"Have you ice-water in your veins?" his mother asked, pa.s.sionately.
"I have your blood, madam, and my father"s, hence I am what I am."
"Well, then you must be a man of honor, of your word. Will you promise never to take arms against the South?"
"I have told you I have no disposition to do so."
"The promise, then, can cost you little, and it will be a relief to my mind."
"Oh, well, mamma, if it will make you feel any easier, I promise with one exception. Both South and North must keep their hands off the property my father gave me."
"If Southern leaders were dictating terms in New York City, as they will, ere long, they would never touch your property."
"They had better not."
"You know what I mean, Willard. I ask you never to a.s.sume this hated Northern uniform, or put your foot on Southern soil with a hostile purpose."
"Yes, I can promise that."
"Swear it to me then, by your mother"s honor and your father"s memory."
"Is not my word sufficient?"
"These things are sacred to me, and I wish them treated in a sacred manner. If you will do this my mind will be at rest and I may be able to do more for you in the future."
"To satisfy you, I swear never to put on the Northern uniform or to enter the South with a hostile purpose."
She stepped forward and touched his forehead with her lips, as she said: "The compact is sealed. Your oath is registered on earth and in heaven. Your simple word as a man of honor will satisfy me as to one other request. I wish you never to speak to any one of this solemn covenant between us."
"I"m not in the habit of gossiping over family affairs," he replied, haughtily.
"I know that, and also that your delicacy of feeling would keep you from speaking of a matter so sacred to me. But I am older and more experienced than you, and I shall feel safer if you promise.
You would not gossip about it, of course. You might refer to it to some friend or to the woman who became your wife. I can foresee complications which might make it better that it should be utterly unknown. You little know how I dream and plan for you, and I only ask you never to speak of this interview and its character to a living soul."
"Certainly, mother, I can promise this. I should feel it small business to babble about anything which you take so to heart. These visions of empire occupy your mind and do no harm. I only hope you will meet your disappointment philosophically. Good-by now till lunch."
"Poor mamma!" thought the young man, as he started out for a walk; "she rails against Northern fanatics, forgetting that it is just possible to be a little fanatical on the Southern side of the line."
As he strode along in the sunshine his oath weighed upon him no more than if he had promised not to go out in his sail-boat that day.
At last, after surmounting a rather steep hill, he threw himself on the gra.s.s under the shade of a tree. "It"s going to be awfully slow and stupid here," he muttered, "and it will be a month or two before we can return. I hoped to be back in time to join the Montagues in climbing Mont Blanc, and here I am tied up between these mole-hill mountains and city law-offices. How shall I ever get through with the time?"
A pony-phaeton, containing two ladies, appeared at the foot of the hill and slowly approached. His eyes rested on it in languid indifference, but, as it drew nearer, the younger of the two ladies fixed his attention. Her charming summer costume at first satisfied his taste, and, as her features became distinct, he was surprised at their beauty, as he thought at first; but he soon felt that animation redeemed the face from mere prettiness. The young girl was talking earnestly, but a sudden movement of the horse caused her to glance toward the road-side, and she encountered the dark eyes of a stranger. Her words ceased instantly. A slight frown contracted her brow, and, touching her horse with her whip, she pa.s.sed on rapidly.
"By Jove! Strahan is right. If I have many such countrywomen in the neighborhood, I ought to find amus.e.m.e.nt."
He rose and sauntered after the phaeton, and saw that it turned in at a pretty little cottage, embowered in vines and trees. Making a mental note of the locality, he bent his steps in another direction, laughing as he thought: "From that one glance I am sure that those blue eyes will kindle more than one fellow before they are quenched.
I wonder if Strahan knows her. Well, here, perhaps, is a chance for a summer lark. If Strahan is enamored I"d like to cut him out, for by all the fiends of dulness I must find something to do."
Strahan had accepted an invitation to lunch at the Vosburghs" that day, and arrived, hot and flushed, from his second morning"s drill.
"Well!" he exclaimed, "I"ve seen the great Mogul."
"I believe I have also," replied Marian. "Has he not short and slightly curly hair, dark eyes, and an impudent stare?"
"I don"t recognize the "stare" exactly. Merwyn is polite enough in his way, and confound his way! But the rest of your description tallies. Where did you see him?"
She explained.
"That was he, accomplishing his usual day"s work. O ye dogs of war!
how I would like to have him in my squad one of these July days!
Miss Marian, I"d wear your shoe-tie in my cap the rest of my life, if you would humble that fellow and make him feel that he never spoke to a t.i.tled lady abroad who had not her equal in some American girl. It just enrages me to see a New-York man, no better born than myself, putting on such superior and indifferent airs. If he"d come to me and say, "Strahan, I"m a rebel, I"m going to fight and kill you if I can," I"d shake hands with him as I did not to-day. I"d treat him like a jolly, square fellow, until we came face to face in a fair fight, and then--the fortune of war. As it was, I felt like taking him by the collar and shaking him out of his languid grace. He told me to mind my own business so politely that I couldn"t take offence, although he gave scarcely any other reason than that he proposed to mind his. When I met his Southern mother on the piazza, she looked at me in my uniform at first as if I had been a toad. They are rebels at heart, and yet they stand aloof and sneer at the North, from which they derive protection and revenue.
I made his eyes flash once though," chuckled the young fellow in conclusion.
Marian laughed heartily as she said: "Mr. Strahan, if you fight as well as you talk, I foresee Southern reverses. You have no idea how your indignation becomes you. "As well-born," did you say? Why, my good friend, you are worth a wilderness of such lackadaisical fellows. Ciphers don"t count unless they stand after a significant figure; neither do such men, unless stronger men use them."
"Your arithmetic is at fault, Miss Marian. Ciphers do have the power of pushing a significant figure way back to the right of the decimal point, and, as a practical fact, these elegant human ciphers usually stand before good men and true in society. I don"t believe it would be so with you, but few of us would stand a chance with most girls should this rich American, with his foreign airs and graces, enter the lists against us."
In her sincerity and earnestness, she took his hand and said: "I thank you for your tribute. You are right. Though this person had the wealth of the Indies, and every external grace, he could not be my friend unless he were a MAN. I"ve talked with papa a good deal, and believe there are men in the Southern army just as honest and patriotic as you are; but no cold-blooded, selfish betwixt-and-betweens shall ever take my hand."
"Make me a promise," cried Strahan, giving the hand he held a hearty and an approving shake.
"Well?"
"If opportunity offers, make this fellow bite the dust."
"We"ll see about that. I may not think it worth the while, and I certainly shall not compromise myself in the slightest degree."
"But if I bring him here you will be polite to him?"
"Just about as polite as he was to you, I imagine."
"Miss Marian, I wouldn"t have any harm come to you for the wide world. If--if anything should turn out amiss I"d shoot him, I certainly would."
The girl"s only answer was a merry peal of laughter.
CHAPTER XII.
"A VOW."