Mistress Truelove Taberer, having
read in a very clear and gentle voice the Sermon on
the Mount to those placid Friends, Tobias and Martha
Taberer, closed the book, and went about her household
affairs with a quiet step, but a heart that somehow
fluttered at every sound without the door. To
still it she began to repeat to herself words she had
read: “Blessed are the peacemakers, for
they shall be called the children of God ... blessed
are the peacemakers”
Winter sunshine poured in at the windows
and door. Truelove, kneeling to wipe a fleck
of dust from her wheel, suddenly, with a catch of her
breath and a lifting of her brown eyes, saw in the
Scripture she had been repeating a meaning and application
hitherto unexpected. “The peacemaker ...
that is one who makes peace, in the world,
between countries, in families, yea, in the heart
of one alone. Did he not say, last time he came,
that with me he forgot this naughty world and all its
strife; that if I were always with him”
Truelove’s countenance became
exalted, her gaze fixed. “If it were a
call” she murmured, and for a moment
bowed her head upon the wheel; then rose from her
knees and went softly through the morning tasks.
When they were over, she took down from a peg and
put on a long gray cloak and a gray hood that most
becomingly framed her wild-rose face; then came and
stood before her father and mother. “I am
going forth to walk by the creekside,” she said,
in her sweet voice. “It may be that I will
meet Angus MacLean.”
“If thee does,” answered
one tranquil Friend, “thee may tell him that
upon next seventh day meeting will be held in this
house.”
“Truly,” said the other
tranquil Friend, “my heart is drawn toward that
young man. His mind hath been filled with anger
and resistance and the turmoil of the world.
It were well if he found peace at last.”
“Surely it were well,”
agreed Truelove sweetly, and went out into the crisp
winter weather.
The holly, the pine, and the cedar
made green places in the woods, and the multitude
of leaves underfoot were pleasant to tread. Clouds
were in the sky, but the spaces between were of serenest
blue, and in the sunshine the creek flashed diamonds.
Truelove stood upon the bank, and, with her hand shading
her eyes, watched MacLean rowing toward her up the
creek.
When he had fastened his boat and
taken her hand, the two walked soberly on beside the
sparkling water until they came to a rude seat built
beneath an oak-tree, to which yet clung a number of
brown leaves. Truelove sat down, drawing her
cloak about her, for, though the sun shone, the air
was keen. MacLean took off his coat, and kneeling
put it beneath her feet. He laughed at her protest.
“Why, these winds are not bleak!” he said.
“This land knows no true and honest cold.
In my country, night after night have I lain in snow
with only my plaid for cover, and heard the spirits
call in the icy wind, the kelpie shriek beneath the
frozen loch. I listened; then shut my eyes and
dreamed warm of glory and true love.”
“Thy coat is new,” said
Truelove, with downcast eyes. “The earth
will stain the good cloth.”
MacLean laughed. “Then
will I wear it stained, as ’tis said a courtier
once wore his cloak.”
“There is lace upon it,” said Truelove
timidly.
MacLean turned with a smile, and laid
a fold of her cloak against his dark cheek. “Ah,
the lace offends you, offends thee, Truelove.
Why, ’tis but to mark me a gentleman again!
Last night, at Williamsburgh, I supped with Haward
and some gentlemen of Virginia. He would have
me don this suit. I might not disoblige my friend.”
“Thee loves it,” said
Truelove severely. “Thee loves the color,
and the feel of the fine cloth, and the ruffles at
thy wrists.”
The Highlander laughed. “Why,
suppose that I do! Look, Truelove, how brave
and red are those holly berries, and how green and
fantastically twisted the leaves! The sky is
a bright blue, and the clouds are silver; and think
what these woods will be when the winter is past!
One might do worse, meseems, than to be of God’s
taste in such matters.”
Truelove sighed, and drew her gray
cloak more closely around her.
“Thee is in spirits to-day,
Angus MacLean,” she said, and sighed once more.
“I am free,” he answered.
“The man within me walks no longer with a hanging
head.”
“And what will thee do with thy freedom?”
The Highlander made no immediate reply,
but, chin in hand, studied the drifts of leaves and
the slow-moving water. “I am free,”
he said at last. “I wear to-day the dress
of a gentleman. I could walk without shame into
a hall that I know, and find there strangers, standers
in dead men’s shoon, brothers who want me not, who
would say behind their hands, ’He has been twelve
years a slave, and the world has changed since he went
away!’ ... I will not trouble them.”
