It was a month later that Rachael,
returning after a long ride with Hamilton, found her
mother just descended from the family coach.
“Is it possible that you have
been to pay visits?” she asked, as she hastened
to support the feeble old woman up the steps.
“No, I have been to Basseterre with Archibald
Hamn.”
“Not to St. Peter’s, I hope.”
“Oh, my dear, I do not feel
in the mood to jest. I went to court to secure
the future of my three dear slaves, Rebecca, Flora,
and Esther.”
Rachael placed her mother on one of
the verandah chairs and dropped upon another.
“Why have you done that?” she asked faintly.
“Surely—”
“There are several things I
fully realize, and one is that each attack leaves
me with less vitality to resist the next. These
girls are the daughters of my dear old Rebecca, who
was as much to me as a black ever can be to a white,
and that is saying a good deal. I have just signed
a deed of trust before the Registrar—to
Archibald. They are still mine for the rest of
my life, yours for your lifetime, or as long as you
live here; then they go to Archibald or his heirs.
I want you to promise me that they shall never go
beyond this Island or Nevis.”
“I promise.” Rachael had covered
her face with her hand.
“I believe you kept the last
promise you made me. It is not in your character
to break your word, however you may see fit to take
the law into your own hands.”
“I kept it.”
“And you will live with him
openly after my death. I have appreciated your
attempt to spare me.”
“Ah, you do know me.”
“Some things may escape my tired
old eyes, but I love you too well not to have seen
for a month past that you were as happy as a bride.
I shall say no more—save for a few moments
with James Hamilton. I am old and ill and helpless.
You are young and indomitable. If I were as vigorous
and self-willed as when I left your father, I could
not control you now. I shall leave you independent.
Will Hamilton, Archibald, and a few others will stand
by you; but alas! you will, in the course of nature,
outlive them all, and have no friend in the world but
Hamilton—although I shall write an appeal
to your sisters to be sent to them after my death.
But oh, how I wish, how I wish, that you could marry
this man.”
Mary Fawcett was attacked that night
by the last harsh rigours of her disease and all its
complications. Until she died, a week later,
Rachael, except for the hour that Hamilton sat alone
beside the bed of the stricken woman, did not leave
her mother. The immortal happiness of the last
month was forgotten. She was prostrate, literally
on her knees with grief and remorse, for she believed
that her mother’s discovery had hastened the
end.
“No, it is not so,” said
Mary Fawcett, one day. “My time has come
to die. Will Hamilton will assure you of that,
and I have watched the space between myself and death
diminish day by day, for six months past. I have
known that I should die before the year was out.
It is true that I die in sorrow and with a miserable
sense of failure, for you have been my best-beloved,
my idol, and I leave you terribly placed in life and
with little hope of betterment. But for you I
have no reproach. You have given me love for
love, and duty for duty. Life has treated you
brutally; what has come now was, I suppose, inevitable.
Human nature when it is strong enough is stronger
than moral law. I grieve for you, but I die without
grievance against you. Remember that. And
Hamilton? He is honourable, and he loves you
utterly—but is he strong? I wish I
knew. His emotions and his active brain give him
so much apparent force—but underneath?
I wish I knew.”
Rachael was grateful for her mother’s
unselfish assurance, but she was not to be consoled.
The passions in her nature, released from other thrall,
manifested themselves in a grief so profound, and at
times so violent, that only her strong frame saved
her from illness. For two weeks after Mary Fawcett’s
death she refused to see James Hamilton; but by that
time he felt at liberty to assert his rights, and her
finely poised mind recovered its balance under his
solace and argument. Her life was his, and to
punish him assuaged nothing of her sorrow. He
had decided, after consultation with his cousin, to
take her to Nevis, not only to seclude her from the
scandalized society she knew best, but that he might
better divert her mind, in new scenes, from her heavy
affliction. Hamilton had already embarked in his
business enterprise, but he had bought and manned
a sail-boat, which would carry him to and from St.
Kitts daily. In the dead calms of summer there
was little business doing.
“I attempted no sophistry with
my cousin,” said Hamilton, “and for that
reason I think I have put the final corking-pin into
our friendship. Right or wrong we are going to
live together for the rest of our lives, because I
will have no other woman, and you will have no other
man; and we will live together publicly, not only
because neither of us has the patience for scheming
and deceit, but because passion is not our only motive
for union. There is gallantry on every side of
us, and doubtless we alone shall be made to suffer;
for the world loves to be fooled, it hates the crudeness
of truth. But we have each other, and nothing
else matters.”
And to Rachael nothing else mattered,
for her mother was dead, and she loved Hamilton with
an increasing passion that was long in culminating.