There were not many who troubled their heads by conjectures upon the subject: for Stone Dean lay so much out of the line of the ordinary roads of the county, that but few persons ever found occasion to pass near it. Few could say they had ever been in sight of it. There were people living within five miles of the place that did not even know of its existence; and others who had once known, and forgotten it.
Of late, however, the “Old house of Stone Dean” had become a subject of some interest; and at the fairs, and other village gatherings, its name was often pronounced. This arose from the circumstance: that a new tenant had displaced the old fixture of a caretaker – the latter disappearing from the place as quietly and inexplicably as he had occupied it!
About the new comer, and his domestic ménage, there was an air of peculiarity approaching the mysterious. Such of the peasants, as had found pretext for visiting the house, reported that there was but one servant in the establishment – a young man, with a copper-coloured skin, and long straight black hair, who answered to the name of “Oriole;” and who appeared to be of the race of American Indians – a party of whom from the Transatlantic Plantations had about that time paid a visit to England.
It was further known that Oriole either could not speak English, or would not. At all events, the visitors to Stone Dean had not been able to elicit from the servant any great amount of information respecting the master.
The master himself, however, was not long resident in the county of Bucks before he became well enough known to his neighbours. He was in the habit of meeting them at their markets and merry-makings; of entering into free converse with them on many subjects – more especially on matters appertaining to their political welfare; and seemed to lose no opportunity of giving them instructive hints in regard to their rights, as well as wrongs.
Such sentiments were neither new, nor uncongenial, to the dwellers amongst the Chilterns. They had long been cherished in their hearts; but the dread of the Star chamber hindered them from rising to their lips. The man, therefore, who had the courage to give speech to them could not fail to be popular among the worthy yeomanry of Bucks; and such, in reality, had become the occupant of Stone Dean, in a few short weeks after taking up his residence in their county.
This individual possessed other claims to popular favour. He was a gentleman – nobly born and highly bred. His appearance and behaviour proclaimed these points beyond cavil; and in such matters the instinct of the rustic is rarely incorrect. Furthermore, the stranger was a person of elegant appearance; perhaps not regularly handsome, but with that air of savoir faire, and bold bearing, sure to attract admiration. Plainly, but richly dressed; a splendid horseman, and riding a splendid horse withal; frank and affable, not as if condescending – for at this the instinct of the rustic revolts – but distinguished by that simple unselfish spirit, which characterises the true gentleman, how could Henry Holtspur fail to be popular?
Such was the cavalier, who had conquered the arm of Captain Scarthe, and the heart of Marion Wade.
It was the night of that same day, on which the fête had been held in the park of Sir Marmaduke Wade. The unexpected arrival of the cuirassiers – with the exciting circumstances that succeeded – had brought the sports to an early termination.
After incidents of so tragical a character, it was not likely that any one should care to continue the tame diversion of quoits, or balloon. Even single-stick and wrestling appeared insipid – succeeding to that strife, that had well-nigh proved deadly.
Long before night, the old camp had become cleared of its crowd. Though groups lingered later in the park, it was not in pursuance of sport, but out of curiosity, and to converse about what was passing at the mansion – whither the cuirassier captain and his troopers had transported themselves, after reading that ironical appeal to the hospitality of its owner.
Among the earliest who had left the ground was the conqueror in the equestrian combat. He could not have gone direct home; or he must have again ridden abroad: since at a late hour of the night – his horse dappled with sweat and foam – he was seen turning out of the king’s highway, into the bridle-road already described, as running over the ridges in the direction of Stone Dean.
As the woods extended nearly the whole of the way, he rode in shadow – though a bright moon was beaming in the heavens above. He rode in silence too. But the subject of his thoughts may be easily conjectured. Treading a track oft hallowed by her presence, what but Marion Wade could he be thinking of?
More unerringly might his sentiments be divined, when, on reaching the open glade, he stopped under the spreading beech, raised his beaver from his head, and gazed for some seconds upon the white glove, glistening beneath its panache of black plumes.
As he did so, his features exhibited a mingled expression – half fondness, half fear – as if his mind was wavering between confidence and doubt. It was an expression difficult to read; and no one ignorant of the circumstances of his life – perhaps no one but himself – could have given it the true interpretation.
Henry Holtspur had more than one thought to sadden his spirit; but the one which most troubled him then was, that she, who had given the glove – for he fondly clung to the belief that it had been a gift – that she had ceased to think either of it or of him. It was now six days since that token had been received; and, excepting at the fête, he had not met her again. She came no more outside the enclosure of the park – no more was the track of her palfrey impressed upon the forest path.
Why had she discontinued those lonely rides – those wanderings in the wood, that had led to such sweet encounters?
For days past, and every hour of the day, had Holtspur been asking himself this question; but as yet it remained unanswered.
Little did young Walter Wade suspect the profound though well – concealed pleasure with which his fellow traveller had heard, and accepted his proffered hospitality. The promised introduction on the morrow would surely enable the lover to obtain some explanation – if only a word to resolve the doubt that had begun to torture him?
