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<h2> CHAPTER XXXIX IN WHICH WE LISTEN TO A SONG </h2>
<p>IT was like a May morning, so mild was the air, so gay the sunshine, when
the mist had risen. Wild flowers were blooming, and here and there
unfolding leaves made a delicate fretwork against a deep blue sky. The
wind did not blow; everywhere were stillness soft and sweet, dewy
freshness, careless peace.</p>
<p>Hour after hour I walked slowly through the woodland, pausing now and then
to look from side to side. It was idle going, wandering in a desert with
no guiding star. The place where I would be might lie to the east, to the
west. In the wide enshrouding forest I might have passed it by. I believed
not that I had done so. Surely, surely I should have known; surely the
voice that lived only in my heart would have called to me to stay.</p>
<p>Beside a newly felled tree, in a glade starred with small white flowers, I
came upon the bodies of a man and a boy, so hacked, so hewn, so robbed of
all comeliness, that at the sight the heart stood still and the brain grew
sick. Farther on was a clearing, and in its midst the charred and
blackened walls of what had been a home. I crossed the freshly turned
earth, and looked in at the cabin door with the stillness and the
sunshine. A woman lay dead upon the floor, her outstretched hand clenched
upon the foot of a cradle. I entered the room, and, looking within the
cradle, found that the babe had not been spared. Taking up the little
waxen body with the blood upon its innocent breast, I laid it within the
mother's arms, and went my way over the sunny doorstep and the earth that
had been made ready for planting. A white butterfly—the first of the
year—fluttered before me; then rose through a mist of green and
passed from my sight.</p>
<p>The sun climbed higher into the deep blue sky. Save where grew pines or
cedars there were no shadowy places in the forest. The slight green of
uncurling leaves, the airy scarlet of the maples, the bare branches of the
tardier trees, opposed no barrier to the sunlight. It streamed into the
world below the treetops, and lay warm upon the dead leaves and the green
moss and the fragile wild flowers. There was a noise of birds, and a fox
barked. All was lightness, gayety, and warmth; the sap was running, the
heyday of the spring at hand. Ah! to be riding with her, to be going home
through the fairy forest, the sunshine, and the singing!... The happy
miles to Weyanoke, the smell of the sassafras in its woods, the house all
lit and trimmed. The fire kindled, the wine upon the table... Diccon's
welcoming face, and his hand upon Black Lamoral's bridle; the minister,
too, maybe, with his great heart and his kindly eyes; her hand in mine,
her head upon my breast—</p>
<p>The vision faded. Never, never, never for me a home-coming such as that,
so deep, so dear, so sweet. The men who were my friends, the woman whom I
loved, had gone into a far country. This world was not their home. They
had crossed the threshold while I lagged behind. The door was shut, and
without were the night and I.</p>
<p>With the fading of the vision came a sudden consciousness of a presence in
the forest other than my own. I turned sharply, and saw an Indian walking
with me, step for step, but with a space between us of earth and brown
tree trunks and drooping branches. For a moment I thought that he was a
shadow, not substance; then I stood still, waiting for him to speak or to
draw nearer. At the first glimpse of the bronze figure I had touched my
sword, but when I saw who it was I let my hand fall. He too paused, but he
did not offer to speak. With his hand upon a great bow, he waited,
motionless in the sunlight. A minute or more thus; then I walked on with
my eyes upon him.</p>
<p>At once he addressed himself to motion, not speaking or making any sign or
lessening the distance between us, but moving as I moved through the light
and shade, the warmth and stillness, of the forest. For a time I kept my
eyes upon him, but soon I was back with my dreams again. It seemed not
worth while to wonder why he walked with me, who was now the mortal foe of
the people to whom he had returned.</p>
<p>From the river bank, the sycamore, and the boat that I had fastened there,
I had gone northward toward the Pamunkey; from the clearing and the ruined
cabin with the dead within it, I had turned to the eastward. Now, in that
hopeless wandering, I would have faced the north again. But the Indian who
had made himself my traveling companion stopped short, and pointed to the
east. I looked at him, and thought that he knew, maybe, of some war party
between us and the Pamunkey, and would save me from it. A listlessness had
come upon me, and I obeyed the pointing finger.</p>
<p>So, estranged and silent, with two spears' length of earth between us, we
went on until we came to a quiet stream flowing between low, dark banks.
