It could not have been far from midnight when I came beneath
Hollingsworth's window, and, finding it open, flung in a tuft of grass
with earth at the roots, and heard it fall upon the floor. He was either
awake or sleeping very lightly; for scarcely a moment had gone by before
he looked out and discerned me standing in the moonlight.
"Is it you, Coverdale?" he asked. "What is the matter?"
"Come down to me, Hollingsworth!" I answered. "I am anxious to speak
with you."
The strange tone of my own voice startled me, and him, probably, no less.
He lost no time, and soon issued from the house-door, with his dress
half arranged.
"Again, what is the matter?" he asked impatiently.
"Have you seen Zenobia," said I, "since you parted from her at Eliot's
pulpit?"
"No," answered Hollingsworth; "nor did I expect it."
Hardly had he spoken, when Silas Foster thrust his head, done up in a
cotton handkerchief, out of another window, and took what he called as it
literally was--a squint at us.
"Well, folks, what are ye about here?" he demanded. "Aha! are you
there, Miles Coverdale? You have been turning night into day since you
left us, I reckon; and so you find it quite natural to come prowling
about the house at this time o' night, frightening my old woman out of
her wits, and making her disturb a tired man out of his best nap. In
with you, you vagabond, and to bed!"
"Dress yourself quickly, Foster," said I. "We want your assistance."
I could not, for the life of me, keep that strange tone out of my voice.
Silas Foster, obtuse as were his sensibilities, seemed to feel the
ghastly earnestness that was conveyed in it as well as Hollingsworth did.
He immediately withdrew his head, and I heard him yawning, muttering to
his wife, and again yawning heavily, while he hurried on his clothes.
Meanwhile I showed Hollingsworth a delicate handkerchief, marked with a
well-known cipher, and told where I had found it, and other circumstances,
which had filled me with a suspicion so terrible that I left him, if he
dared, to shape it out for himself. By the time my brief explanation was
finished, we were joined by Silas Foster in his blue woollen frock.
"Well, boys," cried he peevishly, "what is to pay now?"
Hollingsworth shivered perceptibly, and drew in a hard breath betwixt his
teeth. He steadied himself, however, and, looking the matter more firmly
in the face than I had done, explained to Foster my suspicions, and the
grounds of them, with a distinctness from which, in spite of my utmost
efforts, my words had swerved aside. The tough-nerved yeoman, in his
comment, put a finish on the business, and brought out the hideous idea
in its full terror, as if he were removing the napkin from the face of a
corpse.
"And so you think she's drowned herself?" he cried. I turned away my
face.
"What on earth should the young woman do that for?" exclaimed Silas, his
eyes half out of his head with mere surprise. "Why, she has more means
than she can use or waste, and lacks nothing to make her comfortable, but
a husband, and that's an article she could have, any day. There's some
mistake about this, I tell you!"
"Come," said I, shuddering; "let us go and ascertain the truth."
"Well, well," answered Silas Foster; "just as you say. We'll take the
long pole, with the hook at the end, that serves to get the bucket out of
the draw-well when the rope is broken. With that, and a couple of
long-handled hay-rakes, I'll answer for finding her, if she's anywhere to
be found. Strange enough! Zenobia drown herself! No, no; I don't
believe it. She had too much sense, and too much means, and enjoyed life
a great deal too well."
When our few preparations were completed, we hastened, by a shorter than
the customary route, through fields and pastures, and across a portion of
the meadow, to the particular spot on the river-bank which I had paused
to contemplate in the course of my afternoon's ramble. A nameless
presentiment had again drawn me thither, after leaving Eliot's pulpit. I
showed my companions where I had found the handkerchief, and pointed to
two or three footsteps, impressed into the clayey margin, and tending
towards the water. Beneath its shallow verge, among the water-weeds,
there were further traces, as yet unobliterated by the sluggish current,
which was there almost at a standstill. Silas Foster thrust his face down
close to these footsteps, and picked up a shoe that had escaped my
observation, being half imbedded in the mud.
"There's a kid shoe that never was made on a Yankee last," observed he.
"I know enough of shoemaker's craft to tell that. French manufacture;
and see what a high instep! and how evenly she trod in it! There never
was a woman that stept handsomer in her shoes than Zenobia did. Here,"
he added, addressing Hollingsworth, "would you like to keep the shoe?"
I dabbled it in the water, to rinse off the mud, and have kept it ever
since. Not far from this spot lay an old, leaky punt, drawn up on the
oozy river-side, and generally half full of water. It served the angler
to go in quest of pickerel, or the sportsman to pick up his wild ducks.
