"I heard you complaining to Baron de Riedesel yesterday of not being able to get a nurse. Will you not give me the place, and let my pay be for us all to live in your garret?
We will make as little trouble--"
"Ach! Why deet I not it think before?" cried the baroness, boxing her own ear. "Cochon! Brute! You come, ma pauvre! Mais not as bonne, non, non."
"Indeed, Frederica, "t is the only way that we can. We could not live upon you without in some way making a return, and the paper money with which we furnished ourselves has gone on falling till now "t is worth but a threepence in the pound, so that we could not hope to pay for--"
"Bah! Who asks? You come as our guests; when you had ze plenty of milk and eggs you shared it weez us, and so now we share our plenty weez you. You, a proud girl, to be a nurse, indeet!"
""T is that pride which asks it, my dear. Ah, if you only would let me! Mommy suffers so with the cold, and has such a frightful cough, that every day I fear to see it become a pneumonia, and--"
"Stop! I was ze wrong. Come as you please, a l"instant.
Ah, ze leettle ones, zay will go craze for joy; ze baron he will geef no more eyes to ze wife who is losing her shape, and all ze officairs, zay will say, "Gott! How I lofe children!"
Mais, I will not angree be, but kiss you so, and so, and so.
And to all will I say, "Voila, deet efer woman haf such a frent for herself and such a second mutter for her children?""
LVI A LIFE OF CAPTIVITY
The removal to Colle was made the same day, and Janice a.s.sumed her new charge. It was, as it proved, not a very onerous one, for the children were well mannered for their years, and, young as they were, in the German method they were kept pretty steadily at tasks, while an old servant of the general, a German Yager, was only too delighted at any time to a.s.sume care of them. Janice herself slept in the nursery, and at first Mr. and Mrs. Meredith were given, as suggested, accommodation in the garret. But the baron, not content with the s.p.a.ce at his command, as soon as the weather permitted, had built a large dining-room and salon, separate from the house, and this supplied so much more s.p.a.ce that the parents were given a good room on a lower floor.
The new arrangement not merely brought them comfort, but also pleasure. Mr. and Mrs. Meredith were treated as guests; and Madame de Riedesel made Janice quite as much her own companion as an attendant on the children. With her, once her nervousness was conquered, Janice talked French entirely; and more for amus.e.m.e.nt than for improvement, she began the study of German, with her friend as instructor; and, having as well the aid of every Brunswick officer, who only too gladly frequented the house, she was soon able to both read and speak it, to the delight of the baron, who preferred his native tongue; though his wife, German-born as she was, could not understand how any one who could talk French would for a moment willingly use any other tongue. Furthermore, they taught each other the various st.i.tches in embroidery and crocheting each knew; and the German, who was an excellent housewife, not merely made Janice her a.s.sistant in the household cares, but, after expressing horror that the girl knew nothing of accounts, spent many hours inducting her into the mysteries by which she knew to a farthing how her money was expended.
Although these were all pastimes rather than labours to Janice, there were lighter hours in which she made a fourth at whist, learned chess from the general, and played on the harpsichord or sang to him. Once a week there was a musicale, at which all who could play on any instrument contributed a share, and dances and dinners were frequently given by the Riedesels and by General Phillips, the major-general in command of the British part of the Convention prisoners. Horses in plenty were in the stable, and the two ladies, well escorted by officers, took almost daily rides, the baroness making herself a figure of remark to the natives by riding astride her horse in a short skirt and long boots.
With the advent of summer, their pleasures became more pastoral. So soon as the weather permitted, the gentry of the neighbourhood came to call upon their foes, and this led to much dining about. Then, too, there were out-of-door fetes and picnics, oftentimes at long distances from the cantonment; so that ere many weeks the Riedesels and the Merediths had come to know both the people and the region intimately.
A sudden end came to these amus.e.m.e.nts by an untoward event. Janice and General de Riedesel had made the flower-garden at Colle their particular charge, working there, despite the heat, for hours each day, till early in August, when one day the baron was found lying in a pathway unconscious, his face blue, his hands white, and his eyes staring. He was hurriedly carried into the house, and when the army surgeon arrived, it was found to be a case of sunstroke. Though he was bled copiously, the sufferer improved but slowly, and before he was convalescent developed the "river" or "breakbone fever." Finally he was ordered over the mountains to the Warm Springs, to see whether their waters might not benefit him; and, leaving Mr. and Mrs. Meredith in charge, the baroness and Janice went with him, half as companions and half as nurses.
Upon their arrival there, they found the Springs so crowded that all the log cabins, which, by custom, fell to the first comers, were already occupied. Declining an offer from one of these to share lodgings, they set to work in a proper spot to make themselves comfortable; for, having foreseen this very possibility, they had come amply supplied with tents. Before they had well begun on their encampment, two negroes in white and red livery appeared, and the spokesman, executing a bow that would have done honour to a lord chamberlain, handed Madame de Riedesel a letter which read as follows:--
"Mrs. Washington preasent"s her most respectful complements to the Barones de Reedaysell, and her sattisfacshon at being informed of her arival at the Springs. She beggs that if the barers of this can be of aney a sistance to the Barones in setling, that she will yuse them as long as they may be of sarvis to her.
"Mrs. Washington likewise bespeeks the honer of the Baroneses party to dinner today and beggs that if it will be aney conveenence to her, that she will sup as well."
Both offers Madame de Riedesel was only too glad to accept; and at the dinner hour, guided by the darkies, they made their way to Lady Washington"s lodgings, to find a plump, smiling, little lady, who received them with much dignity, properly qualified with affability. The meal was spread underneath the trees, and they were quickly seated about the table and chatting genially over it.
