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        <title>The House Behind the Cedars:   
Electronic Edition.</title>
        <author>Charles Waddell Chesnutt, 1858-1932</author>
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        <pubPlace>University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, </pubPlace>
        <date>1997.</date>
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at Chapel Hill. It may be used freely by individuals for research, teaching and personal use as long as this statement of availability is included in the text.</p>
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        <note anchored="yes">Call number C813 C52h1 1900 (North Carolina Collection, UNC-Chapel Hill)</note>
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          <title>The House Behind the Cedars  </title>
          <author>Charles W. Chesnutt</author>
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            <publisher>Houghton, Mifflin and Company</publisher>
            <date>1900</date>
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            <item>Mulattoes -- Fiction.</item>
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            <item>Southern States -- History -- 1865-1877 -- Fiction.</item>
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    <front>
      <div1 type="cover image">
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      <div1 type="title image">
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      <titlePage>
        <docTitle>
          <titlePart type="main">The House Behind the Cedars</titlePart>
        </docTitle>
        <byline>by</byline>
        <docAuthor>Charles W. Chesnutt</docAuthor>
        <docImprint><pubPlace>Boston, New York</pubPlace>
<publisher>Houghton, Mifflin and Company</publisher>
<docDate>1900</docDate></docImprint>
        <pb id="chesnuttverso" n="verso"/>
        <docImprint><date>COPYRIGHT, 1900, BY CHARLES W. CHESNUTT</date>
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
</docImprint>
      </titlePage>
      <pb id="chesnutti" n="[i]"/>
      <div1 type="contents">
        <head>CONTENTS</head>
        <list type="simple">
          <item>I. A Stranger From South Carolina . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="chesnutt1">1</ref></item>
          <item>II. An Evening Visit . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="chesnutt14">14</ref></item>
          <item>III. The Old Judge . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="chesnutt32">32</ref></item>
          <item>IV. Down the River . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="chesnutt36">36</ref></item>
          <item>V. The Tournament . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="chesnutt45">45</ref></item>
          <item>VI. The Queen of Love and Beauty . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="chesnutt59">59</ref></item>
          <item>VII. 'Mid New Surroundings . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="chesnutt63">63</ref></item>
          <item>VIII. The Courtship . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="chesnutt67">67</ref></item>
          <item>IX. Doubts and Fears . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="chesnutt77">77</ref></item>
          <item>X. The Dream . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="chesnutt88">88</ref></item>
          <item>XI. A Letter and a Journey . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="chesnutt96">96</ref></item>
          <item>XII. Tryon Goes To Patesville . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="chesnutt104">104</ref></item>
          <item>XIII. An Injudicious Payment . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="chesnutt116">116</ref></item>
          <item>XIV. A Loyal Friend . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="chesnutt124">124</ref></item>
          <item>XV. Mine Own People . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="chesnutt132">132</ref></item>
          <item>XVI. The Bottom Falls Out . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="chesnutt142">142</ref></item>
          <item>XVII. Two Letters . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="chesnutt149">149</ref></item>
          <item>XVIII. Under the Old Régime . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="chesnutt155">155</ref></item>
          <item>XIX. God Made Us All . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="chesnutt178">178</ref></item>
          <item>XX.  Digging Up Roots . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="chesnutt189">189</ref></item>
          <item>XXI. A Gilded Opportunity . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="chesnutt193">193</ref></item>
          <item>XXII. Imperative Business . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="chesnutt203">203</ref></item>
          <item>XXIII. The Guest of Honor . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="chesnutt209">209</ref></item>
          <item>XXIV. Swing Your Partners . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="chesnutt220">220</ref></item>
          <item>XXV. Balance All . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="chesnutt228">228</ref></item>
          <item>XXVI. The Schoolhouse in the Woods . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="chesnutt233">233</ref></item>
          <item>XXVII. An Interesting Acquaintance . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="chesnutt239">239</ref></item>
          <item>XXVIII. The Lost Knife . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="chesnutt244">244</ref></item>
          <item>XXIX. Plato Earns Half a Dollar . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="chesnutt251">251</ref></item>
          <item>XXX. An Unusual Honor . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="chesnutt260">260</ref></item>
          <item>XXXI. In Deep Waters . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="chesnutt268">268</ref></item>
          <item>XXXII. The Power of Love . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="chesnutt277">277</ref></item>
          <item>XXXIII. A Mule and a Cart . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="chesnutt282">282</ref></item>
        </list>
      </div1>
    </front>
    <body>
      <div1 type="text">
        <head>THE HOUSE BEHIND THE CEDARS</head>
        <pb id="chesnutt1" n="1"/>
        <div2 type="chapter">
          <head>A STRANGER FROM SOUTH CAROLINA</head>
          <p>Time touches all things with destroying hand; 
and if he seem now and then to bestow the bloom 
of youth, the sap of spring, it is but a brief mockery,
to be surely and swiftly followed by the wrinkles
of old age, the dry leaves and bare branches 
of winter. And yet there are places where Time 
seems to linger lovingly long after youth has departed, 
and to which he seems loath to bring the 
evil day. Who has not known some even-tempered 
old man or woman who seemed to have 
drunk of the fountain of youth? Who has not 
seen somewhere an old town that, having long 
since ceased to grow, yet held its own without 
perceptible decline?</p>
          <p>Some such trite reflection--as apposite to the
subject as most random reflections are--passed
through the mind of a young man who came out 
of the front door of the Patesville Hotel about 
nine o'clock one fine morning in spring, a few years 
after the Civil War, and started down Front Street
<pb id="chesnutt2" n="2"/>
toward the market-house. Arriving at the town 
late the previous evening, he had been driven up 
from the steamboat in a carriage, from which he 
had been able to distinguish only the shadowy 
outlines of the houses along the street; so that this 
morning walk was his first opportunity to see the 
town by daylight. He was dressed in a suit of 
linen duck  -  the day was warm  -  a Panama straw 
hat, and patent leather shoes. In appearance he 
was tall, dark, with straight, black, lustrous hair, 
and very clean-cut, high-bred features. When he 
paused by the clerk's desk on his way out, to light 
his cigar, the day clerk, who had just come on duty, 
glanced at the register and read the last entry:  -  </p>
          <p>“‘JOHN WARWICK, CLARENCE, SOUTH CAROLINA.’</p>
          <p>“One of the South Ca'lina bigbugs, I reckon
  -  probably in cotton, or turpentine.” The gentleman 
from South Carolina, walking down the street, 
glanced about him with an eager look, in which 
curiosity and affection were mingled with a touch 
of bitterness. He saw little that was not familiar, 
or that he had not seen in his dreams a hundred 
times during the past ten years. There had been 
some changes, it is true, some melancholy changes, 
but scarcely anything by way of addition or 
improvement to counterbalance them. Here and 
there blackened and dismantled walls marked the
place where handsome buildings once had stood, for
Sherman's march to the sea hail left its mark upon 
the town. The stores were mostly of brick, two
<pb id="chesnutt3" n="3"/>
stories high, joining one another after the manner 
of cities. Some of the names on the signs were 
familiar; others, including a number of Jewish 
names, were quite unknown to him.</p>
          <p>A two minutes' walk brought Warwick  -  the 
name he had registered under, and as we shall call 
him  -  to the market-house, the central feature of 
Patesville, from both the commercial and the 
picturesque points of view. Standing foursquare in 
the heart of the town, at the intersection of the 
two main streets, a “jog” at each street corner 
left around the market-house a little public square, 
which at this hour was well occupied by carts and 
wagons from the country and empty drays 
awaiting hire. Warwick was unable to perceive much
change in the market-house. Perhaps the surface 
of the red brick, long unpainted, had scaled off a 
little more here and there. There might have been 
a slight accretion of the moss and lichen on the 
shingled roof. But the tall tower, with its four-faced 
clock, rose as majestically and uncompromisingly 
as though the land had never been subjugated. 
Was it so irreconcilable, Warwick wondered, as 
still to peal out the curfew bell, which at nine 
o'clock at night had clamorously warned all negroes, 
slave or free, that it was unlawful for them to be 
abroad after that hour, under penalty of imprisonment 
or whipping? Was the old constable, whose 
chief business it had been to ring the bell, still
alive and exercising the functions of his office, and 
had age lessened or increased the number of times
<pb id="chesnutt4" n="4"/>
that obliging citizens performed this duty for him
during his temporary absences in the company of
convivial spirits? A few moments later, Warwick 
saw a colored policeman in the constable's 
place  -  a stronger reminder than even the burned 
buildings that war had left its mark upon the old 
town, with which Time had dealt so tenderly.</p>
          <p>The lower story of the market-house was open 
on all four of its sides to the public square. Warwick 
passed through one of the wide brick arches 
and traversed the building with a leisurely step. 
He looked in vain into the stalls for the butcher 
who had sold fresh meat twice a week, on market 
days, and he felt a genuine thrill of pleasure when 
he recognized the red bandana turban of old 
Aunt Lyddy, the ancient negro woman who had
sold him gingerbread and fried fish, and told him 
weird tales of witchcraft and conjuration, in the 
old days when, as an idle boy, he had loafed about 
the market-house. He did not speak to her, however, 
or give her any sign of recognition. He threw a 
glance toward a certain corner where steps led to 
the town hall above. On this stairway he had 
once seen a manacled free negro shot while being 
taken upstairs for examination under a criminal 
charge. Warwick recalled vividly how the shot 
had rung out. He could see again the livid look
of terror on the victim's face, the gathering crowd, 
the resulting confusion. The murderer, he re-
called, had been tried and sentenced to imprison-
ment for life, but was pardoned by a merciful
<pb id="chesnutt5" n="5"/>
governor after serving a year of his sentence. As
Warwick was neither a prophet nor the son of a
prophet, he could not foresee that, thirty years 
later, even this would seem an excessive 
punishment for so slight a misdemeanor.</p>
          <p>Leaving the market-house, Warwick turned to 
the left, and kept on his course until he reached 
the next corner. After another turn to the right, 
a dozen paces brought him in front of a small 
weather-beaten frame building, from which 
projected a wooden sign-board bearing the 
inscription:  -  
<emph>ARCHIBALD STRAIGHT, LAWYER.</emph>
He turned the knob, but the door was locked.
Retracing his steps past a vacant lot, the young
man entered a shop where a colored man was 
employed in varnishing a coffin, which stood on two
trestles in the middle of the floor. Not at all
impressed by the melancholy suggestiveness of his
task, he was whistling a lively air with great gusto.
Upon Warwick's entrance this effusion came to a
sudden end, and the coffin-maker assumed an air
of professional gravity.</p>
          <p>“Good-mawnin', suh,” he said, lifting his cap
politely.</p>
          <p> “Good-morning,” answered Warwick. “Can 
you tell me anything about Judge Straight's office
hours?”</p>
          <p>“De ole jedge has be'n a little onreg'lar sence
<pb id="chesnutt6" n="6"/>
de wah, suh; but he gin'ally gits roun' 'bout ten 
o'clock er so. He's be'n kin' er feeble fer de las' 
few yeahs. An' I reckon,” continued the 
undertaker solemnly, his glance unconsciously seeking a
row of fine caskets standing against the wall,  -  “I
reckon he'll soon be goin' de way er all de earth. 
'Man dat is bawn er 'oman hath but a sho't time 
ter lib, an' is full er mis'ry. He cometh up an' is 
cut down lack as a flower.' 'De days er his life 
is three-sco' an' ten '  -  an' de ole jedge is libbed 
mo' d'n dat, suh, by five yeahs, ter say de leas'.”</p>
          <p>“ ‘Death’,” quoted Warwick, with whose mood 
the undertaker's remarks were in tune, “ ‘is the 
penalty that all must pay for the crime of 
living.’ ”</p>
          <p>“Dat's a fac', suh, dat's a fac'; so dey mus'  -  
so dey mus'. An' den all de dead has ter be buried. 
An' we does ou' sheer of it, suh, we does ou' sheer. 
We conduc's de obs'quies er all de bes' w'ite folks 
er de town, suh.”</p>
          <p> Warwick left the undertaker's shop and 
retraced his steps until he had passed the lawyer's 
office, toward which he threw an affectionate glance. 
A few rods farther led him past the old brick 
Presbyterian church, with its square tower, embowered 
in a stately grove; past the Catholic church, with 
its many crosses, and a painted woolen figure of 
St. James in a recess beneath the gable; and past 
the old Jefferson House, once the leading hotel of 
the town, in front of which political meetings had 
been held, and political speeches made, and political
<pb id="chesnutt7" n="7"/>
hard cider drunk, in the days of “Tippecanoe 
and Tyler too.”</p>
          <p>The street down which Warwick had come 
intersected Front Street at a sharp angle in front of 
the old hotel, forming a sort of flatiron block at 
the junction, known as Liberty Point,   -   perhaps 
because slave auctions were sometimes held there in 
the good old days. Just before Warwick reached 
Liberty Point, a young woman came down Front 
Street from the direction of the market-house. 
When their paths converged, Warwick kept on 
down Front Street behind her, it having been 
already his intention to walk in this direction.</p>
          <p>Warwick's first glance had revealed the fact 
that the young woman was strikingly handsome, 
with a stately beauty seldom encountered. As he 
walked along, behind her at a measured distance, 
he could not help noting the details that made 
up this pleasing impression, for his mind was 
singularly alive to beauty, in whatever embodiment. 