Setting this crazy bark afloat, I seated myself in the stern with the
paddle, while Hollingsworth sat in the bows with the hooked pole, and
Silas Foster amidships with a hay-rake.
"It puts me in mind of my young days," remarked Silas, "when I used to
steal out of bed to go bobbing for hornpouts and eels. Heigh-ho!--well,
life and death together make sad work for us all! Then I was a boy,
bobbing for fish; and now I am getting to be an old fellow, and here I be,
groping for a dead body! I tell you what, lads; if I thought anything
had really happened to Zenobia, I should feel kind o' sorrowful."
"I wish, at least, you would hold your tongue," muttered I.
The moon, that night, though past the full, was still large and oval, and
having risen between eight and nine o'clock, now shone aslantwise over
the river, throwing the high, opposite bank, with its woods, into deep
shadow, but lighting up the hither shore pretty effectually. Not a ray
appeared to fall on the river itself. It lapsed imperceptibly away, a
broad, black, inscrutable depth, keeping its own secrets from the eye of
man, as impenetrably as mid-ocean could.
"Well, Miles Coverdale," said Foster, "you are the helmsman. How do you
mean to manage this business?"
"I shall let the boat drift, broadside foremost, past that stump," I
replied. "I know the bottom, having sounded it in fishing. The shore,
on this side, after the first step or two, goes off very abruptly; and
there is a pool, just by the stump, twelve or fifteen feet deep. The
current could not have force enough to sweep any sunken object, even if
partially buoyant, out of that hollow."
"Come, then," said Silas; "but I doubt whether I can touch bottom with
this hay-rake, if it's as deep as you say. Mr. Hollingsworth, I think
you'll be the lucky man to-night, such luck as it is."
We floated past the stump. Silas Foster plied his rake manfully, poking
it as far as he could into the water, and immersing the whole length of
his arm besides. Hollingsworth at first sat motionless, with the hooked
pole elevated in the air. But, by and by, with a nervous and jerky
movement, he began to plunge it into the blackness that upbore us,
setting his teeth, and making precisely such thrusts, methought, as if he
were stabbing at a deadly enemy. I bent over the side of the boat. So
obscure, however, so awfully mysterious, was that dark stream, that--and
the thought made me shiver like a leaf--I might as well have tried to
look into the enigma of the eternal world, to discover what had become of
Zenobia's soul, as into the river's depths, to find her body. And there,
perhaps, she lay, with her face upward, while the shadow of the boat, and
my own pale face peering downward, passed slowly betwixt her and the sky!
Once, twice, thrice, I paddled the boat upstream, and again suffered it
to glide, with the river's slow, funereal motion, downward. Silas Foster
had raked up a large mass of stuff, which, as it came towards the surface,
looked somewhat like a flowing garment, but proved to be a monstrous
tuft of water-weeds. Hollingsworth, with a gigantic effort, upheaved a
sunken log. When once free of the bottom, it rose partly out of water,
--all weedy and slimy, a devilish-looking object, which the moon had not
shone upon for half a hundred years,--then plunged again, and sullenly
returned to its old resting-place, for the remnant of the century.
"That looked ugly!" quoth Silas. "I half thought it was the Evil One,
on the same errand as ourselves,--searching for Zenobia."
"He shall never get her," said I, giving the boat a strong impulse.
"That's not for you to say, my boy," retorted the yeoman. "Pray God he
never has, and never may. Slow work this, however! I should really be
glad to find something! Pshaw! What a notion that is, when the only good
luck would be to paddle, and drift, and poke, and grope, hereabouts, till
morning, and have our labor for our pains! For my part, I shouldn't
wonder if the creature had only lost her shoe in the mud, and saved her
soul alive, after all. My stars! how she will laugh at us, to-morrow
morning!"
It is indescribable what an image of Zenobia--at the breakfast-table,
full of warm and mirthful life--this surmise of Silas Foster's brought
before my mind. The terrible phantasm of her death was thrown by it into
the remotest and dimmest background, where it seemed to grow as
improbable as a myth.
"Yes, Silas, it may be as you say," cried I. The drift of the stream had
again borne us a little below the stump, when I felt--yes, felt, for it
was as if the iron hook had smote my breast--felt Hollingsworth's pole
strike some object at the bottom of the river!
Putting a fury of strength into the effort, Hollingsworth heaved amain,
and up came a white swash to the surface of the river. It was the flow
of a woman's garments. A little higher, and we saw her dark hair
streaming down the current. Black River of Death, thou hadst yielded up
thy victim! Zenobia was found!