That morrow had arrived. The introduction had been given. The interview had ended; ill-starred he might deem it: since the conduct of Marion remained inexplicable as ever. Her speeches during the brief dialogue held between them had appeared even cold. With more pain than pleasure did Holtspur now recall them.
Man of the world as he was – far from being unskilled in woman’s heart, or the way of winning it – he should have reasoned differently. Perhaps had the object of this new passion been an ordinary woman, he might have done so. Many had been his conquests; maidens of many climes, and of many shades of complexion – dark and fair, brunette and blonde – all beautiful; but none so brilliantly beautiful as that blue-eyed golden-haired Saxon girl, who had now made conquest of his heart, and held even his reason in captivity.
He gazed upon the glove with a glance at once tender and inquiring – as if he might obtain from it an answer to that question of all-absorbing interest: – whether, under the shadow of that sacred tree it had fallen to the ground by accident, or whether it had been dropped by design?
His steed struck the turf with impatient hoof, as if demanding a reply.
“Ah! Hubert,” muttered his rider, “much as I love you – even despite the service you have this day done me – I should part with you, to be assured, that I ought to esteem this spot the most hallowed upon all the earth. But, come, old friend! that’s no reason why you should be kept any longer out of your stall. You must be tired after your tournament, and a trot of twenty miles at its termination. I’faith, I’m fatigued myself. Let us home, and to rest!”
So saying, the cavalier, by a slight pressure of his knees against the side of his well-trained steed – a signal which the latter perfectly understood – once more set Hubert in motion; who carried him silently away from that scene of uncertain souvenirs.
Volume One – Chapter Twenty Two
It was late at night when Henry Holtspur passed between the ivy-mantled piers, that supported the dilapidated wooden gate of Stone Dean Park. The massive door of the old mansion was standing open, as he rode forward to it. A light, faintly flickering within the hall, showed in dim outline the wide doorway, with its rounded arch of Norman architecture.
Midway between the jambs could be distinguished the figure of a man – standing motionless – as if awaiting his approach.
The moon was shining upon this individual with sufficient clearness to show: that he was a young man of medium stature, straight as a lance, and habited in a sort of tunic, of what appeared to be dressed deerskin. His complexion was a reddish brown – darker from the shadowing of a shock of jet-black hair; while a pair of eyes, that glistened against the moonlight, like two circular discs of highly-polished ebony, exhibited no appearance of surprise at the approach of the horseman.
Something resembling a turban appeared upon the young man’s head; while his legs were wrapped in leggings of similar material to that which composed the tunic, and his feet were also encased in a chaussure of buckskin. A belt around his waist showed a pattern of coloured embroidery; with a short knife stuck behind it, resting diagonally over the region of the heart.
Up to the moment that the horseman made halt in front of the doorway, this individual had neither spoken nor moved – not even as much as a finger; and with the moonlight full upon his face, and revealing his dusky complexion, it would not have been difficult for a stranger to have mistaken him for a statue of bronze – the stoop of the doorway appearing as its pedestal, and the arch above answering to the alcove in which it had been placed. It was only after the horseman had fairly checked his steed to a stand, that the statue condescended to step down from its niche!
Then, gliding forward with the stealthy tread of a cat, the Indian – for such was this taciturn individual – caught hold of the bridle-rein, and stood waiting for his master to dismount.
“Walk Hubert about for five minutes,” said the latter, as he leaped out of the saddle. “That ruined stable’s too damp for him after the exercise he has had. See that he’s well rubbed down, and freely fed, before you leave him.”
To these directions, although delivered in his own native language, the copper-coloured groom made no verbal response.
A slight motion of the head alone indicated that he understood, and consented to obey them.
His master, evidently looking for no other sort of reply, passed on towards the doorway.
“Has any one been after me, Oriole?” inquired he, pausing upon the steps.
Oriole raised his right arm into a horizontal position, and pointed towards the open entrance.
“Some one inside?”
The interrogatory was answered by a nod in the affirmative.
“Only one, or more?”
The Indian held up his hand with all the fingers closed except one.
“One only. Did he come a-foot, or on horseback?”
Oriole made answer, by placing the fore and middle fingers of his right hand astride of the index finger of the left.
“A horseman!” said the cavalier, translating the sign; “’Tis late for a visitor – especially as I did not expect any one to-night. Is he a stranger, Oriole?”
The Indian signalled an affirmative, by spreading his fingers, and placing them so as to cover both his eyes.
“Does he appear to have come from a distance?”
The pantomimic answer to this was the right arm extended to its full length, with the fore finger held in a vertical position – the hand being then drawn slowly in towards the body.
The horseman had come from a distance – a fact that the Indian had deduced from the condition of his horse.
“As soon as you have stalled Hubert, show the stranger into my sitting-room. Be quick about it: he may not intend to stay.”