THE rising wind, which had ridden much faster than Mistress Thankful, had increased to a gale by the time it reached Morristown. It swept through the leafless maples, and rattled the dry bones of the elms. It whistled through the quiet Presbyterian churchyard, as if trying to arouse the sleepers it had known in days gone by. It shook the blank, lustreless windows of the Assembly Rooms over the Freemasons’ Tavern, and wrought in their gusty curtains moving shadows of those amply petticoated dames and tightly hosed cavaliers who had swung in “Sir Roger,” or jigged in “Money Musk,” the night before.
But I fancy it was around the isolated “Ford Mansion,” better known as the “headquarters,” that the wind wreaked its grotesque rage. It howled under its scant eaves, it sang under its bleak porch, it tweaked the peak of its front gable, it whistled through every chink and cranny of its square, solid, unpicturesque structure. Situated on a hillside that descended rapidly to the Whippany River, every summer zephyr that whispered through the porches of the Morristown farm-houses charged as a stiff breeze upon the swinging half doors and windows of the “Ford Mansion”; every wintry wind became a gale that threatened its security. The sentry who paced before its front porch knew from experience when to linger under its lee, and adjust his threadbare outer coat to the bitter north wind.
Within the house something of this cheerlessness prevailed. It had an ascetic gloom, which the scant firelight of the reception-room, and the dying embers on the dining-room hearth, failed to dissipate. The central hall was broad, and furnished plainly with a few rush-bottomed chairs, on one of which half dozed a black body-servant of the commander-in-chief. Two officers in the dining-room, drawn close by the chimney-corner, chatted in undertones, as if mindful that the door of the drawing-room was open, and their voices might break in upon its sacred privacy. The swinging light in the hall partly illuminated it, or rather glanced gloomily from the black polished furniture, the lustreless chairs, the quaint cabinet, the silent spinet, the skeleton-legged centre-table, and finally upon the motionless figure of a man seated by the fire.
It was a figure since so well known to the civilized world, since so celebrated in print and painting, as to need no description here. Its rare combination of gentle dignity with profound force, of a set resoluteness of purpose with a philosophical patience, have been so frequently delivered to a people not particularly remarkable for these qualities, that I fear it has too often provoked a spirit of playful aggression, in which the deeper underlying meaning was forgotten. So let me add that in manner, physical equipoise, and even in the mere details of dress, this figure indicated a certain aristocratic exclusiveness. It was the presentment of a king,—a king who by the irony of circumstances was just then waging war against all kingship; a ruler of men, who just then was fighting for the right of these men to govern themselves, but whom by his own inherent right he dominated. From the crown of his powdered head to the silver buckle of his shoe he was so royal that it was not strange that his brother George of England and Hanover—ruling by accident, otherwise impiously known as the “grace of God”—could find no better way of resisting his power than by calling him “Mr. Washington.”
The sound of horses’ hoofs, the formal challenge of sentry, the grave questioning of the officer of the guard, followed by footsteps upon the porch, did not apparently disturb his meditation. Nor did the opening of the outer door, and a charge of cold air into the hall that invaded even the privacy of the reception-room, and brightened the dying embers on the hearth, stir his calm pre-occupation. But an instant later there was the distinct rustle of a feminine skirt in the hall, a hurried whispering of men’s voices, and then the sudden apparition of a smooth, fresh-faced young officer over the shoulder of the unconscious figure.
“I beg your pardon, general,” said the officer doubtingly, “but—”
“You are not intruding, Col. Hamilton,” said the general quietly.
“There is a young lady without who wishes an audience of your Excellency. ’Tis Mistress Thankful Blossom,—the daughter of Abner Blossom, charged with treasonous practice and favoring the enemy, now in the guard-house at Morristown.”
“Thankful Blossom?” repeated the general interrogatively.
“Your Excellency doubtless remembers a little provincial beauty and a famous toast of the country-side,—the Cressida of our Morristown epic, who led our gallant. Connecticut captain astray—”
“You have the advantages, besides the better memory of a younger man, colonel,” said Washington, with a playful smile that slightly reddened the cheek of his aide-de-camp. “Yet I think I have heard of this phenomenon. By all means, admit her—and her escort.”
“She is alone, general,” responded the subordinate.
