“Do you imagine that I shall sit with head averted while four nations and your Delawares combine to plan the murder of my Oneidas?” I demanded passionately. “When the council sits at Thendara I shall send a belt to every clan in the Oneida nation, and I care not who knows it!”
He rose, pale and menacing. “Mr. Renault,” he said, “do you understand that a word from you would be a treason to the King? You can be a clansman of the Wolf and at the same time be loyal to the King and to the Iroquois Confederacy; but you can not send a single string of wampum to the Oneidas and be either loyal to the Six Nations or to your King. The Oneidas are marked for punishment; the frontier is doomed — doomed, even though this frittering commander in New York will neither aid me nor his King. A word of warning to the Oneidas is a warning to the rebels. And that, sir, I can not contemplate, and you must shrink from.”
“Do you deceive yourself that I shall stand silent and see the Oneida nation ruined?” I asked between my teeth.
“Are you Oneida, or are you a British subject of King George? Are you an Iroquois renegade of the renegade Oneida nation, or are you first of all an Iroquois of the Wolf-Clan? As a white man, you are the King’s subject; as an Iroquois, you are still his subject. As an Oneida only, you must be as black a rebel as George Washington himself. That is the limpid logic of the matter, Mr. Renault. A belt to the Oneidas, and you become traitor to the Confederacy and a traitor to your King. And that, I say, you can not contemplate!”
I fairly ground my teeth, subduing the rage and contempt that shook me. “Since when, Captain Butler,” I sneered, “have the Oneidas learned to swallow Delaware threats? By God, sir, the oldest man among the council can not remember when a Delaware dared speak without permission of an Iroquois! As an Iroquois and an Oneida, I bid the Delawares to speak only when addressed. But as a white man, I answer you that I require no instruction concerning my conduct, and shall merely thank you for your good intentions and your kind advice, which is the more generous because unsolicited and wholly undesired!”
Again that menacing glare came into his eyes as he stood staring at me. But I cared not; he was not my guest, and he had outraged no roof of mine that the law of hospitality must close my mouth lest I betray the salt he had eaten within my walls.
“I am thinking,” he said slowly, “that we did well to burn a certain house in Tryon Bush.”
“Think as you please, Captain Butler,” I said, bowing. “The door swings open yonder for your convenience.”
He surveyed me scornfully. “I trust,” he said pleasantly, “to resume this discussion at a time more opportune.”
“That also shall be at your convenience,” I said. Suddenly such a loathing for the man came over me that I could scarce return his salute and maintain that courteous calm which challenged men must wear at such a moment.
He went away; and I, pacing my chamber lightly, whistled for Dennis, and when he came bade him curl and frizz and powder and perfume me as he had never done before. So to my bath, and then to court the razor, lathered cheek and chin, nose in the air, counting the posies on the wall, as I always did while Dennis shaved me of the beard I fondly feared might one day suddenly appear.
And all the while, singing in my ears, I heard the meaning phrase he used at parting. Challenged? Not quite, but threatened with a challenge. The cards were mine to play — a pretty hand, with here and there a trump. Could I meet him and serve my country best? Aye, if I killed him. And, strangely, I never thought that he might kill me; I only weighed the chances. If I killed him he could not blab and danger me with hints of meddling or of rank disloyalty; but if I only maimed him he would never rest until suspicious eyes must make my mission useless. Suddenly I was aware that I had been a fool to anger him, if I wished to stay here in New York; nay, it was patent that unless I killed him he must one day work a mischief to our cause through me. A sneaking and unworthy happiness crept slowly over me, knowing that once my mission terminated here I was free to hoist true colors, free to bear arms, free to maintain openly the cause I had labored for so long in secret. No more mole’s work a-burrowing into darkness for a scrap to stay my starving country’s maw; no more slinking, listening, playing the stupid indifferent!
And all the while my conscience was at work, urging me to repair the damage my forgetful passion had wrought, urging me to heal the breach with Butler, using what skill I might command, so that I could stay here where his Excellency had set me, plying my abhorred trade in useful, unendurable obscurity.
