Mary Johnston - Foes
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Mary Johnston >> Foes
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"Yes, I must go."
"Is it back to France?"
"Yes--or to America. I do not know. I have thought of that. But here,
first, I thought that I should go to White Farm."
"It would add risk. I do not think that it is needed."
"Jarvis Barrow--"
"The old man lies abed and his wits wander. He would hardly know you,
I think--would not understand. Leave him now, except as you find him
within."
"Her sister?"
"I will tell Gilian. That is a wide and wise spirit. She will
understand."
"Then it is come and gone--"
"Disappear as you appeared! None here wants your peril, and the griefs
and evils were you taken."
"I expected to go back. The brig _Seawing_ brought me. It sails in a
week's time."
"You must be upon it, then."
"Yes, I suppose so." He drew a long, impatient breath. "Let us leave
all that! Sufficient to the day--I wander and wander, and there are
stones and thorns--and Circe, too!... You have the steady light, but I
have not! The wind blows it--it flickers!"
"Ah, I know flickering, too!"
"Is there a great Senor Somebody? Sometimes I feel it--and then there
is only the wild ass in the desert! The dust blinds and the mire
sticks."
"Ah, Old Saracen--"
The other pushed the embers together. "This cave--this glen.... Do you
remember that time we were in Amsterdam and each dreamed one night the
same dream?"
"I remember."
The fire was sinking for the night. The moon was down in the western
sky. Around and around the cave and the glen and the night the inner
ear heard, as it were, a long, faint, wordless cry for help. Alexander
brooded, brooded, his eyes upon the lessening flame. At last, with a
sudden movement, he rose. "I smell the morning air. Let us be going!"
The two covered the embers and left the cave. The moon stood above the
western rim of the glen, the sound of the water was deep and full,
frost hung in the air, the trees great and small stood quiet, in a
winter dream. Ian and Alexander climbed the glen-side, avoiding Mother
Binning's cot. Now they were in open country, moving toward Black
Hill.
The walk was not a short one. Daybreak was just behind the east when
they came to the long heath-grown hill that faced the house, the
purple ridge where as boys they had met. They climbed it, and in the
east was light. Beneath them, among the trees, Black Hill showed roof
and chimney. Then up the path toward them came Peter Lindsay.
He seemed to come in haste and a kind of fear. When he saw the two he
threw up his hands, then violently gestured to them to go back upon
their path, drop beneath the hilltop. They obeyed, and he came to them
himself, panting, sweat upon him for all the chill night. "Mr.
Ian--Laird! Sogers at the house--"
"Ah!"
"Twelve of them. They rade in an hour syne. The lieutenant swears
ye're there, Mr. Ian, and they search the house. Didna ye see the
lights? Mrs. Alison tauld me to gae warn ye--"
CHAPTER XXXV
The soldiers, having fruitlessly searched Black Hill, for the present
set up quarters there, and searched the neighborhood. They gave a wide
cast to that word. It seemed to include all this part of Scotland.
Before long they appeared, not unforeseen, at Glenfernie.
The lieutenant was a wiry, wide-nostriled man, determined to please
superiors and win promotion. He had now men at the Jardine Arms no
less than men at Black Hill. Face to face with the laird of Glenfernie
in the latter's hall, he explained his errand.
"Yes," said Glenfernie. "I saw you coming up the hill. Will you take
wine?"
"To your health, sir!"
"To your health!"
The lieutenant set down the glass and wiped his lips. "I have orders,
Mr. Jardine, which I may not disobey."
"Exactly so, Lieutenant."
"My duty, therefore, brings me in at your door--though of course I may
say that you and your household are hardly under suspicion of
harboring a proscribed rebel! A good Whig"--he bowed stiffly--"a
volunteer serving with the Duke in the late trouble, and, last but
not least, a personal enemy of the man we seek--"
"The catalogue is ample!" said Glenfernie. "But still, having your
orders to make no exception, you must search my house. It is at your
service. I will show you from room to room."
Lieutenant and soldiers and laird went through the place, high and low
and up and down. "Perfunctory!" said the lieutenant twice. "But we
must do as we are told!"