“Then the more reason why we should be polite,” returned Washington, for the first time altering his easy posture, rising to his feet, and lightly clasping his ruffled hands before him. “We must not keep her waiting. Give her access, my dear colonel, at once; and even as she came,—alone.”
The aide-de-camp bowed and withdrew. In another moment the half-opened door swung wide to Mistress Thankful Blossom.
She was so beautiful in her simple riding-dress, so quaint and original in that very beauty, and, above all, so teeming with a certain vital earnestness of purpose just positive and audacious enough to set off that beauty, that the grave gentleman before her did not content himself with the usual formal inclination of courtesy, but actually advanced, and, taking her cold little hand in his, graciously led her to the chair he had just vacated.
“Even if your name were not known to me, Mistress Thankful,” said the commander-in-chief, looking down upon her with grave politeness, “nature has, methinks, spared you the necessity of any introduction to the courtesy of a gentleman. But how can I especially serve you?”
Alack! the blaze of Mistress Thankful’s brown eyes had become somewhat dimmed in the grave half-lights of the room, in the graver, deeper dignity of the erect, soldier-like figure before her. The bright color born of the tempest within and without had somehow faded from her cheek; the sauciness begotten from bullying her horse in the last half-hour’s rapid ride was so subdued by the actual presence of the man she had come to bully, that I fear she had to use all her self-control to keep down her inclination to whimper, and to keep back the tears, that, oddly enough, rose to her sweet eyes as she lifted them to the quietly critical yet placid glance of her interlocutor.
“I can readily conceive the motive of this visit, Miss Thankful,” continued Washington, with a certain dignified kindliness that was more reassuring than the formal gallantry of the period; “and it is, I protest, to your credit. A father’s welfare, however erring and weak that father may be, is most seemly in a maiden—”
Thankful’s eyes flashed again as she rose to her feet. Her upper lip, that had a moment before trembled in a pretty infantine distress, now stiffened and curled as she confronted the dignified figure before her. “It is not of my father I would speak,” she said saucily: “I did not ride here alone to-night, in this weather, to talk of him; I warrant he can speak for himself. I came here to speak of myself, of lies—ay, lies told of me, a poor girl; ay, of cowardly gossip about me and my sweetheart, Capt. Brewster, now confined in prison because he hath loved me, a lass without polities or adherence to the cause—as if ’twere necessary every lad should ask the confidence or permission of yourself or, belike, my Lady Washington, in his preferences.”
She paused a moment, out of breath. With a woman’s quickness of intuition she saw the change in Washington’s face,—saw a certain cold severity overshadowing it. With a woman’s fateful persistency—a persistency which I humbly suggest might, on occasion, be honorably copied by our more politic sex—she went on to say what was in her, even if she were obliged, with a woman’s honorable inconsistency, to unsay it an hour or two later; an inconsistency which I also humbly protest might be as honorably imitated by us—on occasion.
“It has been said,” said Thankful Blossom quickly, “that my father has given entertainment knowingly to two spies,—two spies that, begging your Excellency’s pardon, and the pardon of Congress, I know only as two honorable gentlemen who have as honorably tendered me their affections. It is said, and basely and most falsely too, that my sweetheart, Capt. Allan Brewster, has lodged this information. I have ridden here to deny it. I have ridden here to demand of you that an honest woman’s reputation shall not be sacrificed to the interests of politics; that a prying mob of ragamuffins shall not be sent to an honest farmer’s house to spy and spy—and turn a poor girl out of doors that they might do it. ’Tis shameful, so it is; there! ’tis most scandalous, so it is: there, now! Spies, indeed! what are they, pray?”
In the indignation which the recollection of her wrongs had slowly gathered in her, from the beginning of this speech, she had advanced her face, rosy with courage, and beautiful in its impertinence, within a few inches of the dignified features and quiet gray eyes of the great commander. To her utter stupefaction, he bent his head and kissed her, with a grave benignity, full on the centre of her audacious forehead.
