"The admiration of a coward for a brave man--I have known that more than once. He will do Heaven knows what, and end in making mischief enough."
"I have scared him a little. He talked, the idiot, about his will, and what he would or would not do. As if that would help, or as if the dear child cares or would care. I said I had money to spare at need. He will say nothing for a while. I do not mean to be interfered with. I told him so."
"Did you, indeed?"
"I did."
"Mistress Gainor, you had better keep your own hands off and let things alone. Josiah would be like an elephant in a rose garden."
"And I like--"
"A good, kindly woman about to make a sad mistake. You do not know the mother's deep-seated prejudices, nor yet of what trouble lies like a shadow on Rene's life. I should not dare to interfere."
"What is it?" she said, at once curious and anxious.
"Mistress Gainor, you are to be trusted, else you would go your way. Is not that so?"
"Yes; but I am reasonable and Margaret is dear to me. I like the vicomte and, as for his mother, she thinks me a kind, rough old woman; and for her nonsense about rank and blood, stuff! The girl's blood is as good as hers."
"No doubt; but let it alone. And now I think you ought to hear his story and I mean to tell it." And sitting in the darkness, he told her of Avignon and Carteaux and the real meaning of the duel and how the matter would go on again some day, but how soon fate alone could determine. She listened, appalled at the tragic story which had come thus fatefully from a far-away land into the life of a quiet Quaker family.
"It is terrible and sad," she said. "And he has spoken to no one but you of this tragedy? It must be known to many."
"The death, yes. Carteaux's share in it, no. He was an unknown young _avocat_ at the time."
"How reticent young De Courval must be! It is singular at his age."
"He had no reason to talk of it; he is a man older than his years. He had in fact his own good reason for desiring not to drive this villain out of his reach. He is a very resolute person. If he loves this dear child, he will marry her, if a dozen mothers stand in the way."
"There will be two. I see now why Mary Swanwick is always sending Margaret to me or to Darthea Wynne. I think the maid cares for him."
"Ah, my dear Miss Gainor, if I could keep them apart for a year, I should like it. G.o.d knows where the end will be. Suppose this fellow were to kill him! That they will meet again is sadly sure, if I know De Courval."
"You are right," she returned. "But if, Mr. Schmidt, this shadow did not lie across his path, would it please you? Would you who have done so much for him--would you wish it?"
"With all my heart. But let it rest here, and let time and fate have their way."
"I will," she said, rising. "It is cool. I must go in. It is a sad tangle, and those two mothers! I am sometimes glad that I never married and have no child. Good night. I fear that I shall dream of it."
"I shall have another pipe before I follow you. We are three old cupids," he added, laughing. "We had better go out of business."
"There is a good bit of cupidity about one of us, sir."
"A not uncommon quality," laughed Schmidt.
Pleased with her jest, she went away, saying, "Tom will take care of you."
To the well-concealed satisfaction of the vicomtesse, it was settled that Margaret's health required her to remain all summer at the Hill; but when June was over, De Courval was able to ride, and why not to Chestnut Hill? And although Gainor never left them alone, it was impossible to refuse permission for him to ride with them.
They explored the country far and wide with Aunt Gainor on her great stallion, a rash rider despite her years. Together they saw White Marsh and the historic lines of Valley Forge, and heard of Hugh Wynne's ride, and, by good luck, met General Wayne one day and were told the story of that dismal winter when snow was both foe and friend. Aunt Gainor rode in a riding-mask, and the Quaker bonnet was worn no longer, wherefore, the code of lovers' signals being ingeniously good, there needed no cupids old or young. The spring of love had come and the summer would follow in nature's course. Yet always Rene felt that until his dark debt was paid he could not speak.
Therefore, sometimes he refrained from turning his horse toward the Hill and went to see his mother, now again, to her pleasure, with Darthea, or else he rode with Schmidt through that bit of Holland on the Neck and saw sails over the dikes and the flour windmills turning in the breeze.