His face was as sombre as when Truelove
first beheld it. Suddenly, and against her will,
tears came to her eyes. “I am glad I
and my father and mother and Ephraim that
thee goes not overseas, Angus MacLean,” said
the dove’s voice. “We would have
thee I and my father and mother and Ephraim we
would have thee stay in Virginia.”
“I am to stay,” he answered.
“I have felt no shame in taking a loan from
my friend, for I shall repay it. He hath lands
up river in a new-made county. I am to seat them
for him, and there will be my home. I will build
a house and name it Duart; and if there are hills they
shall be Dun-da-gu and Grieg, and the sound of
winter torrents shall be to me as the sound of the
waters of Mull.”
Truelove caught her breath. “Thee
will be lonely in those forests.”
“I am used to loneliness.”
“There be Indians on the frontier.
They burn houses and carry away prisoners. And
there are wolves and dangerous beasts”
“I am used to danger.”
Truelove’s voice trembled more
and more. “And thee must dwell among negroes
and rude men, with none to comfort thy soul, none to
whom thee can speak in thy dark hours?”
“Before now I have spoken to
the tobacco I have planted, the trees I have felled,
the swords and muskets I have sold.”
“But at last thee came and spoke to me!”
“Ay,” he answered.
“There have been times when you saved my soul
alive. Now, in the forest, in my house of logs,
when the day’s work is done, and I sit upon
my doorstep and begin to hear the voices of the past
crying to me like the spirits in the valley of Glensyte,
I will think of you instead.”
“Oh!” cried Truelove.
“Speak to me instead, and I will speak to thee
... sitting upon the doorstep of our house, when our
day’s work is done!”
Her hood falling back showed her face,
clear pink, with dewy eyes. The carnation deepening
from brow to throat, and the tears trembling upon her
long lashes, she suddenly hid her countenance in her
gray cloak. MacLean, on his knees beside her,
drew away the folds. “Truelove, Truelove!
do you know what you have said?”
Truelove put her hand upon her heart.
“Oh, I fear,” she whispered, “I fear
that I have asked thee, Angus MacLean, to let me be to
let me be thy wife.”
The water shone, and the holly berries
were gay, and a robin redbreast sang a cheerful song.
Beneath the rustling oak-tree there was ardent speech
on the part of MacLean, who found in his mistress a
listener sweet and shy, and not garrulous of love.
But her eyes dwelt upon him and her hand rested at
ease within his clasp, and she liked to hear him speak
of the home they were to make in the wilderness.
It was to be thus, and thus, and thus! With impassioned
eloquence the Gael adorned the shrine and advanced
the merit of the divinity, and the divinity listened
with a smile, a blush, a tear, and now and then a
meek rebuke.
When an hour had passed, the sun went
under a cloud and the air grew colder. The bird
had flown away, but in the rising wind the dead leaves
rustled loudly. MacLean and Truelove, leaving
their future of honorable toil, peace of mind, and
enduring affection, came back to the present.
“I must away,” said the
Highlander. “Haward waits for me at Williamsburgh.
To-morrow, dearer to me than Deirdre to Naos!
I will come again.”
Hand in hand the two walked slowly
toward that haunt of peace, Truelove’s quiet
home. “And Marmaduke Haward awaits thee
at Williamsburgh?” said the Quakeress.
“Last third day he met my father and me on the
Fair View road, and checked his horse and spoke to
us. He is changed.”
“Changed indeed!” quoth
the Highlander. “A fire burns him, a wind
drives him; and yet to the world, last night” He
paused.
“Last night?” said Truelove.
“He had a large company at Marot’s
ordinary,” went on the other. “There
were the Governor and his fellow Councilors, with others
of condition or fashion. He was the very fine
gentleman, the perfect host, free, smiling, full of
wit. But I had been with him before they came.
I knew the fires beneath.”
The two walked in silence for a few
moments, when MacLean spoke again: “He
drank to her. At the last, when this lady had
been toasted, and that, he rose and drank to ‘Audrey,’
and threw his wineglass over his shoulder. He
hath done what he could. The world knows that
he loves her honorably, seeks her vainly in marriage.