“Be seated, I beg, Mistress Blossom,” he said, taking her cold hand in his, and quietly replacing her in the unoccupied chair. “Be seated, I beg, and give me, if you can, your attention for a moment. The officer intrusted with the ungracious task of occupying your father’s house is a member of my military family, and a gentleman. If he has so far forgotten himself—if he has so far disgraced himself and me as—”
“No! no!” uttered Thankful, with feverish alacrity, “the gentleman was most considerate. On the contrary—mayhap—I”—she hesitated, and then came to a full stop, with a heightened color, as a vivid recollection of that gentleman’s face, with the mark of her riding-whip lying across it, rose before her.
“I was about to say that Major Van Zandt, as a gentleman, has known how to fully excuse the natural impulses of a daughter,” continued Washington, with a look of perfect understanding; “but let me now satisfy you on another point, where it would seem we greatly differ.”
He walked to the door, and summoned his servant, to whom he gave an order. In another moment the fresh-faced young officer who had at first admitted her re-appeared with a file of official papers. He glanced slyly at Thankful Blossom’s face with an amused look, as if he had already heard the colloquy between her and his superior officer, and had appreciated that which neither of the earnest actors in the scene had themselves felt,—a certain sense of humor in the situation.
Howbeit, standing before them, Col. Hamilton gravely turned over the file of papers. Thankful bit her lips in embarrassment. A slight feeling of awe, and a presentiment of some fast-coming shame; a new and strange consciousness of herself, her surroundings, of the dignity of the two men before her; an uneasy feeling of the presence of two ladies who had in some mysterious way entered the room from another door, and who seemed to be intently regarding her from afar with a curiosity as if she were some strange animal; and a wild premonition that her whole future life and happiness depended upon the events of the next few moments,—so took possession of her, that the brave girl trembled for a moment in her isolation and loneliness. In another instant Col. Hamilton, speaking to his superior, but looking obviously at one of the ladies who had entered, handed a paper to Washington, and said, “Here are the charges.”
“Read them,” said the general coldly.
Col. Hamilton, with a manifest consciousness of another hearer than Mistress Blossom and his general, read the paper. It was couched in phrases of military and legal precision, and related briefly, that upon the certain and personal knowledge of the writer, Abner Blossom of the “Blossom Farm” was in the habit of entertaining two gentlemen, namely, the “Count Ferdinand” and the “Baron Pomposo,” suspected enemies of the cause, and possible traitors to the Continental army. It was signed by Allan Brewster, late captain in the Connecticut Contingent.
As Col. Hamilton exhibited the signature, Thankful Blossom had no difficulty in recognizing the familiar bad hand and equally familiar mis-spelling of her lover.
She rose to her feet. With eyes that showed her present trouble and perplexity as frankly as they had a moment before blazed with her indignation, she met, one by one, the glances of the group who now seemed to be closing round her. Yet with a woman’s instinct she felt, I am constrained to say, more unfriendliness in the silent presence of the two women than in the possible outspoken criticism of our much-abused sex.
“Of course,” said a voice which Thankful at once, by a woman’s unerring instinct, recognized as the elder of the two ladies, and the legitimate keeper of the conscience of some one of the men who were present,—“of course Mistress Thankful will be able to elect which of her lovers among her country’s enemies she will be able to cling to for support in her present emergency. She does not seem to have been so special in her favors as to have positively excluded any one.”
“At least, dear Lady Washington, she will not give it to the man who has proven a traitor to her,” said the younger woman impulsively. “That is—I beg your ladyship’s pardon”—she hesitated, observing in the dead silence that ensued that the two superior male beings present looked at each other in lofty astonishment.
“He that is trait’rous to his country,” said Lady Washington coldly, “is apt to be trait’rous elsewhere.”
“’Twere as honest to say that he that was trait’rous to his king was trait’rous to his country,” said Mistress Thankful with sudden audacity, bending her knit brows on Lady Washington. But that lady turned dignifiedly away, and Mistress Thankful again faced the general.
“I ask your pardon,” she said proudly, “for troubling you with my wrongs. But it seems to me that even if another and a greater wrong were done me by my sweetheart, through jealousy, it would not justify this accusation against me, even though,” she added, darting a wicked glance at the placid brocaded back of Lady Washington, “even though that accusation came from one who knows that jealousy may belong to the wife of a patriot as well as a traitor.” She was herself again after this speech, although her face was white with the blow she had taken and returned.
