<p><SPAN name="2"></SPAN> </p>
<p> </p>
<h3>II</h3>
<h3>THE GUARDIAN OF THE ACCOLADE<br/> </h3>
<p>Not the least important of the force of the Weymouth Bank was
Uncle Bushrod. Sixty years had Uncle Bushrod given of faithful
service to the house of Weymouth as chattel, servitor, and
friend. Of the colour of the mahogany bank furniture was Uncle
Bushrod—thus dark was he externally; white as the uninked
pages of the bank ledgers was his soul. Eminently pleasing to
Uncle Bushrod would the comparison have been; for to him the
only institution in existence worth considering was the
Weymouth Bank, of which he was something between porter and
generalissimo-in-charge.</p>
<p>Weymouth lay, dreamy and umbrageous, among the low foothills
along the brow of a Southern valley. Three banks there were in
Weymouthville. Two were hopeless, misguided enterprises,
lacking the presence and prestige of a Weymouth to give them
glory. The third was The Bank, managed by the Weymouths—and
Uncle Bushrod. In the old Weymouth homestead—the red brick,
white-porticoed mansion, the first to your right as you crossed
Elder Creek, coming into town—lived Mr. Robert Weymouth (the
president of the bank), his widowed daughter, Mrs.
Vesey—called "Miss Letty" by every one—and her two children,
Nan and Guy. There, also in a cottage on the grounds, resided
Uncle Bushrod and Aunt Malindy, his wife. Mr. William Weymouth
(the cashier of the bank) lived in a modern, fine house on the
principal avenue.</p>
<p>Mr. Robert was a large, stout man, sixty-two years of age, with
a smooth, plump face, long iron-gray hair and fiery blue eyes.
He was high-tempered, kind, and generous, with a youthful smile
and a formidable, stern voice that did not always mean what it
sounded like. Mr. William was a milder man, correct in
deportment and absorbed in business. The Weymouths formed The
Family of Weymouthville, and were looked up to, as was their
right of heritage.</p>
<p>Uncle Bushrod was the bank's trusted porter, messenger, vassal,
and guardian. He carried a key to the vault, just as Mr. Robert
and Mr. William did. Sometimes there was ten, fifteen, or
twenty thousand dollars in sacked silver stacked on the vault
floor. It was safe with Uncle Bushrod. He was a Weymouth in
heart, honesty, and pride.</p>
<p>Of late Uncle Bushrod had not been without worry. It was on
account of Marse Robert. For nearly a year Mr. Robert had been
known to indulge in too much drink. Not enough, understand, to
become tipsy, but the habit was getting a hold upon him, and
every one was beginning to notice it. Half a dozen times a day
he would leave the bank and step around to the Merchants and
Planters' Hotel to take a drink. Mr. Robert's usual keen
judgment and business capacity became a little impaired. Mr.
William, a Weymouth, but not so rich in experience, tried to
dam the inevitable backflow of the tide, but with incomplete
success. The deposits in the Weymouth Bank dropped from six
figures to five. Past-due paper began to accumulate, owing to
injudicious loans. No one cared to address Mr. Robert on the
subject of temperance. Many of his friends said that the cause
of it had been the death of his wife some two years before.
Others hesitated on account of Mr. Robert's quick temper, which
was extremely apt to resent personal interference of such a
nature. Miss Letty and the children noticed the change and
grieved about it. Uncle Bushrod also worried, but he was one of
those who would not have dared to remonstrate, although he and
Marse Robert had been raised almost as companions. But there
was a heavier shock coming to Uncle Bushrod than that caused by
the bank president's toddies and juleps.</p>
<p>Mr. Robert had a passion for fishing, which he usually indulged
whenever the season and business permitted. One day, when
reports had been coming in relating to the bass and perch, he
announced his intention of making a two or three days' visit to
the lakes. He was going down, he said, to Reedy Lake with Judge
Archinard, an old friend.</p>
<p>Now, Uncle Bushrod was treasurer of the Sons and Daughters of
the Burning Bush. Every association he belonged to made him
treasurer without hesitation. He stood AA1 in coloured circles.