The girl's figure, he perceived, was admirably 
proportioned; she was evidently at the period 
when the angles of childhood were rounding into 
the promising curves of adolescence. Her 
abundant hair, of a dark and glossy brown, was neatly
plaited and coiled above an ivory column that rose
straight from a pair of gently sloping shoulders, 
clearly outlined beneath the light muslin frock 
that covered them. He could see that she was 
tastefully, though not richly, dressed, and that she 
walked with an elastic step that revealed a light
<pb id="chesnutt8" n="8"/>
heart and the vigor of perfect health. Her face, 
of course, he could not analyze, since he had 
caught only the one brief but convincing glimpse 
of it. </p>
          <p>The young woman kept on down Front Street,
Warwick maintaining his distance a few rods 
behind her. They passed a factory, a warehouse 
or two, and then, leaving the brick pavement, 
walked along on mother earth, under a leafy 
arcade of spreading oaks and elms. Their way 
led now through a residential portion of the 
town, which, as they advanced, gradually declined 
from staid respectability to poverty, open and 
unabashed. Warwick observed, as they passed 
through the respectable quarter, that few people 
who met the girl greeted her, and that some others 
whom she passed at gates or doorways gave her 
no sign of recognition; from which he inferred 
that she was possibly a visitor in the town and not 
well acquainted.</p>
          <p>Their walk had continued not more than ten 
minutes when they crossed a creek by a wooden 
bridge and came to a row of mean houses standing 
flush with the street. At the door of one, an old 
black woman had stooped to lift a large basket, 
piled high with laundered clothes. The girl, as 
she passed, seized one end of the basket and helped 
the old woman to raise it to her head, where it 
rested solidly on the cushion of her head-kerchief. 
During this interlude, Warwick, though he had 
slackened his pace measurably, had so nearly
<pb id="chesnutt9" n="9"/>
closed the gap between himself and them as to 
hear the old woman say, with the dulcet negro 
intonation:  -  </p>
          <p>“T'ank y', honey; de Lawd gwine bless you 
sho'. You wuz alluz a good gal, and de Lewd 
love eve'ybody w'at help de po' ole nigger. You 
gwine ter hab good luck all yo' bawn days.”</p>
          <p>“I hope you 're a true prophet, Aunt Zilphy,”
laughed the girl in response.</p>
          <p>The sound of her voice gave Warwick a thrill. 
It was soft and sweet and clear  -  quite in 
harmony with her appearance. That it had a faint 
suggestiveness of the old woman's accent he 
hardly noticed, for the current Southern speech, 
including his own, was rarely without a touch of it. 
The corruption of the white people's speech was 
one element  -  only one  -  of the negro's 
unconscious revenge for his own debasement.</p>
          <p>The houses they passed now grew scattering, 
and the quarter of the town more neglected. 
Warwick felt himself wondering where the girl 
might be going in a neighborhood so uninviting. 
When she stopped to pull a half-naked negro 
child out of a mudhole and set him upon his feet, 
he thought she might be some young lady from the 
upper part of the town, bound on some errand of 
mercy, or going, perhaps, to visit an old servant or 
look for a new one. Once she threw a backward 
glance at Warwick, thus enabling him to catch a 
second glimpse of a singularly pretty face. 
Perhaps the young woman found his presence in the
<pb id="chesnutt10" n="10"/>
neighborhood as unaccountable as he had deemed
hers; for, finding his glance fixed upon her, she
quickened her pace with an air of startled timidity.</p>
          <p>“A woman with such a figure,” thought War-
wick, “ought to be able to face the world with the 
confidence of Phryne confronting her judges.”</p>
          <p>By this time Warwick was conscious that 
something more than mere grace or beauty had 
attracted him with increasing force toward this 
young woman. A suggestion, at first faint and 
elusive, of something familiar, had grown stronger 
when he heard her voice, and became more and 
more pronounced with each rod of their advance; 
and when she stopped finally before a gate, and, 
opening it, went into a yard shut off from the
street by a row of dwarf cedars, Warwick had 
already discounted in some measure the surprise he 
would have felt at seeing her enter there had he 
not walked down Front Street behind her. There 
was still sufficient unexpectedness about the act, 
however, to give him a decided thrill of pleasure.</p>
          <p>“It must be Rena,” he murmured. “Who 
could have dreamed that she would blossom out 
like that? It must surely be Rena!”</p>
          <p>He walked slowly past the gate and peered 
through a narrow gap in the cedar hedge. The 
girl was moving along a sanded walk, toward a 
gray, unpainted house, with a steep roof, broken 
by dormer windows. The trace of timidity he had
<pb id="chesnutt11" n="11"/>
observed in her had given place to the more assured
bearing of one who is upon his own ground. The
garden walks were bordered by long rows of 
jonquils, pinks, and carnations, inclosing clumps of 
fragrant shrubs, lilies, and roses already in bloom. 
Toward the middle of the garden stood two fine 
magnolia-trees, with heavy, dark green, glistening 
leaves, while nearer the house two mighty elms 
shaded a wide piazza, at one end of which a 
honey-suckle vine, and at the other a Virginia creeper, 
running over a wooden lattice, furnished additional 
shade and seclusion. On dark or wintry 
days, the aspect of this garden must have been
extremely sombre and depressing, and it might 
well have seemed a fit place to hide some guilty or
disgraceful secret. But on the bright morning 
when Warwick stood looking through the cedars, 
it seemed, with its green frame and canopy and its 
bright carpet of flowers, an ideal retreat from the 
fierce sunshine and the sultry heat of the 
approaching summer.</p>
          <p>The girl stooped to pluck a rose, and as she 
bent over it, her profile was clearly outlined. She 
held the flower to her face with a long-drawn 
inhalation, then went up the steps, crossed the piazza, 
opened the door without knocking, and entered 
the house with the air of one thoroughly at home.</p>
          <p>“Yes,” said the young man to himself, “it's 
Rena, sure enough.”</p>
          <p>The house stood on a corner, around which the
cedar hedge turned, continuing along the side of
<pb id="chesnutt12" n="12"/>
the garden until it reached the line of the front of 
the house. The piazza to a rear wing, at right 
angles to the front of the house, was open to 
inspection from the side street, which, to judge from its 
deserted look, seemed to be but little used. Turning 
into this street and walking leisurely past the 
back yard, which was only slightly screened from 
the street by a china tree, Warwick perceived the 
young woman standing on the piazza, facing an 
elderly woman, who sat in a large rocking-chair, 
plying a pair of knitting-needles on a half-finished 
stocking. Warwick's walk led him within three 
feet of the side gate, which he felt an almost 
irresistible impulse to enter. Every detail of the 
house and garden was familiar; a thousand cords 
of memory and affection drew him thither; but a 
stronger counter-motive prevailed. With a great 
effort he restrained himself, and after a momentary 
pause, walked slowly on past the house, with a 
backward glance, which he turned away when he 
saw that it was observed.</p>
          <p>Warwick's attention had been so fully absorbed 
by the house behind the cedars and the women 
there, that he had scarcely noticed, on the other 
side of the neglected by-street, two men working 
by a large open window, in a low, rude building 
with a clapboarded roof, directly opposite the back 
piazza occupied by the two women. Both the men 
were busily engaged in shaping barrel-staves, each 
wielding a sharp-edged drawing-knife on a piece of 
seasoned oak clasped tightly in a wooden vise.</p>
          <pb id="chesnutt13" n="13"/>
          <p>“I jes' wonder who dat man is, an' w'at he's 
doin' on dis street,” observed the younger of the 
two, with a suspicious air. He had noticed the 
gentleman's involuntary pause and his interest in 
the opposite house, and had stopped work for a 
moment to watch the stranger as he went on down 
the street.</p>
          <p>“Nev' min' 'bout dat man,” said the elder one. 
“You 'ten' ter yo' wuk an' finish dat bairl-stave. 
You spen's enti'ely too much er yo' time stretchin' 
yo' neck after other people. An' you need n' 'sturb 
yo'se'f 'bout dem folks 'cross de street, fer dey 
ain't yo' kin', an' you 're wastin' yo' time both'in' 
yo' min' wid 'em, er wid folks w'at comes on de 
street on account of 'em. Look sha'p now, boy, 
er you'll git dat stave trim' too much.”</p>
          <p>The younger man resumed his work, but still 
found time to throw a slanting glance out of the 
window. The gentleman, he perceived, stood for 
a moment on the rotting bridge across the old 
canal, and then walked slowly ahead until he 
turned to the right into Back Street, a few rods 
farther on.</p>
        </div2>
        <pb id="chesnutt14" n="14"/>
        <div2>
          <head>AN EVENING VISIT</head>
          <p>Toward evening of the same day, Warwick took
his way down Front Street in the gathering dusk. 
By the time night had spread its mantle over the 
earth, he had reached the gate by which he had 
seen the girl of his morning walk enter the cedar-
bordered garden. He stopped at the gate and 
glanced toward the house, which seemed dark and 
silent and deserted.</p>
          <p>“It 's more than likely,” he thought, “that they 
are in the kitchen. I reckon I 'd better try the 
back door.”</p>
          <p>But as he drew cautiously near the corner, he 
saw a man's figure outlined in the yellow light 
streaming from the open door of a small house 
between Front Street and the cooper shop. 
Wishing, for reasons of his own, to avoid observation, 
Warwick did not turn the corner, but walked on 
down Front Street until he reached a point from 
which he could see, at a long angle, a ray of light 
proceeding from the kitchen window of the house
behind the cedars.</p>
          <p>“They are there,” he muttered with a sigh of 
relief, for he had feared they might be away. “I 
suspect I'll have to go to the front door, after all. 
No one can see me through the trees.”</p>
          <pb id="chesnutt15" n="15"/>
          <p>He retraced his steps to the front gate, which 
he essayed to open. There was apparently some 
defect in the latch, for it refused to work. Warwick 
remembered the trick, and with a slight sense 
of amusement, pushed his foot under the gate and 
gave it a hitch to the left, after which it opened 
readily enough. He walked softly up the sanded 
path, tiptoed up the steps and across the piazza, 
and rapped at the front door, not too loudly, lest
this too might attract the attention of the man 
across the street. There was no response to his 
rap. He put his ear to the door and heard voices 
within, and the muffled sound of footsteps. After 
a moment he rapped again, a little louder than 
before.</p>
          <p>There was an instant cessation of the sounds
within. He rapped a third time, to satisfy any 
lingering doubt in the minds of those who he felt 
sure were listening in some trepidation. A 
moment later a ray of light streamed through the 
keyhole</p>
          <p>“Who's there?” a woman's voice inquired
somewhat sharply.</p>
          <p>“A gentleman,” answered Warwick, not 
holding it yet time to reveal himself. “Does Mis' 
Molly Walden live here?”</p>
          <p>“Yes,” was the guarded answer. “I'm Mis' 
Walden. What's yo'r business?”</p>
          <p>“I have a message to you from your son 
John.”</p>
          <p>A key clicked in the lock. The door opened,
<pb id="chesnutt16" n="16"/>
and the elder of the two women Warwick had
seen upon the piazza stood in the doorway, peering 
curiously and with signs of great excitement into
the face of the stranger.</p>
          <p>“You 've got a message from my son, you say?” 
she asked with tremulous agitation. “Is he sick, 
or in trouble?”</p>
          <p>“No. He's well and doing well, and sends 
his love to you, and hopes you've not forgotten 
him.”</p>
          <p>“Fergot him? No, God knows I ain't fergot 
him! But come in, sir, an' tell me somethin' 
mo' about him.”</p>
          <p>Warwick went in, and as the woman closed the 
door after him, he threw a glance round the room.
On the wall, over the mantelpiece, hung a steel
engraving of General Jackson at the battle of
New Orleans, and, on the opposite wall, a framed
fashion-plate from “Godey's Lady's Book.” In 
the middle of the room an octagonal centre-table 
with a single leg, terminating in three sprawling 
feet, held a collection of curiously shaped sea-shells.
There was a great haircloth sofa, somewhat the
worse for wear, and a well-filled bookcase. The
screen standing before the fireplace was covered
with Confederate bank-notes of various denomi-
nations and designs, in which the heads of 
Jefferson Davis and other Confederate leaders were 
conspicuous.</p>
          <lg type="poem">
            <l>“Imperious Cæsar, dead, and turned to clay,</l>
            <l>Might stop a hole to keep the wind away,”</l>
          </lg>
          <pb id="chesnutt17" n="17"/>
          <p>murmured the young man, as his eye fell upon this
specimen of decorative art.</p>
          <p>The woman showed her visitor to a seat. She
then sat down facing him and looked at him closely. 
“When did you last see my son?” she asked.</p>
          <p>“I've never met your son,” he replied.</p>
          <p> Her face fell. “Then the message comes
through you from somebody else?”</p>
          <p>“No, directly from your son.”</p>
          <p>She scanned his face with a puzzled look. This
bearded young gentleman, who spoke so politely
and was dressed so well, surely  -  no, it could 
not be I and yet  -  </p>
          <p>Warwick was smiling at her through a mist of
tears. An electric spark of sympathy flashed
between them. They rose as if moved by one
impulse, and were clasped in each other's arms.</p>
          <p>“John, my John! It <hi rend="italics">is</hi> John!”</p>
          <p>“Mother  -  my dear old mother!”</p>
          <p>“I didn't think,” she sobbed, “that I'd ever
see you again.”</p>
          <p>He smoothed her hair and kissed her. “And 
are you glad to see me, mother?”</p>
          <p>“Am I glad to see you? It's like the dead
comin' to life. I thought I'd lost you forever, 
John, my son, my darlin' boy!” she answered, 
hugging him strenuously.</p>
          <p>“I could n't live without seeing you, mother,”
he said. He meant it, too, or thought he did,
although he had not seen her for ten years.</p>
          <p>“You 've grown so tall, John, and are such a
<pb id="chesnutt18" n="18"/>
fine gentleman! And you are a gentleman now,
John, ain't you  -  sure enough? Nobody knows 
the old story?”</p>
          <p>“Well, mother, I 've taken a man's chance in
life, and have tried to make the most of it; and 
I haven't felt under any obligation to spoil it 
by raking up old stories that are best forgotten. 
There are the dear old books: have they been 
read since I went away?”</p>
          <p>“No, honey, there's be'n nobody to read 'em,
excep' Rena, an' she don't take to books quite like
you did. But I've kep' 'em dusted clean, an' kep'
the moths an' the bugs out; for I hoped you'd
come back some day, an' knowed you'd like to find 
'em all in their places, jus' like you left 'em.”</p>
          <p>“That's mighty nice of you, mother. You
could have done no more if you had loved them
for themselves. But where is Rena? I saw her 
on the street to-day, but she didn't know me from
Adam; nor did I guess it was she until she opened
the gate and came into the yard.”</p>
          <p>“I've been so glad to see you that I'd fergot about 
her,” answered the mother. “Rena, oh, Rena!”</p>
          <p>The girl was not far away; she had been 
standing in the next room, listening intently to every 
word of the conversation, and only kept from 
coming in by a certain constraint that made a
brother whom she had not met for so many years
seem almost as much a stranger as if he had not
been connected with her by any tie.</p>
          <p>“Yes, mamma,” she answered, coming forward.</p>
          <pb id="chesnutt19" n="19"/>
          <p>“Rena, child, here's yo'r brother John, who's
come back to see us. Tell 'im howdy.”</p>
          <p>As she came forward, Warwick rose, put his
arm around her waist, drew her toward him, and
kissed her affectionately, to her evident embarrassment.