It was a battle now ‘twixt pride and conscience, ‘twixt fierce desire and a loathed duty — doubly detested since I had spied a way to freedom and had half tasted a whiff of good free air, untainted by deception.
“O Lord!” I groaned within myself, “will no one set me free of this pit of intrigue and corruption in which I’m doomed to lurk? Must I, in loyalty to his Excellency, repair this fault — go patch up all with Butler, and deceive him so that his hawk’s eyes and forked tongue may not set folk a-watching this house sidewise?”
But while Dennis’s irons were in my hair I thought: “Nevertheless, I must send a belt to our allies, the Oneidas; and then I dare not stay! Oh, joy!”
But the joy was soon dashed. My belt must go first to Colonel Willett, and then to his Excellency, and it might be that he would judge it best to let the Oneidas fight their own battles and so decline to send my belt.
By the time I had arrived so far in my mental argument Dennis had curled, powdered, and tied my hair in the most fashionable manner, using a black flamboyant ribbon for the clubbed queue, a pearl-gray powder à la Rochambeau; but I was not foolish enough to permit him to pass a diamond pin into my hair, for I had once seen that fashion affected by Murray, Earl of Dunmore, that Royal Governor of Virginia who had laid Norfolk in ashes out of pure vindictiveness.
My costume I shall describe, not, I hope, from any unworthy vanity, but because I love beautiful things. Therefore, for the pleasure of others who also admire, and prompted alone by a desire to gratify, I neither seek nor require excuses for recalling what I wore that night at the Artillery ball. The lace at the stock was tied full and fastened with brilliants; the coat of ivory silk, heavily embroidered with golden filigree, fell over a waistcoat of clouded ivory and gold mesh, fashionably short, and made by Thorne. My breeches were like the coat, ivory silk, buckled with gold; the stockings were white silk, a bunch of ribbon caught by the jeweled buckles at either knee; and upon my double-channeled pumps, stitched by Bass, buckles of plain dull gold. There was blond lace at throat and cuff. I confess that, although I did not wear two watches, a great bunch of seals dangled from the fob; and the small three-cornered French hat I tucked beneath my arm was laced like a Nivernois, and dressed and cocked by the most fashionable hatter in Hanover Square.
The mirror before which I stood was but half long enough, so I bade Dennis place it upon the floor, whence it should reflect my legs and gilded court-sword. Pleased, I obtained several agreeable views of my costume, Dennis holding two mirrors for me while I pondered, hesitating where to place the single patch of black.
“Am I fine, Dennis?” I asked.
“Now God be good to the ladies, sir!” he said, so seriously that I laughed like a boy, whisked out my sword, and made a pass at my mirrored throat.
“At all events,” I thought, “I’ll be handsomely clothed if there’s a scratch-quarrel with Walter Butler — which God avert!” Then for the first time it occurred to me that it might not be Walter Butler, but I myself, lying stretched on the lawn behind the Coq d’Or, and I was comforted to know that, however low misfortune might lay me, I should be clothed suitably and as befitted a Renault.
CHAPTER V
THE ARTILLERY BALL
When I descended from my chamber to the south drawing-room I found there a respectable company of gentlemen assembled, awaiting the ladies who had not yet appeared. First I greeted Sir Henry Clinton, who had at that moment entered, followed by his staff and by two glittering of
ficers of his Seventh Light Dragoons. He appeared pale and worn, his eyes somewhat inflamed from overstudy by candle-light, but he spoke to me pleasantly, as did Oliver De Lancey, the Adjutant-General, who had succeeded poor young André — an agreeable and accomplished gentleman, and very smart in his brilliant uniform of scarlet loaded with stiff gold.
O’Neil, in his gay dress of the Seventeenth Dragoons, and Harkness, wearing similar regimentals, were overflushed and frolicksome, no doubt having already begun their celebration for the victory of the Flatbush birds, which they had backed so fortunately at the Coq d’Or. Sir Peter, too, was in mischievous good spirits, examining my very splendid costume as though he had not chosen it for me at his own tailor’s.