He was understood among them to be Mr. Bushrod Weymouth, of the
Weymouth Bank.</p>
<p>The night following the day on which Mr. Robert mentioned his
intended fishing-trip the old man woke up and rose from his bed
at twelve o'clock, declaring he must go down to the bank and
fetch the pass-book of the Sons and Daughters, which he had
forgotten to bring home. The bookkeeper had balanced it for him
that day, put the cancelled checks in it, and snapped two
elastic bands around it. He put but one band around other
pass-books.</p>
<p>Aunt Malindy objected to the mission at so late an hour,
denouncing it as foolish and unnecessary, but Uncle Bushrod was
not to be deflected from duty.</p>
<p>"I done told Sister Adaline Hoskins," he said, "to come by here
for dat book to-morrer mawnin' at sebin o'clock, for to kyar'
it to de meetin' of de bo'd of 'rangements, and dat book gwine
to be here when she come."</p>
<p>So, Uncle Bushrod put on his old brown suit, got his thick
hickory stick, and meandered through the almost deserted
streets of Weymouthville. He entered the bank, unlocking the
side door, and found the pass-book where he had left it, in the
little back room used for consultations, where he always hung
his coat. Looking about casually, he saw that everything was as
he had left it, and was about to start for home when he was
brought to a standstill by the sudden rattle of a key in the
front door. Some one came quickly in, closed the door softly,
and entered the counting-room through the door in the iron
railing.</p>
<p>That division of the bank's space was connected with the back
room by a narrow passageway, now in deep darkness.</p>
<p>Uncle Bushrod, firmly gripping his hickory stick, tiptoed
gently up this passage until he could see the midnight intruder
into the sacred precincts of the Weymouth Bank. One dim gas-jet
burned there, but even in its nebulous light he perceived at
once that the prowler was the bank's president.</p>
<p>Wondering, fearful, undecided what to do, the old coloured man
stood motionless in the gloomy strip of hallway, and waited
developments.</p>
<p>The vault, with its big iron door, was opposite him. Inside
that was the safe, holding the papers of value, the gold and
currency of the bank. On the floor of the vault was, perhaps,
eighteen thousand dollars in silver.</p>
<p>The president took his key from his pocket, opened the vault
and went inside, nearly closing the door behind him. Uncle
Bushrod saw, through the narrow aperture, the flicker of a
candle. In a minute or two—it seemed an hour to the
watcher—Mr. Robert came out, bringing with him a large
hand-satchel, handling it in a careful but hurried manner, as
if fearful that he might be observed. With one hand he closed
and locked the vault door.</p>
<p>With a reluctant theory forming itself beneath his wool, Uncle
Bushrod waited and watched, shaking in his concealing shadow.</p>
<p>Mr. Robert set the satchel softly upon a desk, and turned his
coat collar up about his neck and ears. He was dressed in a
rough suit of gray, as if for travelling. He glanced with
frowning intentness at the big office clock above the burning
gas-jet, and then looked lingeringly about the
bank—lingeringly and fondly, Uncle Bushrod thought, as one who
bids farewell to dear and familiar scenes.</p>
<p>Now he caught up his burden again and moved promptly and softly
out of the bank by the way he had come locking the front door
behind him.</p>
<p>For a minute or longer Uncle Bushrod was as stone in his
tracks. Had that midnight rifler of safes and vaults been any
other on earth than the man he was, the old retainer would have
rushed upon him and struck to save the Weymouth property. But