Again I would have turned to the northward, but the son of Powhatan,
gliding before me, set his face down the stream, toward the river I had
left. A minute in which I tried to think and could not, because in my ears
was the singing of the birds at Weyanoke; then I followed him.</p>
<p>How long I walked in a dream, hand in hand with the sweetness of the past,
I do not know; but when the present and its anguish weighed again upon my
heart it was darker, colder, stiller, in the forest. The soundless stream
was bright no longer; the golden sunshine that had lain upon the earth was
all gathered up; the earth was dark and smooth and bare, with not a
flower; the tree trunks were many and straight and tall. Above were no
longer brown branch and blue sky, but a deep and sombre green, thick
woven, keeping out the sunlight like a pall. I stood still and gazed
around me, and knew the place.</p>
<p>To me, whose heart was haunted, the dismal wood, the charmed silence, the
withdrawal of the light, were less than nothing. All day I had looked for
one sight of horror; yea, had longed to come at last upon it, to fall
beside it, to embrace it with my arms. There, there, though it should be
some fair and sunny spot, there would be my haunted wood. As for this
place of gloom and stillness, it fell in with my mood. More welcome than
the mocking sunshine were this cold and solemn light, this deathlike
silence, these ranged pines. It was a place in which to think of life as a
slight thing and scarcely worth the while, given without the asking, spent
in turmoil, strife, suffering, and longings all in vain. Easily laid down,
too,—so easily laid down that the wonder was—</p>
<p>I looked at the ghostly wood, and at the dull stream, and at my hand upon
the hilt of the sword that I had drawn halfway from the scabbard. The life
within that hand I had not asked for. Why should I stand like a soldier
left to guard a thing not worth the guarding; seeing his comrades march
homeward, hearing a cry to him from his distant hearthstone?</p>
<p>I drew my sword well-nigh from its sheath; and then of a sudden I saw the
matter in a truer light; knew that I was indeed the soldier, and willed to
be neither coward nor deserter. The blade dropped back into the scabbard
with a clang, and, straightening myself, I walked on beside the sluggish
stream deep into the haunted wood.</p>
<p>Presently it occurred to me to glance aside at the Indian who had kept
pace with me through the forest. He was not there; he walked with me no
longer; save for myself there seemed no breathing creature in the dim
wood. I looked to right and left, and saw only the tall, straight pines
and the needle-strewn ground. How long he had been gone I could not tell.
He might have left me when first we came to the pines, for my dreams had
held me, and I had not looked his way.</p>
<p>There was that in the twilight place, or in the strangeness, the horror,
and the yearning that had kept company with me that day, or in the dull
weariness of a mind and body overwrought of late, which made thought
impossible. I went on down the stream toward the river, because it chanced
that my face was set in that direction.</p>
<p>How dark was the shadow of the pines, how lifeless the earth beneath, how
faint and far away the blue that showed here and there through rifts in
the heavy roof of foliage! The stream bending to one side I turned with
it, and there before me stood the minister!</p>
<p>I do not know what strangled cry burst from me. The earth was rocking, all
the wood a glare of light. As for him, at the sight of me and the sound of
my voice he had staggered back against a tree; but now, recovering
himself, he ran to me and put his great arms about me. "From the power of
the dog, from the lion's mouth," he cried brokenly. "And they slew thee
not, Ralph, the heathen who took thee away! Yesternight I learned that you
lived, but I looked not for you here."</p>
<p>I scarce heard or marked what he was saying, and found no time in which to
wonder at his knowledge that I had not perished. I only saw that he was
alone, and that in the evening wood there was no sign of other living
creature.</p>
<p>"Yea, they slew me not, Jeremy," I said. "I would that they had done so.
