Calyxa performed the song in its entirety. Mrs. Comstock banged out the final chords of the last chorus and sat away from the piano, drained … but Calyxa, to the astonishment of us all, carried on for another two verses without accompaniment. Her fine voice expanded into the dusky stillness, singing:
In a tender year
You kissed me here,
Two hearts joined in one beating;
But lovers met
May suffer yet,
And love, like time, is fleeting.
But if your heart
From mine must part
Where the Sauquoit meets the Mohawk,
Still the rolling sea
Keeps the memory
Of the Sauquoit and the Mohawk.
Long moments passed after the last syllable faded into the air. Mrs. Comstock, obviously moved, wiped her eyes. When she had controlled her emotions, she gave Calyxa a curious look.
“Those verse aren’t in the song-sheet,” she said.
Calyxa nodded and seemed embarrassed. “No, I’m sorry—I added them myself—impulsively.”
“The lyrics are your own?”
“It’s a trick I picked up singing in taverns. Make up a fresh verse, surprise the audience.”
“You invented these lyrics beforehand, or on the fly?”
“They were an improvisation,” she admitted.
“What a remarkable talent! I’m increasingly impressed with you, Calyxa.”
“Likewise, Mrs. Comstock,” Calyxa said. She very nearly blushed—something I had seldom seen her do.
Then Mrs. Comstock cleared her throat. “In any event, the men are back from the woods. Julian, Adam, please sit down. We’ve had a communication from the Executive Palace, and I need to tell you about it.”
Julian whitened, in so far as his naturally pale complexion made that possible. We did as we were told, and seated ourselves.
“Well?” Julian asked. “Which is it—a death sentence or a reprieve?”
Mrs. Comstock was somber but didn’t seem unduly alarmed. “Perhaps a little of both. We’ve been invited to the Independence Day celebration on the Palace grounds. Deklan sent a note claiming he wants to honor the heroism of ‘Captain Commongold,’ now that the Captain is revealed as his nephew.”
“My notoriety protects me,” Julian said in a sneering tone. “At least until the Fourth.”
“I doubt he’ll make an attempt on your life before that date, in any case, and he can hardly slaughter you at the height of the celebration. In the meantime you should issue a statement to the newspapers acknowledging your patrimony and giving credit for your achievements to the Comstock bloodline.”
“And abase myself before that butcher? Shall I defile my father’s grave while I’m at it?”
Mrs. Comstock flinched. Sam said harshly, “These are measures to protect your life, Julian.”
“For what it’s worth.”
“It’s worth a great deal,” Mrs. Comstock said tartly. “To me, Julian, if not to you.”
Julian accepted his mother’s rebuke, and his expression softened. “Very well. We have a few weeks until Independence Day, in any case. And if I’m to live that long, I want to live as a human being, and not a fugitive.”
“What do you mean?”
“I mean that tomorrow I’m going back to Manhattan.”
Our nervous idyll had ended.
We went aboard the Sylvania the next day. A storm had blown up overnight, and the morning was a cool and rainy one. I spent some time in the Sylvania’s pi lot house, satisfying my curiosity about the principles and techniques of steam navigation. Then I went to the warmer cabin below, where Julian was sitting with a book in his lap.
“The future is on my mind,” I said.
“Should we prove lucky enough to have one, you mean?”
“Don’t joke, Julian. I know the risks we face. But I’m a married man—I have obligations, and I need a plan of my own. Calyxa and I can’t impose on your hospitality forever. When we reach Manhattan I mean to find myself a job—anything short of the meat-packing industry*—and then locate a place where Calyxa and I can live on our own.”
“Well, the thought is nobly intended. But don’t you think you should wait until after Independence Day? You can certainly stay with us until then. You’re no burden on the household, believe me.”
“Thank you, Julian, but why wait? I might miss an opportunity.”
“Or undertake an engagement you won’t be able to keep. Adam … perhaps my mother wasn’t sufficiently explicit about Deklan Comstock’s invitation. When she said we were invited to the Executive Palace, the pronoun included you.”
“What!”
“And Calyxa as well.”
I was appalled, and not a little weak about the knees. “How’s that possible? What does the President want with me? For that matter, how could he know anything about me at all?”
“The President’s men no doubt bribe or threaten the household servants. Walls are transparent to them. Your name and Calyxa’s were explicitly mentioned in the invitation.”
“Julian, I’m just a lease-boy—I don’t know how to behave in the company of a President, much less a murderous one!”
“Probably he won’t have you killed. But he must have learned that you were the true chronicler of my so-called ‘adventures,’ and I suppose he wants to have a look at you. As for your behavior—” He shrugged. “Be yourself. You have nothing to gain by posing, and nothing to lose by revealing your origins. If the President wants to mock me for associating with lease-boys and tavern singers, let him do so.”
This was not a pleasing prospect; but I bit my lip and said nothing.
“Meanwhile,” Julian said, “I owe you a favor.”
“Surely you don’t.”
“I do, though. You befriended me in Williams Ford, and showed me all you knew about that Estate and how to hunt it.”
“And you’ve shown me Edenvale.”
“Edenvale is nothing. Manhattan, Adam! My town is Manhattan, and I want to instruct you in the perils and the pleasures of it, before you begin life as a working man.”
Perhaps this was meant as a distraction, but I was willing to abandon myself to it, considering how perilous our existence seemed to have become. “Maybe I can learn some of the ways of the Aristos before I’m thrust into their company at the Presidential Palace.”
“That’s right. And the first lesson is not to use the word ‘Aristos.’ ”
“Aristocrats, then.”
“Nor even that. Among ourselves, we’re ‘the Eupatridian Community.’ ”
A label big enough to strangle a man, I thought; but I practiced it dutifully, and after a while it ceased to stick in the throat.
* She played earnestly but haltingly, and Calyxa and I often excused ourselves from these sessions. Sam, on the other hand, was made rapturous by her performances, and claimed he could listen to her all night without tiring, though even he seemed grateful when she moved on to such simpler compositions as Ladies of Cairo or Where the Sauquoit Meets the Mohawk.
* I had taken to heart Lymon Pugh’s many sermons on that subject.