now the watcher's soul was tortured by the poignant dread of
something worse than mere robbery. He was seized by an accusing
terror that said the Weymouth name and the Weymouth honour were
about to be lost. Marse Robert robbing the bank! What else
could it mean? The hour of the night, the stealthy visit to the
vault, the satchel brought forth full and with expedition and
silence, the prowler's rough dress, his solicitous reading of
the clock, and noiseless departure—what else could it mean?</p>
<p>And then to the turmoil of Uncle Bushrod's thoughts came the
corroborating recollection of preceding events—Mr. Robert's
increasing intemperance and consequent many moods of royal high
spirits and stern tempers; the casual talk he had heard in the
bank of the decrease in business and difficulty in collecting
loans. What else could it all mean but that Mr. Robert Weymouth
was an absconder—was about to fly with the bank's remaining
funds, leaving Mr. William, Miss Letty, little Nan, Guy, and
Uncle Bushrod to bear the disgrace?</p>
<p>During one minute Uncle Bushrod considered these things, and
then he awoke to sudden determination and action.</p>
<p>"Lawd! Lawd!" he moaned aloud, as he hobbled hastily toward the
side door. "Sech a come-off after all dese here years of big
doin's and fine doin's. Scan'lous sights upon de yearth when de
Weymouth fambly done turn out robbers and 'bezzlers! Time for
Uncle Bushrod to clean out somebody's chicken-coop and eben
matters up. Oh, Lawd! Marse Robert, you ain't gwine do dat. 'N
Miss Letty an' dem chillun so proud and talkin' 'Weymouth,
Weymouth,' all de time! I'm gwine to stop you ef I can. 'Spec
you shoot Mr. Nigger's head off ef he fool wid you, but I'm
gwine stop you ef I can."</p>
<p>Uncle Bushrod, aided by his hickory stick, impeded by his
rheumatism, hurried down the street toward the railroad
station, where the two lines touching Weymouthville met. As he
had expected and feared, he saw there Mr. Robert, standing in
the shadow of the building, waiting for the train. He held the
satchel in his hand.</p>
<p>When Uncle Bushrod came within twenty yards of the bank
president, standing like a huge, gray ghost by the station
wall, sudden perturbation seized him. The rashness and audacity
of the thing he had come to do struck him fully. He would have
been happy could he have turned and fled from the possibilities
of the famous Weymouth wrath. But again he saw, in his fancy,
the white reproachful face of Miss Letty, and the distressed
looks of Nan and Guy, should he fail in his duty and they
question him as to his stewardship.</p>
<p>Braced by the thought, he approached in a straight line,
clearing his throat and pounding with his stick so that he
might be early recognized. Thus he might avoid the likely
danger of too suddenly surprising the sometimes hasty Mr.
Robert.</p>
<p>"Is that you, Bushrod?" called the clamant, clear voice of the
gray ghost.</p>
<p>"Yes, suh, Marse Robert."</p>
<p>"What the devil are you doing out at this time of night?"</p>
<p>For the first time in his life, Uncle Bushrod told Marse Robert
a falsehood. He could not repress it. He would have to
circumlocute a little. His nerve was not equal to a direct
attack.</p>
<p>"I done been down, suh, to see ol' Aunt M'ria Patterson. She
taken sick in de night, and I kyar'ed her a bottle of M'lindy's
medercine. Yes, suh."</p>
<p>"Humph!" said Robert. "You better get home out of the night
air. It's damp. You'll hardly be worth killing to-morrow on
account of your rheumatism. Think it'll be a clear day,
Bushrod?"</p>
<p>"I 'low it will, suh. De sun sot red las' night."</p>
<p>Mr. Robert lit a cigar in the shadow, and the smoke looked like
his gray ghost expanding and escaping into the night air.