And you are alone? I am glad that you died not, my friend; yes, faith, I
am very glad that one escaped. Tell me about it, and I will sit here upon
the bank and listen. Was it done in this wood? A gloomy deathbed, friend,
for one so young and fair. She should have died to soft music, in the
sunshine, with flowers about her."</p>
<p>With an exclamation he put me from him, but kept his hand upon my arm and
his steady eyes upon my face.</p>
<p>"She loved laughter and sunshine and sweet songs," I continued. "She can
never know them in this wood. They are outside; they are outside the
world, I think. It is sad, is it not? Faith, I think it is the saddest
thing I have ever known."</p>
<p>He clapped his other hand upon my shoulder. "Wake, man!" he commanded. "If
thou shouldst go mad now—Wake! thy brain is turning. Hold to
thyself. Stand fast, as thou art soldier and Christian! Ralph, she is not
dead. She will wear flowers,—thy flowers,—sing, laugh, move
through the sunshine of earth for many and many a year, please God! Art
listening, Ralph? Canst hear what I am saying?"</p>
<p>"I hear," I said at last, "but I do not well understand."</p>
<p>He pushed me back against a pine, and held me there with his hands upon my
shoulders. "Listen," he said, speaking rapidly and keeping his eyes upon
mine. "All those days that you were gone, when all the world declared you
dead, she believed you living. She saw party after party come back without
you, and she believed that you were left behind in the forest. Also she
knew that the George waited but for the search to be quite given over, and
for my Lord Carnal's recovery. She had been told that the King's command
might not be defied, that the Governor had no choice but to send her from
Virginia. Ralph, I watched her, and I knew that she meant not to go upon
that ship. Three nights agone she stole from the Governor's house, and,
passing through the gates that the sleeping warder had left unfastened,
went toward the forest. I saw her and followed her, and at the edge of the
forest I spoke to her. I stayed her not, I brought her not back, Ralph,
because I was convinced that an I did so she would die. I knew of no great
danger, and I trusted in the Lord to show me what to do, step by step, and
how to guide her gently back when she was weary of wandering,—when,
worn out, she was willing to give up the quest for the dead. Art following
me, Ralph?"</p>
<p>"Yes," I answered, and took my hand from my eyes. "I was nigh mad, Jeremy,
for my faith was not like hers. I have looked on Death too much of late,
and yesterday all men believed that he had come to dwell in the forest and
had swept clean his house before him. But you escaped, you both escaped"—</p>
<p>"God's hand was over us," he said reverently. "This is the way of it. She
had been ill, you know, and of late she had taken no thought of food or
sleep. She was so weak, we had to go so slowly, and so winding was our
path, who knew not the country, that the evening found us not far upon our
way, if way we had. We came to a cabin in a clearing, and they whose home
it was gave us shelter for the night. In the morning, when the father and
son would go forth to their work we walked with them. When they came to
the trees they meant to fell we bade them good-by, and went on alone. We
had not gone an hundred paces when, looking back, we saw three Indians
start from the dimness of the forest and set upon and slay the man and the
boy. That murder done they gave chase to me, who caught up thy wife and
ran for both our lives. When I saw that they were light of foot and would
overtake me, I set my burden down, and, drawing a sword that I had with
me, went back to meet them halfway. Ralph, I slew all three,—may the
Lord have mercy on my soul! I knew not what to think of that attack, the
peace with the Indians being so profound, and I began to fear for thy
wife's safety. She knew not the woods, and I managed to turn our steps
back toward Jamestown without her knowledge that I did so. It was about
midday when we saw the gleam of the river through the trees before us, and
heard the sound of firing and of a great yelling. I made her crouch within
a thicket, while I myself went forward to reconnoitre, and well-nigh
stumbled into the midst of an army. Yelling, painted, maddened,
brandishing their weapons toward the town, human hair dabbled with blood
at the belts of many—in the name of God, Ralph, what is the meaning
of it all?"</p>
<p>"It means," I said, "that yesterday they rose against us and slew us by
the hundred. The town was warned and is safe. Go on."</p>
<p>"I crept back to madam," he continued, "and hurried her away from that
dangerous neighborhood. We found a growth of bushes and hid ourselves
within it, and just in time, for from the north came a great band of
picked warriors, tall and black and wondrously feathered, fresh to the
fray, whatever the fray might be. They joined themselves to the imps upon
the river bank, and presently we heard another great din with more firing
