The next morning Hamilton was sitting
in his office when the cards of James Monroe, F.A.
Muhlenberg, and A. Venable were brought in.
“What on earth can they want?”
he thought. “Monroe? We have not bowed
for a year. Two days ago he turned into a muddy
lane and splashed himself to his waist, that he might
avoid meeting me.”
His first impulse was to excuse himself,
on the plea of the pressing nature of his work; but
curiosity triumphed, and he told his page to admit
the men.
Muhlenberg was again Speaker of the
House; Venable was a Representative from Virginia.
Hamilton was not friendly with either, but nodded when
they passed him. He greeted them amiably as they
entered to-day, and exchanged a frigid bow with Monroe.
The Senator from Virginia took a chair in the rear
of the others, stretched his long legs in front of
him, and folded his arms defiantly. He looked
not unlike a greyhound, his preference for drab clothing
enhancing the general effect of a pointed and narrow
leanness.
There was a moment of extreme awkwardness.
Muhlenberg and Venable hitched their chairs about.
Monroe grinned spasmodically, and rubbed his nose
with his upper lip.
“Well, gentlemen,” said
Hamilton, rapping his fingers on the table. “What
can I do for you?” He scented gun-powder at once.
“I am to be the spokesman in
this delicate matter, I believe,” said Muhlenberg,
who looked red and miserable, “and I will, with
your permission, proceed to my unpleasant task with
as little delay as possible.”
“Pray do,” replied Hamilton.
“The daily assaults of my enemies for several
years have endowed me with a fortitude which doubtless
will carry me through this interview in a creditable
manner.”
“I assure you, sir, that I do
not come as an enemy, but as a friend. It is
owing to my appeal that the matter was not laid directly
before the President.”
“The President?” Hamilton
half rose, then seated himself again. His eyes
were glittering dangerously. Muhlenberg blundered
on, his own gaze roving. The Federal term of
endearment for Hamilton, “The Little Lion,”
clanged suddenly in his mind, a warning bell.
“I regret to say that we have
discovered an improper connection between yourself
and one Reynolds.” He produced a bundle
of letters and handed them to Hamilton. “These
are not in your handwriting, sir, but I am informed
that you wrote them.”
Hamilton glanced at them hastily,
and the angry blood raced through his arteries.
“These letters were written
by me,” he said. “I disguised my handwriting
for purposes of my own. What is the meaning of
this unwarrantable intrusion into a man’s private
affairs? Explain yourself at once.”
“That is what we have come for,
sir. Unfortunately we cannot regard it as a private
affair, but one which concerns the whole nation.”
“The whole nation!” thundered
Hamilton. “What has the nation to do with
an affair of this sort? Why cannot you tell the
truth and say that you gloat in having discovered
this wretched affair,—a common enough episode
in the lives of all of you,—in having another
tid-bit for Freneau? Why did you not take it
to him at once? What do you mean by coming here
personally to take me to task?”
“I think there is some misapprehension,
sir,” said Muhlenberg. “It would
be quite impossible for any one present to have misconducted
himself in the manner in which the holder of those
letters, Mr. Reynolds, accuses you of having done.
And surely the whole country is intimately concerned
in the honesty—or the dishonesty—of
the Secretary of the Treasury.”
The words were out, and Muhlenberg
sat with his mouth open for a moment, as if to reinhale
the air which was escaping too quickly for calm speech.
Then he set his shoulders and braced himself to meet
the Secretary’s eyes. Hamilton was staring
at him, with no trace of passion in his face.
His eyes looked like steel; his whole face had hardened
into a mask. He had realized in a flash that he
was in the meshes of a plot, and forced the heat from
his brain. “Explain,” he said.
“I am listening.”
“As you are aware, sir, this
James Clingman, who has been arrested with Reynolds,
was a clerk in my employ. You will also recall
that when he applied to me to get him out, I, in company
with Colonel Burr, waited on you and asked your assistance.