Col. Hamilton passed his hand across his mouth, and coughed slightly. Gen. Washington, standing by the fire with an impassive face, turned to Thankful gravely:—
“You are forgetting, Mistress Thankful, that you have not told me how I can serve you. It cannot be that you are still concerned in Capt. Brewster, who has given evidence against your other—friends, and tacitly against you. Nor can it be on their account, for I regret to say they are still free and unknown. If you come with any information exculpating them, and showing they are not spies or hostile to the cause, your father’s release shall be certain and speedy. Let me ask you a single question: Why do you believe them honest?”
“Because,” said Mistress Thankful, “they were—were—gentlemen.”
“Many spies have been of excellent family, good address, and fair talents,” said Washington gravely; “but you have, mayhap, some other reason.”
“Because they talked only to me,” said Mistress Thankful, blushing mightily; “because they preferred my company to father’s; because”—she hesitated a moment—“because they spoke not of politics, but—of—that which lads mainly talk of—and—and,”—here she broke down a little,—“and the baron I only saw once, but he”—here she broke down utterly—“I know they weren’t spies: there, now!”
“I must ask you something more,” said Washington, with grave kindness: “whether you give me the information or not, you will consider, that, if what you believe is true, it cannot in any way injure the gentlemen you speak of; while, on the other hand, it may relieve your father of suspicion. Will you give to Col. Hamilton, my secretary, a full description of them,—that fuller description which Capt. Brewster, for reasons best known to yourself, was unable to give?”
Mistress Thankful hesitated for a moment, and then, with one of her truthful glances at the commander-in-chief, began a detailed account of the outward semblance of the count. Why she began with him, I am unable to say; but possibly it was because it was easier, for when she came to describe the baron, she was, I regret to say, somewhat vague and figurative. Not so vague, however, but that Col. Hamilton suddenly started up with a look at his chief, who instantly checked it with a gesture of his ruffled hand.
“I thank you. Mistress Thankful,” he said quite impassively, “but did this other gentleman, this baron—”
“Pomposo,” said Thankful proudly. A titter originated in the group of ladies by the window, and became visible on the fresh face of Col. Hamilton; but the dignified color of Washington’s countenance was unmoved.
“May I ask if the baron made an honorable tender of his affections to you,” he continued, with respectful gravity,—“if his attentions were known to your father, and were such as honest Mistress Blossom could receive?”
“Father introduced him to me, and wanted me to be kind to him. He—he kissed me, and I slapped his face,” said Thankful quickly, with cheeks as red, I warrant, as the baron’s might have been.
The moment the words had escaped her truthful lips, she would have given her life to recall them. To her astonishment, however, Col. Hamilton laughed outright, and the ladies turned and approached her, but were checked by a slight gesture from the otherwise impassive figure of the general.
“It is possible, Mistress Thankful,” he resumed, with undisturbed composure, “that one at least of these gentlemen may be known to us, and that your instincts may be correct. At least rest assured that we shall fully inquire into it, and that your father shall have the benefit of that inquiry.”
“I thank your Excellency,” said Thankful, still reddening under the contemplation of her own late frankness, and retreating toward the door. “I—think—I—must—go—now. It is late, and I have far to ride.”
To her surprise, however, Washington stepped forward, and, again taking her hands in his, said with a grave smile, “For that very reason, if for none other, you must be our guest to-night, Mistress Thankful Blossom. We still retain our Virginian ideas of hospitality, and are tyrannous enough to make strangers conform to them, even though we have but perchance the poorest of entertainment to offer them. Lady Washington will not permit Mistress Thankful Blossom to leave her roof to-night until she has partaken of her courtesy as well as her counsel.”
“Mistress Thankful Blossom will make us believe that she has at least in so far trusted our desire to serve her justly, by accepting our poor hospitality for a single night,” said Lady Washington, with a stately courtesy.
Thankful Blossom still stood irresolutely at the door. But the next moment a pair of youthful arms encircled her; and the younger gentlewoman, looking into her brown eyes with an honest frankness equal to her own, said caressingly, “Dear Mistress Thankful, though I am but a guest in her ladyship’s house, let me, I pray you, add my voice to hers. I am Mistress Schuyler of Albany, at your service, Mistress Thankful, as Col. Hamilton here will bear me witness, did I need any interpreter to your honest heart. Believe me, dear Mistress Thankful, I sympathize with you, and only beg you to give me an opportunity to-night to serve you. You will stay, I know, and you will stay with me; and we shall talk over the faithlessness of that over-jealous Yankee captain who has proved himself, I doubt not, as unworthy of you as he is of his country.”