"Yes," said the laird. "This is my sister's garden. The small building
there is an old school-room."
They met Alice walking in the garden, in the winter sunshine.
Strickland, too, joined them here. Presentations over, the lieutenant
again repeated his story.
"Perfunctory, of course, here--perfunctory! The only trace that we
think we have we found in a glen near you. There is a cave there that
I understand he used to haunt. We found ashes, still warm, where had
been a fire. Pity is, the ground is so frozen no footstep shows!"
"You are making escape difficult," said Strickland.
"I flatter myself that we'll get him between here and the sea! I am
going presently," said the lieutenant, "to a place called White Farm.
But I am given to understand that there are good reasons--saving the
lady's presence--why he'll find no shelter there."
"Over yonder is the old keep," said Glenfernie. "When that is passed,
I think you will have seen everything."
They left Strickland and Alice and went to the keep. Their footsteps
and those of the soldiers behind them rang upon the stone stairs.
"Above is the room," said the laird of Glenfernie, "where as a boy I
used to play at alchemy. I built a furnace. I had an intention of
making lead into gold. I keep old treasures there still, and it is
still my dear old lair--though with a difference as I travel on,
though with a difference, Lieutenant, as we travel on!"
They came into the room, quiet, filled with books and old apparatus,
with a burning fire, with sunlight and shadow dappling floor and wall.
"Well, he would hardly hide here!" said the lieutenant.
"Not by received canons," answered Glenfernie.
The lieutenant spoke to the soldiers. "Go about and look beneath and
behind matters. There are no closets?"
"There are only these presses built against the stone." The laird
opened them as he spoke. "You see--blank space!" He moved toward a
corner. "This structure is my ancient furnace of which I spoke. I
still keep it fuel-filled for firing." As he spoke he opened a sizable
door.
The lieutenant, stooping, saw the piled wood. "I don't know much of
alchemy," he said. "I've never had time to get around to those things.
It's bringing out sleeping values isn't it?"
"Something like that." He shut the furnace door, and they stood
watching the soldiers search the room. In no long time this stood a
completed process.
"Perfunctory!" said again the lieutenant. "Now men, we'll to White
Farm!"
"There is food and drink for them below, on this chilly day," said
the laird, "and perhaps in the hall you'll drink another glass of
wine?"
All went down the stairs and out of the keep. Another half-hour and
the detail, lieutenant and men, mounted and rode away. Glenfernie and
Strickland watched them down the winding road, clear of the hill, out
upon the highway.
Alexander went back alone to the keep that, also, from its widened
loopholes, might watch the searchers ride away. He mounted the stair;
he came into his old room. Ian stood beside the table. The sizable
furnace door hung open, the screen of heaped wood was disarranged.
"It was a good notion, that recess behind my old furnace!" said
Glenfernie. "You took no harm beyond some cobwebs and ashes?"
"None, Senor Nobody," said Ian.
That day went by. The laird and Strickland talked together in low
voices in the old school-room. Davie, too, appeared there once, and an
old, trusted stableman. At sunset came Robin Greenlaw, and stayed an
hour. The stars shone out, around drew a high, windy crystal night.
Mrs. Grizel went to bed. Alexander, with Alice and Strickland, sat by
the fire in the hall. There was much that the laird wished to say that
he said. They spoke in low voices, leaning toward the burning logs,
the light playing over their faces, the light laughing upon old armor,
crossed weapons, upon the walls. Alice, a bonny woman with sense and
courage, sat beside Glenfernie. Strickland, from his corner, saw how
much she looked like her mother; how much, to-night, Alexander looked
like her.
They talked until late. They came to agreement, quiet, moved, but
thorough. Glenfernie rose. He took Alice in his arms and kissed her
thrice. Moisture was in the eyes of both.
"Sleep, dear, sleep! So we understand, things grow easy!"
"I think that you are right, and that is a long way to comfort," said
Alice. "Good night, good night, Alexander!"