You said that you would do all that was consistent,
but we did not hear from you further. Clingman
refunded the money, or certificates, which they had
improperly obtained from the Treasury, the action
was withdrawn, and he was discharged to-day. While
the matter was pending I had several conversations
with Clingman, and he frequently dropped hints to
the effect that Reynolds had it in his power materially
to injure the Secretary of the Treasury, as he knew
of several very improper transactions of his.
At first I paid no attention to these hints, but when
he went so far as to assert that Reynolds had it in
his power to hang the Secretary of the Treasury, that
the latter was deeply concerned in speculation with
Duer, and had frequently advanced him—Reynolds,
I mean—money with which to speculate, then
I conceived it my duty to take some sort of action,
and yesterday communicated with Mr. Monroe and Mr.
Venable. They went at once to call on Reynolds—whom
I privately believe to be a rascal, sir—and
he asserted that he was kept in prison by your connivance,
as you feared him; and promised to put us in possession
of the entire facts this morning. When we returned
at the hour appointed, he had absconded, having received
his discharge. We then went to his house and saw
his wife, who asserted, after some circumlocution,
that you had been concerned in speculations with her
husband, that at your request she had burnt most of
the letters you had written to herself and her husband,
and that all were in a disguised hand—like
these few which she had preserved. You will admit
that it is a very serious charge, sir, and that we
should have been justified in going directly to the
President. But we thought that in case there
might be an explanation—”
“Oh, there is an explanation,”
said Hamilton, with a sneer. “You shall
have it at my pleasure. I see that these notes
implicate me to the extent of eleven hundred dollars.
Strange, that a rapacious Secretary of the Treasury,
handling millions, and speculating wildly with a friend
of large resources, should have descended to such
small play as this. More especially strange that
he should have deliberately placed himself in the
power of such a rascal as this Reynolds—who
seems to impress every one he meets with his blackguardism—and
communicated with him freely on paper; you will have
observed that I acknowledged these notes without hesitation.
What a clumsy knave you must think me. I resent
the imputation. Perhaps you have noticed that
in one of these notes I state that on my honour I
cannot accommodate him with the three hundred dollars
he demands, because it is quite out of my power to
furnish it. Odd, that a thieving Secretary, engaged
in riotous speculation, could not lay his hand on
three hundred dollars, especially if it were necessary
to close this rascal’s mouth. I doubt, gentlemen,
if you will be able to convince the country that I
am a fool. Nevertheless, I recognize that this
accusation must be met by controverting proof; and
if you will do me the honour to call at my house to-night
at nine o’clock, I shall, in the presence of
the Comptroller of the Treasury, furnish these proofs.”
He rose, and the others pushed back
their chairs and departed hastily. Muhlenberg’s
red face wore a look of relief, but Monroe scowled.
Neither had failed to be impressed by the Secretary’s
manner, and the Speaker of the House, ashamed of his
part in the business, would gladly have listened to
an immediate vindication.
Hamilton sat motionless for some moments,
the blood returning to his face, for he was seething
with fury and disgust.
“The hounds!” he said
aloud, then again and again. He was alone, and
he never had conquered his youthful habit of muttering
to himself. “I can see Monroe leaping,
not walking, to the jail, the moment he learned of
a chance to incriminate me. The heels at the
end of those long legs must have beaten the powder
from his queue. And this is what a man is to
expect so long as he remains in public life—if
he succeeds. He resigns a large income, reduces
his family almost to poverty, works himself half to
death, rescues the country from contempt, launches
it upon the sea of prosperity; and his public rewards
are more than counterbalanced by the persecutions
of his enemies. I have been on the defensive from
the moment I entered public life. Scarcely a
week but I have been obliged to parry some poisoned
arrow or pluck it out and cauterize. The dreams
of my youth! They never soared so high as my
present attainment, but neither did they include this
constant struggle with the vilest manifestations of
which the human nature is capable.” He brought
his fist down on the table. “I am a match
for all of them,” he exclaimed. “But
their arrows rankle, for I am human. They have
poisoned every hour of victory.”