Hateful to Thankful as was the idea of being commiserated, she nevertheless could not resist the gentle courtesy and gracious sympathy of Miss Schuyler. Besides, it must be confessed that for the first time in her life she felt a doubt of the power of her own independence, and a strange fascination for this young gentlewoman whose arms were around her, who could so thoroughly sympathize with her, and yet allow herself to be snubbed by Lady Washington.
“You have a mother, I doubt not?” said Thankful, raising her questioning eyes to Miss Schuyler.
Irrelevant as this question seemed to the two gentlemen, Miss Schuyler answered it with feminine intuition: “And you, dear Mistress Thankful—”
“Have none,” said Thankful; and here, I regret to say, she whimpered slightly, at which Miss Schuyler, with tears in her own fine eyes, bent her head suddenly to Thankful’s ear, put her arm about the waist of the pretty stranger, and then, to the astonishment of Col. Hamilton, quietly swept her out of the august presence.
When the door had closed upon them, Col. Hamilton turned half-smilingly, half-inquiringly, to his chief. Washington returned his glance kindly but gravely, and then said quietly,—
“If your suspicions jump with mine, colonel, I need not remind you that it is a matter so delicate that it would be as well if you locked it in your own breast for the present; at least, that you should not intimate to the gentleman whom you may have suspected, aught that has passed this evening.”
“As you will, general,” said the subaltern respectfully; “but may I ask”—he hesitated—“if you believe that anything more than a passing fancy for a pretty girl—”
“When I asked your silence, colonel,” interrupted Washington kindly, laying his hand upon the shoulder of the younger man, “it was because I thought the matter sufficiently momentous to claim my own private and especial attention.”
“I ask your Excellency’s pardon,” said the young man, reddening through his fresh complexion like a girl; “I only meant—”
“That you would ask to be relieved to-night,” interrupted Washington, with a benign smile, “forasmuch as you wished the more to show entertainment to our dear friend Miss Schuyler, and her guest; a wayward girl, colonel, but, methinks, an honest one. Treat her of your own quality, colonel, but discreetly, and not too kindly, lest we have Mistress Schuyler, another injured damsel, on our hands;” and with a half playful gesture peculiar to the man, and yet not inconsistent with his dignity, he half led, half pushed his youthful secretary from the room.
When the door had closed upon the colonel, Lady Washington rustled toward her husband, who stood still, quiet and passive, on the hearthstone.
“You surely see in this escapade nothing of political intrigue—no treachery?” she said hastily.
“No,” said Washington quietly.
“Nothing more than an idle, wanton intrigue with a foolish, vain country girl?”
“Pardon me, my lady,” said Washington gravely. “I doubt not we may misjudge her. ’Tis no common rustic lass that can thus stir the country side. ’Twere an insult to your sex to believe it. It is not yet sure that she has not captured even so high game as she has named. If she has, it would add another interest to a treaty of comity and alliance.”
“That creature!” said Lady Washington,—“that light-o’-love with her Connecticut captain lover! Pardon me, but this is preposterous;” and with a stiff courtesy she swept from the room, leaving the central figure of history—as such central figures are apt to be left—alone.
Later in the evening Mistress Schuyler so far subdued the tears and emotions of Thankful, that she was enabled to dry her eyes, and re-arrange her brown hair in the quaint little mirror in Mistress Schuyler’s chamber; Mistress Schuyler herself lending a touch and suggestion here and there, after the secret freemasonry of her sex. “You are well rid of this forsworn captain, dear Mistress Thankful; and methinks that with hair as beautiful as yours, the new style of wearing it, though a modish frivolity, is most becoming. I assure you ’tis much affected in New York and Philadelphia,—drawn straight back from the forehead, after this manner, as you see.”
The result was, that an hour later Mistress Schuyler and Mistress Blossom presented themselves to Col. Hamilton in the reception-room, with a certain freshness and elaboration of toilet that not only quite shamed the young officer’s affaire negligence, but caused him to open his eyes in astonishment. “Perhaps she would rather be alone, that she might indulge her grief,” he said doubtingly, in an aside to Miss Schuyler, “rather than appear in company.”