When she was gone the two men talked yet a little longer, over the
dying fire. Then they, too, wished each other good night. Strickland
went to his room, but Alexander left the house and crossed the
moon-filled night to the keep. It was now he and Ian.
There was no strain. "Old Steadfast" and "Old Saracen," and a long
pilgrimage together, and every difference granted, yet, in the
background, a vast, an oceanic unity.... Ian rose from the settle. He
and the laird of Glenfernie sat by the table and with pen and paper
made a diagram of escape. They bent to the task in hand, and when it
was done, and a few more words had been said, they turned to the
pallets which Davie had spread on either side of the hearth. The moon
and the low fire made a strange half-light in the room. The two lay
still, addressed to sleep. They spoke and answered but once.
Said Ian: "I felt just then the waves of the sea!--The waves of the
sea and the roads of France.... The waves and roads of the days and
nights and months and years. I there and you here. There is an ether,
doubtless, that links, but I don't tread it firmly.... Be sure I'll
turn to you, call to you, often, over the long roads, from out of the
trough of the waves! _Senor Nobody! Senor Nobody!_" He laughed, but
with a catch of the breath. "Good night!"
"Good night, Old Saracen!" said Alexander.
Morn came. That day Glenfernie House heard still that all that region
was searched. The day went by, short, gray, with flurries of snow. By
afternoon it settled to a great, down-drifting pall of white. It was
falling thick and fast when Alexander Jardine and Ian Rullock passed
through the broken wall beyond the school-room. The pine branches were
whitening, the narrow, rugged path ran a zigzag of white.
Strickland had parted from them at the wall, and yet Strickland seemed
to be upon the path, following Glenfernie. Ian wore a dress of
Strickland's, a hat and cloak that the countryside knew. He and
Strickland were nearly of a height. Keeping silence and moving through
a dimness of the descending day and the shaken veil of the snow,
almost any chance-met neighbor would have said, in passing, "Good day,
Mr. Strickland!"
The path led into the wood. Trees rose about them, phantoms in the
snowstorm. The snow fell in large flakes, straight, undriven by wind.
Footprints made transient shapes. The snow obliterated them as in the
desert moving sand obliterated. Ian and Alexander, leaving the wood,
took a way that led by field and moor to Littlefarm.
The earth seemed a Solitary, with no child nor lover of hers abroad.
The day declined, the snow fell. Ian and Alexander moved on, hardly
speaking. The outer landscape rolled dimmed, softened, withdrawn. The
inner world moved among its own contours. The day flowed toward
night, as the night would flow toward day.
They came to the foot of the moor that stretched between White Farm
and Littlefarm.
"There is a woman standing by that tree," said Ian.
"Yes. It is Gilian."
They moved toward her. Tall, fair, wide-browed and gray-eyed, she
leaned against the oak stem and seemed to be at home here, too. The
wide falling snow, the mystic light and quietness, were hers for
mantle. As they approached she stirred.
"Good day, Glenfernie!--Good day, Ian Rullock!--Glenfernie, you cannot
go this way! Soldiers are at Littlefarm."
"Did Robin--"
"He got word to me an hour since. They are chance-fallen, the second
time. They will get no news and soon be gone. He trusted me to give
you warning. He says wait for him at the cot that was old Skene's. It
stands empty and folk say that it is haunted and go round about." She
left the tree and took the path with them. "It lies between us and
White Farm. This snow is friendly. It covers marks--it keeps folk
within-doors--nor does it mean to fall too long or too heavily."
They moved together through the falling snow.
It was a mile to old Skene's cot. They walked it almost in
silence--upon Ian's part in silence. The snow fell; it covered their
footprints. All outlines showed vague and looming. The three seemed
three vital points moving in a world dissolving or a world forming.
The empty cot rose before them, the thatch whitened, the door-stone
whitened. Glenfernie pushed the door. It opened; they found a clean,
bare place, twilight now, still, with the falling snow without.
Gilian spoke. "I'll go on now to White Farm. Robin will come. In no
long time you'll be upon the farther road.... Now I will say Fare you
well!"
Alexander took her hands. "Farewell, Gilian!"
