It was ten of the clock upon this
same night when Hugon left the glebe house. Audrey,
crouching in the dark beside her window, heard him
bid the minister, as drunk as himself, good-night,
and watched him go unsteadily down the path that led
to the road. Once he paused, and made as if to
return; then went on to his lair at the crossroads
ordinary. Again Audrey waited, this
time by the door. Darden stumbled upstairs to
bed. Mistress Deborah’s voice was raised
in shrill reproach, and the drunken minister answered
her with oaths. The small house rang with their
quarrel, but Audrey listened with indifference; not
trembling and stopping her ears, as once she would
have done. It was over at last, and the place
sunk in silence; but still the girl waited and listened,
standing close to the door. At last, as it was
drawing toward midnight, she put her hand upon the
latch, and, raising it very softly, slipped outside.
Heavy breathing came from the room where slept her
guardians; it went evenly on while she crept downstairs
and unbarred the outer door. Sure and silent and
light of touch, she passed like a spirit from the
house that had given her shelter, nor once looked
back upon it.
The boat, hidden in the reeds, was
her destination; she loosed it, and taking the oars
rowed down the creek. When she came to the garden
wall, she bent her head and shut her eyes; but when
she had left the creek for the great dim river, she
looked at Fair View house as she rowed past it on
her way to the mountains. No light to-night; the
hour was late, and he was asleep, and that was well.
It was cold upon the river, and sere
leaves, loosening their hold upon that which had given
them life, drifted down upon her as she rowed beneath
arching trees. When she left the dark bank for
the unshadowed stream, the wind struck her brow and
the glittering stars perplexed her. There were
so many of them. When one shot, she knew that
a soul had left the earth. Another fell, and
another, it must be a good night for dying.
She ceased to row, and, leaning over, dipped her hand
and arm into the black water. The movement brought
the gunwale of the boat even with the flood....
Say that one leaned over a little farther ... there
would fall another star. God gathered the stars
in his hand, but he would surely be angry with one
that came before it was called, and the star would
sink past him into a night forever dreadful....
The water was cold and deep and black. Great
fish throve in it, and below was a bed of ooze and
mud....
The girl awoke from her dream of self-murder
with a cry of terror. Not the river, good Lord,
not the river! Not death, but life! With
a second shuddering cry she lifted hand and arm from
the water, and with frantic haste dried them upon
the skirt of her dress. There had been none to
hear her. Upon the midnight river, between the
dim forests that ever spoke, but never listened, she
was utterly alone. She took the oars again, and
went on her way up the river, rowing swiftly, for
the mountains were far away, and she might be pursued.
When she drew near to Jamestown she
shot far out into the river, because men might be
astir in the boats about the town landing. Anchored
in midstream was a great ship, a man-of-war,
bristling with guns. Her boat touched its shadow,
and the lookout called to her. She bent her head,
put forth her strength, and left the black hull behind
her. There was another ship to pass, a slaver
that had come in the evening before, and would land
its cargo at sunrise. The stench that arose from
it was intolerable, and, as the girl passed, a corpse,
heavily weighted, was thrown into the water.
Audrey went swiftly by, and the river lay clean before
her. The stars paled and the dawn came, but she
could not see the shores for the thick white mist.
A spectral boat, with a sail like a gray moth’s
wing, slipped past her. The shadow at the helm
was whistling for the wind, and the sound came strange
and shrill through the filmy, ashen morning. The
mist began to lift. A few moments now, and the
river would lie dazzlingly bare between the red and
yellow forests. She turned her boat shorewards,
and presently forced it beneath the bronze-leafed,
drooping boughs of a sycamore. Here she left
the boat, tying it to the tree, and hoping that it
was well hidden. The great fear at her heart was
that, when she was missed, Hugon would undertake to
follow and to find her. He had the skill to do
so. Perhaps, after many days, when she was in
sight of the mountains, she might turn her head and,
in that lonely land, see him coming toward her.
The sun was shining, and the woods
were gay above her head and gay beneath her feet.
When the wind blew, the colored leaves went before
it like flights of birds. She was hungry, and
as she walked she ate a piece of bread taken from
the glebe-house larder. It was her plan to go
rapidly through the settled country, keeping as far
as possible to the great spaces of woodland which
the axe had left untouched; sleeping in such dark
and hidden hollows as she could find; begging food
only when she must, and then from poor folk who would
not stay her or be overcurious about her business.