“Nonsense,” quoth Mistress Schuyler. “Is a young woman to mope and sigh because her lover proves false?”
“But her father is a prisoner,” said Hamilton in amazement.
“Can you look me in the face,” said Mistress Schuyler mischievously, “and tell me that you don’t know that in twenty-four hours her father will be cleared of these charges? Nonsense! Do you think I have no eyes in my head? Do you think I misread the general’s face and your own?”
“But, my dear girl,” said the officer in alarm.
“Oh! I told her so, but not why,” responded Miss Schuyler with a wicked look in her dark eyes, “though I had warrant enough to do so, to serve you for keeping a secret from me!”
And with this Parthian shot she returned to Mistress Thankful, who, with her face pressed against the window, was looking out on the moonlit slope beside the Whippany River.
For, by one of those freaks peculiar to the American springtide, the weather had again marvellously changed. The rain had ceased, and the ground was covered with an icing of sleet and snow, that now glittered under a clear sky and a brilliant moon. The northeast wind that shook the loose sashes of the windows had transformed each dripping tree and shrub to icy stalactites that silvered under the moon’s cold touch.
“’Tis a beautiful sight, ladies,” said a bluff, hearty, middle-aged man, joining the group by the window. “But God send the spring to us quickly, and spare us any more such cruel changes! My lady moon looks fine enough, glittering in yonder treetops; but I doubt not she looks down upon many a poor fellow shivering under his tattered blankets in the camp beyond. Had ye seen the Connecticut tatterdemalions file by last night, with arms reversed, showing their teeth at his Excellency, and yet not daring to bite; had ye watched these faint-hearts, these doubting Thomases, ripe for rebellion against his Excellency, against the cause, but chiefly against the weather,—ye would pray for a thaw that would melt the hearts of these men as it would these stubborn fields around us. Two weeks more of such weather would raise up not one Allan Brewster, but a dozen such malcontent puppies ripe for a drum-head court-martial.”
“Yet ’tis a fine night, Gen. Sullivan,” said Col. Hamilton, sharply nudging the ribs of his superior officer with his elbow. “There would be little trouble on such a night, I fancy, to track our ghostly visitant.” Both of the ladies becoming interested, and Col. Hamilton having thus adroitly turned the flank of his superior officer, he went on, “You should know that the camp, and indeed the whole locality here, is said to be haunted by the apparition of a gray-coated figure, whose face is muffled and hidden in his collar, but who has the password pat to his lips, and whose identity hath baffled the sentries. This figure, it is said, forasmuch as it has been seen just before an assault, an attack, or some tribulation of the army, is believed by many to be the genius or guardian spirit of the cause, and, as such, has incited sentries and guards to greater vigilance, and has to some seemed a premonition of disaster. Before the last outbreak of the Connecticut militia, Master Graycoat haunted the outskirts of the weather-beaten and bedraggled camp, and, I doubt not, saw much of that preparation that sent that regiment of faint-hearted onion-gatherers to flaunt their woes and their wrongs in the face of the general himself.”
Here Col. Hamilton, in turn, received a slight nudge from Mistress Schuyler, and ended his speech somewhat abruptly.
Mistress Thankful was not unmindful of both these allusions to her faithless lover, but only a consciousness of mortification and wounded pride was awakened by them. In fact, during the first tempest of her indignation at his arrest, still later at the arrest of her father, and finally at the discovery of his perfidy to her, she had forgotten that he was her lover; she had forgotten her previous tenderness toward him; and, now that her fire and indignation were spent, only a sense of numbness and vacancy remained. All that had gone before seemed not something to be regretted as her own act, but rather as the act of another Thankful Blossom, who had been lost that night in the snow-storm: she felt she had become, within the last twenty-four hours, not perhaps another woman, but for the first time a woman.
