<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXI" id="CHAPTER_XXI"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXI</h2>
<h3>THE TEMPTER</h3>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_198" id="Page_198"></SPAN></span>It was well for Mara that so much of her life had been
passed in wild forest rambles. She looked frail as the rays
of moonbeam which slid down the old white-bearded hemlocks,
but her limbs were agile and supple as steel; and
while the party went crashing on before, she followed with
such lightness that the slight sound of her movements was
entirely lost in the heavy crackling plunges of the party.
Her little heart was beating fast and hard; but could any
one have seen her face, as it now and then came into a
spot of moonshine, they might have seen it fixed in a deadly
expression of resolve and determination. She was going
after <i>him</i>—no matter where; she was resolved to know
who and what it was that was leading him away, as her
heart told her, to no good. Deeper and deeper into the
shadows of the forest they went, and the child easily kept
up with them.</p>
<p>Mara had often rambled for whole solitary days in this
lonely wood, and knew all its rocks and dells the whole
three miles to the long bridge at the other end of the island.
But she had never before seen it under the solemn stillness
of midnight moonlight, which gives to the most familiar
objects such a strange, ghostly charm. After they had
gone a mile into the forest, she could see through the black
spruces silver gleams of the sea, and hear, amid the whirr
and sway of the pine-tops, the dash of the ever restless
tide which pushed up the long cove. It was at the full,
as she could discern with a rapid glance of her practiced<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_199" id="Page_199"></SPAN></span>
eye, expertly versed in the knowledge of every change of
the solitary nature around.</p>
<p>And now the party began to plunge straight down the
rocky ledge of the Devil's Back, on which they had been
walking hitherto, into the deep ravine where lay the cove.
It was a scrambling, precipitous way, over perpendicular
walls of rock, whose crevices furnished anchoring-places for
grand old hemlocks or silver-birches, and whose rough
sides, leathery with black flaps of lichen, were all tangled
and interlaced with thick netted bushes. The men plunged
down laughing, shouting, and swearing at their occasional
missteps, and silently as moonbeam or thistledown the
light-footed shadow went down after them.</p>
<p>She suddenly paused behind a pile of rock, as, through
an opening between two great spruces, the sea gleamed out
like a sheet of looking-glass set in a black frame. And
here the child saw a small vessel swinging at anchor, with
the moonlight full on its slack sails, and she could hear the
gentle gurgle and lick of the green-tongued waves as they
dashed under it toward the rocky shore.</p>
<p>Mara stopped with a beating heart as she saw the company
making for the schooner. The tide is high; will
they go on board and sail away with him where she cannot
follow? What could she do? In an ecstasy of fear
she kneeled down and asked God not to let him go,—to
give her at least one more chance to save him.</p>
<p>For the pure and pious child had heard enough of the
words of these men, as she walked behind them, to fill her
with horror. She had never before heard an oath, but
there came back from these men coarse, brutal tones and
words of blasphemy that froze her blood with horror. And
Moses was going with them! She felt somehow as if they
must be a company of fiends bearing him to his ruin.</p>
<p>For some time she kneeled there watching behind the
rock, while Moses and his companions went on board the<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_200" id="Page_200"></SPAN></span>
little schooner. She had no feeling of horror at the loneliness
of her own situation, for her solitary life had made
every woodland thing dear and familiar to her. She was
cowering down, on a loose, spongy bed of moss, which was
all threaded through and through with the green vines and
pale pink blossoms of the mayflower, and she felt its fragrant
breath streaming up in the moist moonlight. As
she leaned forward to look through a rocky crevice, her
arms rested on a bed of that brittle white moss she had
often gathered with so much admiration, and a scarlet rock-columbine,
such as she loved to paint, brushed her cheek,—and
all these mute fair things seemed to strive to keep
her company in her chill suspense of watchfulness. Two
whippoorwills, from a clump of silvery birches, kept calling
to each other in melancholy iteration, while she stayed there
still listening, and knowing by an occasional sound of
laughing, or the explosion of some oath, that the men were
not yet gone. At last they all appeared again, and came
to a cleared place among the dry leaves, quite near to the
rock where she was concealed, and kindled a fire which
they kept snapping and crackling by a constant supply of
green resinous hemlock branches.</p>
<p>The red flame danced and leaped through the green fuel,
and leaping upward in tongues of flame, cast ruddy bronze
reflections on the old pine-trees with their long branches
waving with boards of white moss,—and by the firelight
Mara could see two men in sailor's dress with pistols in
their belts, and the man Atkinson, whom she had recollected
as having seen once or twice at her grandfather's.