As she went on, the houses, she knew, would be farther
and farther apart; the time would soon arrive when
she might walk half a day and see never a clearing
in the deep woods. Then the hills would rise
about her, and far, far off she might see the mountains,
fixed, cloudlike, serene, and still, beyond the miles
of rustling forest. There would be no more great
houses, built for ladies and gentlemen, but here and
there, at far distances, rude cabins, dwelt in by
kind and simple folk. At such a home, when the
mountains had taken on a deeper blue, when the streams
were narrow and the level land only a memory, she
would pause, would ask if she might stay. What
work was wanted she would do. Perhaps there would
be children, or a young girl like Molly, or a kind
woman like Mistress Stagg; and perhaps, after a long,
long while, it would grow to seem to her like that
other cabin.
These were her rose-colored visions.
At other times a terror took her by the shoulders,
holding her until her face whitened and her eyes grew
wide and dark. The way was long and the leaves
were falling fast, and she thought that it might be
true that in this world into which she had awakened
there was for her no home. The cold would come,
and she might have no bread, and for all her wandering
find none to take her in. In those forests of
the west the wolves ran in packs, and the Indians burned
and wasted. Some bitter night-time she would die....
Watching the sky from Fair View windows, perhaps he
might idly mark a falling star.
All that day she walked, keeping as
far as was possible to the woods, but forced now and
again to traverse open fields and long stretches of
sunny road. If she saw any one coming, she hid
in the roadside bushes, or, if that could not be done,
walked steadily onward, with her head bent and her
heart beating fast. It must have been a day for
minding one’s own business, for none stayed
or questioned her. Her dinner she begged from
some children whom she found in a wood gathering nuts.
Supper she had none. When night fell, she was
glad to lay herself down upon a bed of leaves that
she had raked together; but she slept little, for the
wind moaned in the half-clad branches, and she could
not cease from counting the stars that shot.
In the morning, numbed and cold, she went slowly on
until she came to a wayside house. Quaker folk
lived there; and they asked her no question, but with
kind words gave her of what they had, and let her
rest and grow warm in the sunshine upon their doorstep.
She thanked them with shy grace, but presently, when
they were not looking, rose and went her way.
Upon the second day she kept to the road. It was
loss of time wandering in the woods, skirting thicket
and marsh, forced ever and again to return to the
beaten track. She thought, also, that she must
be safe, so far was she now from Fair View. How
could they guess that she was gone to the mountains?
About midday, two men on horseback
looked at her in passing. One spoke to the other,
and turning their horses they put after and overtook
her. He who had spoken touched her with the butt
of his whip. “Ecod!” he exclaimed.
“It’s the lass we saw run for a guinea
last May Day at Jamestown! Why so far from home,
light o’ heels?”
A wild leap of her heart, a singing
in her ears, and Audrey clutched at safety.
“I be Joan, the smith’s
daughter,” she said stolidly. “I niver
ran for a guinea. I niver saw a guinea.
I be going an errand for feyther.”
“Ecod, then!” said the
other man. “You’re on a wrong scent.
’Twas no dolt that ran that day!”
The man who had touched her laughed.
“’Facks, you are right, Tom! But I’d
ha’ sworn ’t was that brown girl.
Go your ways on your errand for ’feyther’!”
As he spoke, being of an amorous turn, he stooped from
his saddle and kissed her. Audrey, since she
was at that time not Audrey at all, but Joan, the
smith’s daughter, took the salute as stolidly
as she had spoken. The two men rode away, and
the second said to the first: “A Williamsburgh
man told me that the girl who won the guinea could
speak and look like a born lady. Didn’t
ye hear the story of how she went to the Governor’s
ball, all tricked out, dancing, and making people think
she was some fine dame from Maryland maybe? And
the next day she was scored in church before all the
town. I don’t know as they put a white sheet
on her, but they say ’t was no more than her
deserts.”
Audrey, left standing in the sunny
road, retook her own countenance, rubbed her cheek
where the man’s lips had touched it, and trembled
like a leaf. She was frightened, both at the
encounter and because she could make herself so like
Joan, Joan who lived near the crossroads
ordinary, and who had been whipped at the Court House.
