river,
he waved that aside, and went on to teach her another
lesson. The teaching was exquisite; but when the
lesson for the day was over, and he was alone, he sat
with one whom he despised. The learning was exquisite;
it was the sweetest song, but she knew not its name,
and the words were in a strange tongue. She was
Audrey, that she knew; and he, he was the
plumed knight, who, for the lack of a better listener,
told her gracious tales of love, showed her how warm
and beautiful was this world that she sometimes thought
so sad, sang to her sweet lines that poets had made.
Over and through all she thought she read the name
of the princess. She had heard him say that with
the breaking of the heat he should go to Westover,
and one day, early in summer, he had shown her the
miniature of Evelyn Byrd. Because she loved him
blindly, and because he was wise in his generation,
her trust in him was steadfast as her native hills,
large as her faith in God. Now it was sweet beneath
her tongue to be able to tell one that was his friend
how worthy of all friendship nay, all reverence he
was. She spoke simply, but with that strange
power of expression which nature had given her.
Gestures with her hands, quick changes in the tone
of her voice, a countenance that gave ample utterance
to the moment’s thought, as one morning
in the Fair View library she had brought into being
that long dead Eloisa whose lines she spoke, so now
her auditor of to-day thought that he saw the things
of which she told.
She had risen, and was standing in
the wild light, against the background of the forest
that was breathless, as if it too listened, “And
so he brought me safely to this land,” she said.
“And so he left me here for ten years, safe
and happy, he thought. He has told me that all
that while he thought of me as safe and happy.
That I was not so, why, that was not his
fault! When he came back I was both. I have
never seen the sunshine so bright or the woods so
fair as they have been this summer. The people
with whom I live are always kind to me now, that
is his doing. And ah! it is because he would
not let Hugon scare or harm me that that wicked Indian
waits for him now beyond the bend in the road.”
At the thought of Hugon she shuddered, and her eyes
began to widen. “Have we not been here a
long time?” she cried. “Are you sure?
Oh, God! perhaps he has passed!”
“No, no,” answered MacLean,
with his hand upon her arm. “There is no
sign that he has done so. It is not late; it
is that heavy cloud above our heads that has so darkened
the air. Perhaps he has not left Williamsburgh
at all: perhaps, the storm threatening, he waits
until to-morrow.”
From the cloud above came a blinding
light and a great crash of thunder, the
one so intense, the other so tremendous, that for a
minute the two stood as if stunned. Then, “The
tree!” cried Audrey. The great pine, blasted
and afire, uprooted itself and fell from them like
a reed that the wind has snapped. The thunder
crash, and the din with which the tree met its fellows
of the forest, bore them down, and finally struck the
earth from which it came, seemed an alarum to waken
all nature from its sleep. The thunder became
incessant, and the wind suddenly arising the forest
stretched itself and began to speak with no uncertain
voice. MacLean took his seat again upon the log,
but Audrey slipped into the road, and stood in the
whirling dust, her arm raised above her eyes, looking
for the horseman whose approach she could not hope
to hear through the clamor of the storm. The
wind lifted her long hair, and the rising dust half
obscured her form, bent against the blast. On
the lonesome road, in the partial light, she had the
seeming of an apparition, a creature tossed like a
ball from the surging forest. She had made herself
a world, and she had become its product. In all
her ways, to the day of her death, there was about
her a touch of mirage, illusion, fantasy. The
Highlander, imaginative like all his race, and a believer
in things not of heaven nor of earth, thought of spirits
of the glen and the shore.
There was no rain as yet; only the
hurly-burly of the forest, the white dust cloud, and
the wild commotion overhead. Audrey turned to
MacLean, watching her in silence. “He is
coming!” she cried. “There is some
one with him. Now, now he is safe!”