Something more I know. He gathered the company
together last evening that, as his guests, the highest
officers, the finest gentlemen of the colony, should
go with him to the theatre to see her for the first
time as a player. Being what they were, and his
guests, and his passion known, he would insure for
her, did she well or did she ill, order, interest,
decent applause.” MacLean broke off with
a short, excited laugh. “It was not needed, his
mediation. But he could not know that; no, nor
none of us. True, Stagg and his wife had bragged
of the powers of this strangely found actress of theirs
that they were training to do great things, but folk
took it for a trick of their trade. Oh, there
was curiosity enough, but ’twas on Haward’s
account.... Well, he drank to her, standing at
the head of the table at Marot’s ordinary, and
the glass crashed over his shoulder, and we all went
to the play.”
“Yes, yes!” cried Truelove,
breathing quickly, and quite forgetting how great
a vanity was under discussion.
“’Twas ‘Tamerlane,’
the play that this traitorous generation calls for
every 5th of November. It seems that the Governor a
Whig as rank as Argyle had ordered it again
for this week. ’Tis a cursed piece of slander
that pictures the Prince of Orange a virtuous Emperor,
his late Majesty of France a hateful tyrant.
But for Haward, whose guest I was, I had not sat there
with closed lips. I had sprung to my feet and
given those flatterers, those traducers, the lie!
The thing taunted and angered until she entered.
Then I forgot.”
“And she and Audrey?”
“Arpasia was her name in the
play. She entered late; her death came before
the end; there was another woman who had more to do.
It all mattered not, I have seen a great actress.”
“Darden’s Audrey!” said Truelove,
in a whisper.
“That at the very first; not
afterwards,” answered MacLean. “She
was dressed, they say, as upon the night at the Palace,
that first night of Haward’s fever. When
she came upon the stage, there was a murmur like the
wind in the leaves. She was most beautiful, ’beauteous
in hatred,’ as the Sultan in the play called
her, dark and wonderful, with angry eyes.
For a little while she must stand in silence, and
in these moments men and women stared at her, then
turned and looked at Haward. But when she spoke
we forgot that she was Darden’s Audrey.”
MacLean laughed again. “When
the play was ended, or rather, when her
part in it was done, the house did shake
so with applause that Stagg had to remonstrate.
There’s naught talked of to-day in Williamsburgh
but Arpasia; and when I came down Palace Street this
morning, there was a great crowd about the playhouse
door. Stagg might sell his tickets for to-night
at a guinea apiece. ‘Venice Preserved’
is the play.”
“And Marmaduke Haward, what
of him?” asked Truelove softly.
“He is English,” said
MacLean, after a pause. “He can make of
his face a smiling mask, can keep his voice as even
and as still as the pool that is a mile away from
the fierce torrent its parent. It is a gift they
have, the English. I remember at Preston” He
broke off with a sigh. “There will be an
end some day, I suppose. He will win her at last
to his way of thinking; and having gained her, he
will be happy. And yet to my mind there is something
unfortunate, strange and fatal, in the aspect of this
girl. It hath always been so. She is such
a one as the Lady in Green. On a Halloween night,
standing in the twelfth rig, a man might hear her voice
upon the wind. I would old Murdoch of Coll, who
hath the second sight, were here: he could tell
the ending of it all.”
An hour later found the Highlander
well upon his way to Williamsburgh, walking through
wood and field with his long stride, his heart warm
within him, his mind filled with the thought of Truelove
and the home that he would make for her in the rude,
upriver country. Since the two had sat beneath
the oak, clouds had gathered, obscuring the sun.
It was now gray and cold in the forest, and presently
snow began to fall, slowly, in large flakes, between
the still trees.
MacLean looked with whimsical anxiety
at several white particles upon his suit of fine cloth,
claret-colored and silver-laced, and quickened his
pace. But the snow was but the lazy vanguard of
a storm, and so few and harmless were the flakes that
when, a, mile from Williamsburgh and at some little
distance from the road, MacLean beheld a ring of figures
seated upon the Gounod beneath a giant elm, he stopped
to observe who and what they were that sat so still
beneath the leafless tree in the winter weather.
The group, that at first glimpse had
seemed some conclave of beings uncouth and lubberly
and solely of the forest, resolved itself into the
Indian teacher and his pupils, escaped for the afternoon
from the bounds of William and Mary. The Indian
lads slender, bronze, and statuesque sat
in silence, stolidly listening to the words of the
white man, who, standing in the midst of the ring,
with his back to the elm-tree, told to his dusky charges
a Bible tale. It was the story of Joseph and his
brethren. The clear, gentle tones of the teacher
reached MacLean’s ears where he stood unobserved
behind a roadside growth of bay and cedar.