“Gad, Carus!” he exclaimed, “has his Majesty appointed a viceroy in North America — or is it the return of that Solomon whose subjects rule the Dock Ward still?”
O’Neil and Harkness, too, were merry, making pretense that my glitter set them blinking; but the grave, gray visage of Sir Henry, and his restless pacing of the polished floor, gave us all pause; and presently, as by common accord, voices around him dropped to lower tones, and we spoke together under breath, watching askance the commander-in-chief, who now stood, head on his jeweled breast, hands clasped loosely behind his back.
“Sir Peter,” he said, looking up with a forced laugh, “I have irritating news. The rebel dragoons are foraging within six miles of our lines at Kingsbridge.”
For a month we here in New York had become habituated to alarms. We had been warned to expect the French fleet; we had known that his Excellency was at Dobbs Ferry, with quarters at Valentine’s; we had seen, day by day, the northern lines strengthened, new guns mounted on the forts and batteries, new regiments arrive, constant alarms for the militia, and the city companies under arms, marching up Murray Hill, only, like that celebrated army of a certain King of France, to march down again with great racket of drums and overfierce officers noisily shouting commands. But even I had not understood how near to us the siege had drawn, closing in steadily, inch by inch, from the green Westchester hills.
A little thrill shot through me as I noted the newer, deeper lines etched in Sir Henry’s pallid face, and the grave silence of De Lancey, as he stood by the window, arms folded, eying his superior under knitted brows.
“Why not march out, bands playing?” suggested Sir Peter gaily.
“By God, we may do that yet to the tune they choose for us!” blurted out Sir Henry.
“I meant an assault,” said Sir Peter, the smile fading from his handsome face.
“I know what you meant,” returned Sir Henry wearily. “But that is what they wish. I haven’t the men, gentlemen.”
There was a silence. He stood there, swaying slowly to and fro on his polished heels, buried in reflection; but I, who stood a little to one side, could see his fingers clasped loosely behind his back, nervously working and picking at one another.
“What do they expect?” he said suddenly, lifting his head but looking at no one— “what do they expect of me in England? I have not twelve thousand effectives, and of these not nine thousand fit for duty. They have eleven thousand, counting the French, not a dozen miles north of us. Suppose I attack? Suppose I beat them? They have but a mile to fall back, and they are stronger posted than before. I can not pass the Harlem with any chance of remaining, unless I leave here in New York a garrison of at least six thousand regulars. This gives me but three thousand regulars for a sortie.” He moved his head slowly, his eyes traveled from one to another with that heavy, dazed expression which saw nothing.
“Thirty thousand men could not now force Fordham Heights — and but a single bridge left across the Harlem. To boat it means to be beaten in detail. I tell you, gentlemen, that the only chance I might have in an attempt upon any part of Washington’s army must be if he advances. In formal council, Generals Kniphausen, Birch, and Robertson sustain me; and, believing I am right, I am prepared to suffer injustice and calumny in silence from my detractors here in New York and at home.”
His heavy eyes hardened; a flash lighted them, and he turned to Sir Peter, adding:
“I have listened to a very strange proposition from the gentleman you presented to me, Sir Peter. His ideas of civilized warfare and mine do not run in like channels.”
“So I should imagine,” replied Sir Peter dryly. “But he is my guest, and at his pressing solicitation I went with him to wait upon you.”
Sir Henry smiled, for Sir Peter had spoken very distinctly, though without heat.
“My dear friend,” said the general gently, “are you to blame for the violent views of this gentleman who so — ah — distinguished himself at Cherry Valley?”
A sour grimace stamped the visage of every officer present; the name of Cherry Valley was not pleasant to New York ears.
At that moment Walter Butler entered, halted on the threshold, glancing haughtily around him, advanced amid absolute silence, made his bow to Sir Peter, turned and rendered a perfect salute to Sir Henry, then, as Sir Peter quietly named him to every man present, greeted each with ceremony and a graceful reserve that could not but stamp him as a gentleman of quality and breeding.