Late that afternoon she came upon
two or three rude dwellings clustered about a mill.
A knot of men, the miller in the midst, stood and gazed
at the mill-stream. They wore an angry look;
and Audrey passed them hastily by. At the farthest
house she paused to beg a piece of bread; but the
woman who came to the door frowned and roughly bade
her begone, and a child threw a stone at her.
“One witch is enough to take the bread out of
poor folks’ mouths!” cried the woman.
“Be off, or I’ll set the dogs on ye!”
The children ran after her as she hastened from the
inhospitable neighborhood. “’T is a young
witch,” they cried, “going to help the
old one swim to-night!” and a stone struck her,
bruising her shoulder.
She began to run, and, fleet of foot
as she was, soon distanced her tormentors. When
she slackened pace it was sunset, and she was faint
with hunger and desperately weary. From the road
a bypath led to a small clearing in a wood, with a
slender spiral of smoke showing between the trees.
Audrey went that way, and came upon a crazy cabin whose
door and window were fast closed. In the unkempt
garden rose an apple-tree, with the red apples shriveling
upon its boughs, and from the broken gate a line of
cedars, black and ragged, ran down to a piece of water,
here ghastly pale, there streaked like the sky above
with angry crimson. The place was very still,
and the air felt cold. When no answer came to
her first knocking, Audrey beat upon the door; for
she was suddenly afraid of the road behind her, and
of the doleful woods and the coming night.
The window shutter creaked ever so
slightly, and some one looked out; then the door opened,
and a very old and wrinkled woman, with lines of cunning
about her mouth, laid her hand upon the girl’s
arm. “Who be ye?” she whispered.
“Did ye bring warning? I don’t say,
mind ye, that I can’t make a stream go dry, maybe
I can and maybe I can’t, but I didn’t
put a word on the one yonder.” She threw
up her arms with a wailing cry. “But they
won’t believe what a poor old soul says!
Are they in an evil temper, honey?”
“I don’t know what you
mean,” said Audrey. “I have come a
long way, and I am hungry and tired. Give me
a piece of bread, and let me stay with you to-night.”
The old woman moved aside, and the
girl, entering a room that was mean and poor enough,
sat down upon a stool beside the fire. “If
ye came by the mill,” demanded her hostess,
with a suspicious eye, “why did ye not stop
there for bite and sup?”
“The men were all talking together,”
answered Audrey wearily. “They looked so
angry that I was afraid of them. I did stop at
one house; but the woman bade me begone, and the children
threw stones at me and called me a witch.”
The crone stooped and stirred the
fire; then from a cupboard brought forth bread and
a little red wine, and set them before the girl.
“They called you a witch, did they?” she
mumbled as she went to and fro. “And the
men were talking and planning together?”
Audrey ate the bread and drank the
wine; then, because she was so tired, leaned her head
against the table and fell half asleep. When she
roused herself, it was to find her withered hostess
standing over her with a sly and toothless smile.
“I’ve been thinking,” she whispered,
“that since you’re here to mind the house,
I’ll just step out to a neighbor’s about
some business I have in hand. You can stay by
the fire, honey, and be warm and comfortable.
Maybe I’ll not come back to-night.”
Going to the window, she dropped a
heavy bar across the shutter. “Ye’ll
put the chain across the door when I’m out,”
she commanded. “There be evil-disposed
folk may want to win in.” Coming back to
the girl, she laid a skinny hand upon her arm.
Whether with palsy or with fright the hand shook like
a leaf, but Audrey, half asleep again, noticed little
beyond the fact that the fire warmed her, and that
here at last was rest. “If there should
come a knocking and a calling, honey,” whispered
the witch, “don’t ye answer to it or unbar
the door. Ye’ll save time for me that way.
But if they win in, tell them I went to the northward.”
Audrey looked at her with glazed,
uncomprehending eyes, while the gnome-like figure
appeared to grow smaller, to melt out of the doorway.
It was a minute or more before the wayfarer thus left
alone in the hut could remember that she had been
told to bar the door. Then her instinct of obedience
sent her to the threshold. Dusk was falling, and
the waters of the pool lay pale and still beyond the
ebony cedars. Through the twilit landscape moved
the crone who had housed her for the night; but she
went not to the north, but southwards toward the river.