She was a tall girl, but he towered above 
her in quite a protecting fashion; and she thought 
with a thrill how fine it would be to have such a 
brother as this in the town all the time. How
proud she would be, if she could but walk up the
street with such a brother by her side! She 
could then hold up her head before all the world,
oblivious to the glance of pity or contempt. She 
felt a very pronounced respect for this tall 
gentleman who held her blushing face between his 
hands and looked steadily into her eyes.</p>
          <p>“You're the little sister I used to read stories
to, and whom I promised to come and see some
day. Do you remember how you cried when I
went away?”</p>
          <p>“It seems but yesterday,” she answered. “I've 
still got the dime you gave me.”</p>
          <p>He kissed her again, and then drew her down
beside him on the sofa, where he sat enthroned
between the two loving and excited women. No
king could have received more sincere or delighted
homage. He was a man, come into a household 
of women,  -  a man of whom they were proud, and 
to whom they looked up with fond reverence.
For he was not only a son,  -  a brother  -  but he
represented to them the world from which
<pb id="chesnutt20" n="20"/>
circumstances had shut them out, and to which distance
lent even more than its usual enchantment; and
they felt nearer to this far-off world because of the 
glory which Warwick reflected from it.</p>
          <p>“You're a very pretty girl,” said Warwick,
regarding his sister thoughtfully. “I followed 
you down Front Street this morning, and scarcely 
took my eyes off you all the way; and yet I 
didn't know you, and scarcely saw your face. 
You improve on acquaintance; to-night, I find you 
handsomer still.”</p>
          <p>“Now, John,” said his mother, expostulating
mildly, “you'll spile her, if you don't min'.”</p>
          <p>The girl was beaming with gratified vanity.
What woman would not find such praise sweet
from almost any source, and how much more so
from this great man, who, from his exalted station
in the world, must surely know the things whereof
he spoke! She believed every word of it; she
knew it very well indeed, but wished to hear it
repeated and itemized and emphasized.</p>
          <p>“No, he won't, mamma,” she asserted, “for 
he's flattering me. He talks as if I was some 
rich young lady, who lives on the Hill,”  -  the 
Hill was the aristocratic portion of the town,  -  
“instead of a poor”  -  </p>
          <p>“Instead of a poor young girl, who has the hill
to climb,” replied her brother, smoothing her hair
with his hand. Her hair was long and smooth 
and glossy, with a wave like the ripple of a 
summer breeze upon the surface of still water. It
<pb id="chesnutt21" n="21"/>
was the girl's great pride, and had been 
sedulously cared for. “What lovely hair! It has 
just the wave that yours lacks, mother.”</p>
          <p>“Yes,” was the regretful reply, “I've never 
be'n able to git that wave out. But her hair's 
be'n took good care of, an' there ain't nary gal 
in town that's got any finer.”</p>
          <p>“Don't worry about the wave, mother. It's 
just the fashionable ripple, and becomes her 
immensely. I think my little Albert favors his 
Aunt Rena somewhat.”</p>
          <p>“Your little Albert!” they cried. “You've 
got a child?”</p>
          <p>“Oh, yes,” he replied calmly, “a very fine baby
boy.”</p>
          <p>They began to purr in proud contentment at 
this information, and made minute inquiries about 
the age and weight and eyes and nose and other
important details of this precious infant. They
inquired more coldly about the child's mother, 
of whom they spoke with greater warmth when 
they learned that she was dead. They hung 
breathless on Warwick's words as he related 
briefly the story of his life since he had left, years 
before, the house behind the cedars  -  how with a 
stout heart and an abounding hope he had gone 
out into a seemingly hostile world, and made 
fortune stand and deliver. His story had for the 
women the charm of an escape from captivity, 
with all the thrill of a pirate's tale. With the 
whole world before him. he had remained in the
<pb id="chesnutt22" n="22"/>
South, the land of his fathers, where, he conceived, 
he had an inalienable birthright. By some 
good chance he had escaped military service in 
the Confederate army, and, in default of older 
and more experienced men, had undertaken, during 
the rebellion, the management of a large estate, 
which had been left in the hands of women and 
slaves. He had filled the place so acceptably, and
employed his leisure to such advantage, that at the
close of the war he found himself  -  he was 
modest enough to think, too, in default of a better 
man  -  the husband of the orphan daughter of the 
gentleman who had owned the plantation, and who 
had lost his life upon the battlefield. Warwick's 
wife was of good family, and in a more settled 
condition of society it would not have been easy 
for a young man of no visible antecedents to win 
her hand. A year or two later, he had taken the 
oath of allegiance, and had been admitted to the 
South Carolina bar. Rich in his wife's right, he 
had been able to practice his profession upon a 
high plane, without the worry of sordid cares, and
with marked success for one of his age.</p>
          <p>“I suppose,” he concluded, “that I have got 
along at the bar, as elsewhere, owing to the lack of 
better men. Many of the good lawyers were killed 
in the war, and most of the remainder were 
disqualified; while I had the advantage of being alive, 
and of never having been in arms against the 
government. People had to have lawyers, and they 
gave me their business in preference to the 
<pb id="chesnutt23" n="23"/>
carpet-baggers. Fortune, you know, favors the 
available man.”</p>
          <p>His mother drank in with parted lips and 
glistening eyes the story of his adventures and the 
record of his successes. As Rena listened, the 
narrow walls that hemmed her in seemed to draw 
closer and closer, as though they must crush her. 
Her brother watched her keenly. He had been 
talking not only to inform the women, but with 
a deeper purpose, conceived since his morning 
walk, and deepened as he had followed, during his 
narrative, the changing expression of Rena's face
and noted her intense interest in his story, her 
pride in his successes, and the occasional wistful 
look that indexed her self-pity so completely.</p>
          <p>“An' I s'pose you 're happy, John?” asked his
mother.</p>
          <p>“Well, mother, happiness is a relative term, 
and depends, I imagine, upon how nearly we think 
we get what we think we want. I have had my 
chance and haven't thrown it away, and I suppose 
I ought to be happy. But then, I have lost my 
wife, whom I loved very dearly, and who loved me 
just as much, and I 'm troubled about my child.”</p>
          <p>“Why?” they demanded. “Is there anything
the matter with him?”</p>
          <p>“No, not exactly. He's well enough, as babies
go, and has a good enough nurse, as nurses go.
But the nurse is ignorant, and not always careful.
A child needs some woman of its own blood to love
it and look after it intelligently.”</p>
          <pb id="chesnutt24" n="24"/>
          <p>Mis' Molly's eyes were filled with tearful yearning. 
She would have given all the world to warm 
her son's child upon her bosom; but she knew 
this could not be.</p>
          <p>“Did your wife leave any kin?” she asked with 
an effort.</p>
          <p>“No near kin; she was an only child.”</p>
          <p>“You'll be gettin' married again,” suggested
his mother</p>
          <p>“No,” he replied; “I think not.”</p>
          <p>Warwick was still reading his sister's face, and
saw the spark of hope that gleamed in her expressive 
eye.</p>
          <p>“If I had some relation of my own that I could
take into the house with me,” he said reflectively,
“the child might be healthier and happier, and I
should be much more at ease about him.”</p>
          <p>The mother looked from son to daughter with a
dawning apprehension and a sudden pallor. When
she saw the yearning in Rena's eyes, she threw 
herself at her son's feet.</p>
          <p>“Oh, John,” she cried despairingly, “don't take
her away from me! Don't take her, John, darlin',
for it'd break my heart to lose her!”</p>
          <p>Rena's arms were round her mother's neck, and 
Rena's voice was sounding in her ears. “There, 
there, mamma! Never mind! I won't leave you, 
mamma  -  dear old mamma! Your Rena'll stay 
with you always, and never, never leave you.”</p>
          <p>John smoothed his mother's hair with a 
comforting touch, patted her withered cheek
<pb id="chesnutt25" n="25"/>
soothingly, lifted her tenderly to her place by his side,
and put his arm about her.</p>
          <p>“You love your children, mother?”</p>
          <p>“They 're all I 've got,” she sobbed, “an' they
cos' me all I had. When the las' one 's gone, I'll
want to go too, for I'll be all alone in the world.
Don't take Rena, John; for if you do, I'll never
see her again, an' I can't bear to think of it. How
would you like to lose you one child?”</p>
          <p>“Well, well, mother, we'll say no more about
it. And now tell me all about yourself, and about
the neighbors, and how you got through the war,
and who's dead and who 's married  -  and 
everything.”</p>
          <p>The change of subject restored in some 
degree Mis' Molly's equanimity, and with returning
calmness came a sense of other responsibilities.</p>
          <p>“Good gracious, Rena!” she exclaimed. 
“John's been in the house an hour, and ain't had 
nothin' to eat yet! Go in the kitchen an' spread 
a clean tablecloth, an' git out that 'tater pone, an' 
a pitcher o' that las' kag o' persimmon beer, an' 
let John take a bite an' a sip.”</p>
          <p>Warwick smiled at the mention of these homely
dainties. “I thought of your sweet-potato pone 
at the hotel to-day, Then I was at dinner, and
wondered if you'd have some in the house. There
was never any like yours; and I 've forgotten the
taste of persimmon beer entirely.”</p>
          <p>Rena left the room to carry out her hospitable
commission. Warwick, taking advantage of her
<pb id="chesnutt26" n="26"/>
absence, returned after a while to the former 
subject.</p>
          <p>“Of course, mother,” he said calmly, “I 
wouldn't think of taking Rena away against your 
wishes. A mother's claim upon her child is a high 
and holy one. Of course she will have no chance 
here, where our story is known. The war has 
wrought great changes, has put the bottom rail on 
top, and all that  -  but it has n't wiped <hi rend="italics">that</hi> out.  Nothing but death can remove that stain, if it does 
not follow us even beyond the grave. Here she
must forever be  -  nobody! With me she might 
have got out into the world; with her beauty she 
might have made a good marriage; and, if I 
mistake not, she has sense as well as beauty.”</p>
          <p>“Yes,” sighed the mother, “she's got good 
sense. She ain't as quick as you was, an' don't 
read as many books, but she's keerful an' 
painstakin', an' always tries to do what's right. She's 
been thinkin' about goin' away somewhere an' 
tryin' to git a school to teach, er somethin', sence 
the Yankees have started 'em everywhere for po' 
white folks an' niggers too. But I don't like fer 
her to go too fur.”</p>
          <p>“With such beauty and brains,” continued
Warwick, “she could leave this town and make 
a place for herself. The place is already made. 
She has only to step into my carriage  -  after 
perhaps a little preparation  -  and ride up the hill 
which I have had to climb so painfully. It would 
be a great pleasure to me to see her at the top.
<pb id="chesnutt27" n="27"/>
But of course it is impossible  -  a mere idle dream. 
<hi rend="italics">Your</hi> claim comes first; her duty chains her here.”</p>
          <p>“It would be so lonely without her,” murmured 
the mother weakly, “an' I love her so  -  my las' 
one!”</p>
          <p>“No doubt  -  no doubt,” returned Warwick, 
with a sympathetic sigh; “of course you love her. 
It's not to be thought of for a moment. It's 
a pity that she couldn't have a chance here  -  but 
how could she? I had thought she might marry 
a gentleman; but I dare say she'll do as well as 
the rest of her friends  -  as well as Mary B., for
instance, who married  -  Homer Pettifoot, did you 
say? Or maybe Billy Oxendine might do for her. 
As long as she has never known any better, she'll 
probably be as well satisfied as though she married 
a rich man, and lived in a fine house, and kept a 
carriage and servants, and moved with the best in 
the land.”</p>
          <p>The tortured mother could endure no more. 
The one thing she desired above all others was her 
daughter's happiness. Her own life had not been 
governed by the highest standards, but about her 
love for her beautiful daughter there was no taint 
of selfishness. The life her son had described had 
been to her always the ideal but unattainable life. 
Circumstances, some beyond her control, and others 
for which she was herself in a measure responsible, 
had put it forever and inconceivably beyond her 
reach. It had been conquered by her son. It
<pb id="chesnutt28" n="28"/>
beckoned to her daughter. The comparison of this 
free and noble life with the sordid existence of 
those around her broke down the last barrier of 
opposition.</p>
          <p>“O Lord!” she moaned, “what shall I do 
without her? It'll be lonely, John  -  so lonely!”</p>
          <p>“You'll have your home, mother,” said 
Warwick tenderly, accepting the implied surrender. 
“You'll have your friends and relatives, and the 
knowledge that your children are happy. I'll let 
you hear from us often, and no doubt you can see 
Rena now and then. But you must let her go, 
mother,  -  it would be a sin against her to refuse.”</p>
          <p>“She may go,” replied the mother brokenly. 
“I'll not stand in her way  -  I've got sins enough 
to answer for already.”</p>
          <p>Warwick watched her pityingly. He had stirred 
her feelings to unwonted depths, and his sympathy 
went out to her. If she had sinned, she had been 
more sinned against than sinning, and it was not 
his part to judge her. He had yielded to a 
sentimental weakness in deciding upon this trip to 
Patesville. A matter of business had brought him 
within a day's journey of the town, and an 
over-mastering impulse had compelled him to seek the 
mother who had given him birth and the old town 
where he had spent the earlier years of his life. 
No one would have acknowledged sooner than he 
the folly of this visit. Men who have elected to 
govern their lives by principles of abstract right 
and reason, which happen, perhaps, to be at
<pb id="chesnutt29" n="29"/>
variance with what society considers equally right and
reasonable, should, for fear of complications, be 
careful about descending from the lofty heights of 
logic to the common level of impulse and affection. 