and more yelling. Well, to make a long story short, we crouched there in
the bushes until late afternoon, not knowing what was the matter, and not
daring to venture forth to find out. The woman of the cabin at which we
had slept had given us a packet of bread and meat, so we were not without
food, but the time was long. And then of a sudden the wood around us was
filled with the heathen, band after band, coming from the river, stealing
like serpents this way and that into the depths of the forest. They saw us
not in the thick bushes; maybe it was because of the prayers which I said
with might and main. At last the distance swallowed them, the forest
seemed clear, no sound, no motion. Long we waited, but with the sunset we
stole from the bushes and down an aisle of the forest toward the river,
rounded a little wood of cedar, and came full upon perhaps fifty of the
savages"—He paused to draw a great breath and to raise his brows
after a fashion that he had.</p>
<p>"Go on, go on!" I cried. "What did you do? You have said that she is alive
and safe!"</p>
<p>"She is," he answered, "but no thanks to me, though I did set lustily upon
that painted fry. Who led them, d' ye think, Ralph? Who saved us from
those bloody hands?"</p>
<p>A light broke in upon me. "I know," I said. "And he brought you here"—</p>
<p>"Ay, he sent away the devils whose color he is, worse luck! He told us
that there were Indians, not of his tribe, between us and the town. If we
went on we should fall into their hands. But there was a place that was
shunned by the Indian as by the white man: we could bide there until the
morrow, when we might find the woods clear. He guided us to this dismal
wood that was not altogether strange to us. Ay, he told her that you were
alive. He said no more than that; all at once, when we were well within
the wood and the twilight was about us, he was gone."</p>
<p>He ceased to speak, and stood regarding me with a smile upon his rugged
face. I took his hand and raised it to my lips. "I owe you more than I can
ever pay," I said. "Where is she, my friend?"</p>
<p>"Not far away," he answered. "We sought the centre of the wood, and
because she was so chilled and weary and shaken I did dare to build a fire
there. Not a foe has come against us, and we waited but for the dusk of
this evening to try to make the town. I came down to the stream just now
to find, if I could, how near we were to the river"—</p>
<p>He broke off, made a gesture with his hand toward one of the long aisles
of pine trees, and then, with a muttered "God bless you both," left me,
and going a little way down the stream, stood with his back to a great
tree and his eyes upon the slow, deep water.</p>
<p>She was coming. I watched the slight figure grow out of the dusk between
the trees, and the darkness in which I had walked of late fell away. The
wood that had been so gloomy was a place of sunlight and song; had red
roses sprung up around me I had felt no wonder. She came softly and
slowly, with bent head and hanging arms, not knowing that I was near. I
went not to meet her,—it was my fancy to have her come to me still,—but
when she raised her eyes and saw me I fell upon my knees.</p>
<p>For a moment she stood still, with her hands at her bosom; then, softly
and slowly through the dusky wood, she came to me and touched me upon the
shoulder. "Art come to take me home?" she asked. "I have wept and prayed
and waited long, but now the spring is here and the woods are growing
green."</p>
<p>I took her hands and bowed my head upon them. "I believed thee dead," I
said. "I thought that thou hadst gone home, indeed, and I was left in the
world alone. I can never tell thee how I love thee."</p>
<p>"I need no telling," she answered. "I am glad that I did so forget my
womanhood as to come to Virginia on such an errand; glad that they did
laugh at and insult me in the meadow at Jamestown, for else thou mightst
have given me no thought; very heartily glad that thou didst buy me with
thy handful of tobacco. With all my heart I love thee, my knight, my
lover, my lord and husband"—Her voice broke, and I felt the
trembling of her frame. "I love not thy tears upon my hands," she
murmured. "I have wandered far and am weary. Wilt rise and put thy arm
around me and lead me home?"</p>
<p>I stood up, and she came to my arms like a tired bird to its nest. I bent
my head, and kissed her upon the brow, the blue-veined eyelids, the
perfect lips. "I love thee," I said. "The song is old, but it is sweet.
See! I wear thy color, my lady."</p>
<p>The hand that had touched the ribbon upon my arm stole upwards to my lips.
"An old song, but a sweet one," she said. "I love thee. I will always love
thee. My head may lie upon thy breast, but my heart lies at thy feet."</p>
<p>There was joy in the haunted wood, deep peace, quiet thankfulness, a
springtime of the heart,—not riotous like the May, but fair and
grave and tender like the young world in the sunshine without the pines.
