Elizabeth had a great deal of time to think on the way home. Old Joe, who in three days had traveled about fifty miles, could not be encouraged beyond a slow walk. But she did not think very connectedly. Mind and soul were weary; her troubles presented themselves rather as a dull, undefined pain than as a sharp anxiety. Things could wait, she said to herself. It would be necessary, of course, for her to tell Herbert, and she trembled for the effect upon him. She had feared for weeks that his very nature had been affected by his illness and that he would remain a sort of dependent child instead of becoming a man. But what she had heard to-day threw another light on his condition. Could it be that it was an inherited weakness, the result of the shame which their mother must have felt? Their mother had been a woman of strong But not even the word of a Colonel Thomas and the printed statement of a book could in an hour or two alter the conscious and unconscious convictions of Elizabeth’s life. The belief that one has been “well-born” is not easily yielded, even though one may have hitherto felt no conscious satisfaction. When, at last, she turned a weary Joe in upon the grassy drive, her lips were set. “I don’t believe it,” said she stubbornly. Herbert came to meet her and to take the horse. He glanced back over his shoulder into the woods. All day poor Herbert had been looking over his shoulder. “Well, Elizabeth?” he asked nervously. “What did you find out?” “All right,” agreed Herbert. Sometimes through the meal he looked at Elizabeth uneasily, but most of the time he seemed to be occupied with a trouble of his own. He had had that day a peculiar kind of anonymous communication meant for him and he was meditating upon it. When the supper dishes were put away, the two sat down on the doorstep. The lovely weather continued, the rising moon shone once more over the beautiful plain, the whip-poor-wills called mysteriously. “This is the home of my soul, the earthly home at least,” said Elizabeth to herself. Then she laid her hand on Herbert’s knee. “My dear, things are a little worse than I imagined. I visited the old gentleman and he tells me that our grandfather was supposed to have helped the “It isn’t our fault!” “No.” “What shall we do, Elizabeth?” “We shan’t do anything right away. We’re here and we can live even if people won’t buy our things. Our trees are engaged and we’ll set them out. We—” “Oh, let us go away!” cried Herbert. “We should never be happy, we should never see anything but scowling faces.” “Do you think that there’s a chance that it might not be true?” faltered Herbert. “I don’t believe it yet,” said Elizabeth stoutly. “Why not, Elizabeth?” “I don’t know exactly. I just don’t believe it. I should have difficulty believing such a thing about any living man whom I had respected, and I’ll believe it still less about a man who is dead. Moreover, we owe it to ourselves to follow it to its remotest conclusion, Herbert. The possession of ancestors who are a credit is no small possession. But it’s like good health, we don’t value it till it’s gone.” “Do you think we could make investigations and prove it untrue?” “It might be possible.” Elizabeth was pleased. “I’ll do all the work on the place,” offered Herbert, looking uneasily over his shoulder. “That is, if you have to go away anywhere. We haven’t papers or records of any kind, have we?” “Nothing.” “And you’re sure mother never said anything?” Elizabeth’s brow puckered. “I can’t remember that she did. I have been trying to think. It must have been too dreadful to talk about and I wonder her heart didn’t break.” Elizabeth looked back into the dark hall as though she could see there a lonely figure. “Have you any plan, Elizabeth?” “No; except that I thought of hunting through the house. Years and years have passed, but there might be something. There might be a nook or cranny that had escaped the renters and that has escaped us.” “I don’t know,” said Elizabeth. “Now let us go to bed.” The next day offered itself as a suitable time for indoor occupation. The fine weather had broken and rain fell steadily. The plain was gray, the woods were dim, there was all about the sound of running water, water dripping from the eaves and falling from the sky and running rapidly in the brook near the house. “We’ll begin in the cellar,” said Elizabeth. The cellar, explored inch by inch by the aid of lantern and candle, yielded nothing but resolutions that it should be thoroughly whitewashed as soon as possible. “We can store bushels and barrels of stuff there,” said Elizabeth as they came upstairs. “Now the first floor.” Beside the fireplace in the parlor were two deep cupboards for wood. These had been looked into often, but Elizabeth examined them again and scrutinized them earnestly to be sure that On the first floor there were no other cupboards or closets, and the other rooms, occupied as a kitchen and as bedrooms, had been lived in for too many weeks to hold any secrets. At the top of the first flight of stairs, Elizabeth stood still. “Herbert, this place has inexhaustible possibilities! See these many rooms, how easily we could make this a comfortable place for quiet people in summer! Water could be piped down from one of the springs. I know that gravity alone would carry it higher than the house-top. I wonder whether John Baring thought of that!” Elizabeth went into the first room. It was large and bare and offered no place of storage. She passed into the next and there for a moment she forgot the