A touch upon the shoulder made him
turn, to find at his elbow that sometime pupil of
Mr. Charles Griffin in whose company he had once trudged
from Fair View store to Williamsburgh.
“I was lying in the woods over
there,” said Hugon sullenly. “I heard
them coming, and I took my leave. ‘Peste!’
said I. ’The old, weak man who preaches
quietness under men’s injuries, and the young
wolf pack, all brown, with Indian names!’ They
may have the woods; for me, I go back to the town
where I belong.”
He shrugged his shoulders, and stood
scowling at the distant group. MacLean, in his
turn, looked curiously at his quondam companion of
a sunny day in May, the would-be assassin with whom
he had struggled in wind and rain beneath the thunders
of an August storm. The trader wore his great
wig, his ancient steinkirk of tawdry lace, his high
boots of Spanish leather, cracked and stained.
Between the waves of coarse hair, out of coal-black,
deep-set eyes looked the soul of the half-breed, fierce,
vengeful, ignorant, and embittered.
“There is Meshawa,” he
said, “Meshawa, who was a little boy
when I went to school, but who used to laugh when
I talked of France. Pardieu! one day I found
him alone when it was cold, and there was a fire in
the room. Next time I talked he did not laugh!
They are all” he swept his hand toward
the circle beneath the elm “they are
all Saponies, Nottoways, Meherrins; their fathers
are lovers of the peace pipe, and humble to the English.
A Monacan is a great brave; he laughs at the Nottoways,
and says that there are no men in the villages of
the Meherrins.”
“When do you go again to trade
with your people?” asked MacLean.
Hugon glanced at him out of the corners
of his black eyes. “They are not my people;
my people are French. I am not going to the woods
any more. I am so prosperous. Diable! shall
not I as well as another stay at Williamsburgh, dress
fine, dwell in an ordinary, play high, and drink of
the best?”
“There is none will prevent
you,” said MacLean coolly. “Dwell
in town, take your ease in your inn, wear gold lace,
stake the skins of all the deer in Virginia, drink
Burgundy and Champagne, but lay no more arrows athwart
the threshold of a gentleman’s door.”
Hugon’s lips twitched into a
tigerish grimace. “So he found the arrow?
Mortdieu! let him look to it that one day the arrow
find not him!”
“If I were Haward,” said
MacLean, “I would have you taken up.”
The trader again looked sideways at
the speaker, shrugged his shoulders and waved his
hand. “Oh, he he despises me
too much for that! Eh bien! to-day
I love to see him live. When there is no wine
in the cup, but only dregs that are bitter, I laugh
to see it at his lips. She, Ma’m’selle
Audrey, that never before could I coax into my boat, she
reached me her hand, she came with me down the river,
through the night-time, and left him behind at Westover.
Ha! think you not that was bitter, that drink which
she gave him, Mr. Marmaduke Haward of Fair View?
Since then, if I go to that house, that garden at
Williamsburgh, she hides, she will not see me; the
man and his wife make excuse! Bad! But also
he sees her never. He writes to her: she
answers not. Good! Let him live, with the
fire built around him and the splinters in his heart!”
He laughed again, and, dismissing
the subject with airiness somewhat exaggerated, drew
out his huge gilt snuffbox. The snow was now falling
more thickly, drawing a white and fleecy veil between
the two upon the road and the story-teller and his
audience beneath the distant elm. “Are
you for Williamsburgh?” demanded the Highlander,
when he had somewhat abruptly declined to take snuff
with Monsieur Jean Hugon.
That worthy nodded, pocketing his
box and incidentally making a great jingling of coins.
“Then,” quoth MacLean,
“since I prefer to travel alone, twill wait here
until you have passed the rolling-house in the distance
yonder. Good-day to you!”
He seated himself upon the stump of
a tree, and, giving all his attention to the snow,
began to whistle a thoughtful air. Hugon glanced
at him with fierce black eyes and twitching lips,
much desiring a quarrel; then thought better of it,
and before the tune had come to an end was making
with his long and noiseless stride his lonely way to
Williamsburgh, and the ordinary in Nicholson Street.