Our lips met again, and then, with my arm around her, we moved to the
giant pine beneath which stood the minister. He turned at our approach,
and looked at us with a quiet and tender smile, though the water stood in
his eyes. "'Heaviness may endure for a night,'" he said, "'but joy cometh
in the morning.' I thank God for you both."</p>
<p>"Last summer, in the green meadow, we knelt before you while you blessed
us, Jeremy," I answered. "Bless us now again, true friend and man of God."</p>
<p>He laid his hands upon our bowed heads and blessed us, and then we three
moved through the dismal wood and beside the sluggish stream down to the
great bright river. Ere we reached it the pines had fallen away, the
haunted wood was behind us, our steps were set through a fairy world of
greening bough and springing bloom. The blue sky laughed above, the late
sunshine barred our path with gold. When we came to the river it lay in
silver at our feet, making low music amongst its reeds.</p>
<p>I had bethought me of the boat which I had fastened that morning to the
sycamore between us and the town, and now we moved along the river bank
until we should come to the tree. Though we walked through an enemy's
country we saw no foe. Stillness and peace encompassed us; it was like a
beautiful dream from which one fears no wakening.</p>
<p>As we went, I told them, speaking low, for we knew not if we were yet in
safety, of the slaughter that had been made and of Diccon. My wife
shuddered and wept, and the minister drew long breaths while his hands
opened and closed. And then, when she asked me, I told of how I had been
trapped to the ruined hut that night and of all that had followed. When I
had done she turned within my arm and clung to me with her face hidden. I
kissed her and comforted her, and presently we came to the sycamore tree
reaching out over the clear water, and to the boat that I had fastened
there.</p>
<p>The sunset was nigh at hand, and all the west was pink. The wind had died
away, and the river lay like tinted glass between the dark borders of the
forest. Above the sky was blue, while in the south rose clouds that were
like pillars, tall and golden. The air was soft as silk; there was no
sound other than the ripple of the water about our keel and the low dash
of the oars. The minister rowed, while I sat idle beside my love. He would
have it so, and I made slight demur.</p>
<p>We left the bank behind us and glided into the midstream, for it was as
well to be out of arrowshot. The shadow of the forest was gone; still and
bright around us lay the mighty river. When at length the boat head turned
to the west, we saw far up the stream the roofs of Jamestown, dark against
the rosy sky.</p>
<p>"There is a ship going home," said the minister.</p>
<p>We to whom he spoke looked with him down the river, and saw a tall ship
with her prow to the ocean. All her sails were set; the last rays of the
sinking sun struck against her poop windows and made of them a half-moon
of fire. She went slowly, for the wind was light, but she went surely,
away from the new land back to the old, down the stately river to the bay
and the wide ocean, and to the burial at sea of one upon her. With her
pearly sails and the line of flame color beneath, she looked a dwindling
cloud; a little while, and she would be claimed of the distance and the
dusk.</p>
<p>"It is the George," I said.</p>
<p>The lady who sat beside me caught her breath. "Ay, sweetheart," I went on.
"She carries one for whom she waited. He has gone from out our life
forever."</p>
<p>She uttered a low cry and turned to me, trembling, her lips parted, her
eyes eloquent. "We will not speak of him," I said. "As if he were dead let
his name rest between us. I have another thing to tell thee, dear heart,
dear court lady masking as a waiting damsel, dear ward of the King whom
his Majesty hath thundered against for so many weary months. Would it
grieve thee to go home, after all?"</p>
<p>"Home?" she asked. "To Weyanoke? That would not grieve me."</p>
<p>"Not to Weyanoke, but to England," I said. "The George is gone, but three
days since the Esperance came in. When she sails again I think that we
must go."</p>
<p>She gazed at me with a whitening face. "And you?" she whispered. "How will
you go? In chains?"</p>
<p>I took her clasped hands, parted them, and drew her arms around my neck.
"Ay," I answered, "I will go in chains that I care not to have broken. My
dear love, I think that the summer lies fair before us. Listen while I
tell thee of news that the Esperance brought."</p>
<p>While I told of new orders from the Company to the Governor and of my
letter from Buckingham, the minister rested upon his oars that he might
hear the better. When I had ceased to speak he bent to them again, and his
tireless strength sent us swiftly over the glassy water toward the town
that was no longer distant. "I am more glad than I can tell you, Ralph and
Jocelyn," he said, and the smile with which he spoke made his face
beautiful.</p>
<p>The light streaming to us from the ruddy west laid roses in the cheeks of
the sometime ward of the King, and the low wind lifted the dark hair from
her forehead. Her head was on my breast, her hand in mine; we cared not to
speak, we were so happy. On her finger was her wedding ring, the ring that
was only a link torn from the gold chain Prince Maurice had given me. When
she saw my eyes upon it, she raised her hand and kissed the rude circlet.</p>
<p>The hue of the sunset lingered in cloud and water, and in the pale heavens
above the rose and purple shone the evening star. The cloudlike ship at
which we had gazed was gone into the distance and the twilight; we saw her
no more. Broad between its blackening shores stretched the James,
mirroring the bloom in the west, the silver star, the lights upon the
Esperance that lay between us and the town. Aboard her the mariners were
singing, and their song of the sea floated over the water to us, sweetly
and like a love song. We passed the ship unhailed, and glided on to the
haven where we would be. The singing behind us died away, but the song in
our hearts kept on. All things die not: while the soul lives, love lives:
the song may be now gay, now plaintive, but it is deathless.</p>
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