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<h2> CHAPTER VIII IN WHICH ENTERS MY LORD CARNAL </h2>
<p>I FELT a touch upon my shoulder, and turned to find Mistress Percy beside
me. Her cheeks were white, her eyes aflame, her whole frame tense. The
passion that dominated her was so clearly anger at white heat that I
stared at her in amazement. Her hand slid from my shoulder to the bend of
my arm and rested there. "Remember that I am your wife, sir," she said in
a low, fierce voice,—"your kind and loving wife. You said that your
sword was mine; now bring your wit to the same service!"</p>
<p>There was not time to question her meaning. The man whose position in the
realm had just been announced by the Secretary, and of whom we had all
heard as one not unlikely to supplant even Buckingham himself, was close
at hand. The Governor, headpiece in hand, stepped forward; the other swept
off his Spanish hat; both bowed profoundly.</p>
<p>"I speak to his Honor the Governor of Virginia?" inquired the newcomer.
His tone was offhand, his hat already back upon his head.</p>
<p>"I am George Yeardley, at my Lord Carnal's service," answered the
Governor.</p>
<p>The favorite raised his eyebrows. "I don't need to introduce myself, it
seems," he said. "You've found that I am not the devil, after all,—at
least not the Spanish Apollyon. Zooks! a hawk above a poultry yard could
n't have caused a greater commotion than did my poor little ship and my
few poor birding pieces! Does every strange sail so put you through your
paces?"</p>
<p>The Governor's color mounted. "We are not at home," he answered stiffly.
"Here we are few and weak and surrounded by many dangers, and have need to
be vigilant, being planted, as it were, in the very grasp of that Spain
who holds Europe in awe, and who claims this land as her own. That we are
here at all is proof enough of our courage, my lord."</p>
<p>The other shrugged his shoulders. "I don't doubt your mettle," he said
negligently. "I dare say it matches your armor."</p>
<p>His glance had rested for a moment upon the battered headpiece and ancient
rusty breastplate with which Master Jeremy Sparrow was bedight.</p>
<p>"It is something antique, truly, something out of fashion," remarked that
worthy,—"almost as out of fashion as courtesy from guests, or
respect for dignities from my-face-is-my-fortune minions and lords on
carpet considerations."</p>
<p>The hush of consternation following this audacious speech was broken by a
roar of laughter from the favorite himself. "Zounds!" he cried, "your
courage is worn on your sleeve, good giant! I'll uphold you to face
Spaniards, strappado, rack, galleys, and all!"</p>
<p>The bravado with which he spoke, the insolence of his bold glance and
curled lip, the arrogance with which he flaunted that King's favor which
should be a brand more infamous than the hangman's, his beauty, the pomp
of his dress,—all were alike hateful. I hated him then, scarce
knowing why, as I hated him afterward with reason.</p>
<p>He now pulled from the breast of his doublet a packet, which he proffered
the Governor. "From the King, sir," he announced, in the half-fierce, half—mocking
tone he had made his own. "You may read it at your leisure. He wishes you
to further me in a quest upon which I have come."</p>
<p>The Governor took the packet with reverence. "His Majesty's will is our
law," he said. "Anything that lies in our power, sir; though if you come
for gold"—</p>
<p>The favorite laughed again. "I've come for a thing a deal more precious,
Sir Governor,—a thing worth more to me than all the treasure of the
Indies with Manoa and El Dorado thrown in,—to wit, the thing upon
which I've set my mind. That which I determine to do, I do, sir, and the
thing I determine to have, why, sooner or later, by hook or by crook, fair
means or foul, I have it! I am not one to be crossed or defied with
impunity."</p>
<p>"I do not take your meaning, my lord," said the Governor, puzzled, but
courteous. "There are none here who would care to thwart, in any honorable
enterprise, a nobleman so high in the King's favor. I trust that my Lord
Carnal will make my poor house his own during his stay in Virginia—What's
the matter, my lord?"</p>
<p>My lord's face was dark red, his black eyes afire, his mustaches working
up and down. His white teeth had closed with a click on the loud oath
which had interrupted the Governor's speech. Honest Sir George and his
circle stared at this unaccountable guest in amazement not unmixed with
dismay. As for myself, I knew before he spoke what had caused the oath and
the fierce triumph in that handsome face. Master Jeremy Sparrow had moved
a little to one side, thus exposing to view that which his great body had
before screened from observation,—namely, Mistress Jocelyn Percy.</p>
<p>In a moment the favorite was before her, hat in hand, bowing to the
ground.</p>
<p>"My quest hath ended where I feared it but begun!" he cried, flushed and
exultant. "I have found my Manoa sooner than I thought for. Have you no
welcome for me, lady?"</p>
<p>She withdrew her arm from mine and curtsied to him profoundly; then stood
erect, indignant and defiant, her eyes angry stars, her cheeks carnation,
scorn on her smiling lips.</p>
<p>"I cannot welcome you as you should be welcomed, my lord," she said in a
clear voice. "I have but my bare hands. Manoa, my lord, lies far to the
southward. This land is quite out of your course, and you will find here
but your travail for your pains. My lord, permit me to present to you my
husband, Captain Ralph Percy. I think that you know his cousin, my Lord of
Northumberland."</p>
<p>The red left the favorite's cheeks, and he moved as though a blow had been
dealt him by some invisible hand. Recovering himself he bowed to me, and I
to him, which done we looked each other in the eyes long enough for each
to see the thrown gauntlet.</p>
<p>"I raise it," I said.</p>
<p>"And I raise it," he answered.</p>