Presently the dusk swallowed her up, and Audrey was
left with the ragged garden and the broken fence and
the tiny firelit hut. Reentering the room, she
fastened the door, as she had been told to do, and
then went back to the hearth. The fire blazed
and the shadows danced; it was far better than last
night, out in the cold, lying upon dead leaves, watching
the falling stars. Here it was warm, warm as
June in a walled garden; the fire was red like the
roses ... the roses that had thorns to bring heart’s
blood.
Audrey fell fast asleep; and while
she was asleep and the night was yet young, the miller
whose mill stream had run dry, the keeper of a tippling
house whose custom had dwindled, the ferryman whose
child had peaked and pined and died, came with a score
of men to reckon with the witch who had done the mischief.
Finding door and window fast shut, they knocked, softly
at first, then loudly and with threats. One watched
the chimney, to see that the witch did not ride forth
that way; and the father of the child wished to gather
brush, pile it against the entrance, and set all afire.
The miller, who was a man of strength, ended the matter
by breaking in the door. They knew that the witch
was there, because they had heard her moving about,
and, when the door gave, a cry of affright. When,
however, they had laid hands upon her, and dragged
her out under the stars, into the light of the torches
they carried, they found that the witch, who, as was
well known, could slip her shape as a snake slips its
skin, was no longer old and bowed, but straight and
young.
“Let me go!” cried Audrey.
“How dare you hold me! I never harmed one
of you. I am a poor girl come from a long way
off”
“Ay, a long way!” exclaimed
the ferryman. “More leagues, I’ll
warrant, than there are miles in Virginia! We’ll
see if ye can swim home, ye witch!”
“I’m no witch!”
cried the girl again. “I never harmed you.
Let me go!”
One of the torchbearers gave ground
a little. “She do look mortal young.
But where be the witch, then?”
Audrey strove to shake herself free.
“The old woman left me alone in the house.
She went to to the northward.”
“She lies!” cried the
ferryman, addressing himself to the angry throng.
The torches, flaming in the night wind, gave forth
a streaming, uncertain, and bewildering light; to
the excited imaginations of the rustic avengers, the
form in the midst of them was not always that of a
young girl, but now and again wavered toward the semblance
of the hag who had wrought them evil. “Before
the child died he talked forever of somebody young
and fair that came and stood by him when he slept.
We thought ’t was his dead mother, but now now
I see who ’t was!” Seizing the girl by
the wrists, he burst with her through the crowd.
“Let the water touch her, she’ll turn
witch again!”
The excited throng, blinded by its
own imagination, took up the cry. The girl’s
voice was drowned; she set her lips, and strove dumbly
with her captors; but they swept her through the weed-grown
garden and broken gate, past the cedars that were
so ragged and black, down to the cold and deep water.
She thought of the night upon the river and of the
falling stars, and with a sudden, piercing cry struggled
fiercely to escape. The bank was steep; hands
pushed her forward: she felt the ghastly embrace
of the water, and saw, ere the flood closed over her
upturned face, the cold and quiet stars.
So loud was the ringing in her ears
that she heard no access of voices upon the bank,
and knew not that a fresh commotion had arisen.
She was sinking for the third time, and her mind had
begun to wander in the Fair View garden, when an arm
caught and held her up. She was borne to the
shore; there were men on horseback; some one with a
clear, authoritative voice was now berating, now good-humoredly
arguing with, her late judges.
The man who had sprung to save her
held her up to arms that reached down from the bank
above; another moment and she felt the earth again
beneath her feet, but could only think that, with
half the dying past, these strangers had been cruel
to bring her back. Her rescuer shook himself like
a great dog. “I’ve saved the witch
alive,” he panted. “May God forgive
and your Honor reward me!”
“Nay, worthy constable, you
must look to Sathanas for reward!” cried the
gentleman who had been haranguing the miller and his
company. These gentry, hardly convinced, but
not prepared to debate the matter with a justice of
the peace and a great man of those parts, began to
slip away. The torchbearers, probably averse
to holding a light to their own countenances, had
flung the torches into the water, and now, heavily
shadowed by the cedars, the place was in deep darkness.