Schmidt, too, kept him busy, and he visited Baltimore and New York, and fished or shot.
"You are well enough now. Let us fence again," said Schmidt, and once more he was made welcome by the _emigres_ late in the evening when no others came.
He would rarely touch the foils, but "_Mon Dieu_, Schmidt," said de Malerive, "he has with the pistol skill."
Du Vallon admitted it. But: "_Mon ami_, it is no weapon for gentlemen.
The Jacobins like it. There is no tierce or quarte against a bullet."
"Do they practise with the pistol here?"
"No. Carteaux, thy lucky friend, ah, very good,--of the best with the foil,--but no shot." Rene smiled, and Schmidt understood.
"Can you hit that, Rene?" he said, taking from his pocket the ace of clubs, for playing-cards were often used as visiting-cards, the backs being white, and other material not always to be had.
Rene hit the edge of the ace with a ball, and then the center. The gay crowd applauded, and Du Vallon pleased to make a little jest in English, wished it were a Jacobin club, and, again merry, they liked the jest.
XIX
The only man known to me who remembered Schmidt is said to have heard Alexander Hamilton remark that all the German lacked of being great was interest in the n.o.ble game of politics. It was true of Schmidt. The war of parties merely amused him, with their honest dread of a monarchy, their terror of a bonded debt, their disgust at the abominable imposition of a tax on freemen, and, above all, an excise tax on whisky.
Jefferson, with keen intellect, was trying to keep the name Republican for the would-be Democrats, and while in office had rebuked Genet and kept Fauchet in order, so that, save for the smaller side of him and the blinding mind fog of personal and party prejudice, he would have been still more valuable in the distracted cabinet he had left.
Schmidt looked on it all with tranquillity, and while he heard of the horrors of the Terror with regret for individual suffering, regarded that strange drama much as an historian looks back on the records of the past.
Seeing this and the man's interest in the people near to him, in flowers, nature, and books, his att.i.tude of mind in regard to the vast world changes seemed singular to the more intense character of De Courval. It had for him, however, its value in the midst of the turmoil of a new nation and the temptations an immense prosperity offered to a people who were not as yet acclimated to the air of freedom.
In fact Schmidt's indifference, or rather the neutrality of a mind not readily biased, seemed to set him apart, and to enable him to see with sagacity the meaning and the probable results of what appeared to some in America like the beginning of a fatal evolution of ruin.
Their companionship had now the qualities of one of those rare and useful friendships between middle age and youth, seen now and then between a father and son, with similar tastes. They were much together, and by the use of business errands and social engagements the elder man did his share in so occupying De Courval as to limit his chances of seeing Margaret Swanwick; nor was she entirely or surely displeased. Her instincts as a woman made her aware of what might happen at any time.
She knew, too, what would then be the att.i.tude of the repellent Huguenot lady. Her pride of caste was recognized by Margaret with the distinctness of an equal but different pride, and with some resentment at an aloofness which, while it permitted the expression of grat.i.tude, seemed to draw between Mrs. Swanwick and herself a line of impa.s.sable formality of intercourse.
One of the lesser accidents of social life was about to bring for De Courval unlooked-for changes and materially to affect his fortunes. He had seemed to Schmidt of late less troubled, a fact due to a decision which left him more at ease.
The summer of 1794 was over, and the city gay and amusing. He had seen Carteaux more than once, and seeing him, he had been but little disturbed. On an evening in September, Schmidt and he went as usual to the fencing-school. There were some new faces. Du Vallon said, "Here, Schmidt, is an old friend of mine, and Vicomte, let me present Monsieur Brillat-Savarin."
The new-comer greeted De Courval and his face expressed surprise as he bowed to the German. "I beg pardon," he said--"Monsieur Schmidt?"
"Yes, at your service."
He seemed puzzled. "It seems to me that we have met before--in Berne, I think."
"Berne. Berne," said Schmidt, coldly. "I was never in Berne."