<p>"A l'outrance, I think, sir?" I continued.</p>
<p>"A l'outrance," he assented.</p>
<p>"And between us two alone," I suggested.</p>
<p>His answering smile was not good to see, nor was the tone in which he
spoke to the Governor good to hear.</p>
<p>"It is now some weeks, sir," he said, "since there disappeared from court
a jewel, a diamond of most inestimable worth. It in some sort belonged to
the King, and his Majesty, in the goodness of his heart, had promised it
to a certain one,—nay, had sworn by his kingdom that it should be
his. Well, sir, that man put forth his hand to claim his own—when
lo! the jewel vanished! Where it went no man could tell. There was, as you
may believe, a mighty running up and down and looking into dark corners,
all for naught,—it was clean gone. But the man to whom that bright
gem had been promised was not one easily hoodwinked or baffled. He swore
to trace it, follow it, find it, and wear it."</p>
<p>His bold eyes left the Governor, to rest upon the woman beside me; had he
pointed to her with his hand, he could not have more surely drawn upon her
the regard of that motley throng. By degrees the crowd had fallen back,
leaving us three—the King's minion, the masquerading lady, and
myself—the centre of a ring of staring faces; but now she became the
sole target at which all eyes were directed.</p>
<p>In Virginia, at this time, the women of our own race were held in high
esteem. During the first years of our planting they were a greater rarity
than the mocking-birds and flying squirrels, or than that weed the eating
of which made fools of men. The man whose wife was loving and daring
enough, or jealous enough of Indian maids, to follow him into the
wilderness counted his friends by the score and never lacked for company.
The first marriage in Virginia was between a laborer and a waiting maid,
and yet there was as great a deal of candy stuff as if it had been the
nuptials of a lieutenant of the shire. The brother of my Lord de la Warre
stood up with the groom, the brother of my Lord of Northumberland gave
away the bride and was the first to kiss her, and the President himself
held the caudle to their lips that night. Since that wedding there had
been others. Gentlewomen made the Virginia voyage with husband or father;
women signed as servants and came over, to marry in three weeks' time, the
husband paying good tobacco for the wife's freedom; in the cargoes of
children sent for apprentices there were many girls. And last, but not
least, had come Sir Edwyn's doves. Things had changed since that day—at
the memory of which men still held their sides—when Madam West, then
the only woman in the town with youth and beauty, had marched down the
street to the pillory, mounted it, called to her the drummer, and ordered
him to summon to the square by tuck of drum every man in the place. Which
done, and the amazed population at hand, gaping at the spectacle of the
wife of their commander (then absent from home) pilloried before them, she
gave command, through the crier, that they should take their fill of
gazing, whispering, and nudging then and there, forever and a day, and
then should go about their business and give her leave to mind her own.</p>
<p>That day was gone, but men still dropped their work to see a woman pass,
still cheered when a farthingale appeared over a ship's side, and at
church still devoted their eyes to other service than staring at the
minister. In our short but crowded history few things had made a greater
stir than the coming in of Sir Edwyn's maids. They were married now, but
they were still the observed of all observers; to be pointed out to
strangers, run after by children, gaped at by the vulgar, bowed to with
broad smiles by Burgess, Councilor, and commander, and openly contemned by
those dames who had attained to a husband in somewhat more regular
fashion. Of the ninety who had arrived two weeks before, the greater
number had found husbands in the town itself or in the neighboring
hundreds, so that in the crowd that had gathered to withstand the
Spaniard, and had stayed to welcome the King's favorite, there were
farthingales not a few.</p>
<p>But there were none like the woman whose hand I had kissed in the courting
meadow. In the throng, that day, in her Puritan dress and amid the crowd
of meaner beauties, she had passed without overmuch comment, and since
that day none had seen her save Rolfe and the minister, my servants and
myself; and when "The Spaniard!" was cried, men thought of other things
than the beauty of women; so that until this moment she had escaped any
special notice. Now all that was changed. The Governor, following the
pointing of those insolent eyes, fixed his own upon her in a stare of
sheer amazement; the gold-laced quality about him craned necks, lifted
eyebrows, and whispered; and the rabble behind followed their betters'
example with an emphasis quite their own.</p>
<p>"Where do you suppose that jewel went, Sir Governor," said the favorite,—"that
jewel which was overnice to shine at court, which set up its will against
the King's, which would have none of that one to whom it had been given?"</p>
<p>"I am a plain man, my lord," replied the Governor bluntly. "An it please
you, give me plain words."</p>
<p>My lord laughed, his eyes traveling round the ring of greedily intent
faces. "So be it, sir," he assented. "May I ask who is this lady?"</p>
<p>"She came in the Bonaventure," answered the Governor. "She was one of the
treasurer's poor maids."</p>
<p>"With whom I trod a measure at court not long ago," said the favorite. "I
had to wait for the honor until the prince had been gratified."</p>
<p>The Governor's round eyes grew rounder. Young Hamor, a-tiptoe behind him,
drew a long, low whistle.</p>
<p>"In so small a community," went on my lord, "sure you must all know one
another. There can be no masks worn, no false colors displayed. Everything
must be as open as daylight. But we all have a past as well as a present.