He caught up his hat and went out
into the air. The solace of Mrs. Croix in his
blacker moods occurred to him; and he walked down Chestnut
Street as rapidly as he could, in the crowd, lifting
his hat now and again to cool his head in the frosty
air. It was a brilliant winter’s day; drifts
of snow hid the dead animals and the garbage in the
streets; and all the world was out for Christmas shopping.
As it was one of the seasons for display, everybody
was in his best. The women wore bright-coloured
taffetas or velvets, over hoops flattened before and
behind, muskmelon bonnets or towering hats. They
whisked their gowns about, that their satin petticoats
be not overlooked. The men wore the cocked hat,
heavily laced, and a long coat, usually of light-coloured
cloth, with a diminutive cape, the silver buttons
engraved with initials or crest. Their small
clothes were very short, but heavy striped stockings
protected their legs; on their feet were pointed shoes,
with immense silver buckles. Hamilton was dressed
with his usual exquisite care, his cuffs carefully
leaded. But his appearance interested him little
to-day. For the moment, however, he forgot his
private annoyance in the portent on every side of
him. Few of the seekers after gifts had entered
the shops. They blocked the pavements, even the
street, talking excitedly of the news of the day before.
Fully half the throng sported the tri-coloured cockade,
the air hissed with “Citizen,” “Citess,”
or rang with a volley of “Ça ira! Ça ira!”
Hamilton set his teeth. “It
is the next nightmare,” he thought.
“The Cabinet is quiet at present—Jefferson,
mortified and beaten, is coaxing back his courage
for a final spring. When the time comes to determine
our attitude there will be Hell, nothing less.”
But his nostrils quivered. He might rebel at
poisoned arrows, but he revelled in the fight that
involved the triumph of a policy.
His mind was abstracted, the blood
was still in his brain as he entered Mrs. Croix’s
drawing-room. For a moment he had a confused idea
that he had blundered into a shop. The chairs,
the sofas, the floor, were covered with garments and
stuffs of every hue. Hats and bonnets were perched
on every point. Never had he seen so much gorgeous
raiment in one space before. There were brocades,
taffetas, satins, lutestrings, laces, feathers, fans,
underwear like mist. While he was staring about
him in bewilderment, Mrs. Croix came running in from
her bedroom. Her hair was down and tangled, her
dressing sacque half off, her face flushed, her eyes
sparkling. She looked half wanton, half like a
giddy girl darting about among her first trunks.
“Hamilton!” she cried.
“Hamilton!” She flew at him much as his
children did when excited. “Look!
Look! Look! Is this not magnificent?
This is the happiest day of my life!”
“Indeed? Are you about to set up a shop?”
“A shop? I am about to
deck myself once more in the raiment that I love.
Have I not drooped in weeds long enough, sir?
I am going to be beautiful again! I am going
to wear all those lovely things—all! all!
And I am going to Lady Washington’s to-morrow
night. Mrs. Knox will take me. But I vow
I do not care half so much for that as for my beautiful
things. They arrived by the London packet yesterday,
but have only now been delivered. I ordered them
long since, and hardly could control my impatience
till they came. I am so happy! I feel like
a bird that has been plucked for years.”
Hamilton looked at her in amazement,
and despair. More than once he had caught a glimpse
of the frivolous side of her nature, but that it could
spread and control her he never had imagined.
Her intelligence, her passions, her inherited and
accumulated wisdom, were crowded into some submerged
cell. There was nothing in her at the present
moment for him, and he turned on his heel without
a word and left the house. She rapped sharply
on the window as he passed, but he did not look up.
He was filled with that unreasoning anger peculiar
to man when woman for once has failed to respond.
He consigned her and her clothes to the devil, and
looked at his watch. It was ten minutes to one.
His dinner hour was two o’clock. He would
go home to his wife, where he should have gone in
the first place. She never had failed him, or
if she had he could not recall the occasion.
Her little dark face rose before him, innocent and
adorable. He could not tell her of the cause of
his annoyance,—it suddenly occurred to
him that the less of that matter confided to Mrs.
Croix the better,—but then he never worried
her with his troubles. He would merely go and
bask in her presence for an hour, confess to a headache,
and receive her sweet ministrations.
