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The sound of galloping caught her attention as she raised her head and though she could not see the rider, her ears told her that he turned into Greenwood gate, even before the pace was slackened. Not knowing what it might bode, the girl stood listening, with an anxious look on her face. The cadence of the hoof-beats ended suddenly, and silence ensued for a time; then as suddenly, quick footsteps, accompanied by a tell-tale jingle and clank, came striding along the path from the kitchen to the port in the hedge. One glance Janice gave at the opposite entrance, as if flight were in her thoughts, then, with a hand resting on the back of the seat to steady herself, she awaited the intruder.
Brereton paused in the opening of the box, as his eyes rested on his love. "Would to Heaven," he exclaimed, "that I had my colours and the time to paint you as you stand!"
Both relieved and yet more frightened, Janice, in an attempt to conceal the latter feeling, remarked, "I thought you had departed, sir."
"Think you I'd rest content without farewell, or choose to have one with the whole staff as witnesses?" answered Jack, as he came forward. "Furthermore, I had some matters of which to speak that were not to be published to the world."
"Mommy is--"
"Where I'd have her," interjected the officer; "for what I have to say is to you. First: I put the screws on old Hennion and Bagby, and have their word that they will not push their forfeiture bill, or in any other way molest you."
"We thank you deeply, Colonel Brereton."
"I rode to Brunswick and saw Parson McClave yesterday afternoon, to bespeak his aid, and he says he is certain you may live at peace here, if you will not seek to be rigorous with your tenants, and that he will do his best to keep the community from persecuting you."
"'T is glad news, indeed."
"Knowing how you were circ.u.mstanced, I then rode about your farms and held interview with a number of your tenants and pleaded with them that they pay a part of their arrears in supplies; and several of the better sort gave me their word that you should not want for food."
"'T was most thoughtful of you."
"Finally, I wrote a letter to your father, and have sent it under a flag that was going to New York, telling him that you were safe arrived at Greenwood."
"Ah, Colonel Brereton, how can we ever repay your kindness?"
murmured the girl, her eyes brightened and softened by a mist of unshed tears.
"'T was done for my own ease. Think you I could have ridden away, not knowing what risk or privation you might have to suffer in my absence?"
"'T is only the greater cause for grat.i.tude that you make your ease depend on ours."
"That empties my packet of advices," said the aide; "and --and--unless you have something to tell me, I'll--we'll say a farewell and I'll rejoin the army."
"Would that I could thank you, sir, as you deserve; but words mean so little that you have rendered me dumb," replied Janice, feelingly.
"Can you not--Have you nothing else to say to me?"
he begged pleadingly.
"I--Indeed, I can think of nothing, Colonel Brereton,"
replied the maiden, very much fl.u.s.tered.
"Then good-by, and may G.o.d prosper you," ended Jack, sadly, taking her hand and kissing it gently. He turned with obvious reluctance, and went toward the house, but before he had reached the hedge he quickly retraced his steps. "I--I could not force my suit upon you when I found you in such helplessness--not even when you gave me the purse--though none but I can know what the restraint meant in torture," he burst out; "and it seems quite as ungenerous to try to advantage myself now of your moment's gratefulness. But my pa.s.sion has its limits of control, and go I cannot without--without-- Give me but a word, though it be a sentence of death to my heart's desire."
Janice, whose eyes had been dropped groundward during most of this colloquy, gave the pleader a come-and-go glance, then said breathlessly, "I--'T is--Wha--wha--What would you wish me to say?"
"What you can," cried the officer, impetuously.
"I--I would--'T is my desire to--to say what you would have me."
Both her hands were eagerly caught in those of the suppliant.
"If you could--If--'T would be everything on earth-- more than life itself to me--could you but give me the faintest hope that I might win you. Have you such an abhorrence of me that you cannot give me the smallest guerdon of happiness?"
"You err in supposing that I dislike you," protested Janice.
"Then why do you refuse all that is dearest to me? Why turn from a devotion that would make your happiness its own?"
"But I have n't," denied the girl, her heart beating wildly and her breath coming quickly.
As the words pa.s.sed her lips, she was impulsively yet tenderly caught in her lover's arms and drawn to him. "What have you done, then?" he demanded almost fiercely.
"I--I--oh! I don't know," she gasped.
"Then, as you have pity in you, grant my prayer?"
For a moment Janice, with down-bent head, was silent.
Then she raised her eyes to Jack's and said, "I will marry you, Colonel Brereton, if dadda will let me."
LI A FAREWELL AND A WELCOME
There was little weeding of the garden that fore-noon, unless the brus.h.i.+ng off with Jack's gauntlets of some green moss from the garden seat, about which cl.u.s.tered the honeysuckle, can be considered such. Possibly this was done that more sprays of the vine might be plucked, for when Sukey, after repeated calls from the entry, finally came to summon them to dinner, Jack had a bunch of it, and a single rose, thrust in his sword knot.
There was a pretence of affected unconsciousness at the meal on the part of the three, and even of Peg, though the servant made it difficult to maintain the fiction by several times going off into fits of reasonless giggles not easy for those at table to ignore. The repast eaten, Brereton drew Mrs. Meredith aside for a word, and Janice took advantage of the freedom to escape to her room, where she buried her face in the pillow, as if she had some secret to confide to it.
From this she was presently roused by her mother's entrance, and as the girl, with flushed cheeks and questioning look, met her eyes, Mrs. Meredith said: "I think, my child, thou hast acted for the best, and we will hope thy father will think so."
"Oh, mommy, dost think he'll consent?"
"I fear not, but that must be as G.o.d wills it. Go down now, for Colonel Brereton says he must ride away, and only tarries for a word with thee."
Janice gave one glance at the mirror, and put her hands to her hair, with a look of concern. "'T is dreadfully disordered."
"He will not notice it, that I'll warrant," prophesied the matron.
With his horse's bridle over his arm, the lover was waiting for her on the front porch. "Will you not walk with me down the road a little way?" he begged. "'T is so hard to leave you."
"I--I think I had better not," urged the girl, showing trepidation. "'T would surely delay you too--"
"Ah, Janice," interrupted the lover, "why--what have I done that you should show such fear of me?"
"I'm not afraid of you," denied Janice, hurriedly; "and of course I'll go, if--if you think it best."
"Then what is it frightens you, sweetheart?" persisted Jack, as they set off.
The maiden scrutinised the ground and horizon as if seeking an explanation ere she replied shyly, "'T is--'t is indeed no fear of you, but you--you never ask permission."
The officer laughed exultingly. "Then may I put my arm about you?" he requested.
"'T will make walking too difficult."