Solomon - BestLightNovel.com
You’re reading novel Solomon Part 10 online at BestLightNovel.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit BestLightNovel.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
'Does he see visions?'
'Yes, almost every day.'
'Do you see them, also?'
'O no; I'm not like Samuel. He has great gifts, Samuel has! The visions told us to come here; we used to live away down in Maine.'
'Indeed! That was a long journey!'
'Yes! And we didn't come straight either. We'd get to one place and stop, and I'd think we were going to stay, and just get things comfortable, when Samuel would see another vision, and we'd have to start on. We wandered in that way two or three years, but at last we got here, and something in the Flats seemed to suit the spirits, and they let us stay.'
At this moment, through the half-open door, came a voice.
'An evil beast is in this house. Let him depart.'
'Do you mean me?' said Raymond, who had made himself comfortable in a rocking-chair.
'Nay; I refer to the four-legged beast,' continued the voice. 'Come forth, Apollyon!'
Poor Captain Kidd seemed to feel that he was the person in question, for he hastened under the table with drooping tail and mortified aspect.
'Roxana, send forth the beast,' said the voice.
The woman put down her dishes and went toward the table; but I interposed.
'If he must go, I will take him,' I said, rising.
'Yes; he must go,' replied Roxana, holding open the door. So I ordered out the unwilling Captain, and led him into the pa.s.sageway.
'Out of the house, out of the house,' said Waiting Samuel. 'His feet may not rest upon this sacred ground. I must take him hence in the boat.'
'But where?'
'Across the channel there is an islet large enough for him; he shall have food and shelter, but here he cannot abide,' said the man, leading the way down to the boat.
The Captain was therefore ferried across, a tent was made for him out of some old mats, food was provided, and, lest he should swim back, he was tethered by a long rope, which allowed him to prowl around his domain and take his choice of three runs for drinking-water. With all these advantages, the ungrateful animal persisted in howling dismally as we rowed away. It was company he wanted, and not a 'dear little isle of his own'; but then, he was not by nature poetical.
'You do not like dogs?' I said, as we reached our strand again.
'St. Paul wrote, 'Beware of dogs,' replied Samuel.
'But did he mean--'
'I argue not with unbelievers; his meaning is clear to me, let that suffice,' said my strange host, turning away and leaving me to find my way back alone. A delicious repast was awaiting me. Years have gone by, the world and all its delicacies have been unrolled before me, but the memory of the meals I ate in that little kitchen in the Flats haunts me still. That night it was only fish, potatoes, biscuit, b.u.t.ter, stewed fruit, and coffee; but the fish was fresh, and done to the turn of a perfect broil, not burn; the potatoes were fried to a rare crisp, yet tender perfection, not chippy brittleness; the biscuits were light, flaked creamily, and brown on the bottom; the b.u.t.ter freshly churned, without salt; the fruit, great pears, with their cores extracted, standing whole on their dish, ready to melt, but not melted; and the coffee clear and strong, with yellow cream and the old-fas.h.i.+oned, unadulterated loaf-sugar. We ate. That does not express it; we devoured.
Roxana waited on us, and warmed up into something like excitement under our praises.
'I _do_ like good cooking,' she confessed. 'It's about all I have left of my old life. I go over to the mainland for supplies, and in the winter I try all kinds of new things to pa.s.s away the time. But Samuel is a poor eater, he is; and so there isn't much comfort in it. I'm mighty glad you've come, and I hope you'll stay as long as you find it pleasant.' This we promised to do, as we finished the potatoes and attacked the great jellied pears. 'There's one thing, though,' continued Roxana; 'you'll have to come to our service on the roof at sunrise.'
'What service?' I asked.
'The invocation. Dawn is a holy time, Samuel says, and we always wait for it; 'before the morning watch,' you know,--it says so in the Bible.
Why, my name means 'the dawn,' Samuel says; that's the reason he gave it to me. My real name, down in Maine, was Maria,--Maria Ann.'
'But I may not wake in time,' I said.
'Samuel will call you.'
'And if, in spite of that, I should sleep over?'
'You would not do that; it would vex him,' replied Roxana calmly.
'Do you believe in these visions, madam?' asked Raymond, as we left the table, and seated ourselves in front of the dying fire.
'Yes,' said Roxana; emphasis was unnecessary, of course she believed.
'Almost every day there is a spiritual presence, but it does not always speak. They come and hold long conversations in the winter, when there is nothing else to do; that I think is very kind of them, for in the summer Samuel can fish and his time is more occupied. There were fisherman in the Bible, you know; it is a holy calling.'
'Does Samuel ever go over to the mainland?'
'No, he never leaves the Flats. I do all the business; take over the fish, and buy the supplies. I bought all our cattle,' said Roxana, with pride. 'I poled them away over here on a raft, one by one, when they were little things.'
'Where do you pasture them?'
'Here on the island; there are only a few acres, to be sure; but I can cut boat-loads of the best feed within a stone's throw. If we only had a little more solid ground! But this island is almost the only solid piece in the Flats.'
'Your b.u.t.ter is certainly delicious.'
'Yes, I do my best. It is sold to the steamers and vessels as fast as I make it.'
'You keep yourself busy, I see.'
'O, I like to work; I could'nt get on without it.'
'And Samuel?'
'He is not like me,' replied Roxana. 'He has great gifts, Samuel has. I often think how strange it is that I should be the wife of such a holy man! He is very kind to me, too; he tells me about the visions, and all the other things.'
'What things?' said Raymond.
'The spirits, and the sacred influence of the sun; the fiery triangle, and the thousand years of joy. The great day is coming, you know; Samuel is waiting for it.'
'Nine of the night. Take thou thy rest. I will lay me down in peace, and sleep, for it is thou, Lord, only, that makest me dwell in safety,'
chanted a voice in the hall; the tone was deep and not without melody, and the words singularly impressive in that still, remote place.
'Go,' said Roxana, instantly pus.h.i.+ng aside her half-washed dishes.
'Samuel will take you to your room.'
'Do you leave your work unfinished?' I said, with some curiosity, noticing that she had folded her hands without even hanging up her towels.