Many years before, Warwick, when a lad of 
eighteen, had shaken the dust of the town from his 
feet, and with it, he fondly thought, the blight of his 
inheritance, and had achieved elsewhere a worthy 
career. But during all these years of absence he 
had cherished a tender feeling for his mother, and 
now again found himself in her house, amid the 
familiar surroundings of his childhood. His visit 
had brought joy to his mother's heart, and was 
now to bring its shrouded companion, sorrow. His 
mother had lived her life, for good or ill. A wider 
door was open to his sister  -  her mother must not 
bar the entrance.</p>
          <p>“She may go,” the mother repeated sadly, 
drying her tears. “I'll give her up for her good.”</p>
          <p>“The table's ready, mamma,” said Rena, coming 
to the door.</p>
          <p>The lunch was spread in the kitchen, a large 
unplastered room at the rear, with a wide fireplace at
one end. Only yesterday, it seemed to Warwick, 
he had sprawled upon the hearth, turning sweet 
potatoes before the fire, or roasting groundpeas in 
the ashes; or, more often, reading, by the light of 
a blazing pine-knot or lump of resin, some volume 
from the bookcase in the hall. From Bulwer's 
novel, he had read the story of Warwick the 
Kingmaker, and upon leaving home had chosen it
<pb id="chesnutt30" n="30"/>
for his own. He was a new man, but he had the 
blood of an old race, and he would select for his 
own one of its worthy names. Overhead loomed 
the same smoky beams, decorated with what might 
have been, from all appearances, the same bunches 
of dried herbs, the same strings of onions and red 
peppers. Over in the same corner stood the same 
spinning-wheel, and through the open door of an 
adjoining room he saw the old loom, where in 
childhood he had more than once thrown the 
shuttle. The kitchen was different from the stately 
dining-room of the old colonial mansion where he 
now lived; but it was homelike, and it was familiar.
The sight of it moved his heart, and he felt for 
the moment a sort of a blind anger against the 
fate which made it necessary that he should visit 
the home of his childhood, if at all, like a thief 
in the night. But he realized, after a moment, 
that the thought was pure sentiment, and that one 
who had gained so much ought not to complain if 
he must give up a little. He who would climb 
the heights of life must leave even the pleasantest 
valleys behind.</p>
          <p>“Rena,” asked her mother, “how'd you like to 
go an' pay yo'r brother John a visit? I guess I 
might spare you for a little while.”</p>
          <p>The girl's eyes lighted up. She would not have 
gone if her mother had wished her to stay, but she 
would always have regarded this as the lost 
opportunity of her life.</p>
          <p>“Are you sure you don't care, mamma?” she
asked, hoping and yet doubting.</p>
          <pb id="chesnutt31" n="31"/>
          <p>“Oh, I'll manage to git along somehow or other.
You can go an' stay till you git homesick, an' then 
John 'll let you come back home.”</p>
          <p>But Mis' Molly believed that she would never 
come back, except, like her brother, under cover of 
the night. She must lose her daughter as well as 
her son, and this should be the penance for her sin. 
That her children must expiate as well the sins of 
their fathers, who had sinned so lightly, after the 
manner of men, neither she nor they could foresee, 
since they could not read the future.</p>
          <p>The next boat by which Warwick could take his 
sister away left early in the morning of the next 
day but one. He went back to his hotel with the 
understanding that the morrow should be devoted 
to getting Rena ready for her departure, and that 
Warwick would visit the household again the 
following evening; for, as has been intimated, there 
were several reasons why there should be no open 
relations between the fine gentleman at the hotel 
and the women in the house behind the cedars, who, 
while superior in blood and breeding to the people 
of the neighborhood in which they lived, were yet 
under the shadow of some cloud which clearly shut 
them out from the better society of the town. Almost 
any resident could have given one or more of
these reasons, of which any one would have been
sufficient to most of them; and to some of them
Warwick's mere presence in the town would have
seemed a bold and daring thing.</p>
        </div2>
        <pb id="chesnutt32" n="32"/>
        <div2>
          <head>THE OLD JUDGE</head>
          <p>On the morning following the visit to his
mother, Warwick visited the old judge's office.
The judge was not in, but the door stood open,
and Warwick entered to await his return. There
had been fewer changes in the office, where he had 
spent many, many hours, than in the town itself. 
The dust was a little thicker, the papers in the 
pigeon-holes of the walnut desk were a little 
yellower, the cobwebs in the corners a little more
aggressive. The flies droned as drowsily and the
murmur of the brook below was just as audible.
Warwick stood at the rear window and looked out
over a familiar view. Directly across the creek, on
the low ground beyond, might be seen the 
dilapidated stone foundation of the house where once 
had lived Flora Macdonald, the Jacobite refugee, 
the most romantic character of North Carolina 
history. Old Judge Straight had had a tree cut 
away from the creek-side opposite his window, so 
that this historic ruin might be visible from his 
office; for the judge could trace the ties of blood 
that connected him collaterally with this famous 
personage. His pamphlet on Flora Macdonald,
<pb id="chesnutt33" n="33"/>
printed for private circulation, was highly prized 
by those of his friends who were fortunate enough 
to obtain a copy. To the left of the window a 
placid mill-pond spread its wide expanse, and to 
the right the creek disappeared under a canopy of
overhanging trees.</p>
          <p>A footstep sounded in the doorway, and 
Warwick, turning, faced the old judge. Time had left 
greater marks upon the lawyer than upon his office. 
His hair was whiter, his stoop more pronounced; 
when he spoke to Warwick, his voice had some of 
the shrillness of old age; and in his hand, upon 
which the veins stood out prominently, a decided 
tremor was perceptible.</p>
          <p>“Good-morning, Judge Straight,” said the
young man, removing his hat with the graceful
Southern deference of the young for the old.</p>
          <p>“Good-morning, sir,” replied the judge with
equal courtesy.</p>
          <p>“You don't remember me, I imagine,” 
suggested Warwick.</p>
          <p>“Your face seems familiar,” returned the judge
cautiously, “but I cannot for the moment recall
your name. I shall be glad to have you refresh 
my memory.”</p>
          <p>“I was John Walden, sir, when you knew 
me.”</p>
          <p>The judge's face still gave no answering light 
of recognition.</p>
          <p>“Your old office-boy,” continued the younger
man.</p>
          <pb id="chesnutt34" n="34"/>
          <p>“Ah, indeed, so you were!” rejoined the judge
warmly, extending his hand with great cordiality,
and inspecting Warwick more closely through his
spectacles. “Let me see  -  you went away a few
years before the war, wasn't it?”</p>
          <p>“Yes, sir, to South Carolina.”</p>
          <p>“Yes, yes, I remember now! I had been
thinking it was to the North. So many things
have happened since then, that it taxes an old
man's memory to keep track of them all. Well,
well! and how have you been getting along?”</p>
          <p>Warwick told his story in outline, much as he
had given it to his mother and sister, and the
judge seemed very much interested.</p>
          <p>“And you married into a good family?” he
asked.</p>
          <p>“Yes, sir.”</p>
          <p>“And have children?”</p>
          <p>“One.”</p>
          <p>“And you are visiting your mother?”</p>
          <p>“Not exactly. I have seen her, but I am
stopping at a hotel.”</p>
          <p>“H'm! Are you staying long?”</p>
          <p>“I leave to-morrow.”</p>
          <p>“It 's well enough. I wouldn't stay too long.
The people of a small town are inquisitive about
strangers, and some of them have long memories.
I remember we went over the law, which was in
your favor; but custom is stronger than law  -  in
these matters custom <hi rend="italics">is</hi> law. It was a great pity
that your father did not make a will. Well, my
<pb id="chesnutt35" n="35"/>
boy, I wish you continued good luck; I imagined
you would make your way.”</p>
          <p>Warwick went away, and the old judge sat for
a moment absorbed in reflection. “Right and
wrong,” he mused, “must be eternal verities, but
our standards for measuring them vary with our
latitude and our epoch. We make our customs
lightly; once made, like our sins, they grip us in
bands of steel; we become the creatures of our
creations. By one standard my old office-boy
should never have been born. Yet he is a son of
Adam, and came into existence in the way 
ordained by God from the beginning of the world.
In equity he would seem to be entitled to his
chance in life; it might have been wiser, though,
for him to seek it farther afield than South 
Carolina. It was too near home, even though the laws
were with him.”</p>
        </div2>
        <pb id="chesnutt36" n="36"/>
        <div2>
          <head>DOWN THE RIVER</head>
          <p>Neither mother nor daughter slept a great
deal during the night of Warwick's first visit. 
Mis' Molly anointed her sacrifice with tears and 
cried herself to sleep. Rena's emotions were more
conflicting; she was sorry to leave her mother, but
glad to go with her brother. The mere journey 
she was about to make was a great event for the 
two women to contemplate, to say nothing of the
golden vision that lay beyond, for neither of them
had ever been out of the town or its vicinity.</p>
          <p>The next day was devoted to preparations for
the journey. Rena's slender wardrobe was made
ready and packed in a large valise. Towards 
sunset, Mis' Molly took off her apron, put on her
slat-bonnet,  -  she was ever the pink of neatness,
  -  picked her way across the street, which was
muddy from a rain during the day, traversed the
foot-bridge that spanned the ditch in front of the
cooper shop, and spoke first to the elder of the two
men working there.</p>
          <p>“Good-evenin', Peter.”</p>
          <p>“Good-evenin', maim,” responded the man
briefly, and not relaxing at all the energy with
which he was trimming a barrel-stave.</p>
          <pb id="chesnutt37" n="37"/>
          <p>Mis' Molly then accosted the younger workman, 
a dark-brown young man, small in stature, but 
with a well-shaped head, an expressive forehead, 
and features indicative of kindness, intelligence, 
humor, and imagination. “Frank,” she asked, 
“can I git you to do somethin' fer me soon in the 
mo'nin'?”</p>
          <p>“Yas 'm, I reckon so,” replied the young man,
resting his hatchet on the chopping-block. “W'at
is it, Mis' Molly?”</p>
          <p>“My daughter's goin' away on the boat, an' I
'lowed you would n' min' totin' her kyarpet-bag
down to the w'arf, onless you'd ruther haul it down 
on yo'r kyart. It ain't very heavy. Of co'se I'll 
pay you fer you trouble.”</p>
          <p>“Thank y', ma'm,” he replied. He knew that 
she would not pay him, for the simple reason that 
he would not accept pay for such a service. “Is 
she gwine fur?” he asked, with a sorrowful look,
which he could not entirely disguise.</p>
          <p>“As fur as Wilmin'ton an' beyon'. She'll be
visitin' her brother John, who lives in  -  another
State, an' wants her to come an' see him.”</p>
          <p>“Yes em, I'll come. I won' need de kyart  -   
I'll tote de bag. 'Bout w'at time shill I come 
over?”</p>
          <p>“Well 'long 'bout seven o'clock or half pas'.
She's goin' on the Old North State, an' it leaves 
at eight.”</p>
          <p>Frank stood looking after Mis' Molly as she
picked her way across the street, until he was
<pb id="chesnutt38" n="38"/>
recalled to his duty by a sharp word from his 
father.</p>
          <p>“ 'Ten' ter yo' wuk, boy, 'ten' ter yo' wuk. You 
're wastin' yo' time  -  wastin' yo' time!”</p>
          <p>Yes, he was wasting his time. The beautiful 
young girl across the street could never be 
anything to him. But he had saved her life once, 
and had dreamed that he might render her again 
some signal service that might win her friendship, 
and convince her of his humble devotion. For 
Frank was not proud. A smile, which Peter 
would have regarded as condescending to a free 
man, who, since the war, was as good as anybody 
else; a kind word, which Peter would have 
considered offensively patronizing; a piece of Mis'
Molly's famous potato pone from Rena's hands, 
  -  a bone to a dog, Peter called it once;  -  were 
ample rewards for the thousand and one small 
services Frank had rendered the two women who 
lived in the house behind the cedars.</p>
          <p>Frank went over in the morning a little ahead 
of the appointed time, and waited on the back 
piazza until his services were required.</p>
          <p>“You ain't gwine ter be gone long, is you, Miss
Rena?” he inquired, when Rena came out dressed 
for the journey in her best frock, with broad white 
collar and cuffs.</p>
          <p>Rena did not know. She had been asking 
herself the same question. All sorts of vague dreams 
had floated through her mind during the last few
<pb id="chesnutt39" n="39"/>
hours, as to what the future might bring forth. 
But she detected the anxious note in Frank's voice, 
and had no wish to give this faithful friend of the 
family unnecessary pain.</p>
          <p>“Oh, no, Frank, I reckon not. I'm supposed 
to be just going on a short visit. My brother 
has lost his wife, and wishes me to come and stay 
with him awhile, and look after his little boy.”</p>
          <p>“I'm feared you'll lack it better dere, Miss 
Rena,” replied Frank sorrowfully, dropping his 
mask of unconcern, “an' den you won't come 
back, an' none er yo' frien's won't never see you 
no mo'.”</p>
          <p>“You don't think, Frank,” asked Rena severely, 
“that I would leave my mother and my home and 
all my friends, and <hi rend="italics">never</hi> come back again?”</p>
          <p>“Why, no 'ndeed,” interposed Mis' Molly 
wistfully, as she hovered around her daughter, giving 
her hair or her gown a touch here and there; 
she'll be so homesick in a month that she'll be 
willin' to walk home.”</p>
          <p>“You would n' never hafter do dat, Miss Rena,”
returned Frank, with a disconsolate smile. “Ef 
you ever wanter come home, an' can't git back no 
other way, jes' let <hi rend="italics">me</hi> know, an' I'll take my mule 
an' my kyart an' fetch you back, ef it's from de 
een' er de worl'.”</p>
          <p>“Thank you, Frank, I believe you would,” said 
the girl kindly. “You're a true friend, Frank, 
and I'll not forget you while I'm gone.”</p>
          <p>The idea of her beautiful daughter riding home
<pb id="chesnutt40" n="40"/>
from the end of the world with Frank, in a cart, 
behind a one-eyed mule, struck Mis' Molly as the 
height of the ridiculous  -  she was in a state of 
excitement where tears or laughter would have 
come with equal ease  -  and she turned away to 
hide her merriment. Her daughter was going to 
live in a fine house, and marry a rich man, and 
ride in her carriage. Of course a negro would 
drive the carriage, but that was different from
riding with one in a cart.</p>
          <p>When it was time to go, Mis' Molly and Rena 
set out on foot for the river, which was only a 
short distance away. Frank followed with the 
valise. There was no gathering of friends to see 
Rena off, as might have been the ease under 
different circumstances. Her departure had some of 
the characteristics of a secret flight; it was as 
important that her destination should not be known, 
as it had been that her brother should conceal his 
presence in the town.</p>
          <p>Mis' Molly and Rena remained on the bank until 
the steamer announced, with a raucous whistle, 
its readiness to depart. Warwick was seen for a 
moment on the upper deck, from which he greeted 
them with a smile and a slight nod. He had 
bidden his mother an affectionate farewell the 
evening before. Rena gave her hand to Frank.</p>
          <p>“Good-by, Frank,” she said, with a kind smile; 
“I hope you and mamma will be good friends 
while I'm gone.”</p>
          <p>The whistle blew a second warning blast, and
<pb id="chesnutt41" n="41"/>
the deck hands prepared to draw in the gang-plank. 