Silas Foster laid hold of the body; Hollingsworth likewise grappled with
it; and I steered towards the bank, gazing all the while at Zenobia,
whose limbs were swaying in the current close at the boat's side.
Arriving near the shore, we all three stept into the water, bore her out,
and laid her on the ground beneath a tree.
"Poor child!" said Foster,--and his dry old heart, I verily believe,
vouchsafed a tear, "I'm sorry for her!"
Were I to describe the perfect horror of the spectacle, the reader might
justly reckon it to me for a sin and shame. For more than twelve long
years I have borne it in my memory, and could now reproduce it as freshly
as if it were still before my eyes, Of all modes of death, methinks it is
the ugliest. Her wet garments swathed limbs of terrible inflexibility.
She was the marble image of a death-agony. Her arms had grown rigid in
the act of struggling, and were bent before her with clenched hands; her
knees, too, were bent, and--thank God for it!--in the attitude of prayer.
Ah, that rigidity! It is impossible to bear the terror of it. It
seemed,--I must needs impart so much of my own miserable idea,--it seemed
as if her body must keep the same position in the coffin, and that her
skeleton would keep it in the grave; and that when Zenobia rose at the
day of judgment, it would be in just the same attitude as now!
One hope I had, and that too was mingled half with fear. She knelt as if
in prayer. With the last, choking consciousness, her soul, bubbling out
through her lips, it may be, had given itself up to the Father,
reconciled and penitent. But her arms! They were bent before her, as if
she struggled against Providence in never-ending hostility. Her hands!
They were clenched in immitigable defiance. Away with the hideous
thought. The flitting moment after Zenobia sank into the dark pool--when
her breath was gone, and her soul at her lips was as long, in its
capacity of God's infinite forgiveness, as the lifetime of the world!
Foster bent over the body, and carefully examined it.
"You have wounded the poor thing's breast," said he to Hollingsworth,
"close by her heart, too!"
And so he had, indeed, both before and after death!
"See!" said Foster. "That's the place where the iron struck her. It
looks cruelly, but she never felt it!"
He endeavored to arrange the arms of the corpse decently by its side.
His utmost strength, however, scarcely sufficed to bring them down; and
rising again, the next instant, they bade him defiance, exactly as before.
He made another effort, with the same result.
"In God's name, Silas Foster," cried I with bitter indignation. "let
that dead woman alone!"
"Why, man, it's not decent!" answered he, staring at me in amazement.
"I can't bear to see her looking so! Well, well," added he, after a
third effort, "'t is of no use, sure enough; and we must leave the women
to do their best with her, after we get to the house. The sooner that's
done, the better."
We took two rails from a neighboring fence, and formed a bier by laying
across some boards from the bottom of the boat. And thus we bore Zenobia
homeward. Six hours before, how beautiful! At midnight, what a horror!
A reflection occurs to me that will show ludicrously, I doubt not, on my
page, but must come in for its sterling truth. Being the woman that she
was, could Zenobia have foreseen all these ugly circumstances of death,
--how ill it would become her, the altogether unseemly aspect which she
must put on, and especially old Silas Foster's efforts to improve the
matter,--she would no more have committed the dreadful act than have
exhibited herself to a public assembly in a badly fitting garment!
Zenobia, I have often thought, was not quite simple in her death. She
had seen pictures, I suppose, of drowned persons in lithe and graceful
attitudes. And she deemed it well and decorous to die as so many village
maidens have, wronged in their first love, and seeking peace in the bosom
of the old familiar stream,--so familiar that they could not dread it,
--where, in childhood, they used to bathe their little feet, wading
mid-leg deep, unmindful of wet skirts. But in Zenobia's case there was
some tint of the Arcadian affectation that had been visible enough in all
our lives for a few months past.
This, however, to my conception, takes nothing from the tragedy. For,
has not the world come to an awfully sophisticated pass, when, after a
certain degree of acquaintance with it, we cannot even put ourselves to
death in whole-hearted simplicity? Slowly, slowly, with many a dreary
pause,--resting the bier often on some rock or balancing it across a
mossy log, to take fresh hold,--we bore our burden onward through the
moonlight, and at last laid Zenobia on the floor of the old farmhouse.
By and by came three or four withered women and stood whispering around
the corpse, peering at it through their spectacles, holding up their
skinny hands, shaking their night-capped heads, and taking counsel of one
another's experience what was to be done.