To me, above all, was his attitude faultless; and I, relinquishing to a tyrant conscience all hopes of profiting by my blunder in angering him, and giving up all hopes of a duel and consequently of freedom from my hateful business in New York, swallowed pride and repulsion at a single gulp, and crossed the room to where he stood alone, quite at his ease amid the conversation which excluded him.
“Mr. Butler,” I said, “I spoke hastily and thoughtlessly an hour since. I come to say so.”
He bowed instantly, regarding me with curious eyes.
“I know not how to make further amends,” I began, but he waved his hand with peculiar grace, a melancholy smile on his pale visage.
“I only trust, Mr. Renault, that you may one day understand me better. No amends are necessary. I assure you that I shall endeavor to so conduct that in future neither you nor any man may misapprehend my motives.” He glanced coolly across at Sir Henry, then very pleasantly spoke of the coming rout at the Fort, expressing pleasure in gaiety and dancing.
“I love music, too,” he said thoughtfully, “but have heard little for a year save the bellow of conch-horns from the rebel riflemen of Morgan’s corps.”
Mr. De Lancey had come up, moved by the inbred courtesy which distinguished not Sir Henry, who ostentatiously held Sir Peter in forced consultation, his shoulder turned to Walter Butler. And, of the twain, Mr. Butler cut the better figure, and spite of his true character, I was secretly gratified to see how our Tryon County gentry suffered nothing in comparison of savoir faire with the best that England sent us. Courtesy to an enemy — that is a creed no gentleman can renounce save with his title. I speak not of disputes in hot blood, but of a chance meeting upon neutral ground; and Sir Henry was no credit to his title and his country in his treatment there of Walter Butler.
One by one all spoke to Mr. Butler; laughter among us broke out as wine was served and compliments exchanged.
“The hardest lesson man is born to is that lesson which teaches him to await the dressing of his lady,” said De Lancey.
“Aye, and await it, too, without impatience!” said Captain Harkness.
“And in perfect good-humor,” echoed De Lancey gravely. O’Neil sat down at the piano and played “The World Turned Upside-Down,” all drifting into the singing, voice after voice; and the beauty of Walter Butler’s voice struck all, so that presently, one by one, we fell silent, and he alone carried the quaint old melody to its end.
“I have a guitar hereabouts,” blurted out Sir Peter, motioning a servant.
The instrument was brought, and Walter Butler received it without false modesty or wearying protestation, and, touching it dreamily, he sang:
“Ninon! Ninon! Que fais-tu de la vie?
L’heure s’enfuit, le jour succède au jour,
Rose, ce soir �
�� demain flétrie
Comment vis-tu, toi qui n’as pas d’amour?
Ouvrez-vous, jeunes fleurs
Si la mort vous enlève,
La vie est un sommeil, l’amour en est le rêve!”
Sad and sweet the song faded, lingering like perfume, as the deep concord of the strings died out. All were moved. We pressed him to sing more, and he sang what we desired in perfect taste and with a simplicity that fascinated all.
I, too, stood motionless under the spell, yet struggling to think of what I had heard of the nearness of his Excellency to New York, and how I might get word to him at once concerning the Oneidas’ danger and the proposed attempt upon the frontier granaries. The ladies had as yet given no sign of readiness; all present, even Sir Henry, stood within a circle around Walter Butler. So I stepped quietly into the hallway and hastened up the stairs to my chamber, which I locked first, then seized paper and quill and fell to scribbling:
“To His Excellency, Gen’l Washington:
“Sir — I regret to report that, through thoughtlessness and inadvertence, I have made a personal enemy of Captain Walter Butler of the Rangers, who is now here on a mission to enlist the aid of Sir Henry Clinton in a new attempt on the frontier. His purpose in this enterprise is to ruin our granaries, punish the Oneidas friendly to us, and, if aided from below, seize Albany, or at least Johnstown, Caughnawaga, and Schenectady. Sir John Johnson, Major Ross, and Captain Butler are preparing to gather at Niagara Fort. They expect to place a strong, swift force in the field — Rangers, Greens, Hessians, Regulars, and partizans, not counting Brant’s Iroquois of the Seneca, Cayuga, and Mohawk nations.
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