Rena flew into her mother's arms, and 
then, breaking away, hurried on board and retired 
to her state-room, from which she did not emerge 
during the journey. The window-blinds were 
closed, darkening the room, and the stewardess 
who came to ask if she should bring her some 
dinner could not see her face distinctly, but perceived 
enough to make her surmise that the young lady 
had been weeping.</p>
          <p>“Po' chile,” murmured the sympathetic colored 
woman, “I reckon some er her folks is dead, 
er her sweetheart's gone back on her, er e'se she's 
had some kin' er bad luck er 'nuther. W'ite folks 
has deir troubles jes' ez well ez black folks, an' 
sometimes feels 'em mo', 'cause dey ain't ez use' 
ter 'em.”</p>
          <p>Mis' Molly went back in sadness to the lonely 
house behind the cedars, henceforth to be peopled 
for her with only the memory of those she had 
loved. She had paid with her heart's blood 
another installment on the Shylock's bond exacted 
by society for her own happiness of the past and 
her children's prospects for the future.</p>
          <p>The journey down the sluggish river to the 
seaboard in the flat-bottomed, stern-wheel steamer 
lasted all day and most of the night. During the 
first half-day, the boat grounded now and then 
upon a sand-bank, and the half-naked negro 
deckhands toiled with ropes and poles to release it. 
Several times before Rena fell asleep that night,
<pb id="chesnutt42" n="42"/> 
the steamer would tie up at a landing, and by the 
light of huge pine torches she watched the boat 
hands send the yellow turpentine barrels down the 
steep bank in a long string, or pass cord-wood on 
board from hand to hand. The excited negroes, 
their white teeth and eyeballs glistening in the 
surrounding darkness to which their faces formed 
no relief; the white officers in brown linen, shouting, 
swearing, and gesticulating; the yellow, flickering 
torchlight over all,  -  made up a scene of 
which the weird interest would have appealed to a
more<hi rend="italics"> blasé</hi> traveler than this girl upon her first
journey.</p>
          <p>During the day, Warwick had taken his meals 
in the dining-room, with the captain and the other 
cabin passengers. It was learned that he was a 
South Carolina lawyer, and not a carpet-bagger. 
Such credentials were unimpeachable, and the 
passengers found him a very agreeable traveling 
companion. Apparently sound on the subject of 
negroes, Yankees, and the righteousness of the 
lost cause, he yet discussed these themes in a lofty 
and impersonal manner that gave his words greater 
weight than if he had seemed warped by a personal 
grievance. His attitude, in fact, piqued the
curiosity of one or two of the passengers.</p>
          <p>“Did your people lose any niggers?” asked 
one of them.</p>
          <p>“My father owned a hundred,” he replied 
grandly.</p>
          <p>Their respect for his views was doubled. It is
<pb id="chesnutt43" n="43"/>
easy to moralize about the misfortunes of others, 
and to find good in the evil that they suffer;  -   
only a true philosopher could speak thus lightly of 
his own losses.</p>
          <p>When the steamer tied up at the wharf at 
Wilmington, in the early morning, the young lawyer 
and a veiled lady passenger drove in the same 
carriage to a hotel. After they had breakfasted 
in a private room, Warwick explained to his sister 
the plan he had formed for her future. 
Henceforth she must be known as Miss Warwick, 
dropping the old name with the old life. He would 
place her for a year in a boarding-school at
Charleston, after which she would take her place 
as the mistress of his house. Having imparted 
this information, he took his sister for a drive 
through the town. There for the first time Rena 
saw great ships, which, her brother told her, sailed 
across the mighty ocean to distant lands, whose 
flags he pointed out drooping lazily at the 
mastheads. The business portion of the town had “an
ancient and fishlike smell,” and most of the trade
seemed to be in cotton and naval stores and 
products of the sea The wharves were piled high 
with cotton bales, and there were acres of barrels 
of resin and pitch and tar and spirits of turpentine. 
The market, a long, low, wooden structure, 
in the middle of the principal street, was filled 
with a mass of people of all shades, from 
blue-black to Saxon blonde, gabbling and gesticulating 
over piles of oysters and clams and freshly caught
<pb id="chesnutt44" n="44"/>
fish of varied hue. By ten o'clock the sun was 
beating down so fiercely that the glitter of the 
white, sandy streets dazzled and pained the eyes 
unaccustomed to it, and Rena was glad to be 
driven back to the hotel. The travelers left 
together on an early afternoon train.</p>
          <p>Thus for the time being was severed the last tie 
that bound Rena to her narrow past, and for some 
time to come the places and the people who had 
known her once were to know her no more.</p>
          <p>Some few weeks later, Mis' Molly called upon 
old Judge Straight with reference to the taxes on 
her property.</p>
          <p>“Your son came in to see me the other day,” 
he remarked. “He seems to have got along.”</p>
          <p>“Oh, yes, judge, he's done fine, John has; an' 
he's took his sister away with him.”</p>
          <p>“Ah!” exclaimed the judge. Then after a 
pause he added, “I hope she may do as well.”</p>
          <p>“Thank you, sir,” she said, with a curtsy, as 
she rose to go. “We've always knowed that you 
were our friend and wished us well.”</p>
          <p>The judge looked after her as she walked away. 
Her bearing had a touch of timidity, a shade of 
affectation, and yet a certain pathetic dignity.</p>
          <p>“It is a pity,” he murmured, with a sigh, “that 
men cannot select their mothers. My young friend 
John has builded, whether wisely or not, very 
well; but he has come back into the old life and 
carried away a part of it, and I fear that this 
addition will weaken the structure.” </p>
        </div2>
        <pb id="chesnutt45" n="45"/>
        <div2>
          <head>THE TOURNAMENT</head>
          <p>The annual tournament of the Clarence Social 
Club was about to begin. The county fairground, 
where all was in readiness, sparkled with 
the youth and beauty of the town, standing here 
and there under the trees in animated groups, or 
moving toward the seats from which the pageant 
might be witnessed. A quarter of a mile of the 
race track, to right and left of the judges' stand, 
had been laid off for the lists. Opposite the 
grand stand, which occupied a considerable part 
of this distance, a dozen uprights had been erected 
at measured intervals. Projecting several feet 
over the track from each of these uprights was an 
iron crossbar, from which an iron hook depended. 
Between the uprights stout posts were planted, 
of such a height that their tops could be easily 
reached by a swinging sword-cut from a mounted 
rider passing upon the track. The influence of 
Walter Scott was strong upon the old South. 
The South before the war was essentially feudal,
and Scott's novels of chivalry appealed forcefully 
to the feudal heart. During the month preceding 
the Clarence tournament, the local bookseller had
<pb id="chesnutt46" n="46"/>
closed out his entire stock of “Ivanhoe,” consisting 
of five copies, and had taken orders for seven 
copies more. The tournament scene in this popular 
novel furnished the model after which these 
bloodless imitations of the ancient passages-at-
arms were conducted, with such variations as were 
required to adapt them to a different age and
civilization.</p>
          <p>The best people gradually filled the grand 
stand, while the poorer white and colored folks 
found seats outside, upon what would now be 
known as the “bleachers,” or stood alongside the 
lists. The knights, masquerading in fanciful 
costumes, in which bright-colored garments, gilt 
paper, and cardboard took the place of knightly 
harness, were mounted on spirited horses. Most 
of them were gathered at one end of the lists, 
while others practiced their steeds upon the 
unoccupied portion of the race track.</p>
          <p>The judges entered the grand stand, and one 
of them, after looking at his watch, gave a signal.
Immediately a herald, wearing a bright yellow 
sash, blew a loud blast upon a bugle, and, big 
with the importance of his office, galloped wildly 
down the lists. An attendant on horseback busied 
himself hanging upon each of the pendent hooks 
an iron ring, of some two inches in diameter, 
while another, on foot, placed on top of each of 
the shorter posts a wooden ball some four inches 
through.</p>
          <p>“It's my first tournament,” observed a lady
<pb id="chesnutt47" n="47"/>
near the front of the grand stand, leaning over 
and addressing John Warwick, who was seated in 
the second row, in company with a very handsome 
girl. “It is somewhat different from Ashby-de-
la-Zouch.”</p>
          <p>“It is the renaissance of chivalry, Mrs. Newberry,” 
replied the young lawyer, “and, like any 
other renaissance, it must adapt itself to new times 
and circumstances. For instance, when we build 
a Greek portico, having no Pentelic marble near 
at hand, we use a pine-tree, one of nature's 
columns, which Grecian art at its best could only 
copy and idealize. Our knights are not weighted 
down with heavy armor, but much more 
appropriately attired, for a day like this, in costumes 
that recall the picturesqueness, without the 
discomfort, of the old knightly harness. For an
iron-headed lance we use a wooden substitute, with 
which we transfix rings instead of hearts; while 
our trusty blades hew their way through wooden 
blocks instead of through flesh and blood. It is 
a South Carolina renaissance which has points of 
advantage over the tournaments of the olden time.”</p>
          <p>“I'm afraid, Mr. Warwick,” said the lady, 
“that you're the least bit heretical about our
chivalry  -  or else you 're a little too deep for me.”</p>
          <p>“The last would be impossible, Mrs. Newberry; 
and I'm sure our chivalry has proved its valor on 
many a hard-fought field. The spirit of a thing,
after all, is what counts; and what is lacking 
here? We have the lists, the knights, the
<pb id="chesnutt48" n="48"/>
prancing steeds, the trial of strength and skill. If our 
knights do not run the physical risks of 
Ashby-de-la-Zouch, they have all the mental stimulus. 
Wounded vanity will take the place of wounded 
limbs, and there will be broken hopes in lieu of 
broken heads. How many hearts in yonder group 
of gallant horsemen beat high with hope! How 
many possible Queens of Love and Beauty are in 
this group of fair faces that surround us!”</p>
          <p>The lady was about to reply, when the bugle
sounded again, and the herald dashed swiftly back
upon his prancing steed to the waiting group of 
riders. The horsemen formed three abreast, and 
rode down the lists in orderly array. As they 
passed the grand stand, each was conscious of the 
battery of bright eyes turned upon him, and each 
gave by his bearing some idea of his ability to 
stand fire from such weapons. One horse pranced 
proudly, another caracoled with grace. One rider 
fidgeted nervously, another trembled and looked
the other way. Each horseman carried in his hand 
a long wooden lance and wore at his side a cavalry 
sabre, of which there were plenty to be had since 
the war, at small expense. Several left the ranks 
and drew up momentarily beside the grand stand, 
where they took from fair hands a glove or a 
flower, which was pinned upon the rider's breast 
or fastened upon his bat  -  a ribbon or a veil, which 
was tied about the lance like a pennon, but far
enough from the point not to interfere with the
usefulness of the weapon.</p>
          <pb id="chesnutt49" n="49"/>
          <p>As the troop passed the lower end of the grand
stand, a horse, excited by the crowd, became 
somewhat unmanageable, and in the effort to curb 
him, the rider dropped his lance. The prancing 
animal reared, brought one of his hoofs down upon 
the fallen lance with considerable force, and sent a 
broken piece of it flying over the railing opposite 
the grand stand, into the middle of a group of 
spectators standing there. The flying fragment 
was dodged by those who saw it coming, but 
brought up with a resounding thwack against the 
head of a colored man in the second row, who 
stood watching the grand stand with an eager and
curious gaze. He rubbed his head ruefully, and 
made a good-natured response to the chaffing of 
his neighbors, who, seeing no great harm done, 
made witty and original remarks about the 
advantage of being black upon occasions where one's 
skull was exposed to danger. Finding that the 
blow had drawn blood, the young man took out a 
red bandana handkerchief and tied it around his 
head, meantime letting his eye roam over the faces 
in the grand stand, as though in search of some 
one that he expected or hoped to find there.</p>
          <p>The knights, having reached the end of the 
lists, now turned and rode back in open order, 
with such skillful horsemanship as to evoke a 
storm of applause from the spectators. The ladies 
in the grand stand waved their handkerchiefs 
vigorously, and the men clapped their hands. The 
beautiful girl seated by Warwick's side accidentally
<pb id="chesnutt50" n="50"/>
let a little square of white lace-trimmed linen
slip from her hand. It fluttered lightly over the
railing, and, buoyed up by the air, settled slowly
toward the lists. A young rider in the approaching
rear rank saw the handkerchief fall, and darting
swiftly forward, caught it on the point of his
lance ere it touched the ground. He drew up his
horse and made a movement as though to extend
the handkerchief toward the lady, who was blushing
profusely at the attention she had attracted by 
her carelessness. The rider hesitated a moment, 
glanced interrogatively at Warwick, and receiving 
a smile in return, tied the handkerchief around 
the middle of his lance and quickly rejoined his 
comrades at the head of the lists.</p>
          <p>The young man with the bandage round his
head, on the benches across the lists, had forced
his way to the front row and was leaning against
the railing. His restless eye was attracted by 
the falling handkerchief, and his face, hitherto
anxious, suddenly lit up with animation.</p>
          <p>“Yas, suh, yas, suh, it's her!” he muttered
softly. “It's Miss Rena, sho 's you bawn. She
looked lack a' angel befo', but now, up dere
'mongs' all dem rich, fine folks, she looks lack a
whole flock er angels. Dey ain' one er dem ladies
w'at could hol' a candle ter her. I wonder w'at 
dat man 's gwine ter do with her handkercher? I 
s'pose he's her gent'eman now. I wonder ef 
she'd know me er speak ter me ef she seed me? 