Presently there were left to berate only the miller
and the ferryman, and at last these also went sullenly
away without having troubled to mention the witch’s
late transformation from age to youth.
“Where is the rescued fair one?”
continued the gentleman who, for his own pleasure,
had led the conservers of law and order. “Produce
the sibyl, honest Dogberry! Faith, if the lady
be not an ingrate, you’ve henceforth a friend
at court!”
“My name is Saunders, Dick
Saunders, your Honor,” quoth the constable.
“For the witch, she lies quiet on the ground
beneath the cedar yonder.”
“She won’t speak!”
cried another. “She just lies there trembling,
with her face in her hands.”
“But she said, ‘O Christ!’
when we took her from the water,” put in a third.
“She was nigh drowned,”
ended the constable. “And I’m a-tremble
myself, the water was that cold. Wauns!
I wish I were in the chimney corner at the Court House
ordinary!”
The master of Westover flung his riding
cloak to one of the constable’s men. “Wrap
it around the shivering iniquity on the ground yonder;
and you, Tom Hope, that brought warning of what your
neighbors would do, mount and take the witch behind
you. Master Constable, you will lodge Hecate in
the gaol to-night, and in the morning bring her up
to the great house. We would inquire why a lady
so accomplished that she can dry a mill stream to
plague a miller cannot drain a pool to save herself
from drowning!”
At a crossing of the ways, shortly
before Court House, gaol, and ordinary were reached,
the adventurous Colonel gave a good-night to the constable
and his company, and, with a negro servant at his heels,
rode gayly on beneath the stars to his house at Westover.
Hardy, alert, in love with living, he was well amused
by the night’s proceedings. The incident
should figure in his next letter to Orrery or to his
cousin Taylor.
It figured largely in the table-talk
next morning, when the sprightly gentleman sat at
breakfast with his daughter and his second wife, a
fair and youthful kinswoman of Martha and Teresa Blount.
The gentleman, launched upon the subject of witchcraft,
handled it with equal wit and learning. The ladies
thought that the water must have been very cold, and
trusted that the old dame was properly grateful, and
would, after such a lesson, leave her evil practices.
As they were rising from table, word was brought to
the master that constable and witch were outside.
The Colonel kissed his wife, promised
his daughter to be merciful, and, humming a song,
went through the hall to the open house door and the
broad, three-sided steps of stone. The constable
was awaiting him.
“Here be mysteries, your Honor!
As I serve the King, ’t weren’t Goody
Price for whom I ruined my new frieze, but a slip of
a girl!” He waved his hand. “Will
your Honor please to look?”
Audrey sat in the sunshine upon the
stone steps with her head bowed upon her arms.
The morning that was so bright was not bright for her;
she thought that life had used her but unkindly.
A great tree, growing close to the house, sent leaves
of dull gold adrift, and they lay at her feet and
upon the skirt of her dress. The constable spoke
to her: “Now, mistress, here’s a
gentleman as stands for the King and the law.
Look up!”
A white hand was laid upon the Colonel’s
arm. “I came to make sure that you were
not harsh with the poor creature,” said Evelyn’s
pitying voice. “There is so much misery.
Where is she? Ah!”
To gain at last his prisoner’s
attention, the constable struck her lightly across
the shoulders with his cane. “Get up!”
he cried impatiently. “Get up and make
your curtsy! Ecod, I wish I’d left you in
Hunter’s Pond!”
Audrey rose, and turned her face,
not to the justice of the peace and arbiter of the
fate of witches, but to Evelyn, standing above her, Evelyn,
slighter, paler, than she had been at Williamsburgh,
but beautiful in her colored, fragrant silks and the
air that was hers of sweet and mournful distinction.
Now she cried out sharply, while “That girl
again!” swore the Colonel, beneath his breath.
Audrey did as she had been told, and
made her curtsy. Then, while father and daughter
stared at her, the gentleman very red and biting his
lip, the lady marble in her loveliness, she tried
to speak, to ask them to let her go, but found no
words. The face of Evelyn, at whom alone she looked,
wavered into distance, gazing at her coldly and mournfully
from miles away. She made a faint gesture of
weariness and despair; then sank down at Evelyn’s
feet, and lay there in a swoon.