Yet it was singular that she felt more confused when, a few moments later, the conversation turned upon Major Van Zandt: it was still more singular that she even felt considerably frightened at that confusion. Finally she found herself listening with alternate irritability, shame, and curiosity, to praises of that gentleman, of his courage, his devotion, and his personal graces. For one wild moment Thankful felt like throwing herself on the breast of Mistress Schuyler, and confessing her rudeness to the major; but a conviction that Mistress Schuyler would share that secret with Col. Hamilton, that Major Van Zandt might not like that revelation, and, oddly enough associated with this, a feeling of unconquerable irritability toward that handsome and gentle young officer, kept her mouth closed. “Besides,” she said to herself, “he ought to know, if he’s such a fine gentleman as they say, just how I was feeling, and that I don’t mean any rudeness to him;” and with this unanswerable feminine logic poor Thankful to some extent stilled her own honest little heart.
But not, I fear, entirely. The night was a restless one to her: like all impulsive natures, the season of reflection, and perhaps distrust, came to her upon acts that were already committed, and when reason seemed to light the way only to despair. She saw the folly of her intrusion at the headquarters, as she thought, only when it was too late to remedy it; she saw the gracelessness and discourtesy of her conduct to Major Van Zandt, only when distance and time rendered an apology weak and ineffectual. I think she cried a little to herself, lying in the strange gloomy chamber of the healthfully sleeping Mistress Schuyler, the sweet security of whose manifest goodness and kindness she alternately hated and envied; and at last, unable to stand it longer, slipped noiselessly from her bed, and stood very wretched and disconsolate before the window that looked out upon the slope toward the Whippany River. The moon on the new-fallen, frigid, and untrodden snow shone brightly. Far to the left it glittered on the bayonet of a sentry pacing beside the river-bank, and gave a sense of security to the girl that perhaps strengthened another idea that had grown up in her mind. Since she could not sleep, why should she not ramble about until she could? She had been accustomed to roam about the farm in all weathers and at all times and seasons. She recalled to herself the night—a tempestuous one—when she had risen in serious concern as to the lying-in of her favorite Alderney heifer, and how she had saved the life of the calf, a weakling, dropped apparently from the clouds in the tempest, as it lay beside the barn. With this in her mind, she donned her dress again, and, with Mistress Schuyler’s mantle over her shoulders, noiselessly crept down the narrow staircase, passed the sleeping servant on the settee, and, opening the rear door, in another moment was inhaling the crisp air, and tripping down the crisp snow of the hillside.
But Mistress Thankful had overlooked one difference between her own farm and a military encampment. She had not proceeded a dozen yards before a figure apparently started out of the ground beneath her, and, levelling a bayoneted musket across her path, called, “Halt!”
The hot blood mounted to the girl’s cheek at the first imperative command she had ever received in her life: nevertheless she halted unconsciously, and without a word confronted the challenger with her old audacity.
“Who comes there?” reiterated the sentry, still keeping his bayonet level with her breast.
“Thankful Blossom,” she responded promptly.
The sentry brought his musket to a “present.” “Pass, Thankful Blossom, and God send it soon and the spring with it, and good-night,” he said, with a strong Milesian accent. And before the still-amazed girl could comprehend the meaning of his abrupt challenge, or his equally abrupt departure, he had resumed his monotonous pace in the moonlight. Indeed, as she stood looking after him, the whole episode, the odd unreality of the moonlit landscape, the novelty of her position, the morbid play of her thoughts, seemed to make it part of a dream which the morning light might dissipate, but could never fully explain.
With something of this feeling still upon her, she kept her way to the river. Its banks were still fringed with ice, through which its dark current flowed noiselessly. She knew it flowed through the camp where lay her faithless lover, and for an instant indulged the thought of following it, and facing him with the proof of his guilt; but even at the thought she recoiled with a new and sudden doubt in herself, and stood dreamily watching the shimmer of the moon on the icy banks, until another, and, it seemed to her, equally unreal vision suddenly stayed her feet, and drove the blood from her feverish cheeks.
A figure was slowly approaching from the direction of the sleeping encampment. Tall, erect, and habited in a gray surtout, with a hood partially concealing its face, it was the counterfeit presentment of the ghostly visitant she had heard described. Thankful scarcely breathed. The brave little heart that had not quailed before the sentry’s levelled musket a moment before now faltered and stood still, as the phantom with a slow and majestic tread moved toward her. She had only time to gain the shelter of a tree before the figure, majestically unconscious of her presence, passed slowly by. Through all her terror Thankful was still true to a certain rustic habit of practical perception to observe that the tread of the phantom was quite audible over the crust of snow, and was visible and palpable as the imprint of a military boot.
