Part 33 (2/2)
He left the window and, crossing to the mantel, pulled the bell-rope.
Old Burwell appeared at the door. ”Mr. Rand's horse, Burwell,” directed the master, in a cheerful voice, then, when the negro was gone, spoke on without change of tone. ”The night has altered while we talked. There is a great bank of cloud in the west, and I think the drouth is broken. You will reach Roselands, however, before the rain comes down. Pray present my respectful salutations to Mrs. Rand.”
”You are very good,” said Rand. ”My wife”--He hesitated, then, ”I would have you aware that my wife's hand would keep me in that same country road I spoke of, among those same green fields and peaceful, blameless folk! Her star is not like mine--”
”I esteem her the more highly for it,” answered the other. ”I hear your horse upon the gravel--Selim, still, is it not? A pleasant ride to you home through this fresher air! Good-night--and good-bye.”
”I am not the monster I appear to you,” said Rand. ”A man may go through life and never encounter the irresistible current. When he does--I am as little superst.i.tious as you, but I tell you I am borne on! All the men and women whose blood is in my veins hurry me on, and there is behind me a tide of circ.u.mstance. For all past kindnesses I thank you, sir. I admire you much, reverence you no little, and bid you a long farewell.”
He walked to the door, then, turning, swept the room with one slow look.
”I was fifteen,” he said, ”the day I first came here. There was a gla.s.s of lilies on the table. Good-night, sir,--and good-bye.”
Without, the night was indeed cooler, with a sighing wind, and in the west a thickening wrack of clouds. It was very dark. The restless and mult.i.tudinous flicker of the fireflies but emphasized the shadow, and the stars seemed few and dim. It was near midnight, and the wide landscape below the mountain lay in darkness, save for one distant knoll where lights were burning. That was Fontenoy, and Rand, looking toward it with knitted brows, wondered why the house was so brightly lighted at such an hour. In another moment the road descended, the heavy trees shut out the view of the valley, and with very much indeed upon his mind, he thought no more of Fontenoy. It was utterly necessary to him to find a remedy for the sting, keen and intolerable, which he bore with him from Monticello. He felt the poison as he rode, and his mind searched, in pa.s.sion and in haste, for the sovereign antidote. He found it and applied it, and the rankling pain grew less. Now more than ever was it necessary to go on. Now more than ever he must commit himself without reserve to the strong current. When it had borne him to a fair and far country, to kings.h.i.+p, sway, empire, and vast renown, then would this night be justified!
He left the mountain, and, riding rapidly, soon found himself upon the road to Roselands. It was also the Greenwood road. Between the two plantations lay a deep wood, and as he emerged from this, he saw before him in the dim starlight a horseman, coming towards him from Roselands.
”Is that you, Mocket?” he called.
The other drew rein. ”It is Ludwell Cary. Good-evening, Mr. Rand. I have just left Roselands.”
”Indeed?” exclaimed Rand. ”May I ask--”
”I came from Fontenoy at the request of Colonel Churchill. Mrs.
Churchill fell suddenly very ill to-night. They think she will not last many hours, and she asks continually for her niece. Colonel Churchill sent me to beg Mrs. Rand to come without delay to Fontenoy. I have delivered my message, and she but waits your return to Roselands--”
”I will hurry on,” said Rand. ”Be so good as to tell Colonel Churchill that Joab will bring her in the chaise--Mammy Chloe with her. I am sorry for your news. Accept, too, our thanks for the trouble to which you have put yourself--”
”It is nothing,” answered Cary. ”My brother and I chanced to be at Fontenoy. Mrs. Rand is much distressed, and I'll detain you no longer--”
He bowed, touched his horse, and rode into the wood. Rand turned in his saddle and looked after him for a long moment, then shook his reins, broke into a gallop, and pa.s.sed presently through the Roselands gates and up the dark drive to the stone steps and open door. Jacqueline met him on the threshold. She was trembling, but not weeping; there was even a wistful fire and pa.s.sion in her dark eyes and a rose-leaf colour in her cheeks. ”Did you meet him?” she said. ”Did he tell you? I am all ready. He says that Aunt Nancy thinks that it is years ago, and that I'm Jacqueline Churchill still. I thought you would never, never come”--She turned and threw herself into his arms. ”Oh, Lewis, we are going to Fontenoy!”
CHAPTER XX
THE NINETEENTH OF FEBRUARY
”That's true,” quoth Gaudylock. ”It's the cracked I pitcher that goes oftenest to the well, and a delicate lady that's lain a-dying on her bed this twenty year may live to see you and me and the blacksmith buried!
There never was a Churchill that I didn't like, and I'm certainly glad she's better this morning. If you're going to Greenwood, I'll bear you company for a bit. I'm bound for Roselands myself.”
Ludwell Cary dismounted and, with his bridle across his arm, walked beside the hunter. ”Albemarle has not seen you for a long while,” he said pleasantly. ”The county is fond of you, and glad to have you home again.”
”So a lady told me the other day!” answered Adam. ”It has been a year since I was in Albemarle,--but I saw you, sir, last winter in Richmond.”
”Last winter? I don't recall--”
”At Lynch's Coffee House. The twentieth of February. The day the Albemarle Resolutions were pa.s.sed.”
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