s done, the young Union officers
used to ride, and often there would be half a dozen of them to tea. That
house, and other great houses on the Bellefontaine Road with which this
history has no occasion to deal, were as homes to many a poor fellow who
would never see home again. Sometimes Anne would gather together such
young ladies of her acquaintance from the neighbor hood and the city as
their interests and sympathies permitted to waltz with a Union officer,
and there would be a little dance. To these dances Stephen Brice was
usually invited.
One such occasion occurred on a Friday in January, and Mr. Brinsmade
himself called in his buggy and drove Stephen to the country early in
the afternoon. He and Anne went for a walk along the river, the surface
of which was broken by lumps of yellow ice. Gray clouds hung low in the
sky as they picked their way over the frozen furrows of the ploughed
fields. The grass was all a yellow-brown, but the north wind which
swayed the bare trees brought a touch of color to Anne's cheeks. Before
they realized where they were, they had nearly crossed the Bellegarde
estate, and the house itself was come into view, standing high on the
slope above the withered garden. They halted.
"The shutters are up," said Stephen. "I understood that Mrs. Colfax had
come out here not long a--"
"She came out for a day just before Christina," said Anne, smiling, "and
then she ran off to Kentucky. I think she was afraid that she was one of
the two women on the list of Sixty."
"It must have been a blow to her pride when she found that she was not,"
said Stephen, who had a keen remembrance of her conduct upon a certain
Sunday not a year gone.
Impelled by the same inclination, they walked in silence to the house
and sat down on the edge of the porch. The only motion in the view was
the smoke from the slave quarters twisting in the wind, and the hurrying
ice in the stream.
"Poor Jinny!" said Anne, with a sigh, "how she loved to romp! What good
times we used to have here together!"
"Do you think that she is unhappy?" Stephen demanded, involuntarily.
"Oh, yes," said Anne. "How can you ask? But you could not make her show
it. The other morning when she came out to our house I found her sitting
at the piano. I am sure there were tears in her eyes, but she would not
let me see them. She made some joke about Spencer Catherwood running
away. What do you think the Judge will do with that piano, Stephen?"
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