Somehow, Uncle Bushrod could barely force his reluctant tongue
to the dreadful subject. He stood, awkward, shambling, with his
feet upon the gravel and fumbling with his stick. But then,
afar off—three miles away, at the Jimtown switch—he heard the
faint whistle of the coming train, the one that was to
transport the Weymouth name into the regions of dishonour and
shame. All fear left him. He took off his hat and faced the
chief of the clan he served, the great, royal, kind, lofty,
terrible Weymouth—he bearded him there at the brink of the
awful thing that was about to happen.</p>
<p>"Marse Robert," he began, his voice quivering a little with the
stress of his feelings, "you 'member de day dey-all rode de
tunnament at Oak Lawn? De day, suh, dat you win in de ridin',
and you crown Miss Lucy de queen?"</p>
<p>"Tournament?" said Mr. Robert, taking his cigar from his mouth.
"Yes, I remember very well the—but what the deuce are you
talking about tournaments here at midnight for? Go 'long home,
Bushrod. I believe you're sleep-walking."</p>
<p>"Miss Lucy tetch you on de shoulder," continued the old man,
never heeding, "wid a s'ord, and say: 'I mek you a knight, Suh
Robert—rise up, pure and fearless and widout reproach.' Dat
what Miss Lucy say. Dat's been a long time ago, but me nor you
ain't forgot it. And den dar's another time we ain't forgot—de
time when Miss Lucy lay on her las' bed. She sent for Uncle
Bushrod, and she say: 'Uncle Bushrod, when I die, I want you to
take good care of Mr. Robert. Seem like'—so Miss Lucy say—'he
listen to you mo' dan to anybody else. He apt to be mighty
fractious sometimes, and maybe he cuss you when you try to
'suade him but he need somebody what understand him to be
'round wid him. He am like a little child sometimes'—so Miss
Lucy say, wid her eyes shinin' in her po', thin face—'but he
always been'—dem was her words—'my knight, pure and fearless
and widout reproach.'"</p>
<p>Mr. Robert began to mask, as was his habit, a tendency to
soft-heartedness with a spurious anger.</p>
<p>"You—you old windbag!" he growled through a cloud of swirling
cigar smoke. "I believe you are crazy. I told you to go home,
Bushrod. Miss Lucy said that, did she? Well, we haven't kept
the scutcheon very clear. Two years ago last week, wasn't it,
Bushrod, when she died? Confound it! Are you going to stand
there all night gabbing like a coffee-coloured gander?"</p>
<p>The train whistled again. Now it was at the water tank, a mile
away.</p>
<p>"Marse Robert," said Uncle Bushrod, laying his hand on the
satchel that the banker held. "For Gawd's sake, don' take dis
wid you. I knows what's in it. I knows where you got it in de
bank. Don' kyar' it wid you. Dey's big trouble in dat valise
for Miss Lucy and Miss Lucy's child's chillun. Hit's bound to
destroy de name of Weymouth and bow down dem dat own it wid
shame and triberlation. Marse Robert, you can kill dis ole
nigger ef you will, but don't take away dis 'er' valise. If I
ever crosses over de Jordan, what I gwine to say to Miss Lucy
when she ax me: 'Uncle Bushrod, wharfo' didn' you take good
care of Mr. Robert?'"</p>
<p>Mr. Robert Weymouth threw away his cigar and shook free one arm
with that peculiar gesture that always preceded his outbursts
of irascibility. Uncle Bushrod bowed his head to the expected
storm, but he did not flinch. If the house of Weymouth was to
fall, he would fall with it. The banker spoke, and Uncle
Bushrod blinked with surprise. The storm was there, but it was
suppressed to the quietness of a summer breeze.</p>
<p>"Bushrod," said Mr. Robert, in a lower voice than he usually
employed, "you have overstepped all bounds. You have presumed
upon the leniency with which you have been treated to meddle
unpardonably. So you know what is in this satchel! Your long
and faithful service is some excuse, but—go home, Bushrod—not
another word!"</p>
<p>But Bushrod grasped the satchel with a firmer hand. The
headlight of the train was now lightening the shadows about the
station. The roar was increasing, and folks were stirring about