I reckon she would, spite er her gittin' up so in
<pb id="chesnutt51" n="51"/>
de worl'; fer she wuz alluz good ter ev'ybody, an'
dat let even <hi rend="italics">me</hi> in,” he concluded with a sigh.</p>
          <p>“Who is the lady, Tryon?” asked one of the
young men, addressing the knight who had taken
the handkerchief.</p>
          <p>“A Miss Warwick,” replied the knight pleasantly, 
“Miss Rowena Warwick, the lawyer's sister.”</p>
          <p>“I didn't know he had a sister,” rejoined the
first speaker. “I envy you your lady. There 
are six Rebeccas and eight Rowenas of my own
acquaintance in the grand stand, but she throws
them all into the shade. She has n't been here
long, surely; I haven't seen her before.”</p>
          <p>“She has been away at school; she came only
last night,” returned the knight of the crimson 
sash, briefly. He was already beginning to feel a 
proprietary interest in the lady whose token he 
wore, and did not care to discuss her with a casual 
acquaintance.</p>
          <p>The herald sounded the charge. A rider darted
out from the group and galloped over the course.
As he passed under each ring, he tried to catch it
on the point of his lance,  -  a feat which made 
the management of the horse with the left hand
necessary, and required a true eye and a steady
arm. The rider captured three of the twelve 
rings, knocked three others off the hooks, and 
left six undisturbed. Turning at the end of the 
lists, he took the lance with the reins in the left 
hand and drew his sword with the right. He
<pb id="chesnutt52" n="52"/>
then rode back over the course, cutting at the 
wooden balls upon the posts. Of these he clove 
one in twain, to use the parlance of chivalry, and 
knocked two others off their supports. His 
performance was greeted with a liberal measure of 
applause, for which he bowed in smiling 
acknowledgment as he took his place among 
the riders.</p>
          <p>Again the herald's call sounded, and the tourney
went forward. Rider after rider, with varying 
skill, essayed his fortune with lance and sword. 
Some took a liberal proportion of the rings; others 
merely knocked them over the boundaries, where 
they were collected by agile little negro boys and 
handed back to the attendants. A balking horse 
caused the spectators much amusement and his 
rider no little chagrin.</p>
          <p>The lady who had dropped the handkerchief 
kept her eye upon the knight who had bound it 
round his lance. “Who is he, John?” she asked 
the gentleman beside her.</p>
          <p>“That, my dear Rowena, is my good friend and
client, George Tryon, of North Carolina. If he had 
been a stranger, I should have said that he took a 
liberty; but as things stand, we ought to regard it 
as a compliment. The incident is quite in accord 
with the customs of chivalry. If George were but 
masked and you were veiled, we should have a 
romantic situation,  -  you the mysterious damsel in 
distress, he the unknown champion. The parallel, 
my dear, might not be so hard to draw, even as 
things are. But look, it is his turn now; I'll wager 
that he makes a good run.”</p>
          <pb id="chesnutt53" n="53"/>
          <p>“I'll take you up on that, Mr. Warwick,” said 
Mrs. Newberry from behind, who seemed to have a 
very keen ear for whatever Warwick said.</p>
          <p>Rena's eyes were fastened on her knight, so that 
she might lose no single one of his movements. As 
he rode down the lists, more than one woman found 
him pleasant to look upon. He was a tall, fair 
young man, with gray eyes, and a frank, open face. 
He wore a slight mustache, and when he smiled, 
showed a set of white and even teeth. He was 
mounted on a very handsome and spirited bay mare, 
was clad in a picturesque costume, of which velvet 
knee-breeches and a crimson scarf were the most 
conspicuous features, and displayed a marked skill 
in horsemanship. At the blast of the bugle his 
horse started forward, and, after the first few rods, 
settled into an even gallop. Tryon's lance, held 
truly and at the right angle, captured the first ring,
then the second and third. His coolness and steadiness 
seemed not at all disturbed by the applause 
which followed, and one by one the remaining rings 
slipped over the point of his lance, until at the end 
he had taken every one of the twelve. Holding 
the lance with its booty of captured rings in his 
left hand, together with the bridle rein, he drew his 
sabre with the right and rode back over the course. 
His horse moved like clockwork, his eye was true 
and his hand steady. Three of the wooden balls 
fell from the posts, split fairly in the middle, while 
from the fourth he sliced off a goodly piece and left 
the remainder standing in its place.</p>
          <pb id="chesnutt54" n="54"/>
          <p>This performance, by far the best up to this 
point, and barely escaping perfection, elicited a 
storm of applause. The rider was not so well 
known to the townspeople as some of the other 
participants, and his name passed from mouth to 
mouth in answer to numerous inquiries. The girl 
whose token he had worn also became an object of 
renewed interest, because of the result to her in 
case the knight should prove victor in the contest, 
of which there could now scarcely be a doubt; for 
but three riders remained, and it was very 
improbable that any one of them would excel the 
last. Wagers for the remainder of the tourney stood
anywhere from five, and even from ten to one, in 
favor of the knight of the crimson sash, and when 
the last course had been run, his backers were 
jubilant. No one of those following him had 
displayed anything like equal skill.</p>
          <p>The herald now blew his bugle and declared the
tournament closed. The judges put their heads 
together for a moment. The bugle sounded again, 
and the herald announced in a loud voice that Sir 
George Tryon, having taken the greatest number 
of rings and split the largest number of balls, was 
proclaimed victor in the tournament and entitled 
to the flowery chaplet of victory.</p>
          <p>Tryon, having bowed repeatedly in response to 
the liberal applause, advanced to the judges' stand 
and received the trophy from the hands of the chief 
judge, who exhorted him to wear the garland 
worthily, and to yield it only to a better man.</p>
          <pb id="chesnutt55" n="55"/>
          <p>“It will be your privilege, Sir George,” announced 
the judge,  “as the chief reward of your valor, 
to select from the assembled beauty of Clarence 
the lady whom you wish to honor, to whom 
we will all do homage as the Queen of Love and 
Beauty.”</p>
          <p>Tryon took the wreath and bowed his thanks. 
Then placing the trophy on the point of his lance, 
he spoke earnestly for a moment to the herald, and 
rode past the grand stand, from which there was 
another outburst of applause. Returning upon his 
tracks, the knight of the crimson sash paused before 
the group where Warwick and his sister sat, and 
lowered the wreath thrice before the lady whose 
token he had won.</p>
          <p>“Oyez! Oyez!” cried the herald; “Sir George
Tryon, the victor in the tournament, has chosen 
Miss Rowena Warwick as the Queen of Love and 
Beauty, and she will be crowned at the feast to-night 
and receive the devoirs of all true knights.”</p>
          <p>The fair-ground was soon covered with scattered
groups of the spectators of the tournament. In 
one group a vanquished knight explained in 
elaborate detail why it was that he had failed to win the 
wreath. More than one young woman wondered 
why some one of the home young men could not 
have taken the honors, or, if the stranger must win 
them, why he could not have selected some belle of 
the town as Queen of Love and Beauty instead 
of this upstart girl who had blown into the town 
over night, as one might say.</p>
          <pb id="chesnutt56" n="56"/>
          <p>Warwick and his sister, standing under a spreading 
elm, held a little court of their own. A dozen 
gentlemen and several ladies had sought an 
introduction before Tryon came up.</p>
          <p>“I suppose John would have a right to call me 
out, Miss Warwick,” said Tryon, when he had been 
formally introduced and had shaken hands with 
Warwick's sister, “for taking liberties with the 
property and name of a lady to whom I had not 
had an introduction; but I know John so well 
that you seemed like an old acquaintance; and 
when I saw you, and recalled your name, which 
your brother had mentioned more than once, I felt 
instinctively that you ought to be the queen. I 
entered my name only yesterday, merely to swell 
the number and make the occasion more interesting. 
These fellows have been practicing for a
month, and I had no hope of winning. I should 
have been satisfied, indeed, if I hadn't made 
myself ridiculous; but when you dropped your 
handkerchief, I felt a sudden inspiration; and as soon 
as I had tied it upon my lance, victory perched 
upon my saddle-bow, guided my lance and sword, 
and rings and balls went down before me like chaff 
before the wind. Oh, it was a great inspiration, 
Miss Warwick!”</p>
          <p>Rena, for it was our Patesville acquaintance fresh
from boarding-school, colored deeply at this frank 
and fervid flattery, and could only murmur an 
inarticulate reply. Her year of instruction, while 
distinctly improving her mind and manners, had
<pb id="chesnutt57" n="57"/>
scarcely prepared her for so sudden an elevation 
into a grade of society to which she had hitherto 
been a stranger. She was not without a certain 
courage, however, and her brother, who remained 
at her side, helped her over the most difficult 
situations.</p>
          <p>“We'll forgive you, George,” replied Warwick, 
“if you'll come home to luncheon with us.”</p>
          <p>“I'm mighty sorry  -  awfully sorry,” returned 
Tryon, with evident regret, “but I have another 
engagement, which I can scarcely break, even by 
the command of royalty. At what time shall I 
call for Miss Warwick this evening? I believe that 
privilege is mine, along with the other honors and 
rewards of victory,  -  unless she is bound to 
someone else.”</p>
          <p>“She is entirely free,” replied Warwick. “Come 
as early as you like, and I'll talk to you until she's
ready.”</p>
          <p>Tryon bowed himself away, and after a number 
of gentlemen and a few ladies had paid their 
respects to the Queen of Love and Beauty, and 
received an introduction to her, Warwick signaled 
to the servant who had his carriage in charge, and 
was soon driving homeward with his sister. No one 
of the party noticed a young negro, with a 
handkerchief bound around his head, who followed 
them until the carriage turned into the gate and swept 
up the wide drive that led to Warwick's doorstep.</p>
          <p>“Well, Rena,” said Warwick, when they found
themselves alone, “you have arrived. Your debut
<pb id="chesnutt58" n="58"/>
into society is a little more spectacular I should
have wished, but we must rise to the occasion 
and make the most of it. You are winning the 
first fruits of your opportunity. You are the most
envied woman in Clarence at this particular mo-
ment, and, unless I am mistaken, will be the most 
admired at the ball tonight.”</p>
        </div2>
        <pb id="chesnutt59" n="59"/>
        <div2>
          <head>THE QUEEN OF LOVE AND BEAUTY</head>
          <p>Shortly after luncheon, Rena had a visitor in 
the person of Mrs. Newberry, a vivacious young 
widow of the town, who proffered her services to 
instruct Rena in the etiquette of the annual ball.</p>
          <p>“Now, my dear,” said Mrs. Newberry, “the
first thing to do is to get your coronation robe
ready. It simply means a gown with a long train.
You have a lovely white waist. Get right into my
buggy, and we'll go down town to get the cloth,
take it over to Mrs. Marshall's, and have her run
you up a skirt this afternoon.”</p>
          <p>Rena placed herself unreservedly in the hands
of Mrs. Newberry, who introduced her to the best
dressmaker of the town, a woman of much 
experience in such affairs, who improvised during the 
afternoon a gown suited to the occasion. Mrs.
Marshall had made more than a dozen ball dresses
during the preceding month; being a wise woman
and understanding her business thoroughly, she
had made each one of them so that with a few
additional touches it might serve for the Queen of
Love and Beauty. This was her first direct order
for the specific garment.</p>
          <pb id="chesnutt60" n="60"/>
          <p>Tryon escorted Rena to the ball, which was
held in the principal public hall of the town, and
attended by all the best people. The champion 
still wore the costume of the morning, in place 
of evening dress, save that long stockings and
dancing-pumps had taken the place of riding boots. </p>
          <p>Rena went through the ordeal very creditably. 
Her shyness was palpable, but it was saved from 
awkwardness by her native grace and good sense. 
She made up in modesty what she lacked in 
aplomb. Her months in school had not eradicated 
a certain self-consciousness born of her secret. 
The brain-cells never lose the impressions of youth, 
and Rena's Patesville life was not far enough 
removed to have lost its distinctness of outline. 
Of the two, the present was more of a dream, 
the past was the more vivid reality. At school she 
had learned something from books and not a little 
from observation. She had been able to compare 
herself with other girls, and to see wherein she 
excelled or fell short of them. With a sincere desire 
for improvement, and a wish to please her brother 
and do him credit, she had sought to make the 
most of her opportunities. Building upon a 
foundation of innate taste and intelligence, she had 
acquired much of the self-possession which comes 
from a knowledge of correct standards of 
deportment. She had moreover learned without 
difficulty, for it suited her disposition, to keep silence 
when she could not speak to advantage. A certain 
necessary reticence about the past added strength
<pb id="chesnutt61" n="61"/>
to a natural reserve. Thus equipped, she held her
own very well in the somewhat trying ordeal of
the ball, at which the fiction of queenship and the
attendant ceremonies, which were pretty and 
graceful, made her the most conspicuous figure. Few 
of those who watched her move with easy  grace 
through the measures of the dance could have 
guessed how nearly her heart was in her mouth 
during much of the time.</p>
          <p>“You're doing splendidly, my dear,” said Mrs.
Newberry, who had constituted herself Rena's
chaperone.</p>
          <p>“I trust your Gracious Majesty is pleased with
the homage of your devoted subjects,” said Tryon,
who spent much of his time by her side and kept
up the character of knight in his speech and
manner.</p>
          <p>“Very much,” replied the Queen of Love and
Beauty, with a somewhat tired smile. It <hi rend="italics">was</hi>
pleasant, but she would be glad, she thought,
when it was all over.</p>
          <p>“Keep up your courage,” whispered her brother. 