Now, for instance"—</p>
<p>I interrupted him. "In Virginia, my lord, we live in the present. At
present, my lord, I like not the color of your lordship's cloak."</p>
<p>He stared at me, with his black brows drawn together. "It is not of your
choosing nor for your wearing, sir," he rejoined haughtily.</p>
<p>"And your sword knot is villainously tied," I continued. "And I like not
such a fire-new, bejeweled scabbard. Mine, you see, is out at heel."</p>
<p>"I see," he said dryly.</p>
<p>"The pinking of your doublet suits me not, either," I declared. "I could
make it more to my liking," and I touched his Genoa three-pile with the
point of my rapier.</p>
<p>A loud murmur arose from the crowd, and the Governor started forward,
crying out, "Captain Percy! Are you mad?"</p>
<p>"I was never saner in my life, sir," I answered. "French fashions like me
not,—that is all,—nor Englishmen that wear them. To my
thinking such are scarcely true-born."</p>
<p>That thrust went home. All the world knew the story of my late Lord Carnal
and the waiting woman in the service of the French ambassador's wife. A
gasp of admiration went up from the crowd. My lord's rapier was out, the
hand that held it shaking with passion. I had my blade in my hand, but the
point was upon the ground. "I'll lesson you, you madman!" he said thickly.
Suddenly, without any warning, he thrust at me; had he been less blind
with rage, the long score which each was to run up against the other might
have ended where it began. I swerved, and the next instant with my own
point sent his rapier whirling. It fell at the Governor's feet.</p>
<p>"Your lordship may pick it up," I remarked. "Your grasp is as firm as your
honor, my lord."</p>
<p>He glared at me, foam upon his lips. Men were between us now,—the
Governor, Francis West, Master Pory, Hamor, Wynne,—and a babel of
excited voices arose. The diversion I had aimed to make had been made with
a vengeance. West had me by the arm. "What a murrain is all this coil
about, Ralph Percy? If you hurt hair of his head, you are lost!"</p>
<p>The favorite broke from the Governor's detaining hand and conciliatory
speech.</p>
<p>"You'll fight, sir?" he cried hoarsely.</p>
<p>"You know that I need not now, my lord," I answered.</p>
<p>He stamped upon the ground with rage and shame; not true shame for that
foul thrust, but shame for the sword upon the grass, for that which could
be read in men's eyes, strive to hide it as they might, for the open scorn
upon one face. Then, during the minute or more in which we faced each
other in silence, he exerted to some effect that will of which he had
boasted. The scarlet faded from his face, his frame steadied, and he
forced a smile. Also he called to his aid a certain soldierly,
honest-seeming frankness of speech and manner which he could assume at
will.</p>
<p>"Your Virginian sunshine dazzleth the eyes, sir," he said. "Of a verity it
made me think you on guard. Forgive me my mistake."</p>
<p>I bowed. "Your lordship will find me at your service. I lodge at the
minister's house, where your lordship's messenger will find me. I am going
there now with my wife, who hath ridden a score of miles this morning and
is weary. We give you good-day, my lord."</p>
<p>I bowed to him again and to the Governor, then gave my hand to Mistress
Percy. The crowd opening before us, we passed through it, and crossed the
parade by the west bulwark. At the further end was a bit of rising ground.
This we mounted; then, before descending the other side into the lane
leading to the minister's house, we turned as by one impulse and looked
back. Life is like one of those endless Italian corridors, painted,
picture after picture, by a master hand; and man is the traveler through
it, taking his eyes from one scene but to rest them upon another. Some
remain a blur in his mind; some he remembers not; for some he has but to
close his eyes and he sees them again, line for line, tint for tint, the
whole spirit of the piece. I close my eyes, and I see the sunshine hot and
bright, the blue of the skies, the sheen of the river. The sails are white
again upon boats long lost; the Santa Teresa, sunk in a fight with an
Algerine rover two years afterward, rides at anchor there forever in the
James, her crew in the waist and the rigging, her master and his mates on
the poop, above them the flag. I see the plain at our feet and the crowd
beyond, all staring with upturned faces; and standing out from the group
of perplexed and wondering dignitaries a man in black and scarlet, one
hand busy at his mouth, the other clenched upon the newly restored and
unsheathed sword. And I see, standing on the green hillock, hand in hand,
us two, myself and the woman so near to me, and yet so far away that a
common enemy seemed our only tie.</p>
<p>We turned and descended to the green lane and the deserted houses. When we
were quite hidden from those we had left on the bank below the fort, she
dropped my hand and moved to the other side of the lane; and thus, with
never a word to spare, we walked sedately on until we reached the
minister's house.</p>
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