at the track side.</p>
<p>"Marse Robert, gimme dis 'er' valise. I got a right, suh, to
talk to you dis 'er' way. I slaved for you and 'tended to you
from a child up. I went th'ough de war as yo' body-servant tell
we whipped de Yankees and sent 'em back to de No'th. I was at
yo' weddin', and I was n' fur away when yo' Miss Letty was
bawn. And Miss Letty's chillun, dey watches to-day for Uncle
Bushrod when he come home ever' evenin'. I been a Weymouth, all
'cept in colour and entitlements. Both of us is old, Marse
Robert. 'Tain't goin' to be long till we gwine to see Miss Lucy
and has to give an account of our doin's. De ole nigger man
won't be 'spected to say much mo' dan he done all he could by
de fambly dat owned him. But de Weymouths, dey must say dey
been livin' pure and fearless and widout reproach. Gimme dis
valise, Marse Robert—I'm gwine to hab it. I'm gwine to take it
back to the bank and lock it up in de vault. I'm gwine to do
Miss Lucy's biddin'. Turn 'er loose, Marse Robert."</p>
<p>The train was standing at the station. Some men were pushing
trucks along the side. Two or three sleepy passengers got off
and wandered away into the night. The conductor stepped to the
gravel, swung his lantern and called: "Hello, Frank!" at some
one invisible. The bell clanged, the brakes hissed, the
conductor drawled: "All aboard!"</p>
<p>Mr. Robert released his hold on the satchel. Uncle Bushrod
hugged it to his breast with both arms, as a lover clasps his
first beloved.</p>
<p>"Take it back with you, Bushrod," said Mr. Robert, thrusting
his hands into his pockets. "And let the subject drop—now
mind! You've said quite enough. I'm going to take the train.
Tell Mr. William I will be back on Saturday. Good night."</p>
<p>The banker climbed the steps of the moving train and
disappeared in a coach. Uncle Bushrod stood motionless, still
embracing the precious satchel. His eyes were closed and his
lips were moving in thanks to the Master above for the
salvation of the Weymouth honour. He knew Mr. Robert would
return when he said he would. The Weymouths never lied. Nor
now, thank the Lord! could it be said that they embezzled the
money in banks.</p>
<p>Then awake to the necessity for further guardianship of
Weymouth trust funds, the old man started for the bank with the
redeemed satchel.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>Three hours from Weymouthville, in the gray dawn, Mr. Robert
alighted from the train at a lonely flag-station. Dimly he
could see the figure of a man waiting on the platform, and the
shape of a spring-waggon, team and driver. Half a dozen lengthy
bamboo fishing-poles projected from the waggon's rear.</p>
<p>"You're here, Bob," said Judge Archinard, Mr. Robert's old
friend and schoolmate. "It's going to be a royal day for
fishing. I thought you said—why, didn't you bring along the
stuff?"</p>
<p>The president of the Weymouth Bank took off his hat and rumpled
his gray locks.</p>
<p>"Well, Ben, to tell you the truth, there's an infernally
presumptuous old nigger belonging in my family that broke up
the arrangement. He came down to the depot and vetoed the whole
proceeding. He means all right, and—well, I reckon he <i>is</i>
right. Somehow, he had found out what I had along—though I hid
it in the bank vault and sneaked it out at midnight. I reckon
he has noticed that I've been indulging a little more than a
gentleman should, and he laid for me with some reaching
arguments.</p>
<p>"I'm going to quit drinking," Mr. Robert concluded. "I've come
to the conclusion that a man can't keep it up and be quite what
he'd like to be—'pure and fearless and without
reproach'—that's the way old Bushrod quoted it."</p>
<p>"Well, I'll have to admit," said the judge, thoughtfully, as
they climbed into the waggon, "that the old darkey's argument
can't conscientiously be overruled."</p>
<p>"Still," said Mr. Robert, with a ghost of a sigh, "there was
two quarts of the finest old silk-velvet Bourbon in that
satchel you ever wet your lips with."</p>
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