It dawned, presently; and all the unrest left my breast--all that heavy dullness which seemed like the flitting shadow of a pain.
"Tell me," said I, "are you happy?"
"I am contented. I love my Mistress Swift. I love and pity Lady Johnson.... Yes, I am happy."
"I know they both love you," said I. "So you should be happy here....
And admired as you are by all men...."
Again she laughed in her enchanting little way, and bent her bright head. And, presently:
"John Drogue?"
"I hear you, Penelope."
"Do you wish warm woolen stockings for your men?"
"Why--yes."
"I sent to Caydutta Lodge for the garments. They are in the house. You shall choose for yourself and your men before the Continentals take their share."
I was touched, and thanked her. And now, it being near the noon hour, we walked together to the house.
The part.i.tion which Sir John had made for a gun-room, and which now served to enclose Penelope"s chamber, was all hung with stout woolen stockings of her own knitting; and others lay on her trundle-bed. So I admired and handled and praised these sober fruits of her diligence and foresight, and we corded up some dozen pair for my white people; and I stuffed them into my soldier"s leather sack.
Then I took her hands and said my thanks; and she looked at me and answered, "You are welcome, John Drogue."
I do not know what possessed me to put my arm around her. She flushed deeply. I kissed her; and it went to my head.
The girl was dumb and scarlet, not resisting, nor defending her lips; but there came a clatter of china dishes, and I released her as Flora and Colas appeared from below, with dinner smoking, and clattering platters.
And presently Lady Johnson"s door opened, and she stepped out in her silk levete, followed by Claudia.
"I invited no one else," said Lady Johnson, "--if that suits you, Jack."
I protested that it suited me, and that I desired to spend my few hours from duty with them alone.
As we were seated, I ventured a side glance at Penelope and perceived that she seemed nothing ruffled, though her colour was still high. For she gave me that faint, enchanting smile that now began to send a thrill through me, and she answered without confusion any remarks addressed to her.
Remembering my Indian outside, I told Flora, and Colas took food to him on the veranda.
And so we spent a very happy hour there--three old friends together once more, and a young girl stranger whom we loved already. And I did not know in what degree I loved her, but that I did love her now seemed somewhat clear to my confused senses and excited mind,--though to love, I knew, was one thing, and to be _in_ love was still another. Or so it seemed to me.
My animation was presently noticed by Claudia; and she rested her eyes on me. For I talked much and laughed more, and challenged her gay conceits with a wit which seemed to me not wholly contemptible.
"One might think you had been drinking of good news," quoth she; "so pray you share the draught, Jack, for we have none of our own to quench our thirst."
"Unless none be good news, as they say," said Lady Johnson, wistfully.
"News!" said I. "Nenni! But the sun shines, Claudia, and life is young, and "tis a pretty world we live in after all."
"If you admire a marsh," says she, "there"s a world o" mud and rushes to admire out yonder."
"Or if you admire a cabinful o" lonely ladies," added Lady Johnson, "you may gaze your fill upon us."
"I should never be done or have my fill of beauty if I sat here a thousand years, Polly," said I.
"A thousand years and a dead fish outshines our beauty," smiled Lady Johnson. "If you truly admire our beauty, Jack, best prove it now."
"To which of us the Golden Apple?" inquired Claudia, offering one of the winter russets which had been picked at the Point.
"Ho!" said I, "you think to perplex and frighten me? _Non, pas!_ Polly Johnson shall not have it, because, if she ever makes me wise, wisdom is its own reward and needs no other. And you shall not have it, Claudia!"
"Why not?"
"Mere beauty cannot claim it."
"Why not? Venus received the apple cast by Eris."
"But only because Venus promised Love! Do you promise me the reward of the shepherd?"
"Myself?" she asked impudently.
"Venus," said Lady Johnson, "made that personal exception, and so must you, Claudia. The G.o.ddess promised beauty; but not herself."
"Then," said I, "Claudia has nothing to offer me. And so I give the apple to Penelope!"
She refused it, shyly.
"Industry is the winner," said I. "Thrift triumphs. I already have her gift. I have a dozen pair of woolen stockings for my men, knitted by this fair Penelope of today. And, as she awaits no wandering lord, though many suitors press her, then she should have at least this golden apple of Eris to reward her. And so she shall."
And I offered it again.
"Take it, my dear," said Claudia, laughing, "for this young man has given you a reason. Pallas offered military glory; you offer military stockings! What chance have Hera and poor Aphrodite in such a contest?"
We all were laughing while the cloth was cleared, and Flora brought us a great dish of wild strawberries.
These we sopped in our wine and tasted at our ease, there by the open windows, where a soft wind blew the curtains and the far-spreading azure waters sparkled in the sun.
How far away seemed death!
I looked out upon the mountains, now a pale cobalt tint, and their peaks all denting the sky like blue waves on Lake Erie against the horizon.
Low over the Vlaie Water flapped a giant heron, which alighted not far away and stood like a sentry, motionless at his post.
A fresh, wild breath of blossoms grew upon the breeze--the enchanting scent of pinxters. From the mainland, high on a sugar-maple"s spire, came the sweet calling of a meadow-lark.
Truly, war seemed far away; and death farther still in this dear Northland of ours. And I fell a-thinking there that if kings could only see this land on such a day, and smell the pinxters, and hear the sweetened whistle of our lark, there would be no war here, no slavery, no strife where liberty and freedom were the very essence of the land and sky.