Part 20 (2/2)

Lewis Rand Mary Johnston 62110K 2022-07-22

In Albemarle, at all Republican gatherings the man most in demand was Lewis Rand; and the surrounding counties of Fluvanna, Amherst, Augusta, and Orange considered themselves happy if he could be drawn to this or that ma.s.s meeting. It was not easy to attract him. He never consciously said to himself, ”Be chary of favours; they will be the more prized”; he said instead, ”I'll not waste an arrow where there's no gold to hit.”

When he saw that it was worth his while to go, he went, and sent an arrow full into the gold. Amherst and Augusta, Fluvanna and Orange, broke into applause and prophecy, while upon each return home Republican Albemarle welcomed him with added rapture, and Federalist Albemarle hurled another phrase into its already comprehensive anathema.

His reputation grew amain, both in his native section and in the state at large. Before the autumn his election to the House of Delegates, which in April seemed so great a thing, began to a.s.sume the appearance of a trifle in his fortunes. He would overtop that, and how highly no man was prepared to say. Through all the clas.h.i.+ng of s.h.i.+elds, through Republican attack and Federalist resistance, through the clamour over Hamilton's death, the denunciation and upholding of Burr, the impeachment of Chase, the situation in Louisiana, the gravitation towards France, and the check of England, the consciousness of Pitt and the obsession of Napoleon,--through all the commotion and fanfaronade of that summer Rand kept a steady hand and eye, and sent his arrows into the gold. In the law, as in politics, he was successful. A comprehensive knowledge and an infinite painstaking, a grasp wide and firm, a somewhat sombre eloquence, a personal magnetism virile and compelling,--these and other attributes began to make his name resound. He won his cases, until presently to say of a man, ”He has Lewis Rand,” was in effect to conclude the matter. He had no Federalist clients; that rift widened and deepened. Federalist Albemarle meant the Churchills and the Carys, their kinsmen, connections, and friends. The gulf seemed fixed.

Jacqueline, keeping at home in the house on the Three-Notched Road, saw very few from out her old life. Those who had been her girlhood friends kept aloof. If their defection pained her, she gave no sign--she had something of her father's pride. Among the Republican gentry she was of course made much of, and she saw something of the plainer sort of her husband's friends. Tom Mocket came occasionally on business with Rand, and once he brought Vinie with him. Jacqueline liked the sandy-haired and freckled scamp, and made friends with Vinie. In the first July days Adam Gaudylock often sat upon her porch, but now for weeks he had been wandering in the West. Once or twice Mr. Pincornet, straying that way, had delicately looked his pity for a lovely woman in a desert waste.

Cousin Jane Selden remained her good neighbour and kind friend, and once Mr. Ned Hunter brought a message from Unity. Her old minister came to see her, and Dr. Gilmer, when illness called him in that direction, always drew rein at her gate. Ludwell Cary was out of the county, and Fairfax Cary never rode that way. Unity came whenever it was possible, and thrice, between July and October, Deb and Miranda and a horsehair trunk arrived for a blissful week. To Deb they were unshadowed days. The log house, the pine wood and singing stream, an owl that hooted each night, a row of tiger lilies and a thicket of blackberries, Jacqueline to tell her stories, Mammy Chloe and Hannah, the new brother who came home every evening riding a great bay horse and kissing Jacqueline beneath the mimosa tree, the brother who showed her twenty unguessed treasures and gave her the Arabian Nights,--Deb thought the week on the Three-Notched Road a piece out of the book, and wept when she must go back to Fontenoy.

But Colonel Churchill and Major Edward never came, never wrote, never sent messages to Jacqueline, never, she forced Unity to tell her, mentioned her name or would hear it mentioned at Fontenoy. Only Aunt Nancy, lying always in the chamber, her key-basket beside her on the white counterpane, talked of her when she chose. ”But she talks as though you were dead,” acknowledged Unity; then, ”Oh, Jacqueline, it must all come right some day! And as for him, he's talked of more and more,--everywhere one goes, one hears his name! He's head and front of his party here. Oh, what a party! Mrs. Adams writes that at Was.h.i.+ngton they eat soup with their fingers and still think _ca Ira_ the latest song! Cannot you convert him? They say the Mammoth's jealous, and that your husband and Colonel Burr correspond in cipher. Is that so?”

”I don't know,” said Jacqueline. ”I shall not try to convert him. I would have a man loyal to his beliefs--so would you, Unity! Suppose yourself of another party--would you change Fairfax Cary? You would wish him to stay always the Federalist that he is! So with me. I love my great Republican.”

”I love you,” said Unity. ”Kiss me. Now, when do you go to Richmond?”

”Next month. Oh, Unity, if Uncle d.i.c.k and Uncle Edward would but make friends before we go!”

Unity, stopping for an hour at Cousin Jane Selden's, remarked to that lady, ”Ah, she is happy! She does not know and she does not care what is said of Lewis Rand. They say dreadful things. The last Gazette--”

”She doesn't hear a Federalist upon the subject,” replied Cousin Jane.

”The last Gazette! Pooh! who believes what a Federalist paper says of a Republican, or a Republican paper says of a Federalist? Most men and all newspapers are liars.”

”It says that he is a Buonaparte ready to break the sh.e.l.l.”

”Buonaparte's a great man, my dear.”

”And that the Mammoth's alarmed--”

”Like the hen that hatched the eaglet--”

”And that Lewis Rand's no more Republican at heart than he is Federalist. He's just for Lewis Rand.”

”Hm-m-m!”

”And that his name's known as far west as the Mississippi.”

”There's no law against a man's name spreading. It's what every man strives for. One succeeds, and the birds that carried the news are indignant.”

”And that he's an Atheist.”

”Lewis Rand's no saint, child, but he's no fool either. You'll be telling me next that he mistreats his wife.”

”Ah, he does not do that!” exclaimed Unity. ”She's deep in love. He can't be so very bad, can he, Cousin Jane?”

”He's not a monster, child: he's just a man.--And now, Unity, I am making damson preserves to-day.”

”I'll go,” said Unity, rising. ”But they believe these things at Fontenoy.”

”Do they believe them at Greenwood?”

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