The blood came back to Thankful’s cheek, and with it her old audacity. In another instant she was out from the tree, and tracking with a light feline tread the apparition that now loomed up the hill before her. Slipping from tree to tree, she followed until it passed before the door of a low hut or farm-shed that stood midway up the hill. Here it entered, and the door closed behind it. With every sense feverishly alert, Thankful, from the secure advantage of a large maple, watched the door of the hut. In a few moments it re-opened to the same figure free of its gray enwrappings. Forgetful of every thing now, but detecting the face of the impostor, the fearless girl left the tree, and placed herself directly in the path of the figure. At the same moment it turned toward her inquiringly, and the moonlight fell full upon the calm, composed features of Gen. Washington.
In her consternation Thankful could only drop an embarrassed courtesy, and hang out two lovely signals of distress in her cheeks. The face of the pseudo ghost alone remained unmoved.
“You are wandering late, Mistress Thankful,” he said at last, with a paternal gravity; “and I fear that the formal restraint of a military household has already given you some embarrassment. Yonder sentry, for instance, might have stopped you.”
“Oh, he did!” said Thankful quickly; “but it’s all right, please your Excellency. He asked me ‘Who went there,’ and I told him; and he was vastly polite, I assure you.”
The grave features of the commander-in-chief relaxed in a smile. “You are more happy than most of your sex in turning a verbal compliment to practical account. For know then, dear young lady, that in honor of your visit to the headquarters, the password to-night through this encampment was none other than your own pretty patronymic,—‘Thankful Blossom.’”
The tears glittered in the girl’s eyes, and her lip trembled; but, with all her readiness of speech, she could only say, “Oh, your Excellency.”
“Then you did pass the sentry?” continued Washington, looking at her intently with a certain grave watchfulness in his gray eyes. “And doubtless you wandered at the river-bank. Although I myself, tempted by the night, sometimes extend my walk as far as yonder shed, it were a hazardous act for a young lady to pass beyond the protection of the line.”
“Oh! I met no one, your Excellency,” said the usually truthful Thankful hastily, rushing to her first lie with grateful impetuosity.
“And saw no one?” asked Washington quietly.
“No one,” said Thankful, raising her brown eyes to the general’s.
They both looked at each other,—the naturally most veracious young woman in the colonies, and the subsequent allegorical impersonation of truth in America,—and knew each other lied, and, I imagine, respected each other for it.
“I am glad to hear you say so, Mistress Thankful,” said Washington quietly; “for ’twould have been natural for you to have sought an interview with your recreant lover in yonder camp, though the attempt would have been unwise and impossible.”
“I had no such thought, your Excellency,” said Thankful, who had really quite forgotten her late intention; “yet, if with your permission I could hold a few moments’ converse with Capt. Brewster, it would greatly ease my mind.”
“’Twould not be well for the present,” said Washington thoughtfully. “But in a day or two Capt. Brewster will be tried by court-martial at Morristown. It shall be so ordered that when he is conveyed thither his guard shall halt at the Blossom Farm. I will see that the officer in command gives you an opportunity to see him. And I think I can promise also, Mistress Thankful, that your father shall be also present under his own roof, a free man.”
They had reached the entrance to the mansion, and entered the hall. Thankful turned impulsively, and kissed the extended hand of the commander. “You are so good! I have been so foolish—so very, very wrong,” she said, with a slight trembling of her lip. “And your Excellency believes my story; and those gentlemen were not spies, but even as they gave themselves to be.”
“I said not that much,” replied Washington with a kindly smile, “but no matter. Tell me rather, Mistress Thankful, how far your acquaintance with these gentlemen has gone; or did it end with the box on the ear that you gave the baron?”
“He had asked me to ride with him to the Baskingridge, and I—had said—yes,” faltered Mistress Thankful.
“Unless I misjudge you, Mistress Thankful, you can without great sacrifice promise me that you will not see him until I give you my permission,” said Washington, with grave playfulness.
The swinging light shone full in Thankful’s truthful eyes as she lifted them to his.
“I do,” she said quietly.
“Good-night,” said the commander, with a formal bow.
“Good-night, your Excellency.”