Gray eyes met gray eyes. "Be it short time or be it long time--soon
home to Glenfernie, or long, long gone--farewell, and God bless you,
Glenfernie!"
"And you, Gilian!"
She turned to Ian. "Ian Rullock--farewell, too, and God bless you,
too!"
She was gone. They watched through the door her form moving amid
falling snow. The veil between thickened; she vanished; there were
only the white particles of the dissolving or the forming world. The
two kept silence.
Twilight deepened, night came, the snow ceased to fall for a time,
then began again, but less thickly. One hour went by, two, three. Then
came Robin Greenlaw and Peter Lindsay, riding, and with them horses
for the two who waited at Skene's cot.
Four men rode through the December night. At dawn they neared the sea.
The snow fell no longer. When the purple bars came into the east they
saw in the first light the huddled roofs of a small seaport. Beyond
lay gray water, with shipping in the harbor.
At a crossroads the party divided. Robin Greenlaw and Peter Lindsay
took a way that should lead them far aside from this port, and then
with circuitousness home. Before they reached it they would separate,
coming singly into their own dale, back to Black Hill, back to
Littlefarm. The laird of Glenfernie and Littlefarm, dismounting,
moving aside, talked together for a few moments. Ian gave Peter
Lindsay a message for Mrs. Alison.... Good-bys were said. Greenlaw
remounted; he and Peter Lindsay moved slowly from the two bound to the
port. A dip of the earth presently hid them. Alexander and Ian were
left in the gray dawn.
"Alexander, I know the safe house and the safe man and the safe ship.
Why should you run further danger? Let us say good-by now!"
"No, not now."
"You have come to the edge of Scotland. Say farewell here, and danger
saved, rather than on the water stairs in a little while--"
"No. I will go farther, Ian. There is Mackenzie's house, over there."
They rode through the winter dawn to the house at the edge of the
port, where lived a quiet man and wife, under obligations to the
Jardines. There visited them now the laird of Glenfernie and his
secretary, Mr. Strickland.
The latter, it seemed, was not well--kept his room that day. The laird
of Glenfernie went about, indeed, but never once went near the
waterside.... And yet, at eve, the master of the _Seawing_, riding in
the harbor, took the resolution to sail by cockcrow.
The sun went down with red and gold, in a winter splendor. Dark night
followed, but, late, there rose a moon. Alexander and Ian, coming down
to the harbor edge at a specified place, found there the waiting boat
with two rowers. It hung before them on the just-lit water. "Now, Old
Steadfast, farewell!" said Ian.
"I am going a little farther. Step in, man!"
The boat drove across, under the moon, to the _Seawing_. The two
mounted the brig's side and, touching deck, found the captain, known
to Ian, who had sailed before upon the _Seawing_, and known since
yesterday to Glenfernie. The captain welcomed them, his only
passengers, using not their own names, but others that had been
chosen. In the cabin, under the swinging lantern, there followed a few
words as to weather, ports, and sailing. The tide served, the
_Seawing_ would be forth in an hour. The captain, work calling, left
them in the small lighted place.
"The boat is waiting. Now, Old Steadfast--Senor Nobody--"
"Old Saracen, we used to say that we'd go one day to India--"
"Yes--"
"Well, let us go!"
"_Us_--"
"Why not?"
They stood with the table between them. Alexander's hands moved toward
Ian's. They took hands; there followed a strong, a convulsive
pressure.
"We sin in differing ways and at differing times," said Alexander,
"but we all sin. And we all struggle with it and through it and
onward! And there must be some kind of star upon our heights. Well,
let us work toward it together, Old Saracen!"
They went out of the cabin and upon the deck. The boat that had
brought them was gone. They saw it in the moonlight, half-way back to
the quay. On the _Seawing_, sailors were lifting anchor. They stood
and watched. The moon was paling; there came the scent of morning; far
upon the shore a cock crew. The _Seawing's_ crew were making sail. Out
and up went her pinions, filled with a steady and favoring wind. She
thrilled; she moved; she left the harbor for a new voyage, fresh
wonder of the eternal world.
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