As Christopher went up to her, she stretched out her hand and touched his face with her sensitive fingers."Oh, if I could only see you," she said, a little peevishly."It is twenty years since I looked at you, and now you are taller than your father was, you say.I can feel that your hair is light, like his and like Lila's, too, since you are twins."A pretty, fragile woman, who was wrapping a shawl about the old lady's feet, rose to her full height and passed behind the Elizabethan chair." Just a shade lighter than mine, mother," she responded; "the sun makes a difference, you know; he is in the sun so much without a hat." As she stood with her delicate hands clasped above the fancifully carved grotesques upon the chair-back, her beauty shone like a lamp against the smoke-stained walls.
"Ah, if you could but have seen his father when he was young, Lila," sighed her mother, falling into one of the easy reveries of old age."I met him at a fancy ball, you know, where he went as Achilles in full Grecian dress.Oh! the sight he was, my dear, one of the few fair men among us, and taller even than old Colonel Fitzhugh, who was considered one of the finest figures of his time.That was a wild night for me, Christopher, as I've told you often before--it was love at first sight on both sides, and so marked were your father's attentions that they were the talk of the ball.Edward Morris--the greatest wit of his day, you know--remarked at supper that the weak point of Achilles was proved at last to be not his heel, but his heart."She laughed with pleasure at the memory, and returned in a half-hearted fashion to her plate of buttered waffles."Have you been riding again, Christopher?" she asked after a moment, as if remembering a grievance."I haven't had so much as a word from you to-day, but when one is chained to a chair like this it is useless to ask even to be thought of amid your pleasures.""I always think of you, mother."
"Well, I'm glad to hear it, my dear, though I'm sure I should never imagine that you do.Have you heard, by the way, that Boaz lost the key of the winecellar, and that I had to go two whole days without my port? I declare, he is getting so careless that I'm afraid we'll have to put another butler over him.""Lawd, ole miss, you ain' gwine do dat, is you?" anxiously questioned Uncle Boaz as he filled her glass.
She lifted the wine to her lips, her stern face softening.Like many a high-spirited woman doomed to perpetual inaction, her dominion over her servants had grown to represent the larger share of life.
"Then be more careful in future, Boaz," she cautioned."Tell me, Lila, what has become of Nathan, the son of Phyllis? He used to be a very bright little darkey twenty years ago, and I always intended putting him in the dining-room, but things escape me so.
His mother, Phyllis, I remember, got some ridiculous idea about freedom in her head, and ran away with the Yankee soldiers before we whipped them."Lila's face flushed, for since the war Nathan had grown into one of the most respectable of freedmen, but Uncle Boaz, with a glib tongue, started valiantly to her support.
"Go 'way, ole miss; dat ar Natan is de mos' ornery un er de hull bunch," he declared."Wen he comes inter my dinin'-'oom, out I'se gwine, an' days sho."The old lady passed a hand slowly across her brow."I can't remember--I can't remember," she murmured; "but I dare say you're right, Boaz--and that reminds me that this bottle of port is not so good as the last.Have you tried it, Christopher?""Not yet, mother.Where did you find it, Uncle Boaz?""Hit's des de same, suh," protested Uncle Boaz."Dey wuz bofe un um layin' right side by side, des like dey 'uz bo'n blood kin, en I done dus' de cobwebs off'n um wid de same duster, dat I is.""Well, well, that will do.Now go in to supper, children, and send Docia to take my tray.Dear me, I do wish that Tucker could be persuaded to give up that vulgar bacon.I'm not so unreasonable, I hope, as to expect a man to make any sacrifices in this world--that's the woman's part, and I've tried to take my share of it--but to conceive of a passion for a thing like bacon--I declare is quite beyond me.""Come, now, Lucy, don't begin to meddle with my whims," protested the cheerful tones of Tucker, as he entered on his crutches, one of which was strapped to the stump of his right arm."Allow me my dissipations, my dear, and I'll not interfere with yours.""Dissipations!" promptly took up the old lady, from the hearth.
"Why, if it were such a gentlemanly thing as a dissipation, Tucker, I shouldn't say a word--not a single word.A taste for wine is entirely proper, I'm sure, and even a little intoxication is permissible on occasions--such as christenings, weddings, and Christmas Eve gatherings.Your father used to say, Christopher, that the proof of a gentleman was in the way he held his wine.
But to fall a deliberate victim to so low-born a vice as a love of bacon is something that no member of our family has ever done before.""That's true, Lucy," pleasantly assented Tucker; "but then, you see, no member of our family had ever fought three years for his State--to say nothing of losing a leg and an arm in her service."His fine face was ploughed with the marks of suffering, but the heartiness had not left his voice, and his smile still shone bright and strong.From a proud position as the straightest shot and the gayest liver of his day, he had been reduced at a single blow to the couch of a hopeless cripple.Poverty had come a little later, but the second shock had only served to steady his nerves from the vibration of the first, and the courage which had drooped within him for a time was revived in the form of a rare and gentle humour.Nothing was so terrible but Tucker could get a laugh out of it, people said--not knowing that since he had learned to smile at his own ghastly failure it was an easy matter to turn the jest on universal joy or woe.