Once the newness was taken off the acquaintance, the baroness made an appeal to the hostess for a favour. "Ah, Laty Washington," she begged, "ze surgeons, zay declare my goot husband he cannot recovair ze fevair in ze so hot climate, and zat ze one goot for him will be zat he to New York restores himself. I haf written ze prediction to Sir Henry Clinton, applicating zat he secure ze exchange of ze baron immediatement, mais, will you not also write to ze General Washington and ask him, also, zees zing to accomplish?"
"I would in a moment, gladly, baroness," replied Mrs.
Washington, "but I a.s.sure you that the general would highly disapprove of my interfering in a public matter. Do not hesitate, however, to write yourself, for I can a.s.sure you he will do everything in his power to spare you anxiety or discomfort."
"Zen you zink he will my prayer grant?"
"I am sure he will, if it is possible, for, aside from his generous treatment of every one, let me whisper to you that "t is not a quality in his composition to say "No" to a pretty woman."
"Oh, no, Frederika," broke in Janice; "you need not have the slightest fear of his Excellency. He is everything that is kind and great and generous!"
"What!" exclaimed Mrs. Washington. "You know the general, then?"
"Oh, yes," cried Janice, rapturously; "and if you but knew, Lady Washington, how we stand indebted to him at this very moment!"
The hostess smiled in response to the girl"s enthusiasm.
""T is certain he refused you nothing, Miss Meredith," she said.
"Indeed, but he did," answered Janice, merrily. "Wouldst believe it, Lady Washington, though perhaps "t is monstrous bold of me to tell it, "t is he that has had to keep me at a distance, for I have courted him most outrageously!"
""T is fortunate," replied the matron, "that he is a loyal husband, and that I am not a jealous wife, for "t is a way all women have with him. What think you a Virginian female, who happened to be pa.s.sing through camp, had the forwardness to say to me but t" other day? "When General Washington,"
she writ, "throws off the hero and takes up the chatty, agreeable companion, he can be downright impudent sometimes, Martha,--such impudence as you and I, and every woman, always like.""
"Ah," a.s.serted Madame de Riedesel, "ze goot men, zay all lofe us dearly. Eh, Janice?"
"What!" demanded the hostess. "Is your name Janice?
Surely this is not my nice boy Jack"s Miss Meredith?"
The girl reddened and then paled. "I beg, Lady Washington--"
she began; but the baroness, who had noted her change of colour, cut her off.
"You haf a lofer," she cried, "and nevair one word to me told? Ach, ingrate! And your lofe I zought it was mine.
"Miss Meredith is very different, then, from a certain gentleman,"
remarked Mrs. Washington, laughingly. "I first gained his confidence when he lay wounded at headquarters winter before last; but once his secret was unbosomed, I could not so much as stop to ask how he did but he must begin and talk of nothing but her till he became so excited and feverish that I had to check or leave him for his own good."
"Indeed, Lady Washington," protested the girl, her lip trembling in her endeavour to keep back the tears, "once Colonel Brereton may have thought he cared for me, but, I a.s.sure you, "t was but a half-hearted regard, which long since died."
""T is thy cruelty killed it, then," a.s.serted Mrs. Washington, "for, unless my eyes and ears deceived me, never was there more eager lover than--"
""T is not so; on the contrary, he won my heart and then broke it with his cruelty," denied the girl, the tears coming in spite of herself. "I pray you forgive my silly tears, and do not speak more of this matter," she ended.
"I cannot believe it of him," responded Lady Washington.
"But "t was far from my thought to distress you, and it shall never be spoke of more."
The subject was instantly dropped; and though Janice saw much of Lady Washington during their three weeks" stay at the Springs, and a mutual liking sprang up between the two, never again was it broached save at the moment that they set out on their return to Colic, when her new friend, along with her farewell kiss, said, "I, too, shall soon leave the Springs, my dear, and journey ere long to join the general at headquarters for the winter. Have you any message for him?"
"Indeed, but I have," eagerly cried Janice. "Wilt take him my deepest thanks?"
"And no more?"
"If your ladyship were willing," said Janice, archly, "I would ask you to take him my love and a kiss."
"He shall have them, though I doubt not he would prefer such gifts without a proxy," promised Mrs. Washington, smiling.
Then she whispered, "And can I not carry the same to some one else?"
"Never!" replied the girl, grave on the instant. "Once I cared for him, but such feeling as I had has long since died, and nothing can ever restore it."
Keenly desirous as the Merediths were for the well-being of the Riedesels, it was impossible for them not to feel a pang of regret when, one morning, the baroness broke the news to them that Washington had yielded to her prayer, that her husband and General Phillips had at last been exchanged, and that they were to set out within the week for New York. Yet, even in the departure, their benefactors continued their kindness; for, having rented Colle for two years, they placed the house at their disposal for the balance of the lease; and when, after tearful good-byes had been made and they were well started on their northern journey, Janice went to her room, she found a purse containing twenty guineas in gold as a parting gift from the general, a breastpin of price from the baroness, and a ring from Gustava, with a note attached to it in the English print which Janice had taught her, declaring her undying affection and her intention to ask G.o.d to change her to a boy that when she grew up she might return and wed her.
The months that drifted by after this departure were lean ones of incident. Succeeding as they did to the ample garden, poultry, pigs, and two cows which the baron had donated to them, they were quite at ease as to food. The junior officers who still remained in charge of the troops saw to it that they did not want for military servants, thus relieving them of all severe labour; and while they deeply felt the loss of the Riedesels, there was no lack of company.