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XXVI
THE SCHOOLHOUSE IN THE WOODS
BLANCHE
LEARY, closely observant of Tryon's moods, marked a decided change in
his manner after his return from his trip to Patesville. His former moroseness
had given way to a certain defiant lightness, broken now and then by an
involuntary sigh, but maintained so well, on the whole, that his mother
detected no lapses whatever. The change was characterized by another feature
agreeable to both the women: Tryon showed decidedly more interest than
ever before in Miss Leary's society. Within a week he asked her several
times to play a selection on the piano, displaying, as she noticed, a
decided preference for gay and cheerful music, and several times suggesting
a change when she chose pieces of a sentimental cast. More than once,
during the second week after his return, he went out riding with her;
she was a graceful horsewoman, perfectly at home in the saddle, and appearing
to advantage in a riding-habit. She was aware that Tryon watched her now
and then, with an eye rather critical than indulgent.
"He
is comparing me with some other girl," she surmised. "I seem to stand
the test very well. I wonder who the other is, and what was
the trouble?"
Miss
Leary exerted all her powers to interest and amuse the man she had set
out to win, and who seemed nearer than ever before. Tryon, to his pleased
surprise, discovered in her mind depths that he had never suspected. She
displayed a singular affinity for the tastes that were his -- he could
not, of course, know how carefully she had studied them. The old wound,
recently reopened, seemed to be healing rapidly, under conditions more
conducive than before to perfect recovery. No longer, indeed, was he pursued
by the picture of Rena discovered and unmasked -- this he had definitely
banished from the realm of sentiment to that of reason. The haunting image
of Rena loving and beloved, amid the harmonious surroundings of her brother's
home, was not so readily displaced. Nevertheless, he reached in several
weeks a point from which he could consider her as one thinks of a dear
one removed by the hand of death, or smitten by some incurable ailment
of mind or body. Erelong, he fondly believed, the recovery would be so
far complete that he could consign to the tomb of pleasant memories even
the most thrilling episodes of his ill-starred courtship.
"George,"
said Mrs. Tryon one morning while her son was in this cheerful mood, "I'm
sending Blanche over to Major McLeod's to do an errand for me. Would you
mind driving her over? The road may be rough after the storm last night,
and Blanche has an idea that no one drives so well as you."
"Why,
yes, mother, I'll be glad to drive Blanche over. I want to see the major
myself."
They
were soon bowling along between the pines, behind the handsome mare that
had carried Tryon so well at the Clarence tournament. Presently he drew
up sharply.
"A
tree has fallen squarely across the road," he exclaimed. "We shall have
to turn back a little way and go around."
They
drove back a quarter of a mile and turned into a by-road leading to the
right through the woods. The solemn silence of the pine forest is soothing
or oppressive, according to one's mood. Beneath the cool arcade of the
tall, overarching trees a deep peace stole over Tryon's heart. He had
put aside indefinitely and forever an unhappy and impossible love. The
pretty and affectionate girl beside him would make an ideal wife. Of her
family and blood he was sure. She was his mother's choice, and his mother
had set her heart upon their marriage. Why not speak to her now, and thus
give himself the best possible protection against stray flames of love?
"Blanche,"
he said, looking at her kindly
"Yes,
George?" Her voice was very gentle, and slightly tremulous. Could she
have divined his thought? Love is a great clairvoyant.
"Blanche,
dear, I" --
A clatter
of voices broke upon the stillness of the forest and interrupted
Tryon's speech. A sudden turn to the left brought the buggy to a little
clearing, in the midst of which stood a small log schoolhouse. Out of
the schoolhouse a swarm of colored children were emerging, the suppressed
energy of the school hour finding vent in vocal exercise of various sorts.
A group had already formed a ring, and were singing with great volume
and vigor: --
"Miss
Jane, she loves sugar an' tea, Miss Jane, she loves candy. Miss Jane,
she can whirl all around An' kiss her love quite handy.
"De
oak grows tall, De pine grows slim, So rise you up, my true love, An'
let me come in."
"What
a funny little darkey!" exclaimed Miss Leary, pointing to a diminutive
lad who was walking on his hands, with his feet balanced in the air. At
sight of the buggy and its occupants this sable acrobat, still retaining
his inverted position, moved toward the newcomers, and, reversing himself
with a sudden spring, brought up standing beside the buggy.
"Hoddy,
Mars Geo'ge!" he exclaimed, bobbing his head and kicking his heel out
behind in approved plantation style.
"Hello,
Plato," replied the young man, "what are you doing here?"
"Gwine
ter school, Mars Geo'ge," replied the lad; "larnin' ter read
an' write, suh, lack de w'ite folks."
"Wat
you callin' dat w'ite man marster fur?" whispered a tall yellow boy to
the acrobat addressed as Plato. "You don' b'long ter him no mo'; you're
free, an' ain' got sense ernuff ter know it."
Tryon
threw a small coin to Plato, and holding another in his hand suggestively,
smiled toward the tall yellow boy, who looked regretfully at the coin,
but stood his ground; he would call no man master, not even for a piece
of money.
During
this little colloquy, Miss Leary had kept her face turned toward the schoolhouse.
"What
a pretty girl!" she exclaimed. "There," she added, as Tryon turned his
head toward her, "you are too late. She has retired into her castle. Oh,
Plato!"
"Yas,
missis," replied Plato, who was prancing round the buggy in great glee,
on the strength of his acquaintance with the white folks.
"Is
your teacher white?"
"No,
ma'm, she ain't w'ite; she's black. She looks lack she's w'ite, but she's
black."
Tryon
had not seen the teacher's face, but the incident had jarred the old wound;
Miss Leary's description of the teacher, together with Plato's characterization,
had stirred lightly sleeping memories. He was more or less abstracted
during the remainder of the drive, and did not recur to the conversation
that had been interrupted by coming upon the schoolhouse.
The
teacher, glancing for a moment through the open door of the schoolhouse,
had seen a handsome young lady staring at her, -- Miss Leary had a curiously
intent look when she was interested in anything, with no intention whatever
to be rude, -- and beyond the lady the back and shoulder of a man, whose
face was turned the other way. There was a vague suggestion of something
familiar about the equipage, but Rena shrank from this close scrutiny
and withdrew out of sight before she had had an opportunity to identify
the vague resemblance to something she had known.
Miss
Leary had missed by a hair's-breadth the psychological moment, and felt
some resentment toward the little negroes who had interrupted her lover's
train of thought. Negroes have caused a great deal of trouble among white
people. How deeply the shadow of the Ethiopian had fallen upon her own
happiness, Miss Leary of course could not guess.
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