As he entered his own house, and,
relieved of his coat and hat by the waiting black,
ran up the stair, he thought he heard a soft babble
of voices. Knowing that his wife would, if he
desired it, dismiss at once any company she might
have, he knocked confidently at her door and entered.
For a moment he felt inclined to rub his eyes, and
wondered if he were the victim of delirium. The
bed was covered with bandboxes, the sofa with new
frocks. Betsey was sitting before the mirror,
trying on a cap, and her sisters, Peggy and Cornelia,
were clapping their hands. Angelica was perched
on the back of a chair, her eyes twice their natural
size, Hamilton attempted instant retreat, but Betsey
saw his reflection in the mirror.
“You?” she cried.
“What a surprise and pleasure. Come here,
sir, at once.”
Meanwhile his two sisters-in-law,
whose expected visit he had quite forgotten, ran forward
and kissed him effusively. With the desire in
his heart to rend the Universe in twain he went forward
and smiled down into his wife’s eager face.
“Angelica has sent me so many
things!” she exclaimed. Her face was flushed,
her eyes sparkling. She looked sixteen. “And
this cap is the most bewitching of all. You came
just at the right moment; it is quite singular.
Read—“.
She thrust a letter from Mrs. Church
into his hand, and he read where his wife pointed.
“Someone who loves you will tell you if it is
becoming or not.” And on the following
page. “Kiss my saucy Brother for me.
I call him my Brother with an air of pride. And
tell him, Il est l’homme le plus aimable
du monde.”
“It is charming,” said
Hamilton, pinching his wife’s chin. “It
is like a frame. You never looked half so sweet.”
Betsey cooed with delight. Hamilton,
having done his duty, was about to retire in good
order, when he met his little daughter’s eyes.
They had dismissed the wonderful cap and were fixed
on him with an expression that gave him a sudden thrill.
It was not the first time he had seen in Angelica
so strong a resemblance to his mother that he half
believed some fragment of Rachael Levine had come
back to him. Her eyes were dark, but she had
a mane of reddish fair hair, and a skin as white as
porcelain, a long sensitive nose, and a full mobile
mouth. She had none of his mother’s vitality
and dash, however. She was delicate and rather
shrinking, and he knew that Rachael at her age must
have been a marvel of mental and physical energy.
It was only occasionally, when he turned suddenly
and caught Angelica staring at him, that he experienced
the odd sensation of meeting his mother’s eyes,
informed, moreover, with an expression of penetrating
comprehension—an expression he recalled
without effort. The child idolized him. She
sat outside his study while he wrote, crawling in
between the legs of anyone who opened the door? to
sit at his feet; or, if he dismissed her, in another
part of the room until he left it. She watched
for his daily returns, and usually greeted him from
the banister post. Amiable, intelligent, pretty,
affectionate, and already putting forth the tender
leaves of a great gift, her father thought her quite
perfect, and they had long conversations whenever he
was at leisure in his home. She demanded a great
deal of petting, and he was always ready to humour
her, the more as she was the only girl, and the one
quiet member of his little family—although
she had been known to use her fists upon occasion.
Her prettiness and intelligence delighted him, her
affection was one of the deepest pleasures of his
life, and he was thankful for the return to him of
his mother’s beautiful and singular features.
To-day the resemblance was so striking that he contracted
his eyelids. Angelica straightened herself, gave
a spring, and alighted on his chest.
“Take me downstairs and talk
to me,” she commanded. “’Tis nearly
an hour to dinner.”
Hamilton swung her to his shoulder,
and went downstairs. On the way he laughed out
loud. The past half-hour tossed itself into the
foreground of his mind, clad in the skirts of high
comedy. Tragedy fled. The burden in his
breast went with it. Far be it from him to cherish
a grudge against the sex that so often reduced the
trials of public life to insignificance. Women
were delicious irresponsible beings; man was an ingrate
to take their shortcomings seriously.
“Why do you laugh?” asked
his daughter, whose arm nearly strangled him.