purpose of her search. The view from the front door was extensive, but from the second floor one could look over a spur of the “There isn’t anything here, Elizabeth,” said Herbert. “No, nothing. Now we’ll try the attic. That’s the traditional hiding-place for documents.” The attic was as bare as the rest of the house. If the family had left any property there, it had been long since removed by the successive renters. Herbert went downstairs for a candle and they crept into the low cubby-holes under the slanting roof. Mud wasps’ nests and spider webs rewarded them. “There is really nothing,” said Herbert drearily. “Yes, there is!” cried Elizabeth. “Here is writing on this beam. I can’t quite stretch to it, Herbert. What does it say?” Herbert dropped the candle from his nervous hand. “I’m afraid you’ll be disappointed,” said he “What does it say?” “It says, ‘I have built this house the best I know. God bless those who go in and out.’ It’s signed ‘John Baring.’” Elizabeth stood looking up at the inscription. Suddenly a tear rolled down her cheek. “I don’t believe he was a traitor,” said she. “I believe he was a good man.” They went carefully over each beam, and crept again into the dusty cupboards. “Now we’ll go to the barn,” said Elizabeth. “What do you expect to find there?” “I don’t know, but I’m going.” As Elizabeth had left the attic for the last spot to be visited in the house, so she left the barn chamber as the most promising quarter of the barn. It was a large room on the main floor which had evidently been used at one time as a living-room, for there was an opening in the wall for a stovepipe. Herbert smiled faintly. He had opened the door of one of the cupboards and drew out an old map. “There’s nothing in here but this, Elizabeth.” “Let’s unroll it.” Then Herbert grew white. It was a map of Adams County. From its center Gettysburg and the surrounding country had been cut, or rather slashed, as though it were done hastily with a large knife. “What’s the matter, Herbert?” “Do you suppose he showed them with this, or gave them this piece?” “No,” said Elizabeth. “I prefer to think that some one cut that out to hide or destroy it. They might not have been able to destroy the whole map quickly. It signifies nothing whatever.” After two days of rain the sky cleared. Brother and sister rested on the doorstep at the end of a long day. They had not spoken again of the writing or of the old map. Herbert wondered whether Elizabeth was now convinced. Elizabeth sat silently, drinking in the beauty of the evening. A faint gold showed where the moon would rise. “Elizabeth!” “What is it?” “That man is watching us again with his dog and his gun. I can see him quite plainly.” Elizabeth lifted her voice. All her depression and anxiety were transmuted into anger against these disturbers of her peace. “I told Colonel Thomas in Gettysburg about the men who are prowling about,” said she loudly and distinctly. “He said the State police would be up here the minute I complained. From what I hear, there are enough crimes in the past For a while there was not a sound. “I didn’t see him go, but he’s gone,” said Herbert in a whisper. He clasped his hands tightly. Again he had had his anonymous greeting, and again by Herculean effort of will had kept it from Elizabeth. It was not only because of its ignominious character, it was because at last he was beginning to see his dependence. This was, moreover, his own trouble; it was not Elizabeth’s, nor a trouble common to them both. “I don’t suppose they’ve had much chance,” said Elizabeth at last; then she added bitterly, “When I first saw this man I thought perhaps we might help the women and children of such people. But now—” She let her chin sink to her clasped hands. “Have you any other plan?” asked Herbert. “Yes, I have. I’m going to talk to the neighbors.” “I’m going all round this country and wherever there is an old person, I’ll find out what he or she knows about John Baring. There must be some who remember him, and he must have had some friends among them. I believe that he was a good man and that he was kind.” “But would that have any relation to this?” “Yes, it would. Somebody might be able to give a clue.” “What kind of a clue?” “Well, somebody might have lived here, and have heard him refuse to guide the Confederates. The Confederates might then have killed him, or carried him away, or he might have met with an accident. Somebody might have some testimony about his previous loyalty.” “But the book said he had given them information!” “The general might have been mistaken in the confusion. Some one else might have given them information.” “The people might shame you or insult you.” “They can’t do either.” “When are you going to start?” “To-morrow morning. I’m going to leave you to guard the property.” Herbert looked at her startled. His short period of courage had passed. Again he was about to speak, then he covered his lips with his hand as if forcibly to restrain himself. The words which he choked back were, “Do not leave me alone, Elizabeth!” Poor Herbert rose filled with despair. When Elizabeth called good-night to him, he did not answer, being certain that he could not command his voice. He went into his room and to bed. But he did not sleep. It was a long time before Elizabeth closed her eyes. Her mind traveled beyond her visits to the neighbors. “When I have done that, what then?” said she. “If that fails, what can I do?” “I have signed the contract for the trees,” said she. “It would really mean ruin!” |