“You are not only queen, but the belle of the 
ball. I am proud of you. A dozen women here
would give a year off the latter end of life to be 
in your shoes to-night.”</p>
          <p>Rena felt immensely relieved when the hour 
arrived at which she could take her departure, which 
was to be the signal for the breaking-up of the 
ball. She was driven home in Tryon's carriage,
her brother accompanying them. The night was
<pb id="chesnutt62" n="62"/> 
warm, and the drive homeward under the starlight,
in the open carriage, had a soothing effect upon
Rena's excited nerves. The calm restfulness of
the night, the cool blue depths of the unclouded
sky, the solemn croaking of the frogs in a distant
swamp, were much more in harmony with her
nature than the crowded brilliancy of the ball-room. 
She closed her eyes, and, leaning back in the 
carriage, thought of her mother, who she wished might 
have seen her daughter this night. A momentary 
pang of homesickness pierced her tender heart, 
and she furtively wiped away the tears that came 
into her eyes.</p>
          <p>“Good-night, fair Queen!” exclaimed Tryon,
breaking into her reverie as the carriage rolled up
to the doorstep, “and let your loyal subject kiss
your hand in token of his fealty. May your
Majesty never abdicate her throne, and may she
ever count me her humble servant and devoted
knight.”</p>
          <p>“And now, sister,” said Warwick, when Tryon
had been driven away, “now that the masquerade
is over, let us to sleep, and to-morrow take up the
serious business of life. Your day has been a 
glorious success!”</p>
          <p>He put his arm around her and gave her a kiss
and a brotherly hug.</p>
          <p>“It is a dream,” she murmured sleepily, “only 
a dream. I am Cinderella before the clock has
struck. Good-night, dear John.”</p>
          <p>“Good-night, Rowena.”</p>
        </div2>
        <pb id="chesnutt63" n="63"/>
        <div2>
          <head>'MID NEW SURROUNDINGS</head>
          <p>Warwick's residence was situated in the 
outskirts of the town. It was a fine old plantation
house, built in colonial times, with a stately 
colonnade, wide verandas, and long windows with 
Venetian blinds. It was painted white, and stood
back several rods from the street, in a charming
setting of palmettoes, magnolias, and flowering
shrubs. Rena had always thought her mother's
house large, but now it seemed cramped and 
narrow, in comparison with this roomy mansion. The 
furniture was old-fashioned and massive. The
great brass andirons on the wide hearth stood like
sentinels proclaiming and guarding the dignity of
the family. The spreading antlers on the wall 
testified to a mighty hunter in some past generation. 
The portraits of Warwick's wife's ancestors  -  
high-featured, proud men and women, dressed in 
the fashions of a bygone age  -  looked down from 
tarnished gilt frames. It was all very novel to 
her, and very impressive. When she ate off 
china, with silver knives and forks that had come 
down as heirlooms, escaping somehow the ravages 
and exigencies of the war time,  -  Warwick told
<pb id="chesnutt64" n="64"/>
her afterwards how he had buried them out of
reach of friend or foe,  -  she thought that her
brother must be wealthy, and she felt very proud
of him and of her opportunity. The servants, of
whom there were several in the house, treated her
with a deference to which her eight months in
school had only partly accustomed her. At school
she had been one of many to be served, and had
herself been held to obedience. Here, for the first
time in her life, she was mistress, and tasted the
sweets of power.</p>
          <p>The household consisted of her brother and
herself, a cook, a coachman, a nurse, and her
brother's little son Albert. The child, with a fine
instinct, had put out his puny arms to Rena at first
sight, and she had clasped the little man to her
bosom with a motherly caress. She had always
loved weak creatures. Kittens and puppies had
ever found a welcome and a meal at Rena's hands, 
only to be chased away by Mis' Molly, who had 
had a wider experience. No shiftless poor white, 
no half-witted or hungry negro, had ever gone 
unfed from Mis' Molly's kitchen door if Rena
were there to hear his plaint. Little Albert was
pale and sickly when she came, but soon bloomed
again in the sunshine of her care, and was happy
only in her presence. Warwick found pleasure in
their growing love for each other, and was glad 
to perceive that the child formed a living link to
connect her with his home.</p>
          <p>“Dat chile sutt'nly do lub Miss Rena, an'
<pb id="chesnutt65" n="65"/>
dat's a fac', sho's you bawn,” remarked 'Lissa the 
cook to Mimy the nurse one day. “You'll get 
yo' nose put out er j'int, ef you don't min'.”</p>
          <p>“I ain't frettin', honey,” laughed the nurse 
good-naturedly. She was not at all jealous. She 
had the same wages as before, and her labors were
materially lightened by the aunt's attention to the
child. This gave Mimy much more time to flirt
with Tom the coachman.</p>
          <p>It was a source of much gratification to 
Warwick that his sister seemed to adapt herself so
easily to the new conditions. Her graceful movements, 
the quiet elegance with which she wore 
even the simplest gown, the easy authoritativeness 
with which she directed the servants, were to him 
proofs of superior quality, and he felt correspondingly 
proud of her. His feeling for her was something 
more than brotherly love,  -  he was quite 
conscious that there were degrees in brotherly 
love, and that if she had been homely or stupid, 
he would never have disturbed her in the stagnant 
life of the house behind the cedars. There had 
come to him from some source, down the stream 
of time, a rill of the Greek sense of proportion, of 
fitness, of beauty, which is indeed but proportion 
embodied, the perfect adaptation of means to 
ends. He had perceived, more clearly than she 
could have appreciated it at that time, the 
undeveloped elements of discord between Rena 
and her  former life. He had imagined her lending 
grace and charm to his own household. Still another
<pb id="chesnutt66" n="66"/>
motive, a purely psychological one, had more or
less consciously influenced him. He had no fear
that the family secret would ever be discovered,  -  
he had taken his precautions too thoroughly, he 
thought, for that; and yet he could not but feel, 
at times, that if peradventure  -  it was a conceivable 
hypothesis  -  it should become known, his 
fine social position would collapse like a house of 
cards. Because of this knowledge, which the 
world around him did not possess, he had felt now 
and then a certain sense of loneliness; and there 
was a measure of relief in having about him 
one who knew his past, and yet whose knowledge, 
because of their common interest, would not 
interfere with his present or jeopardize his future. 
For he had always been, in a figurative sense, a 
naturalized foreigner in the world of wide 
opportunity, and Rena was one of his old compatriots, 
whom he was glad to welcome into the populous 
loneliness of his adopted country.</p>
        </div2>
        <pb id="chesnutt67" n="67"/>
        <div2>
          <head>THE COURTSHIP</head>
          <p>In a few weeks the echoes of the tournament
died away, and Rena's life settled down into a
pleasant routine, which she found much more
comfortable than her recent spectacular 
prominence. Her queenship, while not entirely 
forgiven by the ladies of the town, had gained for
her a temporary social prominence. Among her
own sex, Mrs. Newberry proved a warm and
enthusiastic friend. Rumor whispered that the
lively young widow would not be unwilling to
console Warwick in the loneliness of the old
colonial mansion, to which his sister was a most
excellent medium of approach. Whether this was
true or not it is unnecessary to inquire, for it is 
no part of this story, except as perhaps indicating 
why Mrs. Newberry played the part of the 
female friend, without whom no woman is ever 
launched successfully in a small and conservative 
society. Her brother's standing gave her the 
right of social entry; the tournament opened wide 
the door, and Mrs. Newberry performed the 
ceremony of introduction. Rena had many visitors 
during the month following the tournament, and
<pb id="chesnutt68" n="68"/>
might have made her choice from among a dozen
suitors; but among them all, her knight of the
handkerchief found most favor.</p>
          <p>George Tryon had come to Clarence a few
months before upon business connected with the
settlement of his grandfather's estate. A rather
complicated litigation had grown up around the
affair, various phases of which had kept Tryon
almost constantly in the town. He had placed
matters in Warwick's hands, and had formed a
decided friendship for his attorney, for whom 
he felt a frank admiration. Tryon was only 
twenty-three, and his friend's additional five years,
supplemented by a certain professional gravity,
commanded a great deal of respect from the
younger man. When Tryon had known Warwick 
for a week, he had been ready to swear by 
him. Indeed, Warwick was a man for whom 
most people formed a liking at first sight. To 
this power of attraction he owed most of his 
success  -  first with Judge Straight, of Patesville, 
then with the lawyer whose office he had entered 
at Clarence, with the woman who became his 
wife, and with the clients for whom he transacted 
business. Tryon would have maintained 
against all comers that Warwick was the finest 
fellow in the world. When he met Warwick's 
sister, the foundation for admiration had 
already been laid. If Rena had proved to be a 
maiden lady of uncertain age and doubtful
<pb id="chesnutt69" n="69"/>
personal attractiveness, Tryon would probably have
found in her a most excellent lady, worthy of all
respect and esteem, and would have treated her
with profound deference and sedulous courtesy.
When she proved to be a young and handsome
woman, of the type that he admired most, he 
was capable of any degree of infatuation. His 
mother had for a long time wanted him to marry 
the orphan daughter of an old friend, a vivacious
blonde, who worshiped him. He had felt friendly
towards her, but had shrunk from matrimony. 
He did not want her badly enough to give up his
freedom. The war had interfered with his 
education, and though fairly well instructed, he had
never attended college. In his own opinion, he
ought to see something of the world, and have his
youthful fling. Later on, when he got ready to 
settle down, if Blanche were still in the humor, 
they might marry, and sink to the humdrum 
level of other old married people. The fact that 
Blanche Leary was visiting his mother during his
unexpectedly long absence had not operated at 
all to hasten his return to North Carolina He 
had been having a very good time at Clarence, 
and, at the distance of several hundred miles, was 
safe for the time being from any immediate 
danger of marriage.</p>
          <p>With Rena's advent, however, he had seen life
through different glasses. His heart had thrilled 
at first sight of this tall girl, with the ivory 
complexion, the rippling brown hair, and the
<pb id="chesnutt70" n="70"/>
inscrutable eyes. When he became better acquainted
with her, he liked to think that her thoughts centred 
mainly in himself; and in this he was not
far wrong. He discovered that she had a short
upper lip, and what seemed to him an eminently
kissable mouth. After he had dined twice at
Warwick's, subsequently to the tournament,  -  his
lucky choice of Rena had put him at once upon 
a household footing with the family,  -  his views 
of marriage changed entirely. It now seemed to 
him the duty, as well as the high and holy 
privilege of a young man, to marry and manfully to 
pay his debt to society. When in Rena's presence, 
he could not imagine how he had ever contemplated 
the possibility of marriage with Blanche 
Leary,  -  she was utterly, entirely, and hopelessly 
unsuited to him. For a fair man of vivacious 
temperament, this stately dark girl was the ideal 
mate. Even his mother would admit this, if she 
could only see Rena. To win this beautiful 
girl for his wife would be a worthy task. He had 
crowned her Queen of Love and Beauty; since 
then she had ascended the throne of his heart. 
He would make her queen of his home and 
mistress of his life.</p>
          <p>To Rena this brief month's courtship came as a
new education. Not only had this fair young man
crowned her queen, and honored her above all 
the ladies in town; but since then he had waited
assiduously upon her, had spoken softly to her, had 
looked at her with shining eyes, and had sought to
<pb id="chesnutt71" n="71"/>
be alone with her. The time soon came when to
touch his hand in greeting sent a thrill through her
frame,  -  a time when she listened for his footstep
and was happy in his presence. He had been bold
enough at the tournament; he had since become
somewhat bashful and constrained. He must be in
love, she thought, and wondered how soon he would 
speak. If it were so sweet to walk with him in the 
garden, or along the shaded streets, to sit with him, 
to feel the touch of his hand, what happiness would 
it not be to hear him say that he loved her  -  to 
bear his name, to live with him always. To be thus 
loved and honored by this handsome young man, 
  -  she could hardly believe it possible. He would 
never speak  -  he would discover her secret and 
withdraw. She turned pale at the thought,  -  ah, 
God! something would happen,  -  it was too good 
to be true. The Prince would never try on the 
glass slipper.</p>
          <p>Tryon first told his love for Rena one summer
evening on their way home from church. They
were walking in the moonlight along the quiet street, 
which, but for their presence, seemed quite deserted.</p>
          <p>“Miss Warwick  -  Rowena,” he said, clasping
with his right hand the hand that rested on his left
arm, “I love you! Do you  -  love me?”</p>
          <p>To Rena this simple avowal came with much
greater force than a more formal declaration could
have had. It appealed to her own simple nature.
Indeed, few women at such a moment criticise the
form in which the most fateful words of life  -  but
<pb id="chesnutt72" n="72"/>
one  -  are spoken. Words, while pleasant, are 
really superfluous. Her whispered “Yes” spoke 
volumes.</p>
          <p>They walked on past the house, along the country
road into which the street soon merged. When 
they returned, an hour later, they found Warwick 
seated on the piazza, in a rocking-chair, smoking a 
fragrant cigar.</p>
          <p>“Well, children,” he observed with mock severity, 
“you are late in getting home from church. The 
sermon must have been extremely long.”</p>
          <p>“We have been attending an after-meeting,” 
replied Tryon joyfully, “and have been discussing 
an old text, ‘Little children, love one another,’ 
and its corollary, ‘It is not good for man to live 
alone.’ John, I am the happiest man alive. Your 
sister has promised to marry me. I should like to 
shake my brother's hand.”</p>
          <p>Never does one feel so strongly the universal
brotherhood of man as when one loves some other
fellow's sister. Warwick sprang from his chair and
clasped Tryon's extended hand with real emotion. 
He knew of no man whom he would have preferred 
to Tryon as a husband for his sister.</p>
          <p>“My dear George  -  my dear sister,” he 
exclaimed, “I am very, very glad. I wish you 
every happiness. My sister is the most fortunate 
of women.”</p>
          <p>“And I am the luckiest of men,” cried Tryon.</p>
          <p>“I wish you every happiness,” repeated Warwick; 
adding, with a touch of solemnity, as a certain
<pb id="chesnutt73" n="73"/>
thought, never far distant, occurred to him, 
“I hope that neither of you may ever regret your 
choice.”</p>
          <p>Thus placed upon the footing of an accepted 
lover, Tryon's visits to the house became more 
frequent. He wished to fix a time for the marriage, 
but at this point Rena developed a strange 
reluctance.</p>
          <p>“Can we not love each other for a while?” she
asked. “To be engaged is a pleasure that comes 
but once; it would be a pity to cut it too short.”</p>
          <p>“It is a pleasure that I would cheerfully dispense
with,” he replied, “for the certainty of possession. 
I want you all to myself, and all the time. Things 
might happen. If I should die, for instance, before 
I married you ”  -  </p>
          <p>“Oh, don't suppose such awful things,” she 
cried, putting her hand over his mouth.</p>
          <p>He held it there and kissed it until she pulled it
away.</p>
          <p>“I should consider,” he resumed, completing the
sentence, “that my life had been a failure.”</p>
          <p>“If I should die,” she murmured, “I should die
happy in the knowledge that you had loved me.”</p>
          <p>“In three weeks,” he went on, “I shall have 
finished my business in Clarence, and there will be 
but one thing to keep me here. When shall it be? 
I must take you home with me.”</p>
          <p>“I will let you know,” she replied, with a troubled
sigh, “in a week from to-day.”</p>
          <p>“I'll call your attention to the subject every day
<pb id="chesnutt74" n="74"/>
in the mean time,” he asserted. “I should n't like 
you to forget it.”</p>
          <p>Rena's shrinking from the irrevocable step of
marriage was due to a simple and yet complex 
cause. Stated baldly, it was the consciousness of 
her secret; the complexity arose out of the 
various ways in which it seemed to bear upon her 
future. Our lives are so bound up with those of 
our fellow men that the slightest departure from 
the beaten path involves a multiplicity of small 
adjustments. It had not been difficult for Rena
to conform her speech, her manners, and in a 
measure her modes of thought, to those of the 
people around her; but when this readjustment 
went beyond mere externals and concerned the 
vital issues of life, the secret that oppressed her 
took on a more serious aspect, with tragic 
possibilities. A discursive imagination was not one of her 
characteristics, or the danger of a marriage of 
which perfect frankness was not a condition might 
well have presented itself before her heart had 
become involved. Under the influence of doubt and 
fear acting upon love, the invisible bar to happiness 
glowed with a lambent flame that threatened
dire disaster.</p>
          <p>“Would he have loved me at all,” she asked 
herself, “if he had known the story of my past? 
Or, having loved me, could he blame me now for 
what I cannot help?”</p>
          <p>There were two shoals in the channel of her life,
upon either of which her happiness might go
<pb id="chesnutt75" n="75"/>
to shipwreck. Since leaving the house behind the
cedars, where she had been brought into the 
world without her own knowledge or consent, and 
had first drawn the breath of life by the involuntary 
contraction of certain muscles, Rena had 
learned, in a short time, many things; but she 
was yet to learn that the innocent suffer with the 
guilty, and feel the punishment the more keenly 
because unmerited. She had yet to learn that the
old Mosaic formula, “The sins of the fathers 
shall be visited upon the children,” was graven 
more indelibly upon the heart of the race than 
upon the tables of Sinai.</p>
          <p>But would her lover still love her, if he knew 
all? She had read some of the novels in the 
bookcase in her mother's hall, and others at 
boarding-school. She had read that love was a 
conqueror, that neither life nor death, nor creed nor 
caste, could stay his triumphant course Her secret 
was no legal bar to their union. If Rena could 
forget the secret, and Tryon should never know it, 
it would be no obstacle to their happiness. But
Rena felt, with a sinking of the heart, that happiness 
was not a matter of law or of fact, but lay 
entirely within the domain of sentiment. We are 
happy when we think ourselves happy, and with a 
strange perversity we often differ from others with 
regard to what should constitute our happiness. 
Rena's secret was the worm in the bud, the 
skeleton in the closet.</p>
          <p>“He says that he loves me. He <hi rend="italics">does</hi> love me.
<pb id="chesnutt76" n="76"/>
Would he love me, if he knew?” She stood 
before an oval mirror brought from France by one 
of Warwick's wife's ancestors, and regarded her
image with a coldly critical eye. She was as little
vain as any of her sex who are endowed with
beauty. She tried to place herself, in thus 
passing upon her own claims to consideration, in the
hostile attitude of society toward her hidden disability. 
There was no mark upon her brow to brand her 
as less pure, less innocent, less desirable, 
less worthy to be loved, than these proud women 
of the past who had admired themselves in this 
old mirror.</p>
          <p>“I think a man might love me for myself,” she
murmured pathetically, “and if he loved me truly,
that he would marry me. If he would not marry
me, then it would be because he didn't love me. 
I'll tell George my secret. If he leaves me, then
he does not love me.”</p>
          <p>But this resolution vanished into thin air before
it was fully formulated. The secret was not hers
alone; it involved her brother's position, to whom
she owed everything, and in less degree the future
of her little nephew, whom she had learned to love
so well. She had the choice of but two courses of
action, to marry Tryon or to dismiss him. The
thought that she might lose him made him seem
only more dear; to think that he might leave her
made her sick at heart. In one week she was
bound to give him an answer; he was more likely
to ask for it at their next meeting.</p>
        </div2>
        <pb id="chesnutt77" n="77"/>
        <div2>
          <head>DOUBTS AND FEARS</head>
          <p>Rena's heart was too heavy with these 
misgivings for her to keep them to herself. On the
morning after the conversation with Tryon in
which she had promised him an answer within a
week, she went into her brother's study, where he
usually spent an hour after breakfast before going
to his office. He looked up amiably from the 
book before him and read trouble in her face.</p>
          <p>“Well, Rena, dear,” he asked with a smile, 
“what's the matter? Is there anything you
want  -  money, or what? I should like to have
Aladdin's lamp  -  though I'd hardly need it  -  
that you might have no wish unsatisfied.”</p>
          <p>He had found her very backward in asking for
things that she needed. Generous with his means,
he thought nothing too good for her. Her success
had gratified his pride, and justified his course in
taking her under his protection.</p>
          <p>“Thank you, John. You give me already more
than I need. It is something else, John. George
wants me to say when I will marry him. I am
afraid to marry him, without telling him. If he
should find out afterwards, he might cast me off,
<pb id="chesnutt78" n="78"/> 
or cease to love me. If he did not know it, I 
should be forever thinking of what he would do if 
he <hi rend="italics">should</hi> find it out; or, if I should die without 
his having learned it, I should not rest easy in 
my grave for thinking of what he would have 
done if he <hi rend="italics">had</hi> found it out.”</p>
          <p>Warwick's smile gave place to a grave expression 
at this somewhat comprehensive statement. He 
rose and closed the door carefully, lest some one 
of the servants might overhear the conversation. 
More liberally endowed than Rena with imagination, 
and not without a vein of sentiment, he had 
nevertheless a practical side that outweighed them 
both. With him, the problem that oppressed his 
sister had been in the main a matter of argument, 
of self-conviction. Once persuaded that he had 
certain rights, or ought to have them, by virtue of
the laws of nature, in defiance of the customs of
mankind, he had promptly sought to enjoy them. 
This he had been able to do by simply concealing 
his antecedents and making the most of his 
opportunities, with no troublesome qualms of conscience 
whatever. But he had already perceived, in their 
brief intercourse, that Rena's emotions, while less 
easily stirred, touched a deeper note than his, and 
dwelt upon it with greater intensity than if they 
had been spread over the larger field to which a 
more ready sympathy would have supplied so many 
points of access;  -  hers was a deep and silent 
current flowing between the narrow walls of a 
self-contained life, his the spreading river that ran
<pb id="chesnutt79" n="79"/>
through a pleasant landscape. Warwick's imagination, 
however, enabled him to put himself in touch 
with her mood and recognize its bearings upon her 
conduct. He would have preferred her taking the 
practical point of view, to bring her round to which 
he perceived would be a matter of diplomacy.</p>
          <p>“How long have these weighty thoughts been
troubling your small head?” he asked with assumed
lightness.</p>
          <p>“Since he asked me last night to name our 
wedding day.”</p>
          <p>“My dear child,” continued Warwick, “you take 
too tragic a view of life. Marriage is a reciprocal
arrangement, by which the contracting parties give 
love for love, care for keeping, faith for faith. It 
is a matter of the future, not of the past. What 
a poor soul it is that has not some secret chamber, 
sacred to itself; where one can file away the things 
others have no right to know, as well as things that 
one himself would fain forget! We are under no 
moral obligation to inflict upon others the history 
of our past mistakes, our wayward thoughts, our 
secret sins, our desperate hopes, or our heart-
breaking disappointments. Still less are we bound
to bring out from this secret chamber the dusty 
record of our ancestry.</p>
          <lg>
            <l>‘Let the dead past bury its dead.’</l>
          </lg>
          <p>George Tryon loves you for yourself alone; it is 
not your ancestors that he seeks to marry.”</p>
          <p>“But would he marry me if he knew?” she 
persisted.</p>
          <pb id="chesnutt80" n="80"/>
          <p>Warwick paused for reflection. He would have
preferred to argue the question in a general way, 
but felt the necessity of satisfying her scruples, as 
far as might be. He had liked Tryon from the 
very beginning of their acquaintance. In all their 
intercourse, which had been very close for several 
months, he had been impressed by the young man's 
sunny temper, his straightforwardness, his 
intellectual honesty. Tryon's deference to Warwick 
as the elder man had very naturally proved an 
attraction. Whether this friendship would have stood 
the test of utter frankness about his own past was 
a merely academic speculation with which Warwick 
did not trouble himself. With his sister the question 
had evidently become a matter of conscience,
  -  a difficult subject with which to deal in a 
person of Rena's temperament.</p>
          <p>“My dear sister,” he replied, “ why should he 
know? We haven't asked him for his pedigree; 
we don't care to know it. If he cares for ours, he 
should ask for it, and it would then be time enough 
to raise the question. You love him, I imagine, 
and wish to make him happy?”</p>
          <p>It is the highest wish of the woman who loves. 
The enamored man seeks his own happiness; the 
loving woman finds no sacrifice too great for the 
loved one. The fiction of chivalry made man serve 
woman; the fact of human nature makes woman 
happiest when serving where she loves.</p>
          <p>“Yes, oh, yes,” Rena exclaimed with fervor,
clasping her hands unconsciously. “I'm afraid
<pb id="chesnutt81" n="81"/>
he'd be unhappy if he knew, and it would make me
miserable to think him unhappy.”</p>
          <p>“Well, then,” said Warwick, “suppose we 
should tell him our secret and put ourselves in his 
power, and that he should then conclude that he 
couldn't marry you? Do you imagine he would be 
any happier than he is now, or than if he should 
never know?”</p>
          <p>Ah, no! she could not think so. One could 
not tear love out of one's heart without pain and 
suffering. </p>
          <p>There was a knock at the door. Warwick 
opened it to the nurse, who stood with little Albert 
in her arms.</p>
          <p>“Please, suh,” said the girl, with a curtsy, “de 
baby's be'n cryin' an' frettin' for Miss Rena, an' 
I 'lowed she mought want me ter fetch 'im, of it 
wouldn't 'sturb her.”</p>
          <p>“Give me the darling,” exclaimed Rena, coming
forward and taking the child from the nurse. “It 
wants its auntie. Come to its auntie, bless its 
little heart!”</p>
          <p>Little Albert crowed with pleasure and put up 
his pretty mouth for a kiss. Warwick found the 
sight a pleasant one. If he could but quiet his 
sister's troublesome scruples, he might erelong see 
her fondling beautiful children of her own. Even 
if Rena were willing to risk her happiness, and he
to endanger his position, by a quixotic frankness 
the future of his child must not be compromised.</p>
          <p>“You wouldn't want to make George unhappy,”
<pb id="chesnutt82" n="82"/>
Warwick resumed when the nurse retired. “Very 
well; would you not be willing, for his sake, to keep 
a secret  -  your secret and mine, and that of the 
innocent child in your arms? Would you involve 
all of us in difficulties merely to secure your own 
peace of mind? Doesn't such a course seem just 
the least bit selfish? Think the matter over from 
that point of view, and we'll speak of it later in the 
day. I shall be with George all the morning, and 
I may be able, by a little management, to find out 
his views on the subject of birth and family, and 
all that. Some men are very liberal, and love is a
great leveler. I'll sound him, at any rate.”</p>
          <p>He kissed the baby and left Rena to her own
reflections, to which his presentation of the case had
given a new turn. It had never before occurred to 
her to regard silence in the light of self-sacrifice. 
It had seemed a sort of sin; her brother's 
argument made of it a virtue. It was not the first 
time, nor the last, that right and wrong had been 
a matter of view-point.</p>
          <p>Tryon himself furnished the opening for 
Warwick's proposed examination. The younger man 
could not long remain silent upon the subject 
uppermost in his mind. “I am anxious, John,” he said, 
“to have Rowena name the happiest day of my 
life  -  our wedding day. When the trial in 
Edgecombe County is finished, I shall have no further 
business here, and shall be ready to leave for home. 
I should like to take my bride with me, and surprise
my mother. </p>
          <pb id="chesnutt83" n="83"/>
          <p>Mothers, thought Warwick, are likely to prove
inquisitive about their sons' wives, especially when
taken unawares in matters of such importance. 
This seemed a good time to test the liberality of 
Tryon's views, and to put forward a shield for his 
sister's protection.</p>
          <p>“Are you sure, George, that your mother will 
find the surprise agreeable when you bring home a 
bride of whom you know so little and your mother 
nothing at all?”</p>
          <p>Tryon had felt that it would be best to surprise 
his mother. She would need only to see Rena to 
approve of her, but she was so far prejudiced in 
favor of Blanche Leary that it would be wisest to 
present the argument after having announced the 
irrevocable conclusion. Rena herself would be a 
complete justification for the accomplished deed.</p>
          <p>“I think you ought to know, George,” continued
Warwick, without waiting for a reply to his 
question, “that my sister and I are not of an old family, 
or a rich family, or a distinguished family; that 