“You were very angry when you came into mamma’s
room.”
“Indeed?” said Hamilton, nettled.
“Was I not smiling?”
“Yes, sir; but you often smile
when you would like to run the carving-knife into
somebody.”
They had reached the library.
Hamilton sat the child on the edge of his table and
took a chair closely facing her. “What do
you mean, you little witch?” he demanded.
“I am always happy when I am at home.”
“Almost always. Sometimes
you are very angry, and sometimes you are sad.
Why do you pretend? Why don’t you tell us?”
“Well,” said Hamilton,
with some confusion. “I love you all very
much, you see, and you do make me happy—why
should I worry you?”
“I should feel better if you
told me—right out. It gives me a pain
here.”
She laid her hand to her head, and
Hamilton stared at her in deepening perplexity.
Another child—anything feminine, at least—would
have indicated her heart as the citadel of sorrow.
“Why there?” he asked. “Do
you mean a pain?”
“Yes, a pain, but not so bad
as when I am in Albany or Saratoga and you are here.
Then I worry all the time.”
“Do you mean that you are ever unhappy?”
“I am unhappy whenever you are,
or I am afraid that you are. I know that you
are very big and the cleverest man in the world, and
that I am too little to do you any good, and I don’t
know why I worry when I am away.” “But,
my dear child, what in Heaven’s name do you mean?
Have you ever spoken to your mother of this?”
Angelica shook her head. Her
eyes grew larger and wiser. “No; I should
only worry Betsey, and she is always happy. She
is not clever like you and me.”
Hamilton rose abruptly and walked
to the window. When he had composed his features
he returned. “You must not criticise your
mother in that way, my dear. She is a very clever
little woman, indeed.”
Angelica nodded. “If she
were clever, you would not say ‘little.’
Nobody says that you are a very clever little man.
When I’m big, I’ll not be called little,
either. I love our dear Queen Bess, but I’m
all yours. Why were you so angry to-day?”
“I couldn’t possibly tell
you,” replied her father, turning cold.
“You must not ask too many questions; but I
am very grateful for your sympathy. You are my
dear little girl, and you make me love you more and
more, daily.”
“And will you tell me whenever
you are not feeling like what you are making the rest
believe?”
“If it will make you any happier,
I will whisper it into your pink little ear.
But I think I should be a very bad father to make you
unhappy.”
“I told you, sir, that I am
more unhappy when I imagine things. It is just
like a knife,” and again she pointed to her head.
Hamilton turned pale. “You
are too young to have headaches,” he said.
“Perhaps you have been studying too hard.
I am so ambitious for my children; but the boys have
taken to books as they have to kites and fisticuffs.
I should have remembered that girls—”
His memory gave up the stories of his mother’s
precocity. But this child, who was so startlingly
like the dead woman, was far less fitted to carry such
burdens. So sensitive an intelligence in so frail
a body might suddenly flame too high and fall to ashes.
He resolved to place her in classes of other little
girls at once, and to keep her in the fields as much
as possible. None knew better than he how close
the highly strung unresting brain could press to madness.
He had acquired a superhuman control over his.
If this girl’s brain had come out of his own,
it must be closely watched. She had not inherited
his high light spirits, but the melancholy which had
lain at the foundations of his mother’s nature;
she would require the most persistent guarding.
He took her face between his hands and kissed it many
times.
“Very well,” he said,
“we will have our little secrets. I will
tell you when I am disturbed, and you will sit close
beside me with your doll until I feel better.
But remember, I expect as much confidence in return.
You will never have a care nor a terror nor an annoyance
that you will not confide it to me directly.”
She nodded. “I’m
always telling you things to myself. And I won’t
cry any more in the night, when I think you have felt
badly and could not tell anyone. It will all
go away if you talk to me about it,” she added
confidently.
Hamilton swung her to his shoulder
again and started for the dining room.
“The child is uncanny,”
he thought. “Can there be anything in that
old theory that tormented and erring souls come back
to make their last expiation in children? That
means early death!” He dismissed the thought
promptly.