She remembered how she had always shrunk from him with
a strange instinctive dislike, half fear, half disgust, when
he had addressed her with that kind of free admiration
which men of his class often feel themselves at liberty to
express to a pretty girl of her early age. He was a man
that might have been handsome, had it not been for a cer<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_201" id="Page_201"></SPAN></span>tain
strange expression of covert wickedness. It was as if
some vile evil spirit, walking, as the Scriptures say, through
dry places, had lighted on a comely man's body, in which
he had set up housekeeping, making it look like a fair
house abused by an unclean owner.</p>
<p>As Mara watched his demeanor with Moses, she could
think only of a loathsome black snake that she had once
seen in those solitary rocks;—she felt as if his handsome
but evil eye were charming him with an evil charm to his
destruction.</p>
<p>"Well, Mo, my boy," she heard him say,—slapping
Moses on the shoulder,—"this is something like. We'll
have a 'tempus,' as the college fellows say,—put down
the clams to roast, and I'll mix the punch," he said, setting
over the fire a tea-kettle which they brought from the
ship.</p>
<p>After their preparations were finished, all sat down to
eat and drink. Mara listened with anxiety and horror to
a conversation such as she never heard or conceived before.
It is not often that women hear men talk in the undisguised
manner which they use among themselves; but the conversation
of men of unprincipled lives, and low, brutal habits,
unchecked by the presence of respectable female society,
might well convey to the horror-struck child a feeling as if
she were listening at the mouth of hell. Almost every
word was preceded or emphasized by an oath; and what
struck with a death chill to her heart was, that Moses
swore too, and seemed to show that desperate anxiety to
seem <i>au fait</i> in the language of wickedness, which boys
often do at that age, when they fancy that to be ignorant
of vice is a mark of disgraceful greenness. Moses evidently
was bent on showing that he was not green,—ignorant of
the pure ear to which every such word came like the blast
of death.</p>
<p>He drank a great deal, too, and the mirth among them<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_202" id="Page_202"></SPAN></span>
grew furious and terrific. Mara, horrified and shocked as
she was, did not, however, lose that intense and alert presence
of mind, natural to persons in whom there is moral
strength, however delicate be their physical frame. She
felt at once that these men were playing upon Moses; that
they had an object in view; that they were flattering and
cajoling him, and leading him to drink, that they might
work out some fiendish purpose of their own. The man
called Atkinson related story after story of wild adventure,
in which sudden fortunes had been made by men who, he
said, were not afraid to take "the short cut across lots."
He told of piratical adventures in the West Indies,—of
the fun of chasing and overhauling ships,—and gave dazzling
accounts of the treasures found on board. It was
observable that all these stories were told on the line between
joke and earnest,—as frolics, as specimens of good
fun, and seeing life, etc.</p>
<p>At last came a suggestion,—What if they should start
off together some fine day, "just for a spree," and try a
cruise in the West Indies, to see what they could pick up?
They had arms, and a gang of fine, whole-souled fellows.
Moses had been tied to Ma'am Pennel's apron-string long
enough. And "hark ye," said one of them, "Moses, they
say old Pennel has lots of dollars in that old sea-chest of
his'n. It would be a kindness to him to invest them for
him in an adventure."</p>
<p>Moses answered with a streak of the boy innocence which
often remains under the tramping of evil men, like ribbons
of green turf in the middle of roads:—</p>
<p>"You don't know Father Pennel,—why, he'd no more
come into it than"—</p>
<p>A perfect roar of laughter cut short this declaration, and
Atkinson, slapping Moses on the back, said,—</p>
<p>"By ——, Mo! you are the jolliest green dog! I shall
die a-laughing of your innocence some day. Why, my<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_203" id="Page_203"></SPAN></span>
boy, can't you see? Pennel's money can be invested without
asking him."</p>
<p>"Why, he keeps it locked," said Moses.</p>
<p>"And supposing you pick the lock?"</p>
<p>"Not I, indeed," said Moses, making a sudden movement
to rise.</p>
<p>Mara almost screamed in her ecstasy, but she had sense
enough to hold her breath.</p>
<p>"Ho! see him now," said Atkinson, lying back, and
holding his sides while he laughed, and rolled over; "you
can get off anything on that muff,—any hoax in the
world,—he's so soft! Come, come, my dear boy, sit
down. I was only seeing how wide I could make you
open those great black eyes of your'n,—that's all."</p>
<p>"You'd better take care how you joke with me," said
Moses, with that look of gloomy determination which Mara
was quite familiar with of old. It was the rallying effort
of a boy who had abandoned the first outworks of virtue
to make a stand for the citadel. And Atkinson, like a
prudent besieger after a repulse, returned to lie on his
arms.</p>
<p>He began talking volubly on other subjects, telling stories,
and singing songs, and pressing Moses to drink.</p>
<p>Mara was comforted to see that he declined drinking,—that
he looked gloomy and thoughtful, in spite of the jokes
of his companions; but she trembled to see, by the following
conversation, how Atkinson was skillfully and prudently
making apparent to Moses the extent to which
he had him in his power. He seemed to Mara like an
ugly spider skillfully weaving his web around a fly. She
felt cold and faint; but within her there was a heroic
strength.</p>
<p>She was not going to faint; she would make herself bear
up. She was going to do something to get Moses out of
this snare,—but what? At last they rose.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_204" id="Page_204"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"It is past three o'clock," she heard one of them say.</p>
<p>"I say, Mo," said Atkinson, "you must make tracks for
home, or you won't be in bed when Mother Pennel calls
you."</p>
<p>The men all laughed at this joke, as they turned to go
on board the schooner.</p>
<p>When they were gone, Moses threw himself down and
hid his face in his hands. He knew not what pitying little
face was looking down upon him from the hemlock shadows,
what brave little heart was determined to save him.
He was in one of those great crises of agony that boys pass
through when they first awake from the fun and frolic
of unlawful enterprises to find themselves sold under sin,
and feel the terrible logic of evil which constrains them to
pass from the less to greater crime. He felt that he was in
the power of bad, unprincipled, heartless men, who, if he
refused to do their bidding, had the power to expose him.
All he had been doing would come out. His kind old
foster-parents would know it. Mara would know it. Mr.
Sewell and Miss Emily would know the secrets of his life
that past month. He felt as if they were all looking at
him now. He had disgraced himself,—had sunk below
his education,—had been false to all his better knowledge
and the past expectations of his friends, living a mean,
miserable, dishonorable life,—and now the ground was
fast sliding from under him, and the next plunge might be
down a precipice from which there would be no return.
What he had done up to this hour had been done in the
roystering, inconsiderate gamesomeness of boyhood. It had
been represented to himself only as "sowing wild oats,"
"having steep times," "seeing a little of life," and so on;
but this night he had had propositions of piracy and robbery
made to him, and he had not dared to knock down
the man that made them,—had not dared at once to break
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_205" id="Page_205"></SPAN></span>away from his company. He must meet him again,—must go on with him, or—he groaned in agony at the
thought.</p>
<p>It was a strong indication of that repressed, considerate
habit of mind which love had wrought in the child, that
when Mara heard the boy's sobs rising in the stillness, she
did not, as she wished to, rush out and throw her arms
around his neck and try to comfort him.</p>
<p>But she felt instinctively that she must not do this.
She must not let him know that she had discovered his
secret by stealing after him thus in the night shadows.
She knew how nervously he had resented even the compassionate
glances she had cast upon him in his restless, turbid
intervals during the past few weeks, and the fierceness
with which he had replied to a few timid inquiries. No,—though
her heart was breaking for him, it was a shrewd,
wise little heart, and resolved not to spoil all by yielding
to its first untaught impulses. She repressed herself as the
mother does who refrains from crying out when she sees
her unconscious little one on the verge of a precipice.</p>
<p>When Moses rose and moodily began walking homeward,
she followed at a distance. She could now keep
farther off, for she knew the way through every part of the
forest, and she only wanted to keep within sound of his
footsteps to make sure that he was going home. When he
emerged from the forest into the open moonlight, she sat
down in its shadows and watched him as he walked over
the open distance between her and the house. He went
in; and then she waited a little longer for him to be quite
retired. She thought he would throw himself on the bed,
and then she could steal in after him. So she sat there
quite in the shadows.</p>
<p>The grand full moon was riding high and calm in the
purple sky, and Harpswell Bay on the one hand, and the
wide, open ocean on the other, lay all in a silver shimmer
of light. There was not a sound save the plash of the<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_206" id="Page_206"></SPAN></span>
tide, now beginning to go out, and rolling and rattling the
pebbles up and down as it came and went, and once in a
while the distant, mournful intoning of the whippoorwill.
There were silent lonely ships, sailing slowly to and fro
far out to sea, turning their fair wings now into bright
light and now into shadow, as they moved over the glassy
stillness. Mara could see all the houses on Harpswell
Neck and the white church as clear as in the daylight. It
seemed to her some strange, unearthly dream.</p>
<p>As she sat there, she thought over her whole little life,
all full of one thought, one purpose, one love, one prayer,
for this being so strangely given to her out of that silent
sea, which lay so like a still eternity around her,—and
she revolved again what meant the vision of her childhood.
Did it not mean that she was to watch over him and save
him from some dreadful danger? That poor mother was
lying now silent and peaceful under the turf in the little
graveyard not far off, and <i>she</i> must care for her boy.</p>
<p>A strong motherly feeling swelled out the girl's heart,—she
felt that she <i>must</i>, she would, somehow save that
treasure which had so mysteriously been committed to her.
So, when she thought she had given time enough for Moses
to be quietly asleep in his room, she arose and ran with
quick footsteps across the moonlit plain to the house.</p>
<p>The front-door was standing wide open, as was always
the innocent fashion in these regions, with a half-angle of
moonlight and shadow lying within its dusky depths.
Mara listened a moment,—no sound: he had gone to bed
then. "Poor boy," she said, "I hope he is asleep; how
he must feel, poor fellow! It's all the fault of those
dreadful men!" said the little dark shadow to herself, as
she stole up the stairs past his room as guiltily as if she
were the sinner. Once the stairs creaked, and her heart
was in her mouth, but she gained her room and shut and
bolted the door. She kneeled down by her little white<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_207" id="Page_207"></SPAN></span>
bed, and thanked God that she had come in safe, and then
prayed him to teach her what to do next. She felt chilly
and shivering, and crept into bed, and lay with her great
soft brown eyes wide open, intently thinking what she
should do.</p>
<p>Should she tell her grandfather? Something instinctively
said No; that the first word from him which showed
Moses he was detected would at once send him off with
those wicked men. "He would never, never bear to have
this known," she said. Mr. Sewell?—ah, that was
worse. She herself shrank from letting him know what
Moses had been doing; she could not bear to lower him so
much in his eyes. He could not make allowances, she
thought. He is good, to be sure, but he is so old and
grave, and doesn't know how much Moses has been
tempted by these dreadful men; and then perhaps he
would tell Miss Emily, and they never would want Moses
to come there any more.</p>
<p>"What shall I do?" she said to herself. "I must get
somebody to help me or tell me what to do. I can't tell
grandmamma; it would only make her ill, and she wouldn't
know what to do any more than I. Ah, I know what
I will do,—I'll tell Captain Kittridge; he was always so
kind to me; and he has been to sea and seen all sorts of
men, and Moses won't care so much perhaps to have him
know, because the Captain is such a funny man, and don't
take everything so seriously. Yes, that's it. I'll go
right down to the cove in the morning. God will bring
me through, I know He will;" and the little weary head
fell back on the pillow asleep. And as she slept, a smile
settled over her face, perhaps a reflection from the face of
her good angel, who always beholdeth the